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front; for their strength is not sufficient to allow them to strike

  efficiently with the hinder part of the body. Polypterous insects,

  on the other hand, are of greater bulk-indeed it is this which

  causes them to have so many feathers; and their greater size makes

  them stronger in their hinder parts. The sting of such insects is

  therefore placed behind. Now it is better, when possible, that one and

  the same instrument shall not be made to serve several dissimilar

  uses; but that there shall be one organ to serve as a weapon, which

  can then be very sharp, and a distinct one to serve as a tongue, which

  can then be of spongy texture and fit to absorb nutriment. Whenever,

  therefore, nature is able to provide two separate instruments for

  two separate uses, without the one hampering the other, she does so,

  instead of acting like a coppersmith who for cheapness makes a spit

  and lampholder in one. It is only when this is impossible that she

  uses one organ for several functions.

  The anterior legs are in some cases longer than the others, that

  they may serve to wipe away any foreign matter that may lodge on the

  insect's eyes and obstruct its sight, which already is not very

  distinct owing to the eyes being made of a hard substance. Flies and

  bees and the like may be constantly seen thus dressing themselves with

  crossed forelegs. Of the other legs, the hinder are bigger than the

  middle pair, both to aid in running and also that the insect, when

  it takes flight, may spring more easily from the ground. This

  difference is still more marked in such insects as leap, in locusts

  for instance, and in the various kinds of fleas. For these first

  bend and then extend the legs, and, by doing so, are necessarily

  shot up from the ground. It is only the. hind legs of locusts, and not

  the front ones, that resemble the steering oars of a ship. For this

  requires that the joint shall be deflected inwards, and such is

  never the case with the anterior limbs. The whole number of legs,

  including those used in leaping, is six in all these insects.

  7

  In the Testacea the body consists of but few parts, the reason being

  that these animals live a stationary life. For such animals as move

  much about must of necessity have more numerous parts than such as

  remain quiet; for their activities are many, and the more

  diversified the movements the greater the number of organs required to

  effect them. Some species of Testacea are absolutely motionless, and

  others not quite but nearly so. Nature, however, has provided them

  with a protection in the hardness of the shell with which she has

  invested their body. This shell, as already has been said, may have

  one valve, or two valves, or be turbinate. In the latter case it may

  be either spiral, as in whelks, or merely globular, as in sea-urchins.

  When it has two valves, these may be gaping, as in scallops and

  mussels, where the valves are united together on one side only, so

  as to open and shut on the other; or they may be united together on

  both sides, as in the Solens (razor-fishes). In all cases alike the

  Testacea have, like plants, the head downwards. The reason for this

  is, that they take in their nourishment from below, just as do

  plants with their roots. Thus the under parts come in them to be

  above, and the upper parts to be below. The body is enclosed in a

  membrane, and through this the animal filters fluid free from salt and

  absorbs its nutriment. In all there is a head; but none of the

  parts, excepting this recipient of food, has any distinctive name.

  8

  All the Crustacea can crawl as well as swim, and accordingly they

  are provided with numerous feet. There are four main genera, viz.

  the Carabi, as they are called, the Astaci, the Carides, and the

  Carcini. In each of these genera, again, there are numerous species,

  which differ from each other not only as regards shape, but also

  very considerably as regards size. For, while in some species the

  individuals are large, in others they are excessively minute. The

  Carcinoid and Caraboid Crustacea resemble each other in possessing

  claws. These claws are not for locomotion, but to serve in place of

  hands for seizing and holding objects; and they are therefore bent

  in the opposite direction to the feet, being so twisted as to turn

  their convexity towards the body, while their feet turn towards it

  their concavity. For in this position the claws are best suited for

  laying hold of the food and carrying it to the mouth. The

  distinction between the Carabi and the Carcini (Crabs) consists in the

  former having a tail while the latter have none. For the Carabi swim

  about and a tail is therefore of use to them, serving for their

  propulsion like the blade of an oar. But it would be of no use to

  the Crabs; for these animals live habitually close to the shore, and

  creep into holes and corners. In such of them as live out at sea,

  the feet are much less adapted for locomotion than in the rest,

  because they are little given to moving about but depend for

  protection on their shell-like covering. The Maiae and the crabs known

  as Heracleotic are examples of this; the legs in the former being very

  thin, in the latter very short.

  The very minute crabs that are found among the small fry at the

  bottom of the net have their hindermost feet flattened out into the

  semblance of fins or oar-blades, so as to help the animal in swimming.

  The Carides are distinguished from the Carcinoid species by the

  presence of a tail; and from the Caraboids by the absence of claws.

  This is explained by their large number of feet, on which has been

  expended the material for the growth of claws. Their feet again are

  numerous to suit their mode of progression, which is mainly by

  swimming.

  Of the parts on the ventral surface, those near the head are in some

  of these animals formed like gills, for the admission and discharge of

  water; while the parts lower down differ in the two sexes. For in

  the female Carabi these are more laminar than in the males, and in the

  female crabs the flap is furnished with hairier appendages. This gives

  ampler space for the disposal of the ova, which the females retain

  in these parts instead of letting them go free, as do fishes and all

  other oviparous animals. In the Carabi and in the Crabs the right claw

  is invariably the larger and the stronger. For it is natural to

  every animal in active operations to use the parts on its right side

  in preference to those on its left; and nature, in distributing the

  organs, invariably assigns each, either exclusively or in a more

  perfect condition, to such animals as can use it. So it is with tusks,

  and teeth, and horns, and spurs, and all such defensive and

  offensive weapons.

  In the Lobsters alone it is a matter of chance which claw is the

  larger, and this in either sex. Claws they must have, because they

  belong to a genus in which this is a constant character; but they have

  them in this indeterminate way, owing to imperfect formation and to

  their not
using them for their natural purpose, but for locomotion.

  For a detailed account of the several parts of these animals, of

  their position and their differences, those parts being also

  included which distinguish the sexes, reference must be made to the

  treatises on Anatomy and to the Researches concerning Animals.

  9

  We come now to the Cephalopoda. Their internal organs have already

  been described with those of other animals. Externally there is the

  trunk of the body, not distinctly defined, and in front of this the

  head surrounded by feet, which form a circle about the mouth and

  teeth, and are set between these and the eyes. Now in all other

  animals the feet, if there are any, are disposed in one of two ways;

  either before and behind or along the sides, the latter being the plan

  in such of them, for instance, as are bloodless and have numerous

  feet. But in the Cephalopoda there is a peculiar arrangement,

  different from either of these. For their feet are all placed at

  what may be called the fore end. The reason for this is that the

  hind part of their body has been drawn up close to the fore part, as

  is also the case in the turbinated Testacea. For the Testacea, while

  in some points they resemble the Crustacea, in others resemble the

  Cephalopoda. Their earthy matter is on the outside, and their fleshy

  substance within. So far they are like the Crustacea. But the

  general plan of their body is that of the Cephalopoda; and, though

  this is true in a certain degree of all the Testacea, it is more

  especially true of those turbinated species that have a spiral

  shell. Of this general plan, common to the two, we will speak

  presently. But let us first consider the case of quadrupeds and of

  man, where the arrangement is that of a straight line. Let A at the

  upper end of such a line be supposed to represent the mouth, then B

  the gullet, and C the stomach, and the intestine to run from this C to

  the excremental vent where D is inscribed. Such is the plan in

  sanguineous animals; and round this straight line as an axis are

  disposed the head and so-called trunk; the remaining parts, such as

  the anterior and posterior limbs, having been superadded by nature,

  merely to minister to these and for locomotion.

  In the Crustacea also and in Insects there is a tendency to a

  similar arrangement of the internal parts in a straight line; the

  distinction between these groups and the sanguineous animals depending

  on differences of the external organs which minister to locomotion.

  But the Cephalopoda and the turbinated Testacea have in common an

  arrangement which stands in contrast with this. For here the two

  extremities are brought together by a curve, as if one were to bend

  the straight line marked E until D came close to Such, then, is the

  disposition of the internal parts; and round these, in the

  Cephalopoda, is placed the sac (in the Poulps alone called a head),

  and, in the Testacea, the turbinate shell which corresponds to the

  sac. There is, in fact, only this difference between them, that the

  investing substance of the Cephalopoda is soft while the shell of

  the Testacea is hard, nature having surrounded their fleshy part

  with this hard coating as a protection because of their limited

  power of locomotion. In both classes, owing to this arrangement of the

  internal organs, the excrement is voided near the mouth; at a point

  below this orifice in the Cephalopoda, and in the Turbinata on one

  side of it.

  Such, then, is the explanation of the position of the feet in the

  Cephalopoda, and of the contrast they present to other animals in this

  matter. The arrangement, however, in the Sepias and the Calamaries

  is not precisely the same as in the Poulps, owing to the former

  having no other mode of progression than by swimming, while the latter

  not only swim but crawl. For in the former six of the feet are above

  the teeth and small, the outer one on either side being the biggest;

  while the remaining two, which make up the total weight, are below the

  mouth and are the biggest of all, just as the hind limbs in quadrupeds

  are stronger than the fore limbs. For it is these that have to support

  the weight, and to take the main part in locomotion. And the outer two

  of the upper six are bigger than the pair which intervene between them

  and the uppermost of all, because they have to assist the lowermost

  pair in their office. In the Poulps, on the other hand, the four

  central feet are the biggest. Again, though the number of feet is

  the same in all the Cephalopoda, namely eight, their length varies

  in different kinds, being short in the Sepias and the Calamaries,

  but greater in the Poulps. For in these latter the trunk of the body

  is of small bulk, while in the former it is of considerable size;

  and so in the one case nature has used the materials subtracted from

  the body to give length to the feet, while in the other she has

  acted in precisely the opposite way, and has given to the growth of

  the body what she has first taken from the feet. The Poulps, then,

  owing to the length of their feet, can not only swim but crawl,

  whereas in the other genera the feet are useless for the latter mode

  of progression, being small while the bulk of the body is

  considerable. These short feet would not enable their possessors to

  cling to the rocks and keep themselves from being torn off by the

  waves when these run high in times of storm; neither would they

  serve to lay hold of objects at all remote and bring them in; but,

  to supply these defects, the animal is furnished with two long

  proboscises, by which it can moor itself and ride at anchor like a

  ship in rough weather. These same processes serve also to catch prey

  at a distance and to bring it to the mouth. They are so used by both

  the Sepias and the Calamaries. In the Poulps the feet are themselves

  able to perform these offices, and there are consequently no

  proboscises. Proboscises and twining tentacles, with acetabula set

  upon them, act in the same way and have the same structure as those

  plaited instruments which were used by physicians of old to reduce

  dislocations of the fingers. Like these they are made by the

  interlacing of their fibres, and they act by pulling upon pieces of

  flesh and yielding substances. For the plaited fibres encircle an

  object in a slackened condition, and when they are put on the

  stretch they grasp and cling tightly to whatever it may be that is

  in contact with their inner surface. Since, then, the Cephalopoda have

  no other instruments with which to convey anything to themselves

  from without, than either twining tentacles, as in some species, or

  proboscises as in others, they are provided with these to serve as

  hands for offence and defence and other necessary uses.

  The acetabula are set in double line in all the Cephalopoda

  excepting in one kind of poulp, where there is but a single row. The

  length and the slimness which is part of the nature of this kind of

  poulp explain the exception. For a narrow space cannot possibly

&nb
sp; admit of more than a single row. This exceptional character, then,

  belongs to them, not because it is the most advantageous

  arrangement, but because it is the necessary consequence of their

  essential specific constitution.

  In all these animals there is a fin, encircling the sac. In the

  Poulps and the Sepias this fin is unbroken and continuous, as is

  also the case in the larger calamaries known as Teuthi. But in the

  smaller kind, called Teuthides, the fin is not only broader than in

  the Sepias and the Poulps, where it is very narrow, but, moreover,

  does not encircle the entire sac, but only begins in the middle of the

  side. The use of this fin is to enable the animal to swim, and also to

  direct its course. It acts, that is, like the rump-feathers in

  birds, or the tail-fin in fishes. In none is it so small or so

  indistinct as in the Poulps. For in these the body is of small bulk

  and can be steered by the feet sufficiently well without other

  assistance.

  The Insects, the Crustacea, the Testacea, and the Cephalopoda,

  have now been dealt with in turn; and their parts have been described,

  whether internal or external.

  10

  We must now go back to the animals that have blood, and consider

  such of their parts, already enumerated, as were before passed over.

  We will take the viviparous animals first, and, we have done with

  these, will pass on to the oviparous, and treat of them in like

  manner.

  The parts that border on the head, and on what is known as the

  neck and throat, have already been taken into consideration. All

  animals that have blood have a head; whereas in some bloodless

  animals, such as crabs, the part which represents a head is not

  clearly defined. As to the neck, it is present in all the Vivipara,

  but only in some of the Ovipara; for while those that have a lung also

  have a neck, those that do not inhale the outer air have none. The

  head exists mainly for the sake of the brain. For every animal that

  has blood must of necessity have a brain; and must, moreover, for

  reasons already given, have it placed in an opposite region to the

 

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