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| author | Roger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org> | 2025-10-14 20:06:45 -0700 |
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| committer | Roger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org> | 2025-10-14 20:06:45 -0700 |
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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/36903-8.txt b/36903-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..c618cf8 --- /dev/null +++ b/36903-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,5106 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of Marvels of Pond-life, by Henry J. Slack + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Marvels of Pond-life + A Year's Microscopic Recreations + +Author: Henry J. Slack + +Release Date: July 30, 2011 [EBook #36903] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MARVELS OF POND-LIFE *** + + + + +Produced by Chris Curnow, Matthew Wheaton and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This +file was produced from images generously made available +by The Internet Archive) + + + + + + + + + + MARVELS OF POND-LIFE + + + OR, + + A YEAR'S MICROSCOPIC RECREATIONS + + AMONG THE + POLYPS, INFUSORIA, ROTIFERS, WATER-BEARS, AND POLYZOA. + + + BY + HENRY J. SLACK, F.G.S., + SECRETARY TO THE ROYAL MICROSCOPICAL SOCIETY; + + AUTHOR OF + 'THE PHILOSOPHY OF PROGRESS IN HUMAN AFFAIRS,' ETC. ETC. + + + _SECOND EDITION._ + + + ILLUSTRATED WITH COLOURED PLATES AND NUMEROUS + WOOD ENGRAVINGS. + + LONDON: + GROOMBRIDGE AND SONS, + 5, PATERNOSTER ROW. + MDCCCLXXI. + + PRINTED BY J. E. ADLARD, + BARTHOLOMEW CLOSE. + + + + +INTRODUCTION. + + +As this little book is intended to be no more than an introduction to an +agreeable branch of microscopical study, it is to be hoped it will not +require a formal preface; but a few words may be convenient to indicate +its scope and purpose. + +The common experience of all microscopists confirms the assertion made +by Dr. Goring, that the most fascinating objects are living creatures of +sufficient dimensions to be easily understood with moderate +magnification; and in no way can objects of this description be so +readily obtained, as by devoting an occasional hour to the examination +of the little ponds which are accessible from almost any situation. A +complete volume of pond lore would not only be a bulky book--much bigger +than the aldermanic tomes which it is the fashion to call "Manuals," +although the great stone fists in the British Museum would be required +to grasp them comfortably,--but its composition would overtask all the +philosophers of our day. In good truth, a tea-spoonful of water from a +prolific locality often contains a variety of living forms, every one of +which demands a profound and patient study, if we would know but a few +things concerning it. + +To man, then, is a vast and a minute. Our minds ache at the +contemplation of astronomical immensities, and we are apt to see the +boundless only in prodigious masses, countless numbers, and +immeasurable spaces. The Creative Mind knows no such limitations; and +the microscope shows us that, whether the field of nature's operation be +what to our apprehension is great or small, there is no limit to the +exhibition of marvellous skill. If the "undevout astronomer" be "mad," +the undevout microscopist must be still more so, for if the matter be +judged by human sense, the skill is greater as the operation is more +minute; and not the sun itself, nor the central orb round which he +revolves, with all his attendant worlds, can furnish sublimer objects of +contemplation, than the miraculous assemblage of forces which make up +the life of the smallest creature that the microscope reveals. + +There is an irresistible charm in the effort to trace _beginnings_ in +nature. We know that we can never succeed; that each discovery, which +conducts back towards some elementary law or principle, only indicates +how much still lies behind it: but the geologist nevertheless loves to +search out the first or oldest traces of life upon our globe; and so the +microscopist delights to view the simplest exhibitions of structures and +faculties, which reach their completion in the frame and mind of man. +That one great plan runs through the whole universe is now an +universally accepted truth, and when applied to physiology and natural +history, it leads to most important results. + +The researches of recent philosophers have shown us that nature cannot +be understood by studying the parts of animals with reference merely to +their utility in the economy of the creature to which they belong. We +do, indeed, find an admirable correspondence between structures and the +services they perform; but every object in creation, and every part of +it, is in harmonious relation to some grand design, and exhibits a +conformity to some general mode of operation, or some general +disposition and direction of forces, which secures the existence of the +individual or the species, and at the same time works out the most +majestic schemes. Microscopic researches, such as are within the reach +of millions, offer many of the most beautiful illustrations of these +truths; and although the following pages are confined to such objects as +are easily obtainable from ponds, and relate almost exclusively to the +Infusoria, the Rotifers, the Polyps, and the Polyzoa, it is hoped that +they will assist in associating a few of the highly suggestive +reasonings of science, with one of the most pleasurable recreations that +human ingenuity has devised. + +After a preliminary chapter, which is intended to assist the young +microscopist in some technical matters, that could not be conveniently +introduced into the text, the observations are distributed in chapters, +corresponding with the twelve calendar months. This arrangement was +suggested by the author's diary of operations for the year 1860, and +although it by no means follows that the months in which particular +creatures were then discovered, will be those in which they will be most +readily found in other years, it was thought advantageous to give a real +account of an actual period of microscopic work, and also that the plan +would facilitate a departure from the dry manner of a technical +treatise. The index will enable any one to use the book for the purpose +of reference, and it will be observed that the first chapter in which +any member of a group of creatures is introduced, is that in which a +general description of the class is given. The illustrations are taken +from drawings made by the wife of the author from the actual objects, +with the exception of a few instances, in which the authority is +acknowledged. The sketches were made _especially for beginners_, and the +rule followed, was not to introduce any details that could not be seen +at one focus, and with the simplest means: more elaborate +representations, though of the highest value to advanced students, are +bewildering at the commencement. + +The ponds referred to are all either close to, or within a moderate +distance of, London;[1] but similar objects will in all probability be +obtained from any ponds similarly situated, and the descriptions and +directions given for the capture of the minute prey will be found +generally applicable. Care has been taken throughout to explain the most +convenient methods of examining the objects, and although verbal +descriptions are poor substitutes for the teachings of experience, it is +hoped that those here given will remove some difficulties from a pursuit +that no intelligent person can enter upon without pleasure, or consent +to abandon when its elementary difficulties have been mastered, and the +boundless fields of discovery are opened to view. Let not the novice be +startled at the word "discovery." It is true that few are likely to +arrive at new principles or facts which will inscribe their names upon +the roll of fame; but no one of ordinary powers can look at living +objects with any considerable perseverance, without seeing much that has +never been recorded, and which is nevertheless worthy of note; and when +the mind, by its own exertions, first arrives at a knowledge of new +truth, an emotion is felt akin to that which more than recompenses the +profoundest philosopher for all his toil. + +[1] Many are now (1871) destroyed by the progress of building. + + + + + CONTENTS. + + + CHAPTER I. + + MICROSCOPES AND THEIR MANAGEMENT. + + Powers that are most serviceable--Estimated by Focal + length--Length of Body of Microscope and its Effects--Popular + Errors about Great Magnification--Modes of Stating Magnifying + Power--use of an "Erector"--Power of various Objectives with + different Eye-pieces--Examination of Surface Markings--Methods + of Illumination--Direct and Oblique Light--Stage + Aperture--Dark-ground Illumination--Mode of Softening + Light--Microscope Lamps--Care of the Eyes + + + CHAPTER II. + + JANUARY. + + Visit to the Ponds--Confervæ--Spirogyra + quinina--Vorticella--Common Rotifer--Three Divisions of + Infusoria--Phytozoa--Protozoa--Rotifera--Tardigrada--Meaning of + these Terms--Euglenæ--Distinction between Animals and + Vegetables--Description of Vorticellæ--Dark-ground + Illumination--Modes of producing it--The Nucleus of the + Vorticella--Methods of Reproduction--Ciliated + Protozoa--Wheel-bearers or Rotifers--Their Structure--The Common + Rotifer--The young Rotifer seen inside the old one--an Internal + Nursery--"Differentiation" and "Specialization"--Bisexuality of + Rotifers--Their Zoological Position--Diversities in their + Appearance--Structure of their Gizzard--Description of Rotifers + + + CHAPTER III. + + FEBRUARY. + + Visit to Hampstead--Small + ponds--Water-Fleas--Water-Beetle--Snails--Polyps--Hydra + viridis--The Dipping-tube--A Glass Cell--The Hydra and its + Prey--Chydorus Sphæricus and Canthocamptus, or Friends and their + Escapes--Cothurnia--Polyp Buds--Catching Polyps--Mode of Viewing + Them--Structure of Polyps--Sarcode--Polyps Stimulated by + Light--Are they Conscious?--Tentacles and Poison + Threads--Paramecium--Trachelius--Motions of Animalcules, whether + Automatic or directed by a Will--Their Restless Character + + + CHAPTER IV. + + MARCH. + + Paramecia--Effects of Sunlight--Pterodina patina--Curious + Tail--Use of a Compressorium--Internal Structure of + Pterodina--Metopidia--Trichodina + pediculus--Cothurnia--Salpina--Its Three-sided Box--Protrusion + of its Gizzard Mouth + + + CHAPTER V. + + APRIL. + + The Beautiful Floscule--Mode of Seeking for Tubicolar + Rotifers--Mode of Illuminating the Floscule--Difficulty of + seeing the Transparent Tube--Protrusion of Long + Hairs--Lobes--Gizzard--Hairy Lobes of Floscule not Rotatory + Organs--Glass Troughs--Their Construction and Use--Movement of + Globules in Lobes of Floscule--Chætonotus larus--Its mode of + Swimming--Coleps hirtus--Devourer of Dead Entomostraca--Dead + Rotifer and Vibriones--Theories of Fermentation and + Putrefaction--Euplotes and Stylonichia--Fecundity of Stylonichia + + + CHAPTER VI. + + MAY. + + Floscularia cornuta--Euchlanis triquetra--Melicerta ringens--Its + Powers as Brickmaker, Architect, and Mason--Mode of Viewing the + Melicerta--Use of Glass Cell--Habits of Melicerta--Curious + Attitudes--Leave their Tubes at + Death--Carchesium--Epistylis--Their Elegant Tree Forms--A + Parasytic Epistylis like the "Old Man of the Sea"--Halteria and + its Leaps--Aspidisca lynceus + + + CHAPTER VII. + + JUNE AND JULY. + + Lindia torulosa--OEcistes crystallinus--A Professor of + Deportment on Stilts--Philodina--Changes of Form and + Habits--Structure of Gizzard in Philodina Family--Mr. Gosse's + Description--Motions of Rotifers--Indications of a Will--Remarks + on the Motions of Lower Creatures--Various Theories--Possibility + of Reason--Reflex Actions--Brain of Insects--Consensual + Actions--Applications of Physiological Reasoning to the + Movements of Rotifers and Animalcules + + + CHAPTER VIII. + + AUGUST. + + Mud Coloured by Worms--Their Retreat at Alarm--A Country + Duck-Pond--Contents of its Scum--Cryptomonads--Their Means of + Locomotion--A Triarthra (Three-limbed Rotifer)--The Brachion or + Pitcher Rotifer--Its Striking Form--Enormous Gizzard--Ciliary + Motion inside this Creature--Large Eye and Brain--Powerful + Tail--Its Functions--Eggs + + + CHAPTER IX. + + SEPTEMBER. + + Microscopic Value of Little Pools--Curious Facts in Appearance + and Disappearance of Animalcules and Rotifers--Mode of + Preserving them in a Glass Jar--Fragments of Melicerta + Tube--Peculiar Shape of Pellets--Amphileptus--Scaridium + longicaudum--A Long-tailed Rotifer--Stephanoceros Eichornii--A + Splendid Rotifer--Its Gelatinous Bottle--Its Crown of + Tentacles--Retreats on Alarm--Illumination Requisite to see its + Beauties--Its Greediness--Richly-coloured Food--Nervous Ganglia + + + CHAPTER X. + + OCTOBER. + + Stentors and Stephanoceri--Description of Stentors--Mode of + viewing them--Their Abundance--Social Habits--Solitary Stentors + living in Gelatinous Caves--Propagation by Divers + Modes--Cephalosiphon limnias--A Group of Vaginicolæ--Changes of + Shape--A Bubble-blowing Vorticella + + + CHAPTER XI. + + NOVEMBER. + + Characteristics of the Polyzoa--Details of Structure according + to Allman--Plumatella repens--Its Great Beauty under proper + Illumination--Its Tentacles and their Cilia--The Mouth and its + Guard or Epistome--Intestinal Tube--How it swallowed a Rotifer, + and what happened--Curiosities of Digestion--Are the Tentacles + capable of Stinging?--Resting Eggs, or "Statoblasts"--Tube of + Plumatella--Its Muscular Fibres--Physiological Importance of + their Structure + + + CHAPTER XII. + + DECEMBER. + + Microscopic Hunting in Winter--Water-Bears, or Tardigrada--Their + Comical Behaviour--Mode of viewing them--Singular + Gizzard--Wenham's Compressorium--Achromatic Condenser--Mouth of + the Water-Bear--Water-Bears' Exposure to Heat--Soluble + Albumen--Physiological and Chemical Reasons why they are not + killed by Heating or Drying--The Trachelius ovum--Mode of + Swimming--Method of Viewing--By Dark-ground + Illumination--Curious Digestive Tube with + Branches--Multiplication by Division--Change of Form immediately + following this Process--subsequent Appearances + + + CHAPTER XIII. + + CONCLUSION.--Remarks on Classification, &c. + + + + + MARVELS OF POND-LIFE. + + + + + CHAPTER I. + + PLAIN HINTS ON MICROSCOPES AND THEIR MANAGEMENT. + + Powers that are most serviceable--Estimated by focal + length--Length of body of microscope and its effects--Popular + errors about great magnification--Modes of stating magnified + power--Use of an "Erector"--Power of various objectives with + different eye-pieces--Examination of surface markings--Methods + of illumination--Direct and oblique light--Stage aperture--Dark + ground illumination--Mode of softening light--Microscope + lamps--Care of the eyes. + + +The microscope is rapidly becoming the companion of every intelligent +family that can afford its purchase, and, thanks to the skill of our +opticians, instruments which can be made to answer the majority of +purposes may be purchased for three or four guineas, while even those +whose price is counted in shillings are by no means to be despised. The +most eminent English makers, Wales, and Tolles, in America, and +Hartnack, in Paris, occupy the first rank, while the average productions +of respectable houses exhibit so high a degree of excellence as to make +comparisons invidious. We shall not, therefore, indulge in the praises +of particular firms, but simply recommend any reader entering upon +microscopic study to procure an achromatic instrument, if it can be +afforded, and having at least two powers, one with a focus of an inch or +two thirds of an inch, and the other of half or a quarter. Cheap +microscopes have usually only one eye-piece, those of a better class +have two, and the best are furnished with three, or even more. + +The magnifying power of a compound microscope depends upon the focal +length of the object-glass (or glass nearest the object), upon the +length of the tube, and the power of the eye-piece. With regard to +object-glasses, those of shortest focal length have the highest powers, +and the longest eye-pieces have the lowest powers. The body of a +microscope, or principal tube of which it is composed, is, in the best +instruments, about nine inches long, and a draw tube, capable of being +extended six inches more, is frequently useful. From simple optical +principles, the longer the tube the higher the power obtained with the +same object-glass; but only object-glasses of very perfect construction +will bear the enlargement of their own imperfections, which results from +the use of long tubes; and consequently for cheap instruments the +opticians often limit the length of the tube, to suit the capacity of +the object-glasses they can afford to give for the money. Such +microscopes may be good enough for the generality of purposes, but they +do not, with glasses of given focal length, afford the same magnifying +power as is done by instruments of better construction. The best and +most expensive glasses will not only bear long tubes, but also +eye-pieces of high power, without any practical diminution of the +accuracy of their operation, and this is a great convenience in natural +history investigations. To obtain it, however, requires such perfection +of workmanship as to be incompatible with cheapness. An experienced +operator will not be satisfied without having an object-glass at least +as high as a quarter, that will bear a deep eye-piece, but beginners are +seldom successful with a higher power than one of half-inch focus, or +thereabouts, and before trying this, they should familiarise themselves +with the use of one with an inch focus. + +It is a popular error to suppose that enormous magnification is always +an advantage, and that a microscope is valuable because it makes a flea +look as big as a cat or a camel. The writer has often smiled at the +exclamations of casual visitors, who have been pleased with his +microscopic efforts to entertain them. "Dear me, what a wonderful +instrument; it must be immensely powerful;" and so forth. These +ejaculations have often followed the use of a low power, and their +authors have been astonished at receiving the explanation that the best +microscope is that which will show the most with the least +magnification, and that accuracy of definition, not mere increase of +bulk, is the great thing needful. + +Scientific men always compute the apparent enlargement of the object by +_one_ dimension only. Thus, supposing an object one hundredth of an inch +square were magnified so as to appear one inch square, it would, in +scientific parlance, be magnified to "one hundred diameters," or one +hundred linear; and the figures 100 would be appended to any drawing +which might be made from it. It is, however, obvious that the length is +magnified as well as the breadth; and hence the magnification of the +whole surface, in the instance specified, would be one hundred times one +hundred, or ten thousand: and this is the way in which magnification is +popularly stated. A few moments' consideration will show that the +scientific method is that which most readily affords information. Any +one can instantly comprehend the fact of an object being made to look +ten times its real length; but if told that it is magnified a hundred +times, he does not know what this really means, until he has gone +through the process of finding the square root of a hundred, and learnt +that a hundredfold magnification means a tenfold magnification of each +superficial dimension. If told, for example, that a hair is magnified +six hundred diameters, the knowledge is at once conveyed that it looks +six hundred times as broad as it is; but a statement that the same hair +is magnified three hundred and sixty thousand times, only excites a +gasping sensation of wonder, until it is ascertained by calculation that +the big figures only mean what the little figures express. In these +pages the scientific plan will always be followed. + +If expense is not an object, a binocular instrument should be purchased, +and it is well to be provided with an object-glass as low as three or +even four inches focus, which will allow the whole of objects having the +diameter of half an inch or more to be seen at once. Such a low power +is exceedingly well adapted for the examination of living insects, or of +the exquisite preparations of entire insects, which can now be had of +all opticians. Microscopes which have a draw tube can be furnished with +an _erector_, an instrument so called because it erects the images, +which the microscope has turned upside down, through the crossing of the +rays. This is very convenient for making dissections under the +instrument; and it also gives us the means of reducing the magnifying +power of an object-glass, and thus obtaining a larger field. The erector +is affixed to the end of the draw tube, and by pulling it out, or +thrusting it in, the rays from the object-glass are intercepted at +different distances, and various degrees of power obtained. + +A binocular microscope is most useful with low powers from two thirds +upwards. A new form, devised by Mr. Stephenson, acts as an erector, and +is very valuable for dissections. It works with high powers. + +Beginners will be glad to know how to obtain the magnifying power which +different objects require, and it may be stated that, with a full-sized +microscope, a two-inch object-glass magnifies about twenty-five +diameters with the lowest eye-piece; a one-inch object-glass, or two +thirds, from fifty to sixty diameters; a half-inch about one hundred; a +quarter-inch about two hundred. The use of deeper eye-pieces adds very +considerably to the power, but in proportions which differ with +different makers. One instrument used by the writer has three +eye-pieces, giving with a two thirds object-glass powers of sixty one +hundred and five, and one hundred and eighty respectively; and with a +fifth two hundred and forty, four hundred and thirty, and seven hundred +and twenty, which can be augmented by the use of a draw tube. + +It has been well observed that the illumination of objects is quite as +important as the glasses that are employed, and the most experienced +microscopists have never done learning in this matter. Most microscopes +are furnished with two mirrors beneath the stage, one plane and one +concave. The first will throw a few parallel rays through any +transparent object properly placed, and the latter causes a number of +rays to converge, producing a more powerful effect. The first is usually +used in daylight, when the instrument is near a window (one with a north +aspect, out of direct sunlight, being the best); and the second is often +useful when the source of illumination is a candle or a lamp. By varying +the angle of the mirror the light is thrown through the object more or +less obliquely, and its quantity should never be sufficient to pain the +eye. Few objects are seen to the best advantage with a _large_ pencil of +perfectly direct light, and the beginner should practise till the amount +of inclination is obtained which produces the best effect. + +It is advisable that the hole in the stage of the microscope should be +large--at least an inch and a half each way--so that the entrance of +oblique rays is not obstructed, and it is desirable that the mirror, in +addition to sliding up and down, should have an arm by which it can be +thrown completely out of the perpendicular plane of the body of the +instrument. This enables such oblique rays to be employed as to give a +dark field, all the light which reaches the eye being _refracted_ by the +object through which it is sent. The opticians sell special pieces of +apparatus for this purpose, but though they are very useful, they do not +render it less desirable to have the mirror mounted as described. + +Most microscopes are furnished with a revolving diaphragm, with three +holes, of different sizes, to diminish the quantity of light that is +admitted to the object. This instrument is of some use, and offers a +ready means of obtaining a very soft agreeable light for transparent +objects, viewed with low powers. For this purpose cut a circular disk of +India or tissue paper, rather larger than the biggest aperture; scrape a +few little pieces of spermaceti, and place them upon it, then put the +whole on a piece of writing-paper, and hold it a few inches above the +flame of a candle, moving it gently. If this is dexterously done, the +spermaceti will be melted without singeing the paper, and when it is +cold the disk will be found transparent. Place it over the hole in the +diaphragm, send the light through it, and the result will be a very soft +agreeable effect, well suited for many purposes, such as viewing +sections of wood, insects mounted whole, after being rendered +transparent, many small water creatures, etc. Another mode of +accomplishing this purpose is to place a similarly prepared disk of +paper on the flat side of a bull's-eye lens, and transmit the light of a +lamp through it. This plan may be used with higher powers, and the white +opaque light it gives may be directed at any angle by means of the +mirror beneath the stage. + +An ordinary lamp may be made to answer for microscopic use, but one of +the small paraffine lamps now sold everywhere for eighteen-pence is +singularly convenient. It is high enough for many purposes, and can +easily be raised by one or more blocks. A paraffine lamp on a sliding +stand is still more handy, and all the better for a hole with a glass +stopper, through which the fluid can be poured. + +Many people fancy that the eyes are injured by continual use of the +microscope, but this is far from being the case if reasonable +precautions are taken. The instrument should be inclined at a proper +angle, all excess of light avoided, and the object brought into focus +before it is steadily looked at. Most people solemnly shut one eye +before commencing a microscopic examination; this is a practical and +physiological mistake. Nature meant both eyes to be open, and usually +resents a prolonged violation of her intentions in this matter. It +requires but a little practice to keep both eyes open, and only pay +attention to what is seen by that devoted to the microscope. The +acquisition of this habit is facilitated, and other advantages gained, +by a screen to keep out extraneous light. For this purpose take a piece +of thin cardboard about nine inches square, and cut a round hole in it, +just big enough to admit the tube of the microscope, about two inches +from the bottom, and equidistant from the two sides. Next cut off the +two upper corners of the cardboard, and give them a pleasant-looking +curve. Then cover the cardboard with black velvet, the commonest, which +is not glossy, answers best, and your screen is made. Put the hole over +the tube of the microscope, and let the screen rest on the little ledge +or rim which forms an ornamental finish to most instruments. A piece of +cork may be gummed at the back of the screen, so as to tilt it a little, +and diminish its chance of coming into contact with that important organ +the nose. This little contrivance adds to the clearness and brilliancy +of objects, and is a great accommodation to the eyes. + +One more oculistic memorandum, and we have done with this chapter. Do +not stare at portions of objects that are out of focus, and consequently +indistinct, as this injures the eyes more than anything. Remember the +proverb, "None so deaf as those that won't hear," which naturally +suggests for a companion, "None so blind as those that won't see." It is +often impossible to get every object in the field in focus at one +time;--look only at that which is in focus, and be blind to all the +rest. This is a habit easily acquired, and is one for which our +_natural_ microscopes are exceedingly grateful; and every judicious +observer desires to keep on the best terms with his eyes. + + + + +CHAPTER II. + +JANUARY. + + Visit to the ponds--Confervæ--Spirogyra + quinina--Vorticella--Common Rotifer--Three divisions of + Infusoria--Phytozoa--Protozoa--Rotifera--Tardigrada--Meaning of + these terms--Euglenæ--Distinction between animals and + vegetables--Description of Vorticellæ--Dark ground + illumination--Modes of producing it--The Nucleus of the + Vorticellæ--Methods of reproduction--Ciliated Protozoa--Wheel + bearers or Rotifers--Their structure--The common Rotifer--The + young Rotifer seen inside the old one--An internal + nursery--"Differentiation" and "Specialisation"--Bisexuality of + Rotifers--Their zoological position--Diversities in their + appearance--Structure of their Gizzard--Description of Rotifers. + + +The winter months are on the whole less favorable to the collection of +microscopic objects from ponds and streams than the warmer portions of +the year; but the difference is rather in abundance than in variety, and +with a very moderate amount of trouble, representatives of the principal +classes can always be obtained. + +On a clear January morning, when the air was keen, but no ice had yet +skinned over the surface of the water, a visit to some small ponds in an +open field not far from Kentish Town provided entertainment for several +days. The ponds were selected from their open airy situation, the +general clearness of their water, and the abundance of vegetation with +which they were adorned. Near the margin confervæ abounded, their +tangled masses of hair-like filaments often matted together, almost with +the closeness of a felted texture. At intervals, minute bubbles of air, +with occasionally a few of greater size, indicated that the complex +processes of vegetable life were actively going on, that the tiny plants +were decomposing carbonic acid, dexterously combining the carbon--which +we are most familiar with in the black opaque form of charcoal--to form +the substance of their delicate translucent tissues, and sending forth +the oxygen as their contribution to the purification of the adjacent +water, and the renovation of our atmospheric air. This was a good sign, +for healthy vegetation is favorable to many of the most interesting +forms of infusorial life. Accordingly the end of a walking-stick was +inserted among the green threads, and a skein of them drawn up, dank, +dripping, and clinging together in a pasty-looking mass. To hold up a +morsel of this mass, and tell some one not in the secrets of pond-lore +that its dripping threads were objects of beauty, surpassing human +productions, in brilliant colour and elegant form, would provoke +laughter, and suggest the notion that you were poking fun at them, when +you poked out your stick with the slimy treasure at its end. But let us +put the green stuff into a bottle, with some water from its native +haunt, cork it up tight, and carry it away for quiet examination under +the microscope at home. + +Here we are with the apparatus ready. We have transferred a few threads +of the conferva from the bottle to the _live box_, spreading out the +fine fibres with a needle, and adding a drop of water. The cover is then +gently pressed down, and the whole placed on the stage of the +microscope, to be examined with a power of about sixty. A light is +thrown somewhat obliquely by the mirror through the object, the focus +adjusted, and a beautiful sight rewards the pains. Our mass of conferva +turns out to contain one of the most elegant species. Fine hair-like +tubes of an organic material, as transparent as glass, are divided by +partitions of the same substance into cylindrical cells, through which a +slender ribbon of emerald green, spangled at intervals with small round +expansions, is spirally wound. We shall call it the Spiral Conferva, its +scientific name being _Spirogyra quinina_. Some other species, though +less elegantly adorned, make a pleasing variety in the microscopic +scene; and appended to some of the threads is a group of small crystal +bells, which jerk up and down upon spirally twisted stalks. These are +the "Bell Flower Animalcules" of old observers, the _Vorticellæ_, or +Little Vortex-makers of the present day. Other small creatures flit +about with lively motions, and among them we observe a number of green +spindles that continually change their shape, while an odd-looking thing +crawls about, after the manner of certain caterpillars, by bringing his +head and tail together, shoving himself on a step, and then repeating +the process, and making another move. He has a kind of snout, behind +which are two little red eyes, and something like a pig-tail sticks out +behind. This is the Common Wheel-bearer, _Rotifer vulgaris_, a +favourite object with microscopists, old and young, and capable, as we +shall see, of doing something more interesting than taking the crawl we +have described. + +A higher power, say one or two hundred, may be conveniently applied to +bring out the details of the inhabitants of our live box more +completely; but if the glasses are good, a linear magnification of sixty +will show a great deal, with the advantage of a large field, and less +trouble in following the moving objects of our search. + +Having commenced our microscopic proceedings by obtaining some Euglenæ, +Vorticellæ, and a Rotifer, we are in a position to consider the chief +characteristics of three great divisions of infusoria, which will often +engage our attention. + +It is well known that animalcules and other small forms of being may be +found in _infusions_ of hay or other vegetable matter, and hence all +such and similar objects were called _Infusoria_ by early observers. +Many groups have been separated from the general mass comprehended under +this term, and it is now used in various senses. The authors of the +'Micrographic Dictionary' employ it to designate "a class of microscopic +_animals_ not furnished with either vessels or nerves, but exhibiting +internal spherical cavities, motion effected by means of cilia, or +variable processes formed of the substance of the body, true legs being +absent." The objection to this definition is, that it to some extent +represents theories which may not be true. That nerves are absent _all +through the class_ is an assumption founded merely upon the negative +evidence of their not having been discovered, and the complete absence +of "vessels" cannot be affirmed. + +In the last edition of 'Pritchard's Infusoria,' to which some of our +ablest naturalists have contributed, after separating two groups, the +Desmids, and the Diatoms, as belonging to the vegetable world, the +remainder of the original family of infusoria are classified as +_Phytozoa_, _Protozoa_, _Rotifera_, and _Tardigrada_. We shall explain +these hard names immediately, first remarking that the Desmids and the +Diatoms, concerning whom we do not intend to speak in these pages, are +the names of two groups, one distinctly vegetable, while the other, +although now generally considered so, were formerly held by many +authorities to be in reality animal. The Desmids occur very commonly in +fresh water. We have some among our Confervæ. They are most brilliant +green, and often take forms of a more angular and crystalline character +than are exhibited by higher plants. The Diatoms are still more common, +and we see before us in our water-drop some of their simplest +representatives in the form of minute boats made of silica (flint) and +moved by means still in dispute. + +Leaving out the Desmids and Diatoms, we have said that in Pritchard's +arrangement the views of those writers are adopted who divide the rest +of the infusoria into four groups, distinguished with foreign +long-tailed names, which we will translate and expound. First come the +_Phytozoa_, under which we recognise our old acquaintance _zoophyte_ +turned upside down. _Zoophytes_ mean animal-plants, _Phytozoa_ mean +plant-animals. We shall have by-and-bye to speak of some of the members +of this artificial and unsatisfactory group, and postpone to that time a +learned disquisition on the difference between animals and plants, a +difference observable enough if we compare a hippopotamus with a +cabbage, but which "grows small by degrees, and beautifully less," as we +contemplate lower forms. + +After the _Phytozoa_ come the _Protozoa_, or first forms in which +animality is distinctly recognised. Under this term are assembled +creatures of very various organization, from the extreme simplicity of +the _Proteus_ or _Amoeba_, a little lump of jelly, that moves by +thrusting out portions of its body, so as to make a sort of extempore +legs, and in which no organs can be discerned,[2] up to others that are +highly developed, like our _Vorticellæ_. This group is evidently +provisional, and jumbles together objects that may be widely separated +when their true structure and real affinities are discerned. + +[2] In some kinds and in some stages of growth this is not strictly +true. + +Following the _Protozoa_, come the _Rotifera_, or Wheel-bearers, of +which we have obtained an example from our pond, and whose +characteristics we shall endeavour to delineate when our specimen is +under view; and last in the list we have the _Tardigrada_, +"Slow-steppers," or Water Bears, queer little creatures, something like +new-born puppies, with a double allowance of imperfect feet. These, +though somewhat connected with the rotifers, are considered to belong to +a low division of the arachnida (spiders, &c.). + +[Illustration: --_a_, motile; and _b_, resting condition of Euglenæ.] + +Feeling that we must be merciful with the long-tailed words and +explanations of classification, we reserve further matter of this kind +for the opportunities that must arise, and direct our attention to +living forms by watching the _Euglenæ_ which our water-drop contains. We +have before us a number of elegant spindle-shaped bodies, somewhat +thicker in front than behind, and in what may be called the head there +glitters a brilliant red speck, commonly called an _eye-spot_, although, +like the eyes of potatoes, it cannot see. Round this eye-spot the +tissues are clear, like glass; but the body of the creature is of a rich +vegetable green, which shines and glistens as it catches the light. Some +swim rapidly with a rollicking motion, while others twist themselves +into all manner of shapes. Now the once delicate spindle is oddly +contorted, now it swells out in the middle, like a top, and now it rolls +itself into a ball. The drawings will afford some idea of these protean +changes, but they must be seen before their harlequin character can be +thoroughly appreciated. Some of the specimens exhibit delicate lines +running lengthwise, and taking a spiral twist as the creature moves +about; but in none can any mouth be discerned, and their antics, +although energetic and comical, afford no certain indications of either +purpose or will. What are they? animals or vegetables? or something +betwixt and between? + +The first impression of any casual observer would be to declare in +favour of their animality; but before this can be settled, comes the +question, what is an animal, and how does it differ from a vegetable? +and upon this the learned do by no means agree. One writer considers the +presence of _starch_ in any object a proof that it belongs to the +dominions of Flora, while another would decide the issue by ascertaining +whether it evolves oxygen and absorbs carbon, as most plants do, or +whether it evolves carbon and absorbs oxygen, as _decided_ animals do. +Dr. Carpenter asserts that the distinction between _Protophyta_ and +_Protozoa_ (first or simplest plants and animals), "lies in the nature +of their food, and the method of its introduction, for whilst the +_Protophyte_ obtains the materials of its nutrition from the air and +moisture that surround it, and possesses the power of detaching oxygen, +hydrogen, carbon, and nitrogen from their previous binary combinations, +and of uniting them into ternary and quaternary organic compounds +(chlorophyll, starch, albumen, &c.), the simplest _Protozoa_, in common +with the highest members of the animal kingdom, seems utterly destitute +of any such power, makes, so to speak, a stomach for itself in the +substance of its body, into which it injects the solid particles that +constitute its food, and within which it subjects them to a regular +process of digestion." + +Unfortunately it is very difficult to apply this simple theory to the +dubious objects which lie on the border-land of the animal world, and no +other theory that has been propounded appears to meet all cases. Some +naturalists do not expect to find a broad line of demarkation between +the two great divisions of living things, but others characterise such +an idea as "unphilosophical," in spite of which, however, we incline +towards it. + +Mr. Gosse, whose opinion is entitled to great respect, calls the +_Euglenæ_ "animals" in his 'Evenings with the Microscope;' but from the +aggregate of recorded observations it seems that they evolve oxygen, are +coloured with the colouring matter of plants, reproduce their species in +a manner analogous to plants, and have in some cases been clearly traced +to the vegetable world. It is, however, possible that some _Euglenæ_ +forms may be animal and others vegetable, and while their place at +nature's table is being decided, they must be content to be called +_Phytozoa_, which, as we have before explained, is merely _Zoophyte_ +turned upside down. + +Some authorities have thought their animality proved by the high degree +of contractility which their tissues evince. This, however, cannot go +for much, as all physiologists admit contractility to belong to the +vegetable tissues of the sensitive plant, "Venus' Fly-trap," &c., and a +little more or less cannot mark the boundary between two orders of +being. + +We shall have occasion again to notice the _Protophytes_, and now pass +to the _Protozoa_, of which we have a good illustration in the +_Vorticella_ already spoken of. In the group before us a number of +elegant bells or vases stand at the end of long stalks, as shown at the +top of the frontispiece, while round the tops of the bells, the +vibrations of a wreath or cilia produce little vortices or whirlpools, +and hence comes the family name. This current brings particles of all +sorts to the mouth near the rim of the bells, and the creature seems not +entirely destitute of power to choose or reject the morsels according to +its taste. Every now and then the stalk of some specimen is suddenly +twisted into a spiral, and contracted, so as to bring the bell almost to +the ground. Then the stem gracefully elongates again, and the cilia +repeat their lively game. + +The general effect can be seen very well by a power of about sixty +linear, but one of them from one to two hundred is necessary to bring +out the details, and a practised observer will use still more +magnification with good effect. They should be examined by a moderately +oblique light, or most of the cilia are apt to be rendered invisible, +and also by _dark ground_ illumination. This may be accomplished in a +well-made microscope by turning the mirror quite out of the plane of the +axis of the instrument, that is to say, on one side of the space the +body would occupy if it were prolonged. By this means, and by placing +the lamp at an angle with the mirror, that must be learnt by experiment, +all the light that reaches the eye has first passed through the object, +and is refracted by it out of the line it was taking, which would have +carried it entirely away. Or the object may be illuminated by an +apparatus called a _spotted lens_, which is a small bull's-eye placed +under the stage, and having all the centre of its face covered with a +plaster of black silk. In this method the central or direct rays from +the mirror are obstructed, but those which strike the edge of the +bull's-eye are bent towards the object, which they penetrate and +illuminate if it is sufficiently transparent and refractive. Another +mode of dark ground illumination is by employing an elegant instrument +called a _parabolic illuminator_, which need not be described. + +[Illustration: Vorticella, with posterior circlet of cilia in process of +separation, 300 linear.--_Stein._] + +[Illustration: Vorticella in process of self-division. A new frontal +wreath in formation in each of the semi-lunar spaces.] + +Different specimens and species of _Vorticellæ_ vary in the length of +their bells from one three or four thousandth to one hundred and +twentieth of an inch, and when they are tolerably large, the dark ground +illumination produces a beautiful effect. The bells shine with a pearly +iridescent lustre, and their cilia flash with brilliant prismatic +colours. + +[Illustration: Vorticella microstoma, showing alimentary tube, ciliated +mouth, and formation of a gemma at the base, 300 linear.--_Stein._] + +[Illustration: Vorticella microstoma, the encysted animal protruding +through a supposed rupture of the tunic.] + +The _Vorticellina_ belong to the upper division of the _Protozoa_--the +_ciliata_, or ciliated animalcules, and they have a mouth, an +oesophagus, and an orifice for the exit of their food. + +Many observers used to ascribe to those creatures a complete intestinal +canal, but such an apparatus is now believed not to exist in any of the +Infusoria. Food particles, after leaving the oesophagus, are thrust +forward into the sarcode, or soft flesh, and any cavity thus formed acts +as a stomach. + +The bells or cups are not, as might be fancied from a casual inspection, +open like wineglasses at the top, but furnished with a retractile disk +or cover, on which the cilia are arranged. Their stalks are not simple +stems, but are hollow tubes, which in the genus Vorticella are furnished +with a muscular band, by whose agency the movements are principally +made. + +Some of the Vorticellids will be observed to leave their stalks, having +developed cilia round their base, and may be seen to swim about in the +enjoyment of individual life. They are also capable of becoming +_encysted_, that is, of secreting a gelatinous cover. + +[Illustration: Encysted Vorticella, showing the obliteration of special +organs by the advancement of the process.--_Pritchard._] + +These changes are exhibited in the annexed cuts, which are copied from +known authorities. By careful observation of the bodies of Vorticellids, +a contractile vesicle may be observed, which appears to cause a movement +of fluids, that is probably connected either with respiration or +secretion. + +Another piece of apparatus in this family, but not confined to it, is +the so-called _nucleus_, which in this case is of a horseshoe shape and +granular texture, and greater solidity than the surrounding parts. The +functions of this organ formed the subject of various conjectures, but +it is now generally held to be an ovary. + +[Illustration: Vorticella microstoma, in process of encystment, 300 +linear; in the last the inclosing tunic is plainly developed.--_Stein._] + +In common with many of the lower animals, the Vorticellids have three +ways of multiplying their race. One by _fission_, or division of their +bodies: another by _buds_, somewhat analogous to those of plants; and +another by reproductive germs. These processes will come again under our +notice, and we shall leave the Vorticellids for the present by observing +that if they are fed with a very small quantity of indigo or carmine, +the vacuoles or spaces, into which their nutriment passes, will be +clearly observed. Ehrenberg thought in these and similar creatures that +every vacuole was a distinct stomach, and that all the stomachs were +connected by an intestinal canal; hence his name _Polygastrica_, or +many stomached. In these views he has not been followed by later +observers, and it is probable he was misled, partly by pushing the +process of reasoning from the analogies of higher animals much too far, +and partly by the imperfection of the glasses he employed. + +[Illustration: Rotifer vulgaris.--A, mouth, or gizzard; B, contractile +vesicle.--_Micrographic Dictionary._ N.B.--When the cilia and tail part +are retracted, and the body shortened, the creature assumes an obtuse +oval form.] + +Having thus briefly considered the Vorticellids we must turn to the +wheel-bearer, who belongs to a higher race than even the ciliated +_Protozoa_. We left her crawling about with her snout or proboscis +protruded, but now she has moored herself by her tail-foot, pulled in +her nose, and put out two groups of cilia, which look like revolving +wheels, and a little below them is seen a gizzard in a state of active +work. After a little while she swims away with her wheels going, and her +tail, forked at the end, is found to be telescopic, or capable of being +pulled in and out. As the cilia play, the neighbouring water is +agitated, and the multitudes of small objects are brought by the +whirlpools within her ravenous maw. But the strangest thing of all is +that inside her body is seen a young one; in this case a large and fine +infant, which, like "a chip of the old block," imitates the parental +motions, thrusts forth its cilia and works its gizzard.[3] In other +genera the eggs are hatched externally, but this one is ovoviparous, and +carries its nursery inside. + +[3] This was met with in the summer, but is described here to avoid +repetition. I do not know whether the eggs are hatched in very cold +weather. + +A very slight investigation is sufficient to show that in the +wheel-bearer we have made a great advance towards a higher organization +than we discovered in the preceding creatures. We witness what the +learned call a "differentiation" of parts and tissues, and a +"specialization" of organs. The head is plainly distinguishable from the +body, the skin or integument is distinctly different from the internal +tissues, behind the eyes we can detect a nervous ganglion or miniature +brain, the gizzard is a complicated piece of vital mechanism, such as we +have not met with before, and in various parts of the transparent inside +we see organs to which particular functions are assigned. + +It was at one time thought that Rotifers were hermaphrodite--uniting +both sexes in one body--but that idea is now generally abandoned, for in +many species the males have been discovered, and the fair sex may be +gratified to hear that they are without doubt the "inferior animals." +Their function is simply to assist the female in producing young, and as +this can be quickly accomplished, their lives are short, and they are +not supplied with the gizzard and digestive apparatus, which their +lady-loves possess. Much discussion has taken place as to the rank which +the Rotifers hold in the animal kingdom, some naturalists thinking them +relations of the crabs, and others believing them to belong to the +family of the worms. Professor Huxley, who adopts the latter view, which +has the most friends, groups the lower _Annulosa_ together under the +name of _Annuloida_, in which he includes _Annelides_, or worms of +various kinds, the _Echinodermata_ (or "spine skins," among which are +the star-fish and sea hedgehogs), and some other families. He considers +the Rotifers to be "the permanent forms of Echinoderm larvæ." This does +not mean that they were ever produced by Echinoderms, and had their +development checked, but that they resemble them in organization, and +illustrate a general law, observable in animated beings, namely, that +the lower creatures are like the imperfect stages of higher animals, and +that all things are formed according to general principles, and exhibit +a uniformity of plan. + +Mr. Gosse adopts a different view, and while admitting a connection +between the Rotifers and the worms, adduces important reasons for +associating them with the insects. + +Leaving zoologists to settle their position, we may remark that the +Rotifers form a very numerous family, presenting very great diversities +of structure, some of the most interesting of which we shall meet with +in the course of our rambles; but they all possess a gizzard, which, +though differing in complexity, is throughout formed upon the same +principle, and that we must now explain. + +We have called the masticatory apparatus of the Rotifers a _gizzard_; +but Mr. Gosse, who has done most to elucidate its structure, contends +that it is a _mouth_; and in some species it is frequently protruded, +and used like the mouth of higher animals. Taking one of the most +typical forms of this organ, and drawing our illustrations from Mr. +Gosse's admirable paper in the "Transactions of the Royal Society," we +may describe it, when completely developed, as consisting of three +lobes, having a more or less rounded form. The eminent naturalist we +have named calls the whole organ the _mastax_, and states that it is +composed of dense muscular fibre. The tube which leads down to it he +designates the "buccal (mouth) funnel," and the tube that issues from +it, and conveys the food to the digestive sac or stomach, he calls the +_oesophagus_, in conformity with the nomenclature applied to creatures +whose mouths are in the usual place. Inside the mouth-gizzard are placed +two organs, which work like hammers, and which Mr. Gosse therefore names +_mallei_. The hammers work against a sort of anvil, which is called +_incus_, the Latin for that implement. Each hammer consists of two +portions articulated by a hinge joint. The lower portion, the +_manubrium_, or handle, gives motion to the upper portion, which from +its shape is named the _uncus_, or hook. The _unci_ are furnished with +finger-like processes of teeth, which vary in number. There are five or +six in the best developed specimens. These hooks or teeth work against +each other, and against the _incus_, or anvil, which consists of +distinct articulated portions, of which the principal are two _rami_, or +branches, jointed so that they can open and close like a pair of shears. +These two rest upon the third portion, which is called the _fulcrum_. +Some faint idea of the working of the toothed hammers may be obtained by +rubbing the knuckles of both hands together, but the motion is more +complicated, and the _rami_ play their part in the trituration of the +food. Mr. Gosse states that when an objectionable morsel has got as far +as this mouth-gizzard, "it is thrown back by a peculiar scoop-like +action of the _unci_, very curious to witness." The foregoing diagram +will help the reader to comprehend this description, but no opportunity +should be lost for viewing this remarkable organ busy at work in the +living animals. + +[Illustration: Gizzard of Notomata.] + +The respiration of the Rotifers is supposed to be effected by the +passage of water through vessels running round them, and called the +"water vascular system," and in addition to their eyes, which often +disappear in adult specimens, the organ we described as standing out +like a pig-tail, as our acquaintance crawled along, is thought to act as +an _antenna_, or feeler, and brings its possessor in further relation to +the external world. It is also called the _calcar_, or spur, and is +furnished with cilia or bristles at its extremity. + +Sometimes the particles swallowed by the Common Rotifer are large enough +for their course to be traced, but there is frequently a great commotion +and grinding of the gizzard, without any appreciable cause, although +doubtless something is taken in, and when the creature is tired, or has +had enough, we see both head and tail retracted, and the body assumes a +globular form. In another chapter, when viewing a Philodine, we shall +see how in the family to which the Common Rotifer belongs, the gizzard +departs from the perfect type. + + + + +CHAPTER III. + +FEBRUARY. + + Visit to Hampstead--Small + ponds--Water-fleas--Water-beetle--Snails--Polyps--Hydra + viridis--The dipping-tube--A glass cell--The Hydra and its + prey--Chydorus sphæricus and Canthocamptus, or friends and their + escapes--Cothurnia--Polyp buds--Catching Polyps--Mode of viewing + them--Structure of Polyps--Sarcode--Polyps stimulated by + light--Are they conscious?--Tentacles and poison + threads--Paramecium--Trachelius--Motions of Animalcules, whether + automatic or directed by a will--Their restless character. + + +It has been a bitterly cold night, and as the sun shines on a clear keen +morning, and glistens in the hoar-frost which covers the trees, it might +seem an unpropitious time for visiting the ponds, in search of +microscopic prey. We will, however, try our luck, and take a brisk trot +to the top of Hampstead Heath, where the air is still keener, and the +ice more thick. Arriving at the highest point, London appears on one +side enveloped in its usual great coat of smoke, through which St. +Paul's big dome, with a score or two of towers and steeples, can be +dimly made out; while looking towards Harrow-on-the-Hill, or Barnet, we +see the advantage of country air in the sharpness with which distant +objects cut the blue sky. We leave the large ponds for another time, +and hunt out the little hollows among the furze and fern. One looks +promising from the bright green vegetation to be discovered under the +sheet of ice, which is almost firm enough to bear human weight. + +Breaking a convenient hole we hook up some of the water-plants, and +place them in a wide-mouthed vial, which we fill with water, and +cursorily examine with a pocket-lens. Some water-fleas briskly skipping +about, and a beautiful little beetle, with an elegant dotted pattern on +his brown back, and a glistening film of air covering his belly, show +that we have not been unsuccessful, although we must wait till we get +home to know the extent of our findings, among which, however, we can +only discern the graceful spiral shell of a small water-snail, the +_Planorbis_. + +Arriving at home the bottle was left undisturbed for some hours in a +warm light place, and then on being examined several specimens of that +beautiful polyp, the _Hydra viridis_, were seen attached to the glass, +and spreading their delicate tentacles in search of prey. One of the +polyps is carefully removed by the _dipping-tube_, a small glass tube, +open at both ends. The forefinger is placed upon the top, and when the +other end is brought over the object the finger is raised for an +instant, and as the water rushes in the little hydra comes too, and is +placed in a glass cell, about half an inch wide, and one tenth of an +inch deep. These cells are obtained from the opticians, and cemented +with varnish or marine glue to an ordinary glass slide. After an object +has been placed in one of them, a little water is taken up in the +dipping-tube, and the cell filled until the fluid stands in a convex +heap above its brim. We then select around glass cover, and press it +gently on the walls of our cell. A few drops of superfluous water +escape, and we have the cell quite full, and the cover held tight by +force of the capillary attraction between the water and the glass. + +[Illustration: _Hydra viridis_ with developed young one, and bud +beginning to sprout.] + +The polyp deposited in one of these water cages is then transferred to +the stage of the microscope, and its proceedings watched. At first it +looks like a shapeless mass of apple-green jelly. Soon, however, the +tail end of the creature is fixed to the glass, the body elongates, and +the tentacles (in this case eight) expand something after the manner of +the leaves of a graceful palm. + +By accident two small Water Fleas were imprisoned with the polyp, and +one (a shrimp-like looking creature, carrying behind her a great bag of +eggs) came into contact with the tentacles, and seemed paralysed for a +time. The hydra made no attempt to convey the captive to its mouth, but +held it tight until another Water Flea, a round merry little fellow +(_Chydorus sphæricus_), came to the rescue, and assisted _Canthocamptus_ +to escape by tugging at her tail. This friendly action may not have been +prompted by the intelligence which seemed to suggest it, but those who +have kept tame soldier-crabs and prawns in an aquarium, will not be +indisposed to attribute to the crustaceans more brains than they have +usually credit for. It must, however, be confessed that the subsequent +conduct of Mrs. Canthocamptus did not indicate the possession of much +prudence, for she learnt no lesson from experience, but repeatedly swam +against her enemy's tentacles, suffered many captures, and only escaped +being devoured through the indifference, or want of appetite, which the +polyp evinced. + +[Illustration: A, _Canthocamptus minutus_; B, _Chydorus sphæricus_; C +and D, Capsules and poison-thread of polyp; E, _Tricodina pediculus_, +side view and under view; F, _Kerona polyporum.--Microg. Dict._] + +On the body of the _Canthocamptus_ were some small transparent vases or +bottles, containing living objects, which sprang up and down. These +were members of the _Vorticella_ family, called _Cothurnia_, and will +be hereafter described. + +[Illustration: _Hydra viridis_, in various shapes.] + +Watching the hydra it was curious to note the changes of form which +these creatures are able to assume. Now the tentacles were short and +thick, and the body squat; now the body was elongated, like the stem of +a palm tree, and the tentacles hung gracefully from the top. From some +of the polyps little round buds were growing, while other buds were +already developed into miniature copies of the parent, and only attached +by a slender stalk. In a few days many of these left the maternal side, +fixed their own little tails to the glass, and commenced housekeeping on +their own account. + +Polyps may be obtained at all times of the year by bringing home +duckweed, conferva, and other water-plants from the ponds. Some hauls +may be unsuccessful, but if one pond is not propitious others should be +tried. The plants should be put in a capacious vessel of water, and +placed in the light, where, if polyps be present, they will show +themselves within twenty-four hours, either attached to the sides of the +glass, or hanging from the plants, or suspended head downwards from the +upper film of the water. They are elegant objects, and may be kept +without difficulty for some weeks. After being confined in a small +quantity of water for purposes of examination, they should be carefully +replaced in the larger vessel, and may thus be used again and again +without suffering any injury. A low power--a three or two-inch glass--or +a one-inch, reduced by employing the erector--is the most convenient for +examining the whole creature, but higher powers are necessary to make +out its minute structure. They should be viewed with direct and oblique +light, as transparent and also as opaque objects. In the latter case the +"Lieberkuhn," or polished silver speculum, is convenient, and if the +microscope is not furnished with Lister's dark wells, a small piece of +black paper may be stuck behind the object, by simply wetting it with +the tongue.[4] + +[4] The side silver reflector is useful for illuminating such objects. + +Although the polyps are remarkable for the simplicity of their +organization, they do not the less exhibit the wonderful nature of +animal life. Their bodies are composed of the substance, called +_sarcode_, in which is imbedded a colouring matter resembling that in +the leaves of plants; every part possesses irritability and +contractility, and they are very sensitive to the stimulus of light. The +outer layer of their bodies is harder than the inner layer. These +layers are severally called _ectoderm_ and _endoderm_. They may be cut +and grafted like trees, and if turned inside out, the new inside digests +and assimilates as well as the old. Whether any form of consciousness +can belong to creatures which have no distinct nervous system is open to +doubt, but it would seem probable from their movements that food and +light afford them something like a pleasurable sensation in a very +humble degree. If we were sufficiently acquainted with the secrets of +molecular combination we might discover that the various functions of +these simple organisms were discharged by different _particles_, +although it is only in higher creatures that muscular particles are +aggregated into muscles, or nerve particles into nerves. + +Having examined the general appearance and proceedings of the hydra, let +us cut off a tentacle, or take a small specimen and gently crush it by +pressing down the cover of the live box, and place the object so +prepared under a power of about three hundred linear. If we then +illuminate it with a moderate quantity of oblique light, we shall +discover round the edge of the tentacle a number of small cells or +capsules, from some of which a very slender wire or thread will be +emitted.[5] These are the stinging organs of the polyp, and resemble +those which Mr. Gosse has so ably elucidated in the sea anemones. Some +writers have endeavoured to show that they are not stinging organs at +all, but so large an amount of evidence to the contrary is accumulated +in Mr. Gosse's 'Actinologia Britannica,' that no reasonable doubt +remains. The stinging capsules of the polyp are shown in the annexed +sketch, and also the way in which they are employed, for it fortunately +happened that on exposing one of the hydras to pressure in the live box, +a small worm (_Anguillula_) escaped, which had been pierced with the +minute weapons which are supposed to convey a poison into the wound. The +authors of the 'Micrographic Dictionary' think that the prongs of the +forks, which will be seen to point upwards in the sketch,[6] are +springs, and occupy a reversed position in the capsule cells, and that +their function is to throw out the threads. However this may be, the +polyps, and similarly endowed creatures, have the power of darting out +their poison threads with considerable force, and Mr. Gosse found that +the anemone was able to pierce a thick piece of human skin. + +[5] See page 34, C and D. + +[6] See page 38. + +[Illustration: Anguillula pierced by stinging organs of the _Hydra +viridis_.] + +The same excellent observer attributes the emission of the anemone +poison threads, which he considers hollow, to the injection of a fluid. +In their quiescent state, he thinks they are drawn in, like the finger +of a glove, and are forced out as the liquid enters their slender tubes. +Possibly the polyp stinging organs may have the same structure. + +Notwithstanding their dangerous weapons, polyps are often infested with +a parasite, the _Trichodina pediculus_, as shown in Fig. E, page 49, and +it must happen that either this visitation is not disagreeable, or that +the Trichodina is not influenced by the poison. + +As the plants in the bottles decayed, some of the animalcules died off +and others appeared. In one bottle, containing decaying chara, +_Paramecia_ abounded. The _Paramecia_, of which there are various +species, have always been favourite objects with microscopists. The +Germans call them "slipper animalcules," and they vary in size from +1--96"[7] to 1--1150". They are flat rounded-oblong creatures, with a +distinct integument or skin, "through which numerous vibratile cilia +pass in regular rows."[8] They are furnished with a distinct mouth, and +adult specimens exhibit star-shaped contractile vesicles in great +perfection. + +[7] The usual mode of giving dimensions is by fractions thus expressed: +1--96" means one ninety-sixth of an inch. + +[8] 'Micrographic Dictionary.' + +The swarm of specimens before us belong to one species, _Paramecium +aurelia_, the _Chrysalis animalcule_, and they crowd every portion of +the little water-drop we have taken up, and examined with a power of +about one hundred linear. When they are sufficiently quiet a power of +about four hundred may be used with advantage, and Pritchard recommends +adding a little indigo and carmine to the water, in order to see the +cilia more clearly, or rather to render their action more plain. The +cilia are disposed lengthwise, and Ehrenberg counted in some rows sixty +or seventy of them, making an aggregate of three thousand six hundred +and forty organs of motion in one small animated speck. This number +seems large, but although we have never performed the feat of counting +them, we should have expected it to prove much greater. Unlike most +animalcules they are susceptible of being preserved by drying upon +glass, and we subjoin a figure from Pritchard, of one thus treated, in +which the star-shaped vesicles are clearly seen. These curious organs +communicate with other vessels, and, as we have previously stated, are +probably connected with respiration and excretion. + +[Illustration: Paramecium aurelia. A dried specimen showing the +vesicles.--_Pritchard._] + +The genus _Paramecium_ is now confined to those creatures which exhibit +rows of longitudinal cilia of uniform length, which are destitute of +hooks, styles, or other organs of motion than the cilia, which have a +lateral mouth, and no eye-spots. One mode of increase is by division, +which may be easily observed; another is through the formation of true +eggs as traced by Balbiani. + +Another of the treasures from the pond was a species of _Trachelius_, or +long-necked ciliated animalcule, which kept darting in and out of a +slimy den, attached to the leaf of a water-plant. The body was stout and +fish-shaped, the tail blunt, and the neck furnished with long +conspicuous cilia, which enabled the advancing and retreating movements +to be made with great rapidity. The motions of this creature exhibit +more appearance of purpose and design than is common with animalcules, +but in proportion as these observations are prolonged, the student will +be impressed with the difficulty of assuming that anything like a +reasoning faculty and volition, is proved by movements that bear some +resemblance to those of higher animals, whose cerebral capacities are +beyond a doubt. It is, however, almost impossible to witness motions +which are neither constant nor periodic, without fancying them to be +dictated by some sort of intelligence. We must, nevertheless, be +cautious, lest we allow ourselves to be deceived by reasoning so +seductive, as the vital operations of the lowest organisms may be merely +illustrations of blind obedience to stimuli, in which category we must +reckon food, and until we arrive at forms of being which clearly possess +a ganglionic system, we have no certainty that a real will exists, even +of the simplest kind; and perhaps we must go still higher before we +ought to believe in its presence. + +Ehrenberg was much struck with the restless character of many +infusoria--whether he looked at them by day or by night, they were never +still. In fact their motions are like the involuntary actions which take +place in the human frame; and if attached to their bodies we observe +cilia that never sleep, the living membrane of some of our own organs, +the nose, for example, is similarly ciliated, and keeps up a perpetual +though unconscious work. + + + + +CHAPTER IV. + +MARCH. + + Paramecia--Effects of Sunlight--Pterodina patina--Curious + tail--Use of a Compressorium--Internal structure of + Pterodina--Metopidia--Trichodina + pediculus--Cothurnia--Salpina--Its three-sided box--Protrusion + of its gizzard mouth. + + +The _Paramecia_, noticed in the last chapter, have increased and +multiplied their kind without any fear lest the due adjustment between +population and food should fail to be preserved. A small drop of the +scum from the surface of the water in their bottle is an astounding +sight. They move hither and thither in countless numbers, seldom +jostling, although thick as herrings in a tub, and in many portions of +the field the process of self-fissure, or multiplication by division, is +going on without any symptoms of discomfort on the part of the parent +creature. This is an interesting sight, but we will not linger over it, +for the sun is shining, and there is enough warmth in the air to make it +probable that the ponds will be more prolific than in the cold winter +months. Sunshine is a great thing for the microscopic hunter; it brings +swarms of creatures to the surface, and the Rotifers are especially fond +of its genial beams. Even if we imitate it by a bright lamp, we shall +attract crowds of live dancing specks to the illuminated side of a +bottle, and may thus easily effect their capture by the dipping-tube. + +[Illustration: Pterodina patina.] + +This year the March sunshine was not lost, for on the third of that +month I obtained a bottleful of conferva from a pond about a mile from +my house, and lying at the foot of the Highgate hills. Water-fleas were +immediately discovered in abundance, together with some minute worms, +and a ferocious-looking larva covered with scales; but what attracted +most attention was a Rotifer, like a transparent animated soup-plate, +from near the middle of which depended a tail, which swayed from side to +side, as the creature swam along. The head exhibited two little red +eyes; two tufts of cilia rowed the living disk through the water, and +the gizzard worked with a rapid snapping motion, that left no doubt the +ciliary whirlpools had brought home no slender stores of invisible food. +Sometimes the end of the tail acted as a sucker, and fixed the animal +tightly to the glass, when the wheels were protruded, and the body +swayed to and fro. Then the sucker action ceased, and as the creature +swam away, a tuft of cilia was thrust out from the extremity of the +tail. A power of one hundred linear was sufficient to enable the general +nature of this beautiful object to be observed, but to bring out the +details, much greater amplification was required, and this would be +useless if the little fidget could not be kept still. + +[Illustration: Pterodina patina--gizzard.] + +The size of the creature, whose name we may as well mention was +_Pterodina patina_, rendered this practicable, but required some care. +The longest diameter of the body, which was not quite round, was about +1--120", so that it was visible to the naked eye, and as a good many +were swimming together, one could be captured without much difficulty, +and transferred with a very small drop of water to the live-box. Then +the cover had to be put on so as to squeeze the animal just enough to +keep it still without doing it any damage, or completely stopping its +motions. This was a troublesome task, and often a little overpressure +prevented its success. + +Some observers always use in these cases an instrument called a +_compressorium_, by which the amount of pressure is regulated by a lever +or a fine screw; but whether the student possess one or not, he should +learn to accomplish the same result by dexterously manipulating a +well-made live-box. We will suppose the _Pterodina_ successfully caged, +and a power of about one hundred and fifty linear brought to bear upon +her, for our specimen is of the "female persuasion." This will suffice +to demonstrate the disposition and relation of the several parts, after +which one of from four hundred to five hundred linear may be used with +great advantage, though in this case the illumination must be carefully +adjusted, and its intensity and obliquity frequently changed, until the +best effect is obtained. + +We find, on thus viewing the Pterodina, that it is a complex, highly +organized creature, having its body protected by a _carapace_, like the +shell of a tortoise, but as flexible as a sheet of white gelatine paper, +which it resembles in appearance. Round the margin of this carapace are +a number of little bosses or dots, which vary in different individuals. +The cilia are not disposed, as at first appeared, in two separate and +distinct disks, but are continuous, as in the annexed sketch. Down each +side are two long muscular bands, distinctly _striated_, and when they +contract, the ciliary apparatus is drawn in. As this contraction takes +place, two apparently elastic bands, to which the ciliary lobes are +attached, are bent downwards, till they look like the C springs behind a +gentleman's carriage; and they regain their former position of slight +curvature, when the cilia are again thrust out. + +[Illustration: Pterodina patina--tail-foot.] + +The gizzard is three-lobed, and curiously grasped by forked expansions +of the handles of the hammers. The tail, or tail-foot, can be withdrawn +or thrust out at the will of the creature; and when in a good position +for observation, a slight additional pressure will keep it so for +examination. Delicate muscular longitudinal bands, forked towards the +end of their course, supply the means of performing some of its motions, +and one, or perhaps two, spiral threads extend through the upper half of +its length, and either act as muscles, or as elastic springs for its +extension. The intestines and other viscera are clearly exhibited, and a +strong ciliary action conducts the food to the gizzard-mouth. + +To return to the tail. One spiral fibre is easily discovered; but I +have often, and at an interval of months, seen the appearance of two, +and am in some doubt whether this was a deception, arising from the +compression employed, or was a genuine indication. + +[Illustration: A. Metopidia acuminata, as drawn by Mr. Gosse. B. +Specimen as seen and described in text. _c._ Mouth or gizzard.] + +Where this Rotifer occurs I have usually found it plentiful, but +unfortunately could obtain no constant supplies after I had determined +to make a special study of the remarkable tail, which is much more +complicated than I have described. The _Pterodina_ lived for some time +in captivity, and for a week or two I could obtain them from my glass +tank. They were likewise to be found for some weeks in the same part of +the pond, but not all over it, until one day not a single specimen could +be discovered, notwithstanding a persevering search nor was I +afterwards able to get any from that pond during the remainder of the +year. + +[Illustration: Trichodina pediculus.] + +Several other Rotifers, with and without carapaces, were among the same +mass of confervæ, among them a _Metopidia_, with a firm shell, a forked +jointed tail, and a projection in front which worked like a pickaxe +among the decaying weed. There were likewise specimens of the +long-necked animalcules (Trachelii), groups of Vorticella, some +specimens of Volvox, and a small _Trichodina pediculus_, which, when +magnified two hundred and sixty linear, was about the size of a sixpence +and equally round. The edge was beautifully fringed with a circle of +cilia; in an inner circle was a row of locomotive organs, and the centre +exhibited vacuoles constantly opening and shutting. This creature, as +before explained, is often found as a parasite upon the polyps. On one +occasion a glimpse was caught of a Rotifer similar in shape to the +common wheel animalcule, but with a yellow inside. Possibly it was the +object so beautifully delineated by Mr. Gosse, in his "Tenby," and +described as the "Yellow Philodine," but this must remain in doubt, as +it managed to escape before it could be secured. + +[Illustration: A. Cothurnia imberbis--('Micrograph. Dict.') B and C. The +specimens described in text. The figures give the _linear_ +magnification.] + +By the 18th of the month the Vorticellids were much more plentiful, and +their changes easily watched; many left their stalks while under the +microscope, after which some rushed about like animated and demented +hats, others twirled round like tee-to-tums, while others took a rest +before commencing their wild career. But the common Vorticellæ were not +the only or the most interesting representations of their charming +order, for upon some threads of conferva were descried several elegant +crystal vases standing upon short foot-stalks, and containing little +creatures that jumped up and down like "Jack in the box." These were so +minute, that a power of four hundred and thirty linear was +advantageously brought to bear upon them. When elongated their bodies +were somewhat pear-shaped, but more slender, and variegated with +vacuoles and particles of food. The mouths resembled those of +Vorticellæ, and put forth circles of vibrating cilia. They were easily +alarmed, when the cilia were retracted, and down they sank to the bottom +of their vases, quickly to rise again. In one bottle there were two +living in friendly juxtaposition. This was not a case of matrimonial +felicity, nor of Siamese twins, but of _fission_, or reproduction by +division. The original inhabitant of the tube finding himself too fat, +or impelled by causes we do not understand, quietly divided himself in +two, and as the house was big enough, no enlargement was required. How +many stout puffy gentlemen must envy this process; how convenient to +have two thin lively specimens of humanity made out of one too obese for +locomotion. Man is, however, sometimes the victim of his superior +organization, and no process of "fission" can make the lusty lean.[9] + +[9] Balbiani in his 'Recherches sur les Phénomènes Sexuels des +Infusoires,' speaks of the Vorticellids as the only Infusoria dividing +longitudinally. In other species such appearances arise from +conjunction. + +The bottles in which these creatures live, in happy ignorance that they +are called by so crackjaw a name as _Cothurnia imberbis_, were described +as _Carapaces_ by Ehrenberg, but they bear no resemblance to the shell +of a turtle or crab. They are thrown off by the animals who preserve no +other connection with them than the attachment at the bottom. + +The Micrographic Dictionary describes the family Ophrydina as +corresponding to Vorticellina with a carapace. Stein places them with +Vorticellids, &c., amongst his Peritricha, which are characterised by a +spiral wreath of cilia round the mouth. + +Towards the end of the month a great number of black pear-shaped bodies +(Stentor niger), visible to the naked eye, were conspicuous in some +water from the Kentish Town ponds. Upon examination they were found to +be filled with granules that were red by reflected, and purple by +transmitted light. Each one had a spiral wreath of cilia, with a mouth +situated like those of the stentors, hereafter to be described, but none +of them became stationary, and in a few days they all disappeared. Stein +divides Ehrenberg's Stentor igneus from S. niger; the creature described +seems to have agreed with Stein's _igneus_, which he describes as having +blood-red lilac, cinnabar, or brown-red pigment particles, and as much +smaller than his S. niger. In the same water were specimens of that +singular Rotifer, the _Salpina_, about 1--150" long, and furnished with +a _lorica_, or carapace, resembling a three-sided glass box, closed +below, and slightly open along the back. At the top of this box were +four, and at the bottom three, points or horns, and the creature had one +eye and a forked tail. Keeping him company was another little Rotifer, +named after its appearance, _Monocerca rattus_, the 'One-tailed Rat.' +This little animal had green matter in its stomach, which was in +constant commotion. I ought to have observed that the Salpina repeatedly +thrust out its gizzard, and used it as an external mouth. In the annexed +sketch the Salpina is seen in a position that displays the dorsal +opening of the carapace. Its three-cornered shape is only shown by a +side view. + +[Illustration: Salpina redunca.] + +Here we close a brief account of what March winds brought in their +train. The next chapter will show the good fortune that attended April +showers. + + + + +CHAPTER V. + +APRIL. + + The beautiful Floscule--Mode of seeking for Tubicolor + Rotifers--Mode of illuminating the Floscule--Difficulty of + seeing the transparent tube--Protrusion of long + hairs--Lobes--Gizzard--Hairy lobes of Floscule not rotatory + organs--Glass troughs--Their construction and use--Movement of + globules in lobes of Floscule--Chætonotus larus--Its mode of + swimming--Coleps hirtus--Devourer of dead Entomostraca--Dead + Rotifer and Vibriones--Theories of fermentation and + putrefaction--Euplotes and Stylonichia--Fecundity of + Stylonichia. + + +Few living creatures deserve so well the appellation of "beautiful" as +the _Floscularia ornata_, or Beautiful Floscule, although to contemplate +a motionless and uncoloured portrait, one would imagine that it +exhibited no graces of either colour or form. Mr. Gosse has, however, +done it justice, and the drawing in his "Tenby" is executed with that +rare combination of scientific accuracy and artistic skill, for which +the productions of his pencil are renowned. + +[Illustration: The Beautiful Floscule. A.--Partially protruded. +B.--Freely protruded, with three eggs. C.--Appearance of young. +D.--Floscule seventeen hours old. D'.--Jaws of Floscule, as figured by +Mr. Gosse.] + +Probably the sketches in several works of authority representing the +long cilia as short bristles, are merely copies from old drawings, from +objects imperfectly seen under indifferent microscopes, and before +the refinements of illumination were understood. Be this as it may, any +reader will be fortunate if on an April, or any other morning, he or she +effects the capture of one of these exquisite objects, although the +first impression may not equal previous expectations, as the delicacy of +the organism is not disclosed by a mode of using the light which answers +well enough for the common infusoria. + +When the Floscules, or other tubicolar Rotifers are specially sought +for, the best way is to proceed to a pond where slender-leaved +water-plants grow, and to examine a few branches at a time in a phial of +water with a pocket-lens. They are all large enough to be discerned, if +present, in this manner, and as soon as one is found, others may be +expected, either in the same or in adjacent parts of the pond, for they +are gregarious in their habits. With many, however, the first finding of +a Floscule will be an accident, as was the case last April, when a small +piece of myriophyllum was placed in the live-box, and looked over to see +what it might contain. The first glimpse revealed an egg-shaped object, +of a brownish tint, stretching itself upon a stalk, and showing some +symptoms of hairs or cilia at its head. This was enough to indicate the +nature of the creature, and to show the necessity for a careful +management of the light, which being adjusted obliquely, gave quite a +new character to the scene. The dirty brown hue disappeared, and was +replaced by brilliant colours; while the hairs, instead of appearing few +and short, were found to be extremely numerous, very long, and +glistening like delicate threads of spun glass. + +Knowing that the Floscules live in transparent gelatinous tubes, such an +object was carefully looked for, but in this instance, as is not +uncommon, it was perfectly free from extraneous matter, and possessed +nearly the same refractive power as the water, so that displaying it to +advantage required some little trouble in the way of careful focusing, +and many experiments as to the best angle at which the mirror should be +turned to direct the light. When all was accomplished, it was seen that +the Floscule had her abode in a clear transparent cylinder, like a thin +confectioner's jar, which she did not touch except at the bottom, to +which her foot was attached. Lying aside her in the bottle were three +large eggs, and the slightest shock given to the table, induced her to +draw back in evident alarm. Immediately afterwards she slowly protruded +a dense bunch of the fine long hairs, which quivered in the light, and +shone with a delicate bluish-green lustre, here and there varied by +opaline tints. + +The hairs were thrust out in a mass, somewhat after the mode in which +the old-fashioned telescope hearth-brooms were made to put forth their +bristles. As soon as they were completely everted, together with the +upper portion of the Floscule, six lobes gradually separated, causing +the hairs to fall on all sides in a graceful shower, and when the +process was complete, they remained perfectly motionless, in six hollow +fan-shaped tufts, one being attached to each lobe. Some internal ciliary +action, quite distinct from the hairs, and which has never been +precisely understood, caused gentle currents to flow towards the mouth +in the middle of the lobes, and from the motion of the gizzard, +imperfectly seen through the integument, and from the rapid filling of +the stomach with particles of all hues, it was plain that captivity had +not destroyed the Floscule's appetite, and that the drop of water in the +live-box contained a good supply of food. + +Sometimes the particles swallowed were too small to be discerned, +although their aggregate effect was visible; but often a monad or larger +object was ingulfed, but without any ciliary action being visible to +account for the journey they were evidently compelled to perform. The +long hairs took no part whatever in the foraging process, and as they do +not either provide victuals or minister to locomotion, they are clearly +not, as was supposed by early observers, representatives of the +"wheels," which the ordinary Rotifers present. Neither can the +cylindrical jar or bottle be justly deemed to occupy the position of the +lorica, or carapace which we have before described. The general +structure of the creature and the nature of its gizzard distinctly +marked it out as a member of the family we call "Rotifers," but the +absence of anything like "wheels" proves that those organs are not +essential characteristics of this class. + +Noticeable currents are not always produced when the mouth of this +Floscule is fully expanded. On one occasion, one having five lobes was +discovered standing at such an angle in a glass trough that the aperture +could be looked down into. The position rendered it impossible to use a +higher power than about two hundred linear, but with this, and the +employment of carmine, nothing like a vortex was seen during a whole +evening, although a less power was sufficient to show the ciliary +whirlpools made by small specimens of _Epistylis_ and _Vaginicola_, +which were in the small vessel. The density of the integument was +unfavorable to viewing the action of the gizzard, but it could be +indistinctly perceived. The contractions and subsequent expansions of +the cup, formed by the upper part of the creature, may be one way in +which its food is drawn in, but there is no doubt it can produce +currents when it thinks proper. Sometimes animalcules in the vicinity of +Floscules whirl about as if under the influence of such currents. Some +may be seen to enter the space between the lobes, swim about inside, and +then get out again, while every now and then one will be sucked in too +far for retreat. + +Above the gizzard in the Horned Floscule,[10] I have seen an appearance +as if a membrane or curtain was waving to and fro, while another was +kept in a fixed perpendicular position. Mr. Gosse, speaking of this +genus, observes "that the whole of the upper part of the body is lined +with a sensitive, contractile, partially opaque membrane, which a little +below the disk recedes from the walls of the body, and forms a +diaphragm, with a highly contractile and versatile central orifice. At +some distance lower down another diaphragm occurs, and the ample chamber +thus enclosed forms a kind of _crop_, or receptacle for the captured +prey." + +[10] The Horned Floscules (_F. cornuta_) which I have found, and which +bred in a glass jar, were not so large as those described by Mr. Dobie, +as quoted in 'Pritchard's Infusoria.' Mr. Dobie's specimens were 1--40" +when extended; mine about half that size, five-lobed, and with a long +slender proboscis, standing in a wavy line outside one lobe. Mr. Dobie +also describes an _F. campanulata_, with five flattened lobes. The +'Micrographic Dictionary' pronounces these two species "doubtfully +distinct." I have three or four times met with a variety of _F. ornata_, +in which one lobe was much enlarged and flattened, but they had no +proboscis. In what I take for _F. cornuta_, the horn or proboscis has +sometimes been a conspicuous object, and at others so fine and +transparent as to be only visible in certain lights. + +"From the ventral side of the ample crop that precedes the stomach, +there springs in _F. ornata_ a perpendicular membrane or veil, partly +extending across the cavity. This is free, except at the vertical edge, +by which it is attached to the side of the chamber, and being ample and +of great delicacy, it continually floats and waves from side to side. At +the bottom of this _veil_, but on the dorsal side, are placed the jaws, +consisting of a pair of curved, unjointed, but free _mallei_, with a +membranous process beneath each." + +The Beautiful Floscule could always be made to repeat the process of +retreating into her den, and coming out again to spread her elegant +plumes before our eyes, by giving the table a smart knock, and her +colours and structure were well exhibited by the dark-ground +illumination, which has been explained in a previous page. + +An object like this should be watched at intervals for hours and even +days, especially if the eggs are nearly ready to give up their infantile +contents. This was the case with the specimen described, and after a few +hours a young Floscule escaped, looking very much like a clumsy little +grub. After a few awkward wriggles the new-born baby became more quiet, +and on looking at it again at the expiration of seventeen hours, it had +developed into the shape of a miniature plum-pudding, with five or six +tiny lobes expanding their tufts of slender hair. Unfortunately its +further proceedings were not seen, or it would have been interesting to +note the growth of the foot, and the formation of the gelatinous tube, +which is probably thrown off in rings. + +To view the details of the structure of a Floscule, it must be placed in +a live-box or compressorium, and if specimens are scarce, they should +not be allowed to remain in the limited quantity of water those +contrivances hold, after the observations are concluded, but should be +carefully removed, and placed in a little vial, such as homoeopathists +use for their medicine. By such means an individual may be kept alive +for many days. It is also interesting to place a little branch of the +plant occupied by Floscules or similar creatures, in a glass trough, +where they may be made quite at home, and their proceedings agreeably +watched by a one-inch or two-thirds power. These troughs,[11] which can +be obtained of the optician, should be of plate glass, about three +inches long, nearly the same height, and about half an inch wide. If +narrower, or much taller, they will not stand, which is a great +inconvenience. The pieces of glass are stuck together with marine glue, +and a very simple contrivance enables the plants or other objects to be +pressed near the front, and thus brought into better view. A strip of +glass, rather narrower than the width of the trough, is dropped into it, +and allowed to fall to the bottom. Then a piece of glass rather shorter +than the trough, and rather higher than its front side, is placed so as +to slope from the front of the bottom towards the back at the top. The +piece of glass first dropped in keeps it in the right position, and the +trough is thus made into a V-shaped vessel, wide at the top and +gradually narrowing. Any object then placed in it will fall till it fits +some part of the V, where it will remain for observation. A small wedge +of cork enables the moveable piece of glass to be thrown forwards, until +it assumes any angle, or is brought parallel to the front of the trough. + +[11] The shallow cells with thin sliding covers devised by Mr. Curteis +(of Baker's), are still more convenient when no pressure is required, +and the objects are small. When not under the microscope they can be +kept full of water by immersion in a tumbler. + +A power of five or six hundred diameters generally enables a movement of +small globules to be seen at the extremity of the lobes of the Floscule, +and the gizzard may be made plain by dissolving the rest of the creature +in a drop of solution of caustic potash. It also becomes more visible as +the supply of food falls short. Mr. Gosse describes the body as "lined +with a yellowish vascular membrane," and young specimens exhibit two red +eyes, which may or may not be found in adults. When these eyes of +Rotifers are not readily conspicuous, they must be sought for by opaque +illumination, or by the dark-ground method which, especially with the +parabola, is successful in bringing them out. + +Naturalists, and possibly the specimens also, do not always agree in +the number of lobes assigned to the "Beautiful Floscule," and although +it is easy enough to count them in _some_ positions, the observer may +have to exercise a good deal of patience before he is certain whether +they are five or six. For a long evening only five could be discerned in +the specimen now described, but the next night six were apparent without +difficulty or doubt. The hairs also will not appear anything like their +true length or number, unless the object-glass is good, and great care +is taken not to obscure them by a blaze of ill-directed light. + +[Illustration: Chætonotus larus (swimming).] + +After the Floscules had been sufficiently admired and put aside, for +observations to be repeated on future occasions, a Rotifer attracted +attention by his merry-andrew pranks, throwing himself in all directions +by means of two long and extremely mobile toes attached to his +tail-foot. Then came a creature swimming like an otter, thrusting his +head about on all sides, and looking much more intelligent than most of +his compeers of the pond. Looked at vertically, he was somewhat +slipper-shaped, the rounded heel forming his head, then narrowing to a +waist, and expanding towards the other end, which projected in a fork. +All round him were long cilia, which were conspicuous near the head, and +a fine line indicated the passage from his mouth to the stomach, which +seemed full of granular matter. Presently he took to crawling, or rather +running, over a thread of conferva, and then his back was elegantly +arched, and his cilia stood erect like the quills of a porcupine. This +was the _Chætonotus larus_. + +[Illustration: Chætonotus larus (crawling).] + +In Pritchard's "Infusoria," the views of those writers are followed who +rank this animal amongst the Rotifers, and place it in the family +_Icthidina_. To help out this theory, the cilia upon the ventral surface +are imagined to form a "band-like rotary organ;" but in truth they bear +no resemblance whatever to the so-called wheels of the ordinary +Rotifers, nor is there anything like the gizzard which true Rotifers +present. Ehrenberg treated it as a Rotifer, and Dujardin placed it among +the Infusoria, in a particular class, comprehending symmetrical +organisms. The 'Microscopic Dictionary' remarks that its "structure +requires further investigation,"[12] and while the learned decide all +the intricate questions of its zoological rank, the ordinary observer +will be pleased to watch its singular aspect and lively motions. Its +size, according to the 'Micrographic Dictionary,' varies from 1--710" to +1--220", and while its general proceeding may be watched with an inch or +two-thirds object-glass, and the second eye-piece, a power of five +hundred linear (obtained by a quarter or a fifth) is required to make +out the details of its structure. If placed in a live-box with threads +of conferva, and a little decayed vegetation, it may be observed to +group about among them, and shake them like a dog. + +[12] See a valuable paper by Mr. Gosse, "History of the Hairy-backed +Animalcules," 'Intellectual Observer,' vol. v, p. 387, in which the +known species are described and reasons given for following Vogt and +ranging them with the Turbellarian worms. + +We have said that water-fleas were among the inhabitants of a bottle +filled at the pond, and as they go the way of all flesh, it is common to +find some odd-looking animalcules ready to devour their mortal remains. +These are creatures shaped like beer-barrels, upon short legs, and which +swim with a tubby rolling gait. Looking at one of these little tubs +lengthwise, a number of lines are seen, as though the edge of each stave +projected a little above the general level, and transverse markings are +also apparent, which may be compared to hoops. This is the _Coleps +hirtus_, which differs from the usual type of Infusoria, by being +symmetrical, that is, divisible into two equal and similar halves. The +dimensions of this species vary from 1--570 to 1--430, and its colour +varies from white to brown. It has been observed to increase by +transverse self-division, and has two orifices, one at each end, for +receiving food and ejecting the remains. It often requires some little +trouble to get a good view of the cilia, which are arranged in +transverse and longitudinal rows. A power of one hundred and fifty +linear is convenient for viewing it in motion, but when quiet under +pressure, one of five or six hundred may be used with advantage. + +[Illustration: Coleps hirtus.] + +Among the rubbish at the bottom of the bottle, in which the coleps was +found, was a minute dead Rotifer, the flesh of which was fast +disappearing, but upon being examined with a power of nine hundred and +sixty diameters, it was observed to swarm with extremely minute +_vibriones_, the largest only appearing under that immense magnification +like chains of bluish-green globules, not bigger than the heads of +minikin pins, while the smallest were known by a worm-like wriggling, +although their structure could not be defined. These _vibriones_ are +probably members of the vegetable world, and they always appear when +animal matter undergoes putrefaction. + +M. Pasteur has brought forward elaborate experiments to show that the +development of the yeast plant is an act correlative to alcoholic +fermentation, and in like manner the growth of _vibriones_ may stand in +correlation to putrefactive decomposition. + +[Illustration: A, Euplotes (patella); B, side view of ditto; C, +stylonichia.] + +Ehrenberg considered them animals, and fancied he detected in them a +plurality of stomachs; but the vegetable theory is the more probable, at +any rate of the species under our notice, which is often seen, though +not always so minute. + +At this time two interesting animalcules were very plentiful--the +_Euplotes patella_, and _Stylonichia_, both remarkable as exhibiting an +advance in organization, which approximates them to the higher animals. +In addition to cilia they possess _styles_, which take the place of the +limbs of more elaborately-constructed creatures, and give a variety to +their means of locomotion. The _Euplotes_ is furnished with an oval +carapace covering the upper surface, which in different individuals, and +probably at different ages, exhibits slightly varied markings round its +margin, which in the specimen drawn above consisted of dots. They can +run, climb, or swim, and exemplify a singular habit which several of the +infusoria possess, that of moving for a little time in one direction, +and then suddenly, and without any apparent cause, reversing it. If the +reader is fond of learned appellations, he can call this _diastrophy_, +but we do not know that he will be any the wiser for it. + +The Stylonichia are oval animalcules, surrounded by cilia, and having +moreover a collection of styles, both straight and curved, the latter +called _uncini_, or little hooks. They swim steadily on, and then dart +back, but not so far as they have advanced, and may be seen to keep up +this fidgety motion by the hour together. Pritchard tells us Ehrenberg +found that a single animalcule lived nine days; during the first +twenty-four hours it was developed by transverse self-division into +three animals; these in twenty-four hours formed two each in the same +manner, so that by self-division only (without ova), these animalcules +increased three or four-fold in twenty-four hours, and _may thus produce +a million_ from a single _animalcule in ten days_. Such are the amazing +powers of reproduction conferred upon these humble creatures, powers +which are fully employed when the surrounding circumstances are +favorable, and which, in the aggregate, change the condition of large +masses of matter, and bring within the circle of life millions upon +millions of particles every minute of the day. + + + + +CHAPTER VI. + +MAY. + + Floscularia cornuta--Euchlanis triquetra--Melicerta ringens--its + powers as brickmaker, architect, and mason--Mode of viewing the + Melicerta--Use of glass-cell--Habits of Melicerta--Curious + Attitudes--Leave their tubes at + death--Carchesium--Epistylis--Their elegant tree forms--A + Parasitic Epistylis like the "Old Man of the Sea"--Halteria and + its Leaps--Aspidisca Lynceus. + + +May, the first of summer months, and of old famous for floral games, +which found their latest patrons in the chimney-sweeps of London, is a +good time for the microscopist among the ponds, for the increase of +warmth and heat favours both animal and vegetable life, and so we found +as we carried home some tops of myriophyllum, and soon discovered a +colony of tubicolor rotifers among the tiny branches. They proved to be +Floscules, generally resembling the _F. ornata_, described in a previous +page, but having a long slender proboscis hanging like a loose ringlet +down one side. The cilia or hairs were not so long as in the Beautiful +Floscules we had before obtained, nor was their manner of opening so +elegant; but they were, nevertheless, objects of great interest, and +were probably specimens of the _Floscularia cornuta_. A swimming rotifer +in a carapace somewhat fiddle-shaped, with one eye in its forehead, and +a two-pronged tail sticking out behind (the _Euchlanis triquetra_), also +served to occupy attention; but a further search among the myriophyllum +revealed more treasures of the tube-dwelling kind. These were specimens +of that highly curious Rotifer, the _Melicerta ringens_, who, not +content with dwelling, like the Floscules, in a gelatinous bottle, is at +once brickmaker, mason, and architect, and fabricates as pretty a tower +as it is easy to conceive. The creature itself stands upon a retractile +foot-stalk, and thrusts out above its battlements a large head, with +four leaf-like expansions surrounded by cilia. Between the lower lobes, +or leaves, the gizzard is seen grinding away, and above it is an organ, +not always displayed, and of which Mr. Gosse was fortunate enough to +discover the use. This eminent naturalist likens it to the circular +ventilator sometimes inserted in windows, and he found it was the +machine for making the yellow ornamental bricks of which the tower is +composed. Pellet by pellet, or brick by brick, does the Melicerta build +her house, which widens gradually from the foundation to the summit, and +every layer is placed with admirable regularity. + +In order to obtain the materials for her brickmaking the Melicerta must +have the power of modifying the direction of the ciliary currents, so as +to throw a stream of small particles into the mould, which is a muscular +organ, and capable of secreting a waterproof cement, by which they are +fastened together. The result is, not to produce anything like the tubes +made by the caddis-worms out of grains of sand, but entirely to change +the appearance of the materials employed. All large particles are +rejected, and only those retained which will form a homogeneous pulp +with the viscid secretion; and when the process is complete the head of +the creature is bent down, and the pellet deposited in its appropriate +place. Each pellet appears originally to possess a more or less conical +figure, but when they are squeezed together to make a compact wall they +all tend to a hexagonal form, by which they are able to touch at all +points, and any holes or interstices are avoided. + +According to Professor Williamson the young Melicerta commences her +house by secreting "a thin hyaline cylinder," and the first row of +pellets are deposited, not at the base as would be expected, but in a +ring about the middle of the tube. "At first new additions are made to +both extremities of the enlarging ring; but the jerking constrictions of +the animal at length force the caudal end of the cylinder down upon the +leaf, to which it becomes securely cemented by the same viscous +secretion as causes the little spheres to cohere." + +Round the margins of the lobes or expansions may be seen delicate +threads towards which others radiate; these are thought by Mr. Gosse to +be portions of a nervous system, and two calcars or feelers serve as +organs of relation. The young Melicertas are likewise furnished with a +pair of eyes, which are probably rudimentary, and disappear as they grow +up. + +The Melicerta tubes, being large enough to be visible to the naked eye, +are easily crushed in the live-box, and to avoid this, they are +conveniently viewed in a shallow glass cell, covered up as before +described. By occasionally changing the water one may be kept for days +in the same cell, and will reward the pains by frequently exposing its +flower-like head. Usually the horns or feelers come out first, and then +a lump of flesh. After this, if all seems right, the wheels appear, and +make a fine whirlpool, as may be readily seen by the use of a little +indigo or carmine. + +The Melicerta is, however, an awkward object to undertake to show to our +friends, for as they knock at the door she is apt to turn sulky, and +when once in this mood it is impossible to say when her fair form will +reappear. At times the head is wagged about in all directions with +considerable vehemence, playing singular antics, and distorting her +lobes so as to exhibit a Punch and Judy profile. When these creatures +die they leave their tubes, which are often found empty in the ponds +they frequent. The Melicertas are conveniently viewed with a power of +from sixty to one hundred linear, and a colony of them may be kept alive +for some weeks in a glass jar or tank. + +Among the remainder of my tiny captives were two beautiful members of +the Vorticella family, _Epistylis_ and _Carchesium_. The reader will +remember that in the Vorticella previously described, the bells stood +upon stalks that were very flexible, and retractile by means of a muscle +running down their length. The _Epistylis_ is, as its name imports, the +dweller on a _pillar_. The stem is stiff, or only slightly flexible, and +has no apparatus by which it can be drawn down. The specimen mentioned +stood like a palm-tree, and the large oval bells drooped elegantly on +all sides, as its portrait will show. At times they nodded with a rapid +jerk. + +[Illustration: Epistylis.] + +The _Carchesium_ differs from the common _Vorticella_, by branching like +a tree, but the stems are all retractile, although the trunk seldom +exercises the power. A group of these creatures presents a spectacle of +extraordinary beauty--it looks like a tree from fairy-land, in which +every leaf has a sentient life. In general structure the bells of the +_Epistylis_ and the _Carchesium_ resemble the common _Vorticella_, and +like them may be seen with a power of about one hundred linear for +general effect, and with a higher one for the examination of special +points. Pritchard notices three species of _Carchesium_, and eighteen of +_Epistylis_;[13] some of which it is to be hoped will turn out to be +only varieties. + +[13] An interesting _Epistylis_, called _Digitalis_, from its bells +resembling fox-glove flowers in shape, occurs as a parasite upon the +_Cyclops quadricornis_, a very common entomostracan in fresh-water +ponds. At this moment I have a beautiful specimen, branching like a +bushy tree, and attached to the tail of a _Cyclops_, who can scarcely +move under his burden, which is like Sinbad's "Old Man of the Sea." + +Towards the end of this month rotifers abounded, and polyps were +plentiful. Among the rotifers was one about a two-hundredth of an inch +long, protected by a carapace, and having a tail terminating in a single +style, hence called "Monostyle." There is perhaps no class of creatures +that present so many curious and unexpected forms as the rotifers; and +although we have noticed a good many, there are far more that remain to +be found and described. + +The water in which the preceding animals dwelt was enlivened by the +jumps of the _Halteria_, a little globe surrounded by long fine cilia, +with which its movements were effected; and its companion was the +_Aspidisca lynceus_, an oval animalcule, having a distinct cilia or +_lorica_, and furnished, in addition to cilia, with bristles, which +enable it to walk and climb as well as swim. + +There were also some eggs of rotifers attached to the water plants, in +which motion could be descried at intervals, and a little red eye +observed. These eggs are always large in proportion to the creatures +that lay them, and if they escape being devoured by enemies, may be +watched until their contents step forth. + +In this, as in other months, omission is made of creatures that have +already come under notice, or our list would assume larger dimensions. + + + + +CHAPTER VII. + +JUNE AND JULY. + + Lindia Torulosa--OEcistes Crystallinus--A professor of + deportment on stilts--Philodina--Changes of form and + habits--Structure of Gizzard in Philodina family--Mr. Gosse's + description--Motions of Rotifers--Indications of a will--Remarks + on the motions of lower creatures--Various theories--Possibility + of reason--Reflex actions Brain of insects--Consensual + actions--Applications of physiological reasoning to the + movements of Rotifers and Animalcules. + + +A Pressure of other occupations prevented full use being made of June +and July, nor was the weather at all propitious. For this reason the +microscopic doings of these two months are recorded in one chapter. + +As usual the Kentish Town ponds were productive of objects, and among +them were several rotifers not found in the previous months. The first +of these was a very small worm-like thing, with one eye, a tuft of cilia +about the mouth, and two toes at the tail end. Had it not been for the +jaws, which were working like fingers thrust against each other, and +which were unmistakably of the rotifer pattern, the animal might have +been supposed to belong to some other class. According to the +'Micrographic Dictionary,' the _Lindia torulosa_ is 1--75" long, but +this specimen was only about 1--200". It was possibly very young, and +did not thrust out its cilia in two distinct tufts, as Cohn describes, +although it may have had the power of doing so. At times it sprang +quickly backwards and forwards, bringing its head where its tail was +before. This object required for its comfortable elucidation a power of +about six hundred linear. + +[Illustration: OEcistes crystallinus.] + +Among the common water-plants, which are worth examining as the probable +abodes of rotifers or infusoria, is the pretty little thing called +"star-weed," some of which was obtained from the last-mentioned ponds, +and on examination yielded a specimen of a tube-dwelling rotifer, the +_OEcistes crystallinus_, which, although less beautiful than the +Floscules or the Melicerta, is, nevertheless, a pretty and interesting +object. In this instance a little rough dirty tube, about 1--70" long, +was observed to contain an animal capable of rising up and expanding a +round mouth garnished with a wreath of cilia; while a little below, the +indefatigable and characteristic gizzard of the tribe was in full play. +A power of two hundred and forty linear sufficed to afford a good view, +and it was seen that a long, irregular, conical body was supported upon +a short wrinkled stalk. The usual drawings represent this creature with +a short bell-shaped body upon a very long slender pedicle. Possibly this +one might have been able to show himself under this guise, but he did +not attempt it; his appearance being always pretty much as described, +which made the foot shorter and the body longer than the measurements +which naturalists have given, and according to which the whole creature +is 1--36" long, although the body is only 1--140". The tube of the +_OEcistes_ is called a "lorica," or carapace; but it has in truth no +right whatever to the appellation. + +Another strange rotifer, of whose name I am uncertain, had an ovalish +oblong body, and a pair of legs like compasses, twice as long as +himself. His antics were those of a posture-master, or "Professor of +Deportment" on stilts. Sometimes he stood bolt upright, bringing his +legs close together; then they were jauntily crossed, and the body +carried horizontally; then the two legs would be slightly opened, and +the body thrown exactly at right-angles to them. These antics were +repeated all the while the observation lasted, and had a very funny +effect in proving that drollery is practised, if not understood, in the +rotatorial world. + +[Illustration: Philodina (swimming).] + +Another kind of rotifer was abundant--the _Philodina_, which belongs to +the same family as the common wheel-bearer, namely, the _Philodinæa_. +The _Philodina_ is a good deal like the common wheel-bearer, or _Rotifer +vulgaris_, but is usually of a stouter build, and carries his eyes in a +different place. In the common rotifer these organs are situated on the +proboscis, while those of the Philodina are lower, and said to be +"cervical." The changes of form in this rotifer are still more +remarkable than in the common wheel-bearer. When resting it resembles a +pear-shaped purse, puckered in at the mouth. Then it thrusts out its +tail-foot, swells its body to an oval globe, protrudes its feeler, and +slightly exposes a row of cilia. After this two distinct wheels are +everted, and as their cilia whirl and spin, the animal is swiftly rowed +along, until it thinks proper to moor itself fast by the tail-foot, and +employ all its ciliary power in causing currents to converge towards its +throat. When it pleases it can elongate the body, till it becomes +vermiform, and it walks like the common rotifer, by curving its back, +and bringing its nose and its tail in contact with the ground. + +[Illustration: Philodina (crawling).] + +The gizzard of this family (_Philodinæa_) presents a considerable +deviation from the perfect form exhibited by the _Brachions_. According +to Mr. Gosse, "The _mallei_ and the _incus_ (terms already explained) +are soldered together into two subquadrantic-globular masses, which +appear to be muscular, but invested with a solid integument. The +_manubria_ (handles) may still be recognised in a vertical aspect as +three loops, of which the central one is chiefly developed, and in a +vertical aspect as a translucent reniform (kidney-shaped) globe." These +descriptions are not easy to understand, not from any want of clearness +or precision in the words employed, but from the complicated character +of the organ, and its very different appearance under different aspects. +To make the matter more intelligible, Mr. Gosse adds, "the structure and +action of an apparatus of this type may be made more clear by a homely +illustration. Suppose an apple to be divided longitudinally, leaving the +stalk attached to one half. Let this now be split again longitudinally +so far as the stalk, but not actually separating either portion from it. +Draw the two portions slightly apart, and lay them down on their rounded +surfaces. They now represent the quadrantic masses in repose, the stalk +being the fulcrum, and the upper surfaces being crossed by the teeth. By +the contraction of the muscles, of which they are composed, the two +segments are made to turn upon their long axis, until the points of the +teeth are brought into contact, and the toothed surfaces rise and +approach each other. The lower edges do not, however, separate as the +upper edges approach, but the form of the mass alters, becoming more +lenticular, so that when the toothed surfaces are brought into their +closest approximation, the outline has a subcircular figure. It is on +account of this change of form that I presume the masses themselves to +be partially composed of muscle." + +These remarks, although specially made of the _Rotifer macrurus_, are in +the main applicable to all the Philodinas, but the student must not +expect to understand any of the complicated gizzards of the rotifers +without repeated observations, and no small exercise of patience. It is +common to call the portions of the Philodine-pattern gizzard +"stirrup-shaped," but Mr. Gosse has shown them to be _quadrantic_, that +is, shaped like the quarter of a sphere. + +As we are not very well off with subjects for description in these two +months, we can afford a little time to consider a question that +continually arises in the mind, on viewing the movements of animalcules, +and especially of any so highly developed as the rotifers, namely, to +what extent motions which appear intelligent are really the result of +anything like a conscious purpose or will. When any of the lower +animals--a bee, for example--acts in precisely the same way as all bees +have acted since their proceedings have been observed, we settle the +question by the use of the term _instinct_. Those who take the lowest +view of insect life, assume that the bee flies because it has wings, but +without wishing to use them, and that the nerves exciting them to action +are in their turn excited, not by volition, but by some physical +stimulus. + +The sight or the smell of flowers is thought by the same reasoners to be +capable of attracting the insect, which is unconscious of the +attraction, while proximity of food stimulates the tongue to make the +movements needful for its acquisition, and so forth. The cells, they +tell us, are built according to a pattern which the earliest bee was +impelled to construct by forces that bear no analogy to human reason and +human will, and so originate all the ordinary processes of bee life. +Sometimes, however, it happens that man or accident interposes +particular obstacles, and forthwith there appears a particular +modification of the orthodox plan, calculated to meet the special +difficulty. How is this? Does any one of the difficulties which the bee +or the ant is able to get over, produce precisely that kind of +electrical disturbance, or polar arrangement of nerve particles that is +necessary to stimulate the _first_ step of the action by which the +difficulty is surmounted; and does the new condition thus established +stimulate the _second_ step, and so forth, or can the bee, within +certain limits, really _think_, design, and contrive? + +No questions are more difficult of solution; but while protesting +against a tendency to undervalue all life below that of man, we must +remember we have in our bodies processes going on which are not the +result of volition, as when the blood circulates, and its particles +arrange themselves in the pattern required to form our tissues and +organs, and also that many of our actions belong to the class termed by +physiologists, "reflex," that is, the result of external impressions +upon the nervous system, in which the _sentient_ brain takes no part. +Thus when a strong light stimulates the optic nerve, the portion of +brain with which it is connected in its turn stimulates the iris to +contract the pupil; and it is supposed that after a man has begun to +walk, through the exercise of his will, he may continue to walk, by a +reflex action; as his feet press the ground they transmit an impression +to the spinal cord, and the legs receive a fresh impulse to locomotion, +although the mind is completely occupied with other business, and pays +no attention to their proceedings.[14] The ordinary movements of insects +appear to be of this character, and to be excited by the ganglia +belonging to the segment to which the moving limbs are attached. Thus a +centipede will run, after its head has been cut off, and a water-beetle +(_Dytiscus_) swam energetically when thrown into water after its brain +had been removed.[15] + +[14] See Carpenter's 'Manual of Physiology.' + +[15] Carpenter's 'Manual of Physiology,' p. 551. + +It must not, however, be assumed that the brain of insects has nothing +to do with their movements. It is probably the means of co-ordinating or +directing them to a common end, and gives rise to what are called +_consensual_ movements, that is, movements which are accompanied or +stimulated by a sensation, although not controlled by a will. In man +these actions are frequently exhibited, "as when laughter is provoked by +some ludicrous sight or sound, or by the remembrance of such at an +unseasonable hour."[16] Sneezing is another instance of a sensation +leading to certain motions, without any intervention of the human will. + +[16] Ibid., p. 543. + +Speaking of these consensual motions, Dr. Carpenter observes, "It is +probable, from the strong manifestations of emotion, exhibited by many +of the lower animals, that some of the actions which we assemble under +the general designation of instinctive are to be referred to this +group." + +The insect brain is composed of a supra-oesophagal ganglion and +infra-oesophagal one. Von Siebold says, the first corresponds to the +cerebrum of the vertebrata, and "the second is comparable, perhaps, to +the cerebellum or spinal cord."[17] The superior ganglion gives off +nerves to the antennæ and eyes, the lower one to the mandibles, &c. So +far as is known the insects that exhibit the most intelligence have the +largest and best developed brains. + +[17] 'Anatomy of Invertebrates,' Burnett's trans. + +A special volume would be required for anything like a complete +examination of the little which is known on this subject, but these few +remarks may assist the microscopic beginner in examining the movements +of his subjects, and guard against the error of referring to reason and +volition those which are, probably, either the direct result of +stimulants applied to the surface (as in nerveless creatures), or the +indirect (reflex) result of such stimulants in beings like the rotifers, +who have a nervous system; or the result of _sensations_, which excite +actions without previously referring the matter to the decision of a +will. It must not, however, be too readily assumed that the behaviour of +creatures possessing distinct organs is entirely automatic; and we must +not forget that even the best physiologists know very little concerning +the range of functions which the nervous ganglia of the invertebrata are +able to discharge. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII. + +AUGUST. + + Mud coloured by worms--Their retreat at alarm--A country + duck-pond--Contents of its scum--Cryptomonads--Their means of + locomotion--A Triarthra (three-limbed Rotifer)--The Brachion or + Pitcher Rotifer--Its striking form--Enormous gizzard--Ciliary + motion inside this creature--Large eye and brain--Powerful + tail--Its functions--Eggs. + + +In the beginning of this month a pond in the Finchley Road, a little +beyond the Highgate Archway, supplied some more specimens of the +_Pterodina patina_, described in a previous chapter; but towards the +middle of the month a visit to Chipstead, in Surrey, enabled a new +region to be explored. + +It is always a treat to a Londoner to get down to any of the picturesque +parts of Surrey; the trees exhibit a richness of foliage and variety of +colour not seen within the regions of metropolitan smoke; the distance +glows with the rich purples so much admired in the pictures of Linnel, +and the sunsets light up earth and sky with the golden tints he is so +well able to reproduce. Probably the warmth of the soil, and the purity +of the air, may make Surrey ponds prolific in microscopic life; but of +this we do not know enough to make a fair comparison, although our own +dips into them were tolerably lucky. + +Walking one day down a lane leading towards Reigate, where the trees +arched overhead, ferns grew plentifully in the sandy banks, and the +sunlight flitted through the branches, and chequered the path, we came +to a shallow pond, or great puddle, which crossed the way, and near the +edge of the water the eye was struck with patches of crimson colour. On +attempting to take up a portion of one of these patches the whole +disappeared, although when the disturbance ceased the rich colour again +clothed the dingy mud. The appearance was caused by thousands of little +worms, belonging to the genus _Tubifex_, not uncommon in such +situations, who thrust themselves out to enjoy the light and air, and +retreat the moment an alarm is given. Probably both actions belong to +the class described in the last chapter, as "reflex;" but it would be +interesting to know whether creatures so humble have any sense of fear. +These worms will repay observation, but in these pages we eschew all +their tribe--unless the rotifers be assigned to them--and take ourselves +once more to our especial subjects. + +[Illustration: Cryptomonad--Euglena.] + +Knowing that farm-ponds are usually well stocked with microscopic game, +we made a dip into one more especially assigned to ducks, and obtained +wondrous little for our pains. We were not, however, discouraged, but +made an examination of the circumstances, which determined a particular +course of action. Our piece of water was simply a dirty duck-pond, in +which no large plants were growing, and which did not even exhibit the +little disks of duckweed that are common to such situations. There was, +however, on the surface, in parts, an exceedingly fine scum of pale +yellow green, and this, armed with a teaspoon, we proceeded to attack. +By careful skimming, a small bottle was half-filled with minute organic +particles, which were likely to be interesting in themselves, and pretty +sure to be the food for something else. A small drop was placed on a +tablet of the live-box, flattened out by the application of the cover, +and viewed with a power of two hundred linear, which disclosed swarms of +brilliant green globes, amongst which were a good sprinkle of minute +creatures, like the _Euglenæ_ already described, and whose little red +eyes contrasted vividly with the prevailing emerald hue. + +[Illustration: Cryptomonad.] + +One of the higher infusoria, whose species I could not identify, was +devouring them like a porpoise among sprats. It did not, however, +exhibit any sense in its hungry career; it moved about in all +directions, gulping down what came in its way, but often permitting the +escape of the little green things that were almost in its mouth. The +little globes rolled and whirled about without the faintest indication +of a purpose, and without exhibiting any instrument with which their +locomotion was effected. To find out how this was done, a higher power +was used, and from their extreme minuteness an amplification of seven +hundred and twenty linear was conveniently employed, although a lower +one (three or four hundred) disclosed the secret by showing that a +little whip was flourished about through the neck, which the lower power +revealed. When highly magnified, each little globe was seen to consist +of an outer case of a reddish orange colour, which was noticeable on +looking at the edges, although in the centre it was transparent enough +to show the brilliant green contents, that resembled the chlorophyll, or +green colouring matter of plants. From a short neck proceeded the +whip-like filament, which was lashed and twisted about in all +directions. These little creatures belong to the monad family, but +whether they are to be called _Trachelomonads_, or by some other hard +name, the learned must decide. + +The 'Micrographic Dictionary' puts a note of interrogation to the +assertion of some writers that _Trachelomonads_ have no necks, and draws +some with such an appendage. + +Pritchard's last edition is against necks, and whether the necks or no +necks are to win, is a mighty question equal at least to the famous +controversy, which divided the world into "big and little endians in the +matter of breaking eggs." + +A discussion of more importance is, whether these _Cryptomonads_--that +name will do whatever comes of the neck controversy--are animals or +vegetables. Lachmann and Mr. Carter affirm that they have detected a +contractile vesicle, which would assimulate them to the animal series, +but their general behaviour is vegetable; and the 'Micrographic +Dictionary' is in favour of referring them to the _Algæ_--that great +family of simple plants, of which the sea-weeds are the most important +representatives. + +[Illustration: Triarthra.] + +When any of the monads swarm, there are sure to be plenty of other +creatures to eat them up, and in this instance the predaceous +animalcule, already described, was not the only enemy the little green +globes had to suffer from, as two sorts of rotifer were frequently met +with. One of these was a very handsome and singular creature, which in +some positions had the general contour of a cockatoo, only that the legs +were wanting, and the head exhibited a monkey face. The "wheels" were +represented by ciliary tufts, and two bright red eyes twinkled with a +knowing look. From each shoulder proceeded a long curved spine, and +about two thirds down the body, and lying between the two long spines, a +shorter one was articulated, which followed the same curve. A gizzard +was busy in the breast, and the body terminated in two short toes, which +grasped a large round egg. Whenever the cilia were drawn in, the three +spines were thrown up; but they had an independent motion of their own, +and every now and then were jerked suddenly and violently back, which +occasioned a rapid change in the creature's position. The gizzard +appeared to consist of two rounded masses, having several ridges of +teeth, which worked against each other something like the prominences of +a coffee-mill. From the three spines, this animal was a _Triarthra_, or +Three-limbed Rotifer, but the position of the spines, and the toes, made +it differ from any species described in the 'Micrographic Dictionary,' +or in Pritchard. + +Whether or not this species is to be regarded as having a lorica or not, +must depend upon the precise meaning attached to that word. At any rate +the integument was much firmer than in many of the rotifers, and gave an +efficient support to the spines which a mere skin could not do. As Mr. +Gosse remarks of an allied genus, the _Polyarthra_, or Many-limbed +Rotifer, this creature could not be investigated without coming to the +conclusion "Here again we have true jointed limbs;" a fact of great +importance in determining the zoological rank of the family, and in +supporting Mr. Gosse's view some at least bore a strong affinity with +the group of _Arthropoda_, of which the insects are the principal +representatives. + +[Illustration: Brachionus urceolaris. This drawing has been accidentally +reversed by the engraver, which alters the relative place of the +internal organs.] + +Another rotifer of even greater interest, which was busy among the +Cryptomonads, was the Brachion, or "Pitcher Rotifer" (Brachionus). The +members of this genus will frequently reward the searcher into +pond-life. Their main characteristic is a cup or pitcher-shaped lorica, +which is cut or notched at the top into several horns or projections, +the number of which indicates the species; while two or more similar +projections ornament the bottom. This lorica is like the shell of a +tortoise open at both ends; from the top an extremely beautiful wreath +of cilia is protruded, and also some longer and stiff cilia, or slender +spines, which do not exhibit the rotatory movement. The ciliary +apparatus is in reality continuous, but it more often presents the +appearance of several divisions, and the lateral cilia frequently hang +over the sides. From the large size of each cilium they are very +favorable creatures for exhibiting the real nature of the action, which +gives rise to the rotatory appearance, and which can be easier studied +than described. By movements, partly from their base, and partly arising +from the flexibility of their structure, the cilia come alternately in +and out of view, and when set in a circular pattern, the effect is +amazingly like the spinning round of a wheel. The internal arrangements +of the Brachiones are finely displayed, and they have a most aldermanic +allowance of gizzard, which extends more than half way across each side +of the median line, and shows all the portions described by Mr. Gosse. +As the joints of this machine move, and the teeth are brought together, +one could fancy a sound of mill-work was heard, and the observer is +fully impressed with a sense of mechanical power. + +When the creature is obliging enough to present a full front view, her +domestic economy is excellently displayed. The prey that is caught in +her whirlpool is carried down by a strong ciliary current to the +gizzard, which may be often seen grappling with objects that appear much +too big for its grasp; and Mr. Gosse was lucky in witnessing an attempt +to chew up a morsel that did actually prove too large and too tough, and +which, after many ineffectual efforts, was suddenly cast out. As soon as +food has passed the gizzard, it is assisted in its journey by more +ciliary currents, which are noticeable in the capacious stomach, in the +neighbourhood of which the secreting and other vessels are readily +observed. Just over the gizzard blazes a great red eye, of a square or +oblong form, and it reposes upon a large mass of soft granular-looking +brain, which well justifies Mr. Gosse's epithet "enormous." Whether this +brain is highly organized enough to be a _thinking_ apparatus, we do not +know, but it is evidently the cause of a very vigorous and consentaneous +action of the various organs the Brachion possesses. + +A description of the Brachion would be very incomplete if it omitted +that important organ the tail, which in this family reaches the highest +point of development. It is a powerful muscular organ, of great size in +proportion to the animal, capable of complete retraction within the +carapace, and of being everted wholly, or partially, at will. It +terminates in two short conical toes, protruded from a tube-like sheath, +and capable of adhering firmly even to a substance so slippery as glass. +This tail may be observed to indicate a variety of emotions, if we can +ascribe such feelings to a rotifer, and it answers many purposes. Now we +see it cautiously thrust forth, and turned this way and that, exploring +like an elephant's trunk, and almost as flexible. Now it seizes firm +hold of some substance, and anchors its proprietor hard and fast. A few +moments afterwards it lashes out right and left with fury, like the tail +of a cat in a passion. Then again it will be retracted, and a casual +observer might not imagine the Brachion to be furnished with such a +terminal implement. + +The Brachiones may often be seen with one or more large eggs stuck +about the upper part of the tail, and others may be discerned inside. +One specimen before us has three eggs attached to her in this way. They +are large oval bodies, with a firm shell. These creatures differ very +much in appearance, according to the direction in which they are seen, +and a side view makes them look so different from a full front or back +aspect, that it would be easy to suppose another animal was under +observation. The extent to which the ciliary apparatus is protruded, and +the pattern it forms likewise differs continually; and hence no drawing, +however correct, is sure to resemble the arrangement that may be +presented to the observer's eye. But however our little "Pitcher" may be +viewed, it is sure to prove a spectacle of interest and delight. + + + + +CHAPTER IX. + +SEPTEMBER. + + Microscopic value of little pools--Curious facts in appearance + and disappearance of Animalcules and Rotifers--Mode of + preserving them in a glass jar--Fragments of Melicerta + tube--Peculiar shape of Pellets--Amphileptus--Scaridium + Longicaudum--A long-tailed Rotifer--Stephanoceros Eichornii--A + splendid Rotifer--Its gelatinous bottle--Its crown of + tentacles--Retreats on alarm--Illumination requisite to see its + beauties--Its greediness--Richly-coloured Food--Nervous ganglia. + + +Scattered about Hampstead Heath are a number of little pools, not big +enough to be dignified by the name of ponds. They are generally +surrounded by furze bushes, and would escape attention if not actually +looked for. Those which are mere puddles, and have only a brief +existence in rainy weather, seldom reward the labour of investigation; +but others are permanent, except after prolonged drought, and afford +convenient situations for the growth of confervæ, star-weed, and other +plants. These will nearly always repay the microscopic collector during +the winter, when he must break the ice to get at their contents; in +spring, when long chains of frog-spawn afford ocular evidence of the +prolific properties of the Batrachian reptiles; and in summer, when +they afford both shade and sunshine to their numerous inhabitants. Small +beetles, water-spiders, larvæ of gnats, and other insects, rotifers, +including the tubicolar sorts, and several varieties of infusoria may be +expected and generally found. There is, however, a curious fact about +ponds, big and little, which Pritchard remarks upon in his 'Infusoria,' +and which corresponds with our own experience, that those which have +proved to be well stocked with any particular creature during one year, +will very likely contain none of it in the next. There are of course +exceptions to this rule, but we have often been astonished and +disappointed at finding the complete change, both in populousness and +population, that a revolution of twelve months will make; and it would +be extremely interesting to notice the changes that took place during a +term of years. + +Such researches might unfold some unexpected laws in the succession of +infusorial life. Those germs which are most widely diffused, will be the +most likely to be developed in any mass of convenient water; but how and +why the rarer forms come and go is very imperfectly understood. Slight +modifications in surrounding circumstances will materially affect the +result. Thus, if we bring home a handful of conferva, and a few +water-plants of higher organisation, such as duckweed and anacharis, and +place the whole in a glass jar full of pond-water, we shall at first +have a good stock of objects; but they will usually grow less and less, +until scarcely anything is left. If, however, we introduce a few pieces +of straw, or a tiny wisp of hay, we shall succeed much better, and not +only preserve our population longer, but enjoy a succession of animated +crops. Extensive decomposition of vegetable matter kills off all but +certain families, such as Paramecia, who enjoy it; on the other hand, +too little decomposition proves fatal to some creatures, by depriving +them of their food, and when they have died off, those who depended upon +them for a living, die too. Different vegetables in decomposition suit +different creatures, and hay and straw in that state seem to please the +largest number. An animalcule tank will succeed best when it contains +two or three kinds of growing plants, which oxygenize the air, and a +moderate variety of decomposing organisms will supply food without +making the water offensive. + +From these considerations it will be apparent that not only the nature +of the vegetation of a pond, which is often changed by accidental +circumstances, but also the quality of the odds and ends that the winds +may blow into it, or which may fall through the air, will do much to +determine the character and number of its inhabitants, while the +quantity of shade or sunshine it enjoys, will also exercise an important +influence. Hay and other infusions have from the beginning of +microscopic investigations been employed to obtain the creatures which +the Germans call "Infusions thierchen" (infusion animalcules), and the +English "Infusoria;" but very little has yet been done in the way of +their scientific culture and management. + +To return from this digression to our little Hampstead ponds, we +obtained from one, in September, that was full of star-weed, a number of +sugar-loaf bodies, adhering to one another, and of a pale yellow brown +colour. The specimens first examined looked complete in themselves, and +were taken for eggs of some water creature. Further search, however, +disclosed aggregations of similar sugar-loaves that had evidently formed +part of a tubular structure, and the idea at once occurred that they +were fragments of a Melicerta tube, a conclusion that was verified by +finding some tubes entire and a dead Melicerta in the rubbish at the +bottom. All the specimens of Melicerta tubes we had hitherto examined +were composed of _rounded_ pellets, but these were made of pointed cones +or sugar-loaves, with the points projecting outwards from the general +surface. In Pritchard's 'Infusoria,' these pellets are described "as +small lenticular bodies." The 'Micrographic Dictionary' states that the +tubes of the Melicerta are composed of "numerous rounded or discoidal +bodies;" and Mr. Gosse, in his 'Tenby,' which contains an admirable +description, and an exquisite drawing of this interesting rotifer, calls +the pellets "round." + +[Illustration: Melicerta ringens.] + +Not being able to obtain a living specimen of the Melicerta, who made +her tube of long sugar-loaves, I could not tell whether she differed in +structure from the usual pattern of her race, but the general appearance +of the dead body was the same. It is possible that these creatures +possess some power of modifying the form of their singular bricks, or +they may at different ages vary the patterns, which matters some +fortunate possessor of a colony of these animals may be able to +verify. + +[Illustration: Scaridium longicaudum.] + +In the sediment of the water containing the Melicerta cases was found an +animalcule about 1--120" long, covered with cilia, and having a +proboscis seldom more than a quarter of the length assumed by the body, +which continually changed its form, sometimes elongating, sometimes +shortening, and often contracting one side into a deep fissure. It was, +probably, an _Amphileptus_, though not precisely agreeing with any +drawing or description I am acquainted with. Another inmate of the same +water was a lively long-tailed rotifer, with a small oval body, a tuft +of vibrating cilia and a curved bristle visible among them on one side. +This creature had a jointed tail-foot, ending in two long style-shaped +toes, and by means of this appendage executed rapid leaps or springs. It +was the _Scaridium longicaudum_, and agreed in dimensions tolerably well +with the size given in the books, namely, total length 1--72". With a +power of five hundred diameters the muscles of the tail-foot presented +a beautifully striated appearance. + +Towards the end of the month I passed the Vale of Heath Pond, Hampstead, +and although I had not gone out for the purpose of collecting, was +fortunately provided with a two-dram bottle. Close by the path the +_Anacharis alsinastrum_ grew in profusion, quantities of water-snails +crawled among its branches, and small fish darted in and out, threading +their mazes with lightning rapidity. Thrusting a walking-stick among the +mass of vegetation, a few little tufts were drawn up and carefully +bottled, with the addition of a little water. Returning home, a few +leaves were placed in the live-box, and on examination with the power of +sixty diameters they disclosed a specimen of, perhaps, the most +beautiful of all the rotifers, the _Stephanoceros Eichornii_. In this +elegant creature an oval body, somewhat expanded at the top, is +supported upon a tapering stalk, and stands in a gelatinous bottle, +composed of irregular rings superimposed one upon the other, as if +thrown off by successive efforts, the upper ones being inverted and +attached to the body of the animal. But that which constitutes the glory +of this little being is the crown of five tapering tentacles, each +having two rows of long cilia arranged on opposing sides, but not in the +same plane. The ordinary position of the tentacles is that of a graceful +elliptical curve, first swelling outwards, then bending inwards, until +their points closely approximate, but each is capable of independent +motion, and they are seldom quiet for many minutes at a time. The cilia +can be arranged in parallel rows or in tufts at the will of the +creature, and their motion appears under control, and susceptible of +greater modification than is exhibited by the ordinary infusoria. + +[Illustration: Stephanoceros Eichornii.] + +The Stephanoceros is a member of the Floscule family, but in all the +specimens I obtained and watched for several weeks, there was an +important difference in the relation of the tube to the creature. In the +Floscules I had never seen anything like an adhesion between the tube +and the animal, but in the Stephanoceros I noticed it continually, and +always in the manner already described. Like the Floscule, the +Stephanoceros is readily alarmed, and retreats into her house, carrying +with her the invaginated portion. In the last edition of 'Pritchard's +Infusoria,' this case is spoken of as apparently not tubular, but a +solid gelatinous mass, enveloping the animal as high up as the base of +the rotatory arms. It is very likely that specimens at different ages, +and possibly in different seasons, may vary in the structure of their +abodes; but I am not able to concur in the preceding account, as all the +tubes I examined resembled sacks turned in at the mouths, and attached +to the shoulders only of their inmates; and on one occasion I was able +to look down into a deserted tube, which had not collapsed, as it would +have done if it had been merely a solid gelatinous mass. + +Like the Floscule, the Stephanoceros only reveals her beauties under +careful illumination. A direct light renders them invisible, and only +when the requisite obliquity has been obtained, does the exquisite +character of the structure become displayed. The dark-ground +illumination is very useful, and makes the ciliary action very distinct. +At times a view can be obtained, in which the cilia of perhaps a single +tentacle are all ranged like the steel springs of a musical box. For a +moment they are quiescent, and then they vibrate in succession, each +moving thread sparkling in the light. With a clumsy mode of lighting +them, the cilia look like stumpy bristles, and are often so drawn; but +precisely the right quantity of light coming in the right direction, +makes them appear more numerous, and much longer than would at first be +supposed. When well exhibited the tentacles have a lustre between glass +and pearl; the body, in a favorable specimen, is like a crystal cup, and +the food, usually composed of small red and green globes, glows like +emeralds and rubies, as if in the height of luxury the little epicure +had more than rivalled Cleopatra's draught, and instead of dissolving, +swallowed its jewelry whole. So lustrous and varied in colour is the +whole appearance of the animal under these circumstances, that it is +frequently alluded to by one of our first artists, to whom it was +displayed. + +It is said by some authors that the tentacles are used to seize prey. +This never occurred under my observation, although their basal portions +are often approximated when an object is forced down to the grinding +apparatus below. The Stephanoceros is a ravenous feeder, and swallows a +variety of creatures. Green vegetable monads, rich red and brown globes +of similar characters, and any animalcule that comes in her way is +acceptable; and even good-sized rotifers do not escape her +all-consuming maw. On one occasion I noticed one of the loricated sort, +more than half as long as one of her tentacles, rapidly swallowed, and +passed downwards without attempting to escape. Objects much too big for +the gizzard are often gulped down, and probably receive a preliminary +softening and maceration in the crop. Very often, when food is +plentiful, the creature is filled to the brim, but still endeavours to +continue her abundant meal. From the presence of large quantities of +food and the density of the integuments, the gizzard cannot always be +seen; but in favorable specimens its teeth may be observed busily at +work. + +At the base of the tentacles small masses of matter may be discovered, +which are probably nervous ganglia, and other organs; and Ehrenberg +discovered small vibrating bodies, supposed to be connected with the +function of respiration. A single egg, as shown in the annexed drawing, +is often found, and the ovarian is said to develop but few at a time. +Two red eyes are found in young specimens, but in adults they either +disappear or are not conspicuous. The Stephanoceri are sociable animals, +and when one is found, others are probably near at hand. Several may +often be discovered on the same branch of a small water-plant, of +various dimensions, and in different stages of growth. The full size is +about 1--36" in height, and from its magnitude care is required not to +crush it in the live-box. When specimens are plentiful, some should be +placed in that convenient receptacle; and others with the plant on which +they are growing, in a glass cell or trough, where they have more room +to display their motions, and can with fresh supplies of water, be +preserved for days and weeks. With occasional renewals from one pond, I +was able to keep up a stock for about three months, and never had +objects which gave more pleasure to myself or to my friends. + + + + +CHAPTER X. + +OCTOBER. + + Stentors and Stephanoceri--Description of Stentors--Mode of + viewing them--Their abundance--Social habits--Solitary Stentors + living in Gelatinous caves--Propagation by divers + modes--Cephalosiphon Limnias--A group of Vaginicolæ--Changes of + shape--A bubble-blowing Vorticella. + + +October, the finest of our autumn months, is noted for usually granting +the inhabitants of our dripping climate about twenty pleasant sunshiny +days, and it is probably on this account somewhat of a favourite with +the infusorial world, although the cold of its nights and early mornings +thins their numbers, which reach a maximum in the summer heat. Even in +the dismal year 1860, October maintained its character, and afforded a +great many opportunities of animalcule hunting, during which a constant +supply of Stephanoceri were readily obtained, together with swarms of +_Stentors_, which are not exceeded in interest by any of the Ciliated +Protozoa. The Stentors were abundant on the same weed (_Anacharis_), +that formed the residence of the Stephanoceri, and might be seen in +large numbers hanging from it like green trumpets, visible to the +unassisted eye. In the 'Micrographic Dictionary' they are said to +belong to the Vorticella family, which has already given us several +beautiful objects, and possess a marvellous power of changing their +shape. It is, however, better to follow Stein, who separates them from +the Vorticellids and ranges them in his order Heterotricha, as they have +two distinct sets of cilia, small ones covering the body and the larger +ones round the mouth. Those before us are named after this property +_Stentor polymorphus_,[18] or Many-shaped Stentors, and owe their +exquisite tint to numberless green vesicles, or small cavities filled +with colouring matter like that of plants. This, however, is not +essential to the species which may often be found of other hues. In size +this Stentor varies from a hundred and twentieth to one twenty-fourth of +an inch. It is entirely covered with fine cilia, disposed in +longitudinal rows, and round the head is a spiral wreath of larger and +very conspicuous cilia leading to the mouth. + +[18] See Frontispiece. + +Having observed the abundance of these creatures, a few small branches +to which they were appended, were placed in the glass trough, and viewed +with powers of sixty and one hundred linear. Some had tumbled down as +shapeless lumps, others presented broad funnel-shaped bodies; while +others stretched themselves to great length like the long, narrow +post-horns which still wake the echoes of a few old-fashioned towns. The +ciliary motion of the elegant wreath was active and rapid, causing quite +a stir among all the little particles, alive and dead; and when the +right sort of food came near the corkscrew entrance to the mouth, down +it went, and if conspicuous for colour, was subsequently seen apparently +embedded in little cavities, which Ehrenberg supposed were separate +stomachs, although that theory is now rejected. One advantage of viewing +these objects in a sufficient quantity of water, to leave them in +freedom, is that they frequently turn themselves, so that you can see +right down into them; and the drawing given in the frontispiece +represents such a view, which is the most favorable for the exhibition +of the mouth. To make out the details of their structure, to see the +nucleus and other organs, the flattening in the live-box is useful, and +it enables much higher powers to be employed. + +[Illustration: A, B, C, D, Stentor polymorphus in different degrees of +expansion. A large specimen is one twenty-fourth of an inch long.] + +After leaving the Anacharis in a glass jar for a few days, the Stentors +multiplied exceedingly; some clung to the sides of the vessel in +sociable communities, others hung from the surface of the water, and +crowds settled upon the stems, visibly changing their tint, as the +Stentor green was much bluer than that of the plant. Scores swam about +in all sorts of forms. Now they looked like cylindrical vessels with +expanding brims, now globular, now oddly distorted, until all semblance +of the original shape was lost. Many were found in shiny tubes, but +these were never so lively or green as the free swimmers, but mostly of +a dingy dirty hue. + +These housekeepers were more timid and cautious than the roving tribe. +They came slowly out of their dens, drew back at the slightest alarm, +never took their tails from home, and only extended their full length +when certain not to be disturbed. Some authors have thought they only +take to private lodgings when they feel a little bit poorly, but others +dispute this opinion, and I do not think it is correct. I have found +these Stentors at all seasons, from January to the autumn, but they are +never so numerous, nor aggregated in numbers like the roving sort. +Whether they are old folks, who are tired of the world and its gaieties, +and devote the remainder of their lives to contemplation, or whether +they are bachelors disappointed in love, I am unable to say; but they +are very inferior in beauty to the "gay and glittering crowd."[19] + +[19] Stein says the colourless variety of S. Polymorphus is sometimes +found with a tube, and the S. Rössellii very frequently so provided. + +For some weeks my Stentors abounded, and then most of them suddenly +disappeared. They could not have "moved," but probably "went to smash" +by a process peculiar to infusoria, and which Dujardin politely +describes as "diffluence." This mode of making an exit from the stage of +life is more tragical than the ripping up so fashionable in Japan. The +integument bursts, and its contents disperse in minute particles, that +in their turn disappear, and scarcely leave a "wrack behind." + +The Stentors obey the injunction to "increase and multiply" by +self-division, which Stein says is always oblique, and the nucleus, +which plays such an important part in infusoria, is band-like, +moniliform (bead-shape), or round. When an animalcule increases by +self-division, a portion of the nucleus goes with each part, and it is +probably the organ which stimulates the change. It is also concerned in +other modes of propagation. "The anus is situated on the back close +beneath the ciliary circle;" and the "contractile vesicle on a level +with the ciliary wreath." Stein records that in November, 1858, he met +green Stentors (_Polymorphus_) encysted, and he figures one in a +gelatinous flask having a stopper in its narrow neck. + +Before closing our account of the Stentor, let us revert a moment to the +ciliary wreath, as it may be made the subject of a curious experiment. +If, for example, the cilia are viewed at right-angles to their length, +they will seem to form a delicate frill, in which a quivering motion is +perceived. But if the table is shaken by a sharp blow, the frill is +thrown into waves, or takes the form which washerwomen give to certain +female articles by the use of the Italian iron, and the ciliary motion +is thus made to take place in different planes, and rendered strikingly +apparent. + +One day turning over the Anacharis in search of subjects, a small brown +tube was noticed, from which a glassy rod protruded like the feeler of a +rotifer. Keeping the table quiet, and watching the result, was soon +rewarded by a further protrusion of the feeler, accompanied by a portion +of the body of the inmate of the tube. The feeler was thrust on this +side and on that, as if collecting information for its proprietor, who, +I suppose, was satisfied with the intelligence, and gradually extended +herself, until she stood out two thirds in length beyond the tube, and +set two lobes of one nearly continuous ciliary organ in rapid motion. +Sometimes the creature, _Cephalosiphon limnias_, bent its neck, if I may +so speak, to the right, and sometimes to the left, and sometimes stood +upright, when the true form of the ciliary apparatus could be seen. The +tube of this creature was opaque, from the adhesion of foreign matter, +and presented an untidy appearance, strangely contrasting with the +clear, neat bottles of the Floscules. These Cephalosiphons are very +whimsical in their ways, and many that were sent to different observers +never exhibited their ciliary wreaths, but performed sundry antics, +disguising their true shape. + +[Illustration: Cephalosiphon limnias.] + +Somewhat like the Cephalosiphon, though much commoner and without the +siphon, is Limnias ceratophylli, which every collector is sure to meet. +The length of the Limnias varies, according to Pritchard, from 1--20" to +1--40". Our Cephalosiphon, when fully extended and magnified one hundred +and eighty linear, looked about three inches and a half long, and was +therefore very small. Just below the ciliary lobes the gizzard was seen, +with its toothed hammers working one against the other. The masticatory +organ differs from the typical form, as represented in the Brachion; and +Mr. Gosse observes of Limnias that "each _uncus_ forms, with its +_ramus_, a well-defined mass of muscle enclosing the solid parts, and in +form approaching the quadrature of a globe. Across the upper surface of +the mass the _uncus_ is stretched like three long parallel fingers, +arched in their common direction, and imbedded in the muscular +substances, their points just reaching the opposing face of the _ramus_, +and meeting the points of the opposite _uncus_ when closed."[20] + +[20] The terms _uncus_, _ramus_, etc., have been explained in Chapter +II, page 28. + +There is no connection between Limnias or Cephalosiphon and their tubes, +except that of simple adhesion, which takes place by means of the end of +their foot-stalks. + +In a former chapter we have described an interesting relation of the +Vorticella, the Cothurnia, whose elegant crystal vases form a very +artistic abode, characterised by possessing a distinct foot. Other +species of the same family inhabit vases which have no foot or stalk, or +live in gelatinous sheaths less accurately fashioned. Sometimes these +creatures are obliging enough to conform to the specific descriptions +which eminent naturalists have given of them, and also to the characters +which the authorities have assigned to the different genera in which +they have been grouped, but the microscopist will often meet with +difficulties in the way of classification. + +[Illustration: Vaginicola (?) (A, elongated; B, retracted.)] + +Attached to a piece of weed were a number of cylindrical masses of +brownish jelly, with rounded tops, and situated in an irregular and very +transparent sheath, about twice as high as themselves. Presently they +all rose up to four times their previous height, put forth a beautiful +crown of vibrating cilia, and opened a sort of trap-door to their +internal arrangements. In this position they had a long cylindrical +form, gracefully curved, but of nearly equal width from the mouth to the +base, and they readily imbibed particles of carmine, which tinged sundry +little cavities with its characteristic hue. The slightest disturbance +caused the ciliary wreaths to be drawn in, and the bodies to be +retracted, and descend into their house like a conjuring toy, until the +appearance first described was reproduced. + +The general form and structure of these objects was like the drawings +usually given of _Vaginicola_, which is said not to exist in groups, +although two individuals are commonly found in one well-shaped cell. +These creatures, however, did not taper towards the base as Vaginicolæ +generally do, and perhaps they became aware of this defect in their +figures, for after a day or two a change appeared, and they assumed a +more graceful form by swelling out in the middle, and then growing +slender down to the bottom, very much like the pattern given by +glass-blowers to little vases of flowers. + +It is very important to note the changing appearance of animalcules, and +where the same individuals can be observed from day to day, these will +often be found considerable. It is probable that when such particulars +are fully known, the number of species will be greatly reduced, and the +study of these organisms considerably simplified. I have called the +animals just described _Vaginicolæ_, but the reader must be prepared to +find similar bodies, inhabiting well-formed vases, either solitarily or +in couples, the latter condition arising from the fission of one +individual without a corresponding division of the abode. + +For a few weeks I continually met with groups living as I have +described, in what may be called amorphous cells, which were often so +nearly like the surrounding water in refracting power, as to be +discerned with some difficulty. No trace could be seen of divisions +into separate cells, but they all appeared to live happily together in +one room, and if one went up all went up, and if one went down all went +down, as if their proceedings were regulated by a community of sensation +or will. + +Another little curiosity was a transparent cup upon a slender stem, +which stood upright like a wineglass, and supported on its mouth a +transparent globe. By removing a leaf which prevented the stalk being +traced to its termination, it was found to be a Vorticella, and after +two hours the globe was partially drawn in, and reduced in size. Why the +creature was engaged in blowing this bubble I do not know, and have not +met with another instance of such conduct. + + + + +CHAPTER XI. + +NOVEMBER. + + Characteristics of the Polyzoa--Details of structure according + to Allman--Plumatella repens--Its great beauty under proper + illumination--Its tentacles and their cilia--The mouth and its + guard or epistome--Intestinal tube--How it swallowed a Rotifer, + and what happened--Curiosities of digestion--Are the tentacles + capable of Stinging?--Resting Eggs, or "Statoblasts"--Tube of + Plumatella--Its muscular Fibres--Physiological importance of + their structure. + + +During the fag end of last month I observed some fragments of a new +creature among some bits of Anacharis, from the Vale of Heath Pond, and +searched for complete and intelligible specimens without effect. Luckily +one evening a scientific neighbour, to whom I had given some of the +plant for the sake of the beautiful _Stephanoceri_ which inhabited it, +came in with a glass trough containing a little branch, to which adhered +a dirty parchment-like ramifying tube, dotted here and there with brown +oval masses, and having sundry open extremities, from which some +polyp-shaped animals put forth long pearly tentacles margined with +vibrating cilia, and making a lively current. The creatures presented an +organization higher than that of polyps, for there was an evident +_differentiation_ and complication of parts. They belonged to the +_Polyzoa_ or _Bryozoa_,[21] a very important division of the _mollusca_. +The _Polyzoa_ are chiefly marine, and the common "sea-mat," often +erroneously treated as a _sea-weed_, is a well-known form. A species of +another order often picked up on our coasts is the _Sertularia_, or +Sea-Fir, composed of delicate branching stems of a horny-looking +substance, which, under a pocket-lens, is found to contain an immense +number of small cells inhabited by Polyps. It is instructive to compare +the two and note how much more advanced in structure is the Polyzoon +than the polyp. + +[21] _Polyzoa_ means "many animals," in allusion to their habit of +living in association. _Bryozoa_, "moss-animals," from some forming +cells having that appearance. + +[Illustration: Plumatella repens. Single Polypide enlarged] + +Polyzoa were formerly associated with the polyps, to which they bear a +strong superficial resemblance; but they are of a much higher degree of +organization, as will be seen by comparing what has been said in a +former chapter on the _Hydra_, with the description which we now proceed +to abridge from Dr. Allman's splendid monograph on the fresh-water +kinds. In order to get a general conception of a Polyzoon, the Professor +tells us to imagine an alimentary canal, consisting of oesophagus, +stomach, and intestine, to be furnished at its origin with long ciliated +tentacles, and to have a single nervous ganglion on one side of the +oesophagus. We must then conceive the intestine bent back till its +anal orifice comes near the mouth; and this curved digestive tube to be +suspended in a bag containing fluid, and having two openings, one for +the mouth and the other for the vent. A system of muscles enables the +alimentary tube to be retracted or protruded, the former process pulling +the bag in, and the latter letting it out. The mouth of the bag is, so +to speak, tied round the creature's neck just below the tentacles, which +are the only portions of it that are left free. The investing sack has +in nearly every case the power of secreting an external sheath, more or +less solid, and which branches forming numerous cells, in which the +members of the family live in a socialistic community, having, as it +were, two lives, one individual, and the other shared in common with the +rest. + +The whole group of tubes and cells, whatever may be the form in which +they are aggregated, is called the _Polypary_, or, as Dr. Allman +prefers, the _Coenoecium_ (common house); the creature he names a +_Polypide_[22] (polyp-like); and the disk which bears the tentacles +_Lophophore_ (crest-bearer). There are some more hard words to be learnt +before the student can enjoy himself scientifically among the Polyzoa, +and we shall be compelled to employ some of them before we have done; +but will now endeavour to describe what was presented to our view by the +specimen obtained from the Hampstead Pond. + +[22] _Polyzoon_ is preferable, as avoiding confusion with _polypite_, +used for another class of object. + +The general aspect of a branch of _Plumatella repens_--the creature we +have to describe--is given in the drawing annexed. When all was quiet, +the mouths of the bags belonging to each cell were slowly everted, and +out came a numerous bundle of tentacles, which were either spread like +the corolla of a flower, or permitted to hang dishevelled like the +snake-locks of Medusa. We will suppose these organs symmetrically +expanded, and that we are looking down upon them with a magnifying power +of sixty diameters, the light having been carefully adjusted by turning +the reflecting mirror a little on one side, to avoid a direct glare. The +tentacles, each of which curves with a living grace, and displays an +opaline tint in its glassy structure, do not form a complete circle, for +at one place we discern two slightly diverging arms of the disk, or +frame (Lophophore) from which they grow. + +These arms support tentacles on each side, and leave a gap between, so +that the whole pattern is _crescentic_, or crescent-shaped, and not +circular. Extending as far as the points of the arms, and carried all +round the crescent, is an extremely delicate membrane, like the finest +gauze, which unites all the tentacles by their basal portions, and makes +an elegant retreating curve between every two. Each tentacle exhibits +two rows of cilia, which scintillate as their vibrations cause them to +catch the light. The motion of the cilia is invariably _down_ one side +and _up_ the other, the current or pattern being carried on from one +tentacle to the other, all through the series. This characteristic, and +the facility with which each cilium can be distinguished, gives great +interest and beauty to the spectacle of this wonderful apparatus, by +which water-currents are made to bathe the tentacles, and assist +respiration, and also to carry food towards the mouth, over which a sort +of finger or tongue is stretched to guard the way, and exercise some +choice as to what particles shall be permitted to pass on. This organ is +called the _epistome_, from two Greek words, signifying "upon the +mouth." + +If the cell is an old one, it may be covered with so much extraneous +matter as to obscure the economy within; but we are fortunate in having +a transparent specimen before us, through which we can see all that goes +on. The alimentary tube, after forming a capacious cavity, much longer +than it is broad, turns round and terminates in an orifice near the +mouth, and just below the integuments. When refuse has to be discharged, +this orifice is protruded; and after the operation is over, it draws +back as before. Long muscles, composed of separate threads or fibres, +pull the creature in and out of its cell, and at the part where the +stomach ends, and the intestine turns round, is attached a long flexible +rope, called the _funiculus_, which goes to the bottom of the cell. The +passage of the food down to the stomach, its digestion, and the eviction +of the residue, can all be watched; and when a large morsel is +swallowed, the spectacle is curious in the extreme. + +One day a polyzoon caught a large rotifer, (_R. vulgaris_,) which, with +several others of its tribe, had been walking over the _coenoecium_, +and swimming amongst the tentacles, as if unconscious of danger. All of +a sudden it went down the whirlpool leading to the mouth, was rolled up +by a process that could not be traced, and without an instant's loss of +time, was seen shooting down in rapid descent to the gulf below, where +it looked a potato-shaped mass, utterly destitute of its characteristic +living form. Having been made into a bolus, the unhappy rotifer, who +never gave the faintest sign of vitality, was tossed up and down from +the top to the bottom of the stomach, just as a billiard-ball might be +thrown from the top to the bottom of a stocking. This process went on +for hours, the ball gradually diminishing in size, until at last it was +lost in the general brown mass with which the stomach was filled. The +bottom of the stomach seems well supplied with muscular fibres, to cause +the constrictions by which this work is chiefly performed, and by +keeping a colony for a month or two, I had many opportunities of seeing +my Polyzoa at their meals. + +When alarmed the tentacles were quickly retracted, but although these +creatures are said to dislike the light, and usually keep away from it +in their native haunts, my specimens had no objection to come out in a +strong illumination, and seemed perfectly at their ease. They were +indeed most amiable creatures, and never failed to display their charms +to admiring visitors, who rewarded them with unmeasured praise. Twice I +had an opportunity of observing an action I cannot explain, except by +supposing either that the tentacles of the _Plumatella_ have some +poisonous action, or that rotifers are susceptible of fear. On these +occasions the common rotifer was the subject of the experiment. First +one and then another got among the tentacles, and on escaping seemed +very poorly. One fellow was, to borrow a phrase from Professor Thomas +Sayers, "completely doubled up," and two or three seconds--long periods +in a rotifer's life--elapsed before he came to himself again. + +By keeping a colony of the Plumatella for a few weeks in a glass trough, +and occasionally supplying them with fresh water from an aquarium, +containing the animalcules, they are easily preserved in good health, +and as they develop fresh cells, the process of growth may be readily +watched. This production of fresh individuals enlarges the parent +colony, but could not be the means of founding a new one, which is +accomplished by two other modes. A little way down the cells Professor +Allman discovered an ovary attached to the internal tube by a short +_peduncle_, or foot stalk, while a testis or male generative organ is +attached to the _funiculus_, or "little rope," we have already +described. + +July and August are the best times for observing the ovaries, and they +are most conspicuous in the genera _Alcyonella_ and _Paludicella_. True +eggs are developed in the ovaries in a manner resembling this mode of +multiplication in other animals; but there is another kind of egg, or, +perhaps to speak more properly, a variety of bud, which is extremely +curious. In looking at our specimens we noticed brown oval bodies in the +cells; these, on careful examination, presented the appearance of the +sketch. The centre is dark, covered with a network, which is more +conspicuous in the lighter coloured and more transparent margins. These +curious bodies are produced from the funiculus, and act as reserves of +propagative force, as they are not hatched or developed until they get +out and find themselves exposed to appropriate circumstances. Professor +Allman names them _Statoblasts_, or stationary germs, and they bear some +resemblance to what are called the "winter eggs" of some other +creatures. The Professor was never able to discover any mode by which +they were permitted to escape from the cells, and in our colonies none +were allowed to leave their homes until the death of their parent, and +the decomposition of its cell had taken place; a process which went on +contemporaneously with the growth of new cells, until the plant on which +the _coenoecium_ was situated, rotted away, and then unfortunately +the whole concern went to pieces. + +[Illustration: Plumatella repens on a leaf.] + +The tubes of the _Plumatella_, and of most other Polyzoa, are composed +of two coats, called respectively _endocyst_ and _ectocyst_, that is, +"inner case" and "outer case." The first is vitally endowed, and +exhibits vessels and muscular fibres. The second or outer case is thrown +off by the first. It is a parchment-like substance, strengthened by the +adhesion of dirt particles, and does not appear to exercise any vital +functions, but to be merely a covering for protection. The inner layer +terminates in the neck of the bag before described, as exserted when the +polypide comes out, and inverted when it goes in. This mode of making a +case or sheath by inversion of a bag is technically called +_invagination_, and is readily seen in new and transparent cells. + +The movement of _eversion_, or coming out, is chiefly produced by the +contraction of the endocyst; while the _inversion_, or getting in again, +is performed by the long muscles, which, when the animal is extended, +are seen attached to it like ropes. Upon these muscles Professor Allman +remarks that they are "especially interesting in a physiological point +of view, as they seem to present us with an example of true muscular +tissue, reduced to its simplest and essential form. A muscle may here +be viewed as a beautiful dissection far surpassing the most refined +preparation of the dissecting needle, for it is composed of a bundle of +elementary fibres, totally separate from one another through their +entire course." He further adds, "The fibres of the great retractor +muscle are distinctly marked by transverse striæ;--a condition, however, +which is not at all times equally perceptible, and some of our best +observers have denied to the Polyzoon the existence of striated fibre." + +We can confirm the fact of this sort of fibre being present, but we +fancy a reader not versed in the mysteries of physiology exclaiming, +'What does it matter whether his fibres are striped or not?' + +Physiologists used to suppose there was a strong and marked distinction +and separation between _striped_ muscles, that is, muscles the fibres of +which exhibit transverse stripes when magnified, and those which do not. +Kölliker, however, says this decided separation can no longer be +maintained,[23] and he gives instances in proof of the connections that +can be traced between the two forms. In the higher animals the striped +muscles are the special instruments of _will_, and of movements that +follow, or are accompanied by, distinct sensations. Striped fibre must +be regarded as the highest form; and as a muscle of this sort contracts +in length it increases uniformly in breadth. + +[23] 'Manual of Human Microscopic Anatomy,' p. 63. + +There are many other genera and species of fresh-water polyzoa besides +the _Plumatella repens_, and they are found attached to sticks, stones, +or leaves, generally to the under surface of the latter. They are all +objects of great interest and beauty, which, whatever their diversity, +conform sufficiently to one type that the student who has observed one, +will easily recognise the zoological position of another. They should be +viewed by transmitted and by dark-ground illumination, which produces +very beautiful effects. To observe them in the performance of their +functions, they require more room than the live-box can afford, but are +well shown in the glass trough, whose moveable diaphragm enables them to +be brought near enough to the object-glass, for the use of a power of +about sixty linear for general purposes, and of from one to two hundred +for the examination of particular parts. For a more detailed examination +dissection must be employed, but all that we have mentioned can be seen +without injury to the living animal, if specimens are kept till new +cells are formed in water, which does not contain enough dirt to render +their integuments opaque. + + + + +CHAPTER XII. + +DECEMBER. + + Microscopic Hunting in Winter--Water-bears, or Tardigrada--Their + comical behaviour--Mode of viewing them--Singular gizzard--A + compressorium--Achromatic condenser--Mouth of the + Water-bear--Water-bears' exposure to heat--Soluble + albumen--Physiological and chemical reasons why they are not + killed by heating and drying--The Trachelius ovum--Mode of + swimming--Method of viewing--By dark-ground + illumination--Curious digestive tube with + branches--Multiplication by division--Change of form immediately + following this process--Subsequent appearances. + + +There is always satisfaction in finding a work accomplished; but the +attempt to delineate some of the marvels of minute creation has been a +pleasant one, and we approach the completion of our task of recording a +_Microscopic Year_ with something like regret. The dark, dirty December +of the great metropolis may not seem a promising time for field +excursions, but some ponds lie near enough to practicable roads and +paths to render an occasional dip in them, not of ourselves, but of our +bottles--an easy and not unpleasant performance; and if the weather is +unusually bad, we can fall back upon our preserves in bottles and tanks, +which seldom fail to afford something new, as we have been pretty sure +to bring home some undeveloped germs with our stock of pond-water and +plants, and even creatures of considerable size are very likely to have +escaped detection in our first efforts at examination. + +When objects are not over abundant, as is apt to be the case in the cold +months, it is well to fill a large vial with some water out of the +aquarium or other large vessel, and watch what living specks may be +moving about therein. These are readily examined with a pocket-lens, and +with a little dexterity any promising creature can be fished out with +the dipping-tube. It is also advisable to shake a mass of vegetation in +a white basin, as the larger infusoria, &c., may be thrown down; and +indeed this method (as recommended by Pritchard) is always convenient. +Even so small a quantity of water as is contained in a glass cell, +appropriated to the continual examination of polyps or polyzoa, should +be frequently hunted over with a low power, as in the course of days and +weeks one race of small animals will disappear, and another take their +place. + +Following these various methods in December, we obtained many specimens; +but the most interesting was found by taking up small branches of the +Anacharis with a pair of forceps, and putting them into a glass trough +to see what inhabitants they might possess. One of these trials was +rewarded by the appearance of a little puppy-shaped animal very busy +pawing about with eight imperfect legs, but not making much progress +with all his efforts. It was evident that we had obtained one of the +_Tardigrada_ (slow-steppers), or Water-Bears, and a very comical amusing +little fellow he was. The figure was like that of a new-born puppy, or +"unlicked" bear cub; each of the eight legs were provided with four +serviceable claws, there was no tail, and the blunt head was susceptible +of considerable alteration of shape. He was grubbing about among some +bits of decayed vegetation, and from the mass of green matter in his +stomach, it was evident that he was not one of that painfully numerous +class in England--the starving poor. + +[Illustration: Water-Bear.] + +A power of one hundred and five linear, obtained with a two-thirds +object-glass, and the second eye-piece, enabled all his motions and +general structure to be exhibited, and showed that he possessed a sort +of gizzard, whose details would require more magnification to bring out. +Accordingly the dipping-tube was carefully held just over him, the +finger removed, and luckily in went the little gentleman with the +ascending current. He was cautiously transferred to a Compressorium,[24] +an apparatus by which the approach of two thin plates of glass can be +regulated by the action of a spring and a screw; and just enough +pressure was employed to keep him from changing his place, although he +was able to move his tiny limbs. Thus arranged, he was placed under a +power of two hundred and forty linear, and illuminated by an achromatic +condenser,[25] to make the fine structure of his gizzard as plain as +possible. It was then seen that this curious organ contains several +prominences or teeth, and is composed of muscular fibres, radiating in +every direction. From the front of the gizzard proceed two rods, which +meet in a point, and are supposed to represent the maxillæ or jaws of +insects, while between them is a tube or channel, through which the food +is passed. The mouth is _suctorial_, and the two horny rods, with their +central piece or pieces, are protrusile. They were frequently brought as +far as the outer lips (if we may so call the margins of the mouth), but +we did not witness an actual protrusion, except when the lips +accompanied them, and formed a small round pouting orifice. The skin of +the animal was tough and somewhat loose, and wrinkled during the +contractions its proprietor made. The interior of the body exhibited an +immense multitude of globular particles of various sizes in constant +motion, but not moving in any vessels, or performing a distinct +circulation. + +[24] The best forms of this instrument are made by Messrs. R. & J. Beck, +the glass plates being held in their places by flat-headed screws, and +not by cement. This plan was devised by the author, and makes it easy to +renew the glasses when broken. + +[25] The achromatic condenser is a frame capable of supporting an +object-glass, lower than that employed for vision, through which the +light passes to the object in quantities and directions determined by +stops of various shapes. The appearances mentioned can be seen without +it, though not so well. + +My specimens had no visible eyes, and these organs are, according to +Pritchard's book, "variable and fugacious." The same authority remarks, +"In most vital phenomena they very closely accord with the rotatoria; +thus like these they can be revived after being put into hot water at +113° to 118°, but are destroyed by immersion in boiling water. They may +be gradually heated to 216°, 252°, and even 261°. It is also by their +capability of resuscitation after being dried that they are able to +sustain their vitality in such localities as the roofs of houses, where +at one time they are subjected to great heat and excessive drought, and +at another are immersed in water." + +When vital processes are not stopped by excess of temperature, as is the +case with the higher animals, the power of resisting heat without +destruction depends upon the condition of the albumen. Soluble albumen, +or, as it should be called, _Albuminate of Soda_ (for a small quantity +of that alkali is present and chemically united with it), after having +been _thoroughly dried_, may be heated without loss of its solubility; +although if the same temperature was applied before it was dry, that +solubility would be destroyed, and it would no longer be a fit +constituent of a living creature. As Dr. Carpenter observes, this fact +is of much interest in explaining the tenacity of life in the +Tardigrada. + +The movements of the water-bears, although slow, evince a decided +purpose and ability to make all parts work together for one common +object; and as might be expected from this fact, and also from the +repetition of distinct, although not articulated limbs, they are +provided with a nervous apparatus of considerable development, in the +shape of a chain of a ganglia and a brain, with connecting filaments. +From these and other circumstances naturalists consider the Tardigrada +to belong to the great family of _Spiders_, of which they are, +physiologically speaking, _poor relations_. Siebold says "they form the +transition from the Arachnoidæ to the Annelides."[26] Like the spiders +they cast their skin; and, although I was not fortunate enough to +witness this operation--called in the language of the learned _ecdysis_, +which means putting its clothes off--I found an empty hide, which, +making allowance for the comparative size of the creatures, looked tough +and strong as that of a rhinoceros, and showed that the stripping +process extended to the tips of the claws. The 'Micrographic Dictionary' +states that the Tardigrada lay but few eggs at a time, and these are +"usually deposited during the ecdysis, the exuviæ serving as a +protection to them during the process of hatching." Thus Mrs. Water-Bear +makes a nursery out of her old skin, a device as ingenious as +unexpected. The water-bears are said to be hermaphrodites, but this is +improbable. + +[26] 'Anatomy of the Invertebrata,' Burnett's trans., p. 364. + +The _Plumatella repens_, described in a former chapter, was kept in a +glass trough, to which some fresh water was added every few days, taken +from a glass jar that had been standing many weeks with growing +anacharis in it. One day a singular creature made its appearance in the +trough; when magnified sixty diameters it resembled an oval bladder, +with a sort of proboscis attached to it. At one part it was +longitudinally constricted, and evidently possessed some branched and +complicated internal vessel. The surface was ciliated, and the neck or +proboscis acted as a rudder, and enabled the creature to execute rapid +turns. It swam up and down, and round about, sometimes rotating on its +axis, at others keeping the same side uppermost, but did not exhibit the +faintest sign of intelligence in its movements, except an occasional +finger-like bend of the proboscis, upon which the cilia seemed thicker +than upon the body. It was big enough to be observed as a moving white +speck by the naked eye, when the vessel containing it was held to catch +the light slantingly; but a power of one hundred and five was +conveniently employed to enable its structure to be discerned. Under +this power, when the animal was resting or moving slowly, a mouth was +perceived on the left side of the proboscis, which was usually, though +not always, curved to the right. The mouth was a round or oval orifice, +and when illuminated by the parabola, its lips or margin looked +thickened, and of a pale blue, and ciliated, while the rest of the body +assumed a pinkish pearly tint. + +Below the mouth came a funnel-shaped tube or oesophagus, having some +folds or plaits on its sides, and terminating in a broad digestive tube, +distinct from the nucleus, and ramifying like a tree. The constriction +before mentioned, which was always seen in certain positions, although +it varied _very considerably_ in depth and width, drew up the integument +towards the main trunk of the digestive tube, and thus the animal had a +distinct ventral and dorsal side. The branches of the tube stopped +somewhat abruptly just before reaching the surface, and were often +observed to end in small round vacuoles or vesicles. + +[Illustration: Trachelius ovum (slightly flattened).] + +At the bottom of the bladder, opposite the mouth, in some specimens were +large round cavities or cells, filled with smaller cells, or partially +transparent granules. These varied in number from one to two or three, +and were replaced in other specimens by masses that did not present the +same regular form or rounded outline. In one instance an amorphous +structure of this kind gradually divided itself, and seemed in the +course of forming two cells, but the end of the process was +unfortunately not seen. The annexed drawing will readily enable the +animal to be recognised. It shows the mouth very plainly, and a current +of small particles moving towards it. The oesophagus terminates in a +digestive tube, like the trunk of a tree, from which numerous branches +spring. This arrangement is probably analogous to that of the +phlebenterous mollusks described by Quatrefages, in which the +ramifications of the stomach answer the purpose of arteries, and convey +the nutrient fluid to various parts of the body. It is also likely that +they minister to the function of respiration. + +The cilia on the surface, which are arranged in parallel lines, are best +observed when the animal is slightly flattened in a live-box; but this +process produces a considerable derangement in the relative position of +the internal parts, and they can only be well seen when it is immersed +in plenty of water, and is polite enough to stand still, and submit his +digestive economy to a steady gaze. The only way to succeed in this +undertaking is to have a large stock of patience as well as a convenient +cell or trough. The table must be kept steady, and the prisoner watched +from time to time, and at last he will be found ready for display. + +Pritchard says this animal, whose name is _Trachelius ovum_, is an +inhabitant of stagnant bog water, and has been found encysted. My +specimens could not be called plentiful, but for several weeks I could +generally find two or three, by filling a four-ounce vial from the glass +jar, and examining its contents with a pocket-lens. If none were +present, another dip was made, and usually with success. + +One evening I caught a good specimen by means of the dipping-tube, and +cautiously let it out, accompanied by a drop of water, on the glass +floor of the live-box. A glance with the pocket-lens showed all was +right, and the cover was very gently put on, but it had scarcely touched +the creature when it became crumpled up and in confusion. On one or two +former occasions I had been unfortunate enough to give my captives a +squeeze too much, with the usual result of a rupture of their +integuments and an escape of globules and fluids from the regions +within. Now, however, there was no such rupture and no such escape, but +instead of a smooth, comely surface, my Trachelius had lost all title to +his specific designation, _ovum_, for instead of bearing any resemblance +to an egg, it was more like an Irishman's hat after having a bit of a +"shindy" at Donnybrook Fair. + +I was greatly puzzled with this aspect of things, and still more so when +my deranged specimen twirled and bumped about with considerable +velocity, and in all directions. Presently a decided constriction +appeared about half-way below the mouth and proboscis, and in transverse +direction. The ciliary motion became very violent in the lower half just +below the constriction, while the proboscis worked hard to make its half +go another way. For some minutes there was a tug of war, and at length +away went proboscis with his portion, still much crumpled by the fight, +and left the other bit to roam at will, gradually smooth his puckers, +and assume the appearance of a respectable well-to-do animalcule. + +[Illustration: _Trachelius ovum_, three hours after division.] + +Three hours after the "fission" the proboscis half was not unlike the +former self of the late "entire," but with diminished body and larger +neck; while the remaining portion had assumed a flask form, and would +not have been known by his dearest acquaintance. The portraits of the +_dis-United States_ were quickly taken, and, as bed-time had arrived, +they were left to darkness and themselves. The next morning a change had +come over the "spirit of their dream." Both were quiet, or sedately +moving, and they were nearly alike. The proboscis fellow had increased +and rounded his body, and diminished his nose; while Mr. Flask had grown +round also, and evinced an intention of cultivating a proboscis himself. +Twenty-seven hours after the separation, both had made considerable +progress in arranging and developing their insides, which had been +thrown into great confusion by the way in which the original animal had +been wrenched in half, and in both a granular mass was forming opposite +the mouth end. The proboscis portion, which may perhaps be termed the +_mother_, was more advanced than her progeny, but both had a great deal +to do if they meant to exhibit the original figure, and develop a set of +bowels as elegantly branched. Whether they would have succeeded or not +under happier circumstances I cannot tell, but unfortunately the Fate +who carries the scissors cut short their days. + +In all other animalcules in which I had observed the process of +multiplication by self-division, it seemed to go on smoothly, and with +no discomfort to either the dividend or the quotient, and it may be that +in the fission of the _Trachelius ovum_ I witnessed what the doctors +would call a bad case. Indeed it may have been prematurely brought on, +and aggravated by the squeeze in the live-box. It is, however, probable, +from the stronger texture and greater organic development of this +animalcule, that it does not divide so easily as the softer and simpler +kinds. + +Frequent examination of this animalcule has created a strong doubt in my +mind whether it is rightly placed in our "systems." My own impression is +that it belongs to a higher class. + + + + +CHAPTER XIII. + +CONCLUSION. + + +The creatures described in the preceding pages range from very simple to +highly complicated forms, and in describing them some attention has been +paid to the general principles of classification. The step is a wide one +from the little masses of living jelly that constitute Amoebæ to the +Rotifers, supplied with organs of sensation--eyes, feelers (calcars), +and the long cilia in the Floscularians, which seem to convey impression +like the whiskers of a cat--together with elaborate machinery for +catching, grinding up, and digesting their prey, and which are also well +furnished with respiratory and excretory apparatus, ovaries, &c. In the +polypi and polyzoa may be observed those resemblances in appearance +which induced early naturalists to group them together, and also the +wide difference of organization which marks the higher rank to which the +latter have attained. Amongst the ciliated infusoria important +gradations and differences will also be noticed, some having only one +sort of cilia, others two sorts, and others, again, supplied, in +addition to cilia, with hooks and styles. No perfectly satisfactory +classification of the infusoria has yet been devised, and the life +history of a great many is still very imperfectly known. On the whole, +the tendency of research is to place many of them higher than they used +to stand after Ehrenberg's supposition of their having a plurality of +distinct stomachs, &c., was given up. Balbiani and others have shown +numerous cases of their forming their eggs by a process analogous to +that of higher animals. Some really are, and others closely resemble, +the larval conditions of creatures higher in the scale, and the +contracted vesicle with its channel bears resemblance to what is called +the "water vascular system" of worms. + +Zoological classification depends very much on morphology, that is, the +tracing of particular structures, or parts, through all their stages, +from the lowest to the highest forms in which they are exhibited. In +this way the swimming bladder of a fish is shown to be a rudimentary +lung, though it has no respiratory functions, and Mr. Kitchen Parker has +found in the imperfect skull of the tadpole a rudimentary appearance of +bones belonging to the human ear. The comparative anatomist, after a +wide survey of the objects before him, arranges them into groups. He +asks what are the characteristic things to be affirmed concerning all +the A's that cannot be said of all the B's; or of all the C's that marks +their difference from the A's or the D's. Careful investigation upon +these methods shows affinities where they were not previously +expected--birds and reptiles being close relations, for example, instead +of distant connections--and they lessen the value for purposes of +classification of peculiarities that might have been deemed of the +highest importance. + +Professor Huxley divides the vertebrates into ITHYCOIDS, comprising +fishes and amphibia, which, besides other characteristics, have gills at +some period of their existence; SAUROIDS (reptiles and birds), which +have no gills, and possess certain developmental characteristics in +common; and, lastly, MAMMALS. The Insecta, Myriopoda, Arachnidæ, and +Crustacea, he remarks, "without doubt present so many characters in +common as to form a very natural assemblage. All are provided with +articulated limbs attached to a segmented body skeleton, the latter, +like the skeleton of the limbs, being an 'exoskeleton,' or a bordering +of that layer which corresponds with the outer part of the vertebrates. +In others, at any rate in the embryonic condition, the nervous system is +composed of a double chain of ganglia, united by longitudinal +commissures, and the gullet passed between two of these commissures. No +one of the members of these four classes is known to possess vibratile +cilia. The great majority of these animals have a distinct heart, +provided with valvular apertures, which are in communication with a +peri-visceral cavity containing corpusculated blood." These four classes +have constituted the larger group or "province" of _Articulata_ or +_Arthropoda_. Professor Huxley thinks that, notwithstanding "the marked +differences" between the Annelida (worms) and the preceding Arthropods +(joint-foots), their resemblances outweighing them--"the characters of +the nervous system, and the frequently segmented body, with imperfect +lateral appendages of the Annelida, necessitates their assemblage with +the Arthropoda in one great division, or sub-kingdom, of ANNULOSA." + +Tracing analogies between the Echinodermata (sea urchins, star-fish, +&c.) and the Scolecida (intestinal worms), he places them together as +_Annuloida_. + +Cephalopoda, Pteropoda, Pulmo-gasteropoda, and Branchio-gasteropoda, +having resemblances of nervous system, and "all possessing that +remarkable buccal apparatus, the Odontophore," are placed together by +him as ODONTOPHORA. The Odontophores (tooth-bearers) are familiar to +microscopists as the so-called _palates_ of mollusca. Placing with the +above the lamellibranchial mollusks (mollusks with gills formed of +lamellæ or little plates), Ascidioida (ascidians), Brachiopoda +(lamp-sheds), and Polyzoa, in spite of their differences, he forms +another great group, ANNULOIDA. + +The Actinozoa (anemonies, &c.) and the Hydrozoa (polyps) constitute the +COELENTERA of Frey and Leuckart. "In all these animals," says +Professor Huxley, "the substance of the body is differentiated into +those histological elements which have been termed cells, and the latter +are previously disposed in two layers, one external and one internal, +constituting the ectoderm and endoderm. Among animals which possess this +histological structure the Coelenterata stand alone in having an +alimentary canal, which is open at its inner end and communicates freely +by this aperture with the general cavity of the body," and "all (unless +the Ctenophora should prove a partial exception to the rule) are +provided with very remarkable organs of offence or defence, called +thread-cells or nematocysts." In describing the Polyps we have given +illustrations of these weapons. + +The remaining classes, which have been roughly associated as _Protozoa_, +must evidently be rearranged. Sponges, Rhizopods (Amoebæ, &c.), and +Gregarines, have strong resemblances, but recent researches may place +the former higher. The Infusoria comprehend creatures too various to +remain under one head, and very many of them too highly organized to be +called "protozoons," or first life-forms. + +Those who wish to pursue this subject further may consult Professor +Huxley's 'Elements of Comparative Anatomy,' from which the preceding +quotations have been taken. + +A system of classification founded upon anatomical and developmental +considerations frequently differs considerably from one we might arrive +at if all the creatures were arranged according to the perfection of +their faculties and the extent and accuracy of their relations to the +external world. Such a classification would not in any way supersede the +former, but it would prove very instructive and offer many valuable +suggestions. Some years since, Professor Owen proposed to divide the +Vertebrates according to the perfection of their brains, but other +anatomists did not find his divisions sufficiently coincident with +facts. Very little has been done towards an exact science of human +phrenology. The difficulties remain pretty much as they were many years +ago, and our comparative phrenology, if we may use such a term, is in a +very imperfect state. When we come to the lower animals we do not know +what peculiarities of the brain of an ant make it the recipient of a +higher instinct, or give its possessor greater capacities for dealing +with new and unexpected difficulties than are possessed by most other +insects, and if any reader has a marine aquarium, and will make a few +experiments in taming prawns, and watching their proceedings, he will +discover symptoms of intelligence beyond what the structure of the +creature would have led him to expect. + +Animals usually possess some one leading characteristic to which their +general structure is subordinated. Man stands alone in having the whole +of his organization conformed to the demands of a thinking, ruling +brain. To pass at once to the other extreme, we observe in the lower +infusoria a restless locomotion, probably subservient to respiration, +but utterly inconsistent with a well developed life of relation, or with +manifestations of thought. The life of an animalcule may be summed up as +a brief and restricted, but vigorous organic energy, and if the amount +of change which a single creature can make in the external world, is +inconceivably small, the labours of the entire race alter the conditions +of a prodigious amount of matter. Microscopic vegetable life is an +important agent in purifying water from the taint of decomposing +organisms. By evolving oxygen it brings putrescent particles under the +influence of a species of combustion, which, though slow, is as +effectual as that which a furnace could accomplish. In this way minute +moulds burn up decaying wood. + +Microscopic animal life helps the regenerative process, and, together +with the minute vegetable life, restores to the organic system myriads +of tons of matter, which death and decay would have handed over to the +inorganic world. In a very small pond or tank the quantity of this kind +of work is soon appreciable, and if we reflect on the amazing amount of +water all over the globe, including seas and oceans, which swarm with +infusoria, the total effect produced in a single year must seem +considerable, even when compared with that portion of the earth's crust +that is subject to alteration from all other causes put together. If we +add to the labour of the Infusoria those of other creatures whose +organization can only be discovered by the microscope, and take in the +foraminifera, polyps, polyzoa, &c., we shall have to record still larger +obligations to minute forms of living things. The coral polyp builds +reefs that constitute the chief characteristic of certain regions in the +Pacific; foraminifera are forming or helping to form strata of +considerable extent, while diatoms are making deposits many feet in +thickness, composed of myriads of their silicious shells, or adding +their contributions of silex, very large in the aggregate, to all +sedimentary rocks. Testimony of this kind of work is found by the +navigator who examines the ice in arctic seas, and it comes up with +soundings from the ocean depths. + +On the surface of the earth the amount of change produced is equally +remarkable, although it leaves less permanent traces behind. As a rule +no decomposition of organized matter takes place, no death of plants or +animals, without infusorial life making its appearance, and disposing of +no small portion of the spoil. Even in our climate the mass of matter +thus annually affected is very large; but what must it not be in moist +tropical lands, where every particle seems alive, and the race of life +and death goes on at a speed, and to an extent scarcely conceivable by +those who have not witnessed it. + +Thus, if we look at the world of minute forms which the microscope +reveals, there opens before us a spectacle of boundless extent. We see +life manifested by the specks of jelly containing particles not +aggregated into structure, and we see it gradually ascending in +complexities of organization. In creatures whose habits and appearance +seem most remote from our own, we find the elementary developments of +the organs and powers that constitute our glory, and give us our power. +Such studies assist us to conceive of the universe as a Cosmos, or +Beautifully Organized Whole; and, although we cannot tell the object for +which a single portion received its precise form, we trace everywhere +relations of structure to means of existence and enjoyment, and are led +to the conviction that all the actions and arrangements of the organic +or inorganic worlds are due to a definite direction and co-ordination of +a few simple forces, which implicitly and unerringly obey the dictates +of an Omniscient Mind. + + PRINTED BY J. E. ADLARD, BARTHOLOMEW CLOSE. + + + + +NEW WORKS AND NEW EDITIONS + + +RECENTLY PUBLISHED BY GROOMBRIDGE AND SONS + +5, PATERNOSTER ROW, LONDON. + +DEDICATED TO THE RIGHT HON. LORD LYTTON. + +_In one handsome Volume, Foolscap Quarto, cloth gilt, price 25s._ + + +WOMANKIND IN WESTERN EUROPE, + +FROM THE EARLIEST AGES TO THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY. + +BY THOMAS WRIGHT, M.A., F.S.A. + +_Illustrated with numerous Coloured Plates and Wood Engravings._ + + "It is something more than a drawing-room ornament. It is an + elaborate and careful summary of all that one of our most + learned antiquaries, after years of pleasant labour on a very + pleasant subject, has been able to learn as to the condition of + women from the earliest times. It is beautifully illustrated, + both in colours--mainly from ancient illuminations--and also by + a profusion of woodcuts, portraying the various fashions by + which successive ages of our history have been marked."--_The + Times._ + +_In one handsome Volume, Super-royal Quarto, cloth gilt, price 21s._ + + +RURAL CHURCHES THEIR HISTORIES, ARCHITECTURE, AND ANTIQUITIES. + +BY SIDNEY CORNER. + +_With Coloured Illustrations from Paintings by the Author._ + + Illustrations of some of those of the Churches of our country + that are most interesting, either from their associations or + from the picturesque beauty of their situations; each + Illustration being accompanied by a full descriptive account of + the History, Architecture, and Antiquities of the Church, + together with information on subjects of interest in its + neighbourhood. + +_Large Crown 8vo, cloth gilt, price 10s. 6d._ + + +GRAVEMOUNDS AND THEIR CONTENTS. + +BY LLEWELLYNN JEWITT, F.S.A. + +_Illustrated with more than Three Hundred Illustrations._ + +_The Books in this Catalogue may be ordered through any Bookseller, or +the Publisher will forward them direct (post paid) on receipt of their +value in Postage Stamps or Post-Office Order._ + + + + +NEW EDITION OF THE WORKS OF GRACE AGUILAR. + + + This elegant Edition, large crown 8vo, is printed from new type, + on paper made especially for the series, handsomely bound, and + illustrated by the leading Artists of the day. + + +_HOME INFLUENCE._ + +A Tale for Mothers and Daughters. 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C. + Hall._ + + MOTHER'S RECOMPENSE.--"'The Mother's Recompense' forms a + fitting close to its predecessor, 'Home Influence'. The results + of maternal care are fully developed, its rich rewards are set + forth, and its lesson and its moral are powerfully + enforced."--_Morning Post._ + + WOMAN'S FRIENDSHIP.--"We congratulate Miss Aguilar on the + spirit, motive, and composition of this story. Her aims are + eminently moral, and her cause comes recommended by the most + beautiful associations. These, connected with the skill here + evinced in their development, ensure the success of her + labours."--_Illustrated News._ + + VALE OF CEDARS.--"The Authoress of this most fascinating + volume has selected for her field one of the most remarkable + eras in modern history--the reigns of Ferdinand and Isabella.... + It is marked by much power of description, and by a woman's + delicacy of touch, and it will add to its writer's well-earned + reputation."--_Eclectic Review._ + + DAYS OF BRUCE.--"The tale is well told, the interest warmly + sustained throughout, and the delineation of female character is + marked by a delicate sense of moral beauty. It is a work that + may be confided to the hands of a daughter by her + parent."--_Court Journal._ + + HOME SCENES.--"Grace Aguilar knew the female heart better than + any writer of our day, and in every fiction from her pen we + trace the same masterly analysis and development of the motives + and feelings of woman's nature."--_Critic._ + + WOMEN OF ISRAEL.--"A work that is sufficient of itself to + create and crown a reputation."--_Mrs. S. C. Hall._ + +GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, PATERNOSTER ROW, LONDON. + + + + +_SHILLING GIFT BOOKS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE._ + + +Each Book sent Post Free for 12 Stamps. + + +UNION JACK; AND OTHER STORIES. + +BY MRS. S. C. HALL. + +Illustrated with 15 Wood Engravings. Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, 1_s._ + + "Mrs. Hall has written a charming story. The scene is laid in + Ireland. The characters are for the most part Irish, and the + name of the tale is 'Union Jack.' It is written with much + simplicity, and is calculated to amuse men and women as well as + children, for whom it is professedly written."--_Western Daily + Mercury._ + + +THE TOWN OF TOYS; AND OTHER STORIES. + +BY SARA WOOD. + +Illustrated with 15 Wood Engravings. Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, 1_s._ + + "One of the best of the series; the narrative is clearly and + concisely written, the subject matter is good, and above all it + is replete with that sustained interest, without which + children's stories become worse than useless."--_English + Churchman._ + + +NO MAN'S LAND; AND OTHER STORIES. + +BY T. MILLER. + +Illustrated with 15 Wood Engravings. Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, 1_s._ + + "A series of very amusing and instructive tales for children, + written by a talented author."--_Brighton Gazette._ + + +THE SEA SPLEENWORT; AND OTHER STORIES. + +BY THE AUTHOR OF "THE HEIR OF REDCLYFFE." + +Illustrated with 15 Wood Engravings. Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, 1_s._ + + "A capital little book for children, both amusing and + instructive."--_Liverpool Daily Post._ + + +LOTTIE'S HALF-SOVEREIGN; AND OTHER STORIES. + +BY MRS. RUSSELL GRAY. + +Illustrated with 15 Wood Engravings. Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, 1_s._ + + "The story before us is a most delightful one, and such as may + be placed in the hands of any child with the utmost + confidence."--_Hull Advertiser._ + + +THE SHEPHERD LORD; AND OTHER STORIES. + +BY JULIA CORNER. + +Illustrated with 15 Wood Engravings. Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, 1_s._ + + "We cannot imagine a better book for children educated at home; + it combines the fascination of romance with the truth of + history, and will be eagerly devoured by the youth of both + sexes."--_Somerset County Herald._ + +GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, PATERNOSTER ROW, LONDON. + + +THE CAPTIVE'S DAUGHTER; AND OTHER STORIES. + +BY W. HEARD HILLYARD. + +Illustrated with 15 Wood Engravings. Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, 1_s._ + + "If one were asked to select a series of stories most suitable + for presents to children, and affording real pleasure in their + perusal to 'children of a larger growth,' very few would + hesitate to name this series as the very first and best of the + class."--_Coventry Herald._ + + +THE ORPHANS OF ELFHOLM; AND OTHER STORIES. + +BY FRANCES BROWNE. + +Illustrated with 15 Wood Engravings. Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, 1_s._ + + "A book to be prized by the young, for its several tales are + well written and full of touching interest."--_City Press._ + + +WHEN WE WERE YOUNG; AND OTHER STORIES. + +BY THE AUTHOR OF "A TRAP TO CATCH A SUNBEAM." + +Illustrated with 15 Wood Engravings. Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, 1_s._ + + "The precept of moral courage which it inculcates, coupled with + its excellent tone throughout, stamps it at once as being of the + right sort."--_English Churchman._ + + +NOT CLEVER; AND OTHER STORIES. + +BY FRANCES M. WILBRAHAM. + +Illustrated with 15 Wood Engravings. Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, 1_s._ + + "Pure in tone, full of interest, well got up, and + cheap."--_Hereford Times._ + + +DEAR CHARLOTTE'S BOYS; AND OTHER STORIES. + +BY EMILY TAYLOR. + +Illustrated with 15 Wood Engravings. Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, 1_s._ + + "We are glad to receive a volume of these pretty stories. There + is something refreshing in them, scarcely to be found in any + other publication."--_City Press._ + + +THE STORY OF NELSON; AND OTHER STORIES. + +BY W. H. G. KINGSTON. + +Illustrated with 15 Wood Engravings. Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, 1_s._ + + "Mr. Kingston, with great skill, brings out the stirring events + of the great Admiral's life from the lips of an old Greenwich + pensioner. The story is told with all the enthusiasm of a true + 'Salt,' and has the further merit of capital descriptive + writing."--_Plymouth Journal._ + + +BLIND URSULA; AND OTHER STORIES. + +BY MRS. WEBB. + +Illustrated with 15 Wood Engravings. Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, 1_s._ + + "A domestic tale of humble life, which will well repay perusal. + There is an excellent tone, moral and religious, throughout the + narrative."--_Leeds Intelligencer._ + + +SEA-SHELL ISLAND; AND OTHER STORIES. + +BY G. E. SARGENT. + +Illustrated with 15 Wood Engravings. Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, 1_s._ + + "An exceeding pretty story."--_Somersetshire County Herald._ + + +WHICH WAS THE BRAVEST? AND OTHER STORIES. + +BY L. A. HALL. + +Illustrated with 15 Wood Engravings. Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, 1_s._ + + "A tale of the Christmas holidays on the banks of the Shannon, + intended to show, by the conduct of a party of young people, + that rashness and disobedience are no proofs of courage. It + should be widely spread, for the spirit of the little book is + excellent. The engravings are appropriate and + pleasing."--_Plymouth Journal._ + + +THE CLOCKMAKER OF LYONS; AND OTHER STORIES. + +BY E. M. PIPER. + +Illustrated with 15 Wood Engravings. Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, 1_s._ + + "An interesting tale, forming one of Messrs. Groombridge's + Series of Gift Books, and by no means the worst of the + series."--_Cheltenham Journal._ + + +THE ANGEL UNAWARES; AND OTHER STORIES. + +BY MARY HOWITT. + +Illustrated with 15 Wood Engravings. Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, 1_s._ + + "A pretty story of kindness rewarded by success. Tho principal + actors are children, and the teaching of the story, while it is + full of point for older learners, is adapted especially to the + capacity of youth."--_Plymouth and Devonport Journal._ + + +HISTORICAL DRAMAS. + +BY THE AUTHOR OF "THE HEIR OF REDCLYFFE." + +Illustrated with 15 Wood Engravings. Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, 1_s._ + + "Combines amusement with instruction in a way that must please + the rising generation."--_Renfrewshire Independent._ + + +LOST IN THE WOOD; AND OTHER STORIES. + +BY MRS. GILCHRIST. + +Illustrated with 15 Wood Engravings. Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, 1_s._ + + "Perfectly healthy in tone, and highly interesting, these tales + are indeed most suitable for family reading."--_Gloucester + Mercury._ + + +RAINBOW'S REST; AND OTHER STORIES. + +BY THOMAS HOOD. + +Illustrated with 15 Wood Engravings. Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, 1_s._ + + "These are excellent stories for children, and nicely got up and + illustrated."--_Paisley Herald._ + +A COMPLETE SET OF THE TWENTY VOLUMES, VIZ.:-- + + UNION JACK. By Mrs. S. C. HALL. + TOWN OF TOYS. By SARA WOOD. + NO MAN'S LAND. By T. MILLER. + SEA SPLEENWORT. By Author of "The Heir of Redclyffe." + LOTTIE'S HALF-SOVEREIGN. By Mrs. RUSSELL GRAY. + THE SHEPHERD LORD. By JULIA CORNER. + THE CAPTIVE'S DAUGHTER. By W. HEARD HILLYARD. + THE ORPHANS OF ELFHOLM. By FRANCES BROWNE. + WHEN WE WERE YOUNG. By Author of "A Trap to Catch a Sunbeam." + NOT CLEVER. By FRANCES M. WILBRAHAM. + DEAR CHARLOTTE'S BOYS. By EMILY TAYLOR. + STORY OF NELSON. By W. H. G. KINGSTON. + BLIND URSULA. By Mrs. WEBB. + SEA-SHELL ISLAND. By G. E. SARGENT. + WHICH WAS THE BRAVEST? By L. A. HALL. + THE CLOCKMAKER OF LYONS. By E. M. PIPER. + THE ANGEL UNAWARES. By MARY HOWITT. + HISTORICAL DRAMAS. By Author of "The Heir of Redclyffe." + LOST IN THE WOOD. By Mrs. GILCHRIST. + RAINBOW'S REST. By THOMAS HOOD. + +Enclosed in a Box, 20s. + + "We have read most of them with great care, for we are very + watchful over books for the young, and can assure our readers + they are well worth a mother's attention. They vary in interest + and in moral value, but all of them are calculated both to amuse + and instruct. Some convey valuable historical information, + others lessons in natural history, and most of them convey a + healthy moral influence. All are subservient to religion as well + as morals, but they are not tinctured with any _ism_, nor do + they inculcate any peculiar tenets."--_British Mothers' + Journal._ + +GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, PATERNOSTER ROW, LONDON. + + + + +GROOMBRIDGE'S SHILLING PRACTICAL MANUALS. + +_Each Book sent post-free on receipt of the price._ + + + 1. HOME-MADE WINES. How to Make and Keep them, with remarks on + preparing the fruit, fining, bottling, and storing. By G. VINE. + Contains Apple, Apricot, Beer, Bilberry, Blackberry, Cherry, + Clary, Cowslip, Currant, Damson, Elderberry, Gooseberry, Ginger, + Grape, Greengage, Lemon, Malt, Mixed Fruit, Mulberry, Orange, + Parsnip, Raspberry, Rhubarb, Raisin, Sloe, Strawberry, Turnip, + Vine Leaf, and Mead. + + 2. CARVING MADE EASY; or, Practical Instructions for Diners + Out. Illustrated with Engravings of Fish, Flesh, and Fowl, and + appropriate instructions, whereby a complete and skilful + knowledge of the useful art of Carving may be attained, and the + usages of the Dinner Table duly observed. By A. MERRYTHOUGHT. + + 3. COTTAGE COOKERY. Containing Simple Instructions upon Money, + Time, Management of Provisions, Firing, Utensils, Choice of + Provisions, Modes of Cooking, Stews, Soups, Broths, Puddings, + Pies, Fat, Pastry, Vegetables, Modes of Dressing Meat, Bread, + Cakes, Buns, Salting or Curing Meat, Frugality and Cheap + Cookery, Charitable Cookery, Cookery for the Sick and Young + Children. By ESTHER COPLEY. + + 4. COTTAGE FARMING; or, How to Cultivate from Two to Twenty + Acres, including the Management of Cows, Pigs, and Poultry. By + MARTIN DOYLE. Contains, On Enclosing a Farm, Land Drainage, + Manures, Management of a Two-acre Farm, Cow Keeping, The Dairy, + Pig Keeping, Bees and Poultry, Management of a Ten-acre Farm, + Flax and Rape, Management of a Farm of Twenty Acres, Farm + Buildings, etc. + + 5. SINGING MADE EASIER FOR AMATEURS, explaining the pure + Italian Method of Producing and Cultivating the Voice; the + Management of the Breath; the best way of Improving the Ear; + with much other valuable information equally valuable to + Professional Singers and Amateurs. + + 6. MARKET GARDENING, giving in detail the various methods + adopted by Gardeners in growing the Strawberry, Rhubarb, + Filberts, Early Potatoes, Asparagus, Sea Kale, Cabbages, + Cauliflowers, Celery, Beans, Peas, Brussels Sprouts, Spinach, + Radishes, Lettuce, Onions, Carrots, Turnips, Water Cress, etc. + By JAMES CUTHILL, F.R.H.S. + + 7. CLERK'S DICTIONARY OF COMMERCIAL TERMS; containing + Explanations of upwards of Three Hundred Terms used in Business + and Merchants' Offices. By the Author of "Common Blunders in + Speaking and Writing Corrected." + + "An indispensable book for all young men entering a + counting-house for the first time." + + 8. THE CAT, Its History and Diseases, with Method of + Administering Medicine. By the Honourable LADY CUST. + + 9. ELOCUTION MADE EASY for Clergymen, Public Speakers, and + Readers, Lecturers, Actors, Theatrical Amateurs, and all who + wish to speak well and effectively in Public or Private. By + CHARLES HARTLEY. Contents: Cultivation of the Speaking Voice, + Management of the Voice, Pausing, Taking Breath, Pitch, + Articulation, Pronunciation, The Aspirate, The Letter R, + Emphasis, Tone, Movement, Feeling and Passion, Verse, Scriptural + Reading, Stammering and Stuttering, Action, Acting, Reciting, + etc. + + 10. ORATORY MADE EASY. A Guide to the Composition of Speeches. + By CHARLES HARTLEY. Contents: Introduction, Power of Art, + Various Kinds of Oratory, Prepared Speech, Constructing a + Speech, Short Speeches, Command of Language, Reading and + Thinking, Style, Hasty Composition, Forming a Style, Copiousness + and Conciseness, Diction or Language, Purity and Propriety, + Misapplied Words, Monosyllables, Specific Terms, Variety of + Language, Too Great Care about Words, Epithets, Precision, + Synonymes, Perspicuity, Long and Short Sentences, Tropes and + Figures, Metaphor, Simile, etc. + + 11. THE GRAMMATICAL REMEMBRANCER; or, Aids for correct + Speaking, Writing, and Spelling, for Adults. By CHARLES HARTLEY. + Contents: Introduction, Neglect of English Grammar, Divisions of + Grammar, Parts of Speech, The Article, The Silent H, Nouns, + Formation of the Plural, Genders of Nouns, Cases of Nouns, + Comparison of Adjectives, Personal Pronouns, Relative Pronouns, + Demonstrative Pronouns, Regular and Irregular Verbs, Shall and + Will, The Adverb, Misapplication of Words, Division of Words, + Capital Letters, Rules for Spelling, Double _l_ and _p_, A Short + Syntax, Punctuation, etc. + + 12. THE CANARY. Its History, Varieties, Management, and + Breeding, with Coloured Frontispiece. By RICHARD AVIS. Contains, + History of the Canary, Varieties of the Canary, Food and General + Management, Cages, Breeding, Education of the Young, Mules, + Diseases, etc. + + 13. BIRD PRESERVING and Bird Mounting, and the Preservation of + Birds' Eggs, with a Chapter on Bird Catching. By RICHARD AVIS. + + 14. WINE GUIDE; or, Practical Hints on the Purchase and + Management of Foreign Wines, their History, and a complete + catalogue of all those in present use, together with remarks + upon the treatment of Spirits, Bottled Beer, and Cider. To which + is appended Instructions for the Cellar, and other information + valuable to the Consumer as well as the Dealer. By FREDERICK C. + MILLS. + +GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, PATERNOSTER ROW, LONDON. + + + + +ELEGANT PRIZE OR GIFT BOOK FOR BOYS. + + + In Three handsome Volumes, fcap. quarto, gilt edges, Illustrated + with Eleven Hundred Beautiful Engravings, price Twenty-four + Shillings. + + +RECREATIVE SCIENCE + +A RECORD AND REMEMBRANCER OF INTELLECTUAL OBSERVATION IN EVERY +DEPARTMENT OF SCIENCE. + +ASTRONOMY, CHEMISTRY, BOTANY, GEOLOGY, MECHANICS, METEOROLOGY, +MICROSCOPY, PHYSIOLOGY, ZOOLOGY, etc., etc. + + +THE PROMINENT FEATURES OF RECREATIVE SCIENCE. + + APPLICATIONS OF SCIENCE, including Photography and the + Stereoscope, Electro-Metallurgy, etc., with all their minute and + recreative manipulations. + + ESSAYS ON THE RESULT OF SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH, as witnessed by the + civilization of the Nineteenth Century, which derives so much of + its strength and moral excellence from the STEAM-ENGINE, the + ELECTRIC TELEGRAPH, and other applications of scientific + principles. + + BIOGRAPHIES OF EMINENT SCIENTIFIC MEN AND ANALYSIS OF OLD AND + NEW SCIENTIFIC BOOKS. + + ILLUSTRATIONS OF NATURAL PHENOMENA and Diagrams of Optical, + Mechanical, and other principles as required by the subject + matter of the papers published in the work. + + NATURAL HISTORY occupies a prominent position among the various + subjects dealt with, including HOME RECREATIONS, of which the + love of Nature may be said to be the basis. The Management of + Collections of Living Animals, the Preparation of Specimens by + Taxidermy, and the arrangement of Cabinets of Insects, Birds, + Shells, Plants, etc., etc. + + EXPERIMENTAL PHILOSOPHY AND RECREATIONS IN CHEMISTRY are + introduced with a view to explain principles and give a zest to + study. + + RECREATIVE SCIENCE is in all respects popular in tone and + attractive in its subjects. It is compiled by writers of the + highest eminence in the several departments of Scientific + Knowledge. In a word, it is a Record of Discovery, Observation, + and Intellectual Progress. An Instructor in First Principles, + and an Exhibitor of the Accomplishments of Research. + +GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London. + +Crown 8vo, elegantly bound, cloth gilt, Illustrated with 8 beautifully +coloured full-page Plates and numerous Wood Engravings, price 3s. 6d. + + +THE MICROSCOPE + +A Popular Description of some of the most Beautiful and Instructive +Objects for Exhibition. + +With Directions for the Arrangement of the Instruments and the +Collection and Mounting of Objects. + +BY THE HON. MRS. WARD. + + "This elegant book deserves at our hands especial commendation + for many reasons. There is no book that we know of that we would + more willingly place in the hands of a beginner to create an + interest in the science of Microscopy. The Illustrations are + beautiful, coloured to represent nature, and all original. To + our readers we cannot give better advice than to become + purchasers of the book--they will not regret the + outlay."--_Electrician._ + +GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London. + +Crown 8vo, elegantly bound, cloth gilt, Illustrated with 12 beautifully +coloured full-page Plates and numerous Wood Engravings, price 3s. 6d. + + +THE TELESCOPE A FAMILIAR SKETCH + +COMBINING A SPECIAL NOTICE OF OBJECTS COMING WITHIN THE RANGE OF A SMALL +TELESCOPE + +With a Detail of the most Interesting Discoveries which have been made +with the assistance of powerful Telescopes, concerning the Phenomena +of the Heavenly Bodies. + +BY THE HON. MRS. WARD. + + "It is with pleasure that we direct the reader's attention to a + little gem lately published by the Hon. Mrs. WARD. One of the + most admirable little works on one of the most sublime subjects + that has been given to the world. The main design of the book is + to show how much may be done in astronomy with ordinary powers + and instruments. We have no hesitation in saying that we never + saw a work of the kind that is so perfect. The illustrations are + admirable, and are all original."--_Western Daily Press._ + +GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London. + +Crown 8vo, elegantly bound, cloth gilt, Illustrated with 8 full-page +coloured Plates and numerous Wood Engravings, price 3s. 6d. + + +COUNTRY WALKS OF A NATURALIST WITH HIS CHILDREN. + +BY THE REV. W. HOUGHTON, M.A., F.L.S. + + "A fresher, pleasanter, or more profitable book than this has + rarely issued from the press."--_Art Journal._ + + "Contrives to furnish a large amount of interesting natural + history in brief compass and in a picturesque and engaging + manner."--_Pall Mall Gazette._ + + "It is wonderful what a very large amount of most instructive + matter connected with the animal and plant world the writer has + condensed into a small compass."--_Land and Water._ + + "This pretty little volume forms one of the best little books on + popular Natural History, and is admirably adapted as a present + to the young"--_Birmingham Daily Journal._ + +GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London. + +Crown 8vo, elegantly bound, cloth gilt, Illustrated with 8 beautifully +coloured full-page Plates and numerous Wood Engravings, price 3s. 6d. + + +SEA-SIDE WALKS OF A NATURALIST WITH HIS CHILDREN. + +BY THE REV. W. HOUGHTON, M.A., F.L.S. + + "The wonders of the sea-shore are detailed in an easy, pleasant + and lucid style."--_Examiner._ + + "The book is very attractive, and its usefulness is enhanced by + its many careful illustrations."--_Daily Telegraph._ + + "Families visiting the sea-side should provide themselves with + this convenient and instructive work."--_The Queen._ + + "It is pleasingly written, and the scientific information is + correct and well selected."--_Athenæum._ + +GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London. + +Crown 8vo, elegantly bound, cloth gilt, Illustrated with 8 beautifully +coloured full-page Plates and 90 Wood Engravings, price 3s. 6d. + + +FIELD FLOWERS A HANDY BOOK FOR THE RAMBLING BOTANIST, SUGGESTING WHAT TO +LOOK FOR AND WHERE TO GO IN THE OUTDOOR STUDY OF BRITISH PLANTS. + +BY SHIRLEY HIBBERD, F.R.H.S. + + "It will serve as an excellent introduction to the practical + study of wild flowers."--_The Queen._ + + "We cannot praise too highly the illustrations which crowd the + pages of this handbook; the coloured plates are especially + attractive, and serve to bring before us very distinctly the + most prominent flowers of the field, the heaths, and the + hedgerows."--_Examiner._ + +GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London. + +Crown 8vo, elegantly bound, cloth gilt, illustrated with 8 beautifully +coloured Plates and 40 Wood Engravings, price 3s. 6d. + + +THE FERN GARDEN HOW TO MAKE, KEEP, AND ENJOY IT OR, FERN CULTURE MADE +EASY. + +BY SHIRLEY HIBBERD, F.R.H.S. + +CONTENTS. + + FERNS IN GENERAL + FERN COLLECTING + HOW TO FORM AN OUTDOOR FERNERY + CULTIVATION OF ROCK FERNS + CULTIVATION OF MARSH FERNS + FERNS IN POTS + THE FERN HOUSE + THE FERNERY AT THE FIRESIDE + MANAGEMENT OF FERN CASES + THE ART OF MULTIPLYING FERNS + BRITISH FERNS + CULTIVATION OF GREENHOUSE + STOVE FERNS + SELECT GREENHOUSE FERNS + SELECT STOVE FERNS + TREE FERNS + FERN ALLIES + +GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London. + +Crown 8vo, elegantly bound, gilt edges, Illustrated with 12 beautifully +coloured Engravings, price 3s. 6d. + + +THE CANARY + +ITS VARIETIES, MANAGEMENT, AND BREEDING WITH PORTRAITS OF THE AUTHOR'S +OWN BIRDS. + +BY THE REV. FRANCIS SMITH. + +CONTENTS. + + A PLEA FOR THE CANARY + ORIGIN OF OUR OWN CANARIA + THE WILD CANARY + OUR LIZARDS + OUR YORKSHIRE SPANGLES + OUR NORWICH YELLOWS + OUR LONDON FANCY BIRDS + OUR BELGIANS + OUR GREEN BIRDS + OUR CINNAMONS + OUR TURNCRESTS + THE DOMINIE AND THE GERMANS + PREPARATIONS FOR BREEDING + NEST BOXES AND NESTS + OUR FIRST BIRDS + OUR MISFORTUNES + OUR INFIRMARY + ON CAGES + +GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London. + +Post 8vo, cloth gilt, with Woodcut Illustrations, price 5s. + + +THE ROSE BOOK A PRACTICAL TREATISE ON THE CULTURE OF THE ROSE. + +COMPRISING + + The Formation of the Rosarium; the Characters of Species and + Varieties; Modes of Propagating, Planting, Pruning, Training, + and Preparing for Exhibition; and the Management of Roses in all + Seasons. + +BY SHIRLEY HIBBERD, F.R.H.S. + +CONTENTS. + + THE FAMILIES OF WILD ROSES + THE FAMILIES OF CULTIVATED ROSES + SUMMER ROSES + FORMING THE ROSARIUM + CULTURE OF ROSES IN THE OPEN GROUND + AUTUMN PLANTING + SPRING PLANTING + PRUNING, DISBUDDING, AND SEASONAL MANAGEMENT + CLIMBING ROSES + PILLAR ROSES + YELLOW ROSES + ROSES IN POTS + ROSES IN BEDS + ROSES IN GREAT TOWNS + TEA ROSES IN TOWNS + VARIOUS MODES OF PROPAGATING + SELECT LISTS OF ROSES + REMINDERS OF MONTHLY WORK IN ROSE GARDEN + HINTS TO BEGINNERS + +GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London. + + + + +BOOKS FOR YOUNG NATURALISTS + + +Crown 8vo, elegantly bound, gilt edges, Illustrated with 16 beautifully +coloured Plates and numerous Wood Engravings, price 5s. + + +NESTS AND EGGS OF FAMILIAR BIRDS. + +Described and Illustrated with an account of the Haunts and Habits of +the Feathered Architects, and their Times and Modes of Building. + +BY H. G. ADAMS. + +GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London. + +Crown 8vo, elegantly bound, gilt edges, Illustrated with 8 beautifully +coloured Plates and numerous Wood Engravings, price 3s. 6d. + + +BEAUTIFUL BUTTERFLIES DESCRIBED AND ILLUSTRATED. + + With an Introductory chapter, containing the History of a + Butterfly through all its Changes and Transformations. A + Description of its Structure in the Larva, Pupa, and Imago + states, with an Explanation of the scientific terms used by + Naturalists in reference thereto, with observations upon the + Poetical and other associations of the Insect. + +BY H. G. ADAMS. + +GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London. + +Crown 8vo, elegantly bound, gilt edges, Illustrated with 8 beautifully +coloured Plates and numerous Wood Engravings, price 3s. 6d. + + +BEAUTIFUL SHELLS THEIR NATURE, STRUCTURE, AND USES FAMILIARLY EXPLAINED. + +With Directions for Collecting, Clearing and Arranging them in the +Cabinet. + +Descriptions of the most remarkable Species, and of the creatures +which inhabit them, and explanations of the meaning of their scientific +names, and of the terms used in Conchology. + +BY H. G. ADAMS. + +GROOMBRIDGE AND SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London. + +Crown 8vo, elegantly bound, gilt edges, Illustrated with 8 beautifully +coloured Plates and Wood Engravings, price 3s. 6d. + + +HUMMING BIRDS, DESCRIBED AND ILLUSTRATED. + +With an introductory Sketch of their Structure, Plumage, Haunts, Habits, +etc. + +BY H. G. ADAMS. + +GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London. + + +NEW EDITION OF THE WORKS OF ANNA LISLE. + +This elegant edition, large crown 8vo, is handsomely bound in cloth, +gilt edges, suitable for presentation, and Illustrated by the leading +artists of the day. + +In One Volume, large crown 8vo, Illustrated, price 6s. + + +SELF AND SELF-SACRIFICE OR, NELLY'S STORY. + +BY ANNA LISLE. + + "A very beautiful story, with characters well drawn, scenery + vividly described, and interest admirably sustained. The + tendency of the volume is not only unexceptionable, but + excellent in a Christian point of view. We have seldom seen a + book in which the best and highest aim is so manifest without + the attractiveness of the tale being at all lessened by the + embodiment of religious principles."--_Eclectic Review._ + + "The story is so delightful, and the whole spirit of the book so + pure, that it compels our admiration."--_Daily News._ + + "Since 'Currer Bell' we have read nothing more genuine, nor more + touching. 'Nelly's Story' has power to carry the reader right + through with it, and can hardly fail to impress a moral of + inestimable importance."--_Carlisle Journal._ + + "Admirably written, pervaded throughout by fine, correct, and + wholesome sentiments."--_Morning Post._ + + "Its excellent moral tone, and keen observation, are sure to + render the book widely popular."--_John Bull._ + + "'Nelly's Story' is a good one. It is one of the best we have + read for a long time."--_Bucks Advertiser._ + + "Abounding in interest. We can hardly conceive a more suitable + gift-book."--_Lady's Newspaper._ + + "Will be welcomed, read, and talked about."--_Gentleman's + Magazine._ + + "'Nelly's Story' is told in such a good and pleasant way, and + withal is so useful and world-like, that we trust it may bring + to its authoress the fame that she is well able to + support."--_Tait's Magazine._ + + "We recognise and proclaim in the authoress of this thrilling + tale a quality beyond mere ability--genius of a very high order. + We claim for Anna Lisle a place amongst the most distinguished + writers of her age. The story is a brilliant effort of refined + and sanctified imagination throughout, quite as fascinating as + anything in the way of story, whether told by Scott, Stowe, + Dickens, or Currer Bell."--_Sentinel._ + +In One Volume, large crown 8vo, Illustrated, price 5s. + + +QUICKSANDS A TALE. + +BY ANNA LISLE. + + "It is a thoroughly woman's book. We can fairly say that we have + seldom met with a graver or more striking warning against the + consequences of over eagerness about worldly position and + advantages, more forcibly and, at the same time, gracefully + conveyed."--_Literary Gazette._ + + "Contains a great deal of quiet and powerful writing. Marty, the + maid of Mrs. Grey, might pass for a creation of Dickens. The + moral of 'Quicksands' is at once comprehensive and + striking."--_Weekly Mail._ + +GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London. + + + + +GIFT BOOKS FOR BOYS. + + +Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, Illustrated with 8 full-page Wood Engravings, +price 2s. 6d. + + +INVENTION AND DISCOVERY A COLLECTION OF INTERESTING ANECDOTES. + +BY RALPH AND CHANDOS TEMPLE. + + "Has a point and object, and a good one--nicely worked + out."--_Saturday Review._ + + "We can recommend this book as a Christmas present, and one + which has given us no small pleasure."--_Literary Churchman._ + + "Exceedingly well-timed. A volume which should be added to every + working-man's club in England."--Notes and Queries. + + "Exhibits a conscientious regard for accuracy."--_Athenæum._ + + "The tendency is to instil the principle of self-help and the + advantage of earnest purpose."--_Bell's Messenger._ + +GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London. + +Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, Illustrated with 8 full-page Wood Engravings, +price 2s. 6d. + + +ENTERPRISE AND ADVENTURE A COLLECTION OF INTERESTING ANECDOTES. + +BY RALPH AND CHANDOS TEMPLE. + + "Very handsomely got up. The 'Temple Anecdotes' will be one of + the most popular of Christmas books."--_Standard._ + + "A sensible, well-written book."--_Globe._ + + "We know of no work which will make a more acceptable present + than this extremely handsome and really useful book."--_Era._ + + "As a present for boys, nothing can be better."--_Daily News._ + + "The anecdotes are told with a clearness and simplicity that + cannot fail to give pleasure."--_Spectator._ + +GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London. + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Marvels of Pond-life, by Henry J. 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Slack + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Marvels of Pond-life + A Year's Microscopic Recreations + +Author: Henry J. Slack + +Release Date: July 30, 2011 [EBook #36903] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MARVELS OF POND-LIFE *** + + + + +Produced by Chris Curnow, Matthew Wheaton and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This +file was produced from images generously made available +by The Internet Archive) + + + + + + +</pre> + +<div> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/i_cover.jpg" width="400" height="608" alt="cover" title="Cover"> +</div> + +<p class="spacer"> </p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 372px;"> +<a name="frontispiece" id="frontispiece"></a> +<img src="images/i_002.jpg" width="372" height="600" alt="i002" title="frontispiece."> +</div> + +<h1 id="booktitle">MARVELS OF POND-LIFE</h1> + +<p class="h4">OR,</p> + +<p class="h3">A YEAR'S MICROSCOPIC RECREATIONS</p> + +<p class="h4">AMONG THE</p> +<p class="h3">POLYPS, INFUSORIA, ROTIFERS, WATER-BEARS,<br> +AND POLYZOA.</p> + +<p class="spacer"> </p> + +<p class="h4">BY</p> + +<p class="h3">HENRY J. SLACK, F.G.S.,<br> +SECRETARY TO THE ROYAL MICROSCOPICAL SOCIETY;</p> + +<p class="h4">AUTHOR OF</p> +<p class="h4">'THE PHILOSOPHY OF PROGRESS IN HUMAN AFFAIRS,' ETC. ETC.</p> + +<br> + +<p class="h3"><i>SECOND EDITION.</i></p> + +<p class="h3">ILLUSTRATED WITH COLOURED PLATES AND NUMEROUS WOOD ENGRAVINGS.</p> + +<br> + +<p class="h3">LONDON:<br> +GROOMBRIDGE AND SONS,<br> +5, PATERNOSTER ROW.<br> +MDCCCLXXI.</p> + +<br> + +<p class="h4">PRINTED BY J. E. ADLARD,<br> +BARTHOLOMEW CLOSE.</p> + +<hr class="chapter"> + +<h2>INTRODUCTION.</h2> + +<p>As this little book is intended to be no more than an +introduction to an agreeable branch of microscopical study, +it is to be hoped it will not require a formal preface; but +a few words may be convenient to indicate its scope and +purpose.</p> + +<p>The common experience of all microscopists confirms the +assertion made by Dr. Goring, that the most fascinating +objects are living creatures of sufficient dimensions to be +easily understood with moderate magnification; and in no +way can objects of this description be so readily obtained, +as by devoting an occasional hour to the examination of the +little ponds which are accessible from almost any situation. +A complete volume of pond lore would not only be a bulky +book—much bigger than the aldermanic tomes which it is +the fashion to call "Manuals," although the great stone +fists in the British Museum would be required to grasp +them comfortably,—but its composition would overtask all +the philosophers of our day. In good truth, a tea-spoonful +of water from a prolific locality often contains a variety of +living forms, every one of which demands a profound +and patient study, if we would know but a few things +concerning it.</p> + +<p>To man, then, is a vast and a minute. Our minds ache +at the contemplation of astronomical immensities, and we +are apt to see the boundless only in prodigious masses,<span class="pagenum">[iv]</span> +countless numbers, and immeasurable spaces. The Creative +Mind knows no such limitations; and the microscope +shows us that, whether the field of nature's operation be +what to our apprehension is great or small, there is no +limit to the exhibition of marvellous skill. If the "undevout +astronomer" be "mad," the undevout microscopist +must be still more so, for if the matter be judged by human +sense, the skill is greater as the operation is more minute; +and not the sun itself, nor the central orb round which he +revolves, with all his attendant worlds, can furnish sublimer +objects of contemplation, than the miraculous assemblage of +forces which make up the life of the smallest creature that +the microscope reveals.</p> + +<p>There is an irresistible charm in the effort to trace +<i>beginnings</i> in nature. We know that we can never +succeed; that each discovery, which conducts back towards +some elementary law or principle, only indicates how much +still lies behind it: but the geologist nevertheless loves to +search out the first or oldest traces of life upon our globe; +and so the microscopist delights to view the simplest +exhibitions of structures and faculties, which reach their +completion in the frame and mind of man. That one great +plan runs through the whole universe is now an universally +accepted truth, and when applied to physiology and natural +history, it leads to most important results.</p> + +<p>The researches of recent philosophers have shown us +that nature cannot be understood by studying the parts of +animals with reference merely to their utility in the +economy of the creature to which they belong. We do, +indeed, find an admirable correspondence between structures +and the services they perform; but every object in +creation, and every part of it, is in harmonious relation to +some grand design, and exhibits a conformity to some +general mode of operation, or some general disposition and +direction of forces, which secures the existence of the<span class="pagenum">[v]</span> +individual or the species, and at the same time works out +the most majestic schemes. Microscopic researches, such +as are within the reach of millions, offer many of the most +beautiful illustrations of these truths; and although the +following pages are confined to such objects as are easily +obtainable from ponds, and relate almost exclusively to the +Infusoria, the Rotifers, the Polyps, and the Polyzoa, it is +hoped that they will assist in associating a few of the highly +suggestive reasonings of science, with one of the most +pleasurable recreations that human ingenuity has devised.</p> + +<p>After a preliminary chapter, which is intended to assist +the young microscopist in some technical matters, that +could not be conveniently introduced into the text, the +observations are distributed in chapters, corresponding with +the twelve calendar months. This arrangement was suggested +by the author's diary of operations for the year +1860, and although it by no means follows that the months +in which particular creatures were then discovered, will be +those in which they will be most readily found in other +years, it was thought advantageous to give a real account +of an actual period of microscopic work, and also that the +plan would facilitate a departure from the dry manner of a +technical treatise. The index will enable any one to use +the book for the purpose of reference, and it will be +observed that the first chapter in which any member of a +group of creatures is introduced, is that in which a general +description of the class is given. The illustrations are +taken from drawings made by the wife of the author from +the actual objects, with the exception of a few instances, in +which the authority is acknowledged. The sketches were +made <i>especially for beginners</i>, and the rule followed, was +not to introduce any details that could not be seen at +one focus, and with the simplest means: more elaborate +representations, though of the highest value to advanced +students, are bewildering at the commencement.<span class="pagenum">[vi]</span></p> + +<p>The ponds referred to are all either close to, or within a +moderate distance of, London;<a name="FNanchor_A_1" id="FNanchor_A_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> but similar objects will in +all probability be obtained from any ponds similarly +situated, and the descriptions and directions given for the +capture of the minute prey will be found generally applicable. +Care has been taken throughout to explain the most +convenient methods of examining the objects, and although +verbal descriptions are poor substitutes for the teachings of +experience, it is hoped that those here given will remove +some difficulties from a pursuit that no intelligent person +can enter upon without pleasure, or consent to abandon +when its elementary difficulties have been mastered, and +the boundless fields of discovery are opened to view. Let +not the novice be startled at the word "discovery." It is +true that few are likely to arrive at new principles or facts +which will inscribe their names upon the roll of fame; but +no one of ordinary powers can look at living objects with +any considerable perseverance, without seeing much that +has never been recorded, and which is nevertheless worthy +of note; and when the mind, by its own exertions, first +arrives at a knowledge of new truth, an emotion is felt +akin to that which more than recompenses the profoundest +philosopher for all his toil.</p> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_A_1" id="Footnote_A_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> Many are now (1871) destroyed by the progress of building.<span class="pagenum">[vii]</span></p></div> + +<br> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 150px;"> +<img src="images/i_008.jpg" width="150" height="14" alt="i008" title=""> +</div> +<br> + +<h2>CONTENTS.</h2> + +<hr class="thin"> + +<p class="h4"> +CHAPTER I.<br> +<br> +MICROSCOPES AND THEIR MANAGEMENT.</p> +<br> +<p class="out"><span class="right">PAGE</span></p> + +<br> +<br> + +<p class="out">Powers that are most serviceable—Estimated by Focal +length—Length of Body of Microscope and its Effects—Popular +Errors about Great Magnification—Modes of +Stating Magnifying Power—use of an "Erector"—Power +of various Objectives with different Eye-pieces—Examination +of Surface Markings—Methods of Illumination—Direct +and Oblique Light—Stage Aperture—Dark-ground +Illumination—Mode of Softening Light—Microscope +Lamps—Care of the Eyes<span class="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">1</a></span></p> + +<br> +<br> + +<p class="h4">CHAPTER II.<br> +<br> +JANUARY.</p> + +<br> + +<p class="out">Visit to the Ponds—Confervæ—Spirogyra quinina—Vorticella—Common +Rotifer—Three Divisions of Infusoria—Phytozoa—Protozoa—Rotifera—Tardigrada—Meaning +of these Terms—Euglenæ—Distinction between Animals +and Vegetables—Description of Vorticellæ—Dark-ground +Illumination—Modes of producing it—The +<span class="pagenum">[viii]</span>Nucleus of the Vorticella—Methods of Reproduction—Ciliated +Protozoa—Wheel-bearers or Rotifers—Their +Structure—The Common Rotifer—The young Rotifer +seen inside the old one—an Internal Nursery—"Differentiation" +and "Specialization"—Bisexuality of Rotifers—Their +Zoological Position—Diversities in their +Appearance—Structure of their Gizzard—Description of +Rotifers<span class="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">10</a></span></p> + +<br> +<br> + +<p class="h4">CHAPTER III.<br> +<br> +FEBRUARY.</p> + +<br> + +<p class="out">Visit to Hampstead—Small ponds—Water-Fleas—Water-Beetle—Snails—Polyps—Hydra +viridis—The Dipping-tube—A +Glass Cell—The Hydra and its Prey—Chydorus +Sphæricus and Canthocamptus, or Friends and +their Escapes—Cothurnia—Polyp Buds—Catching +Polyps—Mode of Viewing Them—Structure of Polyps—Sarcode—Polyps +Stimulated by Light—Are they Conscious?—Tentacles +and Poison Threads—Paramecium—Trachelius—Motions +of Animalcules, whether Automatic +or directed by a Will—Their Restless Character<span class="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">30</a></span></p> + +<br> +<br> + +<p class="h4">CHAPTER IV.</p> + +<p class="h3">MARCH.</p> + +<br> + +<p class="out">Paramecia—Effects of Sunlight—Pterodina patina—Curious +Tail—Use of a Compressorium—Internal Structure +of Pterodina—Metopidia—Trichodina pediculus—Cothurnia—Salpina—Its +Three-sided Box—Protrusion of +its Gizzard Mouth<span class="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">43</a></span></p> +<span class="pagenum">[ix]</span> + +<br> +<br> + +<p class="h4">CHAPTER V.<br> +<br> +APRIL.</p> + +<br> + +<p class="out">The Beautiful Floscule—Mode of Seeking for Tubicolar +Rotifers—Mode of Illuminating the Floscule—Difficulty +of seeing the Transparent Tube—Protrusion of Long +Hairs—Lobes—Gizzard—Hairy Lobes of Floscule not +Rotatory Organs—Glass Troughs—Their Construction +and Use—Movement of Globules in Lobes of Floscule—Chætonotus +larus—Its mode of Swimming—Coleps +hirtus—Devourer of Dead Entomostraca—Dead Rotifer +and Vibriones—Theories of Fermentation and Putrefaction—Euplotes +and Stylonichia—Fecundity of Stylonichia<span class="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">54</a></span></p> + +<br> +<br> + +<p class="h4">CHAPTER VI.<br> +<br> +MAY.</p> + +<br> + +<p class="out">Floscularia cornuta—Euchlanis triquetra—Melicerta ringens—Its +Powers as Brickmaker, Architect, and Mason—Mode +of Viewing the Melicerta—Use of Glass Cell—Habits +of Melicerta—Curious Attitudes—Leave their +Tubes at Death—Carchesium—Epistylis—Their Elegant +Tree Forms—A Parasytic Epistylis like the "Old +Man of the Sea"—Halteria and its Leaps—Aspidisca +lynceus<span class="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">69</a></span></p> + +<br> +<br> + +<p class="h4">CHAPTER VII.<br> +<br> +JUNE AND JULY.</p> + +<br> + +<p class="out">Lindia torulosa—Œcistes crystallinus—A Professor of +Deportment on Stilts—Philodina—Changes of Form +<span class="pagenum">[x]</span>and Habits—Structure of Gizzard in Philodina Family—Mr. +Gosse's Description—Motions of Rotifers—Indications +of a Will—Remarks on the Motions of Lower +Creatures—Various Theories—Possibility of Reason—Reflex +Actions—Brain of Insects—Consensual Actions—Applications +of Physiological Reasoning to the Movements +of Rotifers and Animalcules<span class="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">76</a></span></p> + +<br> +<br> + +<p class="h4">CHAPTER VIII.<br> +<br> +AUGUST.</p> + +<br> + +<p class="out">Mud Coloured by Worms—Their Retreat at Alarm—A +Country Duck-Pond—Contents of its Scum—Cryptomonads—Their +Means of Locomotion—A Triarthra +(Three-limbed Rotifer)—The Brachion or Pitcher Rotifer—Its +Striking Form—Enormous Gizzard—Ciliary +Motion inside this Creature—Large Eye and Brain—Powerful +Tail—Its Functions—Eggs<span class="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">86</a></span></p> + +<br> +<br> + +<p class="h4">CHAPTER IX.<br> +<br> +SEPTEMBER.</p> + +<br> + +<p class="out">Microscopic Value of Little Pools—Curious Facts in Appearance +and Disappearance of Animalcules and Rotifers—Mode +of Preserving them in a Glass Jar—Fragments +of Melicerta Tube—Peculiar Shape of Pellets—Amphileptus—Scaridium +longicaudum—A Long-tailed +Rotifer—Stephanoceros Eichornii—A Splendid Rotifer—Its +Gelatinous Bottle—Its Crown of Tentacles—Retreats +on Alarm—Illumination Requisite to see its +Beauties—Its Greediness—Richly-coloured Food—Nervous +Ganglia<span class="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">97</a></span></p> +<span class="pagenum">[xi]</span> + +<br> +<br> + +<p class="h4">CHAPTER X.<br> +<br> +OCTOBER.</p> + +<br> + +<p class="out">Stentors and Stephanoceri—Description of Stentors—Mode +of viewing them—Their Abundance—Social +Habits—Solitary Stentors living in Gelatinous Caves—Propagation +by Divers Modes—Cephalosiphon limnias—A +Group of Vaginicolæ—Changes of Shape—A Bubble-blowing +Vorticella<span class="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_X">107</a></span></p> + +<br> +<br> + +<p class="h4">CHAPTER XI.<br> +<br> +NOVEMBER.</p> + +<br> + +<p class="out">Characteristics of the Polyzoa—Details of Structure according +to Allman—Plumatella repens—Its Great +Beauty under proper Illumination—Its Tentacles and +their Cilia—The Mouth and its Guard or Epistome—Intestinal +Tube—How it swallowed a Rotifer, and what +happened—Curiosities of Digestion—Are the Tentacles +capable of Stinging?—Resting Eggs, or "Statoblasts"—Tube +of Plumatella—Its Muscular Fibres—Physiological +Importance of their Structure<span class="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">118</a></span></p> + +<br> +<br> + +<p class="h4">CHAPTER XII.<br> +<br> +DECEMBER.</p> + +<br> + +<p class="out">Microscopic Hunting in Winter—Water-Bears, or Tardigrada—Their +Comical Behaviour—Mode of viewing +them—Singular Gizzard—Wenham's Compressorium—Achromatic +Condenser—Mouth of the Water-Bear—Water-Bears' +Exposure to Heat—Soluble Albumen—Physiological +and Chemical Reasons why they are not +<span class="pagenum">[xii]</span>killed by Heating or Drying—The Trachelius ovum—Mode +of Swimming—Method of Viewing—By Dark-ground +Illumination—Curious Digestive Tube with +Branches—Multiplication by Division—Change of Form +immediately following this Process—subsequent Appearances<span class="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">128</a></span></p> + +<br> +<br> + +<p class="h4">CHAPTER XIII.</p> + +<br> + +<p class="out"><span class="smcap">Conclusion.</span>—Remarks on Classification, &c.<span class="right"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">140</a></span></p> + +<br> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 150px;"> +<img src="images/i_014.jpg" width="150" height="35" alt="i014" title=""> +</div> + +<p class="spacer"> </p> + +<hr class="chapter"> + +<p><span class="pagenum">[1]</span></p> + +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I.</h2> + +<p class="h2">PLAIN HINTS ON MICROSCOPES AND THEIR +MANAGEMENT.</p> + +<p class="out">Powers that are most serviceable—Estimated by focal length—Length +of body of microscope and its effects—Popular errors about great +magnification—Modes of stating magnified power—Use of an +"Erector"—Power of various objectives with different eye-pieces—Examination +of surface markings—Methods of illumination—Direct +and oblique light—Stage aperture—Dark ground illumination—Mode +of softening light—Microscope lamps—Care of the eyes.</p> + +<br> + +<img class="dropimg" src="images/i_015.jpg" width="90" height="91" alt="i015" title="T"> +<p class="minus"><b>HE</b> microscope is rapidly becoming the companion +of every intelligent family that can +afford its purchase, and, thanks to the skill of +our opticians, instruments which can be made to answer +the majority of purposes may be purchased for three +or four guineas, while even those whose price is counted +in shillings are by no means to be despised. The most +eminent English makers, Wales, and Tolles, in America, +and Hartnack, in Paris, occupy the first rank, while the +average productions of respectable houses exhibit so +high a degree of excellence as to make comparisons<span class="pagenum">[2]</span> +invidious. We shall not, therefore, indulge in the praises +of particular firms, but simply recommend any reader +entering upon microscopic study to procure an achromatic +instrument, if it can be afforded, and having at +least two powers, one with a focus of an inch or two +thirds of an inch, and the other of half or a quarter. +Cheap microscopes have usually only one eye-piece, +those of a better class have two, and the best are furnished +with three, or even more.</p> + +<p>The magnifying power of a compound microscope +depends upon the focal length of the object-glass (or +glass nearest the object), upon the length of the tube, +and the power of the eye-piece. With regard to object-glasses, +those of shortest focal length have the highest +powers, and the longest eye-pieces have the lowest +powers. The body of a microscope, or principal tube +of which it is composed, is, in the best instruments, +about nine inches long, and a draw tube, capable of +being extended six inches more, is frequently useful. +From simple optical principles, the longer the tube the +higher the power obtained with the same object-glass; +but only object-glasses of very perfect construction will +bear the enlargement of their own imperfections, which +results from the use of long tubes; and consequently for +cheap instruments the opticians often limit the length of +the tube, to suit the capacity of the object-glasses they +can afford to give for the money. Such microscopes +may be good enough for the generality of purposes, but +they do not, with glasses of given focal length, afford +the same magnifying power as is done by instruments +of better construction. The best and most expensive<span class="pagenum">[3]</span> +glasses will not only bear long tubes, but also eye-pieces +of high power, without any practical diminution of the +accuracy of their operation, and this is a great convenience +in natural history investigations. To obtain +it, however, requires such perfection of workmanship +as to be incompatible with cheapness. An experienced +operator will not be satisfied without having an object-glass +at least as high as a quarter, that will bear a deep +eye-piece, but beginners are seldom successful with a +higher power than one of half-inch focus, or thereabouts, +and before trying this, they should familiarise +themselves with the use of one with an inch focus.</p> + +<p>It is a popular error to suppose that enormous magnification +is always an advantage, and that a microscope +is valuable because it makes a flea look as big as a cat +or a camel. The writer has often smiled at the exclamations +of casual visitors, who have been pleased with +his microscopic efforts to entertain them. "Dear me, +what a wonderful instrument; it must be immensely +powerful;" and so forth. These ejaculations have often +followed the use of a low power, and their authors have +been astonished at receiving the explanation that the +best microscope is that which will show the most with +the least magnification, and that accuracy of definition, +not mere increase of bulk, is the great thing +needful.</p> + +<p>Scientific men always compute the apparent enlargement +of the object by <i>one</i> dimension only. Thus, +supposing an object one hundredth of an inch square +were magnified so as to appear one inch square, it +would, in scientific parlance, be magnified to "one hundred<span class="pagenum">[4]</span> +diameters," or one hundred linear; and the figures +100 would be appended to any drawing which might be +made from it. It is, however, obvious that the length +is magnified as well as the breadth; and hence the +magnification of the whole surface, in the instance +specified, would be one hundred times one hundred, or +ten thousand: and this is the way in which magnification +is popularly stated. A few moments' consideration +will show that the scientific method is that which +most readily affords information. Any one can instantly +comprehend the fact of an object being made +to look ten times its real length; but if told that it is +magnified a hundred times, he does not know what this +really means, until he has gone through the process of +finding the square root of a hundred, and learnt that a +hundredfold magnification means a tenfold magnification +of each superficial dimension. If told, for example, +that a hair is magnified six hundred diameters, the +knowledge is at once conveyed that it looks six hundred +times as broad as it is; but a statement that the +same hair is magnified three hundred and sixty +thousand times, only excites a gasping sensation +of wonder, until it is ascertained by calculation that +the big figures only mean what the little figures express. +In these pages the scientific plan will always be followed.</p> + +<p>If expense is not an object, a binocular instrument +should be purchased, and it is well to be provided with +an object-glass as low as three or even four inches focus, +which will allow the whole of objects having the diameter +of half an inch or more to be seen at once. Such a low<span class="pagenum">[5]</span> +power is exceedingly well adapted for the examination +of living insects, or of the exquisite preparations of +entire insects, which can now be had of all opticians. +Microscopes which have a draw tube can be furnished +with an <i>erector</i>, an instrument so called because it +erects the images, which the microscope has turned +upside down, through the crossing of the rays. This is +very convenient for making dissections under the instrument; +and it also gives us the means of reducing +the magnifying power of an object-glass, and thus +obtaining a larger field. The erector is affixed to the +end of the draw tube, and by pulling it out, or thrusting +it in, the rays from the object-glass are intercepted at +different distances, and various degrees of power obtained.</p> + +<p>A binocular microscope is most useful with low +powers from two thirds upwards. A new form, devised +by Mr. Stephenson, acts as an erector, and is very +valuable for dissections. It works with high powers.</p> + +<p>Beginners will be glad to know how to obtain the +magnifying power which different objects require, and +it may be stated that, with a full-sized microscope, a +two-inch object-glass magnifies about twenty-five diameters +with the lowest eye-piece; a one-inch object-glass, +or two thirds, from fifty to sixty diameters; a +half-inch about one hundred; a quarter-inch about two +hundred. The use of deeper eye-pieces adds very considerably +to the power, but in proportions which differ +with different makers. One instrument used by the +writer has three eye-pieces, giving with a two thirds +object-glass powers of sixty one hundred and five, and<span class="pagenum">[6]</span> +one hundred and eighty respectively; and with +a fifth two hundred and forty, four hundred and +thirty, and seven hundred and twenty, which can be +augmented by the use of a draw tube.</p> + +<p>It has been well observed that the illumination of +objects is quite as important as the glasses that are +employed, and the most experienced microscopists have +never done learning in this matter. Most microscopes +are furnished with two mirrors beneath the stage, one +plane and one concave. The first will throw a few +parallel rays through any transparent object properly +placed, and the latter causes a number of rays to +converge, producing a more powerful effect. The first +is usually used in daylight, when the instrument is +near a window (one with a north aspect, out of direct +sunlight, being the best); and the second is often +useful when the source of illumination is a candle or a +lamp. By varying the angle of the mirror the light is +thrown through the object more or less obliquely, and +its quantity should never be sufficient to pain the eye. +Few objects are seen to the best advantage with a +<i>large</i> pencil of perfectly direct light, and the beginner +should practise till the amount of inclination is obtained +which produces the best effect.</p> + +<p>It is advisable that the hole in the stage of the +microscope should be large—at least an inch and a half +each way—so that the entrance of oblique rays is not +obstructed, and it is desirable that the mirror, in +addition to sliding up and down, should have an arm +by which it can be thrown completely out of the +perpendicular plane of the body of the instrument.<span class="pagenum">[7]</span> +This enables such oblique rays to be employed as to +give a dark field, all the light which reaches the eye +being <i>refracted</i> by the object through which it is sent. +The opticians sell special pieces of apparatus for this +purpose, but though they are very useful, they do not +render it less desirable to have the mirror mounted as +described.</p> + +<p>Most microscopes are furnished with a revolving +diaphragm, with three holes, of different sizes, to +diminish the quantity of light that is admitted to the +object. This instrument is of some use, and offers a +ready means of obtaining a very soft agreeable light for +transparent objects, viewed with low powers. For this +purpose cut a circular disk of India or tissue paper, +rather larger than the biggest aperture; scrape a few +little pieces of spermaceti, and place them upon it, then +put the whole on a piece of writing-paper, and hold it +a few inches above the flame of a candle, moving it +gently. If this is dexterously done, the spermaceti will +be melted without singeing the paper, and when it is +cold the disk will be found transparent. Place it over +the hole in the diaphragm, send the light through it, +and the result will be a very soft agreeable effect, well +suited for many purposes, such as viewing sections of +wood, insects mounted whole, after being rendered +transparent, many small water creatures, etc. Another +mode of accomplishing this purpose is to place a +similarly prepared disk of paper on the flat side of a +bull's-eye lens, and transmit the light of a lamp through +it. This plan may be used with higher powers, and +the white opaque light it gives may be directed<span class="pagenum">[8]</span> +at any angle by means of the mirror beneath the +stage.</p> + +<p>An ordinary lamp may be made to answer for microscopic +use, but one of the small paraffine lamps now +sold everywhere for eighteen-pence is singularly convenient. +It is high enough for many purposes, and can +easily be raised by one or more blocks. A paraffine +lamp on a sliding stand is still more handy, and all the +better for a hole with a glass stopper, through which +the fluid can be poured.</p> + +<p>Many people fancy that the eyes are injured by +continual use of the microscope, but this is far from +being the case if reasonable precautions are taken. +The instrument should be inclined at a proper angle, +all excess of light avoided, and the object brought into +focus before it is steadily looked at. Most people +solemnly shut one eye before commencing a microscopic +examination; this is a practical and physiological +mistake. Nature meant both eyes to be open, and +usually resents a prolonged violation of her intentions +in this matter. It requires but a little practice to keep +both eyes open, and only pay attention to what is seen +by that devoted to the microscope. The acquisition of +this habit is facilitated, and other advantages gained, +by a screen to keep out extraneous light. For this +purpose take a piece of thin cardboard about nine +inches square, and cut a round hole in it, just big +enough to admit the tube of the microscope, about two +inches from the bottom, and equidistant from the two +sides. Next cut off the two upper corners of the cardboard, +and give them a pleasant-looking curve. Then<span class="pagenum">[9]</span> +cover the cardboard with black velvet, the commonest, +which is not glossy, answers best, and your screen is +made. Put the hole over the tube of the microscope, +and let the screen rest on the little ledge or rim which +forms an ornamental finish to most instruments. A +piece of cork may be gummed at the back of the screen, +so as to tilt it a little, and diminish its chance of +coming into contact with that important organ the +nose. This little contrivance adds to the clearness and +brilliancy of objects, and is a great accommodation to +the eyes.</p> + +<p>One more oculistic memorandum, and we have done +with this chapter. Do not stare at portions of objects +that are out of focus, and consequently indistinct, as +this injures the eyes more than anything. Remember +the proverb, "None so deaf as those that won't hear," +which naturally suggests for a companion, "None so +blind as those that won't see." It is often impossible +to get every object in the field in focus at one time;—look +only at that which is in focus, and be blind to all +the rest. This is a habit easily acquired, and is one +for which our <i>natural</i> microscopes are exceedingly +grateful; and every judicious observer desires to keep +on the best terms with his eyes.</p> + +<hr class="chapter"> + +<span class="pagenum">[10]</span> + +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II.</h2> + +<p class="h2">JANUARY.</p> + +<p class="out">Visit to the ponds—Confervæ—Spirogyra quinina—Vorticella—Common +Rotifer—Three divisions of Infusoria—Phytozoa—Protozoa—Rotifera—Tardigrada—Meaning +of these terms—Euglenæ—Distinction +between animals and vegetables—Description of +Vorticellæ—Dark ground illumination—Modes of producing it—The +Nucleus of the Vorticellæ—Methods of reproduction—Ciliated +Protozoa—Wheel bearers or Rotifers—Their structure—The common +Rotifer—The young Rotifer seen inside the old one—An +internal nursery—"Differentiation" and "Specialisation"—Bisexuality +of Rotifers—Their zoological position—Diversities in +their appearance—Structure of their Gizzard—Description of +Rotifers.</p> + +<br> + +<img class="dropimg" src="images/i_024.jpg" width="90" height="91" alt="i024" title="T"> +<p class="minus"><b>HE</b> winter months are on the whole less +favorable to the collection of microscopic +objects from ponds and streams than the +warmer portions of the year; but the difference is +rather in abundance than in variety, and with a very +moderate amount of trouble, representatives of the +principal classes can always be obtained.</p> + +<p>On a clear January morning, when the air was keen, +but no ice had yet skinned over the surface of the +water, a visit to some small ponds in an open field not +far from Kentish Town provided entertainment for +several days. The ponds were selected from their open<span class="pagenum">[11]</span> +airy situation, the general clearness of their water, and +the abundance of vegetation with which they were +adorned. Near the margin confervæ abounded, their +tangled masses of hair-like filaments often matted +together, almost with the closeness of a felted texture. +At intervals, minute bubbles of air, with occasionally a +few of greater size, indicated that the complex processes +of vegetable life were actively going on, that the tiny +plants were decomposing carbonic acid, dexterously +combining the carbon—which we are most familiar +with in the black opaque form of charcoal—to form +the substance of their delicate translucent tissues, and +sending forth the oxygen as their contribution to the +purification of the adjacent water, and the renovation +of our atmospheric air. This was a good sign, for +healthy vegetation is favorable to many of the most +interesting forms of infusorial life. Accordingly the +end of a walking-stick was inserted among the green +threads, and a skein of them drawn up, dank, dripping, +and clinging together in a pasty-looking mass. To +hold up a morsel of this mass, and tell some one not in +the secrets of pond-lore that its dripping threads were +objects of beauty, surpassing human productions, in +brilliant colour and elegant form, would provoke +laughter, and suggest the notion that you were poking +fun at them, when you poked out your stick with the +slimy treasure at its end. But let us put the green +stuff into a bottle, with some water from its native +haunt, cork it up tight, and carry it away for quiet +examination under the microscope at home.</p> + +<p>Here we are with the apparatus ready. We have<span class="pagenum">[12]</span> +transferred a few threads of the conferva from the +bottle to the <i>live box</i>, spreading out the fine fibres with +a needle, and adding a drop of water. The cover is +then gently pressed down, and the whole placed on the +stage of the microscope, to be examined with a power +of about sixty. A light is thrown somewhat obliquely +by the mirror through the object, the focus adjusted, +and a beautiful sight rewards the pains. Our mass of +conferva turns out to contain one of the most elegant +species. Fine hair-like tubes of an organic material, +as transparent as glass, are divided by partitions of the +same substance into cylindrical cells, through which a +slender ribbon of emerald green, spangled at intervals +with small round expansions, is spirally wound. We +shall call it the Spiral Conferva, its scientific name +being <i>Spirogyra quinina</i>. Some other species, though +less elegantly adorned, make a pleasing variety in the +microscopic scene; and appended to some of the +threads is a group of small crystal bells, which jerk up +and down upon spirally twisted stalks. These are the +"Bell Flower Animalcules" of old observers, the +<i>Vorticellæ</i>, or Little Vortex-makers of the present day. +Other small creatures flit about with lively motions, +and among them we observe a number of green spindles +that continually change their shape, while an odd-looking +thing crawls about, after the manner of certain +caterpillars, by bringing his head and tail together, +shoving himself on a step, and then repeating the +process, and making another move. He has a kind of +snout, behind which are two little red eyes, and something +like a pig-tail sticks out behind. This is the<span class="pagenum">[13]</span> +Common Wheel-bearer, <i>Rotifer vulgaris</i>, a favourite +object with microscopists, old and young, and capable, +as we shall see, of doing something more interesting +than taking the crawl we have described.</p> + +<p>A higher power, say one or two hundred, may be +conveniently applied to bring out the details of the +inhabitants of our live box more completely; but if the +glasses are good, a linear magnification of sixty will +show a great deal, with the advantage of a large field, +and less trouble in following the moving objects of our +search.</p> + +<p>Having commenced our microscopic proceedings by +obtaining some Euglenæ, Vorticellæ, and a Rotifer, we +are in a position to consider the chief characteristics of +three great divisions of infusoria, which will often +engage our attention.</p> + +<p>It is well known that animalcules and other small +forms of being may be found in <i>infusions</i> of hay or +other vegetable matter, and hence all such and similar +objects were called <i>Infusoria</i> by early observers. Many +groups have been separated from the general mass +comprehended under this term, and it is now used in +various senses. The authors of the 'Micrographic +Dictionary' employ it to designate "a class of microscopic +<i>animals</i> not furnished with either vessels or +nerves, but exhibiting internal spherical cavities, motion +effected by means of cilia, or variable processes +formed of the substance of the body, true legs being +absent." The objection to this definition is, that it +to some extent represents theories which may not be +true. That nerves are absent <i>all through the class</i> is an<span class="pagenum">[14]</span> +assumption founded merely upon the negative evidence +of their not having been discovered, and the complete +absence of "vessels" cannot be affirmed.</p> + +<p>In the last edition of 'Pritchard's Infusoria,' to which +some of our ablest naturalists have contributed, after +separating two groups, the Desmids, and the Diatoms, +as belonging to the vegetable world, the remainder of +the original family of infusoria are classified as <i>Phytozoa</i>, +<i>Protozoa</i>, <i>Rotifera</i>, and <i>Tardigrada</i>. We shall explain +these hard names immediately, first remarking that the +Desmids and the Diatoms, concerning whom we do not +intend to speak in these pages, are the names of two +groups, one distinctly vegetable, while the other, +although now generally considered so, were formerly +held by many authorities to be in reality animal. The +Desmids occur very commonly in fresh water. We have +some among our Confervæ. They are most brilliant +green, and often take forms of a more angular and +crystalline character than are exhibited by higher +plants. The Diatoms are still more common, and we +see before us in our water-drop some of their simplest +representatives in the form of minute boats made of +silica (flint) and moved by means still in dispute.</p> + +<p>Leaving out the Desmids and Diatoms, we have said +that in Pritchard's arrangement the views of those +writers are adopted who divide the rest of the infusoria +into four groups, distinguished with foreign long-tailed +names, which we will translate and expound. First +come the <i>Phytozoa</i>, under which we recognise our old +acquaintance <i>zoophyte</i> turned upside down. <i>Zoophytes</i> +mean animal-plants, <i>Phytozoa</i> mean plant-animals. We<span class="pagenum">[15]</span> +shall have by-and-bye to speak of some of the members +of this artificial and unsatisfactory group, and postpone +to that time a learned disquisition on the difference +between animals and plants, a difference observable +enough if we compare a hippopotamus with a cabbage, +but which "grows small by degrees, and beautifully +less," as we contemplate lower forms.</p> + +<p>After the <i>Phytozoa</i> come the <i>Protozoa</i>, or first forms +in which animality is distinctly recognised. Under this +term are assembled creatures of very various organization, +from the extreme simplicity of the <i>Proteus</i> or +<i>Amœba</i>, a little lump of jelly, that moves by thrusting +out portions of its body, so as to make a sort of extempore +legs, and in which no organs can be discerned,<a name="FNanchor_A_2" id="FNanchor_A_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> +up to others that are highly developed, like our <i>Vorticellæ</i>. +This group is evidently provisional, and jumbles +together objects that may be widely separated when +their true structure and real affinities are discerned.</p> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_A_2" id="Footnote_A_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> In some kinds and in some stages of growth this is not strictly +true.</p></div> + +<p>Following the <i>Protozoa</i>, come the <i>Rotifera</i>, or Wheel-bearers, +of which we have obtained an example from +our pond, and whose characteristics we shall endeavour +to delineate when our specimen is under view; and last +in the list we have the <i>Tardigrada</i>, "Slow-steppers," or +Water Bears, queer little creatures, something like new-born +puppies, with a double allowance of imperfect feet. +These, though somewhat connected with the rotifers, +are considered to belong to a low division of the arachnida +(spiders, &c.).</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;"> +<img src="images/i_030.jpg" width="300" height="117" alt="i030" title=""> +<span class="caption">a, motile; and b, resting condition of Euglenæ.</span> +</div> + +<p>Feeling that we must be merciful with the long-tailed +<span class="pagenum">[16]</span>words and explanations of classification, we reserve +further matter of this kind for the opportunities that +must arise, and direct our attention to living forms by +watching the <i>Euglenæ</i> which our water-drop contains. +We have before us a number of elegant spindle-shaped +bodies, somewhat thicker in front than behind, and in +what may be called the head there glitters a brilliant +red speck, commonly called an <i>eye-spot</i>, although, like +the eyes of potatoes, it cannot see. Round this eye-spot +the tissues are clear, like glass; but the body of +the creature is of a rich vegetable green, which shines +and glistens as it catches the light. Some swim rapidly +with a rollicking motion, while others twist themselves +into all manner of shapes. Now the once delicate +spindle is oddly contorted, now it swells out in the +middle, like a top, and now it rolls itself into a ball. +The drawings will afford some idea of these protean +changes, but they must be seen before their harlequin +character can be thoroughly appreciated. Some of the +specimens exhibit delicate lines running lengthwise, and +taking a spiral twist as the creature moves about; but +in none can any mouth be discerned, and their antics,<span class="pagenum">[17]</span> +although energetic and comical, afford no certain indications +of either purpose or will. What are they? +animals or vegetables? or something betwixt and +between?</p> + +<p>The first impression of any casual observer would be +to declare in favour of their animality; but before this +can be settled, comes the question, what is an animal, +and how does it differ from a vegetable? and upon this +the learned do by no means agree. One writer considers +the presence of <i>starch</i> in any object a proof that +it belongs to the dominions of Flora, while another +would decide the issue by ascertaining whether it evolves +oxygen and absorbs carbon, as most plants do, or whether +it evolves carbon and absorbs oxygen, as <i>decided</i> animals +do. Dr. Carpenter asserts that the distinction between +<i>Protophyta</i> and <i>Protozoa</i> (first or simplest plants and +animals), "lies in the nature of their food, and the +method of its introduction, for whilst the <i>Protophyte</i> +obtains the materials of its nutrition from the air and +moisture that surround it, and possesses the power of +detaching oxygen, hydrogen, carbon, and nitrogen from +their previous binary combinations, and of uniting them +into ternary and quaternary organic compounds (chlorophyll, +starch, albumen, &c.), the simplest <i>Protozoa</i>, +in common with the highest members of the animal +kingdom, seems utterly destitute of any such power, +makes, so to speak, a stomach for itself in the substance +of its body, into which it injects the solid particles that +constitute its food, and within which it subjects them +to a regular process of digestion."</p> + +<p>Unfortunately it is very difficult to apply this simple<span class="pagenum">[18]</span> +theory to the dubious objects which lie on the border-land +of the animal world, and no other theory that has +been propounded appears to meet all cases. Some +naturalists do not expect to find a broad line of demarkation +between the two great divisions of living +things, but others characterise such an idea as "unphilosophical," +in spite of which, however, we incline +towards it.</p> + +<p>Mr. Gosse, whose opinion is entitled to great respect, +calls the <i>Euglenæ</i> "animals" in his 'Evenings with +the Microscope;' but from the aggregate of recorded +observations it seems that they evolve oxygen, are +coloured with the colouring matter of plants, reproduce +their species in a manner analogous to plants, and have +in some cases been clearly traced to the vegetable +world. It is, however, possible that some <i>Euglenæ</i> +forms may be animal and others vegetable, and while +their place at nature's table is being decided, they must +be content to be called <i>Phytozoa</i>, which, as we have +before explained, is merely <i>Zoophyte</i> turned upside +down.</p> + +<p>Some authorities have thought their animality proved +by the high degree of contractility which their tissues +evince. This, however, cannot go for much, as all +physiologists admit contractility to belong to the vegetable +tissues of the sensitive plant, "Venus' Fly-trap," +&c., and a little more or less cannot mark the boundary +between two orders of being.</p> + +<p>We shall have occasion again to notice the <i>Protophytes</i>, +and now pass to the <i>Protozoa</i>, of which we have +a good illustration in the <i>Vorticella</i> already spoken of.<span class="pagenum">[19]</span> +In the group before us a number of elegant bells or +vases stand at the end of long stalks, as shown at the +top of the frontispiece, while round the tops of the bells, +the vibrations of a wreath or cilia produce little vortices +or whirlpools, and hence comes the family name. This +current brings particles of all sorts to the mouth near +the rim of the bells, and the creature seems not entirely +destitute of power to choose or reject the morsels according +to its taste. Every now and then the stalk of +some specimen is suddenly twisted into a spiral, and +contracted, so as to bring the bell almost to the ground. +Then the stem gracefully elongates again, and the cilia +repeat their lively game.</p> + +<p>The general effect can be seen very well by a power +of about sixty linear, but one of them from one to two +hundred is necessary to bring out the details, and a +practised observer will use still more magnification with +good effect. They should be examined by a moderately +oblique light, or most of the cilia are apt to be rendered +invisible, and also by <i>dark ground</i> illumination. This +may be accomplished in a well-made microscope by +turning the mirror quite out of the plane of the axis of +the instrument, that is to say, on one side of the space +the body would occupy if it were prolonged. By this +means, and by placing the lamp at an angle with the +mirror, that must be learnt by experiment, all the light +that reaches the eye has first passed through the object, +and is refracted by it out of the line it was taking, +which would have carried it entirely away. Or the +object may be illuminated by an apparatus called a +<i>spotted lens</i>, which is a small bull's-eye placed under +<span class="pagenum">[20]</span>the stage, and having all the centre of its face covered +with a plaster of black silk. In this method the central +or direct rays from the mirror are obstructed, but +those which strike the edge of the bull's-eye are bent +towards the object, which they penetrate and illuminate +if it is sufficiently transparent and refractive. Another +mode of dark ground illumination is by employing an +<span class="pagenum">[21]</span>elegant instrument called a <i>parabolic illuminator</i>, which +need not be described.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 529px;"> +<img src="images/i_034.jpg" width="529" height="506" alt="i034" title=""> +<span class="caption">Left: Vorticella, with posterior +circlet of cilia in process of separation—Stein.</span> +<br> +<span class="caption">Right: Vorticella in process of self-division. +A new frontal wreath in formation in +each of the semi-lunar spaces.</span> +</div> + +<p>Different specimens and species of <i>Vorticellæ</i> vary in +the length of their bells from one three or four +thousandth to one hundred and twentieth of an inch, +and when they are tolerably large, the dark ground +illumination produces a beautiful effect. The bells +shine with a pearly iridescent lustre, and their cilia +flash with brilliant prismatic colours.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/i_035.jpg" width="245" height="195" alt="i035" title=""><br> +<span class="caption">Left: Vorticella microstoma, showing +alimentary tube, ciliated mouth, +and formation of a gemma at the +base, 300 linear.—Stein.</span> +<br> +<span class="caption">Right: Vorticella microstoma, the encysted +animal protruding through +a supposed rupture of the tunic.</span> +</div> + +<p>The <i>Vorticellina</i> belong to the upper division of the +<i>Protozoa</i>—the <i>ciliata</i>, or ciliated animalcules, and they +have a mouth, an œsophagus, and an orifice for the +exit of their food.</p> + +<p>Many observers used to ascribe to those creatures a<span class="pagenum">[22]</span> +complete intestinal canal, but such an apparatus is now +believed not to exist in any of the Infusoria. Food +particles, after leaving the œsophagus, are thrust forward +into the sarcode, or soft flesh, and any cavity thus +formed acts as a stomach.</p> + +<p>The bells or cups are not, as might be fancied from +a casual inspection, open like wineglasses at the top, +but furnished with a retractile disk or cover, on which +the cilia are arranged. Their stalks are not simple +stems, but are hollow tubes, which in the genus Vorticella +are furnished with a muscular band, by whose +agency the movements are principally made.</p> + +<p>Some of the Vorticellids will be observed to leave +their stalks, having developed cilia round their base, +and may be seen to swim about in the enjoyment of +individual life. They are also capable of becoming +<i>encysted</i>, that is, of secreting a gelatinous cover.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/i_036.jpg" width="400" height="90" alt="i036" title=""> +<span class="caption">Encysted Vorticella, showing the obliteration of special organs by +the advancement of the process.—Pritchard.</span> +</div> + +<p>These changes are exhibited in the annexed cuts, +which are copied from known authorities. By careful +observation of the bodies of Vorticellids, a contractile +vesicle may be observed, which appears to cause a +movement of fluids, that is probably connected either +with respiration or secretion.<span class="pagenum">[23]</span></p> + +<p>Another piece of apparatus in this family, but not +confined to it, is the so-called <i>nucleus</i>, which in this +case is of a horseshoe shape and granular texture, +and greater solidity than the surrounding parts. The +functions of this organ formed the subject of various +conjectures, but it is now generally held to be an +ovary.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/i_037.jpg" width="400" height="143" alt="i037" title=""> +<span class="caption">Vorticella microstoma, in process of encystment, 300 linear; in the +last the inclosing tunic is plainly developed.—Stein.</span> +</div> + +<p>In common with many of the lower animals, the +Vorticellids have three ways of multiplying their race. +One by <i>fission</i>, or division of their bodies: another by +<i>buds</i>, somewhat analogous to those of plants; and another +by reproductive germs. These processes will come +again under our notice, and we shall leave the Vorticellids +for the present by observing that if they are +fed with a very small quantity of indigo or carmine, +the vacuoles or spaces, into which their nutriment +passes, will be clearly observed. Ehrenberg thought +in these and similar creatures that every vacuole +was a distinct stomach, and that all the stomachs +were connected by an intestinal canal; hence his name<span class="pagenum">[24]</span> +<i>Polygastrica</i>, or many stomached. In these views he +has not been followed by later observers, and it is probable +he was misled, partly by pushing the process of +reasoning from the analogies of higher animals much +too far, and partly by the imperfection of the glasses he +employed.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/i_038.jpg" width="400" height="292" alt="i038" title=""> +<span class="caption">Rotifer vulgaris.—A, mouth, or gizzard; B, contractile +vesicle.—Micrographic Dictionary. +<br> +N.B.—When the cilia and tail part are retracted, and the +body shortened, the creature assumes an obtuse oval form.</span> +</div> + +<p>Having thus briefly considered the Vorticellids we +must turn to the wheel-bearer, who belongs to a +higher race than even the ciliated <i>Protozoa</i>. We left +her crawling about with her snout or proboscis protruded, +but now she has moored herself by her tail-foot, +pulled in her nose, and put out two groups of cilia,<span class="pagenum">[25]</span> +which look like revolving wheels, and a little below +them is seen a gizzard in a state of active work. After +a little while she swims away with her wheels going, +and her tail, forked at the end, is found to be telescopic, +or capable of being pulled in and out. As the cilia +play, the neighbouring water is agitated, and the multitudes +of small objects are brought by the whirlpools +within her ravenous maw. But the strangest thing of +all is that inside her body is seen a young one; in this +case a large and fine infant, which, like "a chip of the +old block," imitates the parental motions, thrusts forth +its cilia and works its gizzard.<a name="FNanchor_A_3" id="FNanchor_A_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> In other genera the +eggs are hatched externally, but this one is ovoviparous, +and carries its nursery inside.</p> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_A_3" id="Footnote_A_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> This was met with in the summer, but is described here to avoid +repetition. I do not know whether the eggs are hatched in very cold +weather.</p></div> + +<p>A very slight investigation is sufficient to show that +in the wheel-bearer we have made a great advance +towards a higher organization than we discovered in +the preceding creatures. We witness what the learned +call a "differentiation" of parts and tissues, and a +"specialization" of organs. The head is plainly distinguishable +from the body, the skin or integument is +distinctly different from the internal tissues, behind the +eyes we can detect a nervous ganglion or miniature +brain, the gizzard is a complicated piece of vital +mechanism, such as we have not met with before, and +in various parts of the transparent inside we see organs +to which particular functions are assigned.</p> + +<p>It was at one time thought that Rotifers were her<span class="pagenum">[26]</span>maphrodite—uniting +both sexes in one body—but that +idea is now generally abandoned, for in many species +the males have been discovered, and the fair sex may +be gratified to hear that they are without doubt the +"inferior animals." Their function is simply to assist +the female in producing young, and as this can be +quickly accomplished, their lives are short, and they +are not supplied with the gizzard and digestive apparatus, +which their lady-loves possess. Much discussion +has taken place as to the rank which the Rotifers hold +in the animal kingdom, some naturalists thinking them +relations of the crabs, and others believing them to +belong to the family of the worms. Professor Huxley, +who adopts the latter view, which has the most friends, +groups the lower <i>Annulosa</i> together under the name of +<i>Annuloida</i>, in which he includes <i>Annelides</i>, or worms +of various kinds, the <i>Echinodermata</i> (or "spine skins," +among which are the star-fish and sea hedgehogs), and +some other families. He considers the Rotifers to be +"the permanent forms of Echinoderm larvæ." This +does not mean that they were ever produced by +Echinoderms, and had their development checked, but +that they resemble them in organization, and illustrate +a general law, observable in animated beings, namely, +that the lower creatures are like the imperfect stages of +higher animals, and that all things are formed according +to general principles, and exhibit a uniformity of +plan.</p> + +<p>Mr. Gosse adopts a different view, and while admitting +a connection between the Rotifers and the worms,<span class="pagenum">[27]</span> +adduces important reasons for associating them with +the insects.</p> + +<p>Leaving zoologists to settle their position, we may +remark that the Rotifers form a very numerous family, +presenting very great diversities of structure, some of +the most interesting of which we shall meet with in the +course of our rambles; but they all possess a gizzard, +which, though differing in complexity, is throughout +formed upon the same principle, and that we must now +explain.</p> + +<p>We have called the masticatory apparatus of the +Rotifers a <i>gizzard</i>; but Mr. Gosse, who has done most +to elucidate its structure, contends that it is a <i>mouth</i>; +and in some species it is frequently protruded, and used +like the mouth of higher animals. Taking one of the +most typical forms of this organ, and drawing our illustrations +from Mr. Gosse's admirable paper in the +"Transactions of the Royal Society," we may describe +it, when completely developed, as consisting of three +lobes, having a more or less rounded form. The +eminent naturalist we have named calls the whole organ +the <i>mastax</i>, and states that it is composed of dense muscular +fibre. The tube which leads down to it he +designates the "buccal (mouth) funnel," and the tube +that issues from it, and conveys the food to the digestive +sac or stomach, he calls the <i>œsophagus</i>, in conformity +with the nomenclature applied to creatures whose +mouths are in the usual place. Inside the mouth-gizzard +are placed two organs, which work like hammers, +and which Mr. Gosse therefore names <i>mallei</i>. +The hammers work against a sort of anvil, which is +<span class="pagenum">[28]</span>called <i>incus</i>, the Latin for that implement. Each +hammer consists of two portions articulated by a hinge +joint. The lower portion, the <i>manubrium</i>, or handle, +gives motion to the upper portion, which from its +shape is named the <i>uncus</i>, or hook. The <i>unci</i> are +furnished with finger-like processes of teeth, which +vary in number. There are five or six in the best +developed specimens. These hooks or teeth work +against each other, and against the <i>incus</i>, or anvil, +which consists of distinct articulated portions, of which +the principal are two <i>rami</i>, or branches, jointed so that +they can open and close like a pair of shears. These +two rest upon the third portion, which is called the +<i>fulcrum</i>. Some faint idea of the working of the +toothed hammers may be obtained by rubbing the +knuckles of both hands together, but the motion is +more complicated, and the <i>rami</i> play their part in the +trituration of the food. Mr. Gosse states that when +an objectionable morsel has got as far as this mouth-gizzard, +<span class="pagenum">[29]</span>"it is thrown back by a peculiar scoop-like +action of the <i>unci</i>, very curious to witness." The +foregoing diagram will help the reader to comprehend +this description, but no opportunity should be lost for +viewing this remarkable organ busy at work in the +living animals.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 200px;"> +<img src="images/i_042.jpg" width="200" height="162" alt="i042" title=""> +<span class="caption">Gizzard of Notomata.</span> +</div> + +<p>The respiration of the Rotifers is supposed to be +effected by the passage of water through vessels running +round them, and called the "water vascular +system," and in addition to their eyes, which often +disappear in adult specimens, the organ we described +as standing out like a pig-tail, as our acquaintance +crawled along, is thought to act as an <i>antenna</i>, or +feeler, and brings its possessor in further relation to +the external world. It is also called the <i>calcar</i>, or +spur, and is furnished with cilia or bristles at its +extremity.</p> + +<p>Sometimes the particles swallowed by the Common +Rotifer are large enough for their course to be traced, +but there is frequently a great commotion and grinding +of the gizzard, without any appreciable cause, although +doubtless something is taken in, and when the creature +is tired, or has had enough, we see both head and tail +retracted, and the body assumes a globular form. In +another chapter, when viewing a Philodine, we shall see +how in the family to which the Common Rotifer +belongs, the gizzard departs from the perfect type.</p> + +<hr class="chapter"> + +<span class="pagenum">[30]</span> + +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III.</h2> + +<p class="h2">FEBRUARY.</p> + +<p class="out">Visit to Hampstead—Small ponds—Water-fleas—Water-beetle—Snails—Polyps—Hydra +viridis—The dipping-tube—A glass cell—The +Hydra and its prey—Chydorus sphæricus and Canthocamptus, or +friends and their escapes—Cothurnia—Polyp buds—Catching +Polyps—Mode of viewing them—Structure of Polyps—Sarcode—Polyps +stimulated by light—Are they conscious?—Tentacles and +poison threads—Paramecium—Trachelius—Motions of Animalcules, +whether automatic or directed by a will—Their restless character.</p> + +<br> + +<img class="dropimg" src="images/i_044.jpg" width="91" height="90" alt="i044" title="I"> +<p class="minus"><b>T</b> has been a bitterly cold night, and as the sun +shines on a clear keen morning, and glistens +in the hoar-frost which covers the trees, it +might seem an unpropitious time for visiting the ponds, +in search of microscopic prey. We will, however, +try our luck, and take a brisk trot to the top of +Hampstead Heath, where the air is still keener, and +the ice more thick. Arriving at the highest point, +London appears on one side enveloped in its usual +great coat of smoke, through which St. Paul's big +dome, with a score or two of towers and steeples, can +be dimly made out; while looking towards Harrow-on-the-Hill, +or Barnet, we see the advantage of country +air in the sharpness with which distant objects cut the +blue sky. We leave the large ponds for another time,<span class="pagenum">[31]</span> +and hunt out the little hollows among the furze and +fern. One looks promising from the bright green +vegetation to be discovered under the sheet of ice, +which is almost firm enough to bear human weight.</p> + +<p>Breaking a convenient hole we hook up some of the +water-plants, and place them in a wide-mouthed vial, +which we fill with water, and cursorily examine with a +pocket-lens. Some water-fleas briskly skipping about, +and a beautiful little beetle, with an elegant dotted +pattern on his brown back, and a glistening film of air +covering his belly, show that we have not been unsuccessful, +although we must wait till we get home to +know the extent of our findings, among which, however, +we can only discern the graceful spiral shell of a small +water-snail, the <i>Planorbis</i>.</p> + +<p>Arriving at home the bottle was left undisturbed for +some hours in a warm light place, and then on being +examined several specimens of that beautiful polyp, the +<i>Hydra viridis</i>, were seen attached to the glass, and +spreading their delicate tentacles in search of prey. +One of the polyps is carefully removed by the <i>dipping-tube</i>, +a small glass tube, open at both ends. The forefinger +is placed upon the top, and when the other end +is brought over the object the finger is raised for an +instant, and as the water rushes in the little hydra +comes too, and is placed in a glass cell, about half an +inch wide, and one tenth of an inch deep. These cells +are obtained from the opticians, and cemented with +varnish or marine glue to an ordinary glass slide. +After an object has been placed in one of them, a little +water is taken up in the dipping-tube, and the cell +<span class="pagenum">[32]</span>filled until the fluid stands in a convex heap above its +brim. We then select around glass cover, and press +<span class="pagenum">[33]</span>it gently on the walls of our cell. A few drops of +superfluous water escape, and we have the cell quite +full, and the cover held tight by force of the capillary +attraction between the water and the glass.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/i_046.jpg" width="400" height="543" alt="i046" title=""> +<span class="caption">Hydra viridis with developed young one, and bud beginning +to sprout.</span> +</div> + +<p>The polyp deposited in one of these water cages is +then transferred to the stage of the microscope, and its +proceedings watched. At first it looks like a shapeless +mass of apple-green jelly. Soon, however, the tail end +of the creature is fixed to the glass, the body elongates, +and the tentacles (in this case eight) expand something +after the manner of the leaves of a graceful +palm.</p> + +<p>By accident two small Water Fleas were imprisoned +with the polyp, and one (a shrimp-like looking creature, +carrying behind her a great bag of eggs) came +into contact with the tentacles, and seemed paralysed +for a time. The hydra made no attempt to convey the +captive to its mouth, but held it tight until another +Water Flea, a round merry little fellow (<i>Chydorus +sphæricus</i>), came to the rescue, and assisted <i>Canthocamptus</i> +to escape by tugging at her tail. This friendly +action may not have been prompted by the intelligence +which seemed to suggest it, but those who have kept +tame soldier-crabs and prawns in an aquarium, will +not be indisposed to attribute to the crustaceans more +brains than they have usually credit for. It must, +however, be confessed that the subsequent conduct of +Mrs. Canthocamptus did not indicate the possession of +much prudence, for she learnt no lesson from experience, +but repeatedly swam against her enemy's tentacles, +suffered many captures, and only escaped being<span class="pagenum">[34]</span> +devoured through the indifference, or want of appetite, +which the polyp evinced.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<a name="fn5" id="fn5"></a> +<img src="images/i_048.jpg" width="400" height="442" alt="i048" title=""> +<span class="caption">A, Canthocamptus minutus; B, Chydorus sphæricus; C and +D, Capsules and poison-thread of polyp; E, Tricodina pediculus, +side view and under view; F, Kerona polyporum.—Microg. +Dict.</span> +</div> + +<p>On the body of the <i>Canthocamptus</i> were some +small transparent vases or bottles, containing living +objects, which sprang up and down. These were<span class="pagenum">[35]</span> +members of the <i>Vorticella</i> family, called <i>Cothurnia</i>, and +will be hereafter described.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 340px;"> +<img src="images/i_049.jpg" width="340" height="199" alt="i049" title=""> +<span class="caption">Hydra viridis, in various shapes.</span> +</div> + +<p>Watching the hydra it was curious to note the +changes of form which these creatures are able to +assume. Now the tentacles were short and thick, and +the body squat; now the body was elongated, like the +stem of a palm tree, and the tentacles hung gracefully +from the top. From some of the polyps little round +buds were growing, while other buds were already +developed into miniature copies of the parent, and only +attached by a slender stalk. In a few days many of +these left the maternal side, fixed their own little tails +to the glass, and commenced housekeeping on their +own account.</p> + +<p>Polyps may be obtained at all times of the year by +bringing home duckweed, conferva, and other water-plants +from the ponds. Some hauls may be unsuccessful, +but if one pond is not propitious others should +be tried. The plants should be put in a capacious<span class="pagenum">[36]</span> +vessel of water, and placed in the light, where, if polyps +be present, they will show themselves within twenty-four +hours, either attached to the sides of the glass, or +hanging from the plants, or suspended head downwards +from the upper film of the water. They are elegant +objects, and may be kept without difficulty for some +weeks. After being confined in a small quantity of +water for purposes of examination, they should be carefully +replaced in the larger vessel, and may thus be +used again and again without suffering any injury. A +low power—a three or two-inch glass—or a one-inch, +reduced by employing the erector—is the most +convenient for examining the whole creature, but +higher powers are necessary to make out its minute +structure. They should be viewed with direct and +oblique light, as transparent and also as opaque +objects. In the latter case the "Lieberkuhn," or +polished silver speculum, is convenient, and if the +microscope is not furnished with Lister's dark wells, +a small piece of black paper may be stuck behind the +object, by simply wetting it with the tongue.<a name="FNanchor_A_4" id="FNanchor_A_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a></p> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_A_4" id="Footnote_A_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> The side silver reflector is useful for illuminating such objects.</p></div> + +<p>Although the polyps are remarkable for the simplicity +of their organization, they do not the less +exhibit the wonderful nature of animal life. Their +bodies are composed of the substance, called <i>sarcode</i>, +in which is imbedded a colouring matter resembling that +in the leaves of plants; every part possesses irritability +and contractility, and they are very sensitive to the +stimulus of light. The outer layer of their bodies is +<span class="pagenum">[37]</span>harder than the inner layer. These layers are severally +called <i>ectoderm</i> and <i>endoderm</i>. They may be cut and +grafted like trees, and if turned inside out, the new +inside digests and assimilates as well as the old. +Whether any form of consciousness can belong to +creatures which have no distinct nervous system is +open to doubt, but it would seem probable from their +movements that food and light afford them something +like a pleasurable sensation in a very humble degree. +If we were sufficiently acquainted with the secrets of +molecular combination we might discover that the +various functions of these simple organisms were discharged +by different <i>particles</i>, although it is only in +higher creatures that muscular particles are aggregated +into muscles, or nerve particles into nerves.</p> + +<p>Having examined the general appearance and proceedings +of the hydra, let us cut off a tentacle, or take +a small specimen and gently crush it by pressing down +the cover of the live box, and place the object so prepared +under a power of about three hundred linear. If +we then illuminate it with a moderate quantity of oblique +light, we shall discover round the edge of the tentacle +a number of small cells or capsules, from some of +which a very slender wire or thread will be emitted.<a name="FNanchor_A_5" id="FNanchor_A_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> +These are the stinging organs of the polyp, and +resemble those which Mr. Gosse has so ably elucidated +in the sea anemones. Some writers have endeavoured +to show that they are not stinging organs at all, but so +large an amount of evidence to the contrary is accumulated +in Mr. Gosse's 'Actinologia Britannica,' +<span class="pagenum">[38]</span>that no reasonable doubt remains. The stinging +capsules of the polyp are shown in the annexed sketch, +and also the way in which they are employed, for it +<span class="pagenum">[39]</span>fortunately happened that on exposing one of the +hydras to pressure in the live box, a small worm +(<i>Anguillula</i>) escaped, which had been pierced with the +minute weapons which are supposed to convey a poison +into the wound. The authors of the 'Micrographic +Dictionary' think that the prongs of the forks, +which will be seen to point upwards in the sketch,<a name="FNanchor_B_6" id="FNanchor_B_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_B_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> +are springs, and occupy a reversed position in the +capsule cells, and that their function is to throw out +the threads. However this may be, the polyps, and +similarly endowed creatures, have the power of darting +out their poison threads with considerable force, and +Mr. Gosse found that the anemone was able to pierce +a thick piece of human skin.</p> + +<div class="footnote"> +<p> + <a name="Footnote_A_5" id="Footnote_A_5"></a> + <a href="#FNanchor_A_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> +See illustration <a href="#fn5">above</a>.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"> +<p> + <a name="Footnote_B_6" id="Footnote_B_6"></a> + <a href="#FNanchor_B_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> +See illustration <a href="#fn6">below</a>.</p></div> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<a name="fn6" id="fn6"></a> +<img src="images/i_052.jpg" width="400" height="584" alt="i052" title=""> +<span class="caption">Anguillula pierced by stinging organs of the Hydra viridis.</span> +</div> + +<p>The same excellent observer attributes the emission +of the anemone poison threads, which he considers +hollow, to the injection of a fluid. In their quiescent +state, he thinks they are drawn in, like the finger of a +glove, and are forced out as the liquid enters their +slender tubes. Possibly the polyp stinging organs may +have the same structure.</p> + +<p>Notwithstanding their dangerous weapons, polyps +are often infested with a parasite, the <i>Trichodina pediculus</i>, +as shown in Fig. <span class="smcap">E</span>, page 49, and it must happen +that either this visitation is not disagreeable, or that +the Trichodina is not influenced by the poison.</p> + +<p>As the plants in the bottles decayed, some of the +animalcules died off and others appeared. In one +bottle, containing decaying chara, <i>Paramecia</i> abounded. +The <i>Paramecia</i>, of which there are various species, +<span class="pagenum">[40]</span>have always been favourite objects with microscopists. +The Germans call them "slipper animalcules," and +they vary in size from 1—96" +<a name="FNanchor_A_7" id="FNanchor_A_7"></a> +<a href="#Footnote_A_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> to 1—1150". They are +flat rounded-oblong creatures, with a distinct integument +or skin, "through which numerous vibratile cilia +pass in regular rows."<a name="FNanchor_B_8" id="FNanchor_B_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_B_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a> They are furnished with a +distinct mouth, and adult specimens exhibit star-shaped +contractile vesicles in great perfection.</p> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_A_7" id="Footnote_A_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> The usual mode of giving dimensions is by fractions thus +expressed: 1—96" means one ninety-sixth of an inch.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_B_8" id="Footnote_B_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_B_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> 'Micrographic Dictionary.'</p></div> + +<p>The swarm of specimens before us belong to one +species, <i>Paramecium aurelia</i>, the <i>Chrysalis animalcule</i>, +and they crowd every portion of the little water-drop +we have taken up, and examined with a power of about +one hundred linear. When they are sufficiently quiet +a power of about four hundred may be used with +advantage, and Pritchard recommends adding a little +indigo and carmine to the water, in order to see the +cilia more clearly, or rather to render their action more +plain. The cilia are disposed lengthwise, and Ehrenberg +counted in some rows sixty or seventy of them, making +an aggregate of three thousand six hundred and forty +organs of motion in one small animated speck. This +number seems large, but although we have never performed +the feat of counting them, we should have +expected it to prove much greater. Unlike most +animalcules they are susceptible of being preserved by +drying upon glass, and we subjoin a figure from +Pritchard, of one thus treated, in which the star-shaped +vesicles are clearly seen. These curious organs com<span class="pagenum">[41]</span>municate +with other vessels, and, as we have previously +stated, are probably connected with respiration and +excretion.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;"> +<img src="images/i_055.jpg" width="300" height="140" alt="i055" title=""> +<span class="caption">Paramecium aurelia. +A dried specimen showing the vesicles.—Pritchard.</span> +</div> + +<p>The genus <i>Paramecium</i> is now confined to those +creatures which exhibit rows of longitudinal cilia of +uniform length, which are destitute of hooks, styles, or +other organs of motion than the cilia, which have a +lateral mouth, and no eye-spots. One mode of increase +is by division, which may be easily observed; another +is through the formation of true eggs as traced by +Balbiani.</p> + +<p>Another of the treasures from the pond was a species +of <i>Trachelius</i>, or long-necked ciliated animalcule, which +kept darting in and out of a slimy den, attached to the +leaf of a water-plant. The body was stout and fish-shaped, +the tail blunt, and the neck furnished with long +conspicuous cilia, which enabled the advancing and +retreating movements to be made with great rapidity. +The motions of this creature exhibit more appearance +of purpose and design than is common with animalcules,<span class="pagenum">[42]</span> +but in proportion as these observations are prolonged, +the student will be impressed with the difficulty +of assuming that anything like a reasoning faculty and +volition, is proved by movements that bear some +resemblance to those of higher animals, whose cerebral +capacities are beyond a doubt. It is, however, almost +impossible to witness motions which are neither constant +nor periodic, without fancying them to be dictated +by some sort of intelligence. We must, nevertheless, +be cautious, lest we allow ourselves to be deceived by +reasoning so seductive, as the vital operations of the +lowest organisms may be merely illustrations of blind +obedience to stimuli, in which category we must reckon +food, and until we arrive at forms of being which +clearly possess a ganglionic system, we have no certainty +that a real will exists, even of the simplest kind; +and perhaps we must go still higher before we ought to +believe in its presence.</p> + +<p>Ehrenberg was much struck with the restless character +of many infusoria—whether he looked at them +by day or by night, they were never still. In fact +their motions are like the involuntary actions which +take place in the human frame; and if attached to +their bodies we observe cilia that never sleep, the +living membrane of some of our own organs, the nose, +for example, is similarly ciliated, and keeps up a perpetual +though unconscious work.</p> + +<hr class="chapter"> + +<span class="pagenum">[43]</span> + +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV.</h2> + +<p class="h2">MARCH.</p> + +<p class="out">Paramecia—Effects of Sunlight—Pterodina patina—Curious tail—Use +of a Compressorium—Internal structure of +Pterodina—Metopidia—Trichodina pediculus—Cothurnia—Salpina—Its +three-sided box—Protrusion of its gizzard mouth.</p> + +<br> + +<img class="dropimg" src="images/i_057.jpg" width="90" height="91" alt="i057" title="T"> +<p class="minus"><b>HE</b> <i>Paramecia</i>, noticed in the last chapter, +have increased and multiplied their kind +without any fear lest the due adjustment +between population and food should fail to be preserved. +A small drop of the scum from the surface of the water +in their bottle is an astounding sight. They move +hither and thither in countless numbers, seldom +jostling, although thick as herrings in a tub, and in +many portions of the field the process of self-fissure, or +multiplication by division, is going on without any +symptoms of discomfort on the part of the parent creature. +This is an interesting sight, but we will not +linger over it, for the sun is shining, and there is enough +warmth in the air to make it probable that the ponds +will be more prolific than in the cold winter months. +Sunshine is a great thing for the microscopic hunter; +it brings swarms of creatures to the surface, and the +Rotifers are especially fond of its genial beams. Even<span class="pagenum">[44]</span> +if we imitate it by a bright lamp, we shall attract +crowds of live dancing specks to the illuminated side of +a bottle, and may thus easily effect their capture by +the dipping-tube.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 150px;"> +<img src="images/i_058.jpg" width="150" height="167" alt="i058" title=""> +<span class="caption">Pterodina patina.</span> +</div> + +<p>This year the March sunshine was not lost, for on +the third of that month I obtained a bottleful of +conferva from a pond about a mile from my house, and +lying at the foot of the Highgate hills. Water-fleas +were immediately discovered in abundance, together +with some minute worms, and a ferocious-looking larva +covered with scales; but what attracted most attention +was a Rotifer, like a transparent animated soup-plate, +from near the middle of which depended a tail, which +swayed from side to side, as the creature swam along. +The head exhibited two little red eyes; two tufts of +cilia rowed the living disk through the water, and the +gizzard worked with a rapid snapping motion, that left +no doubt the ciliary whirlpools had brought home no +slender stores of invisible food. Sometimes the end of +the tail acted as a sucker, and fixed the animal tightly<span class="pagenum">[45]</span> +to the glass, when the wheels were protruded, and the +body swayed to and fro. Then the sucker action +ceased, and as the creature swam away, a tuft of cilia +was thrust out from the extremity of the tail. A power +of one hundred linear was sufficient to enable the +general nature of this beautiful object to be observed, +but to bring out the details, much greater amplification +was required, and this would be useless if the little +fidget could not be kept still.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 200px;"> +<img src="images/i_059.jpg" width="200" height="271" alt="i059" title=""> +<span class="caption">450 Pterodina patina—gizzard.</span> +</div> + +<p>The size of the creature, whose name we may as well +mention was <i>Pterodina patina</i>, rendered this practicable, +but required some care. The longest diameter of the +body, which was not quite round, was about 1—120", +so that it was visible to the naked eye, and as a good +many were swimming together, one could be captured +without much difficulty, and transferred with a very +small drop of water to the live-box. Then the cover<span class="pagenum">[46]</span> +had to be put on so as to squeeze the animal just +enough to keep it still without doing it any damage, or +completely stopping its motions. This was a troublesome +task, and often a little overpressure prevented its +success.</p> + +<p>Some observers always use in these cases an instrument +called a <i>compressorium</i>, by which the amount of +pressure is regulated by a lever or a fine screw; but +whether the student possess one or not, he should learn +to accomplish the same result by dexterously manipulating +a well-made live-box. We will suppose the +<i>Pterodina</i> successfully caged, and a power of about one +hundred and fifty linear brought to bear upon her, for +our specimen is of the "female persuasion." This will +suffice to demonstrate the disposition and relation of +the several parts, after which one of from four hundred +to five hundred linear may be used with great advantage, +though in this case the illumination must be +carefully adjusted, and its intensity and obliquity frequently +changed, until the best effect is obtained.</p> + +<p>We find, on thus viewing the Pterodina, that it is +a complex, highly organized creature, having its body +protected by a <i>carapace</i>, like the shell of a tortoise, but +as flexible as a sheet of white gelatine paper, which it +resembles in appearance. Round the margin of this +carapace are a number of little bosses or dots, which +vary in different individuals. The cilia are not disposed, +as at first appeared, in two separate and distinct disks, +but are continuous, as in the annexed sketch. Down +each side are two long muscular bands, distinctly +<i>striated</i>, and when they contract, the ciliary apparatus<span class="pagenum">[47]</span> +is drawn in. As this contraction takes place, two +apparently elastic bands, to which the ciliary lobes are +attached, are bent downwards, till they look like the C +springs behind a gentleman's carriage; and they regain +their former position of slight curvature, when the cilia +are again thrust out.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 200px;"> +<img src="images/i_061.jpg" width="200" height="182" alt="i061" title=""> +<span class="caption">Pterodina patina—tail-foot.</span> +</div> + +<p>The gizzard is three-lobed, and curiously grasped by +forked expansions of the handles of the hammers. The +tail, or tail-foot, can be withdrawn or thrust out at the +will of the creature; and when in a good position for +observation, a slight additional pressure will keep it so +for examination. Delicate muscular longitudinal bands, +forked towards the end of their course, supply the means +of performing some of its motions, and one, or perhaps +two, spiral threads extend through the upper half of its +length, and either act as muscles, or as elastic springs for +its extension. The intestines and other viscera are +clearly exhibited, and a strong ciliary action conducts +the food to the gizzard-mouth.</p> + +<p>To return to the tail. One spiral fibre is easily discovered;<span class="pagenum">[48]</span> +but I have often, and at an interval of months, +seen the appearance of two, and am in some doubt +whether this was a deception, arising from the compression +employed, or was a genuine indication.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/i_062.jpg" width="400" height="305" alt="i062" title=""> +<span class="caption">A. Metopidia acuminata, as drawn by Mr. Gosse. B. Specimen +as seen and described in text. c. Mouth or gizzard.</span> +</div> + +<p>Where this Rotifer occurs I have usually found it +plentiful, but unfortunately could obtain no constant +supplies after I had determined to make a special study +of the remarkable tail, which is much more complicated +than I have described. The <i>Pterodina</i> lived for some +time in captivity, and for a week or two I could obtain +them from my glass tank. They were likewise to be +found for some weeks in the same part of the pond, but +not all over it, until one day not a single specimen +could be discovered, notwithstanding a persevering search<span class="pagenum">[49]</span> +nor was I afterwards able to get any from that pond +during the remainder of the year.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 200px;"> +<img src="images/i_063.jpg" width="200" height="110" alt="i063" title=""> +<span class="caption">Trichodina pediculus.</span> +</div> + +<p>Several other Rotifers, with and without carapaces, +were among the same mass of confervæ, among them +a <i>Metopidia</i>, with a firm shell, a forked jointed tail, and +a projection in front which worked like a pickaxe among +the decaying weed. There were likewise specimens of +the long-necked animalcules (Trachelii), groups of +Vorticella, some specimens of Volvox, and a small +<i>Trichodina pediculus</i>, which, when magnified two hundred +and sixty linear, was about the size of a sixpence +and equally round. The edge was beautifully fringed +with a circle of cilia; in an inner circle was a row of +locomotive organs, and the centre exhibited vacuoles +constantly opening and shutting. This creature, as +before explained, is often found as a parasite upon the +polyps. On one occasion a glimpse was caught of a +Rotifer similar in shape to the common wheel animalcule, +but with a yellow inside. Possibly it was the +object so beautifully delineated by Mr. Gosse, in his +"Tenby," and described as the "Yellow Philodine," +but this must remain in doubt, as it managed to escape +before it could be secured.</p> +<p><span class="pagenum">[50]</span></p> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/i_064.jpg" width="400" height="226" alt="i064" title=""> +<span class="caption">A. Cothurnia imberbis—('Micrograph. Dict.') B and C. The specimens described in text. +The figures give the linear magnification.</span> +</div> +<p><span class="pagenum">[51]</span></p> +<p>By the 18th of the month the Vorticellids were much +more plentiful, and their changes easily watched; many +left their stalks while under the microscope, after which +some rushed about like animated and demented hats, +others twirled round like tee-to-tums, while others took +a rest before commencing their wild career. But the +common Vorticellæ were not the only or the most interesting +representations of their charming order, for +upon some threads of conferva were descried several +elegant crystal vases standing upon short foot-stalks, +and containing little creatures that jumped up and down +like "Jack in the box." These were so minute, that a +power of four hundred and thirty linear was advantageously +brought to bear upon them. When elongated +their bodies were somewhat pear-shaped, but more +slender, and variegated with vacuoles and particles of +food. The mouths resembled those of Vorticellæ, and +put forth circles of vibrating cilia. They were easily +alarmed, when the cilia were retracted, and down they +sank to the bottom of their vases, quickly to rise again. +In one bottle there were two living in friendly juxtaposition. +This was not a case of matrimonial felicity, +nor of Siamese twins, but of <i>fission</i>, or reproduction by +division. The original inhabitant of the tube finding +himself too fat, or impelled by causes we do not understand, +quietly divided himself in two, and as the house +was big enough, no enlargement was required. How +many stout puffy gentlemen must envy this process; +how convenient to have two thin lively specimens of +humanity made out of one too obese for locomotion. +Man is, however, sometimes the victim of his superior<span class="pagenum">[52]</span> +organization, and no process of "fission" can make the +lusty lean.<a name="FNanchor_A_9" id="FNanchor_A_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a></p> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_A_9" id="Footnote_A_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> Balbiani in his 'Recherches sur les Phénomènes Sexuels des Infusoires,' +speaks of the Vorticellids as the only Infusoria dividing longitudinally. +In other species such appearances arise from conjunction.</p></div> + +<p>The bottles in which these creatures live, in happy +ignorance that they are called by so crackjaw a name +as <i>Cothurnia imberbis</i>, were described as <i>Carapaces</i> by +Ehrenberg, but they bear no resemblance to the shell +of a turtle or crab. They are thrown off by the animals +who preserve no other connection with them than the +attachment at the bottom.</p> + +<p>The Micrographic Dictionary describes the family +Ophrydina as corresponding to Vorticellina with a carapace. +Stein places them with Vorticellids, &c., amongst +his Peritricha, which are characterised by a spiral +wreath of cilia round the mouth.</p> + +<p>Towards the end of the month a great number of +black pear-shaped bodies (Stentor niger), visible to +the naked eye, were conspicuous in some water from +the Kentish Town ponds. Upon examination they +were found to be filled with granules that were red by +reflected, and purple by transmitted light. Each one +had a spiral wreath of cilia, with a mouth situated like +those of the stentors, hereafter to be described, but none +of them became stationary, and in a few days they all +disappeared. Stein divides Ehrenberg's Stentor igneus +from S. niger; the creature described seems to have +agreed with Stein's <i>igneus</i>, which he describes as having +blood-red lilac, cinnabar, or brown-red pigment particles, +and as much smaller than his S. niger. In the same<span class="pagenum">[53]</span> +water were specimens of that singular Rotifer, the +<i>Salpina</i>, about 1—150" long, and furnished with a +<i>lorica</i>, or carapace, resembling a three-sided glass +box, closed below, and slightly open along the +back. At the top of this box were four, and at the +bottom three, points or horns, and the creature had +one eye and a forked tail. Keeping him company +was another little Rotifer, named after its appearance, +<i>Monocerca rattus</i>, the 'One-tailed Rat.' This little +animal had green matter in its stomach, which was in +constant commotion. I ought to have observed that +the Salpina repeatedly thrust out its gizzard, and used +it as an external mouth. In the annexed sketch the +Salpina is seen in a position that displays the dorsal +opening of the carapace. Its three-cornered shape is +only shown by a side view.</p> + +<p>Here we close a brief account of what March winds +brought in their train. The next chapter will show the +good fortune that attended April showers.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 150px;"> +<img src="images/i_067.jpg" width="150" height="298" alt="i067" title=""> +<span class="caption">Salpina redunca.</span> +</div> + +<hr class="chapter"> + +<span class="pagenum">[54]</span> + +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V.</h2> + +<p class="h2">APRIL.</p> + +<p class="out">The beautiful Floscule—Mode of seeking for Tubicolor Rotifers—Mode +of illuminating the Floscule—Difficulty of seeing the transparent +tube—Protrusion of long hairs—Lobes—Gizzard—Hairy lobes of +Floscule not rotatory organs—Glass troughs—Their construction +and use—Movement of globules in lobes of Floscule—Chætonotus +larus—Its mode of swimming—Coleps hirtus—Devourer of dead +Entomostraca—Dead Rotifer and Vibriones—Theories of fermentation +and putrefaction—Euplotes and Stylonichia—Fecundity of +Stylonichia.</p> + +<br> + +<img class="dropimg" src="images/i_068.jpg" width="91" height="90" alt="i068" title="F"> +<p class="minus"><b>EW</b> living creatures deserve so well the appellation +of "beautiful" as the <i>Floscularia ornata</i>, +or Beautiful Floscule, although to contemplate +a motionless and uncoloured portrait, one would +imagine that it exhibited no graces of either colour or +form. Mr. Gosse has, however, done it justice, and +the drawing in his "Tenby" is executed with that +rare combination of scientific accuracy and artistic +skill, for which the productions of his pencil are +renowned.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/i_069.jpg" width="400" height="245" alt="i069" title=""> +<span class="caption">The Beautiful Floscule. A.—Partially protruded. B.—Freely protruded, with three eggs. C.—Appearance +of young. D.—Floscule seventeen hours old. D'.—Jaws of Floscule, as figured by Mr. Gosse.</span> +</div> + +<p>Probably the sketches in several works of authority +representing the long cilia as short bristles, are merely +copies from old drawings, from objects imperfectly +<span class="pagenum">[55]</span>seen under indifferent microscopes, and before the +refinements of illumination were understood. Be this +as it may, any reader will be fortunate if on an April, +or any other morning, he or she effects the capture of +one of these exquisite objects, although the first impression +may not equal previous expectations, as the +delicacy of the organism is not disclosed by a mode of +using the light which answers well enough for the +common infusoria.</p> + +<p>When the Floscules, or other tubicolar Rotifers are +specially sought for, the best way is to proceed to a +pond where slender-leaved water-plants grow, and to +examine a few branches at a time in a phial of water +with a pocket-lens. They are all large enough to be +discerned, if present, in this manner, and as soon as +one is found, others may be expected, either in the +same or in adjacent parts of the pond, for they are +gregarious in their habits. With many, however, the +first finding of a Floscule will be an accident, as was +the case last April, when a small piece of myriophyllum +was placed in the live-box, and looked over to see +what it might contain. The first glimpse revealed an +egg-shaped object, of a brownish tint, stretching itself +upon a stalk, and showing some symptoms of hairs or +cilia at its head. This was enough to indicate the +nature of the creature, and to show the necessity for a +careful management of the light, which being adjusted +obliquely, gave quite a new character to the scene. +The dirty brown hue disappeared, and was replaced by +brilliant colours; while the hairs, instead of appearing +few and short, were found to be extremely numerous,<span class="pagenum">[56]</span> +very long, and glistening like delicate threads of spun +glass.</p> + +<p>Knowing that the Floscules live in transparent +gelatinous tubes, such an object was carefully looked +for, but in this instance, as is not uncommon, it was +perfectly free from extraneous matter, and possessed +nearly the same refractive power as the water, so that +displaying it to advantage required some little trouble +in the way of careful focusing, and many experiments +as to the best angle at which the mirror should be +turned to direct the light. When all was accomplished, +it was seen that the Floscule had her abode in a clear +transparent cylinder, like a thin confectioner's jar, +which she did not touch except at the bottom, to which +her foot was attached. Lying aside her in the bottle +were three large eggs, and the slightest shock given to +the table, induced her to draw back in evident alarm. +Immediately afterwards she slowly protruded a dense +bunch of the fine long hairs, which quivered in the +light, and shone with a delicate bluish-green lustre, +here and there varied by opaline tints.</p> + +<p>The hairs were thrust out in a mass, somewhat after +the mode in which the old-fashioned telescope hearth-brooms +were made to put forth their bristles. As soon +as they were completely everted, together with the +upper portion of the Floscule, six lobes gradually +separated, causing the hairs to fall on all sides in a +graceful shower, and when the process was complete, +they remained perfectly motionless, in six hollow fan-shaped +tufts, one being attached to each lobe. Some +internal ciliary action, quite distinct from the hairs,<span class="pagenum">[57]</span> +and which has never been precisely understood, caused +gentle currents to flow towards the mouth in the +middle of the lobes, and from the motion of the gizzard, +imperfectly seen through the integument, and from the +rapid filling of the stomach with particles of all hues, +it was plain that captivity had not destroyed the +Floscule's appetite, and that the drop of water in the +live-box contained a good supply of food.</p> + +<p>Sometimes the particles swallowed were too small to +be discerned, although their aggregate effect was +visible; but often a monad or larger object was ingulfed, +but without any ciliary action being visible to +account for the journey they were evidently compelled +to perform. The long hairs took no part whatever in +the foraging process, and as they do not either provide +victuals or minister to locomotion, they are clearly not, +as was supposed by early observers, representatives of +the "wheels," which the ordinary Rotifers present. +Neither can the cylindrical jar or bottle be justly +deemed to occupy the position of the lorica, or carapace +which we have before described. The general structure +of the creature and the nature of its gizzard distinctly +marked it out as a member of the family we call +"Rotifers," but the absence of anything like "wheels" +proves that those organs are not essential characteristics +of this class.</p> + +<p>Noticeable currents are not always produced when +the mouth of this Floscule is fully expanded. On one +occasion, one having five lobes was discovered standing +at such an angle in a glass trough that the aperture +could be looked down into. The position rendered it<span class="pagenum">[58]</span> +impossible to use a higher power than about two +hundred linear, but with this, and the employment of +carmine, nothing like a vortex was seen during a whole +evening, although a less power was sufficient to show +the ciliary whirlpools made by small specimens of +<i>Epistylis</i> and <i>Vaginicola</i>, which were in the small +vessel. The density of the integument was unfavorable +to viewing the action of the gizzard, but it could be +indistinctly perceived. The contractions and subsequent +expansions of the cup, formed by the upper part of the +creature, may be one way in which its food is drawn +in, but there is no doubt it can produce currents when +it thinks proper. Sometimes animalcules in the +vicinity of Floscules whirl about as if under the influence +of such currents. Some may be seen to enter the +space between the lobes, swim about inside, and then +get out again, while every now and then one will be +sucked in too far for retreat.</p> + +<p>Above the gizzard in the Horned Floscule,<a name="FNanchor_A_10" id="FNanchor_A_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> I have +seen an appearance as if a membrane or curtain was +waving to and fro, while another was kept in a fixed +<span class="pagenum">[59]</span>perpendicular position. Mr. Gosse, speaking of this +genus, observes "that the whole of the upper part of +the body is lined with a sensitive, contractile, partially +opaque membrane, which a little below the disk recedes +from the walls of the body, and forms a diaphragm, +with a highly contractile and versatile central orifice. +At some distance lower down another diaphragm +occurs, and the ample chamber thus enclosed forms a +kind of <i>crop</i>, or receptacle for the captured prey."</p> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_A_10" id="Footnote_A_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> The Horned Floscules (<i>F. cornuta</i>) which I have found, and which +bred in a glass jar, were not so large as those described by Mr. Dobie, +as quoted in 'Pritchard's Infusoria.' Mr. Dobie's specimens were +1—40" when extended; mine about half that size, five-lobed, and with +a long slender proboscis, standing in a wavy line outside one lobe. +Mr. Dobie also describes an <i>F. campanulata</i>, with five flattened lobes. +The 'Micrographic Dictionary' pronounces these two species "doubtfully +distinct." I have three or four times met with a variety of +<i>F. ornata</i>, in which one lobe was much enlarged and flattened, but +they had no proboscis. In what I take for <i>F. cornuta</i>, the horn or +proboscis has sometimes been a conspicuous object, and at others so fine +and transparent as to be only visible in certain lights.</p></div> + +<p>"From the ventral side of the ample crop that +precedes the stomach, there springs in <i>F. ornata</i> a +perpendicular membrane or veil, partly extending +across the cavity. This is free, except at the vertical +edge, by which it is attached to the side of the +chamber, and being ample and of great delicacy, it +continually floats and waves from side to side. At the +bottom of this <i>veil</i>, but on the dorsal side, are placed +the jaws, consisting of a pair of curved, unjointed, but +free <i>mallei</i>, with a membranous process beneath each."</p> + +<p>The Beautiful Floscule could always be made to +repeat the process of retreating into her den, and +coming out again to spread her elegant plumes before +our eyes, by giving the table a smart knock, and her +colours and structure were well exhibited by the dark-ground +illumination, which has been explained in a +previous page.</p> + +<p>An object like this should be watched at intervals +for hours and even days, especially if the eggs are +nearly ready to give up their infantile contents. This +was the case with the specimen described, and after a +few hours a young Floscule escaped, looking very much<span class="pagenum">[60]</span> +like a clumsy little grub. After a few awkward +wriggles the new-born baby became more quiet, and on +looking at it again at the expiration of seventeen hours, +it had developed into the shape of a miniature plum-pudding, +with five or six tiny lobes expanding their +tufts of slender hair. Unfortunately its further proceedings +were not seen, or it would have been +interesting to note the growth of the foot, and the +formation of the gelatinous tube, which is probably +thrown off in rings.</p> + +<p>To view the details of the structure of a Floscule, it +must be placed in a live-box or compressorium, and if +specimens are scarce, they should not be allowed to +remain in the limited quantity of water those contrivances +hold, after the observations are concluded, but +should be carefully removed, and placed in a little vial, +such as homœopathists use for their medicine. By +such means an individual may be kept alive for many +days. It is also interesting to place a little branch +of the plant occupied by Floscules or similar creatures, +in a glass trough, where they may be made quite at +home, and their proceedings agreeably watched by a +one-inch or two-thirds power. These troughs,<a name="FNanchor_A_11" id="FNanchor_A_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> which +can be obtained of the optician, should be of plate +glass, about three inches long, nearly the same height, +and about half an inch wide. If narrower, or much +taller, they will not stand, which is a great incon<span class="pagenum">[61]</span>venience. +The pieces of glass are stuck together with +marine glue, and a very simple contrivance enables the +plants or other objects to be pressed near the front, and +thus brought into better view. A strip of glass, rather +narrower than the width of the trough, is dropped into +it, and allowed to fall to the bottom. Then a piece of +glass rather shorter than the trough, and rather higher +than its front side, is placed so as to slope from the +front of the bottom towards the back at the top. The +piece of glass first dropped in keeps it in the right +position, and the trough is thus made into a V-shaped +vessel, wide at the top and gradually narrowing. Any +object then placed in it will fall till it fits some part of +the V, where it will remain for observation. A small +wedge of cork enables the moveable piece of glass to +be thrown forwards, until it assumes any angle, or is +brought parallel to the front of the trough.</p> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_A_11" id="Footnote_A_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> The shallow cells with thin sliding covers devised by Mr. Curteis +(of Baker's), are still more convenient when no pressure is required, +and the objects are small. When not under the microscope they can +be kept full of water by immersion in a tumbler.</p></div> + +<p>A power of five or six hundred diameters generally +enables a movement of small globules to be seen at the +extremity of the lobes of the Floscule, and the gizzard +may be made plain by dissolving the rest of the creature +in a drop of solution of caustic potash. It also becomes +more visible as the supply of food falls short. Mr. +Gosse describes the body as "lined with a yellowish +vascular membrane," and young specimens exhibit two +red eyes, which may or may not be found in adults. +When these eyes of Rotifers are not readily conspicuous, +they must be sought for by opaque illumination, or by +the dark-ground method which, especially with the +parabola, is successful in bringing them out.</p> + +<p>Naturalists, and possibly the specimens also, do not<span class="pagenum">[62]</span> +always agree in the number of lobes assigned to the +"Beautiful Floscule," and although it is easy enough +to count them in <i>some</i> positions, the observer may have +to exercise a good deal of patience before he is certain +whether they are five or six. For a long evening only +five could be discerned in the specimen now described, +but the next night six were apparent without difficulty +or doubt. The hairs also will not appear anything like +their true length or number, unless the object-glass is +good, and great care is taken not to obscure them by a +blaze of ill-directed light.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;"> +<img src="images/i_078.jpg" width="300" height="215" alt="i078" title=""> +<span class="caption">Chætonotus larus (swimming).</span> +</div> + +<p>After the Floscules had been sufficiently admired and +put aside, for observations to be repeated on future +occasions, a Rotifer attracted attention by his merry-andrew +pranks, throwing himself in all directions by +means of two long and extremely mobile toes attached +to his tail-foot. Then came a creature swimming like +an otter, thrusting his head about on all sides, and +looking much more intelligent than most of his compeers +of the pond. Looked at vertically, he was somewhat<span class="pagenum">[63]</span> +slipper-shaped, the rounded heel forming his head, then +narrowing to a waist, and expanding towards the other +end, which projected in a fork. All round him were +long cilia, which were conspicuous near the head, and a +fine line indicated the passage from his mouth to the +stomach, which seemed full of granular matter. Presently +he took to crawling, or rather running, over a +thread of conferva, and then his back was elegantly +arched, and his cilia stood erect like the quills of a +porcupine. This was the <i>Chætonotus larus</i>.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;"> +<img src="images/i_079.jpg" width="300" height="116" alt="i079" title=""> +<span class="caption">Chætonotus larus (crawling).</span> +</div> + +<p>In Pritchard's "Infusoria," the views of those writers +are followed who rank this animal amongst the Rotifers, +and place it in the family <i>Icthidina</i>. To help out this +theory, the cilia upon the ventral surface are imagined +to form a "band-like rotary organ;" but in truth they +bear no resemblance whatever to the so-called wheels of +the ordinary Rotifers, nor is there anything like the +gizzard which true Rotifers present. Ehrenberg treated +it as a Rotifer, and Dujardin placed it among the Infusoria, +in a particular class, comprehending symmetrical +organisms. The 'Microscopic Dictionary' +remarks that its "structure requires further investigation,"<a name="FNanchor_A_12" id="FNanchor_A_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> +<span class="pagenum">[64]</span>and while the learned decide all the intricate +questions of its zoological rank, the ordinary observer +will be pleased to watch its singular aspect and lively +motions. Its size, according to the 'Micrographic +Dictionary,' varies from 1—710" to 1—220", and while +its general proceeding may be watched with an inch or +two-thirds object-glass, and the second eye-piece, a +power of five hundred linear (obtained by a quarter or +a fifth) is required to make out the details of its structure. +If placed in a live-box with threads of conferva, +and a little decayed vegetation, it may be observed to +group about among them, and shake them like a dog.</p> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_A_12" id="Footnote_A_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> See a valuable paper by Mr. Gosse, "History of the Hairy-backed +Animalcules," 'Intellectual Observer,' vol. v, p. 387, in which the +known species are described and reasons given for following Vogt and +ranging them with the Turbellarian worms.</p></div> + +<p>We have said that water-fleas were among the inhabitants +of a bottle filled at the pond, and as they go +the way of all flesh, it is common to find some odd-looking +animalcules ready to devour their mortal +remains. These are creatures shaped like beer-barrels, +upon short legs, and which swim with a tubby rolling +gait. Looking at one of these little tubs lengthwise, a +number of lines are seen, as though the edge of each +stave projected a little above the general level, and +transverse markings are also apparent, which may be +compared to hoops. This is the <i>Coleps hirtus</i>, which +differs from the usual type of Infusoria, by being symmetrical, +that is, divisible into two equal and similar +halves. The dimensions of this species vary from +1—570 to 1—430, and its colour varies from white to +<span class="pagenum">[65]</span>brown. It has been observed to increase by transverse +self-division, and has two orifices, one at each end, for +receiving food and ejecting the remains. It often +requires some little trouble to get a good view of the +cilia, which are arranged in transverse and longitudinal +rows. A power of one hundred and fifty linear is +convenient for viewing it in motion, but when quiet +under pressure, one of five or six hundred may be used +with advantage.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 180px;"> +<img src="images/i_081.jpg" width="180" height="235" alt="i081" title=""> +<span class="caption">Coleps hirtus.</span> +</div> + +<p>Among the rubbish at the bottom of the bottle, in +which the coleps was found, was a minute dead Rotifer, +the flesh of which was fast disappearing, but upon being +examined with a power of nine hundred and sixty +diameters, it was observed to swarm with extremely +minute <i>vibriones</i>, the largest only appearing under that +immense magnification like chains of bluish-green +globules, not bigger than the heads of minikin pins, +while the smallest were known by a worm-like wriggling, +although their structure could not be defined.<span class="pagenum">[66]</span> +These <i>vibriones</i> are probably members of the vegetable +world, and they always appear when animal matter +undergoes putrefaction.</p> + +<p>M. Pasteur has brought forward elaborate experiments +to show that the development of the yeast plant is an +act correlative to alcoholic fermentation, and in like +manner the growth of <i>vibriones</i> may stand in correlation +to putrefactive decomposition.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/i_082.jpg" width="400" height="222" alt="i082" title=""> +<span class="caption">A, Euplotes (patella); B, side view of ditto; C, stylonichia.</span> +</div> + +<p>Ehrenberg considered them animals, and fancied he +detected in them a plurality of stomachs; but the +vegetable theory is the more probable, at any rate of the +species under our notice, which is often seen, though +not always so minute.</p> + +<p>At this time two interesting animalcules were very +plentiful—the <i>Euplotes patella</i>, and <i>Stylonichia</i>, both +remarkable as exhibiting an advance in organization, +which approximates them to the higher animals. In +addition to cilia they possess <i>styles</i>, which take the<span class="pagenum">[67]</span> +place of the limbs of more elaborately-constructed +creatures, and give a variety to their means of locomotion. +The <i>Euplotes</i> is furnished with an oval carapace +covering the upper surface, which in different individuals, +and probably at different ages, exhibits slightly +varied markings round its margin, which in the specimen +drawn above consisted of dots. They can run, climb, +or swim, and exemplify a singular habit which several +of the infusoria possess, that of moving for a little time +in one direction, and then suddenly, and without any +apparent cause, reversing it. If the reader is fond +of learned appellations, he can call this <i>diastrophy</i>, +but we do not know that he will be any the wiser +for it.</p> + +<p>The Stylonichia are oval animalcules, surrounded by +cilia, and having moreover a collection of styles, both +straight and curved, the latter called <i>uncini</i>, or little +hooks. They swim steadily on, and then dart back, but +not so far as they have advanced, and may be seen to +keep up this fidgety motion by the hour together. +Pritchard tells us Ehrenberg found that a single animalcule +lived nine days; during the first twenty-four +hours it was developed by transverse self-division into +three animals; these in twenty-four hours formed two +each in the same manner, so that by self-division only +(without ova), these animalcules increased three or four-fold +in twenty-four hours, and <i>may thus produce a million</i> +from a single <i>animalcule in ten days</i>. Such are the +amazing powers of reproduction conferred upon these +humble creatures, powers which are fully employed +when the surrounding circumstances are favorable,<span class="pagenum">[68]</span> +and which, in the aggregate, change the condition of +large masses of matter, and bring within the circle of +life millions upon millions of particles every minute of +the day.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 180px;"> +<img src="images/i_084.jpg" width="180" height="42" alt="i084" title=""> +</div> + +<hr class="chapter"> + +<span class="pagenum">[69]</span> + +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI.</h2> + +<p class="h2">MAY.</p> + +<p class="out">Floscularia cornuta—Euchlanis triquetra—Melicerta ringens—its +powers as brickmaker, architect, and mason—Mode of viewing the +Melicerta—Use of glass-cell—Habits of Melicerta—Curious +Attitudes—Leave their tubes at death—Carchesium—Epistylis—Their +elegant tree forms—A Parasitic Epistylis like the "Old Man +of the Sea"—Halteria and its Leaps—Aspidisca Lynceus.</p> + +<br> + +<img class="dropimg" src="images/i_085.jpg" width="88" height="90" alt="i085" title="M"> +<p class="minus"><b>AY</b>, the first of summer months, and of old +famous for floral games, which found their +latest patrons in the chimney-sweeps of +London, is a good time for the microscopist among the +ponds, for the increase of warmth and heat favours both +animal and vegetable life, and so we found as we carried +home some tops of myriophyllum, and soon discovered +a colony of tubicolor rotifers among the tiny +branches. They proved to be Floscules, generally +resembling the <i>F. ornata</i>, described in a previous page, +but having a long slender proboscis hanging like a +loose ringlet down one side. The cilia or hairs were +not so long as in the Beautiful Floscules we had before +obtained, nor was their manner of opening so elegant; +but they were, nevertheless, objects of great interest, +and were probably specimens of the <i>Floscularia cornuta</i>. +A swimming rotifer in a carapace somewhat fiddle-shaped,<span class="pagenum">[70]</span> +with one eye in its forehead, and a two-pronged +tail sticking out behind (the <i>Euchlanis triquetra</i>), also +served to occupy attention; but a further search among +the myriophyllum revealed more treasures of the tube-dwelling +kind. These were specimens of that highly +curious Rotifer, the <i>Melicerta ringens</i>, who, not content +with dwelling, like the Floscules, in a gelatinous +bottle, is at once brickmaker, mason, and architect, +and fabricates as pretty a tower as it is easy to conceive. +The creature itself stands upon a retractile foot-stalk, +and thrusts out above its battlements a large +head, with four leaf-like expansions surrounded by +cilia. Between the lower lobes, or leaves, the gizzard +is seen grinding away, and above it is an organ, not +always displayed, and of which Mr. Gosse was fortunate +enough to discover the use. This eminent naturalist +likens it to the circular ventilator sometimes inserted +in windows, and he found it was the machine for +making the yellow ornamental bricks of which the +tower is composed. Pellet by pellet, or brick by brick, +does the Melicerta build her house, which widens +gradually from the foundation to the summit, and every +layer is placed with admirable regularity.</p> + +<p>In order to obtain the materials for her brickmaking +the Melicerta must have the power of modifying the +direction of the ciliary currents, so as to throw a stream +of small particles into the mould, which is a muscular +organ, and capable of secreting a waterproof cement, by +which they are fastened together. The result is, not to +produce anything like the tubes made by the caddis-worms +out of grains of sand, but entirely to change<span class="pagenum">[71]</span> +the appearance of the materials employed. All large +particles are rejected, and only those retained which +will form a homogeneous pulp with the viscid secretion; +and when the process is complete the head of the creature +is bent down, and the pellet deposited in its appropriate +place. Each pellet appears originally to possess +a more or less conical figure, but when they are +squeezed together to make a compact wall they all tend +to a hexagonal form, by which they are able to touch +at all points, and any holes or interstices are avoided.</p> + +<p>According to Professor Williamson the young +Melicerta commences her house by secreting "a thin +hyaline cylinder," and the first row of pellets are +deposited, not at the base as would be expected, but in +a ring about the middle of the tube. "At first new +additions are made to both extremities of the enlarging +ring; but the jerking constrictions of the animal at +length force the caudal end of the cylinder down upon +the leaf, to which it becomes securely cemented by the +same viscous secretion as causes the little spheres to +cohere."</p> + +<p>Round the margins of the lobes or expansions may +be seen delicate threads towards which others radiate; +these are thought by Mr. Gosse to be portions of a +nervous system, and two calcars or feelers serve as +organs of relation. The young Melicertas are likewise +furnished with a pair of eyes, which are probably +rudimentary, and disappear as they grow up.</p> + +<p>The Melicerta tubes, being large enough to be visible +to the naked eye, are easily crushed in the live-box, +and to avoid this, they are conveniently viewed in a<span class="pagenum">[72]</span> +shallow glass cell, covered up as before described. By +occasionally changing the water one may be kept for +days in the same cell, and will reward the pains by frequently +exposing its flower-like head. Usually the +horns or feelers come out first, and then a lump of flesh. +After this, if all seems right, the wheels appear, and +make a fine whirlpool, as may be readily seen by the +use of a little indigo or carmine.</p> + +<p>The Melicerta is, however, an awkward object to +undertake to show to our friends, for as they knock at +the door she is apt to turn sulky, and when once in this +mood it is impossible to say when her fair form will +reappear. At times the head is wagged about in all +directions with considerable vehemence, playing singular +antics, and distorting her lobes so as to exhibit a +Punch and Judy profile. When these creatures die +they leave their tubes, which are often found empty in +the ponds they frequent. The Melicertas are conveniently +viewed with a power of from sixty to one +hundred linear, and a colony of them may be kept alive +for some weeks in a glass jar or tank.</p> + +<p>Among the remainder of my tiny captives were two +beautiful members of the Vorticella family, <i>Epistylis</i> +and <i>Carchesium</i>. The reader will remember that in +the Vorticella previously described, the bells stood upon +stalks that were very flexible, and retractile by means +of a muscle running down their length. The <i>Epistylis</i> +is, as its name imports, the dweller on a <i>pillar</i>. The +stem is stiff, or only slightly flexible, and has no apparatus +by which it can be drawn down. The specimen +mentioned stood like a palm-tree, and the large oval<span class="pagenum">[73]</span> +bells drooped elegantly on all sides, as its portrait will +show. At times they nodded with a rapid jerk.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;"> +<a name="fn13" id="fn13"></a> +<img src="images/i_089.jpg" width="300" height="400" alt="i089" title=""> +<span class="caption">Epistylis.</span> +</div> + +<p>The <i>Carchesium</i> differs from the common <i>Vorticella</i>, +by branching like a tree, but the stems are all retractile, +although the trunk seldom exercises the power. +A group of these creatures presents a spectacle of extraordinary +beauty—it looks like a tree from fairy-land, +in which every leaf has a sentient life. In general +structure the bells of the <i>Epistylis</i> and the <i>Carchesium</i> +resemble the common <i>Vorticella</i>, and like them may be +seen with a power of about one hundred linear for +general effect, and with a higher one for the examination<span class="pagenum">[74]</span> +of special points. Pritchard notices three species +of <i>Carchesium</i>, and eighteen of <i>Epistylis</i>;<a name="FNanchor_A_13" id="FNanchor_A_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a> some of +which it is to be hoped will turn out to be only varieties.</p> + +<div class="footnote"> +<p> + <a name="Footnote_A_13" id="Footnote_A_13"></a> +<a href="#FNanchor_A_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> +An interesting <i>Epistylis</i>, called <i>Digitalis</i>, from its bells resembling +fox-glove flowers in shape, occurs as a parasite upon the <i>Cyclops quadricornis</i>, +a very common entomostracan in fresh-water ponds. At this +moment I have a beautiful specimen, branching like a bushy tree, and +attached to the tail of a <i>Cyclops</i>, who can scarcely move under his +burden, which is like Sinbad's "Old Man of the Sea." (See illustration <a href="#fn13">above</a>.)</p></div> + +<p>Towards the end of this month rotifers abounded, and +polyps were plentiful. Among the rotifers was one +about a two-hundredth of an inch long, protected by a +carapace, and having a tail terminating in a single style, +hence called "Monostyle." There is perhaps no class +of creatures that present so many curious and unexpected +forms as the rotifers; and although we have +noticed a good many, there are far more that remain to +be found and described.</p> + +<p>The water in which the preceding animals dwelt was +enlivened by the jumps of the <i>Halteria</i>, a little globe +surrounded by long fine cilia, with which its movements +were effected; and its companion was the <i>Aspidisca +lynceus</i>, an oval animalcule, having a distinct cilia or +<i>lorica</i>, and furnished, in addition to cilia, with bristles, +which enable it to walk and climb as well as swim.</p> + +<p>There were also some eggs of rotifers attached to the +water plants, in which motion could be descried at intervals, +and a little red eye observed. These eggs are +always large in proportion to the creatures that +lay them, and if they escape being devoured by +<span class="pagenum">[75]</span>enemies, may be watched until their contents step +forth.</p> + +<p>In this, as in other months, omission is made of +creatures that have already come under notice, or our +list would assume larger dimensions.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 200px;"> +<img src="images/i_091.jpg" width="200" height="31" alt="i091" title=""> +</div> + +<hr class="chapter"> + +<span class="pagenum">[76]</span> + +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII.</h2> + +<p class="h2">JUNE AND JULY.</p> + +<p class="out">Lindia Torulosa—Œcistes Crystallinus—A professor of deportment on +stilts—Philodina—Changes of form and habits—Structure of +Gizzard in Philodina family—Mr. Gosse's description—Motions of +Rotifers—Indications of a will—Remarks on the motions of lower +creatures—Various theories—Possibility of reason—Reflex actions +Brain of insects—Consensual actions—Applications of physiological +reasoning to the movements of Rotifers and Animalcules.</p> + +<br> + +<img class="dropimg" src="images/i_092.jpg" width="89" height="90" alt="i092" title="A"> +<p class="minus"> <b>PRESSURE</b> of other occupations prevented +full use being made of June and July, nor +was the weather at all propitious. For this +reason the microscopic doings of these two months are +recorded in one chapter.</p> + +<p>As usual the Kentish Town ponds were productive +of objects, and among them were several rotifers not +found in the previous months. The first of these was a +very small worm-like thing, with one eye, a tuft of cilia +about the mouth, and two toes at the tail end. Had it +not been for the jaws, which were working like fingers +thrust against each other, and which were unmistakably +of the rotifer pattern, the animal might have been +supposed to belong to some other class. According to +the 'Micrographic Dictionary,' the <i>Lindia torulosa</i> is +1—75" long, but this specimen was only about 1—200".<span class="pagenum">[77]</span> +It was possibly very young, and did not thrust out its +cilia in two distinct tufts, as Cohn describes, although +it may have had the power of doing so. At times it +sprang quickly backwards and forwards, bringing its +head where its tail was before. This object required for +its comfortable elucidation a power of about six hundred +linear.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 180px;"> +<img src="images/i_093.jpg" width="180" height="394" alt="i093" title=""> +<span class="caption">Œcistes crystallinus.</span> +</div> + +<p>Among the common water-plants, which are worth +examining as the probable abodes of rotifers or infusoria, +is the pretty little thing called "star-weed," +some of which was obtained from the last-mentioned<span class="pagenum">[78]</span> +ponds, and on examination yielded a specimen of a +tube-dwelling rotifer, the <i>Œcistes crystallinus</i>, which, +although less beautiful than the Floscules or the +Melicerta, is, nevertheless, a pretty and interesting +object. In this instance a little rough dirty tube, about +1—70" long, was observed to contain an animal capable +of rising up and expanding a round mouth garnished +with a wreath of cilia; while a little below, the indefatigable +and characteristic gizzard of the tribe was in +full play. A power of two hundred and forty linear +sufficed to afford a good view, and it was seen that a +long, irregular, conical body was supported upon a short +wrinkled stalk. The usual drawings represent this +creature with a short bell-shaped body upon a very long +slender pedicle. Possibly this one might have been able +to show himself under this guise, but he did not attempt +it; his appearance being always pretty much as described, +which made the foot shorter and the body +longer than the measurements which naturalists have +given, and according to which the whole creature is +1—36" long, although the body is only 1—140". The +tube of the <i>Œcistes</i> is called a "lorica," or carapace; +but it has in truth no right whatever to the appellation.</p> + +<p>Another strange rotifer, of whose name I am uncertain, +had an ovalish oblong body, and a pair of legs +like compasses, twice as long as himself. His antics +were those of a posture-master, or "Professor of Deportment" +on stilts. Sometimes he stood bolt upright, +bringing his legs close together; then they were jauntily +crossed, and the body carried horizontally; then the<span class="pagenum">[79]</span> +two legs would be slightly opened, and the body thrown +exactly at right-angles to them. These antics were +repeated all the while the observation lasted, and had a +very funny effect in proving that drollery is practised, +if not understood, in the rotatorial world.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;"> +<img src="images/i_095.jpg" width="300" height="243" alt="i095" title=""> +<span class="caption">Philodina (swimming).</span> +</div> + +<p>Another kind of rotifer was abundant—the <i>Philodina</i>, +which belongs to the same family as the common wheel-bearer, +namely, the <i>Philodinæa</i>. The <i>Philodina</i> is a +good deal like the common wheel-bearer, or <i>Rotifer +vulgaris</i>, but is usually of a stouter build, and carries +his eyes in a different place. In the common rotifer +these organs are situated on the proboscis, while those +of the Philodina are lower, and said to be "cervical." +The changes of form in this rotifer are still more +remarkable than in the common wheel-bearer. When +resting it resembles a pear-shaped purse, puckered in at +the mouth. Then it thrusts out its tail-foot, swells its +body to an oval globe, protrudes its feeler, and slightly<span class="pagenum">[80]</span> +exposes a row of cilia. After this two distinct wheels +are everted, and as their cilia whirl and spin, the animal +is swiftly rowed along, until it thinks proper to moor +itself fast by the tail-foot, and employ all its ciliary +power in causing currents to converge towards its +throat. When it pleases it can elongate the body, till +it becomes vermiform, and it walks like the common +rotifer, by curving its back, and bringing its nose and +its tail in contact with the ground.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 250px;"> +<img src="images/i_096.jpg" width="250" height="152" alt="i096" title=""> +<span class="caption">Philodina (crawling).</span> +</div> + +<p>The gizzard of this family (<i>Philodinæa</i>) presents a +considerable deviation from the perfect form exhibited +by the <i>Brachions</i>. According to Mr. Gosse, "The +<i>mallei</i> and the <i>incus</i> (terms already explained) are +soldered together into two subquadrantic-globular +masses, which appear to be muscular, but invested with +a solid integument. The <i>manubria</i> (handles) may still +be recognised in a vertical aspect as three loops, of +which the central one is chiefly developed, and in a +vertical aspect as a translucent reniform (kidney-shaped) +globe." These descriptions are not easy to understand,<span class="pagenum">[81]</span> +not from any want of clearness or precision in the words +employed, but from the complicated character of the +organ, and its very different appearance under different +aspects. To make the matter more intelligible, Mr. +Gosse adds, "the structure and action of an apparatus +of this type may be made more clear by a homely illustration. +Suppose an apple to be divided longitudinally, +leaving the stalk attached to one half. Let this now +be split again longitudinally so far as the stalk, but not +actually separating either portion from it. Draw the +two portions slightly apart, and lay them down on their +rounded surfaces. They now represent the quadrantic +masses in repose, the stalk being the fulcrum, and the +upper surfaces being crossed by the teeth. By the +contraction of the muscles, of which they are composed, +the two segments are made to turn upon their long axis, +until the points of the teeth are brought into contact, +and the toothed surfaces rise and approach each other. +The lower edges do not, however, separate as the upper +edges approach, but the form of the mass alters, becoming +more lenticular, so that when the toothed surfaces +are brought into their closest approximation, the outline +has a subcircular figure. It is on account of this change +of form that I presume the masses themselves to be +partially composed of muscle."</p> + +<p>These remarks, although specially made of the <i>Rotifer +macrurus</i>, are in the main applicable to all the Philodinas, +but the student must not expect to understand +any of the complicated gizzards of the rotifers without +repeated observations, and no small exercise of patience. +It is common to call the portions of the Philodine-pattern<span class="pagenum">[82]</span> +gizzard "stirrup-shaped," but Mr. Gosse has +shown them to be <i>quadrantic</i>, that is, shaped like the +quarter of a sphere.</p> + +<p>As we are not very well off with subjects for description +in these two months, we can afford a little time to +consider a question that continually arises in the mind, +on viewing the movements of animalcules, and especially +of any so highly developed as the rotifers, namely, to +what extent motions which appear intelligent are really +the result of anything like a conscious purpose or will. +When any of the lower animals—a bee, for example—acts +in precisely the same way as all bees have acted +since their proceedings have been observed, we settle +the question by the use of the term <i>instinct</i>. Those who +take the lowest view of insect life, assume that the bee +flies because it has wings, but without wishing to use +them, and that the nerves exciting them to action are +in their turn excited, not by volition, but by some +physical stimulus.</p> + +<p>The sight or the smell of flowers is thought by the +same reasoners to be capable of attracting the insect, +which is unconscious of the attraction, while proximity +of food stimulates the tongue to make the movements +needful for its acquisition, and so forth. The cells, +they tell us, are built according to a pattern which the +earliest bee was impelled to construct by forces that +bear no analogy to human reason and human will, and +so originate all the ordinary processes of bee life. Sometimes, +however, it happens that man or accident interposes +particular obstacles, and forthwith there appears +a particular modification of the orthodox plan, calculated<span class="pagenum">[83]</span> +to meet the special difficulty. How is this? Does +any one of the difficulties which the bee or the ant is +able to get over, produce precisely that kind of electrical +disturbance, or polar arrangement of nerve particles +that is necessary to stimulate the <i>first</i> step of the action +by which the difficulty is surmounted; and does the +new condition thus established stimulate the <i>second</i> +step, and so forth, or can the bee, within certain limits, +really <i>think</i>, design, and contrive?</p> + +<p>No questions are more difficult of solution; but +while protesting against a tendency to undervalue all +life below that of man, we must remember we have in +our bodies processes going on which are not the result +of volition, as when the blood circulates, and its +particles arrange themselves in the pattern required to +form our tissues and organs, and also that many of our +actions belong to the class termed by physiologists, +"reflex," that is, the result of external impressions upon +the nervous system, in which the <i>sentient</i> brain takes no +part. Thus when a strong light stimulates the optic +nerve, the portion of brain with which it is connected +in its turn stimulates the iris to contract the pupil; +and it is supposed that after a man has begun to walk, +through the exercise of his will, he may continue to +walk, by a reflex action; as his feet press the ground +they transmit an impression to the spinal cord, and the +legs receive a fresh impulse to locomotion, although the +mind is completely occupied with other business, and pays +no attention to their proceedings.<a name="FNanchor_A_14" id="FNanchor_A_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a> The ordinary move<span class="pagenum">[84]</span>ments +of insects appear to be of this character, and +to be excited by the ganglia belonging to the +segment to which the moving limbs are attached. +Thus a centipede will run, after its head has been cut +off, and a water-beetle (<i>Dytiscus</i>) swam energetically +when thrown into water after its brain had been +removed.<a name="FNanchor_B_15" id="FNanchor_B_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_B_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a></p> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_A_14" id="Footnote_A_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> See Carpenter's 'Manual of Physiology.'</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_B_15" id="Footnote_B_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_B_15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> Carpenter's 'Manual of Physiology,' p. 551.</p></div> + +<p>It must not, however, be assumed that the brain of +insects has nothing to do with their movements. It is +probably the means of co-ordinating or directing them +to a common end, and gives rise to what are called +<i>consensual</i> movements, that is, movements which are +accompanied or stimulated by a sensation, although +not controlled by a will. In man these actions are +frequently exhibited, "as when laughter is provoked +by some ludicrous sight or sound, or by the remembrance +of such at an unseasonable hour."<a name="FNanchor_A_16" id="FNanchor_A_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> Sneezing +is another instance of a sensation leading to certain +motions, without any intervention of the human will.</p> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_A_16" id="Footnote_A_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a> Ibid., p. 543.</p></div> + +<p>Speaking of these consensual motions, Dr. Carpenter +observes, "It is probable, from the strong manifestations +of emotion, exhibited by many of the lower +animals, that some of the actions which we assemble +under the general designation of instinctive are to be +referred to this group."</p> + +<p>The insect brain is composed of a supra-œsophagal +ganglion and infra-œsophagal one. Von Siebold says, +the first corresponds to the cerebrum of the vertebrata, +and "the second is comparable, perhaps, to the cere<span class="pagenum">[85]</span>bellum +or spinal cord."<a name="FNanchor_A_17" id="FNanchor_A_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a> The superior ganglion gives +off nerves to the antennæ and eyes, the lower one to the +mandibles, &c. So far as is known the insects that +exhibit the most intelligence have the largest and best +developed brains.</p> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_A_17" id="Footnote_A_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_17"><span class="label">[17]</span></a> 'Anatomy of Invertebrates,' Burnett's trans.</p></div> + +<p>A special volume would be required for anything like +a complete examination of the little which is known on +this subject, but these few remarks may assist the +microscopic beginner in examining the movements of +his subjects, and guard against the error of referring to +reason and volition those which are, probably, either the +direct result of stimulants applied to the surface (as in +nerveless creatures), or the indirect (reflex) result of +such stimulants in beings like the rotifers, who have a +nervous system; or the result of <i>sensations</i>, which +excite actions without previously referring the matter +to the decision of a will. It must not, however, be +too readily assumed that the behaviour of creatures +possessing distinct organs is entirely automatic; and +we must not forget that even the best physiologists +know very little concerning the range of functions +which the nervous ganglia of the invertebrata are able +to discharge.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 120px;"> +<img src="images/i_101.jpg" width="120" height="15" alt="i101" title=""> +</div> + +<hr class="chapter"> + +<p><span class="pagenum">[86]</span></p> + +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII.</h2> + +<p class="h2">AUGUST.</p> + +<p class="out">Mud coloured by worms—Their retreat at alarm—A country duck-pond—Contents +of its scum—Cryptomonads—Their means of +locomotion—A Triarthra (three-limbed Rotifer)—The Brachion or +Pitcher Rotifer—Its striking form—Enormous gizzard—Ciliary +motion inside this creature—Large eye and brain—Powerful tail—Its +functions—Eggs.</p> + +<br> + +<img class="dropimg" src="images/i_102.jpg" width="91" height="90" alt="i102" title="I"> +<p class="minus"><b>N</b> the beginning of this month a pond in the +Finchley Road, a little beyond the Highgate +Archway, supplied some more specimens of +the <i>Pterodina patina</i>, described in a previous chapter; +but towards the middle of the month a visit to +Chipstead, in Surrey, enabled a new region to be +explored.</p> + +<p>It is always a treat to a Londoner to get down to +any of the picturesque parts of Surrey; the trees +exhibit a richness of foliage and variety of colour not +seen within the regions of metropolitan smoke; the +distance glows with the rich purples so much admired +in the pictures of Linnel, and the sunsets light up earth +and sky with the golden tints he is so well able to +reproduce. Probably the warmth of the soil, and the +purity of the air, may make Surrey ponds prolific in<span class="pagenum">[87]</span> +microscopic life; but of this we do not know enough to +make a fair comparison, although our own dips into +them were tolerably lucky.</p> + +<p>Walking one day down a lane leading towards +Reigate, where the trees arched overhead, ferns grew +plentifully in the sandy banks, and the sunlight flitted +through the branches, and chequered the path, we came +to a shallow pond, or great puddle, which crossed the +way, and near the edge of the water the eye was struck +with patches of crimson colour. On attempting to +take up a portion of one of these patches the whole +disappeared, although when the disturbance ceased +the rich colour again clothed the dingy mud. The +appearance was caused by thousands of little worms, +belonging to the genus <i>Tubifex</i>, not uncommon in +such situations, who thrust themselves out to enjoy the +light and air, and retreat the moment an alarm is +given. Probably both actions belong to the class +described in the last chapter, as "reflex;" but it would +be interesting to know whether creatures so humble +have any sense of fear. These worms will repay observation, +but in these pages we eschew all their tribe—unless +the rotifers be assigned to them—and take ourselves +once more to our especial subjects.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;"> +<img src="images/i_104.jpg" width="300" height="314" alt="i104" title=""> +<span class="caption">Cryptomonad—Euglena.</span> +</div> + +<p>Knowing that farm-ponds are usually well stocked +with microscopic game, we made a dip into one more +especially assigned to ducks, and obtained wondrous +little for our pains. We were not, however, discouraged, +but made an examination of the circumstances, +which determined a particular course of action. Our +piece of water was simply a dirty duck-pond, in which +<span class="pagenum">[88]</span>no large plants were growing, and which did not even +exhibit the little disks of duckweed that are common +to such situations. There was, however, on the surface, +in parts, an exceedingly fine scum of pale yellow green, +and this, armed with a teaspoon, we proceeded to +attack. By careful skimming, a small bottle was half-filled +with minute organic particles, which were likely +to be interesting in themselves, and pretty sure to be +the food for something else. A small drop was placed +on a tablet of the live-box, flattened out by the application +of the cover, and viewed with a power of two +hundred linear, which disclosed swarms of brilliant +green globes, amongst which were a good sprinkle of +minute creatures, like the <i>Euglenæ</i> already described,<span class="pagenum">[89]</span> +and whose little red eyes contrasted vividly with the +prevailing emerald hue.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 100px;"> +<img src="images/i_105.jpg" width="100" height="192" alt="i105" title=""> +<span class="caption">Cryptomonad.</span> +</div> + +<p>One of the higher infusoria, whose species I could +not identify, was devouring them like a porpoise +among sprats. It did not, however, exhibit any sense +in its hungry career; it moved about in all directions, +gulping down what came in its way, but often permitting +the escape of the little green things that were +almost in its mouth. The little globes rolled and +whirled about without the faintest indication of a +purpose, and without exhibiting any instrument with +which their locomotion was effected. To find out how +this was done, a higher power was used, and from their +extreme minuteness an amplification of seven hundred +and twenty linear was conveniently employed, although +a lower one (three or four hundred) disclosed the secret +by showing that a little whip was flourished about +through the neck, which the lower power revealed. +When highly magnified, each little globe was seen to +consist of an outer case of a reddish orange colour,<span class="pagenum">[90]</span> +which was noticeable on looking at the edges, although +in the centre it was transparent enough to show the +brilliant green contents, that resembled the chlorophyll, +or green colouring matter of plants. From a short +neck proceeded the whip-like filament, which was +lashed and twisted about in all directions. These little +creatures belong to the monad family, but whether they +are to be called <i>Trachelomonads</i>, or by some other hard +name, the learned must decide.</p> + +<p>The 'Micrographic Dictionary' puts a note of +interrogation to the assertion of some writers that +<i>Trachelomonads</i> have no necks, and draws some with +such an appendage.</p> + +<p>Pritchard's last edition is against necks, and whether +the necks or no necks are to win, is a mighty question +equal at least to the famous controversy, which divided +the world into "big and little endians in the matter +of breaking eggs."</p> + +<p>A discussion of more importance is, whether these +<i>Cryptomonads</i>—that name will do whatever comes of +the neck controversy—are animals or vegetables. +Lachmann and Mr. Carter affirm that they have +detected a contractile vesicle, which would assimulate +them to the animal series, but their general behaviour +is vegetable; and the 'Micrographic Dictionary' is in +favour of referring them to the <i>Algæ</i>—that great family +of simple plants, of which the sea-weeds are the most +important representatives.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;"> +<img src="images/i_107.jpg" width="300" height="250" alt="i107" title=""> +<span class="caption">Triarthra.</span> +</div> + +<p>When any of the monads swarm, there are sure to +be plenty of other creatures to eat them up, and in +this instance the predaceous animalcule, already +<span class="pagenum">[91]</span>described, was not the only enemy the little green +globes had to suffer from, as two sorts of rotifer were +frequently met with. One of these was a very handsome +and singular creature, which in some positions +had the general contour of a cockatoo, only that the +legs were wanting, and the head exhibited a monkey +face. The "wheels" were represented by ciliary tufts, +and two bright red eyes twinkled with a knowing look. +From each shoulder proceeded a long curved spine, and +about two thirds down the body, and lying between +the two long spines, a shorter one was articulated, +which followed the same curve. A gizzard was busy in +the breast, and the body terminated in two short toes, +which grasped a large round egg. Whenever the cilia +were drawn in, the three spines were thrown up; but +they had an independent motion of their own, and +every now and then were jerked suddenly and violently<span class="pagenum">[92]</span> +back, which occasioned a rapid change in the creature's +position. The gizzard appeared to consist of two +rounded masses, having several ridges of teeth, which +worked against each other something like the prominences +of a coffee-mill. From the three spines, this +animal was a <i>Triarthra</i>, or Three-limbed Rotifer, but +the position of the spines, and the toes, made it differ +from any species described in the 'Micrographic +Dictionary,' or in Pritchard.</p> + +<p>Whether or not this species is to be regarded as +having a lorica or not, must depend upon the precise +meaning attached to that word. At any rate the +integument was much firmer than in many of the +rotifers, and gave an efficient support to the spines +which a mere skin could not do. As Mr. Gosse +remarks of an allied genus, the <i>Polyarthra</i>, or Many-limbed +Rotifer, this creature could not be investigated +without coming to the conclusion "Here again we have +true jointed limbs;" a fact of great importance in +determining the zoological rank of the family, and in +supporting Mr. Gosse's view some at least bore a strong +affinity with the group of <i>Arthropoda</i>, of which the +insects are the principal representatives.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/i_109.jpg" width="400" height="477" alt="i109" title=""> +<span class="caption">Brachionus urceolaris. +This drawing has been accidentally reversed by the engraver, +which alters the relative place of the internal organs.</span> +</div> + +<p>Another rotifer of even greater interest, which was +busy among the Cryptomonads, was the Brachion, or +"Pitcher Rotifer" (Brachionus). The members of +this genus will frequently reward the searcher into +pond-life. Their main characteristic is a cup or pitcher-shaped +lorica, which is cut or notched at the top into +several horns or projections, the number of which +indicates the species; while two or more similar +<span class="pagenum">[93]</span>projections ornament the bottom. This lorica is like +the shell of a tortoise open at both ends; from the top +an extremely beautiful wreath of cilia is protruded, and +also some longer and stiff cilia, or slender spines, which +do not exhibit the rotatory movement. The ciliary<span class="pagenum">[94]</span> +apparatus is in reality continuous, but it more often +presents the appearance of several divisions, and the +lateral cilia frequently hang over the sides. From the +large size of each cilium they are very favorable +creatures for exhibiting the real nature of the action, +which gives rise to the rotatory appearance, and which +can be easier studied than described. By movements, +partly from their base, and partly arising from the +flexibility of their structure, the cilia come alternately +in and out of view, and when set in a circular pattern, +the effect is amazingly like the spinning round of a wheel. +The internal arrangements of the Brachiones are finely +displayed, and they have a most aldermanic allowance +of gizzard, which extends more than half way across +each side of the median line, and shows all the portions +described by Mr. Gosse. As the joints of this machine +move, and the teeth are brought together, one could +fancy a sound of mill-work was heard, and the observer +is fully impressed with a sense of mechanical power.</p> + +<p>When the creature is obliging enough to present a +full front view, her domestic economy is excellently +displayed. The prey that is caught in her whirlpool is +carried down by a strong ciliary current to the gizzard, +which may be often seen grappling with objects that +appear much too big for its grasp; and Mr. Gosse was +lucky in witnessing an attempt to chew up a morsel +that did actually prove too large and too tough, and +which, after many ineffectual efforts, was suddenly cast +out. As soon as food has passed the gizzard, it is +assisted in its journey by more ciliary currents, which +are noticeable in the capacious stomach, in the neighbourhood<span class="pagenum">[95]</span> +of which the secreting and other vessels are +readily observed. Just over the gizzard blazes a great +red eye, of a square or oblong form, and it reposes +upon a large mass of soft granular-looking brain, +which well justifies Mr. Gosse's epithet "enormous." +Whether this brain is highly organized enough to be a +<i>thinking</i> apparatus, we do not know, but it is evidently +the cause of a very vigorous and consentaneous action +of the various organs the Brachion possesses.</p> + +<p>A description of the Brachion would be very incomplete +if it omitted that important organ the tail, +which in this family reaches the highest point of +development. It is a powerful muscular organ, of +great size in proportion to the animal, capable of complete +retraction within the carapace, and of being +everted wholly, or partially, at will. It terminates in +two short conical toes, protruded from a tube-like +sheath, and capable of adhering firmly even to a substance +so slippery as glass. This tail may be observed +to indicate a variety of emotions, if we can ascribe +such feelings to a rotifer, and it answers many purposes. +Now we see it cautiously thrust forth, and turned this +way and that, exploring like an elephant's trunk, and +almost as flexible. Now it seizes firm hold of some +substance, and anchors its proprietor hard and fast. A +few moments afterwards it lashes out right and left +with fury, like the tail of a cat in a passion. Then +again it will be retracted, and a casual observer might +not imagine the Brachion to be furnished with such a +terminal implement.</p> + +<p>The Brachiones may often be seen with one or more<span class="pagenum">[96]</span> +large eggs stuck about the upper part of the tail, and +others may be discerned inside. One specimen before +us has three eggs attached to her in this way. They +are large oval bodies, with a firm shell. These +creatures differ very much in appearance, according to +the direction in which they are seen, and a side view +makes them look so different from a full front or back +aspect, that it would be easy to suppose another animal +was under observation. The extent to which the +ciliary apparatus is protruded, and the pattern it forms +likewise differs continually; and hence no drawing, +however correct, is sure to resemble the arrangement +that may be presented to the observer's eye. But +however our little "Pitcher" may be viewed, it is sure +to prove a spectacle of interest and delight.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 180px;"> +<img src="images/i_112.jpg" width="180" height="19" alt="i112" title=""> +</div> + +<hr class="chapter"> + +<span class="pagenum">[97]</span> + +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX.</h2> + +<p class="h2">SEPTEMBER.</p> + +<p class="out">Microscopic value of little pools—Curious facts in appearance and +disappearance of Animalcules and Rotifers—Mode of preserving +them in a glass jar—Fragments of Melicerta tube—Peculiar shape +of Pellets—Amphileptus—Scaridium Longicaudum—A long-tailed +Rotifer—Stephanoceros Eichornii—A splendid Rotifer—Its gelatinous +bottle—Its crown of tentacles—Retreats on alarm—Illumination +requisite to see its beauties—Its greediness—Richly-coloured +Food—Nervous ganglia.</p> + +<br> + +<img class="dropimg" src="images/i_113.jpg" width="92" height="90" alt="i113" title="S"> +<p class="noin"><b>CATTERED</b> about Hampstead Heath are a +number of little pools, not big enough to be +dignified by the name of ponds. They are +generally surrounded by furze bushes, and would escape +attention if not actually looked for. Those which are +mere puddles, and have only a brief existence in rainy +weather, seldom reward the labour of investigation; +but others are permanent, except after prolonged +drought, and afford convenient situations for the +growth of confervæ, star-weed, and other plants. These +will nearly always repay the microscopic collector +during the winter, when he must break the ice to get +at their contents; in spring, when long chains of frog-spawn +afford ocular evidence of the prolific properties<span class="pagenum">[98]</span> +of the Batrachian reptiles; and in summer, when they +afford both shade and sunshine to their numerous +inhabitants. Small beetles, water-spiders, larvæ of +gnats, and other insects, rotifers, including the tubicolar +sorts, and several varieties of infusoria may be +expected and generally found. There is, however, a +curious fact about ponds, big and little, which Pritchard +remarks upon in his 'Infusoria,' and which +corresponds with our own experience, that those which +have proved to be well stocked with any particular +creature during one year, will very likely contain none +of it in the next. There are of course exceptions to +this rule, but we have often been astonished and disappointed +at finding the complete change, both in +populousness and population, that a revolution of +twelve months will make; and it would be extremely +interesting to notice the changes that took place during +a term of years.</p> + +<p>Such researches might unfold some unexpected laws +in the succession of infusorial life. Those germs which +are most widely diffused, will be the most likely to be +developed in any mass of convenient water; but how +and why the rarer forms come and go is very imperfectly +understood. Slight modifications in surrounding +circumstances will materially affect the result. Thus, +if we bring home a handful of conferva, and a few +water-plants of higher organisation, such as duckweed +and anacharis, and place the whole in a glass jar full +of pond-water, we shall at first have a good stock of +objects; but they will usually grow less and less, until +scarcely anything is left. If, however, we introduce a<span class="pagenum">[99]</span> +few pieces of straw, or a tiny wisp of hay, we shall +succeed much better, and not only preserve our population +longer, but enjoy a succession of animated crops. +Extensive decomposition of vegetable matter kills off +all but certain families, such as Paramecia, who enjoy +it; on the other hand, too little decomposition proves +fatal to some creatures, by depriving them of their food, +and when they have died off, those who depended upon +them for a living, die too. Different vegetables in +decomposition suit different creatures, and hay and +straw in that state seem to please the largest number. +An animalcule tank will succeed best when it contains +two or three kinds of growing plants, which oxygenize +the air, and a moderate variety of decomposing organisms +will supply food without making the water +offensive.</p> + +<p>From these considerations it will be apparent that +not only the nature of the vegetation of a pond, which +is often changed by accidental circumstances, but also +the quality of the odds and ends that the winds may +blow into it, or which may fall through the air, will do +much to determine the character and number of its +inhabitants, while the quantity of shade or sunshine it +enjoys, will also exercise an important influence. Hay +and other infusions have from the beginning of microscopic +investigations been employed to obtain the +creatures which the Germans call "Infusions thierchen" +(infusion animalcules), and the English "Infusoria;" +but very little has yet been done in the way of +their scientific culture and management.</p> + +<p>To return from this digression to our little Hampstead<span class="pagenum">[100]</span> +ponds, we obtained from one, in September, that +was full of star-weed, a number of sugar-loaf bodies, +adhering to one another, and of a pale yellow brown +colour. The specimens first examined looked complete +in themselves, and were taken for eggs of some water +creature. Further search, however, disclosed aggregations +of similar sugar-loaves that had evidently formed +part of a tubular structure, and the idea at once +occurred that they were fragments of a Melicerta tube, +a conclusion that was verified by finding some tubes +entire and a dead Melicerta in the rubbish at the +bottom. All the specimens of Melicerta tubes we had +hitherto examined were composed of <i>rounded</i> pellets, +but these were made of pointed cones or sugar-loaves, +with the points projecting outwards from the general +surface. In Pritchard's 'Infusoria,' these pellets are +described "as small lenticular bodies." The 'Micrographic +Dictionary' states that the tubes of the +Melicerta are composed of "numerous rounded or +discoidal bodies;" and Mr. Gosse, in his 'Tenby,' +which contains an admirable description, and an +exquisite drawing of this interesting rotifer, calls the +pellets "round."</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/i_117.jpg" width="400" height="608" alt="i117" title=""> +<span class="caption">Melicerta ringens.</span> +</div> + +<p>Not being able to obtain a living specimen of the +Melicerta, who made her tube of long sugar-loaves, I +could not tell whether she differed in structure from +the usual pattern of her race, but the general appearance +of the dead body was the same. It is possible +that these creatures possess some power of modifying +the form of their singular bricks, or they may at +different ages vary the patterns, which matters some +<span class="pagenum">[101]</span>fortunate possessor of a colony of these animals may be +able to verify.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/i_119.jpg" width="400" height="141" alt="i119" title=""> +<span class="caption">Scaridium longicaudum.</span> +</div> + +<p>In the sediment of the water containing the Melicerta +cases was found an animalcule about 1—120" long, +covered with cilia, and having a proboscis seldom more +than a quarter of the length assumed by the body, +which continually changed its form, sometimes elongating, +sometimes shortening, and often contracting +one side into a deep fissure. It was, probably, an +<i>Amphileptus</i>, though not precisely agreeing with any +drawing or description I am acquainted with. Another +inmate of the same water was a lively long-tailed rotifer, +with a small oval body, a tuft of vibrating cilia and a +curved bristle visible among them on one side. This +creature had a jointed tail-foot, ending in two long +style-shaped toes, and by means of this appendage +executed rapid leaps or springs. It was the <i>Scaridium +longicaudum</i>, and agreed in dimensions tolerably well +with the size given in the books, namely, total length +1—72". With a power of five hundred diameters the<span class="pagenum">[102]</span> +muscles of the tail-foot presented a beautifully striated +appearance.</p> + +<p>Towards the end of the month I passed the Vale of +Heath Pond, Hampstead, and although I had not gone +out for the purpose of collecting, was fortunately +provided with a two-dram bottle. Close by the path the +<i>Anacharis alsinastrum</i> grew in profusion, quantities of +water-snails crawled among its branches, and small fish +darted in and out, threading their mazes with lightning +rapidity. Thrusting a walking-stick among the mass +of vegetation, a few little tufts were drawn up and carefully +bottled, with the addition of a little water. +Returning home, a few leaves were placed in the live-box, +and on examination with the power of sixty diameters +they disclosed a specimen of, perhaps, the most +beautiful of all the rotifers, the <i>Stephanoceros Eichornii</i>. +In this elegant creature an oval body, somewhat expanded +at the top, is supported upon a tapering stalk, +and stands in a gelatinous bottle, composed of irregular +rings superimposed one upon the other, as if thrown off +by successive efforts, the upper ones being inverted and +attached to the body of the animal. But that which +constitutes the glory of this little being is the crown of +five tapering tentacles, each having two rows of long +cilia arranged on opposing sides, but not in the same +plane. The ordinary position of the tentacles is that +of a graceful elliptical curve, first swelling outwards, +then bending inwards, until their points closely approximate, +but each is capable of independent motion, and +they are seldom quiet for many minutes at a time. +The cilia can be arranged in parallel rows or in tufts +<span class="pagenum">[103]</span>at the will of the creature, and their motion appears +under control, and susceptible of greater modification +than is exhibited by the ordinary infusoria.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/i_121.jpg" width="400" height="602" alt="i121" title=""> +<span class="caption">Stephanoceros Eichornii.</span> +</div> + +<p>The Stephanoceros is a member of the Floscule +family, but in all the specimens I obtained and watched +for several weeks, there was an important difference in +the relation of the tube to the creature. In the Floscules +I had never seen anything like an adhesion +between the tube and the animal, but in the Stephanoceros +I noticed it continually, and always in the manner +already described. Like the Floscule, the Stephanoceros +is readily alarmed, and retreats into her house, +carrying with her the invaginated portion. In the last +edition of 'Pritchard's Infusoria,' this case is spoken of +as apparently not tubular, but a solid gelatinous mass, +enveloping the animal as high up as the base of the +rotatory arms. It is very likely that specimens at +different ages, and possibly in different seasons, may +vary in the structure of their abodes; but I am not +able to concur in the preceding account, as all the +tubes I examined resembled sacks turned in at the +mouths, and attached to the shoulders only of their +inmates; and on one occasion I was able to look down +into a deserted tube, which had not collapsed, as it +would have done if it had been merely a solid gelatinous +mass.</p> + +<p>Like the Floscule, the Stephanoceros only reveals +her beauties under careful illumination. A direct light +renders them invisible, and only when the requisite +obliquity has been obtained, does the exquisite character +of the structure become displayed. The dark-ground<span class="pagenum">[104]</span> +illumination is very useful, and makes the +ciliary action very distinct. At times a view can be +obtained, in which the cilia of perhaps a single tentacle +are all ranged like the steel springs of a musical box. +For a moment they are quiescent, and then they vibrate +in succession, each moving thread sparkling in the +light. With a clumsy mode of lighting them, the cilia +look like stumpy bristles, and are often so drawn; but +precisely the right quantity of light coming in the +right direction, makes them appear more numerous, +and much longer than would at first be supposed. +When well exhibited the tentacles have a lustre between +glass and pearl; the body, in a favorable specimen, is +like a crystal cup, and the food, usually composed of +small red and green globes, glows like emeralds and +rubies, as if in the height of luxury the little epicure +had more than rivalled Cleopatra's draught, and instead +of dissolving, swallowed its jewelry whole. So lustrous +and varied in colour is the whole appearance of the +animal under these circumstances, that it is frequently +alluded to by one of our first artists, to whom it was +displayed.</p> + +<p>It is said by some authors that the tentacles are used +to seize prey. This never occurred under my observation, +although their basal portions are often approximated +when an object is forced down to the grinding +apparatus below. The Stephanoceros is a ravenous +feeder, and swallows a variety of creatures. Green +vegetable monads, rich red and brown globes of similar +characters, and any animalcule that comes in her way +is acceptable; and even good-sized rotifers do not<span class="pagenum">[105]</span> +escape her all-consuming maw. On one occasion I +noticed one of the loricated sort, more than half as +long as one of her tentacles, rapidly swallowed, and +passed downwards without attempting to escape. +Objects much too big for the gizzard are often gulped +down, and probably receive a preliminary softening and +maceration in the crop. Very often, when food is +plentiful, the creature is filled to the brim, but still +endeavours to continue her abundant meal. From the +presence of large quantities of food and the density of +the integuments, the gizzard cannot always be seen; +but in favorable specimens its teeth may be observed +busily at work.</p> + +<p>At the base of the tentacles small masses of matter +may be discovered, which are probably nervous ganglia, +and other organs; and Ehrenberg discovered small +vibrating bodies, supposed to be connected with the +function of respiration. A single egg, as shown in the +annexed drawing, is often found, and the ovarian is said +to develop but few at a time. Two red eyes are found +in young specimens, but in adults they either disappear +or are not conspicuous. The Stephanoceri are sociable +animals, and when one is found, others are probably +near at hand. Several may often be discovered on the +same branch of a small water-plant, of various dimensions, +and in different stages of growth. The full size +is about 1—36" in height, and from its magnitude care +is required not to crush it in the live-box. When +specimens are plentiful, some should be placed in that +convenient receptacle; and others with the plant on +which they are growing, in a glass cell or trough,<span class="pagenum">[106]</span> +where they have more room to display their motions, +and can with fresh supplies of water, be preserved for +days and weeks. With occasional renewals from one +pond, I was able to keep up a stock for about three +months, and never had objects which gave more pleasure +to myself or to my friends.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 180px;"> +<img src="images/i_126.jpg" width="180" height="40" alt="i126" title=""> +</div> + +<hr class="chapter"> + +<p><span class="pagenum">[107]</span></p> + +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X"></a>CHAPTER X.</h2> + +<p class="h2">OCTOBER.</p> + +<p class="out">Stentors and Stephanoceri—Description of Stentors—Mode of viewing +them—Their abundance—Social habits—Solitary Stentors living in +Gelatinous caves—Propagation by divers modes—Cephalosiphon +Limnias—A group of Vaginicolæ—Changes of shape—A bubble-blowing +Vorticella.</p> + +<br> + +<img class="dropimg" src="images/i_127.jpg" width="89" height="90" alt="i127" title="O"> +<p class="minus"><b>CTOBER</b>, the finest of our autumn months, is +noted for usually granting the inhabitants of +our dripping climate about twenty pleasant +sunshiny days, and it is probably on this account somewhat +of a favourite with the infusorial world, although +the cold of its nights and early mornings thins their +numbers, which reach a maximum in the summer heat. +Even in the dismal year 1860, October maintained its +character, and afforded a great many opportunities of +animalcule hunting, during which a constant supply of +Stephanoceri were readily obtained, together with +swarms of <i>Stentors</i>, which are not exceeded in interest +by any of the Ciliated Protozoa. The Stentors were +abundant on the same weed (<i>Anacharis</i>), that formed +the residence of the Stephanoceri, and might be seen +in large numbers hanging from it like green trumpets, +visible to the unassisted eye. In the 'Micrographic<span class="pagenum">[108]</span> +Dictionary' they are said to belong to the Vorticella +family, which has already given us several beautiful +objects, and possess a marvellous power of changing +their shape. It is, however, better to follow Stein, who +separates them from the Vorticellids and ranges them +in his order Heterotricha, as they have two distinct +sets of cilia, small ones covering the body and the +larger ones round the mouth. Those before us are +named after this property <i>Stentor polymorphus</i>,<a name="FNanchor_A_18" id="FNanchor_A_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a> or +Many-shaped Stentors, and owe their exquisite tint to +numberless green vesicles, or small cavities filled with +colouring matter like that of plants. This, however, is +not essential to the species which may often be found +of other hues. In size this Stentor varies from a +hundred and twentieth to one twenty-fourth of an +inch. It is entirely covered with fine cilia, disposed in +longitudinal rows, and round the head is a spiral +wreath of larger and very conspicuous cilia leading to +the mouth.</p> + +<div class="footnote"> +<p> + <a name="Footnote_A_18" id="Footnote_A_18"></a> + <a href="#FNanchor_A_18"><span class="label">[18]</span></a> +See <a href="#frontispiece">Frontispiece</a>.</p></div> + +<p>Having observed the abundance of these creatures, a +few small branches to which they were appended, were +placed in the glass trough, and viewed with powers of +sixty and one hundred linear. Some had tumbled +down as shapeless lumps, others presented broad +funnel-shaped bodies; while others stretched themselves +to great length like the long, narrow post-horns which +still wake the echoes of a few old-fashioned towns. +The ciliary motion of the elegant wreath was active +and rapid, causing quite a stir among all the little +particles, alive and dead; and when the right sort of +<span class="pagenum">[109]</span>food came near the corkscrew entrance to the mouth, +down it went, and if conspicuous for colour, was +subsequently seen apparently embedded in little +cavities, which Ehrenberg supposed were separate +stomachs, although that theory is now rejected. One +advantage of viewing these objects in a sufficient +quantity of water, to leave them in freedom, is that +they frequently turn themselves, so that you can see +right down into them; and the drawing given in the +frontispiece represents such a view, which is the most +favorable for the exhibition of the mouth. To make<span class="pagenum">[110]</span> +out the details of their structure, to see the nucleus +and other organs, the flattening in the live-box is +useful, and it enables much higher powers to be employed.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/i_129.jpg" width="400" height="319" alt="i129" title=""> +<span class="caption">A, B, C, D, Stentor polymorphus in different degrees of expansion. +A large specimen is one twenty-fourth of an inch +long.</span> +</div> + +<p>After leaving the Anacharis in a glass jar for a few +days, the Stentors multiplied exceedingly; some clung +to the sides of the vessel in sociable communities, +others hung from the surface of the water, and crowds +settled upon the stems, visibly changing their tint, as +the Stentor green was much bluer than that of the +plant. Scores swam about in all sorts of forms. Now +they looked like cylindrical vessels with expanding +brims, now globular, now oddly distorted, until all +semblance of the original shape was lost. Many were +found in shiny tubes, but these were never so lively or +green as the free swimmers, but mostly of a dingy +dirty hue.</p> + +<p>These housekeepers were more timid and cautious +than the roving tribe. They came slowly out of their +dens, drew back at the slightest alarm, never took their +tails from home, and only extended their full length +when certain not to be disturbed. Some authors have +thought they only take to private lodgings when they +feel a little bit poorly, but others dispute this opinion, +and I do not think it is correct. I have found these +Stentors at all seasons, from January to the autumn, +but they are never so numerous, nor aggregated in +numbers like the roving sort. Whether they are old +folks, who are tired of the world and its gaieties, and +devote the remainder of their lives to contemplation, or +whether they are bachelors disappointed in love, I am<span class="pagenum">[111]</span> +unable to say; but they are very inferior in beauty to +the "gay and glittering crowd."<a name="FNanchor_A_19" id="FNanchor_A_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a></p> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_A_19" id="Footnote_A_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_19"><span class="label">[19]</span></a> Stein says the colourless variety of S. Polymorphus is sometimes +found with a tube, and the S. Rössellii very frequently so provided.</p></div> + +<p>For some weeks my Stentors abounded, and then +most of them suddenly disappeared. They could not +have "moved," but probably "went to smash" by a +process peculiar to infusoria, and which Dujardin +politely describes as "diffluence." This mode of +making an exit from the stage of life is more tragical +than the ripping up so fashionable in Japan. The +integument bursts, and its contents disperse in minute +particles, that in their turn disappear, and scarcely +leave a "wrack behind."</p> + +<p>The Stentors obey the injunction to "increase and +multiply" by self-division, which Stein says is always +oblique, and the nucleus, which plays such an important +part in infusoria, is band-like, moniliform (bead-shape), +or round. When an animalcule increases by +self-division, a portion of the nucleus goes with each +part, and it is probably the organ which stimulates the +change. It is also concerned in other modes of propagation. +"The anus is situated on the back close +beneath the ciliary circle;" and the "contractile vesicle +on a level with the ciliary wreath." Stein records that +in November, 1858, he met green Stentors (<i>Polymorphus</i>) +encysted, and he figures one in a gelatinous +flask having a stopper in its narrow neck.</p> + +<p>Before closing our account of the Stentor, let us +revert a moment to the ciliary wreath, as it may be +made the subject of a curious experiment. If, for +<span class="pagenum">[112]</span>example, the cilia are viewed at right-angles to their +length, they will seem to form a delicate frill, in which +a quivering motion is perceived. But if the table is +shaken by a sharp blow, the frill is thrown into waves, +or takes the form which washerwomen give to certain +female articles by the use of the Italian iron, and the +ciliary motion is thus made to take place in different +planes, and rendered strikingly apparent.</p> + +<p>One day turning over the Anacharis in search of +subjects, a small brown tube was noticed, from which +a glassy rod protruded like the feeler of a rotifer. +Keeping the table quiet, and watching the result, was +soon rewarded by a further protrusion of the feeler, +accompanied by a portion of the body of the inmate of +the tube. The feeler was thrust on this side and on +that, as if collecting information for its proprietor, who, +I suppose, was satisfied with the intelligence, and +gradually extended herself, until she stood out two +thirds in length beyond the tube, and set two lobes of +one nearly continuous ciliary organ in rapid motion. +Sometimes the creature, <i>Cephalosiphon limnias</i>, bent +its neck, if I may so speak, to the right, and sometimes +to the left, and sometimes stood upright, when the +true form of the ciliary apparatus could be seen. The +tube of this creature was opaque, from the adhesion of +foreign matter, and presented an untidy appearance, +strangely contrasting with the clear, neat bottles of the +Floscules. These Cephalosiphons are very whimsical +in their ways, and many that were sent to different +observers never exhibited their ciliary wreaths, but +performed sundry antics, disguising their true shape.<span class="pagenum">[113]</span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 180px;"> +<img src="images/i_133.jpg" width="180" height="592" alt="i133" title=""> +<span class="caption">Cephalosiphon limnias.</span> +</div> + +<p>Somewhat like the Cephalosiphon, though much +commoner and without the siphon, is Limnias ceratophylli, +which every collector is sure to meet. The +length of the Limnias varies, according to Pritchard, +from 1—20" to 1—40". Our Cephalosiphon, when fully +extended and magnified one hundred and eighty linear,<span class="pagenum">[114]</span> +looked about three inches and a half long, and was +therefore very small. Just below the ciliary lobes the +gizzard was seen, with its toothed hammers working one +against the other. The masticatory organ differs from +the typical form, as represented in the Brachion; and Mr. +Gosse observes of Limnias that "each <i>uncus</i> forms, with +its <i>ramus</i>, a well-defined mass of muscle enclosing the +solid parts, and in form approaching the quadrature of +a globe. Across the upper surface of the mass the +<i>uncus</i> is stretched like three long parallel fingers, +arched in their common direction, and imbedded in the +muscular substances, their points just reaching the +opposing face of the <i>ramus</i>, and meeting the points of +the opposite <i>uncus</i> when closed."<a name="FNanchor_A_20" id="FNanchor_A_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a></p> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_A_20" id="Footnote_A_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_20"><span class="label">[20]</span></a> The terms <i>uncus</i>, <i>ramus</i>, etc., have been explained in Chapter II, +page 28.</p></div> + +<p>There is no connection between Limnias or Cephalosiphon +and their tubes, except that of simple adhesion, +which takes place by means of the end of their foot-stalks.</p> + +<p>In a former chapter we have described an interesting +relation of the Vorticella, the Cothurnia, whose elegant +crystal vases form a very artistic abode, characterised +by possessing a distinct foot. Other species of the +same family inhabit vases which have no foot or stalk, +or live in gelatinous sheaths less accurately fashioned. +Sometimes these creatures are obliging enough to +conform to the specific descriptions which eminent +naturalists have given of them, and also to the characters +which the authorities have assigned to the +different genera in which they have been grouped, but +<span class="pagenum">[115]</span>the microscopist will often meet with difficulties in the +way of classification.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/i_135.jpg" width="400" height="249" alt="i135" title=""> +<span class="caption">Vaginicola (?) (A, elongated; B, retracted.)</span> +</div> + +<p>Attached to a piece of weed were a number of cylindrical +masses of brownish jelly, with rounded tops, and +situated in an irregular and very transparent sheath, +about twice as high as themselves. Presently they all +rose up to four times their previous height, put forth a +beautiful crown of vibrating cilia, and opened a sort of +trap-door to their internal arrangements. In this +position they had a long cylindrical form, gracefully +curved, but of nearly equal width from the mouth to +the base, and they readily imbibed particles of carmine, +which tinged sundry little cavities with its characteristic +hue. The slightest disturbance caused the ciliary<span class="pagenum">[116]</span> +wreaths to be drawn in, and the bodies to be retracted, +and descend into their house like a conjuring toy, until +the appearance first described was reproduced.</p> + +<p>The general form and structure of these objects was +like the drawings usually given of <i>Vaginicola</i>, which is +said not to exist in groups, although two individuals +are commonly found in one well-shaped cell. These +creatures, however, did not taper towards the base as +Vaginicolæ generally do, and perhaps they became +aware of this defect in their figures, for after a day or +two a change appeared, and they assumed a more +graceful form by swelling out in the middle, and then +growing slender down to the bottom, very much like +the pattern given by glass-blowers to little vases of +flowers.</p> + +<p>It is very important to note the changing appearance +of animalcules, and where the same individuals can be +observed from day to day, these will often be found +considerable. It is probable that when such particulars +are fully known, the number of species will be greatly +reduced, and the study of these organisms considerably +simplified. I have called the animals just described +<i>Vaginicolæ</i>, but the reader must be prepared to find +similar bodies, inhabiting well-formed vases, either +solitarily or in couples, the latter condition arising +from the fission of one individual without a corresponding +division of the abode.</p> + +<p>For a few weeks I continually met with groups living +as I have described, in what may be called amorphous +cells, which were often so nearly like the surrounding +water in refracting power, as to be discerned with some<span class="pagenum">[117]</span> +difficulty. No trace could be seen of divisions into +separate cells, but they all appeared to live happily +together in one room, and if one went up all went +up, and if one went down all went down, as if their +proceedings were regulated by a community of sensation +or will.</p> + +<p>Another little curiosity was a transparent cup upon a +slender stem, which stood upright like a wineglass, +and supported on its mouth a transparent globe. By +removing a leaf which prevented the stalk being traced +to its termination, it was found to be a Vorticella, and +after two hours the globe was partially drawn in, and +reduced in size. Why the creature was engaged in +blowing this bubble I do not know, and have not met +with another instance of such conduct.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 200px;"> +<img src="images/i_137.jpg" width="200" height="23" alt="i137" title=""> +</div> + +<hr class="chapter"> + +<p><span class="pagenum">[118]</span></p> + +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI"></a>CHAPTER XI.</h2> + +<p class="h2">NOVEMBER.</p> + +<p class="out">Characteristics of the Polyzoa—Details of structure according to +Allman—Plumatella repens—Its great beauty under proper illumination—Its +tentacles and their cilia—The mouth and its guard +or epistome—Intestinal tube—How it swallowed a Rotifer, and +what happened—Curiosities of digestion—Are the tentacles capable +of Stinging?—Resting Eggs, or "Statoblasts"—Tube of Plumatella—Its +muscular Fibres—Physiological importance of their +structure.</p> + +<br> + +<img class="dropimg" src="images/i_138.jpg" width="90" height="90" alt="138" title="D"> +<p class="minus"><b>URING</b> the fag end of last month I observed +some fragments of a new creature among +some bits of Anacharis, from the Vale of +Heath Pond, and searched for complete and intelligible +specimens without effect. Luckily one evening a +scientific neighbour, to whom I had given some of the +plant for the sake of the beautiful <i>Stephanoceri</i> which +inhabited it, came in with a glass trough containing a +little branch, to which adhered a dirty parchment-like +ramifying tube, dotted here and there with brown oval +masses, and having sundry open extremities, from +which some polyp-shaped animals put forth long pearly +tentacles margined with vibrating cilia, and making +a lively current. The creatures presented an organization +higher than that of polyps, for there was an +<span class="pagenum">[119]</span>evident <i>differentiation</i> and complication of parts. They +belonged to the <i>Polyzoa</i> or <i>Bryozoa</i>,<a name="FNanchor_A_21" id="FNanchor_A_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a> a very important +division of the <i>mollusca</i>. The <i>Polyzoa</i> are chiefly +marine, and the common "sea-mat," often erroneously +treated as a <i>sea-weed</i>, is a well-known form. A species +of another order often picked up on our coasts is the +<i>Sertularia</i>, or Sea-Fir, composed of delicate branching +stems of a horny-looking substance, which, under a +pocket-lens, is found to contain an immense number of +small cells inhabited by Polyps. It is instructive to +compare the two and note how much more advanced in +structure is the Polyzoon than the polyp.</p> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_A_21" id="Footnote_A_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_21"><span class="label">[21]</span></a> <i>Polyzoa</i> means "many animals," in allusion to their habit of living +in association. <i>Bryozoa</i>, "moss-animals," from some forming cells +having that appearance.</p></div> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/i_139.jpg" width="400" height="603" alt="i139" title=""> +<span class="caption">Plumatella repens. Single Polypide enlarged</span> +</div> + +<p>Polyzoa were formerly associated with the polyps, to +which they bear a strong superficial resemblance; but +they are of a much higher degree of organization, as +will be seen by comparing what has been said in a +former chapter on the <i>Hydra</i>, with the description +which we now proceed to abridge from Dr. Allman's +splendid monograph on the fresh-water kinds. In +order to get a general conception of a Polyzoon, the +Professor tells us to imagine an alimentary canal, +consisting of œsophagus, stomach, and intestine, to be +furnished at its origin with long ciliated tentacles, and +to have a single nervous ganglion on one side of the +œsophagus. We must then conceive the intestine bent +back till its anal orifice comes near the mouth; and +this curved digestive tube to be suspended in a bag +containing fluid, and having two openings, one for the +<span class="pagenum">[120]</span>mouth and the other for the vent. A system of +muscles enables the alimentary tube to be retracted or +protruded, the former process pulling the bag in, and +the latter letting it out. The mouth of the bag is, so +to speak, tied round the creature's neck just below the +tentacles, which are the only portions of it that are +left free. The investing sack has in nearly every case +the power of secreting an external sheath, more or less +solid, and which branches forming numerous cells, in +which the members of the family live in a socialistic +community, having, as it were, two lives, one individual, +and the other shared in common with the rest.</p> + +<p>The whole group of tubes and cells, whatever may be +the form in which they are aggregated, is called the +<i>Polypary</i>, or, as Dr. Allman prefers, the <i>Cœnœcium</i> +(common house); the creature he names a <i>Polypide</i><a name="FNanchor_A_22" id="FNanchor_A_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a> +(polyp-like); and the disk which bears the tentacles +<i>Lophophore</i> (crest-bearer). There are some more hard +words to be learnt before the student can enjoy himself +scientifically among the Polyzoa, and we shall be +compelled to employ some of them before we have +done; but will now endeavour to describe what was +presented to our view by the specimen obtained from +the Hampstead Pond.</p> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_A_22" id="Footnote_A_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_22"><span class="label">[22]</span></a> <i>Polyzoon</i> is preferable, as avoiding confusion with <i>polypite</i>, used +for another class of object.</p></div> + +<p>The general aspect of a branch of <i>Plumatella repens</i>—the +creature we have to describe—is given in the +drawing annexed. When all was quiet, the mouths of +the bags belonging to each cell were slowly everted, +and out came a numerous bundle of tentacles, which +<span class="pagenum">[121]</span>were either spread like the corolla of a flower, or +permitted to hang dishevelled like the snake-locks of +Medusa. We will suppose these organs symmetrically +expanded, and that we are looking down upon them +with a magnifying power of sixty diameters, the light +having been carefully adjusted by turning the reflecting +mirror a little on one side, to avoid a direct glare. +The tentacles, each of which curves with a living grace, +and displays an opaline tint in its glassy structure, do +not form a complete circle, for at one place we discern +two slightly diverging arms of the disk, or frame +(Lophophore) from which they grow.</p> + +<p>These arms support tentacles on each side, and leave +a gap between, so that the whole pattern is <i>crescentic</i>, +or crescent-shaped, and not circular. Extending as far +as the points of the arms, and carried all round the +crescent, is an extremely delicate membrane, like the +finest gauze, which unites all the tentacles by their +basal portions, and makes an elegant retreating curve +between every two. Each tentacle exhibits two rows +of cilia, which scintillate as their vibrations cause them +to catch the light. The motion of the cilia is invariably +<i>down</i> one side and <i>up</i> the other, the current +or pattern being carried on from one tentacle to the +other, all through the series. This characteristic, and +the facility with which each cilium can be distinguished, +gives great interest and beauty to the spectacle +of this wonderful apparatus, by which water-currents +are made to bathe the tentacles, and assist +respiration, and also to carry food towards the mouth, +over which a sort of finger or tongue is stretched to<span class="pagenum">[122]</span> +guard the way, and exercise some choice as to what +particles shall be permitted to pass on. This organ is +called the <i>epistome</i>, from two Greek words, signifying +"upon the mouth."</p> + +<p>If the cell is an old one, it may be covered with so +much extraneous matter as to obscure the economy +within; but we are fortunate in having a transparent +specimen before us, through which we can see all that +goes on. The alimentary tube, after forming a capacious +cavity, much longer than it is broad, turns round and +terminates in an orifice near the mouth, and just below +the integuments. When refuse has to be discharged, +this orifice is protruded; and after the operation is +over, it draws back as before. Long muscles, composed +of separate threads or fibres, pull the creature in and out +of its cell, and at the part where the stomach ends, and +the intestine turns round, is attached a long flexible +rope, called the <i>funiculus</i>, which goes to the bottom of +the cell. The passage of the food down to the stomach, +its digestion, and the eviction of the residue, can all be +watched; and when a large morsel is swallowed, the +spectacle is curious in the extreme.</p> + +<p>One day a polyzoon caught a large rotifer, (<i>R. vulgaris</i>,) +which, with several others of its tribe, had been +walking over the <i>cœnœcium</i>, and swimming amongst +the tentacles, as if unconscious of danger. All of a +sudden it went down the whirlpool leading to the mouth, +was rolled up by a process that could not be traced, +and without an instant's loss of time, was seen shooting +down in rapid descent to the gulf below, where it looked +a potato-shaped mass, utterly destitute of its characteristic<span class="pagenum">[123]</span> +living form. Having been made into a bolus, +the unhappy rotifer, who never gave the faintest sign of +vitality, was tossed up and down from the top to the +bottom of the stomach, just as a billiard-ball might be +thrown from the top to the bottom of a stocking. +This process went on for hours, the ball gradually +diminishing in size, until at last it was lost in the +general brown mass with which the stomach was filled. +The bottom of the stomach seems well supplied with +muscular fibres, to cause the constrictions by which +this work is chiefly performed, and by keeping a colony +for a month or two, I had many opportunities of seeing +my Polyzoa at their meals.</p> + +<p>When alarmed the tentacles were quickly retracted, +but although these creatures are said to dislike the light, +and usually keep away from it in their native haunts, +my specimens had no objection to come out in a strong +illumination, and seemed perfectly at their ease. They +were indeed most amiable creatures, and never failed to +display their charms to admiring visitors, who rewarded +them with unmeasured praise. Twice I had an opportunity +of observing an action I cannot explain, except +by supposing either that the tentacles of the <i>Plumatella</i> +have some poisonous action, or that rotifers are +susceptible of fear. On these occasions the common +rotifer was the subject of the experiment. First one +and then another got among the tentacles, and on +escaping seemed very poorly. One fellow was, to borrow +a phrase from Professor Thomas Sayers, "completely +doubled up," and two or three seconds—long periods in +a rotifer's life—elapsed before he came to himself again.<span class="pagenum">[124]</span></p> + +<p>By keeping a colony of the Plumatella for a few weeks +in a glass trough, and occasionally supplying them with +fresh water from an aquarium, containing the animalcules, +they are easily preserved in good health, and as +they develop fresh cells, the process of growth may be +readily watched. This production of fresh individuals +enlarges the parent colony, but could not be the means +of founding a new one, which is accomplished by two +other modes. A little way down the cells Professor +Allman discovered an ovary attached to the internal +tube by a short <i>peduncle</i>, or foot stalk, while a testis or +male generative organ is attached to the <i>funiculus</i>, or +"little rope," we have already described.</p> + +<p>July and August are the best times for observing the +ovaries, and they are most conspicuous in the genera +<i>Alcyonella</i> and <i>Paludicella</i>. True eggs are developed in +the ovaries in a manner resembling this mode of multiplication +in other animals; but there is another kind +of egg, or, perhaps to speak more properly, a variety of +bud, which is extremely curious. In looking at our +specimens we noticed brown oval bodies in the cells; +these, on careful examination, presented the appearance +of the sketch. The centre is dark, covered with a network, +which is more conspicuous in the lighter coloured +and more transparent margins. These curious bodies +are produced from the funiculus, and act as reserves of +propagative force, as they are not hatched or developed +until they get out and find themselves exposed to appropriate +circumstances. Professor Allman names +them <i>Statoblasts</i>, or stationary germs, and they bear +some resemblance to what are called the "winter eggs" +<span class="pagenum">[125]</span>of some other creatures. The Professor was never able +to discover any mode by which they were permitted to +escape from the cells, and in our colonies none were +allowed to leave their homes until the death of their +parent, and the decomposition of its cell had taken +place; a process which went on contemporaneously with +the growth of new cells, until the plant on which the +<i>cœnœcium</i> was situated, rotted away, and then unfortunately +the whole concern went to pieces.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;"> +<img src="images/i_148.jpg" width="400" height="619" alt="i148" title=""> +<span class="caption">Plumatella repens on a leaf.</span> +</div> + +<p>The tubes of the <i>Plumatella</i>, and of most other Polyzoa, +are composed of two coats, called respectively +<i>endocyst</i> and <i>ectocyst</i>, that is, "inner case" and "outer +case." The first is vitally endowed, and exhibits vessels +and muscular fibres. The second or outer case is +thrown off by the first. It is a parchment-like substance, +strengthened by the adhesion of dirt particles, and does +not appear to exercise any vital functions, but to be +merely a covering for protection. The inner layer +terminates in the neck of the bag before described, as +exserted when the polypide comes out, and inverted +when it goes in. This mode of making a case or sheath +by inversion of a bag is technically called <i>invagination</i>, +and is readily seen in new and transparent cells.</p> + +<p>The movement of <i>eversion</i>, or coming out, is chiefly +produced by the contraction of the endocyst; while the +<i>inversion</i>, or getting in again, is performed by the long +muscles, which, when the animal is extended, are seen +attached to it like ropes. Upon these muscles Professor +Allman remarks that they are "especially interesting +in a physiological point of view, as they seem +to present us with an example of true muscular tissue,<span class="pagenum">[126]</span> +reduced to its simplest and essential form. A muscle +may here be viewed as a beautiful dissection far surpassing +the most refined preparation of the dissecting +needle, for it is composed of a bundle of elementary +fibres, totally separate from one another through their +entire course." He further adds, "The fibres of the +great retractor muscle are distinctly marked by transverse +striæ;—a condition, however, which is not at all +times equally perceptible, and some of our best observers +have denied to the Polyzoon the existence of +striated fibre."</p> + +<p>We can confirm the fact of this sort of fibre being +present, but we fancy a reader not versed in the +mysteries of physiology exclaiming, 'What does it +matter whether his fibres are striped or not?'</p> + +<p>Physiologists used to suppose there was a strong and +marked distinction and separation between <i>striped</i> +muscles, that is, muscles the fibres of which exhibit +transverse stripes when magnified, and those which do +not. Kölliker, however, says this decided separation +can no longer be maintained,<a name="FNanchor_A_23" id="FNanchor_A_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> and he gives instances +in proof of the connections that can be traced between +the two forms. In the higher animals the striped +muscles are the special instruments of <i>will</i>, and of movements +that follow, or are accompanied by, distinct sensations. +Striped fibre must be regarded as the highest +form; and as a muscle of this sort contracts in length +it increases uniformly in breadth.</p> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_A_23" id="Footnote_A_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_23"><span class="label">[23]</span></a> 'Manual of Human Microscopic Anatomy,' p. 63.</p></div> + +<p>There are many other genera and species of fresh-water +polyzoa besides the <i>Plumatella repens</i>, and they +<span class="pagenum">[127]</span>are found attached to sticks, stones, or leaves, generally +to the under surface of the latter. They are all objects +of great interest and beauty, which, whatever their diversity, +conform sufficiently to one type that the student +who has observed one, will easily recognise the zoological +position of another. They should be viewed by transmitted +and by dark-ground illumination, which produces +very beautiful effects. To observe them in the performance +of their functions, they require more room than +the live-box can afford, but are well shown in the glass +trough, whose moveable diaphragm enables them to be +brought near enough to the object-glass, for the use of +a power of about sixty linear for general purposes, and +of from one to two hundred for the examination of +particular parts. For a more detailed examination +dissection must be employed, but all that we have mentioned +can be seen without injury to the living animal, +if specimens are kept till new cells are formed in water, +which does not contain enough dirt to render their integuments +opaque.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 180px;"> +<img src="images/i_151.jpg" width="180" height="22" alt="i151" title=""> +</div> + +<hr class="chapter"> + +<p><span class="pagenum">[128]</span></p> + +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII"></a>CHAPTER XII.</h2> + +<p class="h2">DECEMBER.</p> + +<p class="out">Microscopic Hunting in Winter—Water-bears, or Tardigrada—Their +comical behaviour—Mode of viewing them—Singular gizzard—A +compressorium—Achromatic condenser—Mouth of the +Water-bear—Water-bears' exposure to heat—Soluble +albumen—Physiological and chemical reasons why they are not killed by +heating and drying—The Trachelius ovum—Mode of swimming—Method +of viewing—By dark-ground illumination—Curious digestive +tube with branches—Multiplication by division—Change of +form immediately following this process—Subsequent appearances.</p> + +<br> + +<img class="dropimg" src="images/i_152.jpg" width="91" height="90" alt="i152" title="T"> +<p class="minus"><b>HERE</b> is always satisfaction in finding a work +accomplished; but the attempt to delineate +some of the marvels of minute creation has +been a pleasant one, and we approach the completion of +our task of recording a <i>Microscopic Year</i> with something +like regret. The dark, dirty December of the +great metropolis may not seem a promising time for +field excursions, but some ponds lie near enough to +practicable roads and paths to render an occasional dip +in them, not of ourselves, but of our bottles—an +easy and not unpleasant performance; and if the +weather is unusually bad, we can fall back upon our +preserves in bottles and tanks, which seldom fail to +afford something new, as we have been pretty sure to +bring home some undeveloped germs with our stock of<span class="pagenum">[129]</span> +pond-water and plants, and even creatures of considerable +size are very likely to have escaped detection +in our first efforts at examination.</p> + +<p>When objects are not over abundant, as is apt to be +the case in the cold months, it is well to fill a large vial +with some water out of the aquarium or other large +vessel, and watch what living specks may be moving +about therein. These are readily examined with a +pocket-lens, and with a little dexterity any promising +creature can be fished out with the dipping-tube. It is +also advisable to shake a mass of vegetation in a white +basin, as the larger infusoria, &c., may be thrown +down; and indeed this method (as recommended by +Pritchard) is always convenient. Even so small a +quantity of water as is contained in a glass cell, appropriated +to the continual examination of polyps or +polyzoa, should be frequently hunted over with a low +power, as in the course of days and weeks one race of +small animals will disappear, and another take their +place.</p> + +<p>Following these various methods in December, we +obtained many specimens; but the most interesting was +found by taking up small branches of the Anacharis +with a pair of forceps, and putting them into a glass +trough to see what inhabitants they might possess. +One of these trials was rewarded by the appearance of +a little puppy-shaped animal very busy pawing about +with eight imperfect legs, but not making much progress +with all his efforts. It was evident that we had +obtained one of the <i>Tardigrada</i> (slow-steppers), or +Water-Bears, and a very comical amusing little fellow<span class="pagenum">[130]</span> +he was. The figure was like that of a new-born puppy, +or "unlicked" bear cub; each of the eight legs were +provided with four serviceable claws, there was no +tail, and the blunt head was susceptible of considerable +alteration of shape. He was grubbing about among +some bits of decayed vegetation, and from the mass of +green matter in his stomach, it was evident that he was +not one of that painfully numerous class in England—the +starving poor.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;"> +<img src="images/i_154.jpg" width="300" height="168" alt="i154" title=""> +<span class="caption">Water-Bear.</span> +</div> + +<p>A power of one hundred and five linear, obtained +with a two-thirds object-glass, and the second eye-piece, +enabled all his motions and general structure to be exhibited, +and showed that he possessed a sort of gizzard, +whose details would require more magnification to bring +out. Accordingly the dipping-tube was carefully held +just over him, the finger removed, and luckily in went +the little gentleman with the ascending current. He +was cautiously transferred to a Compressorium,<a name="FNanchor_A_24" id="FNanchor_A_24"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a> an +<span class="pagenum">[131]</span>apparatus by which the approach of two thin plates +of glass can be regulated by the action of a spring and +a screw; and just enough pressure was employed to +keep him from changing his place, although he was +able to move his tiny limbs. Thus arranged, he +was placed under a power of two hundred and forty +linear, and illuminated by an achromatic condenser,<a name="FNanchor_B_25" id="FNanchor_B_25"></a><a href="#Footnote_B_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a> to +make the fine structure of his gizzard as plain as possible. +It was then seen that this curious organ contains +several prominences or teeth, and is composed of muscular +fibres, radiating in every direction. From the +front of the gizzard proceed two rods, which meet in a +point, and are supposed to represent the maxillæ or +jaws of insects, while between them is a tube or channel, +through which the food is passed. The mouth is +<i>suctorial</i>, and the two horny rods, with their central +piece or pieces, are protrusile. They were frequently +brought as far as the outer lips (if we may so call the +margins of the mouth), but we did not witness an actual +protrusion, except when the lips accompanied them, +and formed a small round pouting orifice. The skin of +the animal was tough and somewhat loose, and wrinkled +during the contractions its proprietor made. The interior +of the body exhibited an immense multitude of +globular particles of various sizes in constant motion, +but not moving in any vessels, or performing a distinct +circulation.</p> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_A_24" id="Footnote_A_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_24"><span class="label">[24]</span></a> The best forms of this instrument are made by Messrs. R. & J. +Beck, the glass plates being held in their places by flat-headed screws, +and not by cement. This plan was devised by the author, and makes +it easy to renew the glasses when broken.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_B_25" id="Footnote_B_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor_B_25"><span class="label">[25]</span></a> The achromatic condenser is a frame capable of supporting an +object-glass, lower than that employed for vision, through which the +light passes to the object in quantities and directions determined by +stops of various shapes. The appearances mentioned can be seen +without it, though not so well.</p></div> +<p><span class="pagenum">[132]</span></p> +<p>My specimens had no visible eyes, and these organs +are, according to Pritchard's book, "variable and fugacious." +The same authority remarks, "In most vital +phenomena they very closely accord with the rotatoria; +thus like these they can be revived after being put into +hot water at 113° to 118°, but are destroyed by immersion +in boiling water. They may be gradually heated +to 216°, 252°, and even 261°. It is also by their capability +of resuscitation after being dried that they are +able to sustain their vitality in such localities as the +roofs of houses, where at one time they are subjected to +great heat and excessive drought, and at another are +immersed in water."</p> + +<p>When vital processes are not stopped by excess of +temperature, as is the case with the higher animals, the +power of resisting heat without destruction depends +upon the condition of the albumen. Soluble albumen, +or, as it should be called, <i>Albuminate of Soda</i> (for a +small quantity of that alkali is present and chemically +united with it), after having been <i>thoroughly dried</i>, may +be heated without loss of its solubility; although if the +same temperature was applied before it was dry, that +solubility would be destroyed, and it would no longer +be a fit constituent of a living creature. As Dr. Carpenter +observes, this fact is of much interest in explaining +the tenacity of life in the Tardigrada.</p> + +<p>The movements of the water-bears, although slow, +evince a decided purpose and ability to make all parts +work together for one common object; and as might +be expected from this fact, and also from the +repetition of distinct, although not articulated limbs,<span class="pagenum">[133]</span> +they are provided with a nervous apparatus of considerable +development, in the shape of a chain of a +ganglia and a brain, with connecting filaments. From +these and other circumstances naturalists consider the +Tardigrada to belong to the great family of <i>Spiders</i>, +of which they are, physiologically speaking, <i>poor +relations</i>. Siebold says "they form the transition +from the Arachnoidæ to the Annelides."<a name="FNanchor_A_26" id="FNanchor_A_26"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a> Like +the spiders they cast their skin; and, although I +was not fortunate enough to witness this operation—called +in the language of the learned <i>ecdysis</i>, which +means putting its clothes off—I found an empty hide, +which, making allowance for the comparative size of +the creatures, looked tough and strong as that of a +rhinoceros, and showed that the stripping process extended +to the tips of the claws. The 'Micrographic +Dictionary' states that the Tardigrada lay but few eggs +at a time, and these are "usually deposited during the +ecdysis, the exuviæ serving as a protection to them +during the process of hatching." Thus Mrs. Water-Bear +makes a nursery out of her old skin, a device as +ingenious as unexpected. The water-bears are said to +be hermaphrodites, but this is improbable.</p> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_A_26" id="Footnote_A_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_26"><span class="label">[26]</span></a> 'Anatomy of the Invertebrata,' Burnett's trans., p. 364.</p></div> + +<p>The <i>Plumatella repens</i>, described in a former chapter, +was kept in a glass trough, to which some fresh water +was added every few days, taken from a glass jar that had +been standing many weeks with growing anacharis in it. +One day a singular creature made its appearance in the +trough; when magnified sixty diameters it resembled +an oval bladder, with a sort of proboscis attached to it. +<span class="pagenum">[134]</span>At one part it was longitudinally constricted, and +evidently possessed some branched and complicated +internal vessel. The surface was ciliated, and the neck +or proboscis acted as a rudder, and enabled the creature +to execute rapid turns. It swam up and down, and +round about, sometimes rotating on its axis, at others +keeping the same side uppermost, but did not exhibit +the faintest sign of intelligence in its movements, except +an occasional finger-like bend of the proboscis, +upon which the cilia seemed thicker than upon the +body. It was big enough to be observed as a moving +white speck by the naked eye, when the vessel containing +it was held to catch the light slantingly; but a +power of one hundred and five was conveniently employed +to enable its structure to be discerned. Under +this power, when the animal was resting or moving +slowly, a mouth was perceived on the left side of the +proboscis, which was usually, though not always, curved +to the right. The mouth was a round or oval orifice, +and when illuminated by the parabola, its lips or +margin looked thickened, and of a pale blue, and +ciliated, while the rest of the body assumed a pinkish +pearly tint.</p> + +<p>Below the mouth came a funnel-shaped tube or +œsophagus, having some folds or plaits on its sides, and +terminating in a broad digestive tube, distinct from the +nucleus, and ramifying like a tree. The constriction +before mentioned, which was always seen in certain +positions, although it varied <i>very considerably</i> in depth +and width, drew up the integument towards the main +trunk of the digestive tube, and thus the animal had a<span class="pagenum">[135]</span> +distinct ventral and dorsal side. The branches of the +tube stopped somewhat abruptly just before reaching +the surface, and were often observed to end in small +round vacuoles or vesicles.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 280px;"> +<img src="images/i_159.jpg" width="280" height="368" alt="i159" title=""> +<span class="caption">Trachelius ovum (slightly flattened).</span> +</div> + +<p>At the bottom of the bladder, opposite the mouth, in +some specimens were large round cavities or cells, filled +with smaller cells, or partially transparent granules. +These varied in number from one to two or three, and +were replaced in other specimens by masses that did +not present the same regular form or rounded outline. +In one instance an amorphous structure of this kind +gradually divided itself, and seemed in the course of +forming two cells, but the end of the process was unfortunately +not seen. The annexed drawing will readily +enable the animal to be recognised. It shows the mouth +very plainly, and a current of small particles moving<span class="pagenum">[136]</span> +towards it. The œsophagus terminates in a digestive +tube, like the trunk of a tree, from which numerous +branches spring. This arrangement is probably analogous +to that of the phlebenterous mollusks described by +Quatrefages, in which the ramifications of the stomach +answer the purpose of arteries, and convey the nutrient +fluid to various parts of the body. It is also likely +that they minister to the function of respiration.</p> + +<p>The cilia on the surface, which are arranged in +parallel lines, are best observed when the animal is +slightly flattened in a live-box; but this process produces +a considerable derangement in the relative position +of the internal parts, and they can only be well seen +when it is immersed in plenty of water, and is polite +enough to stand still, and submit his digestive economy +to a steady gaze. The only way to succeed in this +undertaking is to have a large stock of patience as well +as a convenient cell or trough. The table must be kept +steady, and the prisoner watched from time to time, +and at last he will be found ready for display.</p> + +<p>Pritchard says this animal, whose name is <i>Trachelius</i> +<i>ovum</i>, is an inhabitant of stagnant bog water, and has +been found encysted. My specimens could not be +called plentiful, but for several weeks I could generally +find two or three, by filling a four-ounce vial from the +glass jar, and examining its contents with a pocket-lens. +If none were present, another dip was made, and usually +with success.</p> + +<p>One evening I caught a good specimen by means of +the dipping-tube, and cautiously let it out, accompanied +by a drop of water, on the glass floor of the live-box.<span class="pagenum">[137]</span> +A glance with the pocket-lens showed all was right, and +the cover was very gently put on, but it had scarcely +touched the creature when it became crumpled up and +in confusion. On one or two former occasions I had +been unfortunate enough to give my captives a squeeze +too much, with the usual result of a rupture of their +integuments and an escape of globules and fluids from +the regions within. Now, however, there was no such +rupture and no such escape, but instead of a smooth, +comely surface, my Trachelius had lost all title to his +specific designation, <i>ovum</i>, for instead of bearing any +resemblance to an egg, it was more like an Irishman's +hat after having a bit of a "shindy" at Donnybrook +Fair.</p> + +<p>I was greatly puzzled with this aspect of things, and +still more so when my deranged specimen twirled and +bumped about with considerable velocity, and in all +directions. Presently a decided constriction appeared +about half-way below the mouth and proboscis, and in +transverse direction. The ciliary motion became very +violent in the lower half just below the constriction, +while the proboscis worked hard to make its half go +another way. For some minutes there was a tug of war, +and at length away went proboscis with his portion, +still much crumpled by the fight, and left the other +bit to roam at will, gradually smooth his puckers, +and assume the appearance of a respectable well-to-do +animalcule.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;"> +<img src="images/i_162.jpg" width="300" height="147" alt="i162" title=""> +<span class="caption">Trachelius ovum, three hours after division.</span> +</div> + +<p>Three hours after the "fission" the proboscis half +was not unlike the former self of the late "entire," but +with diminished body and larger neck; while the re<span class="pagenum">[138]</span>maining +portion had assumed a flask form, and would +not have been known by his dearest acquaintance. The +portraits of the <i>dis-United States</i> were quickly taken, +and, as bed-time had arrived, they were left to darkness +and themselves. The next morning a change had come +over the "spirit of their dream." Both were quiet, or +sedately moving, and they were nearly alike. The +proboscis fellow had increased and rounded his body, +and diminished his nose; while Mr. Flask had grown +round also, and evinced an intention of cultivating a +proboscis himself. Twenty-seven hours after the +separation, both had made considerable progress in +arranging and developing their insides, which had been +thrown into great confusion by the way in which the +original animal had been wrenched in half, and in both +a granular mass was forming opposite the mouth end. +The proboscis portion, which may perhaps be termed +the <i>mother</i>, was more advanced than her progeny, but +both had a great deal to do if they meant to exhibit the +original figure, and develop a set of bowels as elegantly +branched. Whether they would have succeeded or not +under happier circumstances I cannot tell, but unfortunately<span class="pagenum">[139]</span> +the Fate who carries the scissors cut short their +days.</p> + +<p>In all other animalcules in which I had observed the +process of multiplication by self-division, it seemed to +go on smoothly, and with no discomfort to either the +dividend or the quotient, and it may be that in the +fission of the <i>Trachelius ovum</i> I witnessed what the +doctors would call a bad case. Indeed it may have +been prematurely brought on, and aggravated by the +squeeze in the live-box. It is, however, probable, from +the stronger texture and greater organic development +of this animalcule, that it does not divide so easily as +the softer and simpler kinds.</p> + +<p>Frequent examination of this animalcule has created +a strong doubt in my mind whether it is rightly placed +in our "systems." My own impression is that it +belongs to a higher class.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 180px;"> +<img src="images/i_163.jpg" width="180" height="18" alt="i163" title=""> +</div> + +<hr class="chapter"> + +<span class="pagenum">[140]</span> + +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIII" id="CHAPTER_XIII"></a>CHAPTER XIII.</h2> + +<p class="h2">CONCLUSION.</p> + +<img class="dropimg" src="images/i_164.jpg" width="91" height="90" alt="i164" title="T"> +<p class="minus"><b>HE</b> creatures described in the preceding pages +range from very simple to highly complicated +forms, and in describing them some attention +has been paid to the general principles of classification. +The step is a wide one from the little masses of living +jelly that constitute Amœbæ to the Rotifers, supplied +with organs of sensation—eyes, feelers (calcars), and the +long cilia in the Floscularians, which seem to convey +impression like the whiskers of a cat—together with +elaborate machinery for catching, grinding up, and +digesting their prey, and which are also well furnished +with respiratory and excretory apparatus, ovaries, &c. +In the polypi and polyzoa may be observed those +resemblances in appearance which induced early naturalists +to group them together, and also the wide difference +of organization which marks the higher rank +to which the latter have attained. Amongst the ciliated +infusoria important gradations and differences will also +be noticed, some having only one sort of cilia, others +two sorts, and others, again, supplied, in addition to +cilia, with hooks and styles. No perfectly satisfactory<span class="pagenum">[141]</span> +classification of the infusoria has yet been devised, and +the life history of a great many is still very imperfectly +known. On the whole, the tendency of research is to +place many of them higher than they used to stand +after Ehrenberg's supposition of their having a plurality +of distinct stomachs, &c., was given up. Balbiani and +others have shown numerous cases of their forming +their eggs by a process analogous to that of higher +animals. Some really are, and others closely resemble, +the larval conditions of creatures higher in the scale, and +the contracted vesicle with its channel bears resemblance +to what is called the "water vascular system" of +worms.</p> + +<p>Zoological classification depends very much on morphology, +that is, the tracing of particular structures, +or parts, through all their stages, from the lowest to the +highest forms in which they are exhibited. In this +way the swimming bladder of a fish is shown to be a +rudimentary lung, though it has no respiratory functions, +and Mr. Kitchen Parker has found in the imperfect +skull of the tadpole a rudimentary appearance of +bones belonging to the human ear. The comparative +anatomist, after a wide survey of the objects before +him, arranges them into groups. He asks what are the +characteristic things to be affirmed concerning all the A's +that cannot be said of all the B's; or of all the C's that +marks their difference from the A's or the D's. Careful +investigation upon these methods shows affinities where +they were not previously expected—birds and reptiles +being close relations, for example, instead of distant +connections—and they lessen the value for purposes of<span class="pagenum">[142]</span> +classification of peculiarities that might have been +deemed of the highest importance.</p> + +<p>Professor Huxley divides the vertebrates into <span class="smcap">Ithycoids</span>, +comprising fishes and amphibia, which, besides +other characteristics, have gills at some period of their existence; +<span class="smcap">Sauroids</span> (reptiles and birds), which have no +gills, and possess certain developmental characteristics in +common; and, lastly, <span class="smcap">Mammals</span>. The Insecta, Myriopoda, +Arachnidæ, and Crustacea, he remarks, "without +doubt present so many characters in common as to +form a very natural assemblage. All are provided +with articulated limbs attached to a segmented body +skeleton, the latter, like the skeleton of the limbs, +being an 'exoskeleton,' or a bordering of that layer +which corresponds with the outer part of the vertebrates. +In others, at any rate in the embryonic condition, +the nervous system is composed of a double +chain of ganglia, united by longitudinal commissures, +and the gullet passed between two of these commissures. +No one of the members of these four classes is known +to possess vibratile cilia. The great majority of these +animals have a distinct heart, provided with valvular +apertures, which are in communication with a peri-visceral +cavity containing corpusculated blood." These +four classes have constituted the larger group or +"province" of <i>Articulata</i> or <i>Arthropoda</i>. Professor +Huxley thinks that, notwithstanding "the marked differences" +between the Annelida (worms) and the preceding +Arthropods (joint-foots), their resemblances outweighing +them—"the characters of the nervous system, +and the frequently segmented body, with imperfect<span class="pagenum">[143]</span> +lateral appendages of the Annelida, necessitates their +assemblage with the Arthropoda in one great division, +or sub-kingdom, of <span class="smcap">Annulosa</span>."</p> + +<p>Tracing analogies between the Echinodermata (sea +urchins, star-fish, &c.) and the Scolecida (intestinal +worms), he places them together as <i>Annuloida</i>.</p> + +<p>Cephalopoda, Pteropoda, Pulmo-gasteropoda, and +Branchio-gasteropoda, having resemblances of nervous +system, and "all possessing that remarkable buccal +apparatus, the Odontophore," are placed together by +him as <span class="smcap">Odontophora</span>. The Odontophores (tooth-bearers) +are familiar to microscopists as the so-called <i>palates</i> of +mollusca. Placing with the above the lamellibranchial +mollusks (mollusks with gills formed of lamellæ or +little plates), Ascidioida (ascidians), Brachiopoda (lamp-sheds), +and Polyzoa, in spite of their differences, he +forms another great group, <span class="smcap">Annuloida</span>.</p> + +<p>The Actinozoa (anemonies, &c.) and the Hydrozoa +(polyps) constitute the <span class="smcap">Cœlentera</span> of Frey and Leuckart. +"In all these animals," says Professor Huxley, "the +substance of the body is differentiated into those histological +elements which have been termed cells, and the +latter are previously disposed in two layers, one external +and one internal, constituting the ectoderm and endoderm. +Among animals which possess this histological +structure the Cœlenterata stand alone in having an +alimentary canal, which is open at its inner end and +communicates freely by this aperture with the general +cavity of the body," and "all (unless the Ctenophora +should prove a partial exception to the rule) are provided +with very remarkable organs of offence or defence,<span class="pagenum">[144]</span> +called thread-cells or nematocysts." In describing the +Polyps we have given illustrations of these weapons.</p> + +<p>The remaining classes, which have been roughly +associated as <i>Protozoa</i>, must evidently be rearranged. +Sponges, Rhizopods (Amœbæ, &c.), and Gregarines, +have strong resemblances, but recent researches +may place the former higher. The Infusoria comprehend +creatures too various to remain under one head, +and very many of them too highly organized to be +called "protozoons," or first life-forms.</p> + +<p>Those who wish to pursue this subject further may +consult Professor Huxley's 'Elements of Comparative +Anatomy,' from which the preceding quotations have +been taken.</p> + +<p>A system of classification founded upon anatomical +and developmental considerations frequently differs considerably +from one we might arrive at if all the creatures +were arranged according to the perfection of their +faculties and the extent and accuracy of their relations +to the external world. Such a classification would not +in any way supersede the former, but it would prove +very instructive and offer many valuable suggestions. +Some years since, Professor Owen proposed to divide the +Vertebrates according to the perfection of their brains, +but other anatomists did not find his divisions sufficiently +coincident with facts. Very little has been done +towards an exact science of human phrenology. The +difficulties remain pretty much as they were many years +ago, and our comparative phrenology, if we may use such +a term, is in a very imperfect state. When we come to +the lower animals we do not know what peculiarities<span class="pagenum">[145]</span> +of the brain of an ant make it the recipient of a higher +instinct, or give its possessor greater capacities for +dealing with new and unexpected difficulties than are +possessed by most other insects, and if any reader has +a marine aquarium, and will make a few experiments +in taming prawns, and watching their proceedings, he +will discover symptoms of intelligence beyond what the +structure of the creature would have led him to expect.</p> + +<p>Animals usually possess some one leading characteristic +to which their general structure is subordinated. +Man stands alone in having the whole of his organization +conformed to the demands of a thinking, ruling +brain. To pass at once to the other extreme, we +observe in the lower infusoria a restless locomotion, +probably subservient to respiration, but utterly inconsistent +with a well developed life of relation, or +with manifestations of thought. The life of an animalcule +may be summed up as a brief and restricted, +but vigorous organic energy, and if the amount of +change which a single creature can make in the external +world, is inconceivably small, the labours of the +entire race alter the conditions of a prodigious amount +of matter. Microscopic vegetable life is an important +agent in purifying water from the taint of decomposing +organisms. By evolving oxygen it brings putrescent +particles under the influence of a species of combustion, +which, though slow, is as effectual as that which a +furnace could accomplish. In this way minute moulds +burn up decaying wood.</p> + +<p>Microscopic animal life helps the regenerative process, +and, together with the minute vegetable life,<span class="pagenum">[146]</span> +restores to the organic system myriads of tons of +matter, which death and decay would have handed +over to the inorganic world. In a very small pond +or tank the quantity of this kind of work is soon +appreciable, and if we reflect on the amazing amount +of water all over the globe, including seas and oceans, +which swarm with infusoria, the total effect produced in +a single year must seem considerable, even when compared +with that portion of the earth's crust that is +subject to alteration from all other causes put together. +If we add to the labour of the Infusoria those of other +creatures whose organization can only be discovered +by the microscope, and take in the foraminifera, polyps, +polyzoa, &c., we shall have to record still larger obligations +to minute forms of living things. The coral +polyp builds reefs that constitute the chief characteristic +of certain regions in the Pacific; foraminifera are +forming or helping to form strata of considerable +extent, while diatoms are making deposits many feet in +thickness, composed of myriads of their silicious shells, +or adding their contributions of silex, very large in +the aggregate, to all sedimentary rocks. Testimony of +this kind of work is found by the navigator who +examines the ice in arctic seas, and it comes up with +soundings from the ocean depths.</p> + +<p>On the surface of the earth the amount of change +produced is equally remarkable, although it leaves less +permanent traces behind. As a rule no decomposition +of organized matter takes place, no death of plants or +animals, without infusorial life making its appearance, +and disposing of no small portion of the spoil. Even<span class="pagenum">[147]</span> +in our climate the mass of matter thus annually +affected is very large; but what must it not be in +moist tropical lands, where every particle seems alive, +and the race of life and death goes on at a speed, and +to an extent scarcely conceivable by those who have +not witnessed it.</p> + +<p>Thus, if we look at the world of minute forms which +the microscope reveals, there opens before us a spectacle +of boundless extent. We see life manifested by +the specks of jelly containing particles not aggregated +into structure, and we see it gradually ascending in complexities +of organization. In creatures whose habits and +appearance seem most remote from our own, we find +the elementary developments of the organs and powers +that constitute our glory, and give us our power. Such +studies assist us to conceive of the universe as a +Cosmos, or Beautifully Organized Whole; and, although +we cannot tell the object for which a single +portion received its precise form, we trace everywhere +relations of structure to means of existence and enjoyment, +and are led to the conviction that all the +actions and arrangements of the organic or inorganic +worlds are due to a definite direction and co-ordination +of a few simple forces, which implicitly and unerringly +obey the dictates of an Omniscient Mind.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 180px;"> +<img src="images/i_171.jpg" width="180" height="19" alt="i171" title=""> +</div> + +<br> + +<p class="h4">PRINTED BY J. E. 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Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, 1<i>s.</i></p> + +<blockquote><p>"One of the best of the series; the narrative is clearly and concisely written, +the subject matter is good, and above all it is replete with that sustained interest, +without which children's stories become worse than useless."—<i>English Churchman.</i></p></blockquote> + +<p class="h2">NO MAN'S LAND; AND OTHER STORIES.</p> + +<p class="h5">BY T. MILLER.</p> + +<p class="h6">Illustrated with 15 Wood Engravings. Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, 1<i>s.</i></p> + +<blockquote><p>"A series of very amusing and instructive tales for children, written by a +talented author."—<i>Brighton Gazette.</i></p></blockquote> + +<p class="h2">THE SEA SPLEENWORT; AND OTHER STORIES.</p> + +<p class="h5">BY THE AUTHOR OF "THE HEIR OF REDCLYFFE."</p> + +<p class="h6">Illustrated with 15 Wood Engravings. Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, 1<i>s.</i></p> + +<blockquote><p>"A capital little book for children, both amusing and instructive."—<i>Liverpool +Daily Post.</i></p></blockquote> + +<p class="h2">LOTTIE'S HALF-SOVEREIGN; AND OTHER STORIES.</p> + +<p class="h5">BY MRS. RUSSELL GRAY.</p> + +<p class="h6">Illustrated with 15 Wood Engravings. Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, 1<i>s.</i></p> + +<blockquote><p>"The story before us is a most delightful one, and such as may be placed in +the hands of any child with the utmost confidence."—<i>Hull Advertiser.</i></p></blockquote> + +<p class="h2">THE SHEPHERD LORD; AND OTHER STORIES.</p> + +<p class="h5">BY JULIA CORNER.</p> + +<p class="h6">Illustrated with 15 Wood Engravings. Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, 1<i>s.</i></p> + +<blockquote><p>"We cannot imagine a better book for children educated at home; it combines +the fascination of romance with the truth of history, and will be eagerly +devoured by the youth of both sexes."—<i>Somerset County Herald.</i></p></blockquote> + +<p class="h2">THE CAPTIVE'S DAUGHTER; AND OTHER STORIES.</p> + +<p class="h5">BY W. HEARD HILLYARD.</p> + +<p class="h6">Illustrated with 15 Wood Engravings. Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, 1<i>s.</i></p> + +<blockquote><p>"If one were asked to select a series of stories most suitable for presents to +children, and affording real pleasure in their perusal to 'children of a larger +growth,' very few would hesitate to name this series as the very first and best of +the class."—<i>Coventry Herald.</i></p></blockquote> + +<p class="h2">THE ORPHANS OF ELFHOLM; AND OTHER STORIES.</p> + +<p class="h5">BY FRANCES BROWNE.</p> + +<p class="h6">Illustrated with 15 Wood Engravings. Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, 1<i>s.</i></p> + +<blockquote><p>"A book to be prized by the young, for its several tales are well written and +full of touching interest."—<i>City Press.</i></p></blockquote> + +<p class="h2">WHEN WE WERE YOUNG; AND OTHER STORIES.</p> + +<p class="h5">BY THE AUTHOR OF "A TRAP TO CATCH A SUNBEAM."</p> + +<p class="h6">Illustrated with 15 Wood Engravings. Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, 1<i>s.</i></p> + +<blockquote><p>"The precept of moral courage which it inculcates, coupled with its excellent +tone throughout, stamps it at once as being of the right sort."—<i>English Churchman.</i></p></blockquote> + +<p class="h2">NOT CLEVER; AND OTHER STORIES.</p> + +<p class="h5">BY FRANCES M. WILBRAHAM.</p> + +<p class="h6">Illustrated with 15 Wood Engravings. Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, 1<i>s.</i></p> + +<blockquote><p>"Pure in tone, full of interest, well got up, and cheap."—<i>Hereford Times.</i></p></blockquote> + +<p class="h2">DEAR CHARLOTTE'S BOYS; AND OTHER STORIES.</p> + +<p class="h5">BY EMILY TAYLOR.</p> + +<p class="h6">Illustrated with 15 Wood Engravings. Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, 1<i>s.</i></p> + +<blockquote><p>"We are glad to receive a volume of these pretty stories. There is something +refreshing in them, scarcely to be found in any other publication."—<i>City Press.</i></p></blockquote> + +<p class="h2">THE STORY OF NELSON; AND OTHER STORIES.</p> + +<p class="h5">BY W. H. G. KINGSTON.</p> + +<p class="h6">Illustrated with 15 Wood Engravings. Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, 1<i>s.</i></p> + +<blockquote><p>"Mr. Kingston, with great skill, brings out the stirring events of the great +Admiral's life from the lips of an old Greenwich pensioner. The story is told with +all the enthusiasm of a true 'Salt,' and has the further merit of capital descriptive +writing."—<i>Plymouth Journal.</i></p></blockquote><p><span class="pagenum">[153]</span></p> + +<p class="h2">BLIND URSULA; AND OTHER STORIES.</p> + +<p class="h5">BY MRS. WEBB.</p> + +<p class="h6">Illustrated with 15 Wood Engravings. Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, 1<i>s.</i></p> + +<blockquote><p>"A domestic tale of humble life, which will well repay perusal. There is an +excellent tone, moral and religious, throughout the narrative."—<i>Leeds Intelligencer.</i></p></blockquote> + +<p class="h2">SEA-SHELL ISLAND; AND OTHER STORIES.</p> + +<p class="h5">BY G. E. SARGENT.</p> + +<p class="h6">Illustrated with 15 Wood Engravings. Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, 1<i>s.</i></p> + +<blockquote><p>"An exceeding pretty story."—<i>Somersetshire County Herald.</i></p></blockquote> + +<p class="h2">WHICH WAS THE BRAVEST? AND OTHER STORIES.</p> + +<p class="h5">BY L. A. HALL.</p> + +<p class="h6">Illustrated with 15 Wood Engravings. Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, 1<i>s.</i></p> + +<blockquote><p>"A tale of the Christmas holidays on the banks of the Shannon, intended to +show, by the conduct of a party of young people, that rashness and disobedience +are no proofs of courage. It should be widely spread, for the spirit of the little +book is excellent. The engravings are appropriate and pleasing."—<i>Plymouth +Journal.</i></p></blockquote> + +<p class="h2">THE CLOCKMAKER OF LYONS; AND OTHER STORIES.</p> + +<p class="h5">BY E. M. PIPER.</p> + +<p class="h6">Illustrated with 15 Wood Engravings. Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, 1<i>s.</i></p> + +<blockquote><p>"An interesting tale, forming one of Messrs. Groombridge's Series of Gift +Books, and by no means the worst of the series."—<i>Cheltenham Journal.</i></p></blockquote> + +<p class="h2">THE ANGEL UNAWARES; AND OTHER STORIES.</p> + +<p class="h5">BY MARY HOWITT.</p> + +<p class="h6">Illustrated with 15 Wood Engravings. Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, 1<i>s.</i></p> + +<blockquote><p>"A pretty story of kindness rewarded by success. Tho principal actors are +children, and the teaching of the story, while it is full of point for older learners, +is adapted especially to the capacity of youth."—<i>Plymouth and Devonport Journal.</i></p></blockquote> + +<p class="h2">HISTORICAL DRAMAS.</p> + +<p class="h5">BY THE AUTHOR OF "THE HEIR OF REDCLYFFE."</p> + +<p class="h6">Illustrated with 15 Wood Engravings. Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, 1<i>s.</i></p> + +<blockquote><p>"Combines amusement with instruction in a way that must please the rising +generation."—<i>Renfrewshire Independent.</i></p></blockquote><p><span class="pagenum">[154]</span></p> + +<p class="h2">LOST IN THE WOOD; AND OTHER STORIES.</p> + +<p class="h5">BY MRS. GILCHRIST.</p> + +<p class="h6">Illustrated with 15 Wood Engravings. Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, 1<i>s.</i></p> + +<blockquote><p>"Perfectly healthy in tone, and highly interesting, these tales are indeed +most suitable for family reading."—<i>Gloucester Mercury.</i></p></blockquote> + +<p class="h2">RAINBOW'S REST; AND OTHER STORIES.</p> + +<p class="h5">BY THOMAS HOOD.</p> + +<p class="h6">Illustrated with 15 Wood Engravings. Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, 1<i>s.</i></p> + +<blockquote><p>"These are excellent stories for children, and nicely got up and illustrated."—<i>Paisley +Herald.</i></p></blockquote> + +<hr class="advert"> + +<p>*A COMPLETE SET OF THE TWENTY VOLUMES, VIZ.:—</p> + +<blockquote> +<p class="noin"> +UNION JACK. By Mrs. <span class="smcap">S. C. Hall</span>.<br> +TOWN OF TOYS. By <span class="smcap">Sara Wood</span>.<br> +NO MAN'S LAND. By <span class="smcap">T. Miller</span>.<br> +SEA SPLEENWORT. By Author of "The Heir of Redclyffe."<br> +LOTTIE'S HALF-SOVEREIGN. By Mrs. <span class="smcap">Russell Gray</span>.<br> +THE SHEPHERD LORD. By <span class="smcap">Julia Corner</span>.<br> +THE CAPTIVE'S DAUGHTER. By <span class="smcap">W. Heard Hillyard</span>.<br> +THE ORPHANS OF ELFHOLM. By <span class="smcap">Frances Browne</span>.<br> +WHEN WE WERE YOUNG. By Author of "A Trap to Catch a Sunbeam."<br> +NOT CLEVER. By <span class="smcap">Frances M. Wilbraham</span>.<br> +DEAR CHARLOTTE'S BOYS. By <span class="smcap">Emily Taylor</span>.<br> +STORY OF NELSON. By <span class="smcap">W. H. G. Kingston</span>.<br> +BLIND URSULA. By Mrs. <span class="smcap">Webb</span>.<br> +SEA-SHELL ISLAND. By <span class="smcap">G. E. Sargent</span>.<br> +WHICH WAS THE BRAVEST? By <span class="smcap">L. A. Hall</span>.<br> +THE CLOCKMAKER OF LYONS. By <span class="smcap">E. M. Piper</span>.<br> +THE ANGEL UNAWARES. By <span class="smcap">Mary Howitt</span>.<br> +HISTORICAL DRAMAS. By Author of "The Heir of Redclyffe."<br> +LOST IN THE WOOD. By Mrs. <span class="smcap">Gilchrist</span>.<br> +RAINBOW'S REST. By <span class="smcap">Thomas Hood</span>.</p> +</blockquote> + +<p>Enclosed in a Box, <b>20s.</b></p> + +<blockquote><p>"We have read most of them with great care, for we are very watchful over +books for the young, and can assure our readers they are well worth a mother's +attention. They vary in interest and in moral value, but all of them are calculated +both to amuse and instruct. Some convey valuable historical information, +others lessons in natural history, and most of them convey a healthy moral influence. +All are subservient to religion as well as morals, but they are not tinctured +with any <i>ism</i>, nor do they inculcate any peculiar tenets."—<i>British Mothers' +Journal.</i></p></blockquote> + +<p>GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, PATERNOSTER ROW, LONDON.<span class="pagenum">[155]</span></p> +</div> + +<p class="spacer"> </p> + +<div class="topbox"> +<p class="h2">GROOMBRIDGE'S SHILLING PRACTICAL MANUALS.</p> + +<p><i>Each Book sent post-free on receipt of the price.</i></p> + +<blockquote><p class="noin"><b>1. HOME-MADE WINES.</b> How to Make and Keep +them, with remarks on preparing the fruit, fining, bottling, +and storing. By <span class="smcap">G. VINE.</span> Contains Apple, Apricot, Beer, +Bilberry, Blackberry, Cherry, Clary, Cowslip, Currant, Damson, +Elderberry, Gooseberry, Ginger, Grape, Greengage, Lemon, +Malt, Mixed Fruit, Mulberry, Orange, Parsnip, Raspberry, Rhubarb, +Raisin, Sloe, Strawberry, Turnip, Vine Leaf, and Mead.</p> + +<p class="noin"><b>2. CARVING MADE EASY</b>; or, Practical Instructions +for Diners Out. Illustrated with Engravings of Fish, +Flesh, and Fowl, and appropriate instructions, whereby a +complete and skilful knowledge of the useful art of Carving +may be attained, and the usages of the Dinner Table duly +observed. By <span class="smcap">A. Merrythought</span>.</p> + +<p class="noin"><b>3. COTTAGE COOKERY.</b> Containing Simple Instructions +upon Money, Time, Management of Provisions, Firing, +Utensils, Choice of Provisions, Modes of Cooking, Stews, +Soups, Broths, Puddings, Pies, Fat, Pastry, Vegetables, Modes +of Dressing Meat, Bread, Cakes, Buns, Salting or Curing Meat, +Frugality and Cheap Cookery, Charitable Cookery, Cookery +for the Sick and Young Children. By <span class="smcap">Esther Copley</span>.</p> + +<p class="noin"><b>4. COTTAGE FARMING</b>; or, How to Cultivate from +Two to Twenty Acres, including the Management of Cows, +Pigs, and Poultry. By <span class="smcap">Martin Doyle</span>. Contains, On Enclosing +a Farm, Land Drainage, Manures, Management of a +Two-acre Farm, Cow Keeping, The Dairy, Pig Keeping, Bees +and Poultry, Management of a Ten-acre Farm, Flax and Rape, +Management of a Farm of Twenty Acres, Farm Buildings, etc.</p> + +<p class="noin"><b>5. SINGING MADE EASIER FOR AMATEURS</b>, +explaining the pure Italian Method of Producing and Cultivating +the Voice; the Management of the Breath; the best +way of Improving the Ear; with much other valuable information +equally valuable to Professional Singers and Amateurs.</p> + +<p class="noin"><b>6. MARKET GARDENING</b>, giving in detail the +various methods adopted by Gardeners in growing the Strawberry, +Rhubarb, Filberts, Early Potatoes, Asparagus, Sea +Kale, Cabbages, Cauliflowers, Celery, Beans, Peas, Brussels +Sprouts, Spinach, Radishes, Lettuce, Onions, Carrots, Turnips, +Water Cress, etc. By <span class="smcap">James Cuthill</span>, F.R.H.S.</p> + +<p class="noin"><b>7. CLERK'S DICTIONARY OF COMMERCIAL</b> +TERMS; containing Explanations of upwards of Three +Hundred Terms used in Business and Merchants' Offices. +By the Author of "Common Blunders in Speaking and +Writing Corrected."</p> + +<p class="noin">"An indispensable book for all young men entering a counting-house for the first time."</p> + +<p class="noin"><b>8. THE CAT</b>, Its History and Diseases, with Method +of Administering Medicine. By the Honourable <span class="smcap">Lady Cust</span>.</p> +<p><span class="pagenum">[156]</span></p> +<p class="noin"><b>9. ELOCUTION MADE EASY</b> for Clergymen, Public +Speakers, and Readers, Lecturers, Actors, Theatrical Amateurs, +and all who wish to speak well and effectively in Public +or Private. By <span class="smcap">Charles Hartley</span>. Contents: Cultivation +of the Speaking Voice, Management of the Voice, Pausing, +Taking Breath, Pitch, Articulation, Pronunciation, The +Aspirate, The Letter R, Emphasis, Tone, Movement, Feeling +and Passion, Verse, Scriptural Reading, Stammering and +Stuttering, Action, Acting, Reciting, etc.</p> + +<p class="noin"><b>10. ORATORY MADE EASY.</b> A Guide to the Composition +of Speeches. By <span class="smcap">Charles Hartley</span>. Contents: Introduction, +Power of Art, Various Kinds of Oratory, Prepared +Speech, Constructing a Speech, Short Speeches, Command +of Language, Reading and Thinking, Style, Hasty Composition, +Forming a Style, Copiousness and Conciseness, Diction +or Language, Purity and Propriety, Misapplied Words, +Monosyllables, Specific Terms, Variety of Language, Too +Great Care about Words, Epithets, Precision, Synonymes, +Perspicuity, Long and Short Sentences, Tropes and Figures, +Metaphor, Simile, etc.</p> + +<p class="noin"><b>11. THE GRAMMATICAL REMEMBRANCER</b>; or, +Aids for correct Speaking, Writing, and Spelling, for Adults. +By <span class="smcap">Charles Hartley</span>. Contents: Introduction, Neglect of +English Grammar, Divisions of Grammar, Parts of Speech, +The Article, The Silent H, Nouns, Formation of the Plural, +Genders of Nouns, Cases of Nouns, Comparison of Adjectives, +Personal Pronouns, Relative Pronouns, Demonstrative Pronouns, +Regular and Irregular Verbs, Shall and Will, The Adverb, +Misapplication of Words, Division of Words, Capital +Letters, Rules for Spelling, Double <i>l</i> and <i>p</i>, A Short Syntax, +Punctuation, etc.</p> + +<p class="noin"><b>12. THE CANARY.</b> Its History, Varieties, Management, +and Breeding, with Coloured Frontispiece. By <span class="smcap">Richard +Avis</span>. Contains, History of the Canary, Varieties of the +Canary, Food and General Management, Cages, Breeding, +Education of the Young, Mules, Diseases, etc.</p> + +<p class="noin"><b>13. BIRD PRESERVING</b> and Bird Mounting, and the +Preservation of Birds' Eggs, with a Chapter on Bird Catching. +By <span class="smcap">Richard Avis</span>.</p> + +<p class="noin"><b>14. WINE GUIDE</b>; or, Practical Hints on the Purchase +and Management of Foreign Wines, their History, and +a complete catalogue of all those in present use, together with +remarks upon the treatment of Spirits, Bottled Beer, and +Cider. To which is appended Instructions for the Cellar, and +other information valuable to the Consumer as well as the +Dealer. By <span class="smcap">Frederick C. Mills</span>.</p></blockquote> + +<p>GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, <span class="smcap">5, Paternoster Row, London</span>.<span class="pagenum">[157]</span></p> +</div> + +<p class="spacer"> </p> + +<div class="topbox"> +<p class="h2">ELEGANT PRIZE OR GIFT BOOK FOR BOYS.</p> + +<blockquote><p>In Three handsome Volumes, fcap. quarto, gilt edges, Illustrated with Eleven +Hundred Beautiful Engravings, price Twenty-four Shillings.</p></blockquote> + +<p class="h2">RECREATIVE SCIENCE</p> + +<p class="h4">A RECORD AND REMEMBRANCER OF INTELLECTUAL OBSERVATION</p> + +<p class="h5">IN EVERY DEPARTMENT OF SCIENCE.</p> + +<p class="h5"><span class="smcap">Astronomy</span>, <span class="smcap">Chemistry</span>, <span class="smcap">Botany</span>, <span class="smcap">Geology</span>, <span class="smcap">Mechanics</span>, <span class="smcap">Meteorology</span>, +<span class="smcap">Microscopy</span>, <span class="smcap">Physiology</span>, <span class="smcap">Zoology</span>, etc., etc.</p> + +<p class="h3">THE PROMINENT FEATURES OF RECREATIVE SCIENCE.</p> + +<blockquote> +<p class="out"><span class="smcap">Applications of Science</span>, including Photography and the Stereoscope, Electro-Metallurgy, +etc., with all their minute and recreative manipulations.</p> + +<p class="out"><span class="smcap">Essays on the Result of Scientific Research</span>, as witnessed by the civilization +of the Nineteenth Century, which derives so much of its strength +and moral excellence from the <span class="smcap">Steam-engine</span>, the <span class="smcap">Electric Telegraph</span>, +and other applications of scientific principles.</p> + +<p class="out"><span class="smcap">Biographies of Eminent Scientific Men and Analysis of Old and New +Scientific Books.</span></p> + +<p class="out"><span class="smcap">Illustrations of Natural Phenomena</span> and Diagrams of Optical, Mechanical, +and other principles as required by the subject matter of the papers published +in the work.</p> + +<p class="out"><span class="smcap">Natural History</span> occupies a prominent position among the various subjects +dealt with, including <span class="smcap">Home Recreations</span>, of which the love of Nature +may be said to be the basis. The Management of Collections of Living +Animals, the Preparation of Specimens by Taxidermy, and the arrangement +of Cabinets of Insects, Birds, Shells, Plants, etc., etc.</p> + +<p class="out"><span class="smcap">Experimental Philosophy and Recreations in Chemistry</span> are introduced +with a view to explain principles and give a zest to study.</p> + +<p class="out"><span class="smcap">Recreative Science</span> is in all respects popular in tone and attractive in its +subjects. It is compiled by writers of the highest eminence in the several +departments of Scientific Knowledge. In a word, it is a Record of Discovery, +Observation, and Intellectual Progress. An Instructor in First +Principles, and an Exhibitor of the Accomplishments of Research.</p> +</blockquote> + +<p>GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London.<span class="pagenum">[158]</span></p> +</div> + +<hr class="chapter"> + +<div class="topbox"> +<p class="h6">Crown 8vo, elegantly bound, cloth gilt, Illustrated with 8 beautifully coloured +full-page Plates and numerous Wood Engravings, price 3s. 6d.</p> + +<p class="h2">THE MICROSCOPE</p> + +<p class="h5">A Popular Description of some of the most Beautiful and Instructive +Objects for Exhibition.</p> + +<p>With Directions for the Arrangement of the Instruments and the Collection +and Mounting of Objects.</p> + +<p class="h2"><span class="smcap">By the Hon. Mrs. WARD.</span></p> + +<hr class="advert"> + +<blockquote> +<p>"This elegant book deserves at our hands especial commendation for +many reasons. There is no book that we know of that we would more +willingly place in the hands of a beginner to create an interest in the science +of Microscopy. The Illustrations are beautiful, coloured to represent nature, +and all original. To our readers we cannot give better advice than to +become purchasers of the book—they will not regret the outlay."—<i>Electrician.</i></p> +</blockquote> + +<p>GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London.</p> + +<hr class="advert"> + +<p class="h6">Crown 8vo, elegantly bound, cloth gilt, Illustrated with 12 beautifully +coloured full-page Plates and numerous Wood Engravings, price 3s. 6d.</p> + +<p class="h2">THE TELESCOPE</p> + +<p class="h4">A FAMILIAR SKETCH</p> + +<p class="h6"><span class="smcap">Combining a Special Notice of Objects coming within the Range +Of a Small Telescope</span><br> +<br> +With a Detail of the most Interesting Discoveries which have been made +with the assistance of powerful Telescopes, concerning the Phenomena +of the Heavenly Bodies.</p> + +<p class="h4"><span class="smcap">By the Hon. Mrs. WARD.</span></p> + +<hr class="advert"> + +<blockquote> +<p>"It is with pleasure that we direct the reader's attention to a little gem +lately published by the Hon. Mrs. <span class="smcap">Ward</span>. One of the most admirable little +works on one of the most sublime subjects that has been given to the world. +The main design of the book is to show how much may be done in astronomy +with ordinary powers and instruments. We have no hesitation in +saying that we never saw a work of the kind that is so perfect. The illustrations +are admirable, and are all original."—<i>Western Daily Press.</i></p> +</blockquote> + +<p>GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London.<span class="pagenum">[159]</span></p> + +<p class="h6">Crown 8vo, elegantly bound, cloth gilt, Illustrated with 8 full-page coloured +Plates and numerous Wood Engravings, price 3s. 6d.</p> + +<p class="h2">COUNTRY WALKS OF A NATURALIST WITH HIS CHILDREN.</p> + +<p class="h5"><span class="smcap">By the Rev. W. HOUGHTON</span>, M.A., F.L.S.</p> + +<hr class="advert"> + +<blockquote><p>"A fresher, pleasanter, or more profitable book than this has rarely +issued from the press."—<i>Art Journal.</i></p> + +<p>"Contrives to furnish a large amount of interesting natural history in +brief compass and in a picturesque and engaging manner."—<i>Pall Mall +Gazette.</i></p> + +<p>"It is wonderful what a very large amount of most instructive matter +connected with the animal and plant world the writer has condensed into +a small compass."—<i>Land and Water.</i></p> + +<p>"This pretty little volume forms one of the best little books on popular +Natural History, and is admirably adapted as a present to the young"—<i>Birmingham +Daily Journal.</i></p></blockquote> + +<p>GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London.</p> + +<hr class="advert"> + +<p class="h6">Crown 8vo, elegantly bound, cloth gilt, Illustrated with 8 beautifully coloured +full-page Plates and numerous Wood Engravings, price 3s. 6d.</p> + +<p class="h2">SEA-SIDE WALKS OF A NATURALIST WITH HIS CHILDREN.</p> + +<p class="h5"><span class="smcap">By the Rev. W. HOUGHTON</span>, M.A., F.L.S.</p> + +<blockquote><p>"The wonders of the sea-shore are detailed in an easy, pleasant and +lucid style."—<i>Examiner.</i></p> + +<p>"The book is very attractive, and its usefulness is enhanced by its many +careful illustrations."—<i>Daily Telegraph.</i></p> + +<p>"Families visiting the sea-side should provide themselves with this convenient +and instructive work."—<i>The Queen.</i></p> + +<p>"It is pleasingly written, and the scientific information is correct and +well selected."—<i>Athenæum.</i></p></blockquote> + +<p>GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London.<span class="pagenum">[160]</span></p> + +<p class="h6">Crown 8vo, elegantly bound, cloth gilt, Illustrated with 8 beautifully +coloured full-page Plates and 90 Wood Engravings, price 3s. 6d.</p> + +<p class="h2">FIELD FLOWERS</p> + +<p class="h5">A HANDY BOOK FOR THE RAMBLING BOTANIST,</p> + +<p class="h5">SUGGESTING</p> + +<p class="h5"><span class="smcap">What to Look for and Where to Go in the Outdoor Study of</span> +BRITISH PLANTS.</p> + +<p class="h5"><span class="smcap">By SHIRLEY HIBBERD</span>, F.R.H.S.</p> + +<blockquote><p>"It will serve as an excellent introduction to the practical study of wild +flowers."—<i>The Queen.</i></p> + +<p>"We cannot praise too highly the illustrations which crowd the pages +of this handbook; the coloured plates are especially attractive, and serve +to bring before us very distinctly the most prominent flowers of the field, +the heaths, and the hedgerows."—<i>Examiner.</i></p></blockquote> + +<p>GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London.</p> + +<hr class="advert"> + +<p class="h6">Crown 8vo, elegantly bound, cloth gilt, illustrated with 8 beautifully coloured +Plates and 40 Wood Engravings, price 3s. 6d.</p> + +<p class="h2">THE FERN GARDEN</p> + +<p class="h4">HOW TO MAKE, KEEP, AND ENJOY IT OR, FERN CULTURE MADE EASY.</p> + +<p class="h5"><span class="smcap">By SHIRLEY HIBBERD</span>, F.R.H.S.</p> + +<p class="h5">CONTENTS.</p> + +<blockquote> +<p class="noin"> +<span class="smcap">Ferns in General</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Fern Collecting</span><br> +<span class="smcap">How to Form an Outdoor Fernery</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Cultivation of Rock Ferns</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Cultivation of Marsh Ferns</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Ferns in Pots</span><br> +<span class="smcap">The Fern House</span><br> +<span class="smcap">The Fernery at the Fireside</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Management of Fern Cases</span><br> +<span class="smcap">The Art of Multiplying Ferns</span><br> +<span class="smcap">British Ferns</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Cultivation of Greenhouse</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Stove Ferns</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Select Greenhouse Ferns</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Select Stove Ferns</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Tree Ferns</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Fern Allies</span></p> +</blockquote> +<p>GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London.<span class="pagenum">[161]</span></p> + +<p class="h6">Crown 8vo, elegantly bound, gilt edges, Illustrated with 12 beautifully +coloured Engravings, price 3s. 6d.</p> + +<p class="h2">THE CANARY</p> + +<p class="h4">ITS VARIETIES, MANAGEMENT, AND BREEDING WITH PORTRAITS OF THE AUTHOR'S OWN BIRDS.</p> + +<p class="h2"><span class="smcap">By the Rev. FRANCIS SMITH.</span></p> + +<p class="h5">CONTENTS.</p> + +<blockquote> +<p class="noin"> +<span class="smcap">A Plea for the Canary</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Origin of Our Own Canaria</span><br> +<span class="smcap">The Wild Canary</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Our Lizards</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Our Yorkshire Spangles</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Our Norwich Yellows</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Our London Fancy Birds</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Our Belgians</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Our Green Birds</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Our Cinnamons</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Our Turncrests</span><br> +<span class="smcap">The Dominie and the Germans</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Preparations for Breeding</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Nest Boxes and Nests</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Our First Birds</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Our Misfortunes</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Our Infirmary</span><br> +<span class="smcap">On Cages</span></p> +</blockquote> + +<p>GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London.</p> + +<hr class="advert"> + +<p class="h6">Post 8vo, cloth gilt, with Woodcut Illustrations, price 5s.</p> + +<p class="h2">THE ROSE BOOK</p> + +<p class="h4">A PRACTICAL TREATISE ON THE CULTURE OF THE ROSE</p> + +<p class="h5">COMPRISING</p> + +<blockquote><p>The Formation of the Rosarium; the Characters of Species and Varieties; +Modes of Propagating, Planting, Pruning, Training, and Preparing +for Exhibition; and the Management of Roses in all Seasons.</p></blockquote> + +<p class="h4"><span class="smcap">By SHIRLEY HIBBERD</span>, F.R.H.S.</p> + +<p>CONTENTS.</p> + +<blockquote> +<p class="noin"> +<span class="smcap">The Families of Wild Roses</span><br> +<span class="smcap">The Families of Cultivated Roses</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Summer Roses</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Forming the Rosarium</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Culture of Roses in the Open Ground</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Autumn Planting</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Spring Planting</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Pruning, Disbudding, and Seasonal Management</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Climbing Roses</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Pillar Roses</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Yellow Roses</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Roses in Pots</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Roses in Beds</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Roses in Great Towns</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Tea Roses in Towns</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Various Modes of Propagating</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Select Lists of Roses</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Reminders of Monthly Work In Rose Garden</span><br> +<span class="smcap">Hints To Beginners</span></p> +</blockquote> + +<p>GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London.<span class="pagenum">[162]</span></p> +</div> + +<hr class="chapter"> + +<div class="topbox"> +<p class="h2">BOOKS FOR YOUNG NATURALISTS</p> + +<p class="h6">Crown 8vo, elegantly bound, gilt edges, Illustrated with 16 beautifully +coloured Plates and numerous Wood Engravings, price 5s.</p> + +<p class="h2">NESTS AND EGGS OF FAMILIAR BIRDS.</p> + +<p>Described and Illustrated with an account of the Haunts and Habits of +the Feathered Architects, and their Times and Modes of Building.</p> + +<p class="h5"><span class="smcap">By H. G. ADAMS.</span></p> + +<p>GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London.</p> + +<hr class="advert"> + +<p class="h6">Crown 8vo, elegantly bound, gilt edges, Illustrated with 8 beautifully +coloured Plates and numerous Wood Engravings, price 3s. 6d.</p> + +<p class="h2">BEAUTIFUL BUTTERFLIES</p> + +<p class="h4">DESCRIBED AND ILLUSTRATED.</p> + +<p>With an Introductory chapter, containing the History of a Butterfly +through all its Changes and Transformations. A Description of its Structure +in the Larva, Pupa, and Imago states, with an Explanation of the +scientific terms used by Naturalists in reference thereto, with observations +upon the Poetical and other associations of the Insect.</p> + +<p class="h5"><span class="smcap">By H. G. ADAMS.</span></p> + +<p>GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London.</p> + +<hr class="advert"> + +<p class="h6">Crown 8vo, elegantly bound, gilt edges, Illustrated with 8 beautifully +coloured Plates and numerous Wood Engravings, price 3s. 6d.</p> + +<p class="h2">BEAUTIFUL SHELLS</p> + +<p class="h4">THEIR NATURE, STRUCTURE, AND USES +FAMILIARLY EXPLAINED.</p> + +<p>With Directions for Collecting, Clearing and Arranging them in the +Cabinet.</p> + +<p>Descriptions of the most remarkable Species, and of the creatures +which inhabit them, and explanations of the meaning of their scientific +names, and of the terms used in Conchology.</p> + +<p class="h5"><span class="smcap">By H. G. ADAMS.</span></p> + +<p>GROOMBRIDGE AND SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London.</p> + +<hr class="advert"> + +<p class="h6">Crown 8vo, elegantly bound, gilt edges, Illustrated with 8 beautifully +coloured Plates and Wood Engravings, price 3s. 6d.</p> + +<p class="h2">HUMMING BIRDS.</p> + +<p class="h4">DESCRIBED AND ILLUSTRATED.</p> + +<p class="h5">WITH AN</p> + +<p>Introductory Sketch of their Structure, Plumage, Haunts, Habits, etc.</p> + +<p class="h5"><span class="smcap">By H. G. ADAMS.</span></p> + +<p>GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London.<span class="pagenum">[163]</span></p> +</div> + +<p class="spacer"> </p> + +<div class="topbox"> +<p class="h4">NEW EDITION OF THE WORKS +<br> +OF</p> + +<p class="h4">ANNA LISLE.</p> + +<p>This elegant edition, large crown 8vo, is handsomely bound in cloth, gilt +edges, suitable for presentation, and Illustrated by the +leading artists of the day.</p> + +<hr class="advert"> + +<p>In One Volume, large crown 8vo, Illustrated, price 6s.</p> + +<p class="h2">SELF AND SELF-SACRIFICE +<br> +OR,</p> + +<p class="h2">NELLY'S STORY.</p> + +<p class="h5">BY ANNA LISLE.</p> + +<blockquote><p>"A very beautiful story, with characters well drawn, scenery vividly described, and +interest admirably sustained. The tendency of the volume is not only unexceptionable, +but excellent in a Christian point of view. We have seldom seen a book in which the +best and highest aim is so manifest without the attractiveness of the tale being at all +lessened by the embodiment of religious principles."—<i>Eclectic Review.</i></p> + +<p>"The story is so delightful, and the whole spirit of the book so pure, that it compels +our admiration."—<i>Daily News.</i></p> + +<p>"Since 'Currer Bell' we have read nothing more genuine, nor more touching. +'Nelly's Story' has power to carry the reader right through with it, and can hardly fail +to impress a moral of inestimable importance."—<i>Carlisle Journal.</i></p> + +<p>"Admirably written, pervaded throughout by fine, correct, and wholesome sentiments."—<i>Morning +Post.</i></p> + +<p>"Its excellent moral tone, and keen observation, are sure to render the book widely +popular."—<i>John Bull.</i></p> + +<p>"'Nelly's Story' is a good one. It is one of the best we have read for a long time."—<i>Bucks +Advertiser.</i></p> + +<p>"Abounding in interest. We can hardly conceive a more suitable gift-book."—<i>Lady's +Newspaper.</i></p> + +<p>"Will be welcomed, read, and talked about."—<i>Gentleman's Magazine.</i></p> + +<p>"'Nelly's Story' is told in such a good and pleasant way, and withal is so useful and +world-like, that we trust it may bring to its authoress the fame that she is well able to +support."—<i>Tait's Magazine.</i></p> + +<p>"We recognise and proclaim in the authoress of this thrilling tale a quality beyond +mere ability—genius of a very high order. We claim for Anna Lisle a place amongst +the most distinguished writers of her age. The story is a brilliant effort of refined and +sanctified imagination throughout, quite as fascinating as anything in the way of story, +whether told by Scott, Stowe, Dickens, or Currer Bell."—<i>Sentinel.</i></p></blockquote> + +<hr class="advert"> + +<p class="h6">In One Volume, large crown 8vo, Illustrated, price 5s.</p> + +<p class="h2">QUICKSANDS</p> + +<p class="h4">A TALE.</p> + +<p class="h5">BY ANNA LISLE.</p> + +<blockquote><p>"It is a thoroughly woman's book. We can fairly say that we have seldom met with +a graver or more striking warning against the consequences of over eagerness about +worldly position and advantages, more forcibly and, at the same time, gracefully conveyed."—<i>Literary +Gazette.</i></p> + +<p>"Contains a great deal of quiet and powerful writing. Marty, the maid of Mrs. +Grey, might pass for a creation of Dickens. The moral of 'Quicksands' is at once comprehensive +and striking."—<i>Weekly Mail.</i></p></blockquote> + +<p>GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London.<span class="pagenum">[164]</span></p> +</div> + +<p class="spacer"> </p> + +<div class="topbox"> +<p class="h3">GIFT BOOKS FOR BOYS.</p> + +<p class="h6">Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, Illustrated with 8 full-page Wood Engravings, +price 2s. 6d.</p> + +<p class="h2">INVENTION AND DISCOVERY</p> + +<p class="h4">A COLLECTION +OF +INTERESTING ANECDOTES.<br> +<br> +by</p> + +<p class="h5"><span class="smcap">RALPH and CHANDOS TEMPLE.</span></p> + +<blockquote><p>"Has a point and object, and a good one—nicely worked out."—<i>Saturday +Review.</i></p> + +<p>"We can recommend this book as a Christmas present, and one which +has given us no small pleasure."—<i>Literary Churchman.</i></p> + +<p>"Exceedingly well-timed. A volume which should be added to every +working-man's club in England."—Notes and Queries.</p> + +<p>"Exhibits a conscientious regard for accuracy."—<i>Athenæum.</i></p> + +<p>"The tendency is to instil the principle of self-help and the advantage +of earnest purpose."—<i>Bell's Messenger.</i></p></blockquote> + +<p>GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London.</p> + +<hr class="advert"> + +<p class="h6">Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, Illustrated with 8 full-page Wood Engravings, +price 2s. 6d.</p> + +<p class="h2">ENTERPRISE AND ADVENTURE</p> + +<p class="h4">A COLLECTION +OF +INTERESTING ANECDOTES.<br> +<br> +BY</p> + +<p class="h5"><span class="smcap">RALPH and CHANDOS TEMPLE.</span></p> + +<blockquote><p>"Very handsomely got up. The 'Temple Anecdotes' will be one of +the most popular of Christmas books."—<i>Standard.</i></p> + +<p>"A sensible, well-written book."—<i>Globe.</i></p> + +<p>"We know of no work which will make a more acceptable present +than this extremely handsome and really useful book."—<i>Era.</i></p> + +<p>"As a present for boys, nothing can be better."—<i>Daily News.</i></p> + +<p>"The anecdotes are told with a clearness and simplicity that cannot +fail to give pleasure."—<i>Spectator.</i></p></blockquote> + +<p>GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London.<span class="pagenum">[165]</span></p> +</div> + +</div> + + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Marvels of Pond-life, by Henry J. 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Slack + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Marvels of Pond-life + A Year's Microscopic Recreations + +Author: Henry J. Slack + +Release Date: July 30, 2011 [EBook #36903] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MARVELS OF POND-LIFE *** + + + + +Produced by Chris Curnow, Matthew Wheaton and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This +file was produced from images generously made available +by The Internet Archive) + + + + + + + + + + MARVELS OF POND-LIFE + + + OR, + + A YEAR'S MICROSCOPIC RECREATIONS + + AMONG THE + POLYPS, INFUSORIA, ROTIFERS, WATER-BEARS, AND POLYZOA. + + + BY + HENRY J. SLACK, F.G.S., + SECRETARY TO THE ROYAL MICROSCOPICAL SOCIETY; + + AUTHOR OF + 'THE PHILOSOPHY OF PROGRESS IN HUMAN AFFAIRS,' ETC. ETC. + + + _SECOND EDITION._ + + + ILLUSTRATED WITH COLOURED PLATES AND NUMEROUS + WOOD ENGRAVINGS. + + LONDON: + GROOMBRIDGE AND SONS, + 5, PATERNOSTER ROW. + MDCCCLXXI. + + PRINTED BY J. E. ADLARD, + BARTHOLOMEW CLOSE. + + + + +INTRODUCTION. + + +As this little book is intended to be no more than an introduction to an +agreeable branch of microscopical study, it is to be hoped it will not +require a formal preface; but a few words may be convenient to indicate +its scope and purpose. + +The common experience of all microscopists confirms the assertion made +by Dr. Goring, that the most fascinating objects are living creatures of +sufficient dimensions to be easily understood with moderate +magnification; and in no way can objects of this description be so +readily obtained, as by devoting an occasional hour to the examination +of the little ponds which are accessible from almost any situation. A +complete volume of pond lore would not only be a bulky book--much bigger +than the aldermanic tomes which it is the fashion to call "Manuals," +although the great stone fists in the British Museum would be required +to grasp them comfortably,--but its composition would overtask all the +philosophers of our day. In good truth, a tea-spoonful of water from a +prolific locality often contains a variety of living forms, every one of +which demands a profound and patient study, if we would know but a few +things concerning it. + +To man, then, is a vast and a minute. Our minds ache at the +contemplation of astronomical immensities, and we are apt to see the +boundless only in prodigious masses, countless numbers, and +immeasurable spaces. The Creative Mind knows no such limitations; and +the microscope shows us that, whether the field of nature's operation be +what to our apprehension is great or small, there is no limit to the +exhibition of marvellous skill. If the "undevout astronomer" be "mad," +the undevout microscopist must be still more so, for if the matter be +judged by human sense, the skill is greater as the operation is more +minute; and not the sun itself, nor the central orb round which he +revolves, with all his attendant worlds, can furnish sublimer objects of +contemplation, than the miraculous assemblage of forces which make up +the life of the smallest creature that the microscope reveals. + +There is an irresistible charm in the effort to trace _beginnings_ in +nature. We know that we can never succeed; that each discovery, which +conducts back towards some elementary law or principle, only indicates +how much still lies behind it: but the geologist nevertheless loves to +search out the first or oldest traces of life upon our globe; and so the +microscopist delights to view the simplest exhibitions of structures and +faculties, which reach their completion in the frame and mind of man. +That one great plan runs through the whole universe is now an +universally accepted truth, and when applied to physiology and natural +history, it leads to most important results. + +The researches of recent philosophers have shown us that nature cannot +be understood by studying the parts of animals with reference merely to +their utility in the economy of the creature to which they belong. We +do, indeed, find an admirable correspondence between structures and the +services they perform; but every object in creation, and every part of +it, is in harmonious relation to some grand design, and exhibits a +conformity to some general mode of operation, or some general +disposition and direction of forces, which secures the existence of the +individual or the species, and at the same time works out the most +majestic schemes. Microscopic researches, such as are within the reach +of millions, offer many of the most beautiful illustrations of these +truths; and although the following pages are confined to such objects as +are easily obtainable from ponds, and relate almost exclusively to the +Infusoria, the Rotifers, the Polyps, and the Polyzoa, it is hoped that +they will assist in associating a few of the highly suggestive +reasonings of science, with one of the most pleasurable recreations that +human ingenuity has devised. + +After a preliminary chapter, which is intended to assist the young +microscopist in some technical matters, that could not be conveniently +introduced into the text, the observations are distributed in chapters, +corresponding with the twelve calendar months. This arrangement was +suggested by the author's diary of operations for the year 1860, and +although it by no means follows that the months in which particular +creatures were then discovered, will be those in which they will be most +readily found in other years, it was thought advantageous to give a real +account of an actual period of microscopic work, and also that the plan +would facilitate a departure from the dry manner of a technical +treatise. The index will enable any one to use the book for the purpose +of reference, and it will be observed that the first chapter in which +any member of a group of creatures is introduced, is that in which a +general description of the class is given. The illustrations are taken +from drawings made by the wife of the author from the actual objects, +with the exception of a few instances, in which the authority is +acknowledged. The sketches were made _especially for beginners_, and the +rule followed, was not to introduce any details that could not be seen +at one focus, and with the simplest means: more elaborate +representations, though of the highest value to advanced students, are +bewildering at the commencement. + +The ponds referred to are all either close to, or within a moderate +distance of, London;[1] but similar objects will in all probability be +obtained from any ponds similarly situated, and the descriptions and +directions given for the capture of the minute prey will be found +generally applicable. Care has been taken throughout to explain the most +convenient methods of examining the objects, and although verbal +descriptions are poor substitutes for the teachings of experience, it is +hoped that those here given will remove some difficulties from a pursuit +that no intelligent person can enter upon without pleasure, or consent +to abandon when its elementary difficulties have been mastered, and the +boundless fields of discovery are opened to view. Let not the novice be +startled at the word "discovery." It is true that few are likely to +arrive at new principles or facts which will inscribe their names upon +the roll of fame; but no one of ordinary powers can look at living +objects with any considerable perseverance, without seeing much that has +never been recorded, and which is nevertheless worthy of note; and when +the mind, by its own exertions, first arrives at a knowledge of new +truth, an emotion is felt akin to that which more than recompenses the +profoundest philosopher for all his toil. + +[1] Many are now (1871) destroyed by the progress of building. + + + + + CONTENTS. + + + CHAPTER I. + + MICROSCOPES AND THEIR MANAGEMENT. + + Powers that are most serviceable--Estimated by Focal + length--Length of Body of Microscope and its Effects--Popular + Errors about Great Magnification--Modes of Stating Magnifying + Power--use of an "Erector"--Power of various Objectives with + different Eye-pieces--Examination of Surface Markings--Methods + of Illumination--Direct and Oblique Light--Stage + Aperture--Dark-ground Illumination--Mode of Softening + Light--Microscope Lamps--Care of the Eyes + + + CHAPTER II. + + JANUARY. + + Visit to the Ponds--Confervae--Spirogyra + quinina--Vorticella--Common Rotifer--Three Divisions of + Infusoria--Phytozoa--Protozoa--Rotifera--Tardigrada--Meaning of + these Terms--Euglenae--Distinction between Animals and + Vegetables--Description of Vorticellae--Dark-ground + Illumination--Modes of producing it--The Nucleus of the + Vorticella--Methods of Reproduction--Ciliated + Protozoa--Wheel-bearers or Rotifers--Their Structure--The Common + Rotifer--The young Rotifer seen inside the old one--an Internal + Nursery--"Differentiation" and "Specialization"--Bisexuality of + Rotifers--Their Zoological Position--Diversities in their + Appearance--Structure of their Gizzard--Description of Rotifers + + + CHAPTER III. + + FEBRUARY. + + Visit to Hampstead--Small + ponds--Water-Fleas--Water-Beetle--Snails--Polyps--Hydra + viridis--The Dipping-tube--A Glass Cell--The Hydra and its + Prey--Chydorus Sphaericus and Canthocamptus, or Friends and their + Escapes--Cothurnia--Polyp Buds--Catching Polyps--Mode of Viewing + Them--Structure of Polyps--Sarcode--Polyps Stimulated by + Light--Are they Conscious?--Tentacles and Poison + Threads--Paramecium--Trachelius--Motions of Animalcules, whether + Automatic or directed by a Will--Their Restless Character + + + CHAPTER IV. + + MARCH. + + Paramecia--Effects of Sunlight--Pterodina patina--Curious + Tail--Use of a Compressorium--Internal Structure of + Pterodina--Metopidia--Trichodina + pediculus--Cothurnia--Salpina--Its Three-sided Box--Protrusion + of its Gizzard Mouth + + + CHAPTER V. + + APRIL. + + The Beautiful Floscule--Mode of Seeking for Tubicolar + Rotifers--Mode of Illuminating the Floscule--Difficulty of + seeing the Transparent Tube--Protrusion of Long + Hairs--Lobes--Gizzard--Hairy Lobes of Floscule not Rotatory + Organs--Glass Troughs--Their Construction and Use--Movement of + Globules in Lobes of Floscule--Chaetonotus larus--Its mode of + Swimming--Coleps hirtus--Devourer of Dead Entomostraca--Dead + Rotifer and Vibriones--Theories of Fermentation and + Putrefaction--Euplotes and Stylonichia--Fecundity of Stylonichia + + + CHAPTER VI. + + MAY. + + Floscularia cornuta--Euchlanis triquetra--Melicerta ringens--Its + Powers as Brickmaker, Architect, and Mason--Mode of Viewing the + Melicerta--Use of Glass Cell--Habits of Melicerta--Curious + Attitudes--Leave their Tubes at + Death--Carchesium--Epistylis--Their Elegant Tree Forms--A + Parasytic Epistylis like the "Old Man of the Sea"--Halteria and + its Leaps--Aspidisca lynceus + + + CHAPTER VII. + + JUNE AND JULY. + + Lindia torulosa--OEcistes crystallinus--A Professor of + Deportment on Stilts--Philodina--Changes of Form and + Habits--Structure of Gizzard in Philodina Family--Mr. Gosse's + Description--Motions of Rotifers--Indications of a Will--Remarks + on the Motions of Lower Creatures--Various Theories--Possibility + of Reason--Reflex Actions--Brain of Insects--Consensual + Actions--Applications of Physiological Reasoning to the + Movements of Rotifers and Animalcules + + + CHAPTER VIII. + + AUGUST. + + Mud Coloured by Worms--Their Retreat at Alarm--A Country + Duck-Pond--Contents of its Scum--Cryptomonads--Their Means of + Locomotion--A Triarthra (Three-limbed Rotifer)--The Brachion or + Pitcher Rotifer--Its Striking Form--Enormous Gizzard--Ciliary + Motion inside this Creature--Large Eye and Brain--Powerful + Tail--Its Functions--Eggs + + + CHAPTER IX. + + SEPTEMBER. + + Microscopic Value of Little Pools--Curious Facts in Appearance + and Disappearance of Animalcules and Rotifers--Mode of + Preserving them in a Glass Jar--Fragments of Melicerta + Tube--Peculiar Shape of Pellets--Amphileptus--Scaridium + longicaudum--A Long-tailed Rotifer--Stephanoceros Eichornii--A + Splendid Rotifer--Its Gelatinous Bottle--Its Crown of + Tentacles--Retreats on Alarm--Illumination Requisite to see its + Beauties--Its Greediness--Richly-coloured Food--Nervous Ganglia + + + CHAPTER X. + + OCTOBER. + + Stentors and Stephanoceri--Description of Stentors--Mode of + viewing them--Their Abundance--Social Habits--Solitary Stentors + living in Gelatinous Caves--Propagation by Divers + Modes--Cephalosiphon limnias--A Group of Vaginicolae--Changes of + Shape--A Bubble-blowing Vorticella + + + CHAPTER XI. + + NOVEMBER. + + Characteristics of the Polyzoa--Details of Structure according + to Allman--Plumatella repens--Its Great Beauty under proper + Illumination--Its Tentacles and their Cilia--The Mouth and its + Guard or Epistome--Intestinal Tube--How it swallowed a Rotifer, + and what happened--Curiosities of Digestion--Are the Tentacles + capable of Stinging?--Resting Eggs, or "Statoblasts"--Tube of + Plumatella--Its Muscular Fibres--Physiological Importance of + their Structure + + + CHAPTER XII. + + DECEMBER. + + Microscopic Hunting in Winter--Water-Bears, or Tardigrada--Their + Comical Behaviour--Mode of viewing them--Singular + Gizzard--Wenham's Compressorium--Achromatic Condenser--Mouth of + the Water-Bear--Water-Bears' Exposure to Heat--Soluble + Albumen--Physiological and Chemical Reasons why they are not + killed by Heating or Drying--The Trachelius ovum--Mode of + Swimming--Method of Viewing--By Dark-ground + Illumination--Curious Digestive Tube with + Branches--Multiplication by Division--Change of Form immediately + following this Process--subsequent Appearances + + + CHAPTER XIII. + + CONCLUSION.--Remarks on Classification, &c. + + + + + MARVELS OF POND-LIFE. + + + + + CHAPTER I. + + PLAIN HINTS ON MICROSCOPES AND THEIR MANAGEMENT. + + Powers that are most serviceable--Estimated by focal + length--Length of body of microscope and its effects--Popular + errors about great magnification--Modes of stating magnified + power--Use of an "Erector"--Power of various objectives with + different eye-pieces--Examination of surface markings--Methods + of illumination--Direct and oblique light--Stage aperture--Dark + ground illumination--Mode of softening light--Microscope + lamps--Care of the eyes. + + +The microscope is rapidly becoming the companion of every intelligent +family that can afford its purchase, and, thanks to the skill of our +opticians, instruments which can be made to answer the majority of +purposes may be purchased for three or four guineas, while even those +whose price is counted in shillings are by no means to be despised. The +most eminent English makers, Wales, and Tolles, in America, and +Hartnack, in Paris, occupy the first rank, while the average productions +of respectable houses exhibit so high a degree of excellence as to make +comparisons invidious. We shall not, therefore, indulge in the praises +of particular firms, but simply recommend any reader entering upon +microscopic study to procure an achromatic instrument, if it can be +afforded, and having at least two powers, one with a focus of an inch or +two thirds of an inch, and the other of half or a quarter. Cheap +microscopes have usually only one eye-piece, those of a better class +have two, and the best are furnished with three, or even more. + +The magnifying power of a compound microscope depends upon the focal +length of the object-glass (or glass nearest the object), upon the +length of the tube, and the power of the eye-piece. With regard to +object-glasses, those of shortest focal length have the highest powers, +and the longest eye-pieces have the lowest powers. The body of a +microscope, or principal tube of which it is composed, is, in the best +instruments, about nine inches long, and a draw tube, capable of being +extended six inches more, is frequently useful. From simple optical +principles, the longer the tube the higher the power obtained with the +same object-glass; but only object-glasses of very perfect construction +will bear the enlargement of their own imperfections, which results from +the use of long tubes; and consequently for cheap instruments the +opticians often limit the length of the tube, to suit the capacity of +the object-glasses they can afford to give for the money. Such +microscopes may be good enough for the generality of purposes, but they +do not, with glasses of given focal length, afford the same magnifying +power as is done by instruments of better construction. The best and +most expensive glasses will not only bear long tubes, but also +eye-pieces of high power, without any practical diminution of the +accuracy of their operation, and this is a great convenience in natural +history investigations. To obtain it, however, requires such perfection +of workmanship as to be incompatible with cheapness. An experienced +operator will not be satisfied without having an object-glass at least +as high as a quarter, that will bear a deep eye-piece, but beginners are +seldom successful with a higher power than one of half-inch focus, or +thereabouts, and before trying this, they should familiarise themselves +with the use of one with an inch focus. + +It is a popular error to suppose that enormous magnification is always +an advantage, and that a microscope is valuable because it makes a flea +look as big as a cat or a camel. The writer has often smiled at the +exclamations of casual visitors, who have been pleased with his +microscopic efforts to entertain them. "Dear me, what a wonderful +instrument; it must be immensely powerful;" and so forth. These +ejaculations have often followed the use of a low power, and their +authors have been astonished at receiving the explanation that the best +microscope is that which will show the most with the least +magnification, and that accuracy of definition, not mere increase of +bulk, is the great thing needful. + +Scientific men always compute the apparent enlargement of the object by +_one_ dimension only. Thus, supposing an object one hundredth of an inch +square were magnified so as to appear one inch square, it would, in +scientific parlance, be magnified to "one hundred diameters," or one +hundred linear; and the figures 100 would be appended to any drawing +which might be made from it. It is, however, obvious that the length is +magnified as well as the breadth; and hence the magnification of the +whole surface, in the instance specified, would be one hundred times one +hundred, or ten thousand: and this is the way in which magnification is +popularly stated. A few moments' consideration will show that the +scientific method is that which most readily affords information. Any +one can instantly comprehend the fact of an object being made to look +ten times its real length; but if told that it is magnified a hundred +times, he does not know what this really means, until he has gone +through the process of finding the square root of a hundred, and learnt +that a hundredfold magnification means a tenfold magnification of each +superficial dimension. If told, for example, that a hair is magnified +six hundred diameters, the knowledge is at once conveyed that it looks +six hundred times as broad as it is; but a statement that the same hair +is magnified three hundred and sixty thousand times, only excites a +gasping sensation of wonder, until it is ascertained by calculation that +the big figures only mean what the little figures express. In these +pages the scientific plan will always be followed. + +If expense is not an object, a binocular instrument should be purchased, +and it is well to be provided with an object-glass as low as three or +even four inches focus, which will allow the whole of objects having the +diameter of half an inch or more to be seen at once. Such a low power +is exceedingly well adapted for the examination of living insects, or of +the exquisite preparations of entire insects, which can now be had of +all opticians. Microscopes which have a draw tube can be furnished with +an _erector_, an instrument so called because it erects the images, +which the microscope has turned upside down, through the crossing of the +rays. This is very convenient for making dissections under the +instrument; and it also gives us the means of reducing the magnifying +power of an object-glass, and thus obtaining a larger field. The erector +is affixed to the end of the draw tube, and by pulling it out, or +thrusting it in, the rays from the object-glass are intercepted at +different distances, and various degrees of power obtained. + +A binocular microscope is most useful with low powers from two thirds +upwards. A new form, devised by Mr. Stephenson, acts as an erector, and +is very valuable for dissections. It works with high powers. + +Beginners will be glad to know how to obtain the magnifying power which +different objects require, and it may be stated that, with a full-sized +microscope, a two-inch object-glass magnifies about twenty-five +diameters with the lowest eye-piece; a one-inch object-glass, or two +thirds, from fifty to sixty diameters; a half-inch about one hundred; a +quarter-inch about two hundred. The use of deeper eye-pieces adds very +considerably to the power, but in proportions which differ with +different makers. One instrument used by the writer has three +eye-pieces, giving with a two thirds object-glass powers of sixty one +hundred and five, and one hundred and eighty respectively; and with a +fifth two hundred and forty, four hundred and thirty, and seven hundred +and twenty, which can be augmented by the use of a draw tube. + +It has been well observed that the illumination of objects is quite as +important as the glasses that are employed, and the most experienced +microscopists have never done learning in this matter. Most microscopes +are furnished with two mirrors beneath the stage, one plane and one +concave. The first will throw a few parallel rays through any +transparent object properly placed, and the latter causes a number of +rays to converge, producing a more powerful effect. The first is usually +used in daylight, when the instrument is near a window (one with a north +aspect, out of direct sunlight, being the best); and the second is often +useful when the source of illumination is a candle or a lamp. By varying +the angle of the mirror the light is thrown through the object more or +less obliquely, and its quantity should never be sufficient to pain the +eye. Few objects are seen to the best advantage with a _large_ pencil of +perfectly direct light, and the beginner should practise till the amount +of inclination is obtained which produces the best effect. + +It is advisable that the hole in the stage of the microscope should be +large--at least an inch and a half each way--so that the entrance of +oblique rays is not obstructed, and it is desirable that the mirror, in +addition to sliding up and down, should have an arm by which it can be +thrown completely out of the perpendicular plane of the body of the +instrument. This enables such oblique rays to be employed as to give a +dark field, all the light which reaches the eye being _refracted_ by the +object through which it is sent. The opticians sell special pieces of +apparatus for this purpose, but though they are very useful, they do not +render it less desirable to have the mirror mounted as described. + +Most microscopes are furnished with a revolving diaphragm, with three +holes, of different sizes, to diminish the quantity of light that is +admitted to the object. This instrument is of some use, and offers a +ready means of obtaining a very soft agreeable light for transparent +objects, viewed with low powers. For this purpose cut a circular disk of +India or tissue paper, rather larger than the biggest aperture; scrape a +few little pieces of spermaceti, and place them upon it, then put the +whole on a piece of writing-paper, and hold it a few inches above the +flame of a candle, moving it gently. If this is dexterously done, the +spermaceti will be melted without singeing the paper, and when it is +cold the disk will be found transparent. Place it over the hole in the +diaphragm, send the light through it, and the result will be a very soft +agreeable effect, well suited for many purposes, such as viewing +sections of wood, insects mounted whole, after being rendered +transparent, many small water creatures, etc. Another mode of +accomplishing this purpose is to place a similarly prepared disk of +paper on the flat side of a bull's-eye lens, and transmit the light of a +lamp through it. This plan may be used with higher powers, and the white +opaque light it gives may be directed at any angle by means of the +mirror beneath the stage. + +An ordinary lamp may be made to answer for microscopic use, but one of +the small paraffine lamps now sold everywhere for eighteen-pence is +singularly convenient. It is high enough for many purposes, and can +easily be raised by one or more blocks. A paraffine lamp on a sliding +stand is still more handy, and all the better for a hole with a glass +stopper, through which the fluid can be poured. + +Many people fancy that the eyes are injured by continual use of the +microscope, but this is far from being the case if reasonable +precautions are taken. The instrument should be inclined at a proper +angle, all excess of light avoided, and the object brought into focus +before it is steadily looked at. Most people solemnly shut one eye +before commencing a microscopic examination; this is a practical and +physiological mistake. Nature meant both eyes to be open, and usually +resents a prolonged violation of her intentions in this matter. It +requires but a little practice to keep both eyes open, and only pay +attention to what is seen by that devoted to the microscope. The +acquisition of this habit is facilitated, and other advantages gained, +by a screen to keep out extraneous light. For this purpose take a piece +of thin cardboard about nine inches square, and cut a round hole in it, +just big enough to admit the tube of the microscope, about two inches +from the bottom, and equidistant from the two sides. Next cut off the +two upper corners of the cardboard, and give them a pleasant-looking +curve. Then cover the cardboard with black velvet, the commonest, which +is not glossy, answers best, and your screen is made. Put the hole over +the tube of the microscope, and let the screen rest on the little ledge +or rim which forms an ornamental finish to most instruments. A piece of +cork may be gummed at the back of the screen, so as to tilt it a little, +and diminish its chance of coming into contact with that important organ +the nose. This little contrivance adds to the clearness and brilliancy +of objects, and is a great accommodation to the eyes. + +One more oculistic memorandum, and we have done with this chapter. Do +not stare at portions of objects that are out of focus, and consequently +indistinct, as this injures the eyes more than anything. Remember the +proverb, "None so deaf as those that won't hear," which naturally +suggests for a companion, "None so blind as those that won't see." It is +often impossible to get every object in the field in focus at one +time;--look only at that which is in focus, and be blind to all the +rest. This is a habit easily acquired, and is one for which our +_natural_ microscopes are exceedingly grateful; and every judicious +observer desires to keep on the best terms with his eyes. + + + + +CHAPTER II. + +JANUARY. + + Visit to the ponds--Confervae--Spirogyra + quinina--Vorticella--Common Rotifer--Three divisions of + Infusoria--Phytozoa--Protozoa--Rotifera--Tardigrada--Meaning of + these terms--Euglenae--Distinction between animals and + vegetables--Description of Vorticellae--Dark ground + illumination--Modes of producing it--The Nucleus of the + Vorticellae--Methods of reproduction--Ciliated Protozoa--Wheel + bearers or Rotifers--Their structure--The common Rotifer--The + young Rotifer seen inside the old one--An internal + nursery--"Differentiation" and "Specialisation"--Bisexuality of + Rotifers--Their zoological position--Diversities in their + appearance--Structure of their Gizzard--Description of Rotifers. + + +The winter months are on the whole less favorable to the collection of +microscopic objects from ponds and streams than the warmer portions of +the year; but the difference is rather in abundance than in variety, and +with a very moderate amount of trouble, representatives of the principal +classes can always be obtained. + +On a clear January morning, when the air was keen, but no ice had yet +skinned over the surface of the water, a visit to some small ponds in an +open field not far from Kentish Town provided entertainment for several +days. The ponds were selected from their open airy situation, the +general clearness of their water, and the abundance of vegetation with +which they were adorned. Near the margin confervae abounded, their +tangled masses of hair-like filaments often matted together, almost with +the closeness of a felted texture. At intervals, minute bubbles of air, +with occasionally a few of greater size, indicated that the complex +processes of vegetable life were actively going on, that the tiny plants +were decomposing carbonic acid, dexterously combining the carbon--which +we are most familiar with in the black opaque form of charcoal--to form +the substance of their delicate translucent tissues, and sending forth +the oxygen as their contribution to the purification of the adjacent +water, and the renovation of our atmospheric air. This was a good sign, +for healthy vegetation is favorable to many of the most interesting +forms of infusorial life. Accordingly the end of a walking-stick was +inserted among the green threads, and a skein of them drawn up, dank, +dripping, and clinging together in a pasty-looking mass. To hold up a +morsel of this mass, and tell some one not in the secrets of pond-lore +that its dripping threads were objects of beauty, surpassing human +productions, in brilliant colour and elegant form, would provoke +laughter, and suggest the notion that you were poking fun at them, when +you poked out your stick with the slimy treasure at its end. But let us +put the green stuff into a bottle, with some water from its native +haunt, cork it up tight, and carry it away for quiet examination under +the microscope at home. + +Here we are with the apparatus ready. We have transferred a few threads +of the conferva from the bottle to the _live box_, spreading out the +fine fibres with a needle, and adding a drop of water. The cover is then +gently pressed down, and the whole placed on the stage of the +microscope, to be examined with a power of about sixty. A light is +thrown somewhat obliquely by the mirror through the object, the focus +adjusted, and a beautiful sight rewards the pains. Our mass of conferva +turns out to contain one of the most elegant species. Fine hair-like +tubes of an organic material, as transparent as glass, are divided by +partitions of the same substance into cylindrical cells, through which a +slender ribbon of emerald green, spangled at intervals with small round +expansions, is spirally wound. We shall call it the Spiral Conferva, its +scientific name being _Spirogyra quinina_. Some other species, though +less elegantly adorned, make a pleasing variety in the microscopic +scene; and appended to some of the threads is a group of small crystal +bells, which jerk up and down upon spirally twisted stalks. These are +the "Bell Flower Animalcules" of old observers, the _Vorticellae_, or +Little Vortex-makers of the present day. Other small creatures flit +about with lively motions, and among them we observe a number of green +spindles that continually change their shape, while an odd-looking thing +crawls about, after the manner of certain caterpillars, by bringing his +head and tail together, shoving himself on a step, and then repeating +the process, and making another move. He has a kind of snout, behind +which are two little red eyes, and something like a pig-tail sticks out +behind. This is the Common Wheel-bearer, _Rotifer vulgaris_, a +favourite object with microscopists, old and young, and capable, as we +shall see, of doing something more interesting than taking the crawl we +have described. + +A higher power, say one or two hundred, may be conveniently applied to +bring out the details of the inhabitants of our live box more +completely; but if the glasses are good, a linear magnification of sixty +will show a great deal, with the advantage of a large field, and less +trouble in following the moving objects of our search. + +Having commenced our microscopic proceedings by obtaining some Euglenae, +Vorticellae, and a Rotifer, we are in a position to consider the chief +characteristics of three great divisions of infusoria, which will often +engage our attention. + +It is well known that animalcules and other small forms of being may be +found in _infusions_ of hay or other vegetable matter, and hence all +such and similar objects were called _Infusoria_ by early observers. +Many groups have been separated from the general mass comprehended under +this term, and it is now used in various senses. The authors of the +'Micrographic Dictionary' employ it to designate "a class of microscopic +_animals_ not furnished with either vessels or nerves, but exhibiting +internal spherical cavities, motion effected by means of cilia, or +variable processes formed of the substance of the body, true legs being +absent." The objection to this definition is, that it to some extent +represents theories which may not be true. That nerves are absent _all +through the class_ is an assumption founded merely upon the negative +evidence of their not having been discovered, and the complete absence +of "vessels" cannot be affirmed. + +In the last edition of 'Pritchard's Infusoria,' to which some of our +ablest naturalists have contributed, after separating two groups, the +Desmids, and the Diatoms, as belonging to the vegetable world, the +remainder of the original family of infusoria are classified as +_Phytozoa_, _Protozoa_, _Rotifera_, and _Tardigrada_. We shall explain +these hard names immediately, first remarking that the Desmids and the +Diatoms, concerning whom we do not intend to speak in these pages, are +the names of two groups, one distinctly vegetable, while the other, +although now generally considered so, were formerly held by many +authorities to be in reality animal. The Desmids occur very commonly in +fresh water. We have some among our Confervae. They are most brilliant +green, and often take forms of a more angular and crystalline character +than are exhibited by higher plants. The Diatoms are still more common, +and we see before us in our water-drop some of their simplest +representatives in the form of minute boats made of silica (flint) and +moved by means still in dispute. + +Leaving out the Desmids and Diatoms, we have said that in Pritchard's +arrangement the views of those writers are adopted who divide the rest +of the infusoria into four groups, distinguished with foreign +long-tailed names, which we will translate and expound. First come the +_Phytozoa_, under which we recognise our old acquaintance _zoophyte_ +turned upside down. _Zoophytes_ mean animal-plants, _Phytozoa_ mean +plant-animals. We shall have by-and-bye to speak of some of the members +of this artificial and unsatisfactory group, and postpone to that time a +learned disquisition on the difference between animals and plants, a +difference observable enough if we compare a hippopotamus with a +cabbage, but which "grows small by degrees, and beautifully less," as we +contemplate lower forms. + +After the _Phytozoa_ come the _Protozoa_, or first forms in which +animality is distinctly recognised. Under this term are assembled +creatures of very various organization, from the extreme simplicity of +the _Proteus_ or _Amoeba_, a little lump of jelly, that moves by +thrusting out portions of its body, so as to make a sort of extempore +legs, and in which no organs can be discerned,[2] up to others that are +highly developed, like our _Vorticellae_. This group is evidently +provisional, and jumbles together objects that may be widely separated +when their true structure and real affinities are discerned. + +[2] In some kinds and in some stages of growth this is not strictly +true. + +Following the _Protozoa_, come the _Rotifera_, or Wheel-bearers, of +which we have obtained an example from our pond, and whose +characteristics we shall endeavour to delineate when our specimen is +under view; and last in the list we have the _Tardigrada_, +"Slow-steppers," or Water Bears, queer little creatures, something like +new-born puppies, with a double allowance of imperfect feet. These, +though somewhat connected with the rotifers, are considered to belong to +a low division of the arachnida (spiders, &c.). + +[Illustration: --_a_, motile; and _b_, resting condition of Euglenae.] + +Feeling that we must be merciful with the long-tailed words and +explanations of classification, we reserve further matter of this kind +for the opportunities that must arise, and direct our attention to +living forms by watching the _Euglenae_ which our water-drop contains. We +have before us a number of elegant spindle-shaped bodies, somewhat +thicker in front than behind, and in what may be called the head there +glitters a brilliant red speck, commonly called an _eye-spot_, although, +like the eyes of potatoes, it cannot see. Round this eye-spot the +tissues are clear, like glass; but the body of the creature is of a rich +vegetable green, which shines and glistens as it catches the light. Some +swim rapidly with a rollicking motion, while others twist themselves +into all manner of shapes. Now the once delicate spindle is oddly +contorted, now it swells out in the middle, like a top, and now it rolls +itself into a ball. The drawings will afford some idea of these protean +changes, but they must be seen before their harlequin character can be +thoroughly appreciated. Some of the specimens exhibit delicate lines +running lengthwise, and taking a spiral twist as the creature moves +about; but in none can any mouth be discerned, and their antics, +although energetic and comical, afford no certain indications of either +purpose or will. What are they? animals or vegetables? or something +betwixt and between? + +The first impression of any casual observer would be to declare in +favour of their animality; but before this can be settled, comes the +question, what is an animal, and how does it differ from a vegetable? +and upon this the learned do by no means agree. One writer considers the +presence of _starch_ in any object a proof that it belongs to the +dominions of Flora, while another would decide the issue by ascertaining +whether it evolves oxygen and absorbs carbon, as most plants do, or +whether it evolves carbon and absorbs oxygen, as _decided_ animals do. +Dr. Carpenter asserts that the distinction between _Protophyta_ and +_Protozoa_ (first or simplest plants and animals), "lies in the nature +of their food, and the method of its introduction, for whilst the +_Protophyte_ obtains the materials of its nutrition from the air and +moisture that surround it, and possesses the power of detaching oxygen, +hydrogen, carbon, and nitrogen from their previous binary combinations, +and of uniting them into ternary and quaternary organic compounds +(chlorophyll, starch, albumen, &c.), the simplest _Protozoa_, in common +with the highest members of the animal kingdom, seems utterly destitute +of any such power, makes, so to speak, a stomach for itself in the +substance of its body, into which it injects the solid particles that +constitute its food, and within which it subjects them to a regular +process of digestion." + +Unfortunately it is very difficult to apply this simple theory to the +dubious objects which lie on the border-land of the animal world, and no +other theory that has been propounded appears to meet all cases. Some +naturalists do not expect to find a broad line of demarkation between +the two great divisions of living things, but others characterise such +an idea as "unphilosophical," in spite of which, however, we incline +towards it. + +Mr. Gosse, whose opinion is entitled to great respect, calls the +_Euglenae_ "animals" in his 'Evenings with the Microscope;' but from the +aggregate of recorded observations it seems that they evolve oxygen, are +coloured with the colouring matter of plants, reproduce their species in +a manner analogous to plants, and have in some cases been clearly traced +to the vegetable world. It is, however, possible that some _Euglenae_ +forms may be animal and others vegetable, and while their place at +nature's table is being decided, they must be content to be called +_Phytozoa_, which, as we have before explained, is merely _Zoophyte_ +turned upside down. + +Some authorities have thought their animality proved by the high degree +of contractility which their tissues evince. This, however, cannot go +for much, as all physiologists admit contractility to belong to the +vegetable tissues of the sensitive plant, "Venus' Fly-trap," &c., and a +little more or less cannot mark the boundary between two orders of +being. + +We shall have occasion again to notice the _Protophytes_, and now pass +to the _Protozoa_, of which we have a good illustration in the +_Vorticella_ already spoken of. In the group before us a number of +elegant bells or vases stand at the end of long stalks, as shown at the +top of the frontispiece, while round the tops of the bells, the +vibrations of a wreath or cilia produce little vortices or whirlpools, +and hence comes the family name. This current brings particles of all +sorts to the mouth near the rim of the bells, and the creature seems not +entirely destitute of power to choose or reject the morsels according to +its taste. Every now and then the stalk of some specimen is suddenly +twisted into a spiral, and contracted, so as to bring the bell almost to +the ground. Then the stem gracefully elongates again, and the cilia +repeat their lively game. + +The general effect can be seen very well by a power of about sixty +linear, but one of them from one to two hundred is necessary to bring +out the details, and a practised observer will use still more +magnification with good effect. They should be examined by a moderately +oblique light, or most of the cilia are apt to be rendered invisible, +and also by _dark ground_ illumination. This may be accomplished in a +well-made microscope by turning the mirror quite out of the plane of the +axis of the instrument, that is to say, on one side of the space the +body would occupy if it were prolonged. By this means, and by placing +the lamp at an angle with the mirror, that must be learnt by experiment, +all the light that reaches the eye has first passed through the object, +and is refracted by it out of the line it was taking, which would have +carried it entirely away. Or the object may be illuminated by an +apparatus called a _spotted lens_, which is a small bull's-eye placed +under the stage, and having all the centre of its face covered with a +plaster of black silk. In this method the central or direct rays from +the mirror are obstructed, but those which strike the edge of the +bull's-eye are bent towards the object, which they penetrate and +illuminate if it is sufficiently transparent and refractive. Another +mode of dark ground illumination is by employing an elegant instrument +called a _parabolic illuminator_, which need not be described. + +[Illustration: Vorticella, with posterior circlet of cilia in process of +separation, 300 linear.--_Stein._] + +[Illustration: Vorticella in process of self-division. A new frontal +wreath in formation in each of the semi-lunar spaces.] + +Different specimens and species of _Vorticellae_ vary in the length of +their bells from one three or four thousandth to one hundred and +twentieth of an inch, and when they are tolerably large, the dark ground +illumination produces a beautiful effect. The bells shine with a pearly +iridescent lustre, and their cilia flash with brilliant prismatic +colours. + +[Illustration: Vorticella microstoma, showing alimentary tube, ciliated +mouth, and formation of a gemma at the base, 300 linear.--_Stein._] + +[Illustration: Vorticella microstoma, the encysted animal protruding +through a supposed rupture of the tunic.] + +The _Vorticellina_ belong to the upper division of the _Protozoa_--the +_ciliata_, or ciliated animalcules, and they have a mouth, an +oesophagus, and an orifice for the exit of their food. + +Many observers used to ascribe to those creatures a complete intestinal +canal, but such an apparatus is now believed not to exist in any of the +Infusoria. Food particles, after leaving the oesophagus, are thrust +forward into the sarcode, or soft flesh, and any cavity thus formed acts +as a stomach. + +The bells or cups are not, as might be fancied from a casual inspection, +open like wineglasses at the top, but furnished with a retractile disk +or cover, on which the cilia are arranged. Their stalks are not simple +stems, but are hollow tubes, which in the genus Vorticella are furnished +with a muscular band, by whose agency the movements are principally +made. + +Some of the Vorticellids will be observed to leave their stalks, having +developed cilia round their base, and may be seen to swim about in the +enjoyment of individual life. They are also capable of becoming +_encysted_, that is, of secreting a gelatinous cover. + +[Illustration: Encysted Vorticella, showing the obliteration of special +organs by the advancement of the process.--_Pritchard._] + +These changes are exhibited in the annexed cuts, which are copied from +known authorities. By careful observation of the bodies of Vorticellids, +a contractile vesicle may be observed, which appears to cause a movement +of fluids, that is probably connected either with respiration or +secretion. + +Another piece of apparatus in this family, but not confined to it, is +the so-called _nucleus_, which in this case is of a horseshoe shape and +granular texture, and greater solidity than the surrounding parts. The +functions of this organ formed the subject of various conjectures, but +it is now generally held to be an ovary. + +[Illustration: Vorticella microstoma, in process of encystment, 300 +linear; in the last the inclosing tunic is plainly developed.--_Stein._] + +In common with many of the lower animals, the Vorticellids have three +ways of multiplying their race. One by _fission_, or division of their +bodies: another by _buds_, somewhat analogous to those of plants; and +another by reproductive germs. These processes will come again under our +notice, and we shall leave the Vorticellids for the present by observing +that if they are fed with a very small quantity of indigo or carmine, +the vacuoles or spaces, into which their nutriment passes, will be +clearly observed. Ehrenberg thought in these and similar creatures that +every vacuole was a distinct stomach, and that all the stomachs were +connected by an intestinal canal; hence his name _Polygastrica_, or +many stomached. In these views he has not been followed by later +observers, and it is probable he was misled, partly by pushing the +process of reasoning from the analogies of higher animals much too far, +and partly by the imperfection of the glasses he employed. + +[Illustration: Rotifer vulgaris.--A, mouth, or gizzard; B, contractile +vesicle.--_Micrographic Dictionary._ N.B.--When the cilia and tail part +are retracted, and the body shortened, the creature assumes an obtuse +oval form.] + +Having thus briefly considered the Vorticellids we must turn to the +wheel-bearer, who belongs to a higher race than even the ciliated +_Protozoa_. We left her crawling about with her snout or proboscis +protruded, but now she has moored herself by her tail-foot, pulled in +her nose, and put out two groups of cilia, which look like revolving +wheels, and a little below them is seen a gizzard in a state of active +work. After a little while she swims away with her wheels going, and her +tail, forked at the end, is found to be telescopic, or capable of being +pulled in and out. As the cilia play, the neighbouring water is +agitated, and the multitudes of small objects are brought by the +whirlpools within her ravenous maw. But the strangest thing of all is +that inside her body is seen a young one; in this case a large and fine +infant, which, like "a chip of the old block," imitates the parental +motions, thrusts forth its cilia and works its gizzard.[3] In other +genera the eggs are hatched externally, but this one is ovoviparous, and +carries its nursery inside. + +[3] This was met with in the summer, but is described here to avoid +repetition. I do not know whether the eggs are hatched in very cold +weather. + +A very slight investigation is sufficient to show that in the +wheel-bearer we have made a great advance towards a higher organization +than we discovered in the preceding creatures. We witness what the +learned call a "differentiation" of parts and tissues, and a +"specialization" of organs. The head is plainly distinguishable from the +body, the skin or integument is distinctly different from the internal +tissues, behind the eyes we can detect a nervous ganglion or miniature +brain, the gizzard is a complicated piece of vital mechanism, such as we +have not met with before, and in various parts of the transparent inside +we see organs to which particular functions are assigned. + +It was at one time thought that Rotifers were hermaphrodite--uniting +both sexes in one body--but that idea is now generally abandoned, for in +many species the males have been discovered, and the fair sex may be +gratified to hear that they are without doubt the "inferior animals." +Their function is simply to assist the female in producing young, and as +this can be quickly accomplished, their lives are short, and they are +not supplied with the gizzard and digestive apparatus, which their +lady-loves possess. Much discussion has taken place as to the rank which +the Rotifers hold in the animal kingdom, some naturalists thinking them +relations of the crabs, and others believing them to belong to the +family of the worms. Professor Huxley, who adopts the latter view, which +has the most friends, groups the lower _Annulosa_ together under the +name of _Annuloida_, in which he includes _Annelides_, or worms of +various kinds, the _Echinodermata_ (or "spine skins," among which are +the star-fish and sea hedgehogs), and some other families. He considers +the Rotifers to be "the permanent forms of Echinoderm larvae." This does +not mean that they were ever produced by Echinoderms, and had their +development checked, but that they resemble them in organization, and +illustrate a general law, observable in animated beings, namely, that +the lower creatures are like the imperfect stages of higher animals, and +that all things are formed according to general principles, and exhibit +a uniformity of plan. + +Mr. Gosse adopts a different view, and while admitting a connection +between the Rotifers and the worms, adduces important reasons for +associating them with the insects. + +Leaving zoologists to settle their position, we may remark that the +Rotifers form a very numerous family, presenting very great diversities +of structure, some of the most interesting of which we shall meet with +in the course of our rambles; but they all possess a gizzard, which, +though differing in complexity, is throughout formed upon the same +principle, and that we must now explain. + +We have called the masticatory apparatus of the Rotifers a _gizzard_; +but Mr. Gosse, who has done most to elucidate its structure, contends +that it is a _mouth_; and in some species it is frequently protruded, +and used like the mouth of higher animals. Taking one of the most +typical forms of this organ, and drawing our illustrations from Mr. +Gosse's admirable paper in the "Transactions of the Royal Society," we +may describe it, when completely developed, as consisting of three +lobes, having a more or less rounded form. The eminent naturalist we +have named calls the whole organ the _mastax_, and states that it is +composed of dense muscular fibre. The tube which leads down to it he +designates the "buccal (mouth) funnel," and the tube that issues from +it, and conveys the food to the digestive sac or stomach, he calls the +_oesophagus_, in conformity with the nomenclature applied to creatures +whose mouths are in the usual place. Inside the mouth-gizzard are placed +two organs, which work like hammers, and which Mr. Gosse therefore names +_mallei_. The hammers work against a sort of anvil, which is called +_incus_, the Latin for that implement. Each hammer consists of two +portions articulated by a hinge joint. The lower portion, the +_manubrium_, or handle, gives motion to the upper portion, which from +its shape is named the _uncus_, or hook. The _unci_ are furnished with +finger-like processes of teeth, which vary in number. There are five or +six in the best developed specimens. These hooks or teeth work against +each other, and against the _incus_, or anvil, which consists of +distinct articulated portions, of which the principal are two _rami_, or +branches, jointed so that they can open and close like a pair of shears. +These two rest upon the third portion, which is called the _fulcrum_. +Some faint idea of the working of the toothed hammers may be obtained by +rubbing the knuckles of both hands together, but the motion is more +complicated, and the _rami_ play their part in the trituration of the +food. Mr. Gosse states that when an objectionable morsel has got as far +as this mouth-gizzard, "it is thrown back by a peculiar scoop-like +action of the _unci_, very curious to witness." The foregoing diagram +will help the reader to comprehend this description, but no opportunity +should be lost for viewing this remarkable organ busy at work in the +living animals. + +[Illustration: Gizzard of Notomata.] + +The respiration of the Rotifers is supposed to be effected by the +passage of water through vessels running round them, and called the +"water vascular system," and in addition to their eyes, which often +disappear in adult specimens, the organ we described as standing out +like a pig-tail, as our acquaintance crawled along, is thought to act as +an _antenna_, or feeler, and brings its possessor in further relation to +the external world. It is also called the _calcar_, or spur, and is +furnished with cilia or bristles at its extremity. + +Sometimes the particles swallowed by the Common Rotifer are large enough +for their course to be traced, but there is frequently a great commotion +and grinding of the gizzard, without any appreciable cause, although +doubtless something is taken in, and when the creature is tired, or has +had enough, we see both head and tail retracted, and the body assumes a +globular form. In another chapter, when viewing a Philodine, we shall +see how in the family to which the Common Rotifer belongs, the gizzard +departs from the perfect type. + + + + +CHAPTER III. + +FEBRUARY. + + Visit to Hampstead--Small + ponds--Water-fleas--Water-beetle--Snails--Polyps--Hydra + viridis--The dipping-tube--A glass cell--The Hydra and its + prey--Chydorus sphaericus and Canthocamptus, or friends and their + escapes--Cothurnia--Polyp buds--Catching Polyps--Mode of viewing + them--Structure of Polyps--Sarcode--Polyps stimulated by + light--Are they conscious?--Tentacles and poison + threads--Paramecium--Trachelius--Motions of Animalcules, whether + automatic or directed by a will--Their restless character. + + +It has been a bitterly cold night, and as the sun shines on a clear keen +morning, and glistens in the hoar-frost which covers the trees, it might +seem an unpropitious time for visiting the ponds, in search of +microscopic prey. We will, however, try our luck, and take a brisk trot +to the top of Hampstead Heath, where the air is still keener, and the +ice more thick. Arriving at the highest point, London appears on one +side enveloped in its usual great coat of smoke, through which St. +Paul's big dome, with a score or two of towers and steeples, can be +dimly made out; while looking towards Harrow-on-the-Hill, or Barnet, we +see the advantage of country air in the sharpness with which distant +objects cut the blue sky. We leave the large ponds for another time, +and hunt out the little hollows among the furze and fern. One looks +promising from the bright green vegetation to be discovered under the +sheet of ice, which is almost firm enough to bear human weight. + +Breaking a convenient hole we hook up some of the water-plants, and +place them in a wide-mouthed vial, which we fill with water, and +cursorily examine with a pocket-lens. Some water-fleas briskly skipping +about, and a beautiful little beetle, with an elegant dotted pattern on +his brown back, and a glistening film of air covering his belly, show +that we have not been unsuccessful, although we must wait till we get +home to know the extent of our findings, among which, however, we can +only discern the graceful spiral shell of a small water-snail, the +_Planorbis_. + +Arriving at home the bottle was left undisturbed for some hours in a +warm light place, and then on being examined several specimens of that +beautiful polyp, the _Hydra viridis_, were seen attached to the glass, +and spreading their delicate tentacles in search of prey. One of the +polyps is carefully removed by the _dipping-tube_, a small glass tube, +open at both ends. The forefinger is placed upon the top, and when the +other end is brought over the object the finger is raised for an +instant, and as the water rushes in the little hydra comes too, and is +placed in a glass cell, about half an inch wide, and one tenth of an +inch deep. These cells are obtained from the opticians, and cemented +with varnish or marine glue to an ordinary glass slide. After an object +has been placed in one of them, a little water is taken up in the +dipping-tube, and the cell filled until the fluid stands in a convex +heap above its brim. We then select around glass cover, and press it +gently on the walls of our cell. A few drops of superfluous water +escape, and we have the cell quite full, and the cover held tight by +force of the capillary attraction between the water and the glass. + +[Illustration: _Hydra viridis_ with developed young one, and bud +beginning to sprout.] + +The polyp deposited in one of these water cages is then transferred to +the stage of the microscope, and its proceedings watched. At first it +looks like a shapeless mass of apple-green jelly. Soon, however, the +tail end of the creature is fixed to the glass, the body elongates, and +the tentacles (in this case eight) expand something after the manner of +the leaves of a graceful palm. + +By accident two small Water Fleas were imprisoned with the polyp, and +one (a shrimp-like looking creature, carrying behind her a great bag of +eggs) came into contact with the tentacles, and seemed paralysed for a +time. The hydra made no attempt to convey the captive to its mouth, but +held it tight until another Water Flea, a round merry little fellow +(_Chydorus sphaericus_), came to the rescue, and assisted _Canthocamptus_ +to escape by tugging at her tail. This friendly action may not have been +prompted by the intelligence which seemed to suggest it, but those who +have kept tame soldier-crabs and prawns in an aquarium, will not be +indisposed to attribute to the crustaceans more brains than they have +usually credit for. It must, however, be confessed that the subsequent +conduct of Mrs. Canthocamptus did not indicate the possession of much +prudence, for she learnt no lesson from experience, but repeatedly swam +against her enemy's tentacles, suffered many captures, and only escaped +being devoured through the indifference, or want of appetite, which the +polyp evinced. + +[Illustration: A, _Canthocamptus minutus_; B, _Chydorus sphaericus_; C +and D, Capsules and poison-thread of polyp; E, _Tricodina pediculus_, +side view and under view; F, _Kerona polyporum.--Microg. Dict._] + +On the body of the _Canthocamptus_ were some small transparent vases or +bottles, containing living objects, which sprang up and down. These +were members of the _Vorticella_ family, called _Cothurnia_, and will +be hereafter described. + +[Illustration: _Hydra viridis_, in various shapes.] + +Watching the hydra it was curious to note the changes of form which +these creatures are able to assume. Now the tentacles were short and +thick, and the body squat; now the body was elongated, like the stem of +a palm tree, and the tentacles hung gracefully from the top. From some +of the polyps little round buds were growing, while other buds were +already developed into miniature copies of the parent, and only attached +by a slender stalk. In a few days many of these left the maternal side, +fixed their own little tails to the glass, and commenced housekeeping on +their own account. + +Polyps may be obtained at all times of the year by bringing home +duckweed, conferva, and other water-plants from the ponds. Some hauls +may be unsuccessful, but if one pond is not propitious others should be +tried. The plants should be put in a capacious vessel of water, and +placed in the light, where, if polyps be present, they will show +themselves within twenty-four hours, either attached to the sides of the +glass, or hanging from the plants, or suspended head downwards from the +upper film of the water. They are elegant objects, and may be kept +without difficulty for some weeks. After being confined in a small +quantity of water for purposes of examination, they should be carefully +replaced in the larger vessel, and may thus be used again and again +without suffering any injury. A low power--a three or two-inch glass--or +a one-inch, reduced by employing the erector--is the most convenient for +examining the whole creature, but higher powers are necessary to make +out its minute structure. They should be viewed with direct and oblique +light, as transparent and also as opaque objects. In the latter case the +"Lieberkuhn," or polished silver speculum, is convenient, and if the +microscope is not furnished with Lister's dark wells, a small piece of +black paper may be stuck behind the object, by simply wetting it with +the tongue.[4] + +[4] The side silver reflector is useful for illuminating such objects. + +Although the polyps are remarkable for the simplicity of their +organization, they do not the less exhibit the wonderful nature of +animal life. Their bodies are composed of the substance, called +_sarcode_, in which is imbedded a colouring matter resembling that in +the leaves of plants; every part possesses irritability and +contractility, and they are very sensitive to the stimulus of light. The +outer layer of their bodies is harder than the inner layer. These +layers are severally called _ectoderm_ and _endoderm_. They may be cut +and grafted like trees, and if turned inside out, the new inside digests +and assimilates as well as the old. Whether any form of consciousness +can belong to creatures which have no distinct nervous system is open to +doubt, but it would seem probable from their movements that food and +light afford them something like a pleasurable sensation in a very +humble degree. If we were sufficiently acquainted with the secrets of +molecular combination we might discover that the various functions of +these simple organisms were discharged by different _particles_, +although it is only in higher creatures that muscular particles are +aggregated into muscles, or nerve particles into nerves. + +Having examined the general appearance and proceedings of the hydra, let +us cut off a tentacle, or take a small specimen and gently crush it by +pressing down the cover of the live box, and place the object so +prepared under a power of about three hundred linear. If we then +illuminate it with a moderate quantity of oblique light, we shall +discover round the edge of the tentacle a number of small cells or +capsules, from some of which a very slender wire or thread will be +emitted.[5] These are the stinging organs of the polyp, and resemble +those which Mr. Gosse has so ably elucidated in the sea anemones. Some +writers have endeavoured to show that they are not stinging organs at +all, but so large an amount of evidence to the contrary is accumulated +in Mr. Gosse's 'Actinologia Britannica,' that no reasonable doubt +remains. The stinging capsules of the polyp are shown in the annexed +sketch, and also the way in which they are employed, for it fortunately +happened that on exposing one of the hydras to pressure in the live box, +a small worm (_Anguillula_) escaped, which had been pierced with the +minute weapons which are supposed to convey a poison into the wound. The +authors of the 'Micrographic Dictionary' think that the prongs of the +forks, which will be seen to point upwards in the sketch,[6] are +springs, and occupy a reversed position in the capsule cells, and that +their function is to throw out the threads. However this may be, the +polyps, and similarly endowed creatures, have the power of darting out +their poison threads with considerable force, and Mr. Gosse found that +the anemone was able to pierce a thick piece of human skin. + +[5] See page 34, C and D. + +[6] See page 38. + +[Illustration: Anguillula pierced by stinging organs of the _Hydra +viridis_.] + +The same excellent observer attributes the emission of the anemone +poison threads, which he considers hollow, to the injection of a fluid. +In their quiescent state, he thinks they are drawn in, like the finger +of a glove, and are forced out as the liquid enters their slender tubes. +Possibly the polyp stinging organs may have the same structure. + +Notwithstanding their dangerous weapons, polyps are often infested with +a parasite, the _Trichodina pediculus_, as shown in Fig. E, page 49, and +it must happen that either this visitation is not disagreeable, or that +the Trichodina is not influenced by the poison. + +As the plants in the bottles decayed, some of the animalcules died off +and others appeared. In one bottle, containing decaying chara, +_Paramecia_ abounded. The _Paramecia_, of which there are various +species, have always been favourite objects with microscopists. The +Germans call them "slipper animalcules," and they vary in size from +1--96"[7] to 1--1150". They are flat rounded-oblong creatures, with a +distinct integument or skin, "through which numerous vibratile cilia +pass in regular rows."[8] They are furnished with a distinct mouth, and +adult specimens exhibit star-shaped contractile vesicles in great +perfection. + +[7] The usual mode of giving dimensions is by fractions thus expressed: +1--96" means one ninety-sixth of an inch. + +[8] 'Micrographic Dictionary.' + +The swarm of specimens before us belong to one species, _Paramecium +aurelia_, the _Chrysalis animalcule_, and they crowd every portion of +the little water-drop we have taken up, and examined with a power of +about one hundred linear. When they are sufficiently quiet a power of +about four hundred may be used with advantage, and Pritchard recommends +adding a little indigo and carmine to the water, in order to see the +cilia more clearly, or rather to render their action more plain. The +cilia are disposed lengthwise, and Ehrenberg counted in some rows sixty +or seventy of them, making an aggregate of three thousand six hundred +and forty organs of motion in one small animated speck. This number +seems large, but although we have never performed the feat of counting +them, we should have expected it to prove much greater. Unlike most +animalcules they are susceptible of being preserved by drying upon +glass, and we subjoin a figure from Pritchard, of one thus treated, in +which the star-shaped vesicles are clearly seen. These curious organs +communicate with other vessels, and, as we have previously stated, are +probably connected with respiration and excretion. + +[Illustration: Paramecium aurelia. A dried specimen showing the +vesicles.--_Pritchard._] + +The genus _Paramecium_ is now confined to those creatures which exhibit +rows of longitudinal cilia of uniform length, which are destitute of +hooks, styles, or other organs of motion than the cilia, which have a +lateral mouth, and no eye-spots. One mode of increase is by division, +which may be easily observed; another is through the formation of true +eggs as traced by Balbiani. + +Another of the treasures from the pond was a species of _Trachelius_, or +long-necked ciliated animalcule, which kept darting in and out of a +slimy den, attached to the leaf of a water-plant. The body was stout and +fish-shaped, the tail blunt, and the neck furnished with long +conspicuous cilia, which enabled the advancing and retreating movements +to be made with great rapidity. The motions of this creature exhibit +more appearance of purpose and design than is common with animalcules, +but in proportion as these observations are prolonged, the student will +be impressed with the difficulty of assuming that anything like a +reasoning faculty and volition, is proved by movements that bear some +resemblance to those of higher animals, whose cerebral capacities are +beyond a doubt. It is, however, almost impossible to witness motions +which are neither constant nor periodic, without fancying them to be +dictated by some sort of intelligence. We must, nevertheless, be +cautious, lest we allow ourselves to be deceived by reasoning so +seductive, as the vital operations of the lowest organisms may be merely +illustrations of blind obedience to stimuli, in which category we must +reckon food, and until we arrive at forms of being which clearly possess +a ganglionic system, we have no certainty that a real will exists, even +of the simplest kind; and perhaps we must go still higher before we +ought to believe in its presence. + +Ehrenberg was much struck with the restless character of many +infusoria--whether he looked at them by day or by night, they were never +still. In fact their motions are like the involuntary actions which take +place in the human frame; and if attached to their bodies we observe +cilia that never sleep, the living membrane of some of our own organs, +the nose, for example, is similarly ciliated, and keeps up a perpetual +though unconscious work. + + + + +CHAPTER IV. + +MARCH. + + Paramecia--Effects of Sunlight--Pterodina patina--Curious + tail--Use of a Compressorium--Internal structure of + Pterodina--Metopidia--Trichodina + pediculus--Cothurnia--Salpina--Its three-sided box--Protrusion + of its gizzard mouth. + + +The _Paramecia_, noticed in the last chapter, have increased and +multiplied their kind without any fear lest the due adjustment between +population and food should fail to be preserved. A small drop of the +scum from the surface of the water in their bottle is an astounding +sight. They move hither and thither in countless numbers, seldom +jostling, although thick as herrings in a tub, and in many portions of +the field the process of self-fissure, or multiplication by division, is +going on without any symptoms of discomfort on the part of the parent +creature. This is an interesting sight, but we will not linger over it, +for the sun is shining, and there is enough warmth in the air to make it +probable that the ponds will be more prolific than in the cold winter +months. Sunshine is a great thing for the microscopic hunter; it brings +swarms of creatures to the surface, and the Rotifers are especially fond +of its genial beams. Even if we imitate it by a bright lamp, we shall +attract crowds of live dancing specks to the illuminated side of a +bottle, and may thus easily effect their capture by the dipping-tube. + +[Illustration: Pterodina patina.] + +This year the March sunshine was not lost, for on the third of that +month I obtained a bottleful of conferva from a pond about a mile from +my house, and lying at the foot of the Highgate hills. Water-fleas were +immediately discovered in abundance, together with some minute worms, +and a ferocious-looking larva covered with scales; but what attracted +most attention was a Rotifer, like a transparent animated soup-plate, +from near the middle of which depended a tail, which swayed from side to +side, as the creature swam along. The head exhibited two little red +eyes; two tufts of cilia rowed the living disk through the water, and +the gizzard worked with a rapid snapping motion, that left no doubt the +ciliary whirlpools had brought home no slender stores of invisible food. +Sometimes the end of the tail acted as a sucker, and fixed the animal +tightly to the glass, when the wheels were protruded, and the body +swayed to and fro. Then the sucker action ceased, and as the creature +swam away, a tuft of cilia was thrust out from the extremity of the +tail. A power of one hundred linear was sufficient to enable the general +nature of this beautiful object to be observed, but to bring out the +details, much greater amplification was required, and this would be +useless if the little fidget could not be kept still. + +[Illustration: Pterodina patina--gizzard.] + +The size of the creature, whose name we may as well mention was +_Pterodina patina_, rendered this practicable, but required some care. +The longest diameter of the body, which was not quite round, was about +1--120", so that it was visible to the naked eye, and as a good many +were swimming together, one could be captured without much difficulty, +and transferred with a very small drop of water to the live-box. Then +the cover had to be put on so as to squeeze the animal just enough to +keep it still without doing it any damage, or completely stopping its +motions. This was a troublesome task, and often a little overpressure +prevented its success. + +Some observers always use in these cases an instrument called a +_compressorium_, by which the amount of pressure is regulated by a lever +or a fine screw; but whether the student possess one or not, he should +learn to accomplish the same result by dexterously manipulating a +well-made live-box. We will suppose the _Pterodina_ successfully caged, +and a power of about one hundred and fifty linear brought to bear upon +her, for our specimen is of the "female persuasion." This will suffice +to demonstrate the disposition and relation of the several parts, after +which one of from four hundred to five hundred linear may be used with +great advantage, though in this case the illumination must be carefully +adjusted, and its intensity and obliquity frequently changed, until the +best effect is obtained. + +We find, on thus viewing the Pterodina, that it is a complex, highly +organized creature, having its body protected by a _carapace_, like the +shell of a tortoise, but as flexible as a sheet of white gelatine paper, +which it resembles in appearance. Round the margin of this carapace are +a number of little bosses or dots, which vary in different individuals. +The cilia are not disposed, as at first appeared, in two separate and +distinct disks, but are continuous, as in the annexed sketch. Down each +side are two long muscular bands, distinctly _striated_, and when they +contract, the ciliary apparatus is drawn in. As this contraction takes +place, two apparently elastic bands, to which the ciliary lobes are +attached, are bent downwards, till they look like the C springs behind a +gentleman's carriage; and they regain their former position of slight +curvature, when the cilia are again thrust out. + +[Illustration: Pterodina patina--tail-foot.] + +The gizzard is three-lobed, and curiously grasped by forked expansions +of the handles of the hammers. The tail, or tail-foot, can be withdrawn +or thrust out at the will of the creature; and when in a good position +for observation, a slight additional pressure will keep it so for +examination. Delicate muscular longitudinal bands, forked towards the +end of their course, supply the means of performing some of its motions, +and one, or perhaps two, spiral threads extend through the upper half of +its length, and either act as muscles, or as elastic springs for its +extension. The intestines and other viscera are clearly exhibited, and a +strong ciliary action conducts the food to the gizzard-mouth. + +To return to the tail. One spiral fibre is easily discovered; but I +have often, and at an interval of months, seen the appearance of two, +and am in some doubt whether this was a deception, arising from the +compression employed, or was a genuine indication. + +[Illustration: A. Metopidia acuminata, as drawn by Mr. Gosse. B. +Specimen as seen and described in text. _c._ Mouth or gizzard.] + +Where this Rotifer occurs I have usually found it plentiful, but +unfortunately could obtain no constant supplies after I had determined +to make a special study of the remarkable tail, which is much more +complicated than I have described. The _Pterodina_ lived for some time +in captivity, and for a week or two I could obtain them from my glass +tank. They were likewise to be found for some weeks in the same part of +the pond, but not all over it, until one day not a single specimen could +be discovered, notwithstanding a persevering search nor was I +afterwards able to get any from that pond during the remainder of the +year. + +[Illustration: Trichodina pediculus.] + +Several other Rotifers, with and without carapaces, were among the same +mass of confervae, among them a _Metopidia_, with a firm shell, a forked +jointed tail, and a projection in front which worked like a pickaxe +among the decaying weed. There were likewise specimens of the +long-necked animalcules (Trachelii), groups of Vorticella, some +specimens of Volvox, and a small _Trichodina pediculus_, which, when +magnified two hundred and sixty linear, was about the size of a sixpence +and equally round. The edge was beautifully fringed with a circle of +cilia; in an inner circle was a row of locomotive organs, and the centre +exhibited vacuoles constantly opening and shutting. This creature, as +before explained, is often found as a parasite upon the polyps. On one +occasion a glimpse was caught of a Rotifer similar in shape to the +common wheel animalcule, but with a yellow inside. Possibly it was the +object so beautifully delineated by Mr. Gosse, in his "Tenby," and +described as the "Yellow Philodine," but this must remain in doubt, as +it managed to escape before it could be secured. + +[Illustration: A. Cothurnia imberbis--('Micrograph. Dict.') B and C. The +specimens described in text. The figures give the _linear_ +magnification.] + +By the 18th of the month the Vorticellids were much more plentiful, and +their changes easily watched; many left their stalks while under the +microscope, after which some rushed about like animated and demented +hats, others twirled round like tee-to-tums, while others took a rest +before commencing their wild career. But the common Vorticellae were not +the only or the most interesting representations of their charming +order, for upon some threads of conferva were descried several elegant +crystal vases standing upon short foot-stalks, and containing little +creatures that jumped up and down like "Jack in the box." These were so +minute, that a power of four hundred and thirty linear was +advantageously brought to bear upon them. When elongated their bodies +were somewhat pear-shaped, but more slender, and variegated with +vacuoles and particles of food. The mouths resembled those of +Vorticellae, and put forth circles of vibrating cilia. They were easily +alarmed, when the cilia were retracted, and down they sank to the bottom +of their vases, quickly to rise again. In one bottle there were two +living in friendly juxtaposition. This was not a case of matrimonial +felicity, nor of Siamese twins, but of _fission_, or reproduction by +division. The original inhabitant of the tube finding himself too fat, +or impelled by causes we do not understand, quietly divided himself in +two, and as the house was big enough, no enlargement was required. How +many stout puffy gentlemen must envy this process; how convenient to +have two thin lively specimens of humanity made out of one too obese for +locomotion. Man is, however, sometimes the victim of his superior +organization, and no process of "fission" can make the lusty lean.[9] + +[9] Balbiani in his 'Recherches sur les Phenomenes Sexuels des +Infusoires,' speaks of the Vorticellids as the only Infusoria dividing +longitudinally. In other species such appearances arise from +conjunction. + +The bottles in which these creatures live, in happy ignorance that they +are called by so crackjaw a name as _Cothurnia imberbis_, were described +as _Carapaces_ by Ehrenberg, but they bear no resemblance to the shell +of a turtle or crab. They are thrown off by the animals who preserve no +other connection with them than the attachment at the bottom. + +The Micrographic Dictionary describes the family Ophrydina as +corresponding to Vorticellina with a carapace. Stein places them with +Vorticellids, &c., amongst his Peritricha, which are characterised by a +spiral wreath of cilia round the mouth. + +Towards the end of the month a great number of black pear-shaped bodies +(Stentor niger), visible to the naked eye, were conspicuous in some +water from the Kentish Town ponds. Upon examination they were found to +be filled with granules that were red by reflected, and purple by +transmitted light. Each one had a spiral wreath of cilia, with a mouth +situated like those of the stentors, hereafter to be described, but none +of them became stationary, and in a few days they all disappeared. Stein +divides Ehrenberg's Stentor igneus from S. niger; the creature described +seems to have agreed with Stein's _igneus_, which he describes as having +blood-red lilac, cinnabar, or brown-red pigment particles, and as much +smaller than his S. niger. In the same water were specimens of that +singular Rotifer, the _Salpina_, about 1--150" long, and furnished with +a _lorica_, or carapace, resembling a three-sided glass box, closed +below, and slightly open along the back. At the top of this box were +four, and at the bottom three, points or horns, and the creature had one +eye and a forked tail. Keeping him company was another little Rotifer, +named after its appearance, _Monocerca rattus_, the 'One-tailed Rat.' +This little animal had green matter in its stomach, which was in +constant commotion. I ought to have observed that the Salpina repeatedly +thrust out its gizzard, and used it as an external mouth. In the annexed +sketch the Salpina is seen in a position that displays the dorsal +opening of the carapace. Its three-cornered shape is only shown by a +side view. + +[Illustration: Salpina redunca.] + +Here we close a brief account of what March winds brought in their +train. The next chapter will show the good fortune that attended April +showers. + + + + +CHAPTER V. + +APRIL. + + The beautiful Floscule--Mode of seeking for Tubicolor + Rotifers--Mode of illuminating the Floscule--Difficulty of + seeing the transparent tube--Protrusion of long + hairs--Lobes--Gizzard--Hairy lobes of Floscule not rotatory + organs--Glass troughs--Their construction and use--Movement of + globules in lobes of Floscule--Chaetonotus larus--Its mode of + swimming--Coleps hirtus--Devourer of dead Entomostraca--Dead + Rotifer and Vibriones--Theories of fermentation and + putrefaction--Euplotes and Stylonichia--Fecundity of + Stylonichia. + + +Few living creatures deserve so well the appellation of "beautiful" as +the _Floscularia ornata_, or Beautiful Floscule, although to contemplate +a motionless and uncoloured portrait, one would imagine that it +exhibited no graces of either colour or form. Mr. Gosse has, however, +done it justice, and the drawing in his "Tenby" is executed with that +rare combination of scientific accuracy and artistic skill, for which +the productions of his pencil are renowned. + +[Illustration: The Beautiful Floscule. A.--Partially protruded. +B.--Freely protruded, with three eggs. C.--Appearance of young. +D.--Floscule seventeen hours old. D'.--Jaws of Floscule, as figured by +Mr. Gosse.] + +Probably the sketches in several works of authority representing the +long cilia as short bristles, are merely copies from old drawings, from +objects imperfectly seen under indifferent microscopes, and before +the refinements of illumination were understood. Be this as it may, any +reader will be fortunate if on an April, or any other morning, he or she +effects the capture of one of these exquisite objects, although the +first impression may not equal previous expectations, as the delicacy of +the organism is not disclosed by a mode of using the light which answers +well enough for the common infusoria. + +When the Floscules, or other tubicolar Rotifers are specially sought +for, the best way is to proceed to a pond where slender-leaved +water-plants grow, and to examine a few branches at a time in a phial of +water with a pocket-lens. They are all large enough to be discerned, if +present, in this manner, and as soon as one is found, others may be +expected, either in the same or in adjacent parts of the pond, for they +are gregarious in their habits. With many, however, the first finding of +a Floscule will be an accident, as was the case last April, when a small +piece of myriophyllum was placed in the live-box, and looked over to see +what it might contain. The first glimpse revealed an egg-shaped object, +of a brownish tint, stretching itself upon a stalk, and showing some +symptoms of hairs or cilia at its head. This was enough to indicate the +nature of the creature, and to show the necessity for a careful +management of the light, which being adjusted obliquely, gave quite a +new character to the scene. The dirty brown hue disappeared, and was +replaced by brilliant colours; while the hairs, instead of appearing few +and short, were found to be extremely numerous, very long, and +glistening like delicate threads of spun glass. + +Knowing that the Floscules live in transparent gelatinous tubes, such an +object was carefully looked for, but in this instance, as is not +uncommon, it was perfectly free from extraneous matter, and possessed +nearly the same refractive power as the water, so that displaying it to +advantage required some little trouble in the way of careful focusing, +and many experiments as to the best angle at which the mirror should be +turned to direct the light. When all was accomplished, it was seen that +the Floscule had her abode in a clear transparent cylinder, like a thin +confectioner's jar, which she did not touch except at the bottom, to +which her foot was attached. Lying aside her in the bottle were three +large eggs, and the slightest shock given to the table, induced her to +draw back in evident alarm. Immediately afterwards she slowly protruded +a dense bunch of the fine long hairs, which quivered in the light, and +shone with a delicate bluish-green lustre, here and there varied by +opaline tints. + +The hairs were thrust out in a mass, somewhat after the mode in which +the old-fashioned telescope hearth-brooms were made to put forth their +bristles. As soon as they were completely everted, together with the +upper portion of the Floscule, six lobes gradually separated, causing +the hairs to fall on all sides in a graceful shower, and when the +process was complete, they remained perfectly motionless, in six hollow +fan-shaped tufts, one being attached to each lobe. Some internal ciliary +action, quite distinct from the hairs, and which has never been +precisely understood, caused gentle currents to flow towards the mouth +in the middle of the lobes, and from the motion of the gizzard, +imperfectly seen through the integument, and from the rapid filling of +the stomach with particles of all hues, it was plain that captivity had +not destroyed the Floscule's appetite, and that the drop of water in the +live-box contained a good supply of food. + +Sometimes the particles swallowed were too small to be discerned, +although their aggregate effect was visible; but often a monad or larger +object was ingulfed, but without any ciliary action being visible to +account for the journey they were evidently compelled to perform. The +long hairs took no part whatever in the foraging process, and as they do +not either provide victuals or minister to locomotion, they are clearly +not, as was supposed by early observers, representatives of the +"wheels," which the ordinary Rotifers present. Neither can the +cylindrical jar or bottle be justly deemed to occupy the position of the +lorica, or carapace which we have before described. The general +structure of the creature and the nature of its gizzard distinctly +marked it out as a member of the family we call "Rotifers," but the +absence of anything like "wheels" proves that those organs are not +essential characteristics of this class. + +Noticeable currents are not always produced when the mouth of this +Floscule is fully expanded. On one occasion, one having five lobes was +discovered standing at such an angle in a glass trough that the aperture +could be looked down into. The position rendered it impossible to use a +higher power than about two hundred linear, but with this, and the +employment of carmine, nothing like a vortex was seen during a whole +evening, although a less power was sufficient to show the ciliary +whirlpools made by small specimens of _Epistylis_ and _Vaginicola_, +which were in the small vessel. The density of the integument was +unfavorable to viewing the action of the gizzard, but it could be +indistinctly perceived. The contractions and subsequent expansions of +the cup, formed by the upper part of the creature, may be one way in +which its food is drawn in, but there is no doubt it can produce +currents when it thinks proper. Sometimes animalcules in the vicinity of +Floscules whirl about as if under the influence of such currents. Some +may be seen to enter the space between the lobes, swim about inside, and +then get out again, while every now and then one will be sucked in too +far for retreat. + +Above the gizzard in the Horned Floscule,[10] I have seen an appearance +as if a membrane or curtain was waving to and fro, while another was +kept in a fixed perpendicular position. Mr. Gosse, speaking of this +genus, observes "that the whole of the upper part of the body is lined +with a sensitive, contractile, partially opaque membrane, which a little +below the disk recedes from the walls of the body, and forms a +diaphragm, with a highly contractile and versatile central orifice. At +some distance lower down another diaphragm occurs, and the ample chamber +thus enclosed forms a kind of _crop_, or receptacle for the captured +prey." + +[10] The Horned Floscules (_F. cornuta_) which I have found, and which +bred in a glass jar, were not so large as those described by Mr. Dobie, +as quoted in 'Pritchard's Infusoria.' Mr. Dobie's specimens were 1--40" +when extended; mine about half that size, five-lobed, and with a long +slender proboscis, standing in a wavy line outside one lobe. Mr. Dobie +also describes an _F. campanulata_, with five flattened lobes. The +'Micrographic Dictionary' pronounces these two species "doubtfully +distinct." I have three or four times met with a variety of _F. ornata_, +in which one lobe was much enlarged and flattened, but they had no +proboscis. In what I take for _F. cornuta_, the horn or proboscis has +sometimes been a conspicuous object, and at others so fine and +transparent as to be only visible in certain lights. + +"From the ventral side of the ample crop that precedes the stomach, +there springs in _F. ornata_ a perpendicular membrane or veil, partly +extending across the cavity. This is free, except at the vertical edge, +by which it is attached to the side of the chamber, and being ample and +of great delicacy, it continually floats and waves from side to side. At +the bottom of this _veil_, but on the dorsal side, are placed the jaws, +consisting of a pair of curved, unjointed, but free _mallei_, with a +membranous process beneath each." + +The Beautiful Floscule could always be made to repeat the process of +retreating into her den, and coming out again to spread her elegant +plumes before our eyes, by giving the table a smart knock, and her +colours and structure were well exhibited by the dark-ground +illumination, which has been explained in a previous page. + +An object like this should be watched at intervals for hours and even +days, especially if the eggs are nearly ready to give up their infantile +contents. This was the case with the specimen described, and after a few +hours a young Floscule escaped, looking very much like a clumsy little +grub. After a few awkward wriggles the new-born baby became more quiet, +and on looking at it again at the expiration of seventeen hours, it had +developed into the shape of a miniature plum-pudding, with five or six +tiny lobes expanding their tufts of slender hair. Unfortunately its +further proceedings were not seen, or it would have been interesting to +note the growth of the foot, and the formation of the gelatinous tube, +which is probably thrown off in rings. + +To view the details of the structure of a Floscule, it must be placed in +a live-box or compressorium, and if specimens are scarce, they should +not be allowed to remain in the limited quantity of water those +contrivances hold, after the observations are concluded, but should be +carefully removed, and placed in a little vial, such as homoeopathists +use for their medicine. By such means an individual may be kept alive +for many days. It is also interesting to place a little branch of the +plant occupied by Floscules or similar creatures, in a glass trough, +where they may be made quite at home, and their proceedings agreeably +watched by a one-inch or two-thirds power. These troughs,[11] which can +be obtained of the optician, should be of plate glass, about three +inches long, nearly the same height, and about half an inch wide. If +narrower, or much taller, they will not stand, which is a great +inconvenience. The pieces of glass are stuck together with marine glue, +and a very simple contrivance enables the plants or other objects to be +pressed near the front, and thus brought into better view. A strip of +glass, rather narrower than the width of the trough, is dropped into it, +and allowed to fall to the bottom. Then a piece of glass rather shorter +than the trough, and rather higher than its front side, is placed so as +to slope from the front of the bottom towards the back at the top. The +piece of glass first dropped in keeps it in the right position, and the +trough is thus made into a V-shaped vessel, wide at the top and +gradually narrowing. Any object then placed in it will fall till it fits +some part of the V, where it will remain for observation. A small wedge +of cork enables the moveable piece of glass to be thrown forwards, until +it assumes any angle, or is brought parallel to the front of the trough. + +[11] The shallow cells with thin sliding covers devised by Mr. Curteis +(of Baker's), are still more convenient when no pressure is required, +and the objects are small. When not under the microscope they can be +kept full of water by immersion in a tumbler. + +A power of five or six hundred diameters generally enables a movement of +small globules to be seen at the extremity of the lobes of the Floscule, +and the gizzard may be made plain by dissolving the rest of the creature +in a drop of solution of caustic potash. It also becomes more visible as +the supply of food falls short. Mr. Gosse describes the body as "lined +with a yellowish vascular membrane," and young specimens exhibit two red +eyes, which may or may not be found in adults. When these eyes of +Rotifers are not readily conspicuous, they must be sought for by opaque +illumination, or by the dark-ground method which, especially with the +parabola, is successful in bringing them out. + +Naturalists, and possibly the specimens also, do not always agree in +the number of lobes assigned to the "Beautiful Floscule," and although +it is easy enough to count them in _some_ positions, the observer may +have to exercise a good deal of patience before he is certain whether +they are five or six. For a long evening only five could be discerned in +the specimen now described, but the next night six were apparent without +difficulty or doubt. The hairs also will not appear anything like their +true length or number, unless the object-glass is good, and great care +is taken not to obscure them by a blaze of ill-directed light. + +[Illustration: Chaetonotus larus (swimming).] + +After the Floscules had been sufficiently admired and put aside, for +observations to be repeated on future occasions, a Rotifer attracted +attention by his merry-andrew pranks, throwing himself in all directions +by means of two long and extremely mobile toes attached to his +tail-foot. Then came a creature swimming like an otter, thrusting his +head about on all sides, and looking much more intelligent than most of +his compeers of the pond. Looked at vertically, he was somewhat +slipper-shaped, the rounded heel forming his head, then narrowing to a +waist, and expanding towards the other end, which projected in a fork. +All round him were long cilia, which were conspicuous near the head, and +a fine line indicated the passage from his mouth to the stomach, which +seemed full of granular matter. Presently he took to crawling, or rather +running, over a thread of conferva, and then his back was elegantly +arched, and his cilia stood erect like the quills of a porcupine. This +was the _Chaetonotus larus_. + +[Illustration: Chaetonotus larus (crawling).] + +In Pritchard's "Infusoria," the views of those writers are followed who +rank this animal amongst the Rotifers, and place it in the family +_Icthidina_. To help out this theory, the cilia upon the ventral surface +are imagined to form a "band-like rotary organ;" but in truth they bear +no resemblance whatever to the so-called wheels of the ordinary +Rotifers, nor is there anything like the gizzard which true Rotifers +present. Ehrenberg treated it as a Rotifer, and Dujardin placed it among +the Infusoria, in a particular class, comprehending symmetrical +organisms. The 'Microscopic Dictionary' remarks that its "structure +requires further investigation,"[12] and while the learned decide all +the intricate questions of its zoological rank, the ordinary observer +will be pleased to watch its singular aspect and lively motions. Its +size, according to the 'Micrographic Dictionary,' varies from 1--710" to +1--220", and while its general proceeding may be watched with an inch or +two-thirds object-glass, and the second eye-piece, a power of five +hundred linear (obtained by a quarter or a fifth) is required to make +out the details of its structure. If placed in a live-box with threads +of conferva, and a little decayed vegetation, it may be observed to +group about among them, and shake them like a dog. + +[12] See a valuable paper by Mr. Gosse, "History of the Hairy-backed +Animalcules," 'Intellectual Observer,' vol. v, p. 387, in which the +known species are described and reasons given for following Vogt and +ranging them with the Turbellarian worms. + +We have said that water-fleas were among the inhabitants of a bottle +filled at the pond, and as they go the way of all flesh, it is common to +find some odd-looking animalcules ready to devour their mortal remains. +These are creatures shaped like beer-barrels, upon short legs, and which +swim with a tubby rolling gait. Looking at one of these little tubs +lengthwise, a number of lines are seen, as though the edge of each stave +projected a little above the general level, and transverse markings are +also apparent, which may be compared to hoops. This is the _Coleps +hirtus_, which differs from the usual type of Infusoria, by being +symmetrical, that is, divisible into two equal and similar halves. The +dimensions of this species vary from 1--570 to 1--430, and its colour +varies from white to brown. It has been observed to increase by +transverse self-division, and has two orifices, one at each end, for +receiving food and ejecting the remains. It often requires some little +trouble to get a good view of the cilia, which are arranged in +transverse and longitudinal rows. A power of one hundred and fifty +linear is convenient for viewing it in motion, but when quiet under +pressure, one of five or six hundred may be used with advantage. + +[Illustration: Coleps hirtus.] + +Among the rubbish at the bottom of the bottle, in which the coleps was +found, was a minute dead Rotifer, the flesh of which was fast +disappearing, but upon being examined with a power of nine hundred and +sixty diameters, it was observed to swarm with extremely minute +_vibriones_, the largest only appearing under that immense magnification +like chains of bluish-green globules, not bigger than the heads of +minikin pins, while the smallest were known by a worm-like wriggling, +although their structure could not be defined. These _vibriones_ are +probably members of the vegetable world, and they always appear when +animal matter undergoes putrefaction. + +M. Pasteur has brought forward elaborate experiments to show that the +development of the yeast plant is an act correlative to alcoholic +fermentation, and in like manner the growth of _vibriones_ may stand in +correlation to putrefactive decomposition. + +[Illustration: A, Euplotes (patella); B, side view of ditto; C, +stylonichia.] + +Ehrenberg considered them animals, and fancied he detected in them a +plurality of stomachs; but the vegetable theory is the more probable, at +any rate of the species under our notice, which is often seen, though +not always so minute. + +At this time two interesting animalcules were very plentiful--the +_Euplotes patella_, and _Stylonichia_, both remarkable as exhibiting an +advance in organization, which approximates them to the higher animals. +In addition to cilia they possess _styles_, which take the place of the +limbs of more elaborately-constructed creatures, and give a variety to +their means of locomotion. The _Euplotes_ is furnished with an oval +carapace covering the upper surface, which in different individuals, and +probably at different ages, exhibits slightly varied markings round its +margin, which in the specimen drawn above consisted of dots. They can +run, climb, or swim, and exemplify a singular habit which several of the +infusoria possess, that of moving for a little time in one direction, +and then suddenly, and without any apparent cause, reversing it. If the +reader is fond of learned appellations, he can call this _diastrophy_, +but we do not know that he will be any the wiser for it. + +The Stylonichia are oval animalcules, surrounded by cilia, and having +moreover a collection of styles, both straight and curved, the latter +called _uncini_, or little hooks. They swim steadily on, and then dart +back, but not so far as they have advanced, and may be seen to keep up +this fidgety motion by the hour together. Pritchard tells us Ehrenberg +found that a single animalcule lived nine days; during the first +twenty-four hours it was developed by transverse self-division into +three animals; these in twenty-four hours formed two each in the same +manner, so that by self-division only (without ova), these animalcules +increased three or four-fold in twenty-four hours, and _may thus produce +a million_ from a single _animalcule in ten days_. Such are the amazing +powers of reproduction conferred upon these humble creatures, powers +which are fully employed when the surrounding circumstances are +favorable, and which, in the aggregate, change the condition of large +masses of matter, and bring within the circle of life millions upon +millions of particles every minute of the day. + + + + +CHAPTER VI. + +MAY. + + Floscularia cornuta--Euchlanis triquetra--Melicerta ringens--its + powers as brickmaker, architect, and mason--Mode of viewing the + Melicerta--Use of glass-cell--Habits of Melicerta--Curious + Attitudes--Leave their tubes at + death--Carchesium--Epistylis--Their elegant tree forms--A + Parasitic Epistylis like the "Old Man of the Sea"--Halteria and + its Leaps--Aspidisca Lynceus. + + +May, the first of summer months, and of old famous for floral games, +which found their latest patrons in the chimney-sweeps of London, is a +good time for the microscopist among the ponds, for the increase of +warmth and heat favours both animal and vegetable life, and so we found +as we carried home some tops of myriophyllum, and soon discovered a +colony of tubicolor rotifers among the tiny branches. They proved to be +Floscules, generally resembling the _F. ornata_, described in a previous +page, but having a long slender proboscis hanging like a loose ringlet +down one side. The cilia or hairs were not so long as in the Beautiful +Floscules we had before obtained, nor was their manner of opening so +elegant; but they were, nevertheless, objects of great interest, and +were probably specimens of the _Floscularia cornuta_. A swimming rotifer +in a carapace somewhat fiddle-shaped, with one eye in its forehead, and +a two-pronged tail sticking out behind (the _Euchlanis triquetra_), also +served to occupy attention; but a further search among the myriophyllum +revealed more treasures of the tube-dwelling kind. These were specimens +of that highly curious Rotifer, the _Melicerta ringens_, who, not +content with dwelling, like the Floscules, in a gelatinous bottle, is at +once brickmaker, mason, and architect, and fabricates as pretty a tower +as it is easy to conceive. The creature itself stands upon a retractile +foot-stalk, and thrusts out above its battlements a large head, with +four leaf-like expansions surrounded by cilia. Between the lower lobes, +or leaves, the gizzard is seen grinding away, and above it is an organ, +not always displayed, and of which Mr. Gosse was fortunate enough to +discover the use. This eminent naturalist likens it to the circular +ventilator sometimes inserted in windows, and he found it was the +machine for making the yellow ornamental bricks of which the tower is +composed. Pellet by pellet, or brick by brick, does the Melicerta build +her house, which widens gradually from the foundation to the summit, and +every layer is placed with admirable regularity. + +In order to obtain the materials for her brickmaking the Melicerta must +have the power of modifying the direction of the ciliary currents, so as +to throw a stream of small particles into the mould, which is a muscular +organ, and capable of secreting a waterproof cement, by which they are +fastened together. The result is, not to produce anything like the tubes +made by the caddis-worms out of grains of sand, but entirely to change +the appearance of the materials employed. All large particles are +rejected, and only those retained which will form a homogeneous pulp +with the viscid secretion; and when the process is complete the head of +the creature is bent down, and the pellet deposited in its appropriate +place. Each pellet appears originally to possess a more or less conical +figure, but when they are squeezed together to make a compact wall they +all tend to a hexagonal form, by which they are able to touch at all +points, and any holes or interstices are avoided. + +According to Professor Williamson the young Melicerta commences her +house by secreting "a thin hyaline cylinder," and the first row of +pellets are deposited, not at the base as would be expected, but in a +ring about the middle of the tube. "At first new additions are made to +both extremities of the enlarging ring; but the jerking constrictions of +the animal at length force the caudal end of the cylinder down upon the +leaf, to which it becomes securely cemented by the same viscous +secretion as causes the little spheres to cohere." + +Round the margins of the lobes or expansions may be seen delicate +threads towards which others radiate; these are thought by Mr. Gosse to +be portions of a nervous system, and two calcars or feelers serve as +organs of relation. The young Melicertas are likewise furnished with a +pair of eyes, which are probably rudimentary, and disappear as they grow +up. + +The Melicerta tubes, being large enough to be visible to the naked eye, +are easily crushed in the live-box, and to avoid this, they are +conveniently viewed in a shallow glass cell, covered up as before +described. By occasionally changing the water one may be kept for days +in the same cell, and will reward the pains by frequently exposing its +flower-like head. Usually the horns or feelers come out first, and then +a lump of flesh. After this, if all seems right, the wheels appear, and +make a fine whirlpool, as may be readily seen by the use of a little +indigo or carmine. + +The Melicerta is, however, an awkward object to undertake to show to our +friends, for as they knock at the door she is apt to turn sulky, and +when once in this mood it is impossible to say when her fair form will +reappear. At times the head is wagged about in all directions with +considerable vehemence, playing singular antics, and distorting her +lobes so as to exhibit a Punch and Judy profile. When these creatures +die they leave their tubes, which are often found empty in the ponds +they frequent. The Melicertas are conveniently viewed with a power of +from sixty to one hundred linear, and a colony of them may be kept alive +for some weeks in a glass jar or tank. + +Among the remainder of my tiny captives were two beautiful members of +the Vorticella family, _Epistylis_ and _Carchesium_. The reader will +remember that in the Vorticella previously described, the bells stood +upon stalks that were very flexible, and retractile by means of a muscle +running down their length. The _Epistylis_ is, as its name imports, the +dweller on a _pillar_. The stem is stiff, or only slightly flexible, and +has no apparatus by which it can be drawn down. The specimen mentioned +stood like a palm-tree, and the large oval bells drooped elegantly on +all sides, as its portrait will show. At times they nodded with a rapid +jerk. + +[Illustration: Epistylis.] + +The _Carchesium_ differs from the common _Vorticella_, by branching like +a tree, but the stems are all retractile, although the trunk seldom +exercises the power. A group of these creatures presents a spectacle of +extraordinary beauty--it looks like a tree from fairy-land, in which +every leaf has a sentient life. In general structure the bells of the +_Epistylis_ and the _Carchesium_ resemble the common _Vorticella_, and +like them may be seen with a power of about one hundred linear for +general effect, and with a higher one for the examination of special +points. Pritchard notices three species of _Carchesium_, and eighteen of +_Epistylis_;[13] some of which it is to be hoped will turn out to be +only varieties. + +[13] An interesting _Epistylis_, called _Digitalis_, from its bells +resembling fox-glove flowers in shape, occurs as a parasite upon the +_Cyclops quadricornis_, a very common entomostracan in fresh-water +ponds. At this moment I have a beautiful specimen, branching like a +bushy tree, and attached to the tail of a _Cyclops_, who can scarcely +move under his burden, which is like Sinbad's "Old Man of the Sea." + +Towards the end of this month rotifers abounded, and polyps were +plentiful. Among the rotifers was one about a two-hundredth of an inch +long, protected by a carapace, and having a tail terminating in a single +style, hence called "Monostyle." There is perhaps no class of creatures +that present so many curious and unexpected forms as the rotifers; and +although we have noticed a good many, there are far more that remain to +be found and described. + +The water in which the preceding animals dwelt was enlivened by the +jumps of the _Halteria_, a little globe surrounded by long fine cilia, +with which its movements were effected; and its companion was the +_Aspidisca lynceus_, an oval animalcule, having a distinct cilia or +_lorica_, and furnished, in addition to cilia, with bristles, which +enable it to walk and climb as well as swim. + +There were also some eggs of rotifers attached to the water plants, in +which motion could be descried at intervals, and a little red eye +observed. These eggs are always large in proportion to the creatures +that lay them, and if they escape being devoured by enemies, may be +watched until their contents step forth. + +In this, as in other months, omission is made of creatures that have +already come under notice, or our list would assume larger dimensions. + + + + +CHAPTER VII. + +JUNE AND JULY. + + Lindia Torulosa--OEcistes Crystallinus--A professor of + deportment on stilts--Philodina--Changes of form and + habits--Structure of Gizzard in Philodina family--Mr. Gosse's + description--Motions of Rotifers--Indications of a will--Remarks + on the motions of lower creatures--Various theories--Possibility + of reason--Reflex actions Brain of insects--Consensual + actions--Applications of physiological reasoning to the + movements of Rotifers and Animalcules. + + +A Pressure of other occupations prevented full use being made of June +and July, nor was the weather at all propitious. For this reason the +microscopic doings of these two months are recorded in one chapter. + +As usual the Kentish Town ponds were productive of objects, and among +them were several rotifers not found in the previous months. The first +of these was a very small worm-like thing, with one eye, a tuft of cilia +about the mouth, and two toes at the tail end. Had it not been for the +jaws, which were working like fingers thrust against each other, and +which were unmistakably of the rotifer pattern, the animal might have +been supposed to belong to some other class. According to the +'Micrographic Dictionary,' the _Lindia torulosa_ is 1--75" long, but +this specimen was only about 1--200". It was possibly very young, and +did not thrust out its cilia in two distinct tufts, as Cohn describes, +although it may have had the power of doing so. At times it sprang +quickly backwards and forwards, bringing its head where its tail was +before. This object required for its comfortable elucidation a power of +about six hundred linear. + +[Illustration: OEcistes crystallinus.] + +Among the common water-plants, which are worth examining as the probable +abodes of rotifers or infusoria, is the pretty little thing called +"star-weed," some of which was obtained from the last-mentioned ponds, +and on examination yielded a specimen of a tube-dwelling rotifer, the +_OEcistes crystallinus_, which, although less beautiful than the +Floscules or the Melicerta, is, nevertheless, a pretty and interesting +object. In this instance a little rough dirty tube, about 1--70" long, +was observed to contain an animal capable of rising up and expanding a +round mouth garnished with a wreath of cilia; while a little below, the +indefatigable and characteristic gizzard of the tribe was in full play. +A power of two hundred and forty linear sufficed to afford a good view, +and it was seen that a long, irregular, conical body was supported upon +a short wrinkled stalk. The usual drawings represent this creature with +a short bell-shaped body upon a very long slender pedicle. Possibly this +one might have been able to show himself under this guise, but he did +not attempt it; his appearance being always pretty much as described, +which made the foot shorter and the body longer than the measurements +which naturalists have given, and according to which the whole creature +is 1--36" long, although the body is only 1--140". The tube of the +_OEcistes_ is called a "lorica," or carapace; but it has in truth no +right whatever to the appellation. + +Another strange rotifer, of whose name I am uncertain, had an ovalish +oblong body, and a pair of legs like compasses, twice as long as +himself. His antics were those of a posture-master, or "Professor of +Deportment" on stilts. Sometimes he stood bolt upright, bringing his +legs close together; then they were jauntily crossed, and the body +carried horizontally; then the two legs would be slightly opened, and +the body thrown exactly at right-angles to them. These antics were +repeated all the while the observation lasted, and had a very funny +effect in proving that drollery is practised, if not understood, in the +rotatorial world. + +[Illustration: Philodina (swimming).] + +Another kind of rotifer was abundant--the _Philodina_, which belongs to +the same family as the common wheel-bearer, namely, the _Philodinaea_. +The _Philodina_ is a good deal like the common wheel-bearer, or _Rotifer +vulgaris_, but is usually of a stouter build, and carries his eyes in a +different place. In the common rotifer these organs are situated on the +proboscis, while those of the Philodina are lower, and said to be +"cervical." The changes of form in this rotifer are still more +remarkable than in the common wheel-bearer. When resting it resembles a +pear-shaped purse, puckered in at the mouth. Then it thrusts out its +tail-foot, swells its body to an oval globe, protrudes its feeler, and +slightly exposes a row of cilia. After this two distinct wheels are +everted, and as their cilia whirl and spin, the animal is swiftly rowed +along, until it thinks proper to moor itself fast by the tail-foot, and +employ all its ciliary power in causing currents to converge towards its +throat. When it pleases it can elongate the body, till it becomes +vermiform, and it walks like the common rotifer, by curving its back, +and bringing its nose and its tail in contact with the ground. + +[Illustration: Philodina (crawling).] + +The gizzard of this family (_Philodinaea_) presents a considerable +deviation from the perfect form exhibited by the _Brachions_. According +to Mr. Gosse, "The _mallei_ and the _incus_ (terms already explained) +are soldered together into two subquadrantic-globular masses, which +appear to be muscular, but invested with a solid integument. The +_manubria_ (handles) may still be recognised in a vertical aspect as +three loops, of which the central one is chiefly developed, and in a +vertical aspect as a translucent reniform (kidney-shaped) globe." These +descriptions are not easy to understand, not from any want of clearness +or precision in the words employed, but from the complicated character +of the organ, and its very different appearance under different aspects. +To make the matter more intelligible, Mr. Gosse adds, "the structure and +action of an apparatus of this type may be made more clear by a homely +illustration. Suppose an apple to be divided longitudinally, leaving the +stalk attached to one half. Let this now be split again longitudinally +so far as the stalk, but not actually separating either portion from it. +Draw the two portions slightly apart, and lay them down on their rounded +surfaces. They now represent the quadrantic masses in repose, the stalk +being the fulcrum, and the upper surfaces being crossed by the teeth. By +the contraction of the muscles, of which they are composed, the two +segments are made to turn upon their long axis, until the points of the +teeth are brought into contact, and the toothed surfaces rise and +approach each other. The lower edges do not, however, separate as the +upper edges approach, but the form of the mass alters, becoming more +lenticular, so that when the toothed surfaces are brought into their +closest approximation, the outline has a subcircular figure. It is on +account of this change of form that I presume the masses themselves to +be partially composed of muscle." + +These remarks, although specially made of the _Rotifer macrurus_, are in +the main applicable to all the Philodinas, but the student must not +expect to understand any of the complicated gizzards of the rotifers +without repeated observations, and no small exercise of patience. It is +common to call the portions of the Philodine-pattern gizzard +"stirrup-shaped," but Mr. Gosse has shown them to be _quadrantic_, that +is, shaped like the quarter of a sphere. + +As we are not very well off with subjects for description in these two +months, we can afford a little time to consider a question that +continually arises in the mind, on viewing the movements of animalcules, +and especially of any so highly developed as the rotifers, namely, to +what extent motions which appear intelligent are really the result of +anything like a conscious purpose or will. When any of the lower +animals--a bee, for example--acts in precisely the same way as all bees +have acted since their proceedings have been observed, we settle the +question by the use of the term _instinct_. Those who take the lowest +view of insect life, assume that the bee flies because it has wings, but +without wishing to use them, and that the nerves exciting them to action +are in their turn excited, not by volition, but by some physical +stimulus. + +The sight or the smell of flowers is thought by the same reasoners to be +capable of attracting the insect, which is unconscious of the +attraction, while proximity of food stimulates the tongue to make the +movements needful for its acquisition, and so forth. The cells, they +tell us, are built according to a pattern which the earliest bee was +impelled to construct by forces that bear no analogy to human reason and +human will, and so originate all the ordinary processes of bee life. +Sometimes, however, it happens that man or accident interposes +particular obstacles, and forthwith there appears a particular +modification of the orthodox plan, calculated to meet the special +difficulty. How is this? Does any one of the difficulties which the bee +or the ant is able to get over, produce precisely that kind of +electrical disturbance, or polar arrangement of nerve particles that is +necessary to stimulate the _first_ step of the action by which the +difficulty is surmounted; and does the new condition thus established +stimulate the _second_ step, and so forth, or can the bee, within +certain limits, really _think_, design, and contrive? + +No questions are more difficult of solution; but while protesting +against a tendency to undervalue all life below that of man, we must +remember we have in our bodies processes going on which are not the +result of volition, as when the blood circulates, and its particles +arrange themselves in the pattern required to form our tissues and +organs, and also that many of our actions belong to the class termed by +physiologists, "reflex," that is, the result of external impressions +upon the nervous system, in which the _sentient_ brain takes no part. +Thus when a strong light stimulates the optic nerve, the portion of +brain with which it is connected in its turn stimulates the iris to +contract the pupil; and it is supposed that after a man has begun to +walk, through the exercise of his will, he may continue to walk, by a +reflex action; as his feet press the ground they transmit an impression +to the spinal cord, and the legs receive a fresh impulse to locomotion, +although the mind is completely occupied with other business, and pays +no attention to their proceedings.[14] The ordinary movements of insects +appear to be of this character, and to be excited by the ganglia +belonging to the segment to which the moving limbs are attached. Thus a +centipede will run, after its head has been cut off, and a water-beetle +(_Dytiscus_) swam energetically when thrown into water after its brain +had been removed.[15] + +[14] See Carpenter's 'Manual of Physiology.' + +[15] Carpenter's 'Manual of Physiology,' p. 551. + +It must not, however, be assumed that the brain of insects has nothing +to do with their movements. It is probably the means of co-ordinating or +directing them to a common end, and gives rise to what are called +_consensual_ movements, that is, movements which are accompanied or +stimulated by a sensation, although not controlled by a will. In man +these actions are frequently exhibited, "as when laughter is provoked by +some ludicrous sight or sound, or by the remembrance of such at an +unseasonable hour."[16] Sneezing is another instance of a sensation +leading to certain motions, without any intervention of the human will. + +[16] Ibid., p. 543. + +Speaking of these consensual motions, Dr. Carpenter observes, "It is +probable, from the strong manifestations of emotion, exhibited by many +of the lower animals, that some of the actions which we assemble under +the general designation of instinctive are to be referred to this +group." + +The insect brain is composed of a supra-oesophagal ganglion and +infra-oesophagal one. Von Siebold says, the first corresponds to the +cerebrum of the vertebrata, and "the second is comparable, perhaps, to +the cerebellum or spinal cord."[17] The superior ganglion gives off +nerves to the antennae and eyes, the lower one to the mandibles, &c. So +far as is known the insects that exhibit the most intelligence have the +largest and best developed brains. + +[17] 'Anatomy of Invertebrates,' Burnett's trans. + +A special volume would be required for anything like a complete +examination of the little which is known on this subject, but these few +remarks may assist the microscopic beginner in examining the movements +of his subjects, and guard against the error of referring to reason and +volition those which are, probably, either the direct result of +stimulants applied to the surface (as in nerveless creatures), or the +indirect (reflex) result of such stimulants in beings like the rotifers, +who have a nervous system; or the result of _sensations_, which excite +actions without previously referring the matter to the decision of a +will. It must not, however, be too readily assumed that the behaviour of +creatures possessing distinct organs is entirely automatic; and we must +not forget that even the best physiologists know very little concerning +the range of functions which the nervous ganglia of the invertebrata are +able to discharge. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII. + +AUGUST. + + Mud coloured by worms--Their retreat at alarm--A country + duck-pond--Contents of its scum--Cryptomonads--Their means of + locomotion--A Triarthra (three-limbed Rotifer)--The Brachion or + Pitcher Rotifer--Its striking form--Enormous gizzard--Ciliary + motion inside this creature--Large eye and brain--Powerful + tail--Its functions--Eggs. + + +In the beginning of this month a pond in the Finchley Road, a little +beyond the Highgate Archway, supplied some more specimens of the +_Pterodina patina_, described in a previous chapter; but towards the +middle of the month a visit to Chipstead, in Surrey, enabled a new +region to be explored. + +It is always a treat to a Londoner to get down to any of the picturesque +parts of Surrey; the trees exhibit a richness of foliage and variety of +colour not seen within the regions of metropolitan smoke; the distance +glows with the rich purples so much admired in the pictures of Linnel, +and the sunsets light up earth and sky with the golden tints he is so +well able to reproduce. Probably the warmth of the soil, and the purity +of the air, may make Surrey ponds prolific in microscopic life; but of +this we do not know enough to make a fair comparison, although our own +dips into them were tolerably lucky. + +Walking one day down a lane leading towards Reigate, where the trees +arched overhead, ferns grew plentifully in the sandy banks, and the +sunlight flitted through the branches, and chequered the path, we came +to a shallow pond, or great puddle, which crossed the way, and near the +edge of the water the eye was struck with patches of crimson colour. On +attempting to take up a portion of one of these patches the whole +disappeared, although when the disturbance ceased the rich colour again +clothed the dingy mud. The appearance was caused by thousands of little +worms, belonging to the genus _Tubifex_, not uncommon in such +situations, who thrust themselves out to enjoy the light and air, and +retreat the moment an alarm is given. Probably both actions belong to +the class described in the last chapter, as "reflex;" but it would be +interesting to know whether creatures so humble have any sense of fear. +These worms will repay observation, but in these pages we eschew all +their tribe--unless the rotifers be assigned to them--and take ourselves +once more to our especial subjects. + +[Illustration: Cryptomonad--Euglena.] + +Knowing that farm-ponds are usually well stocked with microscopic game, +we made a dip into one more especially assigned to ducks, and obtained +wondrous little for our pains. We were not, however, discouraged, but +made an examination of the circumstances, which determined a particular +course of action. Our piece of water was simply a dirty duck-pond, in +which no large plants were growing, and which did not even exhibit the +little disks of duckweed that are common to such situations. There was, +however, on the surface, in parts, an exceedingly fine scum of pale +yellow green, and this, armed with a teaspoon, we proceeded to attack. +By careful skimming, a small bottle was half-filled with minute organic +particles, which were likely to be interesting in themselves, and pretty +sure to be the food for something else. A small drop was placed on a +tablet of the live-box, flattened out by the application of the cover, +and viewed with a power of two hundred linear, which disclosed swarms of +brilliant green globes, amongst which were a good sprinkle of minute +creatures, like the _Euglenae_ already described, and whose little red +eyes contrasted vividly with the prevailing emerald hue. + +[Illustration: Cryptomonad.] + +One of the higher infusoria, whose species I could not identify, was +devouring them like a porpoise among sprats. It did not, however, +exhibit any sense in its hungry career; it moved about in all +directions, gulping down what came in its way, but often permitting the +escape of the little green things that were almost in its mouth. The +little globes rolled and whirled about without the faintest indication +of a purpose, and without exhibiting any instrument with which their +locomotion was effected. To find out how this was done, a higher power +was used, and from their extreme minuteness an amplification of seven +hundred and twenty linear was conveniently employed, although a lower +one (three or four hundred) disclosed the secret by showing that a +little whip was flourished about through the neck, which the lower power +revealed. When highly magnified, each little globe was seen to consist +of an outer case of a reddish orange colour, which was noticeable on +looking at the edges, although in the centre it was transparent enough +to show the brilliant green contents, that resembled the chlorophyll, or +green colouring matter of plants. From a short neck proceeded the +whip-like filament, which was lashed and twisted about in all +directions. These little creatures belong to the monad family, but +whether they are to be called _Trachelomonads_, or by some other hard +name, the learned must decide. + +The 'Micrographic Dictionary' puts a note of interrogation to the +assertion of some writers that _Trachelomonads_ have no necks, and draws +some with such an appendage. + +Pritchard's last edition is against necks, and whether the necks or no +necks are to win, is a mighty question equal at least to the famous +controversy, which divided the world into "big and little endians in the +matter of breaking eggs." + +A discussion of more importance is, whether these _Cryptomonads_--that +name will do whatever comes of the neck controversy--are animals or +vegetables. Lachmann and Mr. Carter affirm that they have detected a +contractile vesicle, which would assimulate them to the animal series, +but their general behaviour is vegetable; and the 'Micrographic +Dictionary' is in favour of referring them to the _Algae_--that great +family of simple plants, of which the sea-weeds are the most important +representatives. + +[Illustration: Triarthra.] + +When any of the monads swarm, there are sure to be plenty of other +creatures to eat them up, and in this instance the predaceous +animalcule, already described, was not the only enemy the little green +globes had to suffer from, as two sorts of rotifer were frequently met +with. One of these was a very handsome and singular creature, which in +some positions had the general contour of a cockatoo, only that the legs +were wanting, and the head exhibited a monkey face. The "wheels" were +represented by ciliary tufts, and two bright red eyes twinkled with a +knowing look. From each shoulder proceeded a long curved spine, and +about two thirds down the body, and lying between the two long spines, a +shorter one was articulated, which followed the same curve. A gizzard +was busy in the breast, and the body terminated in two short toes, which +grasped a large round egg. Whenever the cilia were drawn in, the three +spines were thrown up; but they had an independent motion of their own, +and every now and then were jerked suddenly and violently back, which +occasioned a rapid change in the creature's position. The gizzard +appeared to consist of two rounded masses, having several ridges of +teeth, which worked against each other something like the prominences of +a coffee-mill. From the three spines, this animal was a _Triarthra_, or +Three-limbed Rotifer, but the position of the spines, and the toes, made +it differ from any species described in the 'Micrographic Dictionary,' +or in Pritchard. + +Whether or not this species is to be regarded as having a lorica or not, +must depend upon the precise meaning attached to that word. At any rate +the integument was much firmer than in many of the rotifers, and gave an +efficient support to the spines which a mere skin could not do. As Mr. +Gosse remarks of an allied genus, the _Polyarthra_, or Many-limbed +Rotifer, this creature could not be investigated without coming to the +conclusion "Here again we have true jointed limbs;" a fact of great +importance in determining the zoological rank of the family, and in +supporting Mr. Gosse's view some at least bore a strong affinity with +the group of _Arthropoda_, of which the insects are the principal +representatives. + +[Illustration: Brachionus urceolaris. This drawing has been accidentally +reversed by the engraver, which alters the relative place of the +internal organs.] + +Another rotifer of even greater interest, which was busy among the +Cryptomonads, was the Brachion, or "Pitcher Rotifer" (Brachionus). The +members of this genus will frequently reward the searcher into +pond-life. Their main characteristic is a cup or pitcher-shaped lorica, +which is cut or notched at the top into several horns or projections, +the number of which indicates the species; while two or more similar +projections ornament the bottom. This lorica is like the shell of a +tortoise open at both ends; from the top an extremely beautiful wreath +of cilia is protruded, and also some longer and stiff cilia, or slender +spines, which do not exhibit the rotatory movement. The ciliary +apparatus is in reality continuous, but it more often presents the +appearance of several divisions, and the lateral cilia frequently hang +over the sides. From the large size of each cilium they are very +favorable creatures for exhibiting the real nature of the action, which +gives rise to the rotatory appearance, and which can be easier studied +than described. By movements, partly from their base, and partly arising +from the flexibility of their structure, the cilia come alternately in +and out of view, and when set in a circular pattern, the effect is +amazingly like the spinning round of a wheel. The internal arrangements +of the Brachiones are finely displayed, and they have a most aldermanic +allowance of gizzard, which extends more than half way across each side +of the median line, and shows all the portions described by Mr. Gosse. +As the joints of this machine move, and the teeth are brought together, +one could fancy a sound of mill-work was heard, and the observer is +fully impressed with a sense of mechanical power. + +When the creature is obliging enough to present a full front view, her +domestic economy is excellently displayed. The prey that is caught in +her whirlpool is carried down by a strong ciliary current to the +gizzard, which may be often seen grappling with objects that appear much +too big for its grasp; and Mr. Gosse was lucky in witnessing an attempt +to chew up a morsel that did actually prove too large and too tough, and +which, after many ineffectual efforts, was suddenly cast out. As soon as +food has passed the gizzard, it is assisted in its journey by more +ciliary currents, which are noticeable in the capacious stomach, in the +neighbourhood of which the secreting and other vessels are readily +observed. Just over the gizzard blazes a great red eye, of a square or +oblong form, and it reposes upon a large mass of soft granular-looking +brain, which well justifies Mr. Gosse's epithet "enormous." Whether this +brain is highly organized enough to be a _thinking_ apparatus, we do not +know, but it is evidently the cause of a very vigorous and consentaneous +action of the various organs the Brachion possesses. + +A description of the Brachion would be very incomplete if it omitted +that important organ the tail, which in this family reaches the highest +point of development. It is a powerful muscular organ, of great size in +proportion to the animal, capable of complete retraction within the +carapace, and of being everted wholly, or partially, at will. It +terminates in two short conical toes, protruded from a tube-like sheath, +and capable of adhering firmly even to a substance so slippery as glass. +This tail may be observed to indicate a variety of emotions, if we can +ascribe such feelings to a rotifer, and it answers many purposes. Now we +see it cautiously thrust forth, and turned this way and that, exploring +like an elephant's trunk, and almost as flexible. Now it seizes firm +hold of some substance, and anchors its proprietor hard and fast. A few +moments afterwards it lashes out right and left with fury, like the tail +of a cat in a passion. Then again it will be retracted, and a casual +observer might not imagine the Brachion to be furnished with such a +terminal implement. + +The Brachiones may often be seen with one or more large eggs stuck +about the upper part of the tail, and others may be discerned inside. +One specimen before us has three eggs attached to her in this way. They +are large oval bodies, with a firm shell. These creatures differ very +much in appearance, according to the direction in which they are seen, +and a side view makes them look so different from a full front or back +aspect, that it would be easy to suppose another animal was under +observation. The extent to which the ciliary apparatus is protruded, and +the pattern it forms likewise differs continually; and hence no drawing, +however correct, is sure to resemble the arrangement that may be +presented to the observer's eye. But however our little "Pitcher" may be +viewed, it is sure to prove a spectacle of interest and delight. + + + + +CHAPTER IX. + +SEPTEMBER. + + Microscopic value of little pools--Curious facts in appearance + and disappearance of Animalcules and Rotifers--Mode of + preserving them in a glass jar--Fragments of Melicerta + tube--Peculiar shape of Pellets--Amphileptus--Scaridium + Longicaudum--A long-tailed Rotifer--Stephanoceros Eichornii--A + splendid Rotifer--Its gelatinous bottle--Its crown of + tentacles--Retreats on alarm--Illumination requisite to see its + beauties--Its greediness--Richly-coloured Food--Nervous ganglia. + + +Scattered about Hampstead Heath are a number of little pools, not big +enough to be dignified by the name of ponds. They are generally +surrounded by furze bushes, and would escape attention if not actually +looked for. Those which are mere puddles, and have only a brief +existence in rainy weather, seldom reward the labour of investigation; +but others are permanent, except after prolonged drought, and afford +convenient situations for the growth of confervae, star-weed, and other +plants. These will nearly always repay the microscopic collector during +the winter, when he must break the ice to get at their contents; in +spring, when long chains of frog-spawn afford ocular evidence of the +prolific properties of the Batrachian reptiles; and in summer, when +they afford both shade and sunshine to their numerous inhabitants. Small +beetles, water-spiders, larvae of gnats, and other insects, rotifers, +including the tubicolar sorts, and several varieties of infusoria may be +expected and generally found. There is, however, a curious fact about +ponds, big and little, which Pritchard remarks upon in his 'Infusoria,' +and which corresponds with our own experience, that those which have +proved to be well stocked with any particular creature during one year, +will very likely contain none of it in the next. There are of course +exceptions to this rule, but we have often been astonished and +disappointed at finding the complete change, both in populousness and +population, that a revolution of twelve months will make; and it would +be extremely interesting to notice the changes that took place during a +term of years. + +Such researches might unfold some unexpected laws in the succession of +infusorial life. Those germs which are most widely diffused, will be the +most likely to be developed in any mass of convenient water; but how and +why the rarer forms come and go is very imperfectly understood. Slight +modifications in surrounding circumstances will materially affect the +result. Thus, if we bring home a handful of conferva, and a few +water-plants of higher organisation, such as duckweed and anacharis, and +place the whole in a glass jar full of pond-water, we shall at first +have a good stock of objects; but they will usually grow less and less, +until scarcely anything is left. If, however, we introduce a few pieces +of straw, or a tiny wisp of hay, we shall succeed much better, and not +only preserve our population longer, but enjoy a succession of animated +crops. Extensive decomposition of vegetable matter kills off all but +certain families, such as Paramecia, who enjoy it; on the other hand, +too little decomposition proves fatal to some creatures, by depriving +them of their food, and when they have died off, those who depended upon +them for a living, die too. Different vegetables in decomposition suit +different creatures, and hay and straw in that state seem to please the +largest number. An animalcule tank will succeed best when it contains +two or three kinds of growing plants, which oxygenize the air, and a +moderate variety of decomposing organisms will supply food without +making the water offensive. + +From these considerations it will be apparent that not only the nature +of the vegetation of a pond, which is often changed by accidental +circumstances, but also the quality of the odds and ends that the winds +may blow into it, or which may fall through the air, will do much to +determine the character and number of its inhabitants, while the +quantity of shade or sunshine it enjoys, will also exercise an important +influence. Hay and other infusions have from the beginning of +microscopic investigations been employed to obtain the creatures which +the Germans call "Infusions thierchen" (infusion animalcules), and the +English "Infusoria;" but very little has yet been done in the way of +their scientific culture and management. + +To return from this digression to our little Hampstead ponds, we +obtained from one, in September, that was full of star-weed, a number of +sugar-loaf bodies, adhering to one another, and of a pale yellow brown +colour. The specimens first examined looked complete in themselves, and +were taken for eggs of some water creature. Further search, however, +disclosed aggregations of similar sugar-loaves that had evidently formed +part of a tubular structure, and the idea at once occurred that they +were fragments of a Melicerta tube, a conclusion that was verified by +finding some tubes entire and a dead Melicerta in the rubbish at the +bottom. All the specimens of Melicerta tubes we had hitherto examined +were composed of _rounded_ pellets, but these were made of pointed cones +or sugar-loaves, with the points projecting outwards from the general +surface. In Pritchard's 'Infusoria,' these pellets are described "as +small lenticular bodies." The 'Micrographic Dictionary' states that the +tubes of the Melicerta are composed of "numerous rounded or discoidal +bodies;" and Mr. Gosse, in his 'Tenby,' which contains an admirable +description, and an exquisite drawing of this interesting rotifer, calls +the pellets "round." + +[Illustration: Melicerta ringens.] + +Not being able to obtain a living specimen of the Melicerta, who made +her tube of long sugar-loaves, I could not tell whether she differed in +structure from the usual pattern of her race, but the general appearance +of the dead body was the same. It is possible that these creatures +possess some power of modifying the form of their singular bricks, or +they may at different ages vary the patterns, which matters some +fortunate possessor of a colony of these animals may be able to +verify. + +[Illustration: Scaridium longicaudum.] + +In the sediment of the water containing the Melicerta cases was found an +animalcule about 1--120" long, covered with cilia, and having a +proboscis seldom more than a quarter of the length assumed by the body, +which continually changed its form, sometimes elongating, sometimes +shortening, and often contracting one side into a deep fissure. It was, +probably, an _Amphileptus_, though not precisely agreeing with any +drawing or description I am acquainted with. Another inmate of the same +water was a lively long-tailed rotifer, with a small oval body, a tuft +of vibrating cilia and a curved bristle visible among them on one side. +This creature had a jointed tail-foot, ending in two long style-shaped +toes, and by means of this appendage executed rapid leaps or springs. It +was the _Scaridium longicaudum_, and agreed in dimensions tolerably well +with the size given in the books, namely, total length 1--72". With a +power of five hundred diameters the muscles of the tail-foot presented +a beautifully striated appearance. + +Towards the end of the month I passed the Vale of Heath Pond, Hampstead, +and although I had not gone out for the purpose of collecting, was +fortunately provided with a two-dram bottle. Close by the path the +_Anacharis alsinastrum_ grew in profusion, quantities of water-snails +crawled among its branches, and small fish darted in and out, threading +their mazes with lightning rapidity. Thrusting a walking-stick among the +mass of vegetation, a few little tufts were drawn up and carefully +bottled, with the addition of a little water. Returning home, a few +leaves were placed in the live-box, and on examination with the power of +sixty diameters they disclosed a specimen of, perhaps, the most +beautiful of all the rotifers, the _Stephanoceros Eichornii_. In this +elegant creature an oval body, somewhat expanded at the top, is +supported upon a tapering stalk, and stands in a gelatinous bottle, +composed of irregular rings superimposed one upon the other, as if +thrown off by successive efforts, the upper ones being inverted and +attached to the body of the animal. But that which constitutes the glory +of this little being is the crown of five tapering tentacles, each +having two rows of long cilia arranged on opposing sides, but not in the +same plane. The ordinary position of the tentacles is that of a graceful +elliptical curve, first swelling outwards, then bending inwards, until +their points closely approximate, but each is capable of independent +motion, and they are seldom quiet for many minutes at a time. The cilia +can be arranged in parallel rows or in tufts at the will of the +creature, and their motion appears under control, and susceptible of +greater modification than is exhibited by the ordinary infusoria. + +[Illustration: Stephanoceros Eichornii.] + +The Stephanoceros is a member of the Floscule family, but in all the +specimens I obtained and watched for several weeks, there was an +important difference in the relation of the tube to the creature. In the +Floscules I had never seen anything like an adhesion between the tube +and the animal, but in the Stephanoceros I noticed it continually, and +always in the manner already described. Like the Floscule, the +Stephanoceros is readily alarmed, and retreats into her house, carrying +with her the invaginated portion. In the last edition of 'Pritchard's +Infusoria,' this case is spoken of as apparently not tubular, but a +solid gelatinous mass, enveloping the animal as high up as the base of +the rotatory arms. It is very likely that specimens at different ages, +and possibly in different seasons, may vary in the structure of their +abodes; but I am not able to concur in the preceding account, as all the +tubes I examined resembled sacks turned in at the mouths, and attached +to the shoulders only of their inmates; and on one occasion I was able +to look down into a deserted tube, which had not collapsed, as it would +have done if it had been merely a solid gelatinous mass. + +Like the Floscule, the Stephanoceros only reveals her beauties under +careful illumination. A direct light renders them invisible, and only +when the requisite obliquity has been obtained, does the exquisite +character of the structure become displayed. The dark-ground +illumination is very useful, and makes the ciliary action very distinct. +At times a view can be obtained, in which the cilia of perhaps a single +tentacle are all ranged like the steel springs of a musical box. For a +moment they are quiescent, and then they vibrate in succession, each +moving thread sparkling in the light. With a clumsy mode of lighting +them, the cilia look like stumpy bristles, and are often so drawn; but +precisely the right quantity of light coming in the right direction, +makes them appear more numerous, and much longer than would at first be +supposed. When well exhibited the tentacles have a lustre between glass +and pearl; the body, in a favorable specimen, is like a crystal cup, and +the food, usually composed of small red and green globes, glows like +emeralds and rubies, as if in the height of luxury the little epicure +had more than rivalled Cleopatra's draught, and instead of dissolving, +swallowed its jewelry whole. So lustrous and varied in colour is the +whole appearance of the animal under these circumstances, that it is +frequently alluded to by one of our first artists, to whom it was +displayed. + +It is said by some authors that the tentacles are used to seize prey. +This never occurred under my observation, although their basal portions +are often approximated when an object is forced down to the grinding +apparatus below. The Stephanoceros is a ravenous feeder, and swallows a +variety of creatures. Green vegetable monads, rich red and brown globes +of similar characters, and any animalcule that comes in her way is +acceptable; and even good-sized rotifers do not escape her +all-consuming maw. On one occasion I noticed one of the loricated sort, +more than half as long as one of her tentacles, rapidly swallowed, and +passed downwards without attempting to escape. Objects much too big for +the gizzard are often gulped down, and probably receive a preliminary +softening and maceration in the crop. Very often, when food is +plentiful, the creature is filled to the brim, but still endeavours to +continue her abundant meal. From the presence of large quantities of +food and the density of the integuments, the gizzard cannot always be +seen; but in favorable specimens its teeth may be observed busily at +work. + +At the base of the tentacles small masses of matter may be discovered, +which are probably nervous ganglia, and other organs; and Ehrenberg +discovered small vibrating bodies, supposed to be connected with the +function of respiration. A single egg, as shown in the annexed drawing, +is often found, and the ovarian is said to develop but few at a time. +Two red eyes are found in young specimens, but in adults they either +disappear or are not conspicuous. The Stephanoceri are sociable animals, +and when one is found, others are probably near at hand. Several may +often be discovered on the same branch of a small water-plant, of +various dimensions, and in different stages of growth. The full size is +about 1--36" in height, and from its magnitude care is required not to +crush it in the live-box. When specimens are plentiful, some should be +placed in that convenient receptacle; and others with the plant on which +they are growing, in a glass cell or trough, where they have more room +to display their motions, and can with fresh supplies of water, be +preserved for days and weeks. With occasional renewals from one pond, I +was able to keep up a stock for about three months, and never had +objects which gave more pleasure to myself or to my friends. + + + + +CHAPTER X. + +OCTOBER. + + Stentors and Stephanoceri--Description of Stentors--Mode of + viewing them--Their abundance--Social habits--Solitary Stentors + living in Gelatinous caves--Propagation by divers + modes--Cephalosiphon Limnias--A group of Vaginicolae--Changes of + shape--A bubble-blowing Vorticella. + + +October, the finest of our autumn months, is noted for usually granting +the inhabitants of our dripping climate about twenty pleasant sunshiny +days, and it is probably on this account somewhat of a favourite with +the infusorial world, although the cold of its nights and early mornings +thins their numbers, which reach a maximum in the summer heat. Even in +the dismal year 1860, October maintained its character, and afforded a +great many opportunities of animalcule hunting, during which a constant +supply of Stephanoceri were readily obtained, together with swarms of +_Stentors_, which are not exceeded in interest by any of the Ciliated +Protozoa. The Stentors were abundant on the same weed (_Anacharis_), +that formed the residence of the Stephanoceri, and might be seen in +large numbers hanging from it like green trumpets, visible to the +unassisted eye. In the 'Micrographic Dictionary' they are said to +belong to the Vorticella family, which has already given us several +beautiful objects, and possess a marvellous power of changing their +shape. It is, however, better to follow Stein, who separates them from +the Vorticellids and ranges them in his order Heterotricha, as they have +two distinct sets of cilia, small ones covering the body and the larger +ones round the mouth. Those before us are named after this property +_Stentor polymorphus_,[18] or Many-shaped Stentors, and owe their +exquisite tint to numberless green vesicles, or small cavities filled +with colouring matter like that of plants. This, however, is not +essential to the species which may often be found of other hues. In size +this Stentor varies from a hundred and twentieth to one twenty-fourth of +an inch. It is entirely covered with fine cilia, disposed in +longitudinal rows, and round the head is a spiral wreath of larger and +very conspicuous cilia leading to the mouth. + +[18] See Frontispiece. + +Having observed the abundance of these creatures, a few small branches +to which they were appended, were placed in the glass trough, and viewed +with powers of sixty and one hundred linear. Some had tumbled down as +shapeless lumps, others presented broad funnel-shaped bodies; while +others stretched themselves to great length like the long, narrow +post-horns which still wake the echoes of a few old-fashioned towns. The +ciliary motion of the elegant wreath was active and rapid, causing quite +a stir among all the little particles, alive and dead; and when the +right sort of food came near the corkscrew entrance to the mouth, down +it went, and if conspicuous for colour, was subsequently seen apparently +embedded in little cavities, which Ehrenberg supposed were separate +stomachs, although that theory is now rejected. One advantage of viewing +these objects in a sufficient quantity of water, to leave them in +freedom, is that they frequently turn themselves, so that you can see +right down into them; and the drawing given in the frontispiece +represents such a view, which is the most favorable for the exhibition +of the mouth. To make out the details of their structure, to see the +nucleus and other organs, the flattening in the live-box is useful, and +it enables much higher powers to be employed. + +[Illustration: A, B, C, D, Stentor polymorphus in different degrees of +expansion. A large specimen is one twenty-fourth of an inch long.] + +After leaving the Anacharis in a glass jar for a few days, the Stentors +multiplied exceedingly; some clung to the sides of the vessel in +sociable communities, others hung from the surface of the water, and +crowds settled upon the stems, visibly changing their tint, as the +Stentor green was much bluer than that of the plant. Scores swam about +in all sorts of forms. Now they looked like cylindrical vessels with +expanding brims, now globular, now oddly distorted, until all semblance +of the original shape was lost. Many were found in shiny tubes, but +these were never so lively or green as the free swimmers, but mostly of +a dingy dirty hue. + +These housekeepers were more timid and cautious than the roving tribe. +They came slowly out of their dens, drew back at the slightest alarm, +never took their tails from home, and only extended their full length +when certain not to be disturbed. Some authors have thought they only +take to private lodgings when they feel a little bit poorly, but others +dispute this opinion, and I do not think it is correct. I have found +these Stentors at all seasons, from January to the autumn, but they are +never so numerous, nor aggregated in numbers like the roving sort. +Whether they are old folks, who are tired of the world and its gaieties, +and devote the remainder of their lives to contemplation, or whether +they are bachelors disappointed in love, I am unable to say; but they +are very inferior in beauty to the "gay and glittering crowd."[19] + +[19] Stein says the colourless variety of S. Polymorphus is sometimes +found with a tube, and the S. Roessellii very frequently so provided. + +For some weeks my Stentors abounded, and then most of them suddenly +disappeared. They could not have "moved," but probably "went to smash" +by a process peculiar to infusoria, and which Dujardin politely +describes as "diffluence." This mode of making an exit from the stage of +life is more tragical than the ripping up so fashionable in Japan. The +integument bursts, and its contents disperse in minute particles, that +in their turn disappear, and scarcely leave a "wrack behind." + +The Stentors obey the injunction to "increase and multiply" by +self-division, which Stein says is always oblique, and the nucleus, +which plays such an important part in infusoria, is band-like, +moniliform (bead-shape), or round. When an animalcule increases by +self-division, a portion of the nucleus goes with each part, and it is +probably the organ which stimulates the change. It is also concerned in +other modes of propagation. "The anus is situated on the back close +beneath the ciliary circle;" and the "contractile vesicle on a level +with the ciliary wreath." Stein records that in November, 1858, he met +green Stentors (_Polymorphus_) encysted, and he figures one in a +gelatinous flask having a stopper in its narrow neck. + +Before closing our account of the Stentor, let us revert a moment to the +ciliary wreath, as it may be made the subject of a curious experiment. +If, for example, the cilia are viewed at right-angles to their length, +they will seem to form a delicate frill, in which a quivering motion is +perceived. But if the table is shaken by a sharp blow, the frill is +thrown into waves, or takes the form which washerwomen give to certain +female articles by the use of the Italian iron, and the ciliary motion +is thus made to take place in different planes, and rendered strikingly +apparent. + +One day turning over the Anacharis in search of subjects, a small brown +tube was noticed, from which a glassy rod protruded like the feeler of a +rotifer. Keeping the table quiet, and watching the result, was soon +rewarded by a further protrusion of the feeler, accompanied by a portion +of the body of the inmate of the tube. The feeler was thrust on this +side and on that, as if collecting information for its proprietor, who, +I suppose, was satisfied with the intelligence, and gradually extended +herself, until she stood out two thirds in length beyond the tube, and +set two lobes of one nearly continuous ciliary organ in rapid motion. +Sometimes the creature, _Cephalosiphon limnias_, bent its neck, if I may +so speak, to the right, and sometimes to the left, and sometimes stood +upright, when the true form of the ciliary apparatus could be seen. The +tube of this creature was opaque, from the adhesion of foreign matter, +and presented an untidy appearance, strangely contrasting with the +clear, neat bottles of the Floscules. These Cephalosiphons are very +whimsical in their ways, and many that were sent to different observers +never exhibited their ciliary wreaths, but performed sundry antics, +disguising their true shape. + +[Illustration: Cephalosiphon limnias.] + +Somewhat like the Cephalosiphon, though much commoner and without the +siphon, is Limnias ceratophylli, which every collector is sure to meet. +The length of the Limnias varies, according to Pritchard, from 1--20" to +1--40". Our Cephalosiphon, when fully extended and magnified one hundred +and eighty linear, looked about three inches and a half long, and was +therefore very small. Just below the ciliary lobes the gizzard was seen, +with its toothed hammers working one against the other. The masticatory +organ differs from the typical form, as represented in the Brachion; and +Mr. Gosse observes of Limnias that "each _uncus_ forms, with its +_ramus_, a well-defined mass of muscle enclosing the solid parts, and in +form approaching the quadrature of a globe. Across the upper surface of +the mass the _uncus_ is stretched like three long parallel fingers, +arched in their common direction, and imbedded in the muscular +substances, their points just reaching the opposing face of the _ramus_, +and meeting the points of the opposite _uncus_ when closed."[20] + +[20] The terms _uncus_, _ramus_, etc., have been explained in Chapter +II, page 28. + +There is no connection between Limnias or Cephalosiphon and their tubes, +except that of simple adhesion, which takes place by means of the end of +their foot-stalks. + +In a former chapter we have described an interesting relation of the +Vorticella, the Cothurnia, whose elegant crystal vases form a very +artistic abode, characterised by possessing a distinct foot. Other +species of the same family inhabit vases which have no foot or stalk, or +live in gelatinous sheaths less accurately fashioned. Sometimes these +creatures are obliging enough to conform to the specific descriptions +which eminent naturalists have given of them, and also to the characters +which the authorities have assigned to the different genera in which +they have been grouped, but the microscopist will often meet with +difficulties in the way of classification. + +[Illustration: Vaginicola (?) (A, elongated; B, retracted.)] + +Attached to a piece of weed were a number of cylindrical masses of +brownish jelly, with rounded tops, and situated in an irregular and very +transparent sheath, about twice as high as themselves. Presently they +all rose up to four times their previous height, put forth a beautiful +crown of vibrating cilia, and opened a sort of trap-door to their +internal arrangements. In this position they had a long cylindrical +form, gracefully curved, but of nearly equal width from the mouth to the +base, and they readily imbibed particles of carmine, which tinged sundry +little cavities with its characteristic hue. The slightest disturbance +caused the ciliary wreaths to be drawn in, and the bodies to be +retracted, and descend into their house like a conjuring toy, until the +appearance first described was reproduced. + +The general form and structure of these objects was like the drawings +usually given of _Vaginicola_, which is said not to exist in groups, +although two individuals are commonly found in one well-shaped cell. +These creatures, however, did not taper towards the base as Vaginicolae +generally do, and perhaps they became aware of this defect in their +figures, for after a day or two a change appeared, and they assumed a +more graceful form by swelling out in the middle, and then growing +slender down to the bottom, very much like the pattern given by +glass-blowers to little vases of flowers. + +It is very important to note the changing appearance of animalcules, and +where the same individuals can be observed from day to day, these will +often be found considerable. It is probable that when such particulars +are fully known, the number of species will be greatly reduced, and the +study of these organisms considerably simplified. I have called the +animals just described _Vaginicolae_, but the reader must be prepared to +find similar bodies, inhabiting well-formed vases, either solitarily or +in couples, the latter condition arising from the fission of one +individual without a corresponding division of the abode. + +For a few weeks I continually met with groups living as I have +described, in what may be called amorphous cells, which were often so +nearly like the surrounding water in refracting power, as to be +discerned with some difficulty. No trace could be seen of divisions +into separate cells, but they all appeared to live happily together in +one room, and if one went up all went up, and if one went down all went +down, as if their proceedings were regulated by a community of sensation +or will. + +Another little curiosity was a transparent cup upon a slender stem, +which stood upright like a wineglass, and supported on its mouth a +transparent globe. By removing a leaf which prevented the stalk being +traced to its termination, it was found to be a Vorticella, and after +two hours the globe was partially drawn in, and reduced in size. Why the +creature was engaged in blowing this bubble I do not know, and have not +met with another instance of such conduct. + + + + +CHAPTER XI. + +NOVEMBER. + + Characteristics of the Polyzoa--Details of structure according + to Allman--Plumatella repens--Its great beauty under proper + illumination--Its tentacles and their cilia--The mouth and its + guard or epistome--Intestinal tube--How it swallowed a Rotifer, + and what happened--Curiosities of digestion--Are the tentacles + capable of Stinging?--Resting Eggs, or "Statoblasts"--Tube of + Plumatella--Its muscular Fibres--Physiological importance of + their structure. + + +During the fag end of last month I observed some fragments of a new +creature among some bits of Anacharis, from the Vale of Heath Pond, and +searched for complete and intelligible specimens without effect. Luckily +one evening a scientific neighbour, to whom I had given some of the +plant for the sake of the beautiful _Stephanoceri_ which inhabited it, +came in with a glass trough containing a little branch, to which adhered +a dirty parchment-like ramifying tube, dotted here and there with brown +oval masses, and having sundry open extremities, from which some +polyp-shaped animals put forth long pearly tentacles margined with +vibrating cilia, and making a lively current. The creatures presented an +organization higher than that of polyps, for there was an evident +_differentiation_ and complication of parts. They belonged to the +_Polyzoa_ or _Bryozoa_,[21] a very important division of the _mollusca_. +The _Polyzoa_ are chiefly marine, and the common "sea-mat," often +erroneously treated as a _sea-weed_, is a well-known form. A species of +another order often picked up on our coasts is the _Sertularia_, or +Sea-Fir, composed of delicate branching stems of a horny-looking +substance, which, under a pocket-lens, is found to contain an immense +number of small cells inhabited by Polyps. It is instructive to compare +the two and note how much more advanced in structure is the Polyzoon +than the polyp. + +[21] _Polyzoa_ means "many animals," in allusion to their habit of +living in association. _Bryozoa_, "moss-animals," from some forming +cells having that appearance. + +[Illustration: Plumatella repens. Single Polypide enlarged] + +Polyzoa were formerly associated with the polyps, to which they bear a +strong superficial resemblance; but they are of a much higher degree of +organization, as will be seen by comparing what has been said in a +former chapter on the _Hydra_, with the description which we now proceed +to abridge from Dr. Allman's splendid monograph on the fresh-water +kinds. In order to get a general conception of a Polyzoon, the Professor +tells us to imagine an alimentary canal, consisting of oesophagus, +stomach, and intestine, to be furnished at its origin with long ciliated +tentacles, and to have a single nervous ganglion on one side of the +oesophagus. We must then conceive the intestine bent back till its +anal orifice comes near the mouth; and this curved digestive tube to be +suspended in a bag containing fluid, and having two openings, one for +the mouth and the other for the vent. A system of muscles enables the +alimentary tube to be retracted or protruded, the former process pulling +the bag in, and the latter letting it out. The mouth of the bag is, so +to speak, tied round the creature's neck just below the tentacles, which +are the only portions of it that are left free. The investing sack has +in nearly every case the power of secreting an external sheath, more or +less solid, and which branches forming numerous cells, in which the +members of the family live in a socialistic community, having, as it +were, two lives, one individual, and the other shared in common with the +rest. + +The whole group of tubes and cells, whatever may be the form in which +they are aggregated, is called the _Polypary_, or, as Dr. Allman +prefers, the _Coenoecium_ (common house); the creature he names a +_Polypide_[22] (polyp-like); and the disk which bears the tentacles +_Lophophore_ (crest-bearer). There are some more hard words to be learnt +before the student can enjoy himself scientifically among the Polyzoa, +and we shall be compelled to employ some of them before we have done; +but will now endeavour to describe what was presented to our view by the +specimen obtained from the Hampstead Pond. + +[22] _Polyzoon_ is preferable, as avoiding confusion with _polypite_, +used for another class of object. + +The general aspect of a branch of _Plumatella repens_--the creature we +have to describe--is given in the drawing annexed. When all was quiet, +the mouths of the bags belonging to each cell were slowly everted, and +out came a numerous bundle of tentacles, which were either spread like +the corolla of a flower, or permitted to hang dishevelled like the +snake-locks of Medusa. We will suppose these organs symmetrically +expanded, and that we are looking down upon them with a magnifying power +of sixty diameters, the light having been carefully adjusted by turning +the reflecting mirror a little on one side, to avoid a direct glare. The +tentacles, each of which curves with a living grace, and displays an +opaline tint in its glassy structure, do not form a complete circle, for +at one place we discern two slightly diverging arms of the disk, or +frame (Lophophore) from which they grow. + +These arms support tentacles on each side, and leave a gap between, so +that the whole pattern is _crescentic_, or crescent-shaped, and not +circular. Extending as far as the points of the arms, and carried all +round the crescent, is an extremely delicate membrane, like the finest +gauze, which unites all the tentacles by their basal portions, and makes +an elegant retreating curve between every two. Each tentacle exhibits +two rows of cilia, which scintillate as their vibrations cause them to +catch the light. The motion of the cilia is invariably _down_ one side +and _up_ the other, the current or pattern being carried on from one +tentacle to the other, all through the series. This characteristic, and +the facility with which each cilium can be distinguished, gives great +interest and beauty to the spectacle of this wonderful apparatus, by +which water-currents are made to bathe the tentacles, and assist +respiration, and also to carry food towards the mouth, over which a sort +of finger or tongue is stretched to guard the way, and exercise some +choice as to what particles shall be permitted to pass on. This organ is +called the _epistome_, from two Greek words, signifying "upon the +mouth." + +If the cell is an old one, it may be covered with so much extraneous +matter as to obscure the economy within; but we are fortunate in having +a transparent specimen before us, through which we can see all that goes +on. The alimentary tube, after forming a capacious cavity, much longer +than it is broad, turns round and terminates in an orifice near the +mouth, and just below the integuments. When refuse has to be discharged, +this orifice is protruded; and after the operation is over, it draws +back as before. Long muscles, composed of separate threads or fibres, +pull the creature in and out of its cell, and at the part where the +stomach ends, and the intestine turns round, is attached a long flexible +rope, called the _funiculus_, which goes to the bottom of the cell. The +passage of the food down to the stomach, its digestion, and the eviction +of the residue, can all be watched; and when a large morsel is +swallowed, the spectacle is curious in the extreme. + +One day a polyzoon caught a large rotifer, (_R. vulgaris_,) which, with +several others of its tribe, had been walking over the _coenoecium_, +and swimming amongst the tentacles, as if unconscious of danger. All of +a sudden it went down the whirlpool leading to the mouth, was rolled up +by a process that could not be traced, and without an instant's loss of +time, was seen shooting down in rapid descent to the gulf below, where +it looked a potato-shaped mass, utterly destitute of its characteristic +living form. Having been made into a bolus, the unhappy rotifer, who +never gave the faintest sign of vitality, was tossed up and down from +the top to the bottom of the stomach, just as a billiard-ball might be +thrown from the top to the bottom of a stocking. This process went on +for hours, the ball gradually diminishing in size, until at last it was +lost in the general brown mass with which the stomach was filled. The +bottom of the stomach seems well supplied with muscular fibres, to cause +the constrictions by which this work is chiefly performed, and by +keeping a colony for a month or two, I had many opportunities of seeing +my Polyzoa at their meals. + +When alarmed the tentacles were quickly retracted, but although these +creatures are said to dislike the light, and usually keep away from it +in their native haunts, my specimens had no objection to come out in a +strong illumination, and seemed perfectly at their ease. They were +indeed most amiable creatures, and never failed to display their charms +to admiring visitors, who rewarded them with unmeasured praise. Twice I +had an opportunity of observing an action I cannot explain, except by +supposing either that the tentacles of the _Plumatella_ have some +poisonous action, or that rotifers are susceptible of fear. On these +occasions the common rotifer was the subject of the experiment. First +one and then another got among the tentacles, and on escaping seemed +very poorly. One fellow was, to borrow a phrase from Professor Thomas +Sayers, "completely doubled up," and two or three seconds--long periods +in a rotifer's life--elapsed before he came to himself again. + +By keeping a colony of the Plumatella for a few weeks in a glass trough, +and occasionally supplying them with fresh water from an aquarium, +containing the animalcules, they are easily preserved in good health, +and as they develop fresh cells, the process of growth may be readily +watched. This production of fresh individuals enlarges the parent +colony, but could not be the means of founding a new one, which is +accomplished by two other modes. A little way down the cells Professor +Allman discovered an ovary attached to the internal tube by a short +_peduncle_, or foot stalk, while a testis or male generative organ is +attached to the _funiculus_, or "little rope," we have already +described. + +July and August are the best times for observing the ovaries, and they +are most conspicuous in the genera _Alcyonella_ and _Paludicella_. True +eggs are developed in the ovaries in a manner resembling this mode of +multiplication in other animals; but there is another kind of egg, or, +perhaps to speak more properly, a variety of bud, which is extremely +curious. In looking at our specimens we noticed brown oval bodies in the +cells; these, on careful examination, presented the appearance of the +sketch. The centre is dark, covered with a network, which is more +conspicuous in the lighter coloured and more transparent margins. These +curious bodies are produced from the funiculus, and act as reserves of +propagative force, as they are not hatched or developed until they get +out and find themselves exposed to appropriate circumstances. Professor +Allman names them _Statoblasts_, or stationary germs, and they bear some +resemblance to what are called the "winter eggs" of some other +creatures. The Professor was never able to discover any mode by which +they were permitted to escape from the cells, and in our colonies none +were allowed to leave their homes until the death of their parent, and +the decomposition of its cell had taken place; a process which went on +contemporaneously with the growth of new cells, until the plant on which +the _coenoecium_ was situated, rotted away, and then unfortunately +the whole concern went to pieces. + +[Illustration: Plumatella repens on a leaf.] + +The tubes of the _Plumatella_, and of most other Polyzoa, are composed +of two coats, called respectively _endocyst_ and _ectocyst_, that is, +"inner case" and "outer case." The first is vitally endowed, and +exhibits vessels and muscular fibres. The second or outer case is thrown +off by the first. It is a parchment-like substance, strengthened by the +adhesion of dirt particles, and does not appear to exercise any vital +functions, but to be merely a covering for protection. The inner layer +terminates in the neck of the bag before described, as exserted when the +polypide comes out, and inverted when it goes in. This mode of making a +case or sheath by inversion of a bag is technically called +_invagination_, and is readily seen in new and transparent cells. + +The movement of _eversion_, or coming out, is chiefly produced by the +contraction of the endocyst; while the _inversion_, or getting in again, +is performed by the long muscles, which, when the animal is extended, +are seen attached to it like ropes. Upon these muscles Professor Allman +remarks that they are "especially interesting in a physiological point +of view, as they seem to present us with an example of true muscular +tissue, reduced to its simplest and essential form. A muscle may here +be viewed as a beautiful dissection far surpassing the most refined +preparation of the dissecting needle, for it is composed of a bundle of +elementary fibres, totally separate from one another through their +entire course." He further adds, "The fibres of the great retractor +muscle are distinctly marked by transverse striae;--a condition, however, +which is not at all times equally perceptible, and some of our best +observers have denied to the Polyzoon the existence of striated fibre." + +We can confirm the fact of this sort of fibre being present, but we +fancy a reader not versed in the mysteries of physiology exclaiming, +'What does it matter whether his fibres are striped or not?' + +Physiologists used to suppose there was a strong and marked distinction +and separation between _striped_ muscles, that is, muscles the fibres of +which exhibit transverse stripes when magnified, and those which do not. +Koelliker, however, says this decided separation can no longer be +maintained,[23] and he gives instances in proof of the connections that +can be traced between the two forms. In the higher animals the striped +muscles are the special instruments of _will_, and of movements that +follow, or are accompanied by, distinct sensations. Striped fibre must +be regarded as the highest form; and as a muscle of this sort contracts +in length it increases uniformly in breadth. + +[23] 'Manual of Human Microscopic Anatomy,' p. 63. + +There are many other genera and species of fresh-water polyzoa besides +the _Plumatella repens_, and they are found attached to sticks, stones, +or leaves, generally to the under surface of the latter. They are all +objects of great interest and beauty, which, whatever their diversity, +conform sufficiently to one type that the student who has observed one, +will easily recognise the zoological position of another. They should be +viewed by transmitted and by dark-ground illumination, which produces +very beautiful effects. To observe them in the performance of their +functions, they require more room than the live-box can afford, but are +well shown in the glass trough, whose moveable diaphragm enables them to +be brought near enough to the object-glass, for the use of a power of +about sixty linear for general purposes, and of from one to two hundred +for the examination of particular parts. For a more detailed examination +dissection must be employed, but all that we have mentioned can be seen +without injury to the living animal, if specimens are kept till new +cells are formed in water, which does not contain enough dirt to render +their integuments opaque. + + + + +CHAPTER XII. + +DECEMBER. + + Microscopic Hunting in Winter--Water-bears, or Tardigrada--Their + comical behaviour--Mode of viewing them--Singular gizzard--A + compressorium--Achromatic condenser--Mouth of the + Water-bear--Water-bears' exposure to heat--Soluble + albumen--Physiological and chemical reasons why they are not + killed by heating and drying--The Trachelius ovum--Mode of + swimming--Method of viewing--By dark-ground + illumination--Curious digestive tube with + branches--Multiplication by division--Change of form immediately + following this process--Subsequent appearances. + + +There is always satisfaction in finding a work accomplished; but the +attempt to delineate some of the marvels of minute creation has been a +pleasant one, and we approach the completion of our task of recording a +_Microscopic Year_ with something like regret. The dark, dirty December +of the great metropolis may not seem a promising time for field +excursions, but some ponds lie near enough to practicable roads and +paths to render an occasional dip in them, not of ourselves, but of our +bottles--an easy and not unpleasant performance; and if the weather is +unusually bad, we can fall back upon our preserves in bottles and tanks, +which seldom fail to afford something new, as we have been pretty sure +to bring home some undeveloped germs with our stock of pond-water and +plants, and even creatures of considerable size are very likely to have +escaped detection in our first efforts at examination. + +When objects are not over abundant, as is apt to be the case in the cold +months, it is well to fill a large vial with some water out of the +aquarium or other large vessel, and watch what living specks may be +moving about therein. These are readily examined with a pocket-lens, and +with a little dexterity any promising creature can be fished out with +the dipping-tube. It is also advisable to shake a mass of vegetation in +a white basin, as the larger infusoria, &c., may be thrown down; and +indeed this method (as recommended by Pritchard) is always convenient. +Even so small a quantity of water as is contained in a glass cell, +appropriated to the continual examination of polyps or polyzoa, should +be frequently hunted over with a low power, as in the course of days and +weeks one race of small animals will disappear, and another take their +place. + +Following these various methods in December, we obtained many specimens; +but the most interesting was found by taking up small branches of the +Anacharis with a pair of forceps, and putting them into a glass trough +to see what inhabitants they might possess. One of these trials was +rewarded by the appearance of a little puppy-shaped animal very busy +pawing about with eight imperfect legs, but not making much progress +with all his efforts. It was evident that we had obtained one of the +_Tardigrada_ (slow-steppers), or Water-Bears, and a very comical amusing +little fellow he was. The figure was like that of a new-born puppy, or +"unlicked" bear cub; each of the eight legs were provided with four +serviceable claws, there was no tail, and the blunt head was susceptible +of considerable alteration of shape. He was grubbing about among some +bits of decayed vegetation, and from the mass of green matter in his +stomach, it was evident that he was not one of that painfully numerous +class in England--the starving poor. + +[Illustration: Water-Bear.] + +A power of one hundred and five linear, obtained with a two-thirds +object-glass, and the second eye-piece, enabled all his motions and +general structure to be exhibited, and showed that he possessed a sort +of gizzard, whose details would require more magnification to bring out. +Accordingly the dipping-tube was carefully held just over him, the +finger removed, and luckily in went the little gentleman with the +ascending current. He was cautiously transferred to a Compressorium,[24] +an apparatus by which the approach of two thin plates of glass can be +regulated by the action of a spring and a screw; and just enough +pressure was employed to keep him from changing his place, although he +was able to move his tiny limbs. Thus arranged, he was placed under a +power of two hundred and forty linear, and illuminated by an achromatic +condenser,[25] to make the fine structure of his gizzard as plain as +possible. It was then seen that this curious organ contains several +prominences or teeth, and is composed of muscular fibres, radiating in +every direction. From the front of the gizzard proceed two rods, which +meet in a point, and are supposed to represent the maxillae or jaws of +insects, while between them is a tube or channel, through which the food +is passed. The mouth is _suctorial_, and the two horny rods, with their +central piece or pieces, are protrusile. They were frequently brought as +far as the outer lips (if we may so call the margins of the mouth), but +we did not witness an actual protrusion, except when the lips +accompanied them, and formed a small round pouting orifice. The skin of +the animal was tough and somewhat loose, and wrinkled during the +contractions its proprietor made. The interior of the body exhibited an +immense multitude of globular particles of various sizes in constant +motion, but not moving in any vessels, or performing a distinct +circulation. + +[24] The best forms of this instrument are made by Messrs. R. & J. Beck, +the glass plates being held in their places by flat-headed screws, and +not by cement. This plan was devised by the author, and makes it easy to +renew the glasses when broken. + +[25] The achromatic condenser is a frame capable of supporting an +object-glass, lower than that employed for vision, through which the +light passes to the object in quantities and directions determined by +stops of various shapes. The appearances mentioned can be seen without +it, though not so well. + +My specimens had no visible eyes, and these organs are, according to +Pritchard's book, "variable and fugacious." The same authority remarks, +"In most vital phenomena they very closely accord with the rotatoria; +thus like these they can be revived after being put into hot water at +113 deg. to 118 deg., but are destroyed by immersion in boiling water. They may +be gradually heated to 216 deg., 252 deg., and even 261 deg. It is also by their +capability of resuscitation after being dried that they are able to +sustain their vitality in such localities as the roofs of houses, where +at one time they are subjected to great heat and excessive drought, and +at another are immersed in water." + +When vital processes are not stopped by excess of temperature, as is the +case with the higher animals, the power of resisting heat without +destruction depends upon the condition of the albumen. Soluble albumen, +or, as it should be called, _Albuminate of Soda_ (for a small quantity +of that alkali is present and chemically united with it), after having +been _thoroughly dried_, may be heated without loss of its solubility; +although if the same temperature was applied before it was dry, that +solubility would be destroyed, and it would no longer be a fit +constituent of a living creature. As Dr. Carpenter observes, this fact +is of much interest in explaining the tenacity of life in the +Tardigrada. + +The movements of the water-bears, although slow, evince a decided +purpose and ability to make all parts work together for one common +object; and as might be expected from this fact, and also from the +repetition of distinct, although not articulated limbs, they are +provided with a nervous apparatus of considerable development, in the +shape of a chain of a ganglia and a brain, with connecting filaments. +From these and other circumstances naturalists consider the Tardigrada +to belong to the great family of _Spiders_, of which they are, +physiologically speaking, _poor relations_. Siebold says "they form the +transition from the Arachnoidae to the Annelides."[26] Like the spiders +they cast their skin; and, although I was not fortunate enough to +witness this operation--called in the language of the learned _ecdysis_, +which means putting its clothes off--I found an empty hide, which, +making allowance for the comparative size of the creatures, looked tough +and strong as that of a rhinoceros, and showed that the stripping +process extended to the tips of the claws. The 'Micrographic Dictionary' +states that the Tardigrada lay but few eggs at a time, and these are +"usually deposited during the ecdysis, the exuviae serving as a +protection to them during the process of hatching." Thus Mrs. Water-Bear +makes a nursery out of her old skin, a device as ingenious as +unexpected. The water-bears are said to be hermaphrodites, but this is +improbable. + +[26] 'Anatomy of the Invertebrata,' Burnett's trans., p. 364. + +The _Plumatella repens_, described in a former chapter, was kept in a +glass trough, to which some fresh water was added every few days, taken +from a glass jar that had been standing many weeks with growing +anacharis in it. One day a singular creature made its appearance in the +trough; when magnified sixty diameters it resembled an oval bladder, +with a sort of proboscis attached to it. At one part it was +longitudinally constricted, and evidently possessed some branched and +complicated internal vessel. The surface was ciliated, and the neck or +proboscis acted as a rudder, and enabled the creature to execute rapid +turns. It swam up and down, and round about, sometimes rotating on its +axis, at others keeping the same side uppermost, but did not exhibit the +faintest sign of intelligence in its movements, except an occasional +finger-like bend of the proboscis, upon which the cilia seemed thicker +than upon the body. It was big enough to be observed as a moving white +speck by the naked eye, when the vessel containing it was held to catch +the light slantingly; but a power of one hundred and five was +conveniently employed to enable its structure to be discerned. Under +this power, when the animal was resting or moving slowly, a mouth was +perceived on the left side of the proboscis, which was usually, though +not always, curved to the right. The mouth was a round or oval orifice, +and when illuminated by the parabola, its lips or margin looked +thickened, and of a pale blue, and ciliated, while the rest of the body +assumed a pinkish pearly tint. + +Below the mouth came a funnel-shaped tube or oesophagus, having some +folds or plaits on its sides, and terminating in a broad digestive tube, +distinct from the nucleus, and ramifying like a tree. The constriction +before mentioned, which was always seen in certain positions, although +it varied _very considerably_ in depth and width, drew up the integument +towards the main trunk of the digestive tube, and thus the animal had a +distinct ventral and dorsal side. The branches of the tube stopped +somewhat abruptly just before reaching the surface, and were often +observed to end in small round vacuoles or vesicles. + +[Illustration: Trachelius ovum (slightly flattened).] + +At the bottom of the bladder, opposite the mouth, in some specimens were +large round cavities or cells, filled with smaller cells, or partially +transparent granules. These varied in number from one to two or three, +and were replaced in other specimens by masses that did not present the +same regular form or rounded outline. In one instance an amorphous +structure of this kind gradually divided itself, and seemed in the +course of forming two cells, but the end of the process was +unfortunately not seen. The annexed drawing will readily enable the +animal to be recognised. It shows the mouth very plainly, and a current +of small particles moving towards it. The oesophagus terminates in a +digestive tube, like the trunk of a tree, from which numerous branches +spring. This arrangement is probably analogous to that of the +phlebenterous mollusks described by Quatrefages, in which the +ramifications of the stomach answer the purpose of arteries, and convey +the nutrient fluid to various parts of the body. It is also likely that +they minister to the function of respiration. + +The cilia on the surface, which are arranged in parallel lines, are best +observed when the animal is slightly flattened in a live-box; but this +process produces a considerable derangement in the relative position of +the internal parts, and they can only be well seen when it is immersed +in plenty of water, and is polite enough to stand still, and submit his +digestive economy to a steady gaze. The only way to succeed in this +undertaking is to have a large stock of patience as well as a convenient +cell or trough. The table must be kept steady, and the prisoner watched +from time to time, and at last he will be found ready for display. + +Pritchard says this animal, whose name is _Trachelius ovum_, is an +inhabitant of stagnant bog water, and has been found encysted. My +specimens could not be called plentiful, but for several weeks I could +generally find two or three, by filling a four-ounce vial from the glass +jar, and examining its contents with a pocket-lens. If none were +present, another dip was made, and usually with success. + +One evening I caught a good specimen by means of the dipping-tube, and +cautiously let it out, accompanied by a drop of water, on the glass +floor of the live-box. A glance with the pocket-lens showed all was +right, and the cover was very gently put on, but it had scarcely touched +the creature when it became crumpled up and in confusion. On one or two +former occasions I had been unfortunate enough to give my captives a +squeeze too much, with the usual result of a rupture of their +integuments and an escape of globules and fluids from the regions +within. Now, however, there was no such rupture and no such escape, but +instead of a smooth, comely surface, my Trachelius had lost all title to +his specific designation, _ovum_, for instead of bearing any resemblance +to an egg, it was more like an Irishman's hat after having a bit of a +"shindy" at Donnybrook Fair. + +I was greatly puzzled with this aspect of things, and still more so when +my deranged specimen twirled and bumped about with considerable +velocity, and in all directions. Presently a decided constriction +appeared about half-way below the mouth and proboscis, and in transverse +direction. The ciliary motion became very violent in the lower half just +below the constriction, while the proboscis worked hard to make its half +go another way. For some minutes there was a tug of war, and at length +away went proboscis with his portion, still much crumpled by the fight, +and left the other bit to roam at will, gradually smooth his puckers, +and assume the appearance of a respectable well-to-do animalcule. + +[Illustration: _Trachelius ovum_, three hours after division.] + +Three hours after the "fission" the proboscis half was not unlike the +former self of the late "entire," but with diminished body and larger +neck; while the remaining portion had assumed a flask form, and would +not have been known by his dearest acquaintance. The portraits of the +_dis-United States_ were quickly taken, and, as bed-time had arrived, +they were left to darkness and themselves. The next morning a change had +come over the "spirit of their dream." Both were quiet, or sedately +moving, and they were nearly alike. The proboscis fellow had increased +and rounded his body, and diminished his nose; while Mr. Flask had grown +round also, and evinced an intention of cultivating a proboscis himself. +Twenty-seven hours after the separation, both had made considerable +progress in arranging and developing their insides, which had been +thrown into great confusion by the way in which the original animal had +been wrenched in half, and in both a granular mass was forming opposite +the mouth end. The proboscis portion, which may perhaps be termed the +_mother_, was more advanced than her progeny, but both had a great deal +to do if they meant to exhibit the original figure, and develop a set of +bowels as elegantly branched. Whether they would have succeeded or not +under happier circumstances I cannot tell, but unfortunately the Fate +who carries the scissors cut short their days. + +In all other animalcules in which I had observed the process of +multiplication by self-division, it seemed to go on smoothly, and with +no discomfort to either the dividend or the quotient, and it may be that +in the fission of the _Trachelius ovum_ I witnessed what the doctors +would call a bad case. Indeed it may have been prematurely brought on, +and aggravated by the squeeze in the live-box. It is, however, probable, +from the stronger texture and greater organic development of this +animalcule, that it does not divide so easily as the softer and simpler +kinds. + +Frequent examination of this animalcule has created a strong doubt in my +mind whether it is rightly placed in our "systems." My own impression is +that it belongs to a higher class. + + + + +CHAPTER XIII. + +CONCLUSION. + + +The creatures described in the preceding pages range from very simple to +highly complicated forms, and in describing them some attention has been +paid to the general principles of classification. The step is a wide one +from the little masses of living jelly that constitute Amoebae to the +Rotifers, supplied with organs of sensation--eyes, feelers (calcars), +and the long cilia in the Floscularians, which seem to convey impression +like the whiskers of a cat--together with elaborate machinery for +catching, grinding up, and digesting their prey, and which are also well +furnished with respiratory and excretory apparatus, ovaries, &c. In the +polypi and polyzoa may be observed those resemblances in appearance +which induced early naturalists to group them together, and also the +wide difference of organization which marks the higher rank to which the +latter have attained. Amongst the ciliated infusoria important +gradations and differences will also be noticed, some having only one +sort of cilia, others two sorts, and others, again, supplied, in +addition to cilia, with hooks and styles. No perfectly satisfactory +classification of the infusoria has yet been devised, and the life +history of a great many is still very imperfectly known. On the whole, +the tendency of research is to place many of them higher than they used +to stand after Ehrenberg's supposition of their having a plurality of +distinct stomachs, &c., was given up. Balbiani and others have shown +numerous cases of their forming their eggs by a process analogous to +that of higher animals. Some really are, and others closely resemble, +the larval conditions of creatures higher in the scale, and the +contracted vesicle with its channel bears resemblance to what is called +the "water vascular system" of worms. + +Zoological classification depends very much on morphology, that is, the +tracing of particular structures, or parts, through all their stages, +from the lowest to the highest forms in which they are exhibited. In +this way the swimming bladder of a fish is shown to be a rudimentary +lung, though it has no respiratory functions, and Mr. Kitchen Parker has +found in the imperfect skull of the tadpole a rudimentary appearance of +bones belonging to the human ear. The comparative anatomist, after a +wide survey of the objects before him, arranges them into groups. He +asks what are the characteristic things to be affirmed concerning all +the A's that cannot be said of all the B's; or of all the C's that marks +their difference from the A's or the D's. Careful investigation upon +these methods shows affinities where they were not previously +expected--birds and reptiles being close relations, for example, instead +of distant connections--and they lessen the value for purposes of +classification of peculiarities that might have been deemed of the +highest importance. + +Professor Huxley divides the vertebrates into ITHYCOIDS, comprising +fishes and amphibia, which, besides other characteristics, have gills at +some period of their existence; SAUROIDS (reptiles and birds), which +have no gills, and possess certain developmental characteristics in +common; and, lastly, MAMMALS. The Insecta, Myriopoda, Arachnidae, and +Crustacea, he remarks, "without doubt present so many characters in +common as to form a very natural assemblage. All are provided with +articulated limbs attached to a segmented body skeleton, the latter, +like the skeleton of the limbs, being an 'exoskeleton,' or a bordering +of that layer which corresponds with the outer part of the vertebrates. +In others, at any rate in the embryonic condition, the nervous system is +composed of a double chain of ganglia, united by longitudinal +commissures, and the gullet passed between two of these commissures. No +one of the members of these four classes is known to possess vibratile +cilia. The great majority of these animals have a distinct heart, +provided with valvular apertures, which are in communication with a +peri-visceral cavity containing corpusculated blood." These four classes +have constituted the larger group or "province" of _Articulata_ or +_Arthropoda_. Professor Huxley thinks that, notwithstanding "the marked +differences" between the Annelida (worms) and the preceding Arthropods +(joint-foots), their resemblances outweighing them--"the characters of +the nervous system, and the frequently segmented body, with imperfect +lateral appendages of the Annelida, necessitates their assemblage with +the Arthropoda in one great division, or sub-kingdom, of ANNULOSA." + +Tracing analogies between the Echinodermata (sea urchins, star-fish, +&c.) and the Scolecida (intestinal worms), he places them together as +_Annuloida_. + +Cephalopoda, Pteropoda, Pulmo-gasteropoda, and Branchio-gasteropoda, +having resemblances of nervous system, and "all possessing that +remarkable buccal apparatus, the Odontophore," are placed together by +him as ODONTOPHORA. The Odontophores (tooth-bearers) are familiar to +microscopists as the so-called _palates_ of mollusca. Placing with the +above the lamellibranchial mollusks (mollusks with gills formed of +lamellae or little plates), Ascidioida (ascidians), Brachiopoda +(lamp-sheds), and Polyzoa, in spite of their differences, he forms +another great group, ANNULOIDA. + +The Actinozoa (anemonies, &c.) and the Hydrozoa (polyps) constitute the +COELENTERA of Frey and Leuckart. "In all these animals," says +Professor Huxley, "the substance of the body is differentiated into +those histological elements which have been termed cells, and the latter +are previously disposed in two layers, one external and one internal, +constituting the ectoderm and endoderm. Among animals which possess this +histological structure the Coelenterata stand alone in having an +alimentary canal, which is open at its inner end and communicates freely +by this aperture with the general cavity of the body," and "all (unless +the Ctenophora should prove a partial exception to the rule) are +provided with very remarkable organs of offence or defence, called +thread-cells or nematocysts." In describing the Polyps we have given +illustrations of these weapons. + +The remaining classes, which have been roughly associated as _Protozoa_, +must evidently be rearranged. Sponges, Rhizopods (Amoebae, &c.), and +Gregarines, have strong resemblances, but recent researches may place +the former higher. The Infusoria comprehend creatures too various to +remain under one head, and very many of them too highly organized to be +called "protozoons," or first life-forms. + +Those who wish to pursue this subject further may consult Professor +Huxley's 'Elements of Comparative Anatomy,' from which the preceding +quotations have been taken. + +A system of classification founded upon anatomical and developmental +considerations frequently differs considerably from one we might arrive +at if all the creatures were arranged according to the perfection of +their faculties and the extent and accuracy of their relations to the +external world. Such a classification would not in any way supersede the +former, but it would prove very instructive and offer many valuable +suggestions. Some years since, Professor Owen proposed to divide the +Vertebrates according to the perfection of their brains, but other +anatomists did not find his divisions sufficiently coincident with +facts. Very little has been done towards an exact science of human +phrenology. The difficulties remain pretty much as they were many years +ago, and our comparative phrenology, if we may use such a term, is in a +very imperfect state. When we come to the lower animals we do not know +what peculiarities of the brain of an ant make it the recipient of a +higher instinct, or give its possessor greater capacities for dealing +with new and unexpected difficulties than are possessed by most other +insects, and if any reader has a marine aquarium, and will make a few +experiments in taming prawns, and watching their proceedings, he will +discover symptoms of intelligence beyond what the structure of the +creature would have led him to expect. + +Animals usually possess some one leading characteristic to which their +general structure is subordinated. Man stands alone in having the whole +of his organization conformed to the demands of a thinking, ruling +brain. To pass at once to the other extreme, we observe in the lower +infusoria a restless locomotion, probably subservient to respiration, +but utterly inconsistent with a well developed life of relation, or with +manifestations of thought. The life of an animalcule may be summed up as +a brief and restricted, but vigorous organic energy, and if the amount +of change which a single creature can make in the external world, is +inconceivably small, the labours of the entire race alter the conditions +of a prodigious amount of matter. Microscopic vegetable life is an +important agent in purifying water from the taint of decomposing +organisms. By evolving oxygen it brings putrescent particles under the +influence of a species of combustion, which, though slow, is as +effectual as that which a furnace could accomplish. In this way minute +moulds burn up decaying wood. + +Microscopic animal life helps the regenerative process, and, together +with the minute vegetable life, restores to the organic system myriads +of tons of matter, which death and decay would have handed over to the +inorganic world. In a very small pond or tank the quantity of this kind +of work is soon appreciable, and if we reflect on the amazing amount of +water all over the globe, including seas and oceans, which swarm with +infusoria, the total effect produced in a single year must seem +considerable, even when compared with that portion of the earth's crust +that is subject to alteration from all other causes put together. If we +add to the labour of the Infusoria those of other creatures whose +organization can only be discovered by the microscope, and take in the +foraminifera, polyps, polyzoa, &c., we shall have to record still larger +obligations to minute forms of living things. The coral polyp builds +reefs that constitute the chief characteristic of certain regions in the +Pacific; foraminifera are forming or helping to form strata of +considerable extent, while diatoms are making deposits many feet in +thickness, composed of myriads of their silicious shells, or adding +their contributions of silex, very large in the aggregate, to all +sedimentary rocks. Testimony of this kind of work is found by the +navigator who examines the ice in arctic seas, and it comes up with +soundings from the ocean depths. + +On the surface of the earth the amount of change produced is equally +remarkable, although it leaves less permanent traces behind. As a rule +no decomposition of organized matter takes place, no death of plants or +animals, without infusorial life making its appearance, and disposing of +no small portion of the spoil. Even in our climate the mass of matter +thus annually affected is very large; but what must it not be in moist +tropical lands, where every particle seems alive, and the race of life +and death goes on at a speed, and to an extent scarcely conceivable by +those who have not witnessed it. + +Thus, if we look at the world of minute forms which the microscope +reveals, there opens before us a spectacle of boundless extent. We see +life manifested by the specks of jelly containing particles not +aggregated into structure, and we see it gradually ascending in +complexities of organization. In creatures whose habits and appearance +seem most remote from our own, we find the elementary developments of +the organs and powers that constitute our glory, and give us our power. +Such studies assist us to conceive of the universe as a Cosmos, or +Beautifully Organized Whole; and, although we cannot tell the object for +which a single portion received its precise form, we trace everywhere +relations of structure to means of existence and enjoyment, and are led +to the conviction that all the actions and arrangements of the organic +or inorganic worlds are due to a definite direction and co-ordination of +a few simple forces, which implicitly and unerringly obey the dictates +of an Omniscient Mind. + + PRINTED BY J. E. ADLARD, BARTHOLOMEW CLOSE. + + + + +NEW WORKS AND NEW EDITIONS + + +RECENTLY PUBLISHED BY GROOMBRIDGE AND SONS + +5, PATERNOSTER ROW, LONDON. + +DEDICATED TO THE RIGHT HON. 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Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, 1_s._ + + "Perfectly healthy in tone, and highly interesting, these tales + are indeed most suitable for family reading."--_Gloucester + Mercury._ + + +RAINBOW'S REST; AND OTHER STORIES. + +BY THOMAS HOOD. + +Illustrated with 15 Wood Engravings. Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, 1_s._ + + "These are excellent stories for children, and nicely got up and + illustrated."--_Paisley Herald._ + +A COMPLETE SET OF THE TWENTY VOLUMES, VIZ.:-- + + UNION JACK. By Mrs. S. C. HALL. + TOWN OF TOYS. By SARA WOOD. + NO MAN'S LAND. By T. MILLER. + SEA SPLEENWORT. By Author of "The Heir of Redclyffe." + LOTTIE'S HALF-SOVEREIGN. By Mrs. RUSSELL GRAY. + THE SHEPHERD LORD. By JULIA CORNER. + THE CAPTIVE'S DAUGHTER. By W. HEARD HILLYARD. + THE ORPHANS OF ELFHOLM. By FRANCES BROWNE. + WHEN WE WERE YOUNG. By Author of "A Trap to Catch a Sunbeam." + NOT CLEVER. By FRANCES M. WILBRAHAM. + DEAR CHARLOTTE'S BOYS. By EMILY TAYLOR. + STORY OF NELSON. By W. H. G. KINGSTON. + BLIND URSULA. By Mrs. WEBB. + SEA-SHELL ISLAND. By G. E. SARGENT. + WHICH WAS THE BRAVEST? By L. A. HALL. + THE CLOCKMAKER OF LYONS. By E. M. PIPER. + THE ANGEL UNAWARES. By MARY HOWITT. + HISTORICAL DRAMAS. By Author of "The Heir of Redclyffe." + LOST IN THE WOOD. By Mrs. GILCHRIST. + RAINBOW'S REST. By THOMAS HOOD. + +Enclosed in a Box, 20s. + + "We have read most of them with great care, for we are very + watchful over books for the young, and can assure our readers + they are well worth a mother's attention. They vary in interest + and in moral value, but all of them are calculated both to amuse + and instruct. Some convey valuable historical information, + others lessons in natural history, and most of them convey a + healthy moral influence. All are subservient to religion as well + as morals, but they are not tinctured with any _ism_, nor do + they inculcate any peculiar tenets."--_British Mothers' + Journal._ + +GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, PATERNOSTER ROW, LONDON. + + + + +GROOMBRIDGE'S SHILLING PRACTICAL MANUALS. + +_Each Book sent post-free on receipt of the price._ + + + 1. HOME-MADE WINES. How to Make and Keep them, with remarks on + preparing the fruit, fining, bottling, and storing. By G. VINE. + Contains Apple, Apricot, Beer, Bilberry, Blackberry, Cherry, + Clary, Cowslip, Currant, Damson, Elderberry, Gooseberry, Ginger, + Grape, Greengage, Lemon, Malt, Mixed Fruit, Mulberry, Orange, + Parsnip, Raspberry, Rhubarb, Raisin, Sloe, Strawberry, Turnip, + Vine Leaf, and Mead. + + 2. CARVING MADE EASY; or, Practical Instructions for Diners + Out. Illustrated with Engravings of Fish, Flesh, and Fowl, and + appropriate instructions, whereby a complete and skilful + knowledge of the useful art of Carving may be attained, and the + usages of the Dinner Table duly observed. By A. MERRYTHOUGHT. + + 3. COTTAGE COOKERY. Containing Simple Instructions upon Money, + Time, Management of Provisions, Firing, Utensils, Choice of + Provisions, Modes of Cooking, Stews, Soups, Broths, Puddings, + Pies, Fat, Pastry, Vegetables, Modes of Dressing Meat, Bread, + Cakes, Buns, Salting or Curing Meat, Frugality and Cheap + Cookery, Charitable Cookery, Cookery for the Sick and Young + Children. By ESTHER COPLEY. + + 4. COTTAGE FARMING; or, How to Cultivate from Two to Twenty + Acres, including the Management of Cows, Pigs, and Poultry. By + MARTIN DOYLE. Contains, On Enclosing a Farm, Land Drainage, + Manures, Management of a Two-acre Farm, Cow Keeping, The Dairy, + Pig Keeping, Bees and Poultry, Management of a Ten-acre Farm, + Flax and Rape, Management of a Farm of Twenty Acres, Farm + Buildings, etc. + + 5. SINGING MADE EASIER FOR AMATEURS, explaining the pure + Italian Method of Producing and Cultivating the Voice; the + Management of the Breath; the best way of Improving the Ear; + with much other valuable information equally valuable to + Professional Singers and Amateurs. + + 6. MARKET GARDENING, giving in detail the various methods + adopted by Gardeners in growing the Strawberry, Rhubarb, + Filberts, Early Potatoes, Asparagus, Sea Kale, Cabbages, + Cauliflowers, Celery, Beans, Peas, Brussels Sprouts, Spinach, + Radishes, Lettuce, Onions, Carrots, Turnips, Water Cress, etc. + By JAMES CUTHILL, F.R.H.S. + + 7. CLERK'S DICTIONARY OF COMMERCIAL TERMS; containing + Explanations of upwards of Three Hundred Terms used in Business + and Merchants' Offices. By the Author of "Common Blunders in + Speaking and Writing Corrected." + + "An indispensable book for all young men entering a + counting-house for the first time." + + 8. THE CAT, Its History and Diseases, with Method of + Administering Medicine. By the Honourable LADY CUST. + + 9. ELOCUTION MADE EASY for Clergymen, Public Speakers, and + Readers, Lecturers, Actors, Theatrical Amateurs, and all who + wish to speak well and effectively in Public or Private. By + CHARLES HARTLEY. Contents: Cultivation of the Speaking Voice, + Management of the Voice, Pausing, Taking Breath, Pitch, + Articulation, Pronunciation, The Aspirate, The Letter R, + Emphasis, Tone, Movement, Feeling and Passion, Verse, Scriptural + Reading, Stammering and Stuttering, Action, Acting, Reciting, + etc. + + 10. ORATORY MADE EASY. A Guide to the Composition of Speeches. + By CHARLES HARTLEY. Contents: Introduction, Power of Art, + Various Kinds of Oratory, Prepared Speech, Constructing a + Speech, Short Speeches, Command of Language, Reading and + Thinking, Style, Hasty Composition, Forming a Style, Copiousness + and Conciseness, Diction or Language, Purity and Propriety, + Misapplied Words, Monosyllables, Specific Terms, Variety of + Language, Too Great Care about Words, Epithets, Precision, + Synonymes, Perspicuity, Long and Short Sentences, Tropes and + Figures, Metaphor, Simile, etc. + + 11. THE GRAMMATICAL REMEMBRANCER; or, Aids for correct + Speaking, Writing, and Spelling, for Adults. By CHARLES HARTLEY. + Contents: Introduction, Neglect of English Grammar, Divisions of + Grammar, Parts of Speech, The Article, The Silent H, Nouns, + Formation of the Plural, Genders of Nouns, Cases of Nouns, + Comparison of Adjectives, Personal Pronouns, Relative Pronouns, + Demonstrative Pronouns, Regular and Irregular Verbs, Shall and + Will, The Adverb, Misapplication of Words, Division of Words, + Capital Letters, Rules for Spelling, Double _l_ and _p_, A Short + Syntax, Punctuation, etc. + + 12. THE CANARY. Its History, Varieties, Management, and + Breeding, with Coloured Frontispiece. By RICHARD AVIS. Contains, + History of the Canary, Varieties of the Canary, Food and General + Management, Cages, Breeding, Education of the Young, Mules, + Diseases, etc. + + 13. BIRD PRESERVING and Bird Mounting, and the Preservation of + Birds' Eggs, with a Chapter on Bird Catching. By RICHARD AVIS. + + 14. WINE GUIDE; or, Practical Hints on the Purchase and + Management of Foreign Wines, their History, and a complete + catalogue of all those in present use, together with remarks + upon the treatment of Spirits, Bottled Beer, and Cider. To which + is appended Instructions for the Cellar, and other information + valuable to the Consumer as well as the Dealer. By FREDERICK C. + MILLS. + +GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, PATERNOSTER ROW, LONDON. + + + + +ELEGANT PRIZE OR GIFT BOOK FOR BOYS. + + + In Three handsome Volumes, fcap. quarto, gilt edges, Illustrated + with Eleven Hundred Beautiful Engravings, price Twenty-four + Shillings. + + +RECREATIVE SCIENCE + +A RECORD AND REMEMBRANCER OF INTELLECTUAL OBSERVATION IN EVERY +DEPARTMENT OF SCIENCE. + +ASTRONOMY, CHEMISTRY, BOTANY, GEOLOGY, MECHANICS, METEOROLOGY, +MICROSCOPY, PHYSIOLOGY, ZOOLOGY, etc., etc. + + +THE PROMINENT FEATURES OF RECREATIVE SCIENCE. + + APPLICATIONS OF SCIENCE, including Photography and the + Stereoscope, Electro-Metallurgy, etc., with all their minute and + recreative manipulations. + + ESSAYS ON THE RESULT OF SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH, as witnessed by the + civilization of the Nineteenth Century, which derives so much of + its strength and moral excellence from the STEAM-ENGINE, the + ELECTRIC TELEGRAPH, and other applications of scientific + principles. + + BIOGRAPHIES OF EMINENT SCIENTIFIC MEN AND ANALYSIS OF OLD AND + NEW SCIENTIFIC BOOKS. + + ILLUSTRATIONS OF NATURAL PHENOMENA and Diagrams of Optical, + Mechanical, and other principles as required by the subject + matter of the papers published in the work. + + NATURAL HISTORY occupies a prominent position among the various + subjects dealt with, including HOME RECREATIONS, of which the + love of Nature may be said to be the basis. The Management of + Collections of Living Animals, the Preparation of Specimens by + Taxidermy, and the arrangement of Cabinets of Insects, Birds, + Shells, Plants, etc., etc. + + EXPERIMENTAL PHILOSOPHY AND RECREATIONS IN CHEMISTRY are + introduced with a view to explain principles and give a zest to + study. + + RECREATIVE SCIENCE is in all respects popular in tone and + attractive in its subjects. It is compiled by writers of the + highest eminence in the several departments of Scientific + Knowledge. In a word, it is a Record of Discovery, Observation, + and Intellectual Progress. An Instructor in First Principles, + and an Exhibitor of the Accomplishments of Research. + +GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London. + +Crown 8vo, elegantly bound, cloth gilt, Illustrated with 8 beautifully +coloured full-page Plates and numerous Wood Engravings, price 3s. 6d. + + +THE MICROSCOPE + +A Popular Description of some of the most Beautiful and Instructive +Objects for Exhibition. + +With Directions for the Arrangement of the Instruments and the +Collection and Mounting of Objects. + +BY THE HON. MRS. WARD. + + "This elegant book deserves at our hands especial commendation + for many reasons. There is no book that we know of that we would + more willingly place in the hands of a beginner to create an + interest in the science of Microscopy. The Illustrations are + beautiful, coloured to represent nature, and all original. To + our readers we cannot give better advice than to become + purchasers of the book--they will not regret the + outlay."--_Electrician._ + +GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London. + +Crown 8vo, elegantly bound, cloth gilt, Illustrated with 12 beautifully +coloured full-page Plates and numerous Wood Engravings, price 3s. 6d. + + +THE TELESCOPE A FAMILIAR SKETCH + +COMBINING A SPECIAL NOTICE OF OBJECTS COMING WITHIN THE RANGE OF A SMALL +TELESCOPE + +With a Detail of the most Interesting Discoveries which have been made +with the assistance of powerful Telescopes, concerning the Phenomena +of the Heavenly Bodies. + +BY THE HON. MRS. WARD. + + "It is with pleasure that we direct the reader's attention to a + little gem lately published by the Hon. Mrs. WARD. One of the + most admirable little works on one of the most sublime subjects + that has been given to the world. The main design of the book is + to show how much may be done in astronomy with ordinary powers + and instruments. We have no hesitation in saying that we never + saw a work of the kind that is so perfect. The illustrations are + admirable, and are all original."--_Western Daily Press._ + +GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London. + +Crown 8vo, elegantly bound, cloth gilt, Illustrated with 8 full-page +coloured Plates and numerous Wood Engravings, price 3s. 6d. + + +COUNTRY WALKS OF A NATURALIST WITH HIS CHILDREN. + +BY THE REV. W. HOUGHTON, M.A., F.L.S. + + "A fresher, pleasanter, or more profitable book than this has + rarely issued from the press."--_Art Journal._ + + "Contrives to furnish a large amount of interesting natural + history in brief compass and in a picturesque and engaging + manner."--_Pall Mall Gazette._ + + "It is wonderful what a very large amount of most instructive + matter connected with the animal and plant world the writer has + condensed into a small compass."--_Land and Water._ + + "This pretty little volume forms one of the best little books on + popular Natural History, and is admirably adapted as a present + to the young"--_Birmingham Daily Journal._ + +GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London. + +Crown 8vo, elegantly bound, cloth gilt, Illustrated with 8 beautifully +coloured full-page Plates and numerous Wood Engravings, price 3s. 6d. + + +SEA-SIDE WALKS OF A NATURALIST WITH HIS CHILDREN. + +BY THE REV. W. HOUGHTON, M.A., F.L.S. + + "The wonders of the sea-shore are detailed in an easy, pleasant + and lucid style."--_Examiner._ + + "The book is very attractive, and its usefulness is enhanced by + its many careful illustrations."--_Daily Telegraph._ + + "Families visiting the sea-side should provide themselves with + this convenient and instructive work."--_The Queen._ + + "It is pleasingly written, and the scientific information is + correct and well selected."--_Athenaeum._ + +GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London. + +Crown 8vo, elegantly bound, cloth gilt, Illustrated with 8 beautifully +coloured full-page Plates and 90 Wood Engravings, price 3s. 6d. + + +FIELD FLOWERS A HANDY BOOK FOR THE RAMBLING BOTANIST, SUGGESTING WHAT TO +LOOK FOR AND WHERE TO GO IN THE OUTDOOR STUDY OF BRITISH PLANTS. + +BY SHIRLEY HIBBERD, F.R.H.S. + + "It will serve as an excellent introduction to the practical + study of wild flowers."--_The Queen._ + + "We cannot praise too highly the illustrations which crowd the + pages of this handbook; the coloured plates are especially + attractive, and serve to bring before us very distinctly the + most prominent flowers of the field, the heaths, and the + hedgerows."--_Examiner._ + +GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London. + +Crown 8vo, elegantly bound, cloth gilt, illustrated with 8 beautifully +coloured Plates and 40 Wood Engravings, price 3s. 6d. + + +THE FERN GARDEN HOW TO MAKE, KEEP, AND ENJOY IT OR, FERN CULTURE MADE +EASY. + +BY SHIRLEY HIBBERD, F.R.H.S. + +CONTENTS. + + FERNS IN GENERAL + FERN COLLECTING + HOW TO FORM AN OUTDOOR FERNERY + CULTIVATION OF ROCK FERNS + CULTIVATION OF MARSH FERNS + FERNS IN POTS + THE FERN HOUSE + THE FERNERY AT THE FIRESIDE + MANAGEMENT OF FERN CASES + THE ART OF MULTIPLYING FERNS + BRITISH FERNS + CULTIVATION OF GREENHOUSE + STOVE FERNS + SELECT GREENHOUSE FERNS + SELECT STOVE FERNS + TREE FERNS + FERN ALLIES + +GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London. + +Crown 8vo, elegantly bound, gilt edges, Illustrated with 12 beautifully +coloured Engravings, price 3s. 6d. + + +THE CANARY + +ITS VARIETIES, MANAGEMENT, AND BREEDING WITH PORTRAITS OF THE AUTHOR'S +OWN BIRDS. + +BY THE REV. FRANCIS SMITH. + +CONTENTS. + + A PLEA FOR THE CANARY + ORIGIN OF OUR OWN CANARIA + THE WILD CANARY + OUR LIZARDS + OUR YORKSHIRE SPANGLES + OUR NORWICH YELLOWS + OUR LONDON FANCY BIRDS + OUR BELGIANS + OUR GREEN BIRDS + OUR CINNAMONS + OUR TURNCRESTS + THE DOMINIE AND THE GERMANS + PREPARATIONS FOR BREEDING + NEST BOXES AND NESTS + OUR FIRST BIRDS + OUR MISFORTUNES + OUR INFIRMARY + ON CAGES + +GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London. + +Post 8vo, cloth gilt, with Woodcut Illustrations, price 5s. + + +THE ROSE BOOK A PRACTICAL TREATISE ON THE CULTURE OF THE ROSE. + +COMPRISING + + The Formation of the Rosarium; the Characters of Species and + Varieties; Modes of Propagating, Planting, Pruning, Training, + and Preparing for Exhibition; and the Management of Roses in all + Seasons. + +BY SHIRLEY HIBBERD, F.R.H.S. + +CONTENTS. + + THE FAMILIES OF WILD ROSES + THE FAMILIES OF CULTIVATED ROSES + SUMMER ROSES + FORMING THE ROSARIUM + CULTURE OF ROSES IN THE OPEN GROUND + AUTUMN PLANTING + SPRING PLANTING + PRUNING, DISBUDDING, AND SEASONAL MANAGEMENT + CLIMBING ROSES + PILLAR ROSES + YELLOW ROSES + ROSES IN POTS + ROSES IN BEDS + ROSES IN GREAT TOWNS + TEA ROSES IN TOWNS + VARIOUS MODES OF PROPAGATING + SELECT LISTS OF ROSES + REMINDERS OF MONTHLY WORK IN ROSE GARDEN + HINTS TO BEGINNERS + +GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London. + + + + +BOOKS FOR YOUNG NATURALISTS + + +Crown 8vo, elegantly bound, gilt edges, Illustrated with 16 beautifully +coloured Plates and numerous Wood Engravings, price 5s. + + +NESTS AND EGGS OF FAMILIAR BIRDS. + +Described and Illustrated with an account of the Haunts and Habits of +the Feathered Architects, and their Times and Modes of Building. + +BY H. G. ADAMS. + +GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London. + +Crown 8vo, elegantly bound, gilt edges, Illustrated with 8 beautifully +coloured Plates and numerous Wood Engravings, price 3s. 6d. + + +BEAUTIFUL BUTTERFLIES DESCRIBED AND ILLUSTRATED. + + With an Introductory chapter, containing the History of a + Butterfly through all its Changes and Transformations. A + Description of its Structure in the Larva, Pupa, and Imago + states, with an Explanation of the scientific terms used by + Naturalists in reference thereto, with observations upon the + Poetical and other associations of the Insect. + +BY H. G. ADAMS. + +GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London. + +Crown 8vo, elegantly bound, gilt edges, Illustrated with 8 beautifully +coloured Plates and numerous Wood Engravings, price 3s. 6d. + + +BEAUTIFUL SHELLS THEIR NATURE, STRUCTURE, AND USES FAMILIARLY EXPLAINED. + +With Directions for Collecting, Clearing and Arranging them in the +Cabinet. + +Descriptions of the most remarkable Species, and of the creatures +which inhabit them, and explanations of the meaning of their scientific +names, and of the terms used in Conchology. + +BY H. G. ADAMS. + +GROOMBRIDGE AND SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London. + +Crown 8vo, elegantly bound, gilt edges, Illustrated with 8 beautifully +coloured Plates and Wood Engravings, price 3s. 6d. + + +HUMMING BIRDS, DESCRIBED AND ILLUSTRATED. + +With an introductory Sketch of their Structure, Plumage, Haunts, Habits, +etc. + +BY H. G. ADAMS. + +GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London. + + +NEW EDITION OF THE WORKS OF ANNA LISLE. + +This elegant edition, large crown 8vo, is handsomely bound in cloth, +gilt edges, suitable for presentation, and Illustrated by the leading +artists of the day. + +In One Volume, large crown 8vo, Illustrated, price 6s. + + +SELF AND SELF-SACRIFICE OR, NELLY'S STORY. + +BY ANNA LISLE. + + "A very beautiful story, with characters well drawn, scenery + vividly described, and interest admirably sustained. The + tendency of the volume is not only unexceptionable, but + excellent in a Christian point of view. We have seldom seen a + book in which the best and highest aim is so manifest without + the attractiveness of the tale being at all lessened by the + embodiment of religious principles."--_Eclectic Review._ + + "The story is so delightful, and the whole spirit of the book so + pure, that it compels our admiration."--_Daily News._ + + "Since 'Currer Bell' we have read nothing more genuine, nor more + touching. 'Nelly's Story' has power to carry the reader right + through with it, and can hardly fail to impress a moral of + inestimable importance."--_Carlisle Journal._ + + "Admirably written, pervaded throughout by fine, correct, and + wholesome sentiments."--_Morning Post._ + + "Its excellent moral tone, and keen observation, are sure to + render the book widely popular."--_John Bull._ + + "'Nelly's Story' is a good one. It is one of the best we have + read for a long time."--_Bucks Advertiser._ + + "Abounding in interest. We can hardly conceive a more suitable + gift-book."--_Lady's Newspaper._ + + "Will be welcomed, read, and talked about."--_Gentleman's + Magazine._ + + "'Nelly's Story' is told in such a good and pleasant way, and + withal is so useful and world-like, that we trust it may bring + to its authoress the fame that she is well able to + support."--_Tait's Magazine._ + + "We recognise and proclaim in the authoress of this thrilling + tale a quality beyond mere ability--genius of a very high order. + We claim for Anna Lisle a place amongst the most distinguished + writers of her age. The story is a brilliant effort of refined + and sanctified imagination throughout, quite as fascinating as + anything in the way of story, whether told by Scott, Stowe, + Dickens, or Currer Bell."--_Sentinel._ + +In One Volume, large crown 8vo, Illustrated, price 5s. + + +QUICKSANDS A TALE. + +BY ANNA LISLE. + + "It is a thoroughly woman's book. We can fairly say that we have + seldom met with a graver or more striking warning against the + consequences of over eagerness about worldly position and + advantages, more forcibly and, at the same time, gracefully + conveyed."--_Literary Gazette._ + + "Contains a great deal of quiet and powerful writing. Marty, the + maid of Mrs. Grey, might pass for a creation of Dickens. The + moral of 'Quicksands' is at once comprehensive and + striking."--_Weekly Mail._ + +GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London. + + + + +GIFT BOOKS FOR BOYS. + + +Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, Illustrated with 8 full-page Wood Engravings, +price 2s. 6d. + + +INVENTION AND DISCOVERY A COLLECTION OF INTERESTING ANECDOTES. + +BY RALPH AND CHANDOS TEMPLE. + + "Has a point and object, and a good one--nicely worked + out."--_Saturday Review._ + + "We can recommend this book as a Christmas present, and one + which has given us no small pleasure."--_Literary Churchman._ + + "Exceedingly well-timed. A volume which should be added to every + working-man's club in England."--Notes and Queries. + + "Exhibits a conscientious regard for accuracy."--_Athenaeum._ + + "The tendency is to instil the principle of self-help and the + advantage of earnest purpose."--_Bell's Messenger._ + +GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London. + +Foolscap 8vo, cloth gilt, Illustrated with 8 full-page Wood Engravings, +price 2s. 6d. + + +ENTERPRISE AND ADVENTURE A COLLECTION OF INTERESTING ANECDOTES. + +BY RALPH AND CHANDOS TEMPLE. + + "Very handsomely got up. The 'Temple Anecdotes' will be one of + the most popular of Christmas books."--_Standard._ + + "A sensible, well-written book."--_Globe._ + + "We know of no work which will make a more acceptable present + than this extremely handsome and really useful book."--_Era._ + + "As a present for boys, nothing can be better."--_Daily News._ + + "The anecdotes are told with a clearness and simplicity that + cannot fail to give pleasure."--_Spectator._ + +GROOMBRIDGE & SONS, 5, Paternoster Row, London. + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Marvels of Pond-life, by Henry J. 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