BERKELEY^ LIBRARY UNIVERSITY OF .CALIFORNIA B/oscience & Natur~ Resources Library LEAYES FROM THE NOTE BOOK OF A NATURALIST. BY W. J. BRODERIP, ESQ., F. R-. S. ETC. ETC. ETC. AUTHOR. OF "ZOOLOGICAL RECREATIONS," ETC. ETC. Farewell, farewell ! but this I toll To thee, thou Wedding-Guest : lie prayeth well, who lovetli well Both man and bird and beast. The A7icient Mariner. ^jOg BOSTON: PUBLISHED BY E. LITTELL & CO NEW YORK: G. P. PUTNAM. 1852. BIOLOGY LIBRARY G CONTENTS. PART I. THE Bearer and the Macauco, . , PART II. Menageries opposed to romance The Condor Unpro- tected state of its eggs Elevations chosen for their resting-place Color, But he says that he had seen much larger elephants than this alive ; some, he adds, he should have guessed to be sixteen feet in height, and with tusks probably exceeding six feet in length. Major Denham, however, acknowledges that the elephant whose measurement is above given, which was the first he had seen dead, was considered of more than common bulk and stature. This unfortunate animal was brought to the ground by hamstringing, and was eventually de- spatched by repeated wounds in the abdomen and proboscis : five leaden .balls had struck him about the haunches, in the course of the chase, but they had merely penetrated a few inches into his flesh, and appeared to give him but little uneasiness. The whole of the next day the road leading to the spot where he lay was like a fair, from the num- bers who repaired thither for the sake of bringing off a part of the flesh, which, Major Denham ob- serves, is esteemed by all, and even eaten in secret by the first people about the sheikh. " It looks coarse," adds the major, "but is better flavored than any beef I found in the country." Upon this occasion whole families put themselves in motion to partake of the spoil. The manner of hunting the elephant (says Majoi Denham) is simply this : From ten to twenty horsemen single out one of these ponderous animals, and, separating him from the flock by screaming and hallooing, force him to fly with all his speed ; after wounding him under the tail, if they can there place a spear, the animal becomes enraged. One horseman then rides in front, whom he pursues with earnestness and fury, regardless of those who press on his rear, notwithstanding the wounds they inflict on him. He is seldom drawn from this first object of pursuit ; and at last, wearied and trans- fixed with spears, his blood deluging the ground, he breathes his last under the knife of some more venturesome hunter than the rest, who buries his dagger in the vulnerable part near the abdomen : for this purpose he will creep between the animal's hinder legs, and apparently expose himself to the greatest danger : when this cannot be accom- plished, one or two will hamstring him while he is baited in the front ; and this giant of quadrupeds then becomes comparatively an easy prey to his persecutors. In one of his hunting expeditions while at Kouka, Major Denham was shooting wild fowl, when one of the sheikh's people came galloping up with the information that three very huge ele- phants were grazing close to the water. When he and his party came within a few hundred yards of them, all the persons on foot, and Major Den- ham's servant on a mule, were ordered to halt, while the major and three others rode up " to these stupendous animals." The sheikh's people began screeching violently ; and although the beasts at first appeared to treat the approach of the cavalcade with great con- tempt ; yet after a little they moved off, erecting their ears, which had till then hung flat on iheir shoulders, giving a roar that shook the ground under the horsemen. One (says the major) was an immense fellow, I should suppose sixteen feet high ; the other two were females, and moved away rather quickly, while the male kept in the rear, as if to guard their retreat. We wheeled swiftly round him ; and Maramy, (a guide sent by the sheikh,) casting a spear at him, which struck him just under the tail, and seemed to give him about as much pain as when we prick our finger with a pin, the huge beast threw up his proboscis in the air with a loud roar, and from it cast such a volume of sand, that, unprepared as I was for such an event, nearly blinded me. The elephant rarely, if ever, attacks ; and it is only when irritated that he is dangerous ; but he will sometimes rush upon a man and horse, after choking them with dust, and destroy them in an instant. Cut off from his companions, the elephant took the direction leading to where the mule and the footmen had been left. They quickly fled in all directions ; and the man who rode the mule, which was not inclined to increase its pace, was so alarmed that he did not get the better of the 18 LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. fright for the whole day. The major and his companions pressed the elephant very close, riding before, hehind, and on each side of him; and his look sometimes, as he turned his head, had the effect of checking instantly the speed of the major's horse. His pace never exceeded a clumsy rolling walk, but was sufficient to keep the horses at a short gallop. Major Denham fired a ball from each barrel of his gun at the beast, and the second, which struck his ear, seemed to give him a mo- ment's uneasiness only. The first, which struck him on the body, failed in making the least im- pression ; and, after giving him another spear, which flew harmless off his tough hide, he was left to pursue his way. Eight elephants were soon afterwards reported as being at no great distance, and coming towards the party ; and they all mounted for the purpose of chasing away the beasts, which appeared to be unwilling to go, and did not even turn their backs till the horsemen were quite close and had thrown several spears at them. The flashes from the pan of the gun seemed to alarm them more than any- thing ; but they retreated very majestically, first throwing out, like the elephant first encountered, a quantity of sand. On their backs were a num- ber of birds called tuda, (a species of buphaga, probably,) described as resembling a thrush in shape and note, and represented as being extreme- ly useful to the elephant, in picking off the vermin from those parts which it is not in his power to reach. In his excursion to Munga and the Gambarou Major Denham and his party came, just before sunset, upon a herd of fourteen or fifteen elephants. These the negroes made to dance and frisk like so many goats by beating a brass basin with a stick ; and in the neighborhood of Bornou these animals were so numerous as to be seen near the Tchad in herds of from fifty to four hundred. In temper the African elephant is considered to be more ferocious than the Asiatic, which may be one reason that it is not now tamed. But it is clear that the Carthaginians availed themselves of its services in war ; and it can hardly be doubted that the elephants which Caesar and Pompey ex- hibited in the amphitheatre came from Africa. The tusks of this species are of grand dimen- sions, and form a lucrative branch of trade. The ivvry of them being as much prized in modern times as it was by the ancients for furniture, orna- mental purposes, and, above all, for the chrys- elephantine statues, such as those of the Minerva of the Parthenon, and of the Olympian Jupiter, in the creation of whose forms Phidias surpassed himself. Regard being had to the ears, the shape of the Afiioan species appears to have been that chosen by Belial, A fairer person lost not heaven, m which to present himself to Faust : Le gouverneur et principal maitre du Docteur Fauste, vintvers le dit Docteur Fauste, et le voulut risiter. Le Docteur Fauste n'eut pas un petit de peur, pour le frayeur qu'il lui fit ; car en la saison qui etuit de 1'ete, il vint un air si froid du diable, que le Docteur Fauste pensa etre tout gele. Le diable, qui s'appelloit Belial, dit au Docteur Fauste : Depuis le Septentrion, oil vous demeurez, j'ai vu ta pensee, et est telle, que volontiers tu pourvois voir quelqu'un des esprits infernaux, qui sont princes, pourtant j'ai voulu m'apparoitre a toi, avec mes principaux conseillers et serviteurs, a ce que vous aussi aiez ton desir accompli d'une telle valeur. Le Docteur Fauste repond : Orsus o\i sont ils ? Mark the courage of Faust under the influence of this Sarsar, this " icy wind of death." The devil was conscious that the great magician quailed not. Or Belial ^toit apparu au Docteur Fauste en la forme d'un elephant, marquete, et aiant 1'epine du dos noire, seulement ses oreilles lui pendoient en has, et ses yeux tous remplis de feu, avec de grandes dents blanches comme neige, une longue trompe, qui avoit troisaunes delongeur demesuree, et avoit au col trois serpens volans. Ainsi vindrent au Docteur Fauste les esprits, 1'ur. apres 1'autre, dans sonpoisle : car ils n'eussent peu etre tous a la fois. Or Belial les montra au D. Fauste 1'un apres 1'autre, comment ils e"toient, et comment ils s'appel- loient. Ilsvinrent devantlui les sept esprits princi- paux, a sgavoir ; lepremier, Lucifer, le Maitre Gou- verneur du Docteur Fauste, lequel se decrit ainsi. C'etoit ungrandhomme, et etoitchevelu, et picofe", de la couleur comme des glandes de chene rouges, qui avoientune grande queue apres eux. And so that damned spirit passed by. Apres venoit Behebub, qui avoit les cheveux peints de couleurs, velu par tout le corps ; il avoit une tete de bceuf avec deux oreilles effroiables, aussi tout marquete de hampes, et chevelu, avec deux gros floquets si rudes comme les charains du foulon qui font dans les champs, demi verd et jaune, qui flottoient sur les floquets d'en has, qui etoient comme d'un four tout de feu. II avoit un queue de dragon. This apparition seems to have suggested that which so terribly disturbed poor old Trunnion ; but the next evil spirit is at Faust's study door : Astaroth; celui-ci vint en la forme d'un serpent, et alloit sur la queue tout droit : il n'avoit point de pieds, sa queue avoit des couleurs comme de bliques changeantes, son ventre etoit fort gros, il avoit deux petits pieds fort cours, tout jaunes, et le ventre un peu blanc et jaunatre ; le col tout de chastain roux, et une pointe un fagon de piques et traits, comme le Herisson, qui avangoient de la longeur des doigts. No naturalist could have given a more precise description of this devilish Pict. Apre*s vint Satan, tout blance et gris, et mar- quete ; il avoit la tete d'une asne, et avoit la queue comme d'un chat, et les comes des pieds longues d'une aune ! And so he vanished. Suivit aussi Anubry. II avoit la tete d'un chien noir et blanc, et des mouchetures blanches sur le noir, et sur le blanc des noires . seulement il avoit les pieds et les oreilles pendantes comme un chien, qui etoient longues de quatres aunes. This must have been the " dog of nile, Anubis." LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. Apres tous ceux-ci venoient Dythican, qui e"toit d'une aunede long, mais il avoit seulement le corps d'une oiseau, qui est la perdrix : il avoit seulement tout le col verd et mouchete ou ombrage*. Were it not for the green neck and the bizarre quality of the plumage, we have here the very familiar that tripped along at the feet of Charles V. Titian has immortalized both.* Le derniers fut Drac, avec quatre pieds fort courts, jaune et verd, le corps par-dessus flambant brun, comme du feu bleu, et sa queue rougedtre. This last grovelling spirit must have been the red-tape devil of the party. Ces sept avec Belial, qui sont ces conseillers d'entretien, etoient ainsi habillez de couleurs et facons, quiont etc recitees. Then came a rabble of fiends, some in the shapes of unknown creatures ; others less ambitious, taking the forms of frogs, fallow deer, red deer, bears, wolves, apes, hares, buffaloes, horses, goats, boar- pigs, and the like ; but are they not pictured in the fearful nightmare of Walpurgis night, by the hand of Retszch, under the inspiration of Goethe? We must lay down this fascinating old book, f even though we shut it in the face of our reader, albeit the indomitable Faust, no whit abashed, bids his friend " go on ;" and stands undaunted the infernal battle wherein all these diabolical forms eat each other up, after changing to as many shapes as the princess in the Arabian story, without even leaving their tails, to say nothing of a plague of insects which afterwards comes upon him and drives him almost mad ; till bitten, stung, and blistered, all over by the vilest vermin, he leaves the enchanted atmosphere of Belial and his study not beaten, mind you and, coming forth into the blessed air of nature, finds that it is all a dia- bolical delusion, and that hks skin is unsullied by a single insect, parasitic or predatory. When Faust has Mephlstopheles, thereafter, assigned to him, what adventures ! But we must not be tempted further, though Alexander the Great himself is made to appear to the emperor, Charles V., as vividly as the phantoms to the " De- formed transformed," upon the adjuration of the Stranger to the Demons heroic Demons who wore, The form of the Stoic Or Sophist of yore Or the shape of each victor From Macedon's boy. But we must leave the magic land of apparitions for the realities. of nature, and introduce such of our readers as feel inclined to the introduction, to the other pachydermatous form, which we hope soon to behold alive in the flesh, the "Innog noTauiog of the Greeks. What an uncouth form it is, propped upon four * In his full-length portrait of the emperor, with a tame partridge at his feet. tHistoire prodigieuse et lamentable de JEAN FAUST, Grand Magician, avec son testament, et sa vie epouvant- able. A Cologne, chez les Heritiers de Pierre Marteau. 19 short huge legs, looking like a gigantic wine-skin fit for the revels of Polyphemus ! " The Hippopotamus" are there not more than one species? That there are several fossil species* there is no doubt ; but whether more than one species now exists is a vexed question. M. Desmoulins names two Hippopotamus Ca- pensis, and H. Senegalensis resting his distinction, as he says, on osteological discrepancies as strong as those on which Cuvier depended, when he separated the great fossil hippopotamus from the recent species exhibited at the Cape. Nay, M. Desmoulins goes further, not only expressing an opinion that it is not impossible that the hippopot- amus of the Nile differs from the two above men- tioned, but hinting that there may be two species in that river. The difference of color observed by M. Caillaud, who found among forty hippopotami living in the Upper Nile two or three of a bluish- black hue, while the rest were reddish, seems to be the foundation on which M. Desmoulins built his last-named suggestion. But color is often a treacherous guide when specific character is the question ; and, to say nothing of differences due to sex and age, the alteration of color in the same individual when its skin is dry, when it is moist, and when the river horse is taking his subaqueous walk, has been remarked by more than one observer. Le Vaillant, for instance, watched the progress of one at the bottom of Great river, from the top of an elevated rock which advanced into the stream, and he remarked, that its color which is grayish when the animal is dry, and bluish when the skin is only moist as it walked along under the water, appeared to be of a deep blue. After the French traveller had satisfied his curiosity by looking over 'iis unconscious peripatetic, as a certain personage hot to be named to ears polite is said to look over Lincoln, he watched the moment when it came to the surface to breathe, and killed it with a well- directed bullet, to the great joy of his Hottentots, who, in their surprise at the feat, and delight at the size of the beast, called it, " The grandmother of the river." In its osteological organization, the hippopota- mus approaches, in some degree, that of the ox and the hog. The skull, especially, exhibits much similarity in the connection of its bones, and the figure of its sutures, to that of the Sui'dae ; but, at the same time, it bears the impress of its own peculiarity. The teeth are very remarkable, and, especially the molars, vary much in form, number and posi- tion, according to the growth and age of the ani- mal. The long subcylindrical incisors and ca- nines the latter being enormous tusks terminating in a sharpened edge, which reminds the observer of that of a chisel of the lower jaw, give a ter- rific aspect to the mouth when it is open. This tremendous apparatus, formed principally for teas- ing and bruising more than grinding, is a fit * Hippopotami major, minutus, mediiis, for example. 20 LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. crushing mill for the coarse, tough plants which are transmitted to a stomach capable of contain- ing, in a full grown hippopotamus, five or six bushels, and a large intestine some eight inches in diameter. Three bushels, at least, of half- masticated vegetables have been taken from the stomach and intestines of one half-grown. But it is impossible to look upon these fearful teeth without thinking of defensive and offensive wea- pons, fit to correct, or even attack a crocodile, if it should venture to take liberties, or approach too near, in its plated armor. It is on record that, when irritated or exasperated by wounds, the bite of a hippopotamus has sunk a boat. Nor would we rely so much upon its abstinence from animal food, (though we do not give implicit credit to the lamentable statement in Alexander's letter to Aristotle, that the hippopotami, rushing from the depths of the river, devoured the light troops which he had sent to swim across,) to feel quite certain that if such luckless wanderers were to come in its way when it was hungry it would not give a zest to its salads with a tender young croc- odile or two. Major Denham states that the flesh of the crocodile is extremely fine, that it has firm green fat resembling the turtle, and that the cal- lipee has the color, firmness and flavor, of the finest veal. Mr. Bullock gave me the same ac- count of the flesh of the alligator, as far as the similitude to veal goes. I presume both travel- lers were speaking of young lacertians ; for the patriarchs give out a very strong musky smell. The formidable teeth of the hippopotamus are masked when the animal is not excited, by im- mense lips, and the body is wrapped in a coating of fat, which, in its turn, is shielded by a thick, smooth, tough hide of which more anon. The longest of the two hippopotami measured by Zerenghi, was sixteen feet nine inches in length ; its girth was fifteen feet ; its height six feet and a half; the aperture of the mouth two feet four in width ; and the tusks above a foot long, clear of the sockets. About the same period is required to complete the gestation of the hippopotamus as that neces- sary for the production of man at least, so it is said, and probably with truth. The female calves on land ; and both mother and offspring take to the water on the slightest alarm. This renders the capture of the young exceedingly dif- ficult. An eye-witness assured Thunberg that he watched a female hippopotamus which had gone op from a neighboring river, and lay motionless with his company till the calf was brought forth, when one of the party shot the poor mother dead. Up sprang the Hottentots from their hidden lair, and rushed forward to secure the new-born crea- ture ; but its instinct did more for it than their reason for them it gained the bank, threw itself into the bosom of the friendly river, and escaped. Another calf, surprised by Sparrman's party, was not so fortunate. On the 28th January, 1766, after sunrise, just as he and his Hottentots were thinking of leaving their posts for their wag- ons, a female hippopotamus, with her calf, came from some other pit or river, to take up their quarters in that which Sparrman was then block- ading. While she was waiting at a rather steep part of the river 's bank, and looking after her calf, which was lame, and consequently came on but slowly, she received an ill-directed shot from a Hottentot rejoicing in the name of " Flip" whom Sparrman, in his wrath, designates as the drowsiest of all sublunary beings, declaring he was half asleep when he fired and immediately plunged into the river. One of the Hottentots then seized the calf, and held it by its hind legs till the rest of the party came to his aid ; when it was fast^ bound and borne in triumph to the wagons, making a noise much like a hog that is going to be killed, but more shrill and harsh. It struggled hard, and was very unmanageable ; and, though the Hottentots were of opinion that it was not more than a fortnight, or at most three weeks, old, it was three feet and a half in length, and two feet high. When it was let loose it ceased crying ; and after the Hottentots had passed their hands several times over its nose, in order to ac- custom it to their effluvia, it directly began to take to them ; and in its hunger, poor thing, devoured the droppings of the oxen. While it was alive, Sparrman made a drawing of it, from which the plate in The Swedish Transactions for 1778, and that in his own Voyage, was taken, and then the hapless orphan was killed, dissected and eaten, in less than three hours. Sparrman found four stomachs, the first nearly empty, containing only a few lumps of cheese or curd ; in the second were several clots of caseous matter, and a great quantity of sand and mud ; the third contained lumps of caseous matter of a yellow color, and harder consistence than the others, together with several leaves, quite whole and fresh, and some dirt ; in the fourth was a good deal of dirt with a small quantity of curds, which were whiter than those in any of the other stomachs. The intes- tinal canal was 109 feet long. This, be it remembered, was a baby. What a supply must be requisite for the full-grown ani- mal ! Bitterly does the husbandman, whose cultivated fields lie in the neighborhood of a hippopotamus- haunted river, rue its voracity, and describe it, unconsciously, in terms long ago recorded by Ni- cander* and Diodorus,f expressive of the ruin oc- casioned to his crops by these enormous reapers. They were regarded as the symbol of the destruc- tion-dealing Typhon, and were worshipped, as some nations worship the devil, from the terror which they inspired. In modern times, every settler and every native makes war upon them. *"H innov rov Ntfion vnio Sa'ir aiSaioiaaav Boaxti, aqovQTiaiv di xaxip im^iMirat aoiijr. Theriac. t Diodorus says, that if the fecundity of the beast were greater, it would be ruinous to the agriculture of Egypt ; and Sonnini states, in the same spirit, that these animals devastated whole tracts of country, and were as formida- ble enemies to man as the crocodile. LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A. NATURALIST. 21 Pit-falls, ambushes, the rifle, are ready for them wherever they make their appearance ; to say nothing of the old and somewhat apocryphal story of laying lots of dried peas in their way rather \n expensive proceeding, one should think which these gluttonous giants devour, and then drinking copiously, the peas swell within them till 'they burst. The beast had his revenge, sometimes ; and Sparrman, for one, was in such a parlous fear, when one came out of the stream upon his party, with a hideous cry, and " as swift as an arrow from a bow," that he thought the river had overflowed its banks, and that he should be drowned. After this confession, he thus endeav- ors to account for the strange impression : " As the hippopotamus," says he, " when it is newly come up out of the water, and is wet and slimy, is said to glisten in the moonshine like a fish, it is no wonder that as soon as I took my handker- chief from before my eyes, it should appear to me, at so near a view as I had of it, like a column of water, which seemed to threaten to carry us off" and drown us in a moment." The voice of the animal is described as some- thing between grunting and neighing : the words heurh, hurh, heoh-hcoh, are used by Sparrman to give some idea of its cry ; the two first words being uttered in a hoarse, hut sharp and tremulous sound, resembling the grunting of other animals, while the third or compound word is sounded ex- tremely quick, and is not unlike the neighing of a horse. Others describe the sound as more resem- bling the bellowing of a buffalo than the neighing of a horse at least, just before death. Some call it snorting, some neighing, and others again grunting ; and it has been likened to the deep creaking of a very heavy gate or door on its hinges. Neither of these similes convey the idea of any- thing very melodious, but there can be no doubt that this clumsy creature has some music in his soul. Major Denham relates, that during the excursion to Munga and the Gambarou, the party encamped on the borders of a lake frequented by hippopota- mi, and intended to shoot some of the huge in- mates. A violent thunder-storm prevented their sport ; but next morning they had a full opportu- nity of convincing themselves that these uncouth animals are not only not insensible to musical sounds, but strongly attracted to them, as seals are said to be, even though the music should not possess the softness and sweetness of the Lydian measure. As the major and his suite passed along the borders of the Lake Muggaby at sunrise, the hippopotami followed the drums of the different chiefs the whole length of the water, sometimes approaching so close to the shore that the water they spouted from their mouths reached the persons who were passing along the banks. Major Den- ham counted fifteen at one time sporting on the surface ; and his servant Columbus shot one of them in the head, when he gave so loud a roar as he buried himself in the lake that all the others disappeared in an instant. But whatever may be thought of the snortings and neighings of this See-pferd, all agree that it deserves the more appetizing name of Wasser ochs, when the sapid excellence of its flesh is consid- ered. The Sea-cow's speck, in other words, the layer of fat which lies immediately below the skin, salted and dried, is highly prized by the Cape Town epicure. Of the teeth, Odoardus Barbosa justly saith, " Hanno gli ippopotami i denti, come gli elefante piccoli et e migliore avorio di quello de gli elefanti, e piti bianco, e piCk forte, e di maniera che non perde il colore." For this last reason the ivory of the canine teeth is highly valued by the manufacturers of those pearly rows which the artist knows so well how to form when he makes the beautiful dental series of rosy eighteen appear between the withered lips of eighty. Nor were the ancients ignorant of its value in a somewhat higher branch of art. Pau- sanius relates that the face of Cybele was formed of the teeth of these animals. The tough skin in ancient times was fashioned into helmets and bucklers. " The skin or hide of his backe is unpenetrable, (whereof are made tar- guets and head-pieces of doubty proof that no weapon wil pierce,) unlesse it be soked in water or some liquor," saith the worthy Philemon Hol- land, in his translation of Pliny. It is, in these modern days, made into whips, and with these instruments terrible punishments, not unfrequently fatal, like the Russian knout, are inflicted. Major Denham makes one shudder when he describes the execution o'f one of those wickedly hypocritical judgments, which, affecting to- avoid a sentence of death, inflicts it in one of its- most agonizing forms. Oppressively hot as the weather was, the sheikh,, he states, admitted of no excuse for breaking the Rhamadan, and any man who was caught suffering his thirst to get the better of him in an African June, or visiting his wives between sunrise and sunset, was sentenced to 400 stripes with one of these deadly whips. A wretched woman bore two hundred stripes the number to which she was sentenced within the courtyard of the palace, and was afterwards carried home senseless. Her paramour received his punishment in the dender or square, suspended by a cloth round his middle his only covering and supported by eight men. An immense whip of one thick thong cut from the skin of the hippopotamus was first shown to him, which he was obliged to kiss and acknowledge the justice of his sentence. Tho fatah was then said aloud, and two powerful slaves of the sheikh inflicted four hundred stripes, reliev- ing each other every thirty or forty strokes. " They strike," says the major, " on the back, while the end of the whip, which has a knob or head, winds round and falls on the breast or upper stomach : this it is that renders these punishments 22 LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. fatal. After the first two hundred " here the dreadful details become too horrible. " * * * In a few hours after he had taken the whole four hundred he was a corpse. The agas, kashellas, and kadis attend on these occasions. I was as- sured the man did not breathe a sigh, audibly. Another punishment succeeded this, which, as it was for a minor offence namely, stealing ten camels and selling them was trifling, as they only gave him one hundred stripes, and with a far less terrific weapon." In ancient history the hippopotamus figures under many shapes ; some giving it the mane of a horse and the hoofs of an ox, and others the tail of the last-named animal. Whether it be the behemoth of Job* is doubtful, many asserting that it is, and as many thinking that it is not : among the last Milton must be reckoned Scarce from his mould, Behemoth biggest born of earth upheaved His vastness : fleeced the flocks and bleating rose, As plants : ambiguous between sea and land The river horse and scaly crocodile. f It is remarkable that the accounts of the an- cients, from Herodotus and Aristotle down to Pliny and subsequent writers, should be so extremely inaccurate, while the representations which have come down to us are comparatively correct. 'Take, for example, the coin of Hadrian, with a crocodile at the side of Nilus and a hippopotamus looking up at the river god; the coin of Marcia Olacilla Severa ; and the sculpture on the plinth of the statue of the Nile, with a crocodile orscink probably the former j-in its mouth. Besides, one should think that some had seen the animal itself. " Marcus Scaurus was the first man, who in his plaies and games that he set out in his aedileship, made a show of one water-Horse -and foure Crocodiles swimming in a poole or mote made for the time during those solemnities."! 'One, also, swelled the triumphal pomp of Augus- tus after his victory over Cleopatra. The later emperors exhibited them frequently, and there is every reason for concluding that they were shown, no longer as mere objects of curiosity, but matched with men. The bestiarus must have thought he had an ugly customer when the lanista first intro- duced a hippopotamus to him as the antagonist against which he was pitted. The third Gordian gratified the people with the display of thirty-two < elephants, ten elks, ten tigers, sixty tame lions, * Chap. xl. 10-19. t Holland's Pliny. Paradise Lost, vii. 470. thirty tame leopards, ten hyaenas, a thousand pair of gladiators, one hippopotamus, one rhinoc- eros, and ten camelopards. These gigantic " games," as they were called, had almost always a bloody termination ; and the author of The Last Days of Pompeii caught the spirit of the savage populace when he made one of them shout in joy- ous anticipation Ho ! ho ! for the merry, merry show, With a forest of faces in every row ; Lo ! the swordsmen, bold as the son of Alemsena, Sweep side by side o'er the hushed arena. Tal k while you may, you will hold your breath When they meet in the grasp of the" glowing death ! Tramp ! tramp ! how gayly they go ! . Ho ! ho ! for the merry, merry show ! The ancients believed that great enmity existed between the hippopotamus and the crocodile ; and that they bear no very good will to each other may be very possible ; but near neighbors as they are, dangerous enough perhaps, Nature has so provided for them, offensively and defensively, that they, most probably, maintain an armed neutrality. The hippopotamus did not escape the medical practitioners of old. Pliny and others show how it enriched the pharmacopoeia. We spare our readers the various prescriptions, merely observing that the teeth were famous against the tooth-ache, and that the mother who could procure some of the brain had only to rub the gums of her infant with it to deliver the poor dear baby from the torments of teething. We must not omit that the animal was considered a master of the art of healing, from his alleged habit of Jetting blood by pressing the vein of his leg against a sharp stake, or stout, broken, sharp-pointed reed, when his constitution required it. If we are so fortunate as to overcome the dif- ficulties of rearing and of the passage, and lodge the young hippopotamus, now sojourning in Egypt, safely in the Regent's Park, how different will the spirit of the English people, who will crowd to see it, be from that with which the sanguinary Romans, high and low, beheld the same form ! We shall have the privilege of peaceably enjoying the sight of this peaceable animal, anxious, in its uncouth way, to show its good will to those who show good will to it, instead of lusting for the ter- rible excitement of the amphitheatre. Commodus, on one occasion, exhibited five ; and descending into the arena butchered some of these wretched beasts with his own imperial hand. Queen Victoria, accompanied by her consort and their children, the hopes of Britain, will gracious- ly look upon the unmolested creature. LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. 23 LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATU- RALIST. PART V. JOHN JONSTON, quoting Robertas de Monte, remarks, that " in the yeer 1125 the winter was so violent, that innumerable eels in Brabant, by reason of the ice, went forth of the lake, which is strange, and got into hay-ricks, and lay hid there, till by extream cold they rotted away. And the trees at last had scarce any leaves put forth in May." The eels might as well have staid .pa- tiently in their lake waiting for better times, as we must for milder weather. Whether the May of 1850 is to be like the May in 1125 is a prob- lem yet to be solved ; but I write on the 28th March, after a bitter easterly-wind-blowing month of it, with the snow on the ground, the sun shin- ing, and the searching, biting, blasting wind in the old quarter. There was thick ice yesterday on the water in St. John's Park. The dryness, for weeks, has almost equalled that which afflicted Italy in the 322d year after the building of Rome, and we have had dust more than enough to ran- som a heptarchy of kings. So pressed for food were the blackbirds, in consequence of the drought, that they ate off the grass of the pinks and carna- tions, making them look as if that plant-cutting bird, the Phytotoma,* or the rodent rabbit, had been at them. The crocuses look pinched with cold, and keep their petals closed, though the sun's rays court them, as if in mockery, to ex- pand. But if Phoebus bears the nuptial torch of the diurnal flowers, without the aid of Zephyrus, the loves of the plants are checked. The buds bide their time snugly wrapped up in their var- nished coats ; but still nature gives signs of vege- table life. The " daffodils begin to peer" daffodils That come before the swallow dares, and take The winds of March with beauty ; and the primrose and violet brave the severity of the season from their lowly but sheltered retreats. After all, the time has been genial when compared with the springs of 1771 and 1838, though the impatience with which many of us regard that fixture the weathercock, day after day, can hardly be wondered at. But could we order things for the better in the long run ? A distinguished philosopher and poet,f indeed, remarks, that the suddenness of the change of the wind from north-east to south-west seems to show that it depends on some minute chemical cause, * Phytotoma rara, the Chilian Plant-cutter. It lives on plants, which it cuts off close to the root, and often shears off many more than it wants, leaving them on the ground, as if it did the mischief from caprice'. The peasants consequently employ every method in their power for its destruction, and rewards are given to chil- dren who take their eggs. Molina describes the bird as about the size of a quail, with a rather large bill, half an inch in length, conical, straight, a little pointed, and serrated. t Darwin. ,JL \3 which if it was discovered might probably, like other chemical causes, be governed by human agency, such as blowing up rocks by gunpowder, or extracting the lightning from the clouds. If, adds the gifted writer, this could be accomplished, it would be the most happy discovery that ever has happened to these northern latitudes, since in this country the north-east winds bring frost, and the south-west winds are attended with warmth and moisture ; and he argues, that if the inferior currents of air could be kept perpetually from the south-west supplied by new productions of air at the line, which he makes the qfficina a'eris for this supply, or by superior currents flowing in a con- trary direction, the vegetation in this country would be doubled, as in the moist African valleys which know no frosts ; the numbers of its inhabit- ants would be increased, and their lives prolonged ; for a great abundance of the aged and infirm of mankind, as well as many birds and animals, are destroyed by severe continued frosts in this climate. And thus man proposes. See what he would do if he had the direction of the clerk of the weather-office ! Our poetic philosopher, however, omits to tell us how he would dispose of the superfluous population of long-livers in this Eden, or how the tropical temperature would suit hyperborean constitutions. In such a paradise, threescore would be no burden, and all the gay grandsires would frisk as in the celebrated Her* fordshire May dance, in which figured eight chosen men " whose ages counted together made eight hundred yeers compleat, so that what one wanted of a hundred, the other exceeded a hundred as much." Our noble 106*168 would emulate " the Countesse of Desmond, who lived in the yeer 1589, and after ; she married in the dayes of Edward the fourth ; Verulam saith, she thrioe renewed her teeth, and lived a hundred and fourty yeers."* All this looks charming upon paper, but, de- pend upon it, the winds are best in the hand of the Great Anemonologist and disposer of events, * Jonston, 1657: who adds, "Epimenides of Crete lived 150 yeers ; Gorgi as Siculus, a rhetorician, 108; Hippocrates 114 : Terentia, wife of Cicero, 103 ; Clodia, daughter of Ofilius, 115, though when she was young she had borne fifteen children. What shall I say of Luceia or Galeria Copiola ? She lived not a little more than a hundred yeers ; for it is reported that for a hundred yeers she played the jester upon the stage : it may be, at first she acted the maid's part, and at last an old wive's. Isra, the player and dancer, was in her youthfull dayes brought upon the stage : how old she was then is not known, but after 99 yeers from that time she was again brought upon the Theater, not to act her part, but to be showed as a miracle ; when Pompey the Great dedicated the Theater. Also she was again showed at the sports ordained for to pray for the health of Diyus Augustus. Verstigan writes, that at Segovia, in Spain, it was re- ported that a woman lived a hundred and sixty yeers. Franciscus Alvarez reports, that he saw an Archbishop of ^Ethiopia a hundred and fifty yeers old. Buchanan testifies that one Lauren tins, of the Orcades, when he was a hundred and fourty yeers old, went a fishing in his boat on the coldest winter commonly." All, these, how- ever, with our own old Parr to boot, must hide their diminished youthful heads before John Jonston's other example, which we have reserved for the last. "John of Times, that was armor-bearer to Charles the Great, lived 360 yeers I" 24 LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. who in his own good time will send the desired change. Still, shivering mortals may be pardoned for looking with intense anxiety for the winged herald of summer, whose advent ever has been and ever will be hailed by man. A Greek design is now before me, representing three persons of different ages. The one on the left, a young man in the flower of youth, exclaims, as he points to the bird flying above him, "Behold a swallow!" The centre figure, a man of more advanced but still vigorous age, seated, like the former, has just turned his up-lifted head, saying " True, by Her- cules!" and at the same moment a boy, standing and pointing to the welcome apparition, cries, " There she is." All this the eldest personage ratifies with " The spring is come!" Nearly the same exclamations flow through a line of Aristophanes.* Speaking of the American barn swallow,f Wilson says, " We welcome their first appear- ance with delight, as the faithful harbingers and companions of flowery spring and ruddy summer ; and when, after a long, frost-bound, and boisterous winter, we hear it announced that ' the swallows are come,' what a train of charming ideas are associated with the simple tidings." The human heart was equally touched, whether it was beat- ing in the bosom of an ancient Greek or of a modern American. The length of the American bird is seven inches, and its alar extent thirteen. The bill is black ; the upper part of the head, neck, back, rump, and tail coverts steel blue, the color de- scending roundly on the breast. The forehead and chin are deep chestnut, and the lining of the wing, belly, and vent, light chestnut. The wings and tail are of a brown or sooty black, glossed with reflections of green. Tail deeply forked, the two external feathers being an inch and a half longer than those next to them, and tapering towards their ends ; each feather, with the excep- tion of the two middle ones, is marked on the inner vane with an oblong white spot. The eyes are dark hazel, the sides of the mouth of a yellow hue, and the legs dark purple. Such is the plumage of the male. The female differs from her mate in having the under parts of a rufous white slightly clouded with a rufous hue, and her external tail feathers are shorter than those of the male. They are nearly a week in finishing their nest, which they commence early in May. Wilson describes it as being in the form of an inverted cone, with a perpendicular section cut off on that side by which it adheres to the wood. At the top it has an extension of the edge, a sort of offset, for the male or female to sit on occasion- ally ; the upper diameter is about six inches by five, the height externally seven inches. Mud mixed with fine hay, as plasterers mix their mor- iStf, x.r.H. Equites. T Hirundo rufa, Gm. ; Hirundo Americana, Wilson. ar with hair to make it adhere the better, and wearing the appearance of having been placed in regular strata or layers from side to side, forms he shell, which is about an inch in thickness. The interior of the cone is filled with fine hay well stuffed in, and above the hay lies a handful of very large downy goose feathers. On this soft receptacle repose five eggs, white, specked, and spotted all over with reddish brown. A slight flesh-colored tinge is due to the semi-transparency of the egg shell. On the 16th of May, being on a shooting expe- dition on the top of Pocano Mountain, North- ampton, when the ice on that and on several suc- cessive mornings was more than a quarter of an inch thick, Wilson observed with surprise a pair of these swallows which had taken up their abode on a miserable cabin there. It was then about sunrise, the ground white with hoar-frost, and the male was twittering on the roof by the side of his mate with great sprightliness.* The man of the house told him that a single pair came regularly there every season, and built their nest on a pro- jecting beam under the eaves, about six or seven feet from the ground. At the bottom of the mountain, in a large barn belonging to the tavern there, Wilson counted twenty nests, all seemingly occupied. In the woods, he says, they are never met with ; but as you approach a farm they soon catch the eye, cutting their gambols in the air. Scarcely a barn to which these birds can find ac- cess is without them ; and as public feeling is universally in their favor, they are seldom or never disturbed. The proprietor of the large barn above-mentioned, a German, assured Wilson, that if a man permitted the swallows to be shot, his cows would give bloody milk, and also that no barn where swallows frequented would ever be struck with lightning ; " I nodded assent," adds this charming and amiable writer ; " when the tenets of super- stition lean to the side of humanity, one can read- ily respect them." Our transatlantic brethren have also their " chimney swallow, "f described with his usual felicity by Wilson, who remarks that the noise which the old ones make in passing up and down the funnel has some resemblance to distant thun- der. When heavy and long-continued rains pre- vail, the nest loses its hold ; if this disaster oc- curs during the period of incubation, the eggs are of course destroyed when the loosened nest is precipitated to the bottom." But kind nature has provided for the safety of the brood if the misfor- tune happen before they can well fly ; for the muscular power of the feet and the sharpness of the claws of the nestlings, even when they are * Our swallow is equally matutinal ; and our own Gray has truly and pathetically associated it with the other early rural sounds : The breezy call of incense-breathing mom, The swallow twittering from the straw-built shed, The cock's shrill clarion, or the echoing horn, No more shall rouse them from their lowly bed. t Hirundo pelasgia, Linn. LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. 25 blind and a considerable time elapses before they can see are remarkable, and the houseless young frequently scramble up the sides of the vent, to which they cling like squirrels, and are often fed by the parents for a week or more while so sit- uated. Mr. Churchman, a correspondent of Wilson, counted more than two hundred go in of an even- ing into one chimney of a mansion. Once he saw a cat come upon the house, and place herself near the chimney, where she strove to catch the birds as they entered, but without success. Puss then climbed the chimney-top, and there took her station. The birds, nothing daunted, descended in gyrations without seeming to regard her, though she made frequent attempts to grab them. "I was pleased," adds good Mr. Churchman, " to see that they all escaped her fangs." Wil- son, who was a close observer, says that he never knew these birds to resort to kitchen chimneys where fire was kept in summer. He thought he had noticed them enter such chimneys for the purpose of exploring, but he observed also that they immediately ascended, and went off, on find- ing fire and smoke. Then there is " the purple martin,"* a gen- eral favorite with the Anglo-Americans, and even with the Indians. Boxes are placed for the wel- come birds in the homesteads, and in these com- fortable lodgings four spotless white eggs, very small for the size of the bird, are deposited. He well repays the hospitality. The purple martin,, (says the author last quoted,) like his half-cousin the king-bird, is the terror of crows, hawks, and eagles ; these he attacks when- ever they make their appearance, and with such vigor and rapidity that they instantly have recourse to flight. So well known is this to the lesser birds and to the domestic poultry, that as soon as they hear the martin's voice engaged in fight, all is alarm and consternation. To observe with what spirit and audacity this bird dives and sweeps upon and around the hawk or eagle is astonishing ; he also bestows an occasional bastinading on the king- bird when he finds him too near his premises, though he will at any time instantly cooperate with him in attacking the common enemy. Byron, who then rarely, if ever, tasted meat, sitting one day opposite to Moore, who was dis- cussing a beef-steak with hearty good will, inquired whether the diet did not make him savage? The stimulating food of the pugnacious purple martin differs from all the rest of the American swallows ; wasps and beetles, particularly those called by the boys, " Goldsmiths," are his favorite prey. Wil- son took four of these large beetles from the stomach of one of these birds. But we must leave the other American Hirun- dinidee, though the temptation be strong ; for it is impossible not to be struck with the migration which is at this moment in progress all over the world. For example, we have it on undoubted authority that from the twenty-first day of March * Hirundo purpurea, Linn. ; Progne purpurea, Bole. to the first day of May, at least one hundred mil- lions of birds enter Pennsylvania from the south part on their way further north, and part to reside during the season. Wilson ascertained during his residence with Mr. Bartram, in the summer of 1811, that in the Botanic Garden and the adjoining buildings, comprehending an extent of little more than eight acres, not less than fifty- one pairs of birds took up their abode and built their nests. Return we then to our own happy land, and our own swallows. ^Elian and Plutarch declare that the fly and the swallow are the only animals which cannot be tamed. Pliny gives it another " indocible" com panion, in his forty-fifth chapter setting forth " what birds are not apt to loarnc, and will not ba taught." And now, (says the Roman zoologist, speaking through the mouth of the venerable Philemon Hol- land) and now that we are in this discourse of wit and capacitie, I must not omit to note that of birds the swallow, and of land beasts the mouse and the rat, are very untoward, and cannot be brought to learn ; whereas we see great elephants ready to do whatever they are commanded ; the furious lions brought to draw under the yoke ; the seals within the sea, and so many fishes grow to be tame and gentle. Whether, as time has rolled on, swallows have become more civilized and docile, or man has arrived at greater excellence in the art of domes- ticating and taming animals, are questions which are not for discussion here ; but certain it is that swallows become very familiar in confinement, and to the observations made in this state we owe the knowledge that their moult takes place in January and February, for they have been so kept for many months. In September, 1800, the Rev. Walter Trevel- yan wrote from Long Witton, Northumberland, in a letter to the editor of Bewick's British Birds, the following narrative, which is so simply and beautifully written, and gives so clear an account of the process of taming, that it would be unjust to recite it in any words but his own for the edifi- cation of those who may wish to make the experi- ment : About nine weeks ago, (writes the good clergy- man,) a swallow fell down one of our chimneys, nearly fledged, and was able to fly in two or three days. The children desired they might try to rear him, to which I agreed, fearing the old ones would desert him ; and, as he was not the least shy, they succeeded without any difficulty, for he opened his mouth for flies as fast as they could supply them, and was regularly fed to a whistle. In a few days, perhaps a week, they used to take him into the fields with them, and as each child found a fly and whistled, the little bird flew for his prey from one to another ; at other times he would fly round about them in the air, but always descended at the first call, in spite of the constant endeavors of the wild swallows to seduce him away : for which purpose several of them at once would fly about him in all directions, striving to drive him away when they 26 LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. saw him about to settle on one of the children's hands, extended with the food. He would very often alight on the children, uncalled, when they were walking several fields distant from home. What a charming sketch of innocence and be- nevolence, heightened by the anxiety of the pet's relations to win him away from beings whom they must have looked upon as so many young ogres ! The poor flies, it is true, darken the picture a little ; but to proceed with the narrative : Our little inmate was never made a prisoner by being put into a cage, but always ranged about the room at large wherever the children were, and they never went out of doors without taking him with them. Sometimes he would sit on their hands or heads and catch flies for himself, which he soon did with great dexterity. At length, finding it take up too much of their time to supply him with food enough to satisfy his appetite, (for I have no doubt he ate from seven hundred to a thousand flies a-day,) they used to turn him out of me house, shutting the window to prevent his re- turn for two or three hours together, in hopes he would learn to cater for himself, which he soon did ; but still was no less tame, always answering their call, and coming in at the window to them (of his own accord) frequently every day, and al- ways roosting in their room, which he has regular- ly done from the first till within a week or ten days past. -He constantly roosted on one of the chil- dren's heads till their bed-time ; nor was he disturbed by the child moving about, or even walking, but would remain perfectly quiet with his head under his wing, till he was put away for the night in some warm corner, for he liked much warmth. The kind and considerate attempt to alienate the attached bird from its little friends had its effect. It is now four days (writes worthy Mr. Tre- velyan, in conclusion) since he came in to roost in the house, and though he did not then show any symptoms of shyness, yet he is evidently becoming less tame, as the whistle will not now bring him to the hand ; nor does he visit us as formerly, but he always acknowledges it when within hearing by a chirp, and by flying near. Nothing could exceed his lameness for about six weeks ; and I have no doubt it would have continued the same had we not left him to himself as much as we could, fearing he would be so perfectly domesticated that he would be left behind at the time of migration, and of course be starved in the winter from cold and hun- ger. And so ends this agreeable story : not, how- ever, that it was " of course" that the confiding bird would be starved if it remained ; for the Rev. W. F. Cornish, of Totness, kept two tame swal- lows, one for a year and a half, and the other for two years, as he informed Mr. Yarrell. Wilson has proved that the American barn- swallow may be easily tamed, and he observes that they, too, soon become exceedingly gentle and familiar. He frequently kept them in his room for several days at a time, when they employed themselves in catching flies, picking them from his clothes and hair, and calling out occasionally as they observed some of their old companions pass- ing the windows. But, after all, it is very questionable kindness to make a pet of a creature so essentially volatile. Look at the bird. Observe its tiny legs and feet. See how the whole structure is fitted for an aerial existence. Look at the prodigal development of wing, and the powerful muscles destined to work the alar machinery, enabling the bird to sustain itself for hours in the air, and there execute such rapid and changing turns and evolutions as the desultory movements of its insect prey require, and with a celerity that the eye can hardly follow. Virgil found no better simile for the velocity and dexterity exhibited by Juturna, when driving her brother's chariot to save him from falling into the hands of ^Eneas ; nor Ariosto for the rapidity of the ship wherein Orlando Furioso desired to cleave the waters. The multitudes of insects destroyed by a pair of swallows in the breeding season may be im- agined from the number of flies that went to make up the daily rations of Mr. Trevelyan's tame bird. Theocritus, through whose verse Nature breathes, had evidently observed the multitudinous visits and departures from the nest for the purpose of feeding the young, and alludes to them with his wonted felicity in his fourteenth idyl. Poetical fable, too, was busy with the bird, and the lament- able story of the daughters of Pandion was cele- brated, both in prose and poetry. Pendebant peniiis, quarum petit altera silvas Allera tecta subit.* The concluding frightful scene, which reminds one of the horrible revenge of Titus Andronicus, with the additional coup de theatre of Philomela throwing the head of Itylus on the table at the conclusion of the revolting repast, and the subse- quent change of Tereus into a hoopoe, Itylus into a pheasant, Philomela into a nightingale, and her sister into a swallow Manibus Procne pectus signata cruentis,t is perhaps as striking a chapter of metamor- phoses as Greek or Roman ever invented. Mos- chus makes the two plaintive sisters prominent in their lamentations, when All the birds in the air fell to sighing and sobbing, on the death of Bion.J Nor are some of the stories told of the bird, evidently in good faith, unamusing : In the mouth of Nilus, near Heraclea, in ^Egypt, there is a mighty banke or causey raised only of a continuall ranke and course of swallows' nests, piled one upon and by another thicke, for the length almost of half a quarter of a mile, which is so firme and strong, that being opposed against the inundations of Nilus, it is able to breake the force * Ovid, Metam. 6 t Gecrrg. iv. Ovid also takes advantage of the plu- mage to help the fable : Nee ad hue de pectore caedis Excessere noteen quoting. Mr. Gilbert, Mr. Gould's assistant, gave him he following information, the result of what Mr. Gilbert saw at Swan river : The greatest peculiarity in the habits of this bird s its manner of suspending itself in perfect clusters, ike a swarm of bees ; a few birds suspending them- selves on the under side of a dead branch, while others of the flock attach themselves one to the other n such numbers, that they have been observed nearly of the size of a bushel measure. This habit of clustering shows itself in the Eu- ropean swallow. Sir Charles Wager relates, that in the spring of the year, as he came into sound- ings in our channel, a great flock of swallows :ame and settled on all his rigging ; every rope, IB says, was crowded. " They hung on one an- other like a swarm of bees ; the decks and carving were filled with them. They seemed almost famished and spent, and were only feathers and bones ; but, being recruited with a night's rest, took their flight in the morning." These weary travellers were evidently on their way northward, and must have passed over France. Mr. Gould found the Australian wood-swallow very numerous in the town of Perth, until about the middle of April, and then he missed it sud- denly, and did not observe it again until near the end of May, when he saw it in countless num- bers flying in company with the common swallows and martens over a lake about ten miles north of the town so numerous, indeed, that he describes them as darkening the water as they flew over it. Its voice, he says, greatly resembles that of the common swallow in character, but it is much more harsh. He describes the stomach as muscular and capacious, and the food as consisting of insects generally. In Van Dieman's Land it may, Mr. Gould adds, be regarded as strictly migratory. It arrives there, according to his observation, in October, the beginning of the Australian summer, and after rearing at least two broods, departs again north- wards in November. A scattered few remain throughout the year on the continent in all the localities favorable to their habits, the number being regulated by the supply of insect food. He remarks, that specimens from Swan river, South Australia, and New South Wales, present no difference, either in size or coloring, while those from Van Diemen's Land are invariably larger in all their admeasurements, and are also of a deeper color. The general season of incubation is from Sep- tember to December, and the situation of the nest much varied. Mr. Gould saw one in a thickly- foliaged bush near the ground ; others, in a naked fork, on the side of the bole of a tree, in a niche formed by a portion of the bark having been sepa- rated from the trunk, &c. The nest itself he describes as rather shallow, of a rounded form, LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. 29 about five inches in diameter, and composed of fine twigs, neatly lined with fibrous roots. He observed that the nests found in Van Diemen's Land were larger, more compact, and more neatly formed, than those on the continent of Australia ; and one which was shown to him by Mr. Justice Montague, near Hobart Town, was placed at the extremity of a small leafy branch. The nest figured by Mr. Gould is so represented. By the way, Mr. Yarrel gives, in his highly interesting British Birds, a vignette executed from a drawing by Mr. Edward Cooke for the late Mr. Wells, of Redleaf. It represents a nest of our common swallow built on a bough of a sycamore, which hung low over a pond at the Moat, Pens- hurst, in Ken* in the summer of 1832. Mr. Gould describes the eggs of Artamus sor- didus, which are four in number, as differing much in the disposition of their markings, of a dull white ground color, spotted and dashed with dark umber brown ; in some, he says, a second series of grayish spots appear, as if beneath the surface of the shell ; medium length eleven lines, and breadth eight. The head, neck, and the whole of the body of the bird are of a sooty gray; the wings dark-bluish black ; the external edges of the second, third, and fourth primaries, white. The tail is black, with a tinge of blue, and all its feathers, except the two middle ones, have extensive white tips. The irides are dark brown, and the blue bill has a black tip. The feet are lead color ;' sexes alike in color, the female rather the smaller ; length, nearly six inches. Mr. Gould remarks, that the young have an irregular stripe of dirty white down the centre of each feather of the upper sur- face, and are mottled with the same on the under surface. April 1. Yesterday the weathercocks, which had so long been fixtures, veered round Grat& vice veris et Favoni. Every bud is now bursting, every seed is swelling now. All Nature is prolific, reminding us of the great egg of Night that floated in chaos, and was broken by the horns of the celestial bull. From this egg* sprang up like a blossom Eros, the lovely, the desirable, with his glossy, golden oinionsj Eros, the elder Cupid, the personifica- tion of divine love. All sublunary eggs, in which the principle of life glows, are now advancing ; and the remem- brance of a promise to relate the attempt of the poor incarcerated white-headed eagles to incubate rises. The female white-headed eagle (Halia'itos leucocephalus) laid her first egg on the 5th of * The TtQMTov wov, the first great egg or seed of the ancient philosophy. A serpent was coiled round it, em- blematical of the eternal divine wisdom. Its image was worshipped in the temple of the Dioscuri, Helen's brothers, as a representation, probably, of Leda's produc- tion. The breaking of the egg by the horns of the bull is typical of the genial effect of spring. t Aristophanes, Aves, 1. 694. Bekker. 3 April, 1845, and a second on the 8th of the same month, on a rough nest, composed of litter and twigs, &c., on the floor of her apartment in the eagle-hut at the garden in the Regent's Park. What a prison for a bird whose home is on the rock that shoots up from the lake, or the cliffs which overhang the mighty river or the wide sea ! Niagara is a favorite resort of the white-headed, or bald eagle the latter appellation a misnomer, for no bird has a better feathered head. There it sits or soars on the watch for the fish, and also for the carcases of squirrels, deer, bears, and other quadrupeds, which, in their attempts to cross the river above the falls, have been caught by the current and dashed down those awful cataracts. It is a very powerful bird, three feet long, and seven in alar extent ; and- has been seen flying off with a lamb ten days old ; but it let the prey fall from a height of ten or twelve feet, in consequence of its struggles and the shouts of the spectator, who ran with loud halloos after the depredator ; the poor lamb's back, however, was broken by the crushing swoop. Nay, a white-headed eagle has been known to seize and throw down an infant, and drag it for a short distance, when the cries of the mother, who had set down the little innocent to amuse itself while she weeded her garden, and the giving way of the child's dress, a portion of which the eagle bore off, saved its life. Thus was a second scene of the " Bird and Bantling" happily cut short. It will also attack old and sickly sheep, aiming furiously at their eyes. In short, he is a most determined brigand, whose portrait has been admirably painted by Wil- son. Look on this picture : Elevated on the high dead limb of some gigantic tree, that commands a wide view of the neighboring shore and ocean, he seems calmly to contemplate the motions of the various feathered tribes that pur- sue their busy avocations below ; the snow-white gulls slowly winnowing the air ; the busy tringse coursing along the sands ; trains of ducks streaming over the surface ; silent and watchful cranes, intent and wading ; clamorous crows, and all the winged multitudes that subsist by the bounty of this vast liquid magazine of Nature. High over all these hovers one whose action instantly arrests all his attention. By his wide curvature of wing and sudden suspension in the air, he knows him to be the fish-hawk, settling over some devoted victim of the deep. His eye kindles at the sight, and balancing himself, with half-opened wings on the branch, he watches the result. Down, rapid as an arrow from heaven, descends the distant object of his attention, the roar of its wings reaching the ear as it disappears in the deep, making the surges foam around. At this moment the eager looks of the eagle are all ardor, and, levelling his neck for flight, he sees the fish-hawk once more emerge struggling with his prey, and mounting in the air with screams of exultation. These are the signal for our hero, who, launching into the air, instantly gives chase, soon gains on the fish-hawk ; each ex- erts his utmost to mount above the other, display- ing in these rencontres the most elegant and sublime aerial evolutions. The unimcumbered eagle rap- 30 LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. idly advances, and is just on the point of reaching his opponent, when, with a sudden scream probably of despair and honest execration, the latter drops his fish. The eagle, poising himself for a moment, as if to take a more certain aim, descends like a whirlwind, snatches it in his grasp ere it reaches the water, and bears his ill-gotton booty silently away to the woods. This is very beautiful and very poetical, and, what is more, very true. But there are two sides to a question, as there were to the shield about which the two silly knights fought. Turn we now to honest, homely Benjamin Franklin's view of the case. In his letter to Mrs. Bache, dated Passy, Jan- uary 26, 1784, he observes, that the gentleman who made his voyage . to France to provide the ribands and medals nad executed his commis- To me (says that venerable philosopher and sturdy republican) they seem tolerably done ; but all such things are criticized. Some find fault with the Latin, as wanting classical elegance and cor- rectness ; and since our nine universities were not able to furnish better Latin, it was a pity, they say, that the mottoes had not been in English. Others object to the title, as not properly assumable by any but General Washington and a few others who served without pay. Others object to the bald eagle, as looking like a dindon, or turkey. For my own part, I wish the bald eagle had not been chosen as the representative of our country ; he is a bird of bad moral character ; he does not get his living honestly. You may have seen him perched on some dead tree, where, too lazy to fish for himself, he watches the labor of the fishing- hawk ; and when that diligent bird has at length taken a fish, and is bearing it to his nest for the support of his mate and young ones, the bald eagle pursues him and takes it from him. With all this injustice he is never in good case, but, like those among men who live by sharping and robbing, he is generally poor, and often very lousy. Besides, he is a rank coward ; the little king-bird, not bigger than a sparrow, attacks him boldly, and drives him out of the district. He is, therefore, by no means a proper emblem for the brave and honest Cincin- nati of America, who have driven all the fo'n^-birds from our country, though exactly fit for that order of knights which the French call Chevaliers d' In- dustrie. I am, on this account, not displeased that the figure is not known as a bald eagle, but looks more like a turkey. For, in truth, the turkey is, in comparison, a much more respectable bird, and withal a true original native of America. Eagles have been found in all countries, but the turkey was peculiar to ours ; the first of the species seen in Europe being brought to France by the Jesuits from Canada, and served up at the wedding-table of Charles IX. He is, besides, (though a little vain and silly, 't is true, but not the worse emblem for that,) a bird of courage, and would not hesitate to attack a grena- dier of the British Guards, who should presume to invade his farm-yard with a red coat on. The editor of this interesting correspondence remarks that a learned friend had observed to him, that the assertion about the first turkey being brought to France, &c., is a mistake, as turkeys were found in great plenty by Cortes when he in- vaded and conquered Mexico, before the time of Charles IX., and that this, and their being brought to old Spain, is mentioned by Peter Mar- tyr of Angelina, who was secretary to the council of the Indies, established immediately after the discovery of America, and personally acquainted with Columbus. But, after all, the white-headed eagle is a bold fellow ; and Mr. Gardiner relates, that when riding within five or six rods of one, the bird, by raising his feathers and his general defying de- meanor, seemed willing to dispute the ground with its owner. As for the vultures, the eagle treats them as so much dirt ; and, indeed, they are little better. He has been frequently seen to keep them at a respectful distance especially upon one occasion, when a whole colony of hapless squirrels had been hurried down the falls of Niagara till he had completely satiated himself with the harvest of death ; but, when pressed by hunger, he plays the same game with a well-filled vulture as he does, ordinarily, with the fish-hawk, attacking it furiously, making the cowardly glutton disgorge the carrion with which its craw is crammed, and then snatching up the dainty contents. The nest in a state of nature is generally fixed on some large, lofty tree, often in a swamp or morass ; and, if the tree be a favorite, will there be continued for years in succession. From being thus repaired and added to every season, it be- comes a dark, prominent mass, catching the eye at a considerable distance. To form it, sticks, sods, earthy rubbish, hay, moss, &c., are collected. The eggs are two in number, and Wilson men- tions a story about the female laying a single egg first, and, after having sat on it for some time, laying another. When the first is hatched, the warmth of that, they say, hatches the second. Upon the correctness of this tale, Wilson declines to determine ; but he relates, that a very respect- able gentleman in Virginia assured him that he saw a large tree cut down, containing the nest of a bald eagle, wherein were two young, one of which appeared nearly three times as large as the other. One of these nestlings might have had the lion's share of the food brought by the parents ; but the story of the hatching at long intervals is so contrary to all known rules of incu- bation, that it must be received with the greatest doubt. We must leave the grand native solitudes where this eagle constructs his eyry, for the cab- ined, cribbed, confined cell, where our poor pris- oners did their best to obey nature's law. The female began to sit on her eggs on the 8th of April, and the pair were seen by hundreds steadily persevering, notwithstanding the gaze of the visitors, from day to day, in a close incubation till the 6th of June, when the worthless eggs were removed. The male was very attentive to the female, and both took their regular turns in sitting. Their entire want of success seems, however, t LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. 31 have disgusted them with the whole proceeding, for we cannot learn that the female has produced an egg since. The attachment of the parents to the young, though it does not seem to reach the self-devotion of the stork, to which I have in a former chapter alluded, is very great. A person near Norfolk, U. S., informed Wilson, that in clearing a piece of woods on his ground, they met with a large dead pine-tree, on which was a nest of one of these birds containing young. Fire was set to the tree, the crackling flames ascended, the tree was in a blaze more than half-way up ; the wretched parent darted round and round through the fire until her plumage was so much injured that it was with difficulty she made her escape, and, even in that condition, she several times at- tempted to return, all the mother rising in her, and driving her to attempt the relief of her doomed nestlings. In a dissection by Dr. Samuel Smith, of Phil- adelphia, the eggs were found to be small and numerous ; and this, the observer remarks, may account for the unusual excitement manifested by these birds in pairing time. But, he adds, why there are so many is a mystery. It is, perhaps, consistent with natural law that everything should be abundant ; but from this bird, it is said, no more than two young are hatched in a season, consequently no more eggs are wanted than a sufficiency to produce that effect. Are the eggs numbered originally, and is there no increase of number, but a gradual loss till all are deposited 1 If so, the number may correspond to the long life and vigorous health of this noble bird. Why there are but two young in a season is easily explained. Nature has been studiously parsimonious of her physical strength, from whence the tribes of ani- mals incapable to resist derive security and confi- dence. That which the indefatigable Mr. Gould could not obtain in the native country of the bird, he may now find in the Garden of the Zoological Society of London. The wedge-tailed eagle,* the Wol-dja of the aborigines of the mountain and lowland districts of Western Australia, the eagle- hawk of the colonists, and the mountain eagle of New South Wales, of Collins, laid the first egg deposited in this country by one of her race on the 27th of February in the present year. On the 28th it was placed under a common hen, which sat very close, but fruitlessly, and on the 21st of March the addled egg was removed. On the 4th * Aquila fucosa, Cuv. In the gallery of the French Museum it appears to have been ticketed, according to Mr. Bennett, as Aq'uila fuscosa, a name under which it is mentioned in the Supplement to the Dictionnaire des Sciences Naturelles, in the English translation of Cuvier's work, and in the last edition published hy himself. Mr. Bennett supposes that this "unmeaning term " crept in erroneously for fucosa, as Temminck and Vigors both write it, and as ornithologists now generally do. Some better appellation than either might have been found for so nohle a species. But names must not he altered, or the greatest confusion there is quite enough already would prevail. of March she laid a second egg, which was also placed under a hen now sitting. What the golden eagle is to the northern hem- isphere, the wedge-tailed eagle is to the southern. Universally spread over the southern portion of Australia, numerous in Van Diemen's Land and on the larger islands of Bass' Straits, Mr. Gould is of opinion that it will, in all probability, be found to extend its range as far towards the tropics in the south as the golden eagle does in the north. Of great power and ferocity, it is the scourge of the shepherds and stock-owners, who wage deadly war against it, and unweariedly seek its extirpa- tion. One, killed by Mr. Gould, weighed nine pounds, and measured six feet eight inches in alar extent; but his impression is, that far Larger indi- viduals have come under his notice. Some opin- ion of its strength may be formed from the act of the bird figured by Collins, which was captured by Captain Waterhouse, during an excursion to Broken Bay, and struck its talons through a man's foot, while lying in the bottom of the boat with its legs tied together. During the ten days of its captivity, it refused food from all but one person. The natives, who looked on it with fear, could not be prevailed on to go near it, and they asserted that it would carry off a middling-sized kanguroo. But the brave bird could not brook confinement ; and one morning the broken rope, by which it was fastened, was all that remained. The captive had divided the strands and soared away. Its natural prey consists chiefly of the smaller species of kanguroo. These its piercing eye de- tects as it wheels aloft, circling gracefully till a victim is marked, when down it conies with uner- ring and fell swoop. Mr. Gould states that the bustard,* whose weight is twice that of its enemy, and which finds a more secure asylum on the ex- tensive plains of the interior, is not safe from its attacks ; and Mr. Cunningham mentions even the emew as its prey. But the kanguroos seem to have been its staple, and probably still are in those parts of the interior where civilized man has not yet penetrated. Of the multitudes of those quad- rupeds in old times we may judge by the account given by Captain Flinders of Kanguroo Island, where they were living in amity with the seals, as appears from the picturesque engraving from the drawing made by the lamented Mr. Westall. The captain writes that it was too late to go on shore in the evening of Sunday, 21st March, 1802, but every glass in the ship was pointed there to see what could be discovered. Several black lumps, like rocks, were asserted to have been seen in motion by some of the young gentlemen, of whom the gallant Sir John Franklin, for whose * This was probably the bird shot hy Mr. Ferdinand Bauer on Wellesley's Islands, which weighed between ten and twelve pounds, and made Captain Flinders and his party " an excellent dinner," after poor Mr. Bauer had carried it on his back many a weary furlong. The captain remarks that the flesh of this bird is distributed in a manner directly contrary to that of the domestic turkey ; the white meat being upon the legs, ard the black upon the breast. 32 LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. safety all good men pray, was one. Next morn- ing a number of dark-brown kanguroos were ob- served peaceably feeding upon a grass-plat by the side of a wood, and the landing of Captain Flin- ders and his party gave the unsuspecting animals no disturbance. I (writes the captain) had with me a double- barrelled gun, fitted with a bayonet, and the gentle- men, my companions, had muskets. It would be difficult to guess how many kanguroos were seen ; but I killed ten, and the rest of the party made up the number to thirty-one, taken on board in the course of the day the least of them weighing sixty-nine, and the largest one hundred and twenty- five pounds. These kanguroos had much resem- blance to the larger species found in the forest lands of New South Wales ; except that their color was darker, and they were not wholly destitute of fat. The captain records this slaughter with some compunction. After this butchery, for the poor animals suffered themselves to be shot in the eyes with small shot, and in some cases to be knocked on the head with sticks, I scrambled with difficulty through the brushwood, and over fallen trees, to reach the higher land with the surveying instruments ; but the thickness and height of the wood prevented any- thing else from being distinguished. There was little doubt, however, that this extensive piece of land was separated from the continent ; for the extraordinary lameness of the kanguroos, and the presence of seals upon the shore, concurred with the absence of all traces of men to show that it was not inhabited. But the sheep now walks where the kanguroo formerly bounded, and the wedge-tailed destroyer makes terrible havoc with the lambs. Not that it will refuse carrion ; fbr Mr. Gould, during one of his journeys into the interior to the northward of Liverpool Plains, saw no less than thirty or forty assembled together round the carcass of a dead bullock; some, gorged to the full, perched upon the neighboring trees, the rest still in the enjoy- ment of the feast. And he adds, that for the sake of the refuse thrown away by the kanguroo hunt- ers it will often follow them for many miles, and even for days together. The nests observed by the same scientific trav- eller were placed in the most inaccessible trees, were very large, nearly flat, and built of sticks and boughs. The eggs he never could procure. One word more, friendly reader, and you shall be left to more instructive and attractive matter. The. latest news from Egypt reports the young hippopotamus to be thriving and waxing strong, but more good-natured and amiable than ever. His teeth are advancing ; he takes his rice and meal with such a hearty good will that his allowance of milk to the great comfort, no doubt, of the good people of Cairo, who must have had some fears of a famine of that nutritious beverage is reduced to fifty pints a day ; and this Brobdignag baby has contrived to win good Mr. Murray's heart so effectually, that it is hoped he may em- bark for England, with his huge pet, somewhere about the 10th of May next, by which time it is expected that the infant's daily stint may be com- fortably lowered to twenty-five pints. And so, farewell for the present. Before these notes meet your eye the groves and gardens will be vocal, and rejoicing nature will be glowing under the influence of spring Cum Zephyris et hirundine prima. LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. 33 LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NAT- URALIST. PARTHENOPE, Ligeia, Leucosia these are pretty names as ever were bestowed on the off- spring of a river god and a muse ; nor are Molpe, Aglaophonos, and Thelxiope* which some will have it were the true designations of the daugh- ters of Achelous and Melpomene unmusical. Blest with powers of voice and fascination equal to Sontag for, however the habitues of her maj- esty's theatre may reasonably doubt it, they too were irresistible the sirens, unlike that fair, spotless enchantress, poured forth their gush of song to the ruin of their entranced audience, though they certainly never executed Rode's va- riations ; it may, indeed, be doubted whether any sublunary being, with the exception of the gifted countess, ever could at least with her supreme excellence. And so these accursed of Ceres con- tinued in their course of musical murder, sur- rounded by the corses of their victims, whose re- mains were wreathed with flowers, radiant with beauty, as our own Etty has depicted them, till their career was closed by the wily Greek, who had received his lesson from another mistress of enchantment ; and so they perished. But, it seems, their crimes were not sufficiently expiated. Years rolled on their ceaseless course. Greece was swallowed up by Rome, who in her turn fell at the feet of the Goth ; and in the ful- ness of time there arose a wizard from the great northern hive, he of the polar star, who waved his wand, aroused the sirens from the annihilation into which they had escaped, and degraded them into one of the lowest reptile forms of America. The Arabs have a saying that monkeys are en- chanted men, and the most elegant of modern poets has been heard to declare that they reminded him of poor relations ; but what is the lot of hu- manity so transformed, compared to the degrada- tion of sirens into Perennibranchiate Batrachians 1 What on earth are Perennibranchiate Batra- chians ? A Batrachian, in the language of the learned, means a reptile of the great frog family, and a Perennibranchiate there is certainly some ses- quipedality in the word, as there too often is in those coined by the scientific ; with all due sub- mission to their worships be it written a Pe- rennibranchiate Batrachian is one that does not go through metamorphosis, like a common frog for instance, (which first bursts upon the aquatic world as a tadpole, then acquires limbs, and then drops his tail and gills, as becomes a citizen of * Or, according to others, Thelxione. The maternity is given by some genealogists to Calliope, by others to Terpsichore ; but the better opinion is, that Melpomene was the mamma of these deluders. Like other irregular branches of families they became troublesome to theirs ; V 116 ng fr [ end ' Hera > excited them to contend with the Muses, who conquered them, and, as a punishment for their presumption, tore off their wings. the terrestrial as well as the watery world thence- forth blessed with lungs,) but remains a gill- breathing, muddy, fishlike groveller, all the days of its life. In my zoological obituary for last March, I find the death of Siren lacertina recorded towards the end of the month. The melancholy event took place in the garden of the Society in the Regent's Park, where the siren had lived for many years in the parrot-house, domiciled in a vessel of pond water, with a bottom of deep mud. It was during its life as vivacious as anything existing in inky-looking mud could be, and throve well on worms with some dozen and a half of which it was daily supplied and small fish. It was very eel-like in its motions, though blessed with two small anterior extremities ; but as you may wish to know something about the animal, curious reader, here is a description of it, which those who are not inquisitive may skip if they please. The generic character of the sirens consists in an elongated form, nearly similar to that of the eels. There are three external branchial or gill tufts on each side. No posterior feet, but two anterior small ones. Not a vestige of a pelvis. The head depressed ; the gape of the mouth mod- erate ; the muzzle obtuse ; the eye very little ; the ear concealed ; the lower jaw sheathed with a horny substance, and aimed with several rows of small teeth ; the upper jaw toothless ; on the palate numerous small retroverted denticles. Such is the reptile of which Dr. Garden, in the years 1765, 1766, sent a description to Ellis and Linnaeus, when the immortal Swede estab- lished an additional order for the siren in his class Amphibia the order Meantes. Such is an out- line of the creature which Cuvier pronounced to be one of the most remarkable of the class of rep- tiles, nay, of the whole animal kingdom ; a bold declaration, but borne out by the anomalies of its structure, its relationship to different families, and its approximation even to different classes. Thus, Pallas, Hermann, Schneider, and Lace- pede, classed it as the larva of a great unknown salamander. Camper placed it among the fishes. He was followed by Gmelin, who made an eel of it, conferring on it the name of Mur&na siren; and 't is almost a pity that the last-named worthy doctor was dead wrong in making it a Murecna ; it would have been so everlasting classical for that enlightened republican, brother Jonathan, who loves to copy the Romans, to have thrown his slaves to the Murcena. But he may still be imi- tative, and throw them to the sirens. Only, in- stead of going to the rocks and deep blue sea where the sirens of old haunted as you, young gentleman, have read in your Virgil* he must condemn them to be laid in the marshes where the luxuriant crops of rice wave. There, and in swamps, under the entangled roots of time-worn trees, the American siren lurks, and thence ob- v. 684. These rocks are understood to have been the island of Caprese, the retreat of the tiger-like Tiberius, who, it is said, could see like a cat in the dark. 34 LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. tained the somewhat unclassical name of " The Mud Iguana." And if you wish to be acquainted with the proportions of the Transatlantic form, know that Siren lacertina, one of the sisters, (whose death we have above recorded,) grows to the length of three feet, a dark anguillary beauty, of some intensity of color, with two little hands, (or fore feet, if you must be critical,) of four rin- gers each, and instead of lower extremities, a compressed tail, with an obtuse fin. When I last saw the defunct, the creature was as large as a child's wrist, and flounced about most vigorously upon being lifted out of its inky bed. Death came upon it at the end of March. Two days before the fatal event it had devoured two small fishes. The weather was unseasonably cold, and frost and snow prevailed. But the siren has, of course, some vocal power? As if to make the mockery complete, this siren was said to have the voice of a duck ; but even this has been denied. The captive siren of the Regent's Park was never heard to utter any sound. This is no place for anatomical or physiological detail, or much might be said relative to this most curious form. Those who feel interested, will be rewarded for referring to John Hunter, Cuvier, and Owen. The last-named distinguished com- parative anatomist has recorded some most val- uable observations on the blood-discs of this ba- trachian, and their comparison with those of man.* The siren's blood-discs were obtained by the pro- fessor from one of the external gills of the de- ceased specimen when it was in good health, in the month of October, 1841. But, without loading these pages with scientific disquisition, it is impossible that any one should even glance at the history and conformation of the sirens without being struck with the anomalies which they present. Pallas and the other dis- tinguished zoologists above-mentioned, may well be pardoned for considering the form that of one of the SalamandridcR in its progress to perfection. The first sight of it suggests the presence of a salamander in a metamorphic stage, and it is only upon close examination that the observer is satis- fied that the animal has reached its completion. It is as if Nature had been determined to show, that if she wished to indulge in the freak, she could arrest the animal's development, and, under the guise of a salamandrian larva, present a crea- ture perfect according to its kind, and forming a finished link in the great chain of beings, as per- fect, after its kind, as Sieboldtia maxima, in which enormous newt, the slits of the gill-aperture which 'always remains open in Menopoma, an American salamandrian are closed. Dr. Von Siebold found this creature which comes nearest of living beings to Scheuchzer's Homo diluvii testis, now termed Andrias Scheuch- zeri, and which has been proved to be a great fos- * See Penny Cyclopaedia, article " Siren (Zoology)," vol. xxii., p. 66 ; where these observations and a history of the animal will be found. sil salamandrian in a lake on a mountain of basalt, in Japan ; just such a locality as we find assigned in the Arabian Nights to enchanted aquatics. The doctor brought with him a male and a female ; but the former was so fond of his wife that he ate her up on the passage home, and arrived, consequently, in the best health and spirits at Leyden, measuring about three feet in length. About the time of the siren's death there were hopes that a young dromedary would make its appearance ; and, indeed, one had been born in the Regent's Park previously. But in this last case the young creature was stillborn, though its mother had bred it well. The period of gestation is stated to be between eleven and twelve months. Viewed with the eye of even a comparatively careless observer, the camel presents one of the most complete instances of design with relation tc human wants. There is not a part of its struc- ture, from the bony framework of the skeleton to the external hair of its coat, that could be omitted without injury to the wonderful work, or improved. Those very parts which seem deformities, are ab- solutely necessary to its well-being and destina- tion, and the hump and callosities become beauties when examined with reference to the exigencies of the animal, and its condition as the slave of man. And here arises the question whether this hump and these callosities are natural formations, or due to the pressure of the loads with which the animal has for ages been burdened, and to the weight of its body. The callosities are seven in number, and upon these the pressure of the body is thrown when the creature kneels down and rises up. They have been observed upon a newly-born camel ; but no child is born with corns on the toes and feet, whatever fashion and tight shoes may have done for its parent at least I never heard of a baby who came into the world with those excruciating afflictions. Not that it may not be admitted, that in a long course of years these marks of servitude, as they have been termed, may have been more largely developed. Dr. Walter Adam, in his paper on the osteology of the Bactrian camel, remarks, that the dorsal ver- tebrae of the animal on which he made his obser- vations had been modified by the pressure of its loads. We know that by careful breeding, the horns of the ox and the sheep may be made to assume almost every grade of excess and defect, till they vanish altogether, and a hornless race is obtained. Those who delight in oddities, know how to secure a breed of rumpless fowls and tail- less cats. The dapper, clean-legged bantams, for which Sir John Sebright was famous, were remarkable for the absence of the sickle-shaped, drooping feathers, from the tails of the cocks, whence they were called by some bird-fanciers " Hen-cocks." This absence had been the result of the greatest care and attention to the breed. In all these cases, the change or modification is limited to externals. The internal organization of the animals remains absolutely the same LEAVES FKOM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. 35 Now, whether we look at the grotesque figure sf the camel, or investigate its internal structure, we find the most unmistakable evidence of adap- tation to that state of life to which it has pleased the great Author of its being to call it. Born for the desert, the callosities prevent the skin from cracking at those points where the weight of the animal rests upon the arid, burning sands. The strong, nipper-like upper incisor teeth are fit in- struments for cutting through the tough plants and shrubs that spring here and there on those bound- less wastes. The nostrils are so organized that the animal can effectually close them, and defy the stormy, destructive sand-drifts that sweep harmlessly by him. " The desert ship" seems to float rather than step on the elastic, pad-like cushions of its spreading feet, moving as noise- lessly as Mr. Mark's vulcanized Indian-rubber wheel-tires convey a carriage over a granite pave- ment. What always struck me as something extremely romantic and mysterious (writes Mr. Macfarlane) was the noiseless step of the camel, from the spongy nature of his feet. Whatever be the nature of the ground sand, or rock, or turf, or paved stones you hear no foot-fall ; you see an immense animal approaching you stilly as a cloud floating on air, and unless he wear a bell your sense of hearing, acute as it may be, will give you no inti- mation of his presence. Riley, too, notices the silent passage of a train of camels up a rocky steep, and accounts for the silence because their feet are as soft as sponge or leather. The structure of his stomach enables the camel to digest the coarsest vegetable tissues, and he even prefers such plants as a horse would not touch, to the finest pasture. He is satisfied with very little, and if he should be stinted even of this hard fare, the fat hump contains a store of nourishment to be taken up into the system, and sustain it till he reaches some oasis of tough prickly bushes, which he discusses with the great- est relish ; and, if the best of liquids be there, fills the water-tanks with which his interior is fitted up, and goes on his way rejoicing. One word more without trespassing upon the province of the anatomist or the patience of the general reader as to the modification which even the hardest parts of the animal frame will undergo to answer the exigencies of the demand. Dr. Adam found that the burdens of the baggage- camel from Bengal, which he examined, and which poor, indefatigable workman had done its duty more scrupulously than many of the biped laborers in the vineyard of this world, had much altered the form of the dorsal vertebras. He ob- served that the natural breadth of the bodies of those vertebrae seemed to be not greater than the wideness of the nostrils ; but, owing to the great weights borne by the patient animal whose re- mains came under the doctor's observation, the enlargement was such that those bones presented an instance of exostosis rather than of normal proportion though still that enlargement had seen controlled by the laws of symmetry. The greatest breadth was attained at the connection of the fifth and the sixth dorsal vertebra? ; there the pressure of the burdens had evidently been most severe ; and the summit of the hump was at the sixth. Thus was the back strengthened for the burden. Dr. Adam suggests that it is not improbable that the symmetry of the swift dromedaries will be found to be much more complete than that of the baggage-camel. The load for the latter is variously stated ; some make it six, some seven, and others above eight hundred pounds ; nay, Sandys says that he will carry a thousand. The swiftness of the dromedary,* el heirie, or, as most travellers call it, maherry, may be compared with that of the high-mettled racer, with more endur- ance. " When thou shalt meet a heirie, and say to the rider Salem Aleik, ere he shall have an- swered thee Aleik Salem, he will be afar off, and nearly out of sight, for his fleetness is like the wind." A sabayee, said to be the swiftest of this breed, is good for six hundred thirty miles (thirty- five days of caravan-travelling) in five days. Seven or eight miles an hour, for nine or ten hours a day, is stated to be a common perform- ance ; and the lamented Captain Lyon, whose accuracy was strict, relates that a Northern Afri- can Arabian maherry's long trot, at the rate of nine miles an hour, will endure for many hours together. Cupid has been pictured bestriding the lion and the dolphin, and Darwin has made him inspire plants with love ; but when he takes the shape of an Arabian lover, and mounts his dromedary, nothing seems impossible space and time are annihilated. It is on record that a young man was passionately fond of a young girl lovely, of course and who on her part had a devouring passion for oranges. None were to be had for love or money at Mogadore, and no fruit worthy of the damsel could be procured nearer than Ma- rocco. The lover mounted his heirie at dawning, sped him away to Marocco, a hundred miles from Mogadore, bagged the desired oranges, and re- turned home that very night ; but too late to pass, for the gates were shut. The beauty, however, was not disappointed, for the gallant Arab made a friend of one of the guards of the batteries, who conveyed the golden fruit to the charming expect- ant. And here the story ends, and it is well that it does so. The natural hope of plodding Euro- peans is, that they were married, and lived long and happily : but then comes the painful truth. Beauty, which in our northern climes endures long in rich ripeness, is in Arabia as fleeting as one of its own flowers. Nothing, we are told, can exceed the prettiness of an Arab girl, but the hideous yes that is the gallant traveller's word the hideous ugliness of the old women. " Train up a child in the way he should go," * KctttrjUo? doouas Camelos dramas, running or swift camel. 36 LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. and, acting upon this principle, the camel-drivers in some parts of Africa Senegal for instance were wont, soon after the birth of a young camel, to tie its feet under its belly, throw a large cloth over its back, and place heavy stones upon each of the corners of the cloth that rested on the ground. Thus did the Moors accustom the ani- mal to receive the loads which it was destined to carry through a life of labor, generally prolonged to twenty years. Females, indeed, and such for- tunate males as are exempt from work, are said to live for twenty-five or even thirty years. The European mode of training is not com- menced till the camel has attained the age of four years, when the trainers first double up one of his fore legs, which they bind fast with a cord ; this they pull, and thus compel the trainee to come down upon his bent knee. But all pupils are not equally docile ; and if this method should fail, as it sometimes does, both legs are tied up, and the camel falls upon both knees, and on the callosity which protects the breast. This opera- tion is often accompanied by a cry and a slight application of the whip from the trainer ; and, by degrees, the animal learns at last to lie down upon his belly, with its legs doubled under it, at the well-remembered cry and blow, accompanied by a jerk of its halter. Having attained so much obedience, the trainer proceeds to place a pack-saddle on the creature's back. When it is accustomed to this appendage a light load is put on, and gradually increased till it reaches the maximum, which is generally understood to be fourteen killogrammes, or above eight hundred pounds, for a full-grown camel. Such is the mode practised at Pisa ; and though the Moors brought the animal into Spain, that appears to be the only locality in Europe where the camel is now bred. The arid plains and stunted vegetation at San Rossora seem to have pointed it out as the proper place for this experi- ment ; but though success attends it, the breed seems to dwindle. The foal is obliged to be held up by attendants to take the maternal nourish- ment, which in a state of nature the new-born creature must be in a condition to obtain without assistance, or continuation of the species must cease. And here it may be observed, that we have no authentic account of the camel in a genu- ine wild state. The earliest records, from the sacred Scripture downwards, present it in a do- mesticated state. When Joseph was cast by his brethren into the pit, and the criminal fraternity sat down to eat bread, they lifted up their eyes and looked, and behold a company of Ishmaelites came from Gilead with their camels, bearing spicery, and balm, and myrrh, going to carry it down 'to Egypt. And yet in Egypt itself no trace appears to have been observed on the multitudinous ancient monuments of the form. It is, indeed, to be seen on the frieze of the building at Ghirza, where it is introduced four several times ; and in one instance a female dromedary is suckling her young one. When Gideon arose and slew Zebah and Zalmunna, he took away the ornaments that were on their camels' necks. Jacob divided the people that was with him, and the flocks and the herds, and the camels, into two bands ; and thirty milch camels and their colts formed part of the present which he sent to propitiate his ill-used brother Esau. The camel appears in the forbid- den list set forth in Leviticus, because he cheweth the cud but divideth not the hoof. The Chal- deans made out three bands and fell upon Job's camels, of which he had three thousand, and car- ried them away ; and when the Lord blessed the latter end of Job more than his beginning, the comforted patriarch possessed six thousand. When Xerxes invaded Greece camels figured as part of his enormous host. The Arabians were stationed in the rear, that the horses might not be frightened, because they cannot endure camels of which more anon ; and when the Great King was inarching through the Paeonian and Crestoni- an territories towards the river Echidorus, lions came down in the night and attacked the camels, seizing them only, and leaving man and every other beast unharmed. Herodotus expresses his wonder that the lions should abstain from all the rest and set upon the camels beasts which they had never before seen or tried,* as was probably the case with those lions. Before the camel was known in Africa, beyond the Nile, the country abounded with lions, and was a kind of preserve whence the proconsuls drew their supplies for the Roman amphitheatre ; but about the middle of the third century, when the Arabs entered Africa, the numbers of these ravenous beasts of prey were greatly diminished ; so much so, indeed, that hunting them was forbidden, except in the case of privileged persons a prohibition which originated in the apprehension that there would be few or none left for the circus. Honorius put an end to this prohibition, and then the destruc- tion of the lions followed ; cultivation increased ; camels were introduced, facilitating communica- tion from one point to another without risk of leonine attack ; and civilization advanced. It has been already observed that no authentic record appears of the existence of camels in a wild state. f And though M. Desmoulins is of opinion that they were to be found in that state in Arabia at tne beginning of the second century, and though the natives of Central Africa declare that wild camels wander free in the mountains where European feet have never trod, such asser- tions are by no means conclusive : for granting them to be true, such camels may have been de- scended from domesticated parents, which had, like the American horses, escaped from their owners. In one expedition, directed by the great Assyrian queen, whom Ninus coveted from the despairing Menones, and obtained to his own des- * Polymnia, 125. t With reference to this question it may be worthy of note, that the fossil remains of a camel are said to have been detected by Col. Cautley in the sub-Himalayan range. LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. 37 truction, three hundred myriads of fooi, a nun- dred myriads of horse, ten myriads of scythe- armed chariots, as many of fighting men mounted on camels, and seventy myriads more of those beasts destined for various services, were among the hosts collected at her command. Camels also carried the artificial elephants, which, to the number of two millions, Semiramis employed in her Mesopotamian expedition against the Indians, in which she was wounded. But if the mother of Vathek had her Alboufaki, the most hideous, malignant, and swift of dromedaries, the daugh- ter of Derceto was mistress of one which, though it may not have rivalled that of Carathis in ugli- ness and unearthly propensities, saved her by its fleetness. Poor Zenobia was not so fortunate, for the swiftness of her dromedaries could not prevent her from falling into the hands of Aure- lian. In ancient war, besides their use as beasts of burthen, the swifter races, the maherries of that day, drew the rapid scythed chariots, mowing down masses of men in their course ; or carried howmen, armed also with long swords, to enable them to reach the cavalry and infantry in personal encounters. As for camels, they are nourished in the Levant or East parts (quoth Philemon Holland, in his transla- tion of Pliny) among other heards of great cattell : two kindes there be of them, the Bactrians and the Arabick : differing herein, that the Bactrians have two bunches upon their backs ; the other but one apiece there, but they have another in their brest, whereupon they rest and ly. Both sorts want the upper row of teeth in their mouthes, like as bulls and kine. In those parts from whence they come they serve all to carry packs, like laboring horses, and are put to service also in the wars, and are backed of horsemen : their swiftness is compara- ble to that of horses ; they grow to a just measure, and exceed not a certain ordinary strength. The camell, in his travelling, will not goe a iot farther than his ordinary journey ; nether will he carry more than his accustomed and usuall load. Natu- rally they doe hate horses. They can abide to be four daies together without drinke ; and when they drinke or meet with water they fill their skin full enough to serve both for time past and to come ; but before they drinke, they must trample with their feet to raise mud and sand, and so trouble the water, otherwise they take no pleasure in drinking. They live comraonly fifty yeares, and some of them a hundred. These creatures also otherwhile fall to be mad, so much as it is. Moreover, they have a device to splay even the very females, to make them fit for the warres ; for if they be not covered, they become the stronger and more cour ageous. There is one manifest error in this account, showing that Pliny never could have looked into a camel's mouth, which has two pointed incisive teeth implanted in the upper jaw, forming with the six lower incisors a formidable pair of nippers, admi- rably adapted for cutting through the tough plants which form the principal fopd of the animal. The age, too, is nearly double that assigned to the camel by the moderns. The antipathy of the horse, which is frequently alluded to by the an- cients, still exists in full force, and appears to be mutual, where use has not reconciled it to the camel, Unjue aquilam cygnus, congrum muraena camelus Odit equum. Cyrus availed himself of this antipathy on the suggestion of Harpagus the Mede to the utter dis- comfiture of Cnesus. He gathered together the multitude of camels that followed his army with provisions and baggage, caused their burthens to be taken off, and armed men to mount them, and then ordered them to go in advance of the army against the Lydian horse. His infantry he placed immediately behind the camels, and his cavalry ir the rear of the infantry. Then he gave the cruel word for no quarter, except to Crcesus, who was on no account to be killed, whatever resistance he might make. He thus disposed his troops, adds Herodotus,* for this reason a horse is afraid of a camel, and cannot endure its sight or smell ; and he had recourse to this stratagem that the cavalry, by which the Lydian expected to win, might be useless to Croasus. And so it fell out ; for when they joined battle, the horses no sooner smelt and saw the camels than they turned tail and destroyed the hopes of Cro2sus. Even, now, at Pisa, it is found necessary to reconcile the horses to the sight of the camels in order to prevent accidents ; and where the pre- cautions of such training have not been adopted, the sudden and dangerous terror with which a horse is seized on coming unexpectedly upon one of them is excessive. The madness alluded to by Pliny probably re- fers to the violence of the male at certain seasons,, when a portion of the velum palati is protruded with a strange and loud noise. Cupid makes many of his votaries play as strange love-pranks as ever the crazy Don performed ; but when he bestrides a camel, he makes the impassioned brute absolutely rabid. Advantage is taken of this state of excitement by the turbaned Turk ; and two rivals are pitted, who at once rush at each other, and a regular combat follows. Before they are let go they are muzzled after a fashion, so that no deadly injury can ensue. Then they turn to like Cornish wrest- lers, standing on their own hind legs, embracing' each other with their anterior extremities, twist- ing their necks together and each striving to over- throw his adversary. Fired at the sight, the Turk loses his staid and apathetic demeanor. He claps his hands, and shouts out the name of the favorite which he has backed with an energy wor- thy of Hockley Hole and Marylebone in the old time, before modern statutes had prohibited the brutalizing dog-fights, bull and badger baits, which, in other days, formed the amusement of the high and low vulgar. A vestige of the old English spirit still lingers, and snatches of ancient songs 79. 38 LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. commemorative of the departed rugging and riving era may yet be heard in triviis* Mr. Macfarlane saw one of these got-up camel- fights at a Turkish wedding in a village near Smyrna, and again at a festival at Magnesia. But he once, in the neighborhood of Smyrna, saw a fight of a more serious character. Two huge camels broke away from the string, and set to in spite of their drivers. They bit each other like furies, and the devidjis,f to whom in general these animals are most obedient and even affectionate, had the greatest difficulty in separating the enraged rivals. On the Roman arena the camel was seen com- paratively late, either as a mere spectacle or in a ruck with other beasts, and there is some founda- tion for the belief that camels appeared in the circus drawing chariots four-in-hand ; not as we drive, but all four in the same line, yoked togeth- .er abreast. Ptolemy evinced his respect for the human race !by showing together two novelties in the Egyptian theatre, namely, a black camel and a parti-colored man, the latter being half white and half black. Without stopping to inquire about the dimen- sions of* the table of that mighty monarch, who, according to some retailers of wonders, had a whole camel served to his robust guests, or whether the said thaumaturgists had not misread a passage which set forth how the entertainer, in his royal magnificence, had sent away the guests, after a feast worthy of Lucullus himself, enriched with golden crowns, massive silver vases, slaves, and a camel each, we may be content with know- ing that the milk and flesh of the animal are said to be as welcome to the Arab as those of the reindeer to the Laplander ; and as there is too frequently but one step between the pleasures of the table and the prescription of the physician, let us see what the ancient pharmacopoeia owed to the camel : His braine (by report) is excellent good against the epilepsie or falling sicknesse, if it be dried and drunk with vinegar : so doth the gall likewise taken in drinke with hony : which also is a good medi- cine for the squinancy.J In cases of obstinate alvine obstruction a dried camel's tail was held to be infallible. The drop- pings " reduced into ashes and incorporate with oile, doth curie and frizzle the haire of the head." This may have been among Antony's cosmetics : " The said ashes made into a liniment and so applied, yea, and taken in drink, as much as a man may comprehend with three fingers, careth * For instance, an itinerant melodist was regaling the ars of his audience the other evening with a racy com- position, which included the following stave : As for sentiment, and that 'ere stuff, It 'a a thin; I can't abide ; Give me a jolly butcher with his apron on, And his bull-hitch by his side. The song was altogether suggestive of the owner of a pair of boots which Edwin Landseer has immortalized in his incomparable " Low Life." t Camel-drivers. t Holland's Pliny. the falling sicknesse ;" and, no doubt, " Great Julius" took it. " The haire of their tails twisted into a wreath or cord, and so worn about the left arme in the manner of a bracelet, cureth the quartan ague ;" and if Caius Ligarius had worn such an antidote, he might not have suffered so much from That same ague which had made him lean. The antipathy between the horse and the came! no longer exists in the East, where their associa- tion has so long and so continually been effected. For many centuries the camel has been the great transporting power, where no other vehicle could have answered the purpose. Old chronicles record that the three Magian kings came mounted on swift dromedaries to the adoration of " the heav'n- born child;" and the slower race have long formed the great medium of commercial inter- course. As a shepherd knows his sheep, so do the devidjis or camel-drivers distinguish their camels, and they talk of their points as a jockey speaks of those of a favorite horse ; nay. a Be- douin knows the print 'of his own camel's foot, and will thus track it when it has wandered. Nothing can be more orderly than the progress of the caravans. The camel moves like clock- work ; and the caravans or strings of camels are. Mr. Macfarlane tells us, always headed by a little ass, on which the driver sometimes rides, and which has a tinkling bell round its neck. Each camel, he adds, is commonly furnished with a large, rude, but soft and pastoral-sounding bell, suspended to the front of the pack or saddle. If these bells be removed by accident or design, the camels, like the mules of Spain and Italy, will come to a dead stop ; and Mr. Macfarlane adds, that like the mules also, the camels always go best in a long line, one after the other. He tried the experiment of the bell at Pergamos. Two stately camels, the foremost furnished with the bell, were trudging along the road with measured steps. The bell was detached with a long stick. The camels halted, nor could they be urged for- ward till their ears were regaled with the well- known music. Mr. Macfarlane observes, that he uses the word " measured," not as a matter of poetry, but of fact ; and he states that their step is so measured and like clockwork, that on a plain you know almost to a yard the distance they will go in a given time. In the flat valleys of the Hermus and Caicus he made calculations with a watch in his hand, and found, hour after hour, an unvarying result, the end of their journey being performed just at the same pace, three miles an hour, as the beginning. The camel is, indeed, the creature of order and regularity.. Each has his prace in the line ; and if this be interfered with, the beasts become disorderly and will not march. " Each gets attached to a particular camel of the caravan, prefers seeing his tail before him to that of any other, and will not go if you displace his friend." Bwt the Egyptians do not move in single file ; LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. 39 they, on the contrary, march with a wide-extended front. Caravans from Bagdad to Aleppo and Da- mascus have heen said to consist of camels march- ing abreast of each other, and sometimes extend- ing over a space of more than a mile. Old authors notice the training of camels to move in measured time by placing the animal on gradually heated plates, and at the same time sounding a musical instrument. The carriage of the head, so frequent a theme of eulogy with the Arabian poets, is due to the atlas, which, besides its articulation with the occipital condyles, affords support to the lower jaw. The Arabs, who have among them most imaginative and finished impro- visator^ compare the elegant movements of a beau- tiful bride to those of a young camel. The Thousand and One Nights, like most clever fables, have some foundation in fact, as is well known to the friends of the Arabian man of rank, who keeps his professed story-teller as an indispensable part of his establishment. African travellers relate that these friends will assemble before his tent, or on the platform with which the house of a Moorish Arab is roofed, and there listen, night after night, to a consecutive history, related for sixty or even one hundred nights in succession. The listeners on such occasions have all the air of being spell- bound, especially while hearing some of their native songs, which are frequently extemporized, full of fire, and appealing with irresistible force .to the passions. "I have seen," says Major Denham, " a circle of Arabs straining their eyes with a fixed attention at one moment and bursting with loud laughter ; at the next melting into tears and clasping their hands in all the ecstasy of grief and sympathy." The good camel-driver frequently cheers his beast with one of these mel- odies, and divides his barley-cake with those Mute companions of his toils, that hear In all his griefs a more than equal share. There, where no springs in summers die away, Or moss-crowned fountains mitigate the day. But sometimes the poor slave suffers dreadfully i'rom the zealous ignorance of those who have the care of him. The attention of Bishop Heber, when on his journey to Cawnpoor, was attracted by the dreadful groans of one of the baggage- camels. He went to the spot, and found that two of the camel-drivers had bound its legs in a kneel- ing posture, so that it could not stir, and were burning it with hot irons in all the fleshy and cartilaginous parts of its body. The good bishop inquired what they were doing, and was answered that the camel had a fever and wind, and would die if they did not so treat it ; and die it did, after all, secundum artem. Our French neighbors love to be systematic, and thus classify the helpers of men : Le medecin qui guerit he is very rare ; Le medecin qui attend la guerison much more Common, but still comparatively rare ; and Le widecin qui tue. The camel-doctors appear to iiave belonged to the last and most numerous class, hough the treatment seems to have been somewhat imilar to that practised on Rodin, for cholera, with success. Immersion in water seems to be most injurious to the camel ; and after being compelled to pass through rivers, disease frequently super- venes. It also appears to be liable to intoxication without drinking stimulating liquors. " Several of our camels," says Dr. Oudney, " are drunk to-day. Their eyes are heavy, and want anima- tion ; gait staggering, and every now and then falling as a man in a state of intoxication." This arose, according to the doctor, from eating dates after drinking water ; and he accounts for the effect on the animal by the probable passing of the fruit into the spirituous fermentation in its stomach that wonderful stomach, which contains a series of reservoirs to enable the desert ship to pursue its voyage over the trackless and arid sands. Yes, it is so. Doubts have been entertained upon the authority of a celebrated name, for it has been stated by a distinguished comparative anatomist* that John Hunter did not give credit to this asser- tion. But upon looking to the source and, as Dr. Johnson said of conversation, it is of primary consequence in appreciating information to ascer- tain whether it comes from a spring or a reservoir we find that Dr. Patrick Russell, the writer on whom Sir Everard depended for this contradiction of a generally received notion, states in the appen- dix to his brother's History of Aleppo, that water, in cases of distress, is taken from the camel's stomach, and that it is a fact neither doubted in Syria nor considered strange. The doctor con- fesses that he never was himself in a caravan re- duced to such an expedient, but he adds that he has no reason to distrust the report of others, par- ticularly of the Arabs ; and he refers to the his- torian Beidawi, who, in relating' the prophet's expedition to Tabuc against the Greeks, observes that, among other miseries of the army, the bel- ligerents were reduced to the extremity of slaying their camels to quench their thirst with the water contained in those animated water-skins. But fur- ther, the doctor records that on his return from the East Indies, in 1789, having heard accidentally that his friend Mr. John Hunter had dissected a camel, and was supposed to have expressed an opinion that the animal's power of preserving water in its stomach was rather improbable, he took an opportunity of conversing with that illus- trious physiologist on the subject, when, he says, to the best of his recollection, John Hunter told him that he by no means drew any such absolute inference from his dissection ; that he saw no reason for assigning more than four stomachs to the camel, though he could conceive that water might be found in the paunch little impregnated with the dry provender of the desert, and readily separating or draining from it. The doctor then goes into anatomical detail, and those who wish to follow him have only to go to the Museum of the College of Surgeons of London the great John Hunter's great monument where they will find the reticulum, or water bag of the camel, with * Sir Everard Home. 40 LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. such an explanation as a catalogue proceeding from the pen of Professor Owen only could give. Then, if we want extrinsic evidence, we have only to call one of the most truthful, amiable wit- nesses, that ever left friends to lament him. Cap- tain Lyon, upon the occasion of a death of one of these animals, says, in his most interesting narra- tive, I never before had an opportunity of observing how water is procured from the belly of a cameHo satisfy the thirst of an almost perishing kaffle.* It is the false stomach which contains the water and undigested food. This is strained through a cloth and then drank; and from those who have been under the necessity of making use of the beverage I learn that the taste is bitter. As the animal had recently drank, its stomach was nearly full. The sailor, whose love of adventure had induced him to make a land voyage, and who suffered ac- cordingly, (for, though full of resources, he must have been very much like a fish out of water a salmon on a gravel walk, for instance,) amused himself by making observations on the skin and skeleton of the defunct ; and which way do you think his thoughts went ? Naturam expelles, &c. ; but you may be sure of the recurrence ; why, in planning a boat out of the remains. He found that a most excellent contrivance might be made from them for the purpose of crossing rivers, the back-bone being used as the keel and the ribs as timbers. The formation of the chest of the camel struck him as being like nothing so much as the prow of a Portuguese bean-cod, or fishing-boat ;* and, with the frankness of a sailor, he adds, that it was in consequence of hearing the Arabs always calling it " markab," or ship, that the idea first occurred to him. Ship, indeed ; never was metaphor more true Launched upon the sandy ocean, where the com pass is not unfrequently used, the camel fleet pur sues its voyage until it reaches its anchoring ground for the night in some brake well known t the devidjis, making commerce easy between nations, to whom the desert would otherwise be an unconquerable bar, or smooths the dreary wa; from Damascus to Mecca for the Mahometan pil grim. The camel of the caravans which trade between Cairo and the interior to spots still i blank on the map of the European geographe becomes a slave-ship. When one of these slave caravans reaches the open country, the miserabl slave has to undergo the horrors of a sort of miy five hundred camels, whose luscious burdens insisted of sweetmeats and confectionery only ; while two hundred and eighty were entirely laden with pomegranates and other fruits. The itiner- ant larder of this potentate contained one thousand eese and three thousand fowls. Even so late as sixty years since, the pilgrim-caravan from Cairo was six hours in passing one who saw the pro- :ession. The departure of such an array, with its thou- sands of camels glittering in every variety of trap- pings, some with two brass field-pieces each, others with bells and streamers others, again, with kettle-drummers, others covered with purple velvet, with men walking by their sides playing on flutes and flageolets some glittering with neck ornaments and silver-studded bridles, varie- gated with colored beads, and with nodding plumes of ostrich-feathers on their foreheads to say nothing of the noble, gigantic, sacred camel, decked with cloth of gold and silk, his bridle studded with jewels and gold, led by two sheiks in green, with the ark or chapel containing the Koran written in letters of gold forms a dazzling contrast to the spectacle it not unfrequently pre- sents before its mission is fulfilled. Numbers of these gayly-caparisoned creatures drop and die miserably, and when the pilgrimage leaves Mecca the air is too often tainted with the effluvia reeking from the bodies of the camels that have sunk under the exhausting fatigue of the march. After he had passed the Akaba, near the head of the Red Sea, the whitened bones of the dead camels were the land-marks which guided the pilgrim through the sand-wastes, as he was led on by the alter- nate hope and disappointment of the mirage, or " serab," as the Arabs term it. Burckhardt describes this phenomenon as seen by him when they were surrounded during a whole day's march by phantom lakes. The color was of the purest azure so clear, that the shadows of the mountains which bordered the horizon were reflected with LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. 41 extreme precision ; and the delusion of its being a sheet of water was thus rendered perfect. He had often seen the mirage in Syria and Egypt ; there he always -found it of a whitish color, like morning mist, seldom lying steadily on the plain, almost continually vibrating ; but in the case above described the appearance was very different, and bore the most complete resemblance to water. This exact similitude the traveller attributes to the great dryness of the air and earth in the desert where he beheld it. There, too, the appearance of water approached much nearer than in Syria and Egypt, being often not more than two hundred paces from the beholders, whereas he had never seen it before at a distance of less than half-a-mile. Will it be believed that some zoologists (among them we could mention a great name* the name of one who did glorious service in his day, but who was too prone to attempt to put Nature in the wrong) have endeavored to account for the con- struction of the camel by a theory based upon the lengthened servitude of the animal ? Now, if you grant, as you will not if you are wise, that the callosities of the camel were the result of an infini- tesimal series of genuflexions, the slave-tokens of a long submission to the tyrant man, what will you make of the internal organization of the cis- terns which enable the animal to live where any creature not so provided must perish from thirst without artificial aid ? Here are vast sandy deserts to be traversed before man can communicate with man. Where is the medium of communication ? Nature presents an animal of surpassing endurance, capable, upon emergency, of sustaining a thirst of ten or twelve days' duration. The head is levelled directly forward, and lighted by eyes that can look *Buffon. onward, and in some degree backward, but which are protected from the downward stroke of the sun by an overhanging orbit which prevents the camel from looking upward. The nostrils are so formed that the animal has only to make the muscles do their duty to shut them against the sand-storm of the simoon. From the sole of the elastic foot to the crown of the well-balanced head the camel ex- ternally is formed for the destiny which it has to fulfil ; and its internal structure is pregnant with proofs of its adaptation to its own wants as well as the wants of man on that particular portion of the earth where it is most vigorous ; if it be taken thence and transplanted to other localities, it does its duty after a fashion, but the breed dwindles. The geologist well knows that the disposition of the strata, after all the convulsions and disrup- tions they have undergone, is precisely that which presents the most accommodating surface to man. If they had remained as they were at first deposited, where would he have found that mineral wealth which is the great source of civilization ? It is quite true that this very mineral wealth is enabling him to supersede the animal of which we have been treating, perhaps at too great length. The steam-power Darwin was a great and true prophet* may leave the camel far behind, even in the desert ; but no sound physiologist can contem- plate the creature without seeing in it an over- whelming manifestation of the wisdom of the Creator. * Soon shall thy arm, unconquered steam, afar, Drag the slow barge, or drive the rapid car. This is fulfilled. Who shall say that the rest of the prophecy may not come to passl Or on wide-waving wings expanded bear The flying chariot through the fields of air. 42 LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. PART VII. THE hen which was induced, good easy Dam Partlet, to bestow her maternal affection upon a egg of the wedge-tailed eagle, laid in the garde of the Zoological Society, was it will be in th remembrance of those who amuse themselves b looking into these simple annals " left sitting.' The first egg was laid on the 27th of February in this year, and was, it will be recollected, place under a common hen, but was removed after th expiration of twenty-one days, in an addled state The second egg that on which the hen wa left sitting at our last notice was laid in the firs week of March, and was removed, after a patien incubation of twenty-two days, addled also. On the 29th of March a third egg was produced but it was destroyed by the parents. April 4. Another egg was this day laid, bu no attempt was made to get it hatched. The imprisoned parents made a poor apologi for a nest of birch-broom and straw the materials within their reach ; but, instead of manifestin any intention to do the parental office, the birds wanted to destroy every one of the eggs, and the keeper found it necessary to look very sharp to prevent them from carrying their ovicidal propen sities into effect. This reversal of the great law of nature is no. confined to birds. The sow and the rabbit, if dis- turbed at the critical moment, will not unfrequent- ly devour their offspring as those know to their cost, whose impatience has brought their prying eyes to look into the mystery. We forget that, in their natural state, the first care of all verte- brated animals is to hide their eggs or young. The same may be said of insects, crustaceans, and even of molluscous animals. In proportion as the organization is developed, the sensitiveness to the violation of this principle increases. The quad- ruped, in a state of morbid irritation, devours its young ; the bird forsakes its nest, or destroys the When, however, this great operation of nature is effected in secrecy, and the storge of the parents is unchecked, the vertebrata, and especially the more highly-developed classes, will risk anything short of life for the protection of their young, and not unfrequently will lay that down in defence of their offspring. In cases of extreme urgency, gregarious quad- rupeds dispose of their young with the most pa- rental care, placing them in the middle, so that when the battle rages they may have the best chance of safety. Thus, by the divine law, pres- ervation follows generation, and is most conspic- uously manifested while the offspring is of tender age, and unable to provide for its own support. Among the mammiferous animals, a reciprocity of benefits is established, and it may be doubted whether the mother or the child feels the greatest enjoyment in imparting or receiving the full tide of maternal nourishment. Even that grand in- carnate fiend, Lady Macbeth, is compelled to say , I have given sucke, and know How tender 'tis to love the babe that milkes me.* Moreover, a sort of instinctive distributive justice is established in the breast of the mother, when the case requires it. Thus, as a general rule, it will be found that an ewe which brings forth two lambs at a time, will not admit one to her teats unless the other be present and partaking ; other- wise one might famish, while the other would grow fat. This manifestation, for the most part, suits the tyrant man, and therefore, in all convenient cases, he very blandly suffers nature to take her course. The Laplander cannot afford to be so benevolent. The female reindeer drops her fawn about the middle of May, and gives milk from the end of June to the middle of October. Now few moth- ers are more extremely fond of their young than these does. If they lose one, they seek it every- where, and, if it be to be found, never rest till they have discovered it, The Laplander, there- fore, knows better than to separate the doe from the fawn. Morning and evening the herd is brought up to be milked. A rope, both ends of which are held in the hand of the assistant, is cast over the neck of the doe, and she is thus com- pelled to submit, giving about a pint. This might seem to be a sufficient fraud upon the poor fawn, >ut no. As soon as the pint is abstracted, the teats of the doe are anointed with a preparation most offensive to the fawn, which thus, notwith- standing its intense disgust, gets just enough to reserve life, and no more, and leaves the poor mother with a comparatively full udder to enrich he dairy of her honest master. All animals of a high grade show the greatest distress if their young are taken from them, and will, if necessary, fight stoutly in their defence. r n that most revolting case of the vivisection of a >oor bitch, she endeavored to lick her puppies in he midst of her tortures, and when they were emoved, uttered the most plaintive cries. The crew of the discovery-ship Carcass, sent ti an exploring voyage to the North Pole, in the ast century, witnessed a most touching instance f maternal affection, which seems, however, to ave had no effect on the hearts of some of those who beheld it. The ship was locked in the ice, and, early one morning, the man at the mast-head gave notice lat three bears were approaching over the frozen ea, invited, doubtless, by the scent of some blub- er of a walrus, killed by the crew a few days efore, which had been set on fire, and was burn- ng on the ice. The visitors proved to be a she- car and her two cubs, the latter nearly as large s the dam. They ran eagerly to the fire, drew way part of the flesh of the walrus that remained nconsumed, and devoured it. Then the crew * Folio. LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. from the ship cast great lumps of walrus-flesh, which still remained, to them. These the old bear fetched away one by one, laying every lump before her cubs, dividing it into shares, and re- serving only a small portion for herself. As the unsuspecting mother was fetching away the last piece, the men levelled their muskets at the cubs and shot them both dead. They then wounded the dam, but not mortally. The rest must be told in the words of the relater : It would have drawn tears of pity from any but unfeeling minds, to have marked the affectionate concern expressed by this poor beast in the dying moments of her expiring young. Though she was sorely wounded, and could but just crawl to the place where they lay, she carried the lump of flesh she had fetched away, as she had done others be- fore, tore it in pieces and laid it down before them ; and when she saw that they refused to eat, she laid her paws first upon one, and then upon the other, and endeavored to raise them up ; all this while it was pitiful to hear her moan. When she found she could not stir them, she went off, and when she had got at some distance, looked back and moaned ; and that not availing her to entice them away, she returned, and, smelling round them, began to lick their wounds. She went off a second time as be- fore ; and having crawled a few paces, looked again behind her, and for some time stood moaning. But still her cubs not rising to follow her, she returned to them again, and with signs of inexpres- sible fondness went round one, and round the other, pawing them and moaning. Finding at last that they were cold and lifeless, she raised her head towards the ship and growled a curse upon the murderers, which they returned with a volley of musket-balls. She fell between her cubs, and died licking their wounds.* Birds, at other times the most timid of creatures, will boldly attack the spoiler of their nests and young. Thrushes, and even smaller birds, have been known to do battle with magpies, jays, crows, hawks, nest-robbing school-boys, and even men. The common hen will show fight to kites, dogs, cats, and unfeathered bipeds, if they come near their chickens with sinister intentions, or even if they approach too closely. White, in his delightful book, mentions an instance of the- fury with which some plundered hens wreaked their vengeance upon a reiver, when, afier repeated predatory acts, they had him in their power. He relates that a neighboring gentleman, one summer, had lost most of his chickens by a sparrow-hawk, that came gliding down between a fagot-pile and the end of his house to the place where the coops stood. The owner, vexed to see his flock dimin- ishing, hung a setting net adroitly between the pile and the house, into which the caitiff dashed and was caught : Resentment (continues the historian of Selborne) suggested the law of retaliation ; he therefore clip- ped the hawk's wings, cut off his talons, and, fixing a cork on his bill, threw him down among the brood-hens. Imagination cannot paint the scene that ensued ; the expressions that fear, rage and revenge inspired were new, or at least such as had * Annual Register, 1775, signed "Marinus." been unnoticed before. The exasperated matron* upbraided, they execrated, they insulted, they triumphed. In a word, they never desisted from buffeting their adversary till they had torn him in. a hundred pieces. Ready and willing, however, as the parents are to defend their young against fearful odds, that modification of reason, which I have observed fre- quently to accompany mere instinct, operates oc- casionally to induce them to acquiesce patiently when help is required and given. Every one has heard of partridges falling into cracks ; and many have looked upon these " acci- dents" as inventions of John to account for the absence of eggs and birds which have found their way to distant parts per rail. But that such mis- fortunes do really happen there can be no doubt. In a clayey country, in Somersetshire, where the cracks, one hot summer, had become danger- ous, even for dogs, two old birds were seen one fine morning in June, " in great trouble." Upon looking about near the spot where they had been disturbed, a huge crack was seen to yawn, which, though not quite so big as the gulf into which Vathek tumbled the fair boys whom he offered to the insatiate Giaour, was all-sufficient for the pur- pose of swallowing up young partridges. The old birds had been scratching about the edge of the crack, where " they had done more harm than good." Upon looking in, a dozen young one* were seen down in the crack. They were hooked out, one by one, with a stick, and the parents stood, " not more than a pole off," anxiously watching the operation, and receiving each of their offspring as it ran from the edge. A hen, which was most pugnacious, flying fiercely at every one who came near her chickens, had wandered with her brood near a fagot-pilo r into which they had scrambled, and had contrived so to entangle themselves that they could not get out. The piercing cries of the bewildered chick* were equalled by the fidgety clucks and gestures of the mother. But when assistance came, in- stead of buffeting the helper, she stood patiently waiting till, after taking off some of the fagots, he caught her chickens and restored them to her. A mare brought forth a foal some eight or ten days before its time. The foal was attacked with spasms in the stomach and bowels, and, as it gen- erally happens in cases of premature birth among horses, died. Every aid that could be thought of was given ; medicines were administered, and the mare stood quietly watching the helpers, as if conscious of the need of its offspring, as long a the foal was in her sight ; but the moment it was- removed she became violent. White mentions the case of an old hunting- mare, which ran on the common, and which, being taken very ill, came down into the village, as it were to implore the help of men, and died the night following in the street. It is a common and not very considerate prac- tice to put duck's eggs under a broody hen : and it must be confessed that, generally speaking, a 44 LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. more numerous and healthy lot of ducklings are hatched, than when the domestic duck herself sits upon them. For she is apt to be fidgety, and haunted, perhaps, by some notions of her origi- nal free state, and of the fresh nest amid the frogs, and herbage of the river-side frequently will not sit close in confinement. But no bird sits closer or better than the common wild duck, or brings out more numerous and vigorous young. Nor are there wanting instances, especially about mills and farms near some running stream or lake, of the domestic duck sitting as close and unweariedly as the most persevering hen. In many home- steads, however, which are distant from rivers or brooks, the terrestrial foster-mother is preferred ; and when the young ones are hatched, the moment they see the pond, in they all go, to the unspeak- able distress of the hen, which remains clucking and crying on the edge, using every call and ges- ture in her power to rescue them from the de- struction which she thinks must be their portion : nay, the distracted parent will in her agony some- times actually take water, at the risk of her own life, to preserve, as she thinks, theirs. All this time the ducklings are swimming about with the utmost complacency, catching flies and amusing themselves in the element to which their unaided instinct has led them, in spite of the indignant remonstrances of their foster-mother, and the obstacles which she opposes to their indomitable will. It was thought advisable in our poultry-yard to adopt the plan of raising ducklings under a hen ; but, in order to lessen the amount of suffering, one particular hen was selected for this office as long as she was fitted for the purpose of incuba- tion. The first year was, of course, a sore trial ; but experience, and that modification of reason to which I have above alluded, had their effect ; and, in the subsequent years, she would lead her pal- mipede brood to the water, calmly see them launch out on its surface, and remain quietly dusting her- self on the dry, sunny bank, with the utmost un- concern. She was a buff-colored hen, of the Dorking breed, and more than once brought out two broods of ducklings in the same year. Birds, in a domesticated or semi-domesticated state, like other parents of a higher grade, appear to derive pleasure from exhibiting their hopeful offspring so as to attract observation and admiration. On the 10th of April last, in an early walk through St. James' Park, I saw on the gravel by the water's edge, on the south side, two black swans, which had brought over their two newly- hatched, gray, downy powder-puffs of nestlings, with black bills and feet, from the island where they had first seen the light, as if to show them in their pride to the passers-by, of whom a little crowd had collected round them, apparently to the great satisfaction of the parents. To be sure, they had the lake to retreat to, if any danger had threatened. After standing to be admired a short time, the whole party again took water and rowed over to their island. In the afternoon, between five and six, I saw the old birds close to the bank, but without their young ones. They had hatched three; but the "gander," as the keeper somewhat irreverently called the male swan, trod on one in the nest, and killed it. I say " irreverently," for, as among barn-door fowls, we have a cock and a hen, we have, among swans, a cob and a pen. April 22. A friend told me on Saturday that he had seen a Swallow in Kent on the 18th. I looked out to-day over the water in St. James' Park, but saw none ; and I was in the Regent's Park yesterday without meeting with a single hi- rundo of any species. My friends, the black swans, have contrived to kill another cygnet, with their great splay feet, probably, and now go about with one only. Very proud 'of it they seem to be. By the way, it appears that the Canada geese,* the ganders especially, are most destructive to the nestlings of other birds during the breeding season. The gander will not suffer anything to live, if it can help it, in the neighborhood of its nest. Duck- lings, goslings, cygnets, all fall before its violence. A pair are sitting in the park, and the gander an- nihilates every young bird of any other species that appears on his domain, and comes within his power. Great fears are now entertained for a fine brood of fourteen young wild-ducks just hatched in his vicinity. When this meets the eye of those who read such trifles, nidification may be considered, with few exceptions, as being over for this year. How varied are the nests, from the merest rough col- lection of straw and litter to the elegant elaborate little domicile now before me ! What nice hand, With twenty years' apprenticeship to boot, Will make me such another? It is the work of a goldfinch ; a labor of love executed in secret. How carefully constructed, with what an eye to the color of surrounding ob- jects, so that there may be the least risk of dis- covery ! The expedients to which small birds have re- course to thwart detection when they are conscious that they are surprised in the act of bearing mate- rials for making their nests, or conveying food to their young, are amusing. On Easter Sunday, as I was passing along the foot-way that borders the National Gallery (thank Punch and The Times, the Vernon collec- tion is at last to be disinterred from the vault to which a grateful government had consigned it) I saw a sparrow fly down to the neighboring hackney-carriage-stand, and pick lip a very long straw, with which it flew, with some labor, to- wards the building. The long, streaming straw, attracted the attention of some of the pedestrians, who stopped and looked at the loaded little bird, which was directing its flight towards the portico of the gallery ; but finding its motions watched, it turned short round and pitched with its straw on one of the window-sills, and the people then passed on. Presently it flew again towards the portico ; * Anscr Canadensis ; L'Oie d cravate of the French. LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. 45 but the people again stopping and looking for if one passenger stops and looks up in a great Lon- don thoroughfare, you have in a very few moments an increasing crowd it flew back to another win- dow ; and the second lot of gazers went their way. The little bird then started again with its straw towards one of the same pillars, and, cutting round it, so as to avoid prying eyes as much as possible, bore it to the capital of one of the pilas- ters and disappeared, straw and all, into the snug nook, made by a part of the projecting ornament, which it had chosen as the place for making its nest. The wary bird was not disposed to let an inquisitive public know the way to its home. On many other occasions I have observed these and other birds remain, waiting about for a long time with nest-materials and food in their bills when they have perceived that I was watching them ; but the moment I turned my head they were off with their burden to the nest. This would not be worth mentioning, were it not so difficult to find persons who will use their eyes to some purpose. The careful preparation and anxious conceal- ment manifested by the generality of birds in the process of nidification can only be equalled by the ardor of the consequent incubation. But there is no rule without an exception, as we shall presently see. In the Book of Job* we find mention made of the ostrich : Which leaveth his egges in the earth and maketh them hole in the dust, And forgetteth that the foote might scatter them, or that the wilde beast might brake them. Hee sheweth himselfe cruell unto his yong ones as they were not his, and is without feare, as if he travailed in vaine. For God hath deprived him of Wisedome, and hath given him no part of understanding. The following note is appended to v. 17 : They write that the ostrich covereth her egges in the sand, and because the countrey is hote, and the sun still keepeth them warme, they are hatched. The masculine gender is used in the text, and we know that in a kindred genus, the emeu, or New Holland cassowary ,| the eggs are hatched by the male. But there can be no doubt that os- triches incubate, though during the heat of the day the parent birds may leave them to the high temperature of the climate in order to avoid a de- gree which might be fatal to the vitality of the eggs. Captain Lyon states that all the Arabs agree respecting the manner in which these birds sit on their eggs. They are not, he says, left to be hatched by the warmth of the sun, but the parent bird forms a rough nest, in which she covers from fourteen to eighteen eggs, and regularly sits on them in the same manner as the common fowl does on her chickens-; the male occasionally relieving the female. It is during the breeding season, he adds, that the greatest numbers are procured, the Arabs shooting the old ones while on their nests. * Chap, xxxix. v. 17, etseq.; Barker's Bible, 1613. t Dromaius Novcc Hollandice. By the way, Captain Lyon remarks, that at all the three towns, Sockna, Hoon, and Wadan, it is the custom to keep tame ostriches in a stable, and in two years to take three cuttings of their feathers. He imagined from what he saw of the skins of ostriches brought for sale, that all the fine feathers sent to Europe are from tame birds ; the wild ones being generally so ragged and torn, that not above half-a-dozen good perfect ones can be found. The white feathers are what Captain Lyon alludes to ; the black ones, being shorter and more flexi- ble, are generally good. Various statements have been made as to the number of eggs, and from eight to ten have been mentioned as found together. The latter is the number assigned by Le Vaillant to a single fe- male. But he disturbed one from a nest contain- ing thirty eggs, surrounded by thirteen others. He watched this nest, and observed four females in succession sit upon them during the day. This appears to have been a sort of nest in co- partnership, such as turkeys and other incubating birds that make their nests upon the ground will sometimes enter into.* The nest of the os- trich appears to be nothing more than a pit of sand some three feet in diameter, the sand being thrown up so as to form a raised edge around it. From this modified and somewhat loose degree of incubation we pass to the exception to the gen- aral rule to which we have above alluded. The visitors to the garden of the Zoological Society of London, in the Regent's Park, may see a plain-looking, sombre bird, with a considerable share of tail, of a size between a common fowl and a curassow,f walking and picking about as if it were looking for something it ought to find but cannot. It is, at present, in the great aviary on the south side, on the right after entering the gate from the road. This is the brush turkey % of the colonists of New Holland, the iveelah of the abo- rigines of the Namoi. If any one should inform an unitiated visitor that the bird before him never\ sits upon its eggs, but plants them in a hotbed, as * In the county of Somerset the mowers found, near an outlying barn where poultry were in the habit of picking about, a partridge's nest, with several unhatched part- ridge's eggs and the shells of three eggs of the common hen, with all the appearances indicative of their having contained chickens. Afterwards, when they were cutting wheat, a brace of partridges and three common chickens got up and flew off ; but the chickens could not keep up with the partridges and were caught by the mowers. These were evidently the produce of the hen's eggs, which must have been laid by the hen in the nest of the partridge, the hen having been attracted most probably by the sight of the partridge's eggs. Now it is well known that the incubation of a partridge is of longer duration than that of a hen. When, therefore, the common hen's eggs were hatched, the hen partridge must have hurried to the con- clusion that the rest of the eggs (her own) were bad, and that it was of no use to waste further time upon them ; whereupon she went away with her foster-chickens, leaving her own eggs to their fate. Here we have an instance of misled instinct. Nor is the facility with which the chickens appear to have ac- commodated themselves to the wild habits of their foster- parents, so far as their powers would permit, uninstruct- ive. They were in a fair way of returning to savage life ; and, if a similar accident had happened in an uninhabited or uncultivated country, who shall say what results might have sprung from the connexion. t Crax. t TalegaUa Lathami (Gould.) 46 LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. a man might plant cucumber and melon seeds, he would he taken for the most notorious fabulist since the days of Bidpai. If he should enlighten the neophyte further, and instruct him that the birds collect the materials for this hotbed them- selves, and bide their time till the fermentation has reached the proper point, till, like the patent incubator, it is fit for hatching the eggs, he would stand a very good chance of being set down as a member of the great family of Munchausen, of adventurous and marvellous memory. But nothing is more true. The brush turkey belongs to a family of birds or, if you wish to be hypercritical, learned reader, a sub-family which never incubate, but having collected vegetable materials which they know will heat to a proper point without, like an ill- saved hayrick, bursting out into combustion, or getting up into a sullen baking point, which would be equally destructive of the vital principle leave their eggs to the genial warmth of this half-nat- ural, half-artificial mother. The genera of this family at present known are Talegalla, Leipoa, and Megapodius, all inhabitants of that marvellous country which seems to be a remnant still left to give us a notion of a very an- cient state of this planet. Talegalla Lathami has been in its time a sore puzzle to systematists. More than one have made it a vulture, and have seized upon it as such to fill up a blank in a favorite system. It is no such thing. If you wish to see a perfect image of the bird, possess yourself of Mr. Gould's admirable work on The Birds of Australia. He has the merit of first clearing up this dark chapter in or- .nithology, and any amusement or instruction which may be derived from the perusal of this portion of this paper is due to him. He is of opinion that the natural situation of the bird is among the rasorial forms, and that it is one of a great family peculiar to Australia and the Indian Islands, of which Megapodius constitutes a part ; and, in con- , formation of his view, he notices the two deep emarginations of the sternum, so truly character- istic of the gallinaceous race. He is right. The upper surface of the adult male, its wings and tail, are of a blackish brown ; but, on the .under surface, the feathers are blackish brown at the base, going into silver-gray at the ends. The skin of the head and neck is of a deep pink, verg- ing on red, and thinly sprinkled with short hair, like feathers of a blackish brown. His wattle is of a bright yellow, tinged with red where it joins the red of the neck. His bill is black, and the irides of his eyes and his feet are brown. In size, the female is about a fourth less than he male, but very similar in color, only her wat- tle is less extensive. Size of well-developed specimens, nearly that of a turkey. Now for the habits of this extraordinary feath- ered biped. The brush turkey is gregarious, going in small companies, and very wary and suspicious. Like the pheasants and some others of the gallinaceous tribe it is a cunning runner, and often escapes through the mazes of the brush. The native dog is their great enemy, and when this destroyer is upon them, and, indeed, whenever they are hard pressed, if the opportunity offers, they all spring upon the lowest bough of a tree, leaping from branch to branch till they reach the top. There they either perch or take wing to another part of the cover. When undisturbed, they seek the sheltering branches of trees during the heats of the day. The sportsman knows this, and, taking ad- vantage of their fatal siesta, knocks them over one after the other ; for they take no warning from the fate of their companions, remaining to be shot at till all are bagged, or the sportsman is tired of plying his gun. In all this there is nothing very extraordinary, surely ? Certainly not, observing sir, or madam ; but patience. It is in the reproduction of the species that the anomalous proceedings of the bird are manifested. Collecting gradually a quantity of decaying vege- tables, the bird makes a hotbed. Several weeks are patiently employed in bringing the materials together, till, at length, a mound, consisting of a congeries of from two to four cart-loads, is formed. But it must not be considered as the labor of an individual, or of a pair, for many join in the work. When once established, a forcing-bed of this de- scription does duty for many years ; that is, the same site is resorted to, and as the lower part decomposes the birds superadd an additional sup- ply previous to depositing their eggs. In the construction of the most elaborate of bird's-nests the bill is the principal instrument of action, the feet performing a very subordinate part in the operation. In the instance before us the case is reversed. The foot is the agent in collecting and depositing ; the bill is not used for those purposes at all. The bird grasps a quantity in its foot, throwing it backwards to the common centre of deposit. The surface of the adjoining ground is thus cleared for a considerable distance so completely that hardly a leaf or blade of grass is left. When this pyramidal vegetable mound has had a sufficient time to heat, so as to be of the proper temperature, the large eggs are inserted, not side by side, as in ordinary cases, but planted at regular distances from each other, some nine or twelve inches apart, perfectly upright, and with the large end downwards, each egg being buried at nearly an arm's depth. They are then covered up and left till they are hatched. John Hunter found the temperature of a sitting hen to be 104 of Fahrenheit's thermometer, and ascertained the heat to be the same when the ball of the instrument was placed under her. Having taken some of the eggs from xmde'r the same hen, when the chick was about three-parts formed, he broke a hole in the shell, and introducing the ball of the thermometer he found that the quicksilver rose to 99. In some that were addled he found LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. 47 the heat not so high by two degrees ; so that, as he observes, the life in the living egg assisted in some degree to support its own heat. We have no statement of the heat of these procreant mounds at hatching-time, but the talegalla, without any aid but that which comes from above, knows ex- actly the time when they have arrived at that degree of temperature necessary for hatching the eggs, and which, probably, closely approximates to that whicli Hunter found to prevail in the sit- ting hen. Mr. Gould was credibly informed, both by na- tives and settlers living near the haunts of these birds, that it is not unusual to obtain nearly a bushel of eggs at one time from a single heap, and delicious eating they are said to be. There seems to be some discrepancy as to the degree of care manifested by the parents for their oviplanta- tion, some of the natives stating that the females are constantly in the neighborhood of the heap about hatching-time, frequently uncovering the eggs and covering them up again, as if for the purpose of assisting the young birds that may have broken their prison, whilst others informed Mr. Gould that the eggs are merely deposited, and the young left to force their way out without assist- ance. If the latter information be correct, the question arises as to how the newly-hatched birds are sus- tained ; and Mr. Gould observes that in all proba- bility as Nature has adopted this mode of repro- duction, she has also gifted the young birds with the power of sustaining themselves from the earliest period ; and he remarks, that the great size of the egg would lead to this conclusion, since in so comparatively large a space as that included in the area of one of these eggs it is reasonable to suppose that the bird would be much more de- veloped than is usually found to be the case in eggs of smaller dimensions. Mr. Gould obtained some confirmation of this opinion ; for, in search- ing for eggs in one of the mounds, he discovered the remains of a young bird, apparently just ex- cluded from the shell, but it was clothed with feathers, not with down, as is usually the case. The upright position of the eggs, he observes, tends to strengthen the opinion that they are never disturbed after they are deposited, for it is well known that the eggs of birds which are placed horizontally are frequently turned during incuba- tion. This may be seen by any o'ne who will closely watch a common sitting hen. Mr. Gould was almost too late for the breeding season, but he saw several of the heaps, both in the interior and at Illawarra. They were always in the most retired and shady glens, and on the slope of a hill, the part above the nest being scratched clean, while all below remained untouched, as if the birds had found it easier to cortvey the materials down than to throw them up. Mr. Gould found only one perfect egg, but he saw the shells of many from which the young had escaped in the position above described. At Illawarra he found them rather deposited in the light vegetable mould than among the leaves, which were accumulated in a considerable heap above them. The comparatively large size of the eggs has been alluded to. Mr. Gould describes them as perfectly white, of a long oval form, three inches and three-quarters long, by two inches and a half in diameter. He saw a living specimen in the garden of the late lamented Mr. Alexander M'Leay, at Sydney, which had for two successive years collected an immense mass of materials, as if it had been in its native woods. Wherever it was allowed to range borders, lawn, and shrubbery presented an appearance that would have satisfied the most fastidious lover of garden neatness, for they looked as if they had been regularly swept, from the bird having scratched everything that lay upon the surface to add to the mound, which was about three feet high and ten feet over. On placing his arm in it, Mr. Gould found the heat to be about 90 or 95 Fahr. He saw the bird, which was a male, strutting about with proud and majestic port, " sometimes parading round the heap, at others perching on the top, and displaying its brilHantly-polored neck and wattle to the greatest advantage ; this wattle it has the power of expand- ing and contracting at will ; at one moment it is scarcely visible, while at another it is extremely prominent. Here was an instance of the uncontrollable power of instinct. This solitary bird persever- ingly continued to construct its mound and keep it ready for the mate, which it was never destined to see. It was unfortunately drowned, and then its sex was discovered upon dissection. Leipoa ocettata, the ngow of the aborigines of the lowland, the ngow-oo of those of the mountain districts of Western Australia, and the native pheas- ant of the Western Australian colonists, is the next form of this anomalous family that claims our notice. The head and crest are of a blackish-brown hue, and a dark ashy gray pervades the neck and shoulders. From the chin to the breast the fore- part of the neck is covered with black lanceolate feathers, with a white stripe down the centre of each. Three distinct bands of grayish-white, brown, and black, mark the back and wings, the marks taking an ocellated form, especially on the tips of the secondaries. The primaries are brown, and have their outer webs pencilled with two or three zigzag lines near their tips. The whole of the under surface is light buff, and the tips of the flank feathers are barred with black. The black- ish-brown tail has a broad buff tip. The bill is black, and the feet are blackish brown. This species lays its eggs in a mound of sand, about three feet in height, which both sexes have contributed to raise, and to form which the natives say that the birds scratch up the sand all around for many yards. The inside of the mound pre- sents alternate layers of dried leaves, grasses, &c, ; among which twelve eggs, or more, are deposited, and covered up by the birds as they are laid, till the process is complete, when the sandy mound LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. presents the appearance of an ant's-nest. The eggs, which are about the size of three of a com- mon fowl, white, slightly tinged with red, are thus left to be hatched by the heat of the sun's rays, the vegetable materials retaining sufficient warmth to keep them at a proper temperature during the night ; for the eggs are deposited in layers, and no two eggs are suffered to lie without an inter- vening division. The hillocks are robbed by the natives two or three times in the course of a season, and they conclude that the number of eggs in a mound is many or few by the quantity of feathers scattered about. If there be abundance of feathers it is a sign that the hillock is full, and they immediately open it and take the whole deposit. The hen then lays again, and when her complement is complete is again robbed, when she will frequently lay a third time. In the mounds ants are often found as numerous as in an ant-hill ; and sometimes that part of the hillock which surrourxls the lower portion of the eggs becomes so hard that a chisel is neces- sary to get them out. Captain Gray, of the 83d regiment, informed Mr. Gould that he had never met witti these nest- mounds except where the soil was dry and sandy, and so thickly covered with a dwarf species of Leptospermum as to render it almost impossible for a traveller to force his way through if he strays from the native paths. In those close scrubiy woods small open glades occur occasionally, and there he found the ngow-oo's nest, consisting of a heap of sand, dead grass and boughs, three feet in height, nine in diameter, and sometimes larger. In size, this beautiful bird is less than the brush turkey. It keeps much on the ground, seldom taking to a tree if not closely pursued. When hard pressed it will often run its head into a bush and is there taken. The food, like ,that of tale- galla, consists principally of seeds and berries, am it utters a mournful note, very like that of a pigeon, but more inward in sound. But the most remarkable of this extraordinary group is the Ooeregoorga of the aborigines of th Coburg Peninsula, known to the colonists of For Essington as the jungle-fowl.* The head and crest of this great-footed bird deep cinnamon brown, the hue of the neck and al the under surface is dark gray. The back am wings are cinnamon brawn, and the upper am under tail-coverts are dark chestnut brown. Th general color of the irides is dark brown, but i: some individuals light reddish brown. The red dish brown bill is bordered with yellow edges The legs and feet bright orange, and the siz about that of the common fowl. When Mr. Gilbert, who assisted Mr. Gould i collecting the materials for his grand work on th Australian birds, arrived at Port Essington, nu merous great mounds of earth were pointed out t him by some of the residents who, probably belonged to the Society of Antiquaries as bein * Megapodius tumulus. tumuli of the aborigines. The natives told im not to listen to these wise men, and assured im, that so far from being the burying-places of e human biped, they were the nests in which the gs of the ooeregoorga were hatched. No one n the settlement believed a story that contradicted 11 the usual experiences of the incubation of irds, and when the natives brought in some of ic large-sized eggs in confirmation of their state- ment, they were treated as lawyers sometimes are ;hen they try to make their case too good, and le doubt previously entertained was strengthened, >ut Mr. Gilbert happened to know something of habits of Leipoa, so he took to himself a know- ng native, and about the middle of November pre- ceded to Knocker's Bay, a portion of Port issington harbor very little known, but where he ad been told a considerable number of these birds night be seen. He landed close to a thicket, and ad proceeded but a short distance from the shore vhen he beheld a mound of 'sand and shells, with slight mixture of black soil, whose base rested n the sandy beach, a few feet above high-water nark. The large yellow-blossomed Hibiscus nveloped this conical tumulus, which was some ve feet high, and twenty feet in circumference at ts base. He turned to his native, and asked what t was. " Oregoorga rambal." (Jungle fowl's house ir nest.) Up scrambled Mr. Gilbert, and sure enough bund a young bird in a hole about two feet deep, apparently but a few days old, and lying on a few dry leaves. The native protested to Mr. Gilbert that it would be of no use to hunt for eggs, as there were no traces of the old birds having been ately there, so our collector secured the nestling, placed it in a good-sized box with a sufficiency of sand, and fed it with bruised Indian corn, which it took lather freely ; but it was wild and un- tractable, and on the third day it contrived to es- cape from its prison. But while it remained in the box, it was incessantly employed in scratching up the sand into heaps, and although it was not larger than a small quail, the vigor and rapidity with which it threw the sand from one end of the place of its confinement to the other, was quite surprising. Poor Mr. Gilbert got but little sleep while it was in his custody, for it was so restless at night; that it kept him awake by the noises it made in endeavoring to gain its liberty. Only one foot was employed in scratching up the sand, and when the bird had grasped a footful it threw the sand behind it with small exertion, and with- out shifting its standing position on the other leg. This exertion seemed to Mr. Gilbert to proceed from mere restlessness, and a desire to use its pow- erful feet without having much, if any, connection with feeding ; for Mr. Gilbert neve* detected the bird in picking up any of the Indian corn which was mixed with the sand while thus employed. Eggs were continually brought to Mr. Gilbert ; but he had no opportunity of seeing them taken from the ground till the commencement of Feb- LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. 49 ruary, when, on another visit to Knocker's Bay, he saw them exhumed from a depth of six feet, in one of the largest mounds which he had seen. In this mound, the holes ran down in an oblique di- rection, from the centre of the hillock towards the outer slope, so that, although the eggs were six feet deep from the top, they were not more than two or three from the side. Mr. Gilbert was in- formed that the birds lay only a single egg in each hole, and that, after the egg is deposited, the earth is immediately thrown down lightly until the hole is filled up. Then the upper part of the mound is smoothed and rounded over. The top and sides of the mound betray the recent excavations of the bird, for the distinct impressions of its feet are there left, and the earth is so lightly thrown over, that the direction of the hole is easily ascertained by thrusting in a slender stick, the ease or diffi- culty of the penetration indicating the length of time that has elapsed since the operations of the bird. But to reach the eggs is no easy task. The natives dig them out with their hands alone, making only sufficient room to admit their bodies, and to throw out the earth between their legs. By grubbing thus with their fingers, they are en- abled to follow the direction of the hole with greater certainty ; and it will, sometimes, at a depth of several feet, turn off sharply at right angles, its direct course being thwarted by a clump of wood, or some other obstacle. Persevering as the savage is, his patience is often sorely tried. Upon the occasion of extracting these two eggs, the native dug down six times successively, to a depth Qf six or seven feet at least, without finding an egg, and came up so exhausted that he refused to try again. But Mr. Gilbert's anxiety to verify the statement made to him was now completely roused ; and, by the offer of an additional reward, he induced the grubber to try again. The seventh trial was crowned with success ; and Mr. Gilbert's gratification was complete, when the native with pride and satisfaction held up an egg, and after two or three more attempts displayed a second. " Thus proving," adds worthy Mr. Gilbert, " how cautious Europeans should be of disregarding the narrations of these poor children of nature, because they happen to sound extraordinary, or different from anything with which they were previously acquainted." In another mound, Mr. Gilbert, with the aid of his native, obtained an egg from the depth of about five feet, after excessive labor. This egg was in a perpendicular position, and the holes in this hillock which rose to the height of fifteen feet, was sixty in circumference at the base, and like the majority of those he had seen, was so enveloped amid trees of thick foliage, as to pre- clude the possibility of the sun's rays penetrating to any part of it commenced at the outer edge of the summit, and ran down obliquely to the cen- tre. This mound felt quite warm to the hands. Now comes the question, How do the young birds effect their escape from the tomb where they are literally buried alive ? This sesms to be a mystery. Some natives told Mr. Gould that they emerged without aid ; others declared that the old birds, when the ful- ness of time was come, scratched down to their offspring, and set them free. Mr. Gilbert found this megapode confined almost exclusively to the dense thickets near the sea-beach ; nor does it appear to be met with far inland, except up the banks of creeks. The birds go in pairs, or singly, feeding on the ground, on roots, for the most part, which the powerful claws of their great feet enable them to scratch up, and on seeds, berries, and insects, especially the large coleopterous kinds of the latter. They are not easily procured, and though the whirring of their wings as they fly away is often heard by those who approach their haunts, the birds themselves are seldom seen. The flight is heavy, and does not seem capable of being long sustained. When first disturbed, the jungle-fowl invariably makes for a tree, and as soon as it there alights, stretch- es out its head and neck in a straight line with the body, and remains motionless in that attitude. When thoroughly roused and alarmed, it flies hor- izontally and laboriously for about a hundred yards, with its legs hanging down. Mr. Gilbert did not hear any note or cry ; but the natives de- scribed and imitated it, and, according to them, it clucks much in the fashion of a common domestic fowl, the cluck ending in a peacock-like scream. He observed that the birds continued to lay from the end of August to March, when he left that part of the country, and, if the natives are to be believed, an interval of only four or five months, including the driest and hottest portion of the year, occurs between their breeding seasons. Mr. Gilbert remarks that the composition of the mound seems to influence the coloring of a thin epider- mis,, with which the eggs are invested, and which readily chips off, showing the shell to be white. Thus, eggs deposited in a black soil, are exter- nally of a dark reddish brown ; those placed in sandy hillocks near the beach present a dirty, yellowish-white hue. They differ in size consid- erably ; but all are of the same form, with both ends equal. The average size may be taken at three inches five lines long, by two inches three lines broad. The geographical distribution of this singular group of birds is not confined to Australia, but extends from the Philippine Islands through those of the Indian Archipelago to Australia. The same Fauna that exhibits the anomalous proceedings of the brush turkey, the native pheas- ant, and the megapode, and the rude congeries of materials in which they plant their eggs, leaving them there to be hatched by vegetable fermenta- tion and solar lieat, as the common snake con- signs her eggs to the dunghill, presents the most curious examples of bird architecture hitherto dis- covered. The history of the elegant artificers of these structures has more the semblance of an Arabian tale than a sober statement of fact. The bower-birds* of Australia display in the erection * Geneva, Ptilonorhynchus and Chlamydera. 50 LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. and decoration of their edifices for assembly and halls of amusement, an ingenuity and taste that place them far beyond any others of their race with which we are acquainted. Their constructions and collections for they are most ardent, assiduous, and indefatigable col- lectors had attracted the attention of travellers, who were puzzled as to what cause they could at- tribute the phenomena presented to them occa- sionally in their journeys. To Mr. Gould, who has dissipated the clouds which obscured so many of the Australian animals, we are indebted for an elucidation of this most curious mystery. He watched the builders, obtained two of the bowers complete, and, with his usual liberality, and not without considerable difficulty, placed one in our national museum and the other in that of Leyden. The bower-like structures from which the birds take their name first came under the notice of Mr. Gould at Sydney. Mr. Charles Coxen had pre- sented an example to the museum there as the work of the satin bower-bird. With his usual energy, Mr. Gould at once determined to leave no means untried for ascertaining every particular re- lating to this particular feature in the economy of the bird ; and on visiting the cedar brushes of the Liverpool range he discovered several of these bowers or playing-places. He found them usually under the shelter of an overhanging tree in the most retired part of the forest, differing considera- bly in size, some being a third larger than that represented in Mr. Gould's admirable picture, (for the illustrations in this, as well as in many of his other works, are not mere figures they are pic- tures,) whilst others were much smaller. He shall now speak for himself: The base consists of an extensive and rather con- vex platform of sticks firmly interwoven, on the centre of which the bower itself is built ; this, like the platform on which it is placed and with which it is interwoven, is formed of sticks and twigs, but of a more slender and flexible description, the tips of the twigs being so arranged as to curve inwards and nearly meet at the top. In the interior of the bower the materials are so placed that the forks of the twigs are always presented outwards, by which arrangement not the slightest obstruction is offered to the passage of the birds. The interest of this curious bovver is much enhanced by the manner in which it is decorated at and near the entrance with the most gayly-colored articles that can be collected, such as the blue tail-feathers of the Rosehill and Pennantian parrots, bleached bones, the shells of snails, &c. ; some of the feathers are stuck in among the twigs, while others, with the bones and shells, are strewed about near the entrances. The pro- pensity of these birds to pick up and fly off with any attractive object is so well known to the natives, that they always search the runs for any small miss- ing article, as the bowl of a pipe, &c., that may 'have been accidentally dropped in the brush. I myself found at the entrance of one of them a small neatly-worked stone tomahawk, of an inch and a half in length, together with some slips of blue cotton rags, which the birds had doubtless picked up at a deserted encampment of the natives. Mr. Gould goes on to observe that the purpose for which these curious bowers are made is not yet, perhaps, fully understood. He is certain that they are not used as a nest, but as a place of re- sort for many individuals of both sexes, which, when there assembled, run through and around the bower in a sportive and playful manner, and that so frequently that it is seldom entirely deserted. The proceedings of these birds (adds Mr. Gould) have not been sufficiently watched to render it cer- tain whether the runs are frequented throughout the whole year or not ; but it is highly probable that they are resorted to as a rendezvous or playing- ground at the pairing-time, and during the period of incubation. It was at this season, as I judged from the state of the plumage and from the internal indications of those I dissected, that I visited these localities ; the bowers I found had been recently renewed ; it was, however, evident, from the ap- pearance of a portion of the accumulated mass of sticks, &c., that the same spot had been used as a place of resort for many years. Mr. Charles Coxen informed me, that, after having destroyed one of these bowers and secreted himself, he had the sat- isfaction of seeing it partially reconstructed ; the birds engaged in this task, he added, were females.* Such are the bovvers constructed by the satin bower-bird, (Ptilonorhynchus holosericeus, Khul,) the cowry of the aborigines of the coast of New South Wales. The plumage of the adult male is deep, shining, blue-black, well justifying that part of its name which likens it u> satin, except the primary wing-feathers, whose deep black more re- sembles velvet, and the wing coverts, secondaries, and tail-feathers, which are also of a velvety black, tipped with lustrous blue-black. The eyes are of a light caerulean blue, with a circle of red round the pupil. The bill is of a bluish horn-color, graduating into yellow at the tip, and the legs and feet are yellowish white. The head and all the upper surface of the fe- male are grayish green, the wings and tail sulphur brown. The same tints prevail on the under sur- face as on the upper, but are much lighter, with a tinge of yellow, and each feather of these under parts has a scale-like appearance produced by a crescent-shaped, dark-brown border at its extremity. The irides are of a deeper blue than those of the male, and there is only an indication of the red ring. The bill is of a dark horn-color ; and the feet are of a yellowish-white hue, tinged with horn-color. The young males closely resemble the females, with this difference, that the hue of the under sur- face is of a more greenish yellow, and the crescent- shaped markings more numerous. The irides are dark blue, the feet olive brown, and the bill black- ish olive. These birds, the male being in its transition suit, may be seen at the garden of the Zoological Society, where they have a bower, and where I have had the pleasure of watching them. But I must break off for the present, though much more remains to be noticed with regard to this most in- * Birds of Australia. By J. Gould, F. R. S., &c. Published by the Author, 20 Broad Street, Golden Square. LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. 51 teresting group, and other temptations crowd upon my pen. The hippopotamus thanks to his pow- erful highness, the Viceroy of Egypt, who saith to a man "Go, and hegoeth;" and to good, zeal- ous, indefatigable, disinterested Mr. Murray is delighting multitudes of eager spectators, who crowd to the Regent's Park to see this most healthy, good-humored, rollicking, pachydermatous baby of five hundred pounds' weight, that has come from a distance of five thousand miles to see and be seen ; for he appears to be as pleased with his visitors as they are with him. The thylacines shapes such as one sees in dreams as yet so shy and wild that they dash with horror from the sight of a human face, and remain sulkily in their dor- mitory, are arrived to add to our notions of Aus- tralian wonders. The Egyptian snake-charmers are come. There are, however, other things in the world besides birds, beasts, and reptiles ; and the friendly reader must be no longer detained from the more interesting pages that here claim his attention. 52 LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. PART VIII. ELEGANT and ingenious as are the structures and collections of the satin bower-bird, the species of the allied genus Chlamydera display still greater architectural abilities, and more extensive, collec- tive, and decorative powers. The spotted bower-bird* is an inhabitant of the interior. Its probable range, in Mr. Gould's opinion, is widely extended over the central por- tions of the Australian continent ; but the only parts in which he observed it, or from which he procured specimens, were the districts immediately to the north of the colony of New South Wales. During his journey into the interior, he saw it in tolerable abundance at Brezi, on the river Mokai, to the northward of the Liverpool plains ; and it was also equally numerous in all the low scrubby ranges in the neighborhood of the Namoi, as well as in the open brushes that intersect the plains on its borders. Mr. Gould is gifted with the eye of an observer ; but, from the extreme shyness of its disposition, it generally escapes the attention of ordinary travellers, and it seldom allows itself to be approached near enough for the spectator to discern its colors. Its " harsh, grating, scolding note" betrays its haunts to the intruder ; but, when disturbed, it seeks the tops of the highest trees, and, generally, flies off to another locality. Mr. Gould obtained his specimens most readily by watching at the water-holes where they come to drink; and, on one occasion, near the termina- tion of a long drought, he was guided by a native to a deep basin in a rock, where water, the pro- duce of many antecedent months, still remained. Numbers of the spotted bower-birds, honeysuck- ers and parrots, sought this welcome reservoir, which had seldom, if ever before, reflected a white face. Mr. Gould's presence was regarded with suspicion by the winged frequenters of this attrac- tive spot ; but while he remained lying on the ground perfectly motionless, though close to the water, their wants overpowered their misgivings, and they would dash down past him and eagerly take their fill, although an enormous black snake was lying coiled upon a piece of wood near the edge of the pool. At this interesting post Mr. Gould remained for three days. The spotted bower-birds were the most numerous of the thirsty assemblage there congregated, and the most shy ; and yet he had the satisfaction of frequently seeing six or eight of them displaying their beautiful necks as they were perched within a few feet of him. He slates that the scanty supply of water remaining in the cavity, must soon have been ex- hausted by the thousands of birds that daily re- sorted to it, if the rains, which had so long been suspended, had not descended in torrents. Mr. Gould discovered several of the bowers of this species during his journey to the interior ; the finest of which, now in the National Museum, he .brought to England. He found the situations of these runs or bowers to be much varied. Some- * Chlamydera maculata. GOULD. times he discovered them on the plains studded with Myalls, (Acacia pendula,) and sornotimes in the brushes with which the lower hills were clothed. He describes them as considerably longer, and more avenue-like, than those of the satin bower-bird, extending in many instances to three feet in length. Outwardly they were built with twigs, and beautifully lined with tall grasses, so disposed that their upper ends nearly met. The decorations were very profuse, consisting of bivalve shells, skulls of small animals, and other bones. Evident and beautiful indications of design (con- tinues Mr. Gould) are manifest throughout the whole of.the bower and decorations formed by this species, particularly in the manner in which the stones are placed within the bower, apparently to keep the grasses with which it is lined firmly fixed in their places ; these stones diverge from the mouth of the run, on each side, so as to form little paths, while the immense collection of decorative materials, bones, shells, &c., are placed in a heap before the entrance of the avenue, this arrange- ment being the same at both ends. In some of the larger bowers, which had evidently been resorted to for many years, I have seen nearly half a bushel of bones, shells, &c., at each of the entrances. In some instances, small bowers, composed almost en- tirely of grasses, apparently the commencement of a new place of rendezvous, were observable. I frequently found these structures at a considerable distance from the rivers, from the borders of which they could alone have procured the shells, and small, round, pebbly stones ; their collection and transportation must, therefore, be a task of great labor and difficulty. As these birds feed almost entirely upon seeds and fruits, the shells and bones cannot have been collected for any other purpose than ornament ; besides, it is only those which have been bleached perfectly white in the sun, or such as have been roasted by the natives, and by this means whitened, that attract their attention. I fully ascertained that these runs, like those of the satin bower-bird, formed the rendezvous of many individuals ; for, after secreting myself for a short space of time near one of them, I killed two males which I had previously seen running through the avenue. The plumage of. this species is remarkable. A rich brown pervades the crown of the head, the ear-coverts and the throat, each feather being bor- dered by a narrow black line ; and, on the crown, the feathers are small and tipped with silver gray. The back of the neck is crossed by a beautiful, broad, light, rosy pink band of elongated feathers, so as to form a sort of occipital crest. The wings, tail, and upper surface, are deep brown ; every feather of the back, rump, scapularies, and secondaries, having a large round spot of full buff at the tip. Primaries slightly tipped with white. All the tail-feathers with buffy white terminations. Under parts grayish white. Flank-feathers zig- zagged, with faint transverse light brown lines. Bill and feet dusky brown. At the corner of the mouth, the bare, thick, fleshy, prominent skin, is of a pinky flesh color, and the irides are dark brown. LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. 53 The rosy frill adorns the adults of both sexes; but the young male and female of the year have it not. Another species, the great bower-bird,* was probably the architect of the bowers found by Captain Grey during his Australian rambles, and which interested him greatly, in consequence of the doubts entertained by him whether they were the works of a bird or of a quadruped the incli- nation of his mind being, that their construction was due to the four-footed animal. They were formed of dead grass and parts of bushes, sunk a slight depth into two parallel furrows, in sandy soil, and were nicely arched above ; they were always full of broken sea-shells, large heaps of which also protruded from the extremity of the bower. In one of these bowers, the most remote from the sea of those discovered by Captain Grey, was a heap of the stones of some fruit that evi- dently had been rolled therein. He never saw any animal in or near these bowers ; but the abundant droppings of a small species of kanga- roo close to them, induced him to suppose them to be the work of some quadruped. Here, then, we have a race of birds, whose ingenuity is not merely directed to the usual ends of existence self-preservation, and the continua- tion of the species but to the elegancies and amusements of life. Their bowers are their ball and assembly rooms ; and we are very much mis- taken if they are not like those places of meeting, For whispering lovers made. The male satin bower-bird, in the garden at the Regent's Park, is indefatigable in his assiduity towards the female ; and his winning ways to coax her into the bower, conjure up the notion that the soul of some Damon, in the course of its trans- migration, has found its way into his elegant form. He picks up a brilliant feather, flits about with ij before her, and when he has caught her eye, adds it to the decorations. Haste, my Nanette, my lovely maid, Haste to the bower thy swain has made. No enchanted prince could act the deferential lover with more delicate or graceful attention. Poor fellow ; the pert, intruding sparrows plague him abominably ; and really it becomes almost an affair of police, that some measures should be adopted for their exclusion. He is subject to fits, too, and suddenly, without the least apparent warning, falls senseless, like an epileptic patient ; but presently recovers, and busies himself about the bower. When he has induced the female to enter it, he seems greatly pleased ; alters the dis- position of a feather or a shell, as if hoping that the change may meet her approbation ; and looks at her as she sits coyly under the overarching twigs, and then at the little arrangement which he has made, and then at her again, till one could almost fancy that one hears him breathe a sigh. He is still in his transition dress, and has not yet donned his full Venetian suit of black. * Chlamydera nucfialis. In their natural state, the satin bower-birds as- sociate in autumn in small parties ; and Mr. Gould states that they may then often be seen on the ground near the sides of rivers, particularly where the brush feathers the descending bank down to the water's edge. The male has a loud, liquid call ; and both sexes frequently utter a harsh guttural note, expressive of surprise and dis- pleasure. Geffrey Chaucer, in his argument to The As- semblie of Foules, relates that " All foules are gathered before Nature on St. Valentine's day, to chuse their makes. A formell egle beyng beloved of three tercels, requireth a yeeres respite to make her choise ; upon this triall, Qui bien aime tard oublie' He that loveth well is slow to forget.' " The female saiin bower-bird in the Regent's Park seems to have taken a leaf out of the " formell egle's" book ; for I cannot discover that her hum- ble and most obsequious swain has been rewarded for his attentions, though they have been continued through so many weary months ; but we shall never be able entirely to solve these mysteries, till we become possessed of the rare ring sent to the King of Sarra by the King of Arabie, "by the vertue whereof" his daughter understood "the language of all foules," unless we can Call up him that left untold The story of Cambuscan bold, Of Camball and of Algersife, And who had Canace to wife, That owned the virtuous ring and glass, And of the wondrous horse of brass, On which the Tartar king did ride. Edmund Spenser, with due reverence for Dan Chaucer, (well of English undefiled,) has, indeed, done his best to supply the defect,* and has told us that Cambello's sister was fair Canacee, That was the learnedst lady in her days, Well seen in every science that mote be, And every_ secret work of nature's ways, In witty riddles and in wise soothsays, In power of herbs, and tunes of beasts and birds: but we learn from him no more of the ring than " Dan Chaucer" tells us : The vertue of this ring, if ye woll here, Is this ; that if she list it for to were Upon her thombe, or in her purse it bere, There is no foule that fleeth under heven That she ne shall understand his stevenjt And know his meaning openly and plaine, And answer him in his language againe ; as Canace does in her conversation with the falcon in The Squier's Tale. Nor is the " vertue" of the ring confined to bird-intelligence, for the knight who came on the " steed of brasse," adds- And, every grasse that groweth upon root She shall well know to whom it will do boot, All be his wounds never so deep and wide. But we must return from these realms of fancy to a country hardly less wonderful ; for Australia presents, in the realities of its quadrupedal forms, a scene that might well pass for one of enchant- ment. * Fairy Queen, book iv., cant. 2, et seq. t Sound. 54 LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. To the uninitiated, a commencement of an ac- count in the following manner, would look very like a narrative proceeding from the pen of the renowned Captain Lemuel Gulliver. The country of the marsupiates, or purse-bear- ers, is of enormous extent, and forms a fifth quar- ter of the globe. Their young are born in an embryotic state, and conveyed to a comfortable marsupium or pouch belonging to the mother, where there are teats, to which these foetuses at- tach themselves by their mouths. Here they stick, like little animated lumps, till the small knobs which exist at the places where the mem- bers Jiight to be, bud and shoot out into limbs. By and bye these limbs become more and more perfect, and the extremities are completely formed ; till gradually the development of the creature reaches its proper proportions, and it is able to go alone. It is right pleasant to behold these curious little animals hopping or running about their parents, and on the most distant approach of danger flying for refuge to the purses of their mothers, where they disappear till it is past, and from whence, if they think they may safely ven- ture, they peep out to see whether the coast is clear. This, however, is an account of the Marsupia- lia, the Animalia crumenata of Scaliger, uncolored by the slightest exaggeration. New Holland is the head-quarters of these anomalous creatures, and there the great type of the group is placed ; nor does it extend far beyond the main land among the adjacent islands. In America it is scantily represented by the opos- sum ; but neither the colder parts of that country nor its southern extremity, know it ; neither do any representatives of the family occur in Europe, Asia, or Africa. Here, then, we have two far- distant regions presenting themselves as the two points of development of a form which has not spread over other portions of the earth ; and, in truth, this, combined with the palaeontological re- searches of Dr. Lund -in Brazil, and of our own Owen, relative to the quadrupedal fossil remains of New Holland, is a strong argument for those who look upon these countries as two distinct foci of creation, and as affording examples, among many others, militating against the notion of a unique centre of origin of the animals now in ex- istence. These marsupials are, as far as observation has gone, of a low grade in the scale of intelligence, and their vocal powers are exceedingly limited. A growl, or a sort of hollow bark, is the nearest approach that is made among them to a completely developed sound, and a half-hissing, half-wheezfng, guttural attempt at a cry, is the noise most fre- quently emitted by them when under the influence of irritation. I have in vain looked for that at- tachment to their keepers, and to those who are kind to them, which characterizes the more highly- developed quadrumanes and quadrupeds in captiv- ity and their manners seem to remind the observer of the reptilian rather than of the mammalian class. The wombat's loud serpentine hiss, when provoked, cannot fail to raise this idea in the mind of any generalizing naturalist who hears it ; and as for the kangaroo, its larynx absolutely wants the necessary apparatus for producing a vocalized sound, to which the noise that the animal emits bears no resemblance. The brain in these creatures is in accordance with the stupidity which renders them so unlike those mammiferous quadrupeds in which that organ exhibits a more advanced state of develop- ment. The examination of those marsupials that have fallen under the notice of comparative anato mists, indicates the impossibility of their manifest- ing those qualities which have so deservedly en- deared the dog to man. They have no corpus callosum ; and, without being very presumptuous, that portion of the brain may be pronounced, upon the authority of those who have not leaped to con- clusions, but have humbly and patiently drawn them from a long course of study and experiment, to be the principal seat of memory. This defect at once accounts for the stupidity and want of attachment above alluded to. These marsupials seem to have just as much intelligence as will en- able them to perform the animal functions, and no more. One of the Thylacines in the Regent's Park, when shut out of his dormitory, spent his time in walking round and round in a narrow circle, without even examining the extent or nature of his place of confinement, or expatiating ; no, he went round and round, as if he had not sense to do any- thing more. But we must introduce this brute form more particularly to our friends. Thylacinus cynocephalus, the dog-faced opossum, vulgarly known as the zebra opossum and zebra wolf in Van Dieman's Land, is about the size of a young wolf. The short, smooth, dusky brown hair, is barred on the back, especially at the lower part and on the rump, with some fifteen or sixteen black transverse stripes, broadest on the back, and narrowing as they extend down the sides. Two or more of these zebra-like marks descend down the thighs considerably. The ground color on the back is of a blackish gray hue. The tail is long, but not large, nor does it look well-proportioned or symmetrically set on. It has forty-six teeth ; eight incisors in the upper jaw and six in the lower, two canines above and two below, and twenty- eight molar teeth, fourteen in the upper jaw and the same number in the lower. There are five toes on each of the fore-feet, and four on each of the hind-feet. Mr. Harris has described this, the largest of the Australian carnivorous animals in the Transactions of the Linncan Society. He remarks that it utters a short, guttural cry, and appears exceedingly inactive and stupid, having, like the owl, an almost constant motion with the nictitating membrane of the eye. The animal described by him was taken in a trap baited with kangaroo flesh, and lived LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. 55 only a few hours after its capture ; in its stomach were found the partly-digested remains of a porcu- pine ant-cater.* The native abode of this curious animal is among the caverns and rocks of the deep and almost in- penetrable glens near the highest mountains of Van Dieman's Land. I first clearly saw a pair of these animals fairly out in the light on the 26th May last, in one of the dens appropriated to the carnivorous animals in the garden of the Zoological Society in the Regent's Park. They had been presented to the Society by Mr. Gunn. I had, on a former day, seen them imperfectly by getting into the outer apartment of their den and looking into their dor- mitory. When fairly exposed, they presented to my eyes the images of the most extraordinary ani- mals that I had seen ; creatures, I repeat, such as one has beheld in dreams uncouth, loggerheaded, oddly made up, as if Nature had been trying her " 'prentice han' " at wolf-making, and as if they belonged to a very ancient state of things in this planet, as all the native Australian quadrupeds do. The clumsy, ill-defined forms of these Thy- lacines have puzzled men to give them a name. " Wolves," "hyaenas," are some of the appellations applied to them by the colonists, who saw a dog- like or wolf-like head on a body striped with marks resembling, in a degree, those of some of the hyaenas. It is impossible for a palaeontologist to look at them without fancying that he sees some fossil animal recalled to life ; and, indeed, the ex- tinct zoophagous marsupial Thylacotherium must, as its name implies, have borne some resemblance to the animals now under consideration. There cannot have been any very wide zoological interval between the forms of the Thylacine and of the Thylacothere. The Thylacines, like all the true Australian mammals, are strictly marsupial ; and the female rejoices in as good a pouch after her kind as the best-provided kangaroo of them all. And what a beautiful provision this is ! how admirably adapted to the region in which the marsupials live, and move, and have their being ! Australia is proverbially wanting in rivers, and during a considerable portion of the year the sup- ply of water is very precarious. Most of these quadrupeds drink very little ; and the mother, instead of dragging hev young about wearily, to look, perhaps in vain, for water, has them com- fortably wrapped up in her pouch, and thrives where a fox and her cubs would miserably per- ish. The size of the foetus of the kangaroo at the time of birth, together with the mode of its attachment to the nipple of the mother and other highly interesting particulars, may be collected from the experiments of Mr. Collie, Mr. Morgan, and especially of Professor Owen. From these it appears that the young, as soon as it is born, is removed by the mother's mouth in all probability to the pouch, which is held open by the mother's fore-paws, and there held till it attaches itself to a nipple. Professor Owen ascertained that the days of gestation in the kangaroo* are twenty-nine. In order to accustom the female to the examination of the pouch, they were commenced at a very early period of gestation, and were continued, till at seven in the morning of the 5th October, 1833, the fetus was discovered in the pouch attached to the left superior nipple. On the preceding day at the same hour a considerable quantity of the moist brown secretion peculiar to the pouch was noticed, indicating that determination of the blood to that part had commenced, and at different times during that day the female put her head into the pouch and licked off the secretion. When ex- amined at six o'clock in the evening, the only per- ceptible change in the state of the pouch was a slight increase of the secretion ; but none of the nipples exhibited any appearance indicating that she was so soon to become a mother. Closely watched as she was she contrived, however, to elude observation at the actual time of parturition, which took place in the night ; nor were there any appearances on the litter or about the fur of the animal indicative of the event. The little one resembled an earth-worm in the color and semi-transparency of its integument, adhered firmly to the point of the nipple, breathed strongly but slowly, and moved its fore-legs when it was disturbed. Its little body was bent upon the abdomen, its short tail tucked in between its hind-legs ; and these legs, destined, if it had lived, to be so gigantically developed, and to execute such enormous bounds, were one third shorter than the fore-legs ; but the three divisions of the toes were distinct. Its whole length from the nose to the end of the tail, when stretched out, did not ex- ceed one inch and two lines. The professor was aware that the Hunterian dissections, which may be seen in the preparations exhibited in the noble museum of the Royal Col- lege of Surgeons of England, as well as the observations of Mr. Morgan and Mr. Collie, con- curred in disproving the theory of a vascular mode of connection between the mammary fetus and the nipple ; but as Geoffrey St. Hilaire had stated that a discharge of blood accompanies marsupial birth, or the detachment of the fetus from the nipple, Professor Owen determined not to neglect the opportunity thus offered, and on the 9th of October, separated the infant creature from the organ that bound it to life. The following reasons urged him to this act. First, it would decide the nature of the connec- tion between the fetus and the nipple. Sec- ondly, it promised to afford the means of ascer- taining the mammary secretion at this period. Thirdly, it might show whether so small a fetus would manifest the powers of a voluntary agent in regaining the nipple ; and, lastly, the actions of * Echidna aculeata. * Macropus major. 56 LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. the mother to effect the same purpose would prob- ably be brought under notice. When the foetus, which retained a firm hold of the nipple, was detached, a small drop of whitish fluid, a serous milk, appeared on the point of the nipple, which had entered the mouth about half a line. This extremity was of smaller diameter than the rest of the organ, not being yet so com- pressed by the contracted orifice of the mouth as to form the clavate appearance which it presents at a later period. The poor young one moved its extremities vigorously after it was detached, but made no apparent effort to apply its legs to the integument of the mother, so as to creep along, but seemed to be perfectly helpless with regard to progressive motion. It was deposited at the bot- tom of the pouch. The mother was then liberated, and carefully watched for an hour. She immediately exhibited symptoms of unea- siness, stooped down and licked herself, and scratched the outside of her pouch. At last, rest- ing on the tripod formed by her hind legs and tail, she grasped the sides of the orifice of the pouch with her forepaws, and, drawing them asunder as in the act of opening a bag, she put her head into the cavity as far as the eyes, and moved it about in different directions. She never meddled with the pouch when she was in a recumbent posture ; but when apparently urged by uneasy sensations, she rose and repeated the operation of drawing open the bag and inserting her muzzle, keeping it there sometimes for half a minute. Professor Owen never observed her put her fore-legs into the pouch ; they were invariably used to open it. When she withdrew her head, she generally fin- ished by licking the orifice of the pouch and swal- lowing the secretion. After repeating the act above described some dozen times, she lay down and seemed to bs at ease. When she had re- mained quiet for about half an hour, she was again examined, and the young one was found, not at the bottom of the pouch, but within two inches of the nipple, breathing strongly and mov- ing its extremities irregularly as before. The professor made an unsuccessful attempt to replace it on the nipple, and the mother was then released. Two days afterwards the pouch was found empty. Every portion of the litter was carefully searched, but no traces of the foetus could be found. It was, therefore, concluded, that the mother had proba- bly destroyed it in consequence of the disturbance, in accordance with the morbid habit to which I have in another part of these papers alluded. It is but just, however, to the professor to remark, that he had no reason for anticipating this fatal result ; for when the Zoological Society held the farm at Kingston, the head keeper there had twice taken a mammary kangaroo foetus from the nipple and pouch of the mother when it did not exceed an inch in length, and each time it again became attached to the nipple. It continued to grow without apparently having sustained any in- jury from the separation, until the death of the mother, when it was nearly fit for leaving the pouch. The person who procured Mr. Collie's specimen told that gentleman that the young one did not pass the whole of its time with the papilla in its mouth, but had been remarked more than once not having hold of it. It had even been wholly removed from the pouch to the person's hand, and had always attached itself anew to the teat. Mr. Collie, with the tip of his finger, gently pressed the head of the little one away from the teat, of which it had hold, and continued pressing a little more strongly for a minute altogether, when the teat, that had been stretched to more than an inch, came out of the young one's mouth, and showed a small circular enlargement at its tip, well adapting it for being retained by the sucker's mouth, the opening of which seemed closed in on both sides, and only sufficiently open in front to admit the slender papilla. After this Mr. Collie placed the extremity of the teat close to the mouth of the young, and held it there for a short time without perceiving any decided effort to get hold of it anew ; when he allowed the pouch to close and put the mother into her place of security. An hour afterwards the young one was observed still unattached ; but in about two hours it had hold of the teat and was actively sucking.* Moreover, Mr. Morgan had detached a mammary foetus about the size of a Norway rat, and after a separation of two hours from the nip- ple it regained its hold, without sustaining any in- jury from the interruption. But although the pigmy young one has power enough to grasp the nipple and adhere firmly to it by the muscular strength of its lips, it must not be supposed that it is capable of drawing suste- nance therefrom by its unaided efforts. So foetal a rudiment would have been in a sad condition, if it had depended for its supply entirely on its own exertions; but bounteous Nature has pro- vided the assistance without which it must have perished. Geoffroyand the lamented Mr. Morgan have both demonstrated the action of a muscle on the mammary gland, so as to inject the milk into the mouth of the adherent suckling. Here again is an instance of that wonderful adaptation of creative power, which must strike every one not absolutely petrified. But, it may be objected, you can hardly assert that the young one's efforts of suciion should al- ways coincide w;jh the injecting acts of the moth- er ; and you must allow that if at any time there should be no such coincidence, the milk would be injected into the larynx, and so suffocate the fcetus. Most true ; but the same Power that willed the birth of the creature in such an embryotic condi- tion has guarded against the possibility of this fatal result. The epiglottis and arytenoid carti- lages are elongated and approximated, and the slit of the glottis is consequently placed at the apex of a conical larynx, which projects, as in the whales, into the posterior nostrils, where it is closely em- braced by the muscles of the soft palate. Thus is * Zool. Journ., vol. r. LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. 57 the air-passage completely separated from the fau- ces, and as the mother injects the milk the divided stream passes, without the possibility of its " go- ing the wrong way," on each side of the larynx into the oesophagus and stomach.* It has been remarked, that the conveyance of the fetus into the pouch is probably effected by the mouth of the mother. The reasons for this belief are well given by Professor Owen, who observes, that, apart from the other circumstantial evidence, this mode of transmission is consistent with analogy, the mouth being always employed by the ordinary quadrupeds dogs, cats, and mice, for instance for the purpose of removing their helpless offspring. The tender embryo would be more liable to injury from the fore-paws ; and these, from the absence of a thumb, could not so securely effect the conveyance as the lips, which can be opposed to each other. The advantages of such a vivarium as that be- longifig to the Zoological Society of London in the Regent's Park are here strongly manifested. Pro- fessor Owen was enabled by his autopsy to correct the error of Geoffrey St. Hilaire, (who had even speculated on the anastomoses and distribution of the continuous vessels, in the neck of the fcetus to account for its junction with the maternal nipple,) and to come to what may be deemed the safe con- clusion as to the mode of the removal of the new- ly-born foetus to the pouch, where it is probably conducted to and held over a nipple by the mouth of the mother, while the pouch is kept open by her fore-paws, till she feels that her young one has, with its lips, laid hold of the sensitive ex- tremity of the organ from which it is to derive its subsistence.! But to return to the Thylacines. They were so very shy and wild, that it was some time before they could be turned into their outer apartment while their sleeping-place was being cleaned, without actual danger to them- selves ; they threw themselves about so recklessly, dashing themselves in their terror against the walls and bars of their place of confinement. When I saw them out they had a most wild and scared appearance, and made haste to escape from the light of day to the obscurity of their inner den. The porcupine ant-eater, whose remains Mr. Harris found in the stomach of his Thylacine, is The hedge-hog of the Sydney colonists, and, to- gether with the Ornithorhynchus, belongs to that other anomalous tribe of quadrupeds to which Geoffroy gave the apt name of Monotremes. In * Geoffrey first described this perfect contrivance ; but, as Professor Owen observes, John Hunter seems to have foreseen the necessity of it, and, indeed, as the professor further remarks, there are evidences in Hunter's prepara- tions in the museum of the college, that he had antici- pated most of the anatomical discoveries which have sub- sequently been made upon the embryo of the kangaroo. t See Professor Owen's admirable paper " On the Gen- eration of the Marsupial Animals, with a Description of the Impregnated Uterus of the Kangaroo." Phil. Trans. 1834. these the reptilian character still further prevails mingled with that of birds. Though they have no pouch, they possess the marsupial bones, which, however, play a very different part in them from that assigned to those bones in the kangaroo and true Marsupiata. They have a clavicular bone placed more forward than the normal clavicle, reminding the observer of the furciform bone, or merry- thought in birds, to which, indeed, it is analogous ; and the cora- coid bone reaches the breast bone. Their eyes are very little, and their ears are without any ex- ternal appendage. Their mode of re-production was for a long time considered doubtful ; some holding that they laid eggs like the birds and reptiles, and others that the young were brought forth alive. Those who maintained the former theory relied upon stories of nests, and eggs, and egg-shells having been found ; but these stories, when subjected to cross-examination, were generally found to bear a very strong resemblance to that method of reason- ing which ascribed the existence of the Goodwin Sands to the building of Tenderden steeple. For example, one sees an ornithorhynchus come from a bank, lands with his native, and finds at the spot from whence the paradoxical animal had re- treated a couple of eggs. The native tells the white man that this is the Mallangong's* nest, and that those are its eggs. The eggs are secured, and triumphantly produced as conclusive evidence of the oviparous nature of the animal. They prove to be reticulated externally, and to those conver- sant with the subject exhibit all the characters of the eggs of a reptile, which may have been there deposited by one of that class, and have been visited by the ornithorhynchus for the purpose of seasoning its insect diet with an omelette au nat- urel. How many of these reptilian eggs the ornithorhynchus may have swallowed before it was disturbed does not appear. But we knovr that the ornithorhynch burrows ; and is it probable that, contrary to all the usual instincts that prompt animals to conceal their nests, eggs, and young, this creature should expose its eggs openly on the bank instead of hiding them in its burrow, if, indeed, it lays eggs at all? We know, too, that each of these monotremes possesses a mammary gland ; and the truth, in all probability,. is that the eggs of the echidna and ornithorhynchus are hatched internally, and that their young are brought forth alive, as a viper produces hers. Such are these other extraordinary forms of this extraordinary land. The first, the hedge-hog of the colonists now become very rare in the colony a toothless, terrestrial, burrowing animal, living on ants, endowed with great strength, and covered with spines. The second, a heteroclite, with the fur of a mole, or, if you will, of a water vole, a bill like a duck furnished with what may be termed, for want of a better descrip- * Mallangong is the name given to this extraordinary animal by the natives. 58 LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. tion, an apology for teeth ; forming, however, an apparatus amply sufficient for the mastication of its insect food burrowing in the banks of rivers, and whose palmated feet enable it to swim and dive, making it perfectly at home in the water. Like the kangaroo* and other Australian ani- mals, these are rapidly disappearing before the march of civilization ; and the noble native sav- age, naked but not ashamed, complains bitterly that the white man's kangaroo, as he terms the sheep and oxen of the colonist, have destroyed his, and declares that he ought to have compensa- tion. He has a far better case than many who obtain it from our best of all possible parlia- ments. At some future period our readers may wish to form a more particular acquaintance with these monotremes ; but at present we must leave them to write a few words on that observed of all ob- servers, the newly-arrived hippopotamus. 26th May. This day I have seen the first living hippopotamus that ever gratified the eye in this country ; or, indeed, I might add in Europe, since the time of the later Roman emperors. It appears on a coin of Marcia Otacilia Severa, the wife of Philip, who was elected by the senate and people upon the assassination of the third Gordian. There is a figure of the beast in one of the tombs of Beni Hassan, far up the Nile, and remarkable for its fresco paintings, where the upward curve of the angle of the mouth is very characteristically given.f Our specimen was safely lodged in its newly built apartments last night. When I first saw it it was in its bath a spacious and deep tank, with wooden lining, and with steps for the ease of the bather when going in and out and put me in mind, as T looked down on the animal's broad, rounded back, of a submerged black portmanteau that had by some fairy freak been endowed with motion. It was in the most perfect health, sank and rose gradually, playfully closed its mouth the action cannot properly be termed biting on the woodwork at the side ; sank again, and when at the bottom walked leisurely about as if looking iLr something, wondering, perhaps, why the luxu- riant water-plants of Africa were not growing there. After disporting itself some time, it lei- surely walked out, and then gave one the idea of a cetacean mounted upon four short pillar-like legs. Its keeper led the way to its sleeping apartment, and the attached animal followed him there like a dog, along the whole length of the giraffe- house to the place where the ostriches were in the winter. The dormitory of the hippopotamus was profusely strewn with clean fresh straw, and the animal having entered it, I had an opportunity of observing him closely. I gently tickled and scratched him about the eyes, muzzle, and ears, * The frequency of these animals in our parks and menageries a few years since must have been observed by many. Now we rarely see one. t A copy of this drawing, by Mr. John M'Gregor, is given in the Illustrated London News, 25th May, 1350. and the good-natured animal lazily lay down like a dog or a pig to enjoy the operation. When I ceased and retired, he rose with playfully open mouth to follow me ; and his keeper, Hamet, who was then with him a fine young man, with a Nubian or Egyptian cast of countenance was obliged to shut the door of his apartment to keep him in, notwithstanding his remonstrating snort. The first parts of his organization that struck me were the eyes and the nostrils. The former have, at first sight, a very extraordinary appear- ance, and convey the idea of enormous projection of the eye-ball ; as if such protrusion was the result of some injury or disorder, external or in- ternal. But no. Here is another instance of the most beautiful adaptation. The muscles of the eye must be most powerful, and must be endowed with great versatility, capable of protruding or withdrawing the eye-ball, which can be either projected remarkably, or sunk within the orbit considerably, so as to adapt it for vision in the different media where it is to act, whether the animal be on land, just under the water, or far dovm beneath its surface. It brought to my mind a similar adaptation in birds, where the bony ring and muscles form a telescopic apparatus in eagles and other birds of prey. The nostrils, which are so placed that they appear above the surface of the water first when the animal rises from below, can be closed like those of a seal when the v animal descends into the deep, and opened when it comes up for the pur- pose of taking in a supply of air. But though the nostrils can be closed like those of the seal, the machinery for working them must be more com- plicated than the muscles which enable that animal merely to close or open those gates of breath at pleasure. In the hippopotamus the nostrils, which appeared to me to be situated more verti- cally than those of the seal, can be mounted up, as it were, by a process indicating the presence of an orbicular sphincter with a protrusive power, so that the air can be taken in with the least possible exposure of the head. These two portions of its animal machinery are of the greatest consequence to the well-being and safety of an animal that spends so much of its time in the water. The beautifully contrived eye is unlike that of any mammiferous quadruped known to me. It approaches, in its power of rolling round, when it is in a state of protrusion, to that of the chameleon, and, like it, must com- mand a very extensive area. See how admirably this is fitted to the requirements of the animal. If danger threatens, the hippopotamus instinctively rushes to the river ; and while there latent, can manage to just lift his head among the water- plants, and roll his eye " like the bull in Cox's museum," but to much better purpose. If all is safe, and according to his observation he may turn out, he can quit his subaqueous retreat ; or, if all be not right, he can quietly sink again and remain in his cool and unapproachable retreat at the bottom, occasionally rising and protruding his LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. 59 muzzle only for the necessary air-supply, and then down again. Thus, if the animal be on its guard, presenting no mark for a rifle, even if the hand that bore it could " haud out " like that of the Master of Ravenswood.* Professor Owen, in a most interesting account lately published,! states that the skin is almost flesh-colored round the eyelids, which defend the peculiarly situated and prominent eyes, and that there is a single groove or fold above the upper eyelid and two curved grooves below the lower one. At first sight, he truly says, they seem de- void of eyelashes ; but on a close inspection a few very short hairs may be seen on the thick rounded margin of the upper lid. He further observes, that the protruding movement of the eyeball from the prominent socket shows an unusual proportion of the white, over which large conjunctival vessels converged to the margin of the cornea, and that the retraction of the eyeball is accompanied by a protrusion of a large and thick palpebra nictitans, and by a simultaneous rolling of the ball obliquely downwards, and inwards, or forwards. There is, he adds, a caruncle, or protuberance, on the mid- dle of the outer surface of the nictitating lid. The color of the iris he describes as dark brown, the pupil as a small transversely oblong aperture, and the eyeball as relatively small and remarkable for the extent of the movements of protraction and retraction. * Take the evidence of one who would have struck the dollar from between the finger and thumb of the keeper, as cleverly as ever Edgar could have done the feat. " Seleka had sent men down to the river to seek. sea-cows" the name by which the hippopotami are known to the colonists "and they soon came running after me to say that they had found some. I accordingly followed them to the river, where, in a long, broad, and deep bend, were four hippopotami, two full-grown cows, a small cow, and a calf. At the tail of this pool was a strong and rapid stream, which thundered along, in High- land fashion, over large masses of dark rock. "On coming to the shady bank, I could at first see only one old cow and calf. When they dived I ran into the reeds, and as the cow came up I shot her in the head ; she, however, got away down the river and I lost her. The other three took away up the river, and became very shy, remaining under the water for five minutes at a time, and then only popping their heads up for a few seconds. I accordingly remained quiet behind the reeds, in hope of their dismissing their alarms. Presently the two smaller ones seemed to be no longer alarmed, popping up their entire heads, and remaining above water for a minute at a time ; but the third, which was by far the largest, and which I thought must be a bull, continued extremely shy, remaining under the water for ten minutes at a time, and then just showing her face for a second, making a blow- ing like a whale, and returning to the bottom. I stood there with rifle at my shoulder, and my eye on the sight, until I was quite tired. / thought I should never get a chance at her, and had just resolved to fire at one of the smaller ones, when she shoved up half her head and looked about her. I made a correct shot ; the ball cracked loudly below her ear, and . the huge body of the sea-cow came floundering to the top. I was enchanted ; she could not escape. Though not dead, she had lost her senses, and continued swimming round and round, some- times beneath and sometimes at the surface of the water, creating a fearful commotion." The victim was after- wards secured, and " her flesh proved most excellent." Five years of a Hunter's Life in the Far Interior of South Africa, &c. By Roualevn Gordon Gumming, Esq., of Altyre. 2 vols. 8vo. London : John Murray, Albemarle street. Every page of the book of this mighty hunter teems with moving incidents. T In the Annals and Magazine of Natural History for June, 1850. The nostrils, (continues the professor,) situated on prominences which the animal has the power of raising, on the upper part of the broad and mas- sive muzzle, are short, oblique slits, guarded by two valves, which can be opened and closed spon- taneously like the eyelids. The movements of these apertures are most conspicuous when the beast is in his favorite element. The wide mouth is chiefly remarkable for the upward curve of its angles towards the eyes, which gives a quaintly comic expression to the massive countenance. The short and small milk-tusks project a little, and the minute deciduous incisors appear to be sunk in grooves or pits of the thick gums ; but the animal would not permit any close examination of his teeth ; with- drawing his head from the attempt, and then threatening to bite. The muzzle is beset with short bristles, projecting at pretty regular dis- tances ; several of them appearing to be split into tufts or pencils of short hairs. Extremely fine and short hairs are scattered all over the back and sides ; which are not very obvious, except upon a close inspection. The tail is short, rather flattened, and gradually tapering to an obtuse point. The animal, when just out of the water, appeared to me to be of a bluish black color above except the ears, which were flesh color, and which it moved in a vivacious manner and of a ruddy flesh color below. There was a scar on the lei't side. The rictus of the mouth was very grotesque, and made a sharp angle upward when the creature gaped. The skin was dotted at short intervals with the apertures of the muciparous glands exu- ding the liquor for lubricating the hide. Though, at first sight, the hide looks hairless, it has, now, a short coat of minute hair, as fine as floss silk, or more like the down upon the lip of a youth, or of a very young man. When it was at the bottom of the water I thought the animal looked more blue, or somewhat lighter, and the spots denoting the presence of the muco-sebaceous pores were very conspicuous. The amphibious character of the animal's life induces us to look for some machinery which ena- bles it to remain below the surface of the water. The venous reservoirs of the seals, and the arterial plexiform receptacles of the whales, will instantly occur to the physiologist. The latter are most complex and ample, as might be expected of organs fitted to secure a supply of aerated blood to the brain, derived from a heart that sends out some ten or fifteen gallons of blood at every stroke, through a tube of a foot in diameter, with immense velocity. One hour and ten minutes ordinarily elapse from the time of a whale's descent below the surface to that of his rising again to breathe, and Leviathan has been known to remain under for an hour and twenty minutes. It has been calculated that about a seventh of his time is con- sumed in respiration. The seals in their natural state have been known to remain under water for periods varying from a quarter of an hour to five- and-twenty minutes ; but, it has been observed, that a seal in confinement has remained asleep with its head under water for an hour at a time. The period during which a hippopotamus can LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. remain submersed does not appear to have been accurately defined ; but as the animal walks lei- surely about at the bottom of a river, from five to ten minutes may probably be spent by it when disposed to remain so long without coming up.* Sparrmann and Mr. Gumming are conspicuous among those who have recorded the habits of the hippopotamus in a state of nature. The latter, in his wild and wonderful book, most graphically describes them. Look on this scene : When the sun went down, the sea-cows com- menced a march up the river. They passed along opposite to my camp, making the most extraordi- nary sounds blowing, snorting and roaring, some- times crashing through the reeds, and sometimes swimming gently, and splashing and sporting through the water. There being a little moonlight, 1 went down with my man Carey, and sat some- time on the river's bank contemplating these won- derful monsters of the river. It was a truly grand and very extraordinary scene ; the opposite bank of the stream was clad with trees of gigantic size and great beauty, which added greatly to the in- terest of the picture. Vol. ii., p. 167. And again, at p. 171 : At every turn there occurred deep, still pools, with occasional sandy islands densely clad with lofty reeds, and with banks covered with reeds to a breadth of thirty yards. Above and beyond these reeds, stood trees of immense age and gigantic size, beneath which grew a long and very rank descrip- tion of grass, on which the sea-cow delights to pas- ture. I soon found fresh spoor,f and after holding on for several miles, just as the sun was going down, and as I entered a dense reed cover, I came upon the fresh lairs of four hippopotami. They had been lying sleeping on the margin of the river, and, on hearing me come crackling through the reeds, had plunged into deep water. I at once as- certained that they were newly started, for the froth aod bubbles were still on the spot where they had plunged in. Next moment I heard them blow- ing a little way down the river. I then headed them, and with considerable difficulty, owing to the cover and the reeds, I at length came right down above where they were standing. It was a broad part of the river, with a sandy bottom, and the water came halfway up their sides. There were four of them, three cows and an old bull ; they stood in the middle of the river, and, though alarmed, did not appear aware of the extent of the impending danger. It would be unjust to this painter with a pen, to omit the following grand picture, or to present it in any other than the vivid form which it takes under his hand : We had proceeded about two miles, when we came upon some most thoroughly-beaten, old-estab- lished hippopotamus paths, and presently, in a broad, long, deep, and shaded pool of the river ,J we heard the sea-cows bellowing. There I beheld one of the most wondrous and interesting sights * It is probably reserved for Professor Owen to detect and describe the natural apparatus which enables the hip- popotamus to remain underwater; but we hope it will be a long time before he will have it in his power to solve the problem. t Tracks. * The Limpopo. that a sportsman can be blest with. I at once knew that there must be an immense herd of them, for the voices came from different parts of the pool ; so, creeping in through the bushes to obtain an in- spection, a large sandy island appeared at the neck of the pool, on which stood several large shady trees. The neck of the pool was very wide and shallow, with rocks and large stones ; below it was deep and still. On a sandy promontory of this island, stood about thirty cows and calves, whilst in the pool opposite, and a little below them, stood about twenty more sea-cows, with their heads and backs above water. About fifty yards further down the river again, showing out their heads, were eight or ten immense fellows, which I think were all bulls ; and about one hundred yards below these, in the middle of the stream, stood another herd of about eight or ten cows with calves, and two huge bulls. The sea-cows lay close together like pigs ; a favorite position was to rest their heads on their comrades' sterns and sides. The herds were at- tended by an immense number of the invariable rhinoceros birds, which, on observing me, did their best to spread alarm through the hippopotami. 1 was resolved to select, if possible, a first-rate old bull out of this vast herd, and I accordingly de- layed firing for nearly two hours, continually run- ning up and down behind the thick thorny cover, and attentively studying the heads. At length 1 determined to go close in, and select the best head out of the eight or ten bulls which lay below the cows. I accordingly left the cover, and walked slowly forward in full view of the whole herd, to the water's edge, where I lay down on my belly, and studied the heads of these bulls. The cows, on seeing me, splashed into the water, and kept a continual snorting and blowing till night set in. P. 194. Upon another occasion (p. 218) Mr. Gumming fell in with a herd of about thirty hippopotami they lay upon some rocks in the middle of a very long and broad pool ; and, again, with at least thirty lying upon the rocks in the middle of e river. He describes the noise made by the hip- popotami as similar to that of the musical instru- ment called a serpent. The following truculent trap will be as new to most of my readers as it is to me : On the 20th (July) I again rode down the river to the pool, and found a herd of sea-cows still there ; I remained with them till sun-down, and bagged two very first-rate old sea-cows, which were forth- :oming next day. This day I detected a most dan- gerous trap> constructed by the Bakalahari for slay- ing sea-cows. It consisted of a sharp little assagai, or spike, most thoroughly poisoned, and stuck irmly into the end of a heavy block of thorn wood, about four feet long, and five inches in diameter. This formidable affiiir was suspended over the cen- tre of a sea-cow path, at a height of about thirty feet from the ground, by a bark cord, which passed over a high branch of a tree, and thence to a peg on one side of the path beneath, leading across the path to a peg on the other side, where it was fas- ;ened. To the. suspending cord were two triggers, so constructed, that when the sea-cow struck against the cord which led across the path, the heavy block above was set at liberty, which in- stantly dropped with immense force with its poi- LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. 61 sonous dart, inflicting a sure and mortal wound. The bones and old teeth of sea-cows, which lay rotting along the bank of the river here, evinced the success of this dangerous invention. P. 197. But we must unwillingly leave this fascinating journal, penned amid the wildest, grandest, and most stirring scenes that ever blessed or shocked a wild hunter's vision, to return to the private history of our obese, tame, but most amusing baby. Its capture, in fulfilment of the nod of the friendly autocrat who presented it, was effected at the commencement of August, in the bygone year, up the Nile, nearly two thousand miles from Cairo, when its bulk was about that of a newly-dropped calf, but its proportions were much stouter, and its height much lower. Its unfortunate mother was mortally wounded, and her attempt to return towards some bushes growing thickly on the river's bank, instead of taking as usual to the water, at- tracted the notice of the hunters, who found the calf there among the rank grass. It slipped through their fingers, however, and instantly made for the river, which it would have gained, if one of the party had not struck the boathook into its flank, gaffing it as an angler would a large fish. The mark of this wound it still bears, as above- mentioned. It soon became much attached to those who had the care of it, treating them as standing in loco parentis, and looking to them for the supply of its wants. On its passage in the Ripon steam-ship, whence it was landed at Southampton on the morning of the 25th of May, its keeper's hammock was slung over its berth, as I was told. The poor man must have had but a disturbed time of it, for his fond charge could not bear his absence without showing anxiety bordering on distress, and at night, as I was informed, would knock up, ever and anon, with his chowder head, as Jack would call it, at the overhanging hammock, to ascertain whether his sable friend was there. The strong attachment of the animal to its keep- er, (writes Professor Owen, in the narrative to which we have already referred,) removed every difficulty in its various transfers from ship to train, and from wagon to its actual abode. On arriving at the gardens, the Arab who had the charge of it walked first out of the transport van, with a bag of dates over his shoulder, and the beast trotted after him, now and then lifting up its huge, gro- tesque muzzle, and sniffing at its favorite dainties, with which it was duly rewarded on entering its apartment. When I saw the hippopotamus the next morning, it was lying on its side in the straw, with its head resting against the chair on which its swarthy attendant sat ; it now and then uttered a soft complacent grunt, and lazily opening its thick, smooth eyelids, leered at its keeper. After lying quietly about an hour, now and then raising its head and swiveling its eyeballs towards the keeper, or playfully opening its huge mouth and threatening to bite the leg of the chair on which its keeper sat, the hippopotamus rose and walked slowly about its room, and then uttered a loud and short harsh note, four or five times in quick succession, reminding one of the snort of a horse, and ending with an explosive sound like a bark. The keeper understood the language, and told us that the animal was expressing its desire to return to its bath. The beast at this time was in one of the compartments of the wing of the giraffe house, on the opposite side to that in which its bath is prepared. It carries its head rather de- pressed, and reminded me most of a huge prize hog, but with a breadth of muzzle and other feat- ures peculiarly its own. The keeper opened the door leading into the giraffe's paddock, and walked through that to the new wing containing the bath, the hippopotamus following like a dog close to his heels. On arriving at the bath-room, the animal descended with some deliberation the flight of low steps leading into the water, stooped and drank a little, dipped his head under, and then plunged for- wards. It was no sooner in its favorite element than its whole aspect changed, and it seemed in- spired with new life and activity ; sinking down to the bottom, and moving about submerged for awhile, it would suddenly rise with a bound almost bodily out of the water, and splashing back, com- menced swimming and plunging about with a ceta- ceous or porpoise-like rolling from side to side, taking in mouthsfull of water and spurting them out again, raising every now and then its huge grotesque head, and biting the woodwork at the margin of the bath. The broad, round back of the animal being now chiefly in view, it looks a much larger animal than when out of the water. After half-an-hour spent in this amusement, it quitted the water at the call of its keeper, and followed him back to the sleeping-room, which is well bedded with straw, and where a stuffed sack is provided for its pillow, of which the animal, having a very short neck, thicker than the head, duly avails itself when it sleeps. I was told that when it was at Cairo it ate a good deal of clay ; and the Arabs, it seems, have expressed a desire that it should have some here. I believe that it is perfectly safe in the hands of Mr. Mitchell; and if it should be thought fit to indulge it with clay, those whom its odd ways delight may rest secure that Mr. Mitchell will not' let Hippo be bricked up with our London clay; but if clay must be given, will prescribe some of the mud of the Colne or Thames, wherein the water-lilies grow so luxuriantly. In the stomachs of the young hippopotamus opened by Sparrman, there was a good deal of "dirt," with curd and' leaves quite fresh ; and it is not improbable that this V dirt" may be required by the animal to cor- rect the acidity arising from its diet, as calves lick chalk. In scooping up the water-plants from the bottoms of rivers and their banks with the enor- mous dental apparatus of the lower jaw, a consid- erable quantity of the soil must be taken up, and that some of it finds its way to the stomach is ev- ident from Sparrman's evidence. Two of his attendants, Jabar Abou Haijab and Mohammed Abou Merwan these, as far as I can- make them out, are their names are snake- charmers, of whom and of whose performance I shall have something to say hereafter. The for- mer, an old man, was employed by the French savans in Bonaparte's Egyptian expedition, and collected reptiles for Geoffrey ; the latter Arab, who appears to be some fifteen years of age, and 62 LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. is the principal performer with the serpents, is, I have heard, his nephew, and is the playfellow of the hippopotamus. When I saw him, on the occa- sion of my first view of his playmate, he had a gold ear-ring and a gold finger-ring, and was clad in fantastic costume, with a feather in his head- gear, and in an old pair of Wellington boots, long since unacquainted with blacking, and a world too wide for his bare shanks. Of these he seemed more proud than of all the rest of his apparel put together, but they so galled his naked feet that they soon brought him to poultices, and he has since taken to stockings and slippers. A complaint has, I hear, been brought against him for teazing the monkeys, which he excites into a frantic state. Sheetan* the name in which he rejoices among his familiars pleaded guilty, and begged hard that one of the monkeys might be assigned to him for education the height of his ambition at pres- ent being to teach his cheiroped scholar to charm serpents. His games of romps with the hippopotamus are 'first-rate. After a little provocation by eccentric antics, which would have done credit to Flibberti- gibbet himself, he flies, and his obese four-footed frolicsome friend shuffles after him with his mouth open and such a mouth! in all the beauty of ugliness. This playful running after its friends open-mouthed may be interpreted in two ways : first, as it wsuld act with its mother, half in play, half as a hint for nourishment ; and secondly, as a lamb, a goat, or a calf butts, before their horns .have budded, betraying a consciousness on the part of our gambolling pachyderm of the locality where the terrible offensive armour is to be with which hereafter he may bite with a vengeance. Professor Owen states that we may reckon this young animal to be tea months old, and that it is now seven feet long, and six and a half feet in girth at the middle of the barrel-shaped trunk, which is supported, dear of the ground, on very short and thick legs, each terminated by four spread- ing hoofs, of which the innermost is the smallest on the forefoot ; the two middle ones, answering to those which are principally developed in the hog are the largest in both feet. The hind-limb (writes Professor Owen in continu- at*n) is buried in the skin of the flank nearly to the prominence of the heel. Thick flakes of cuticle are in process of detachment from the sole. There is .a well-defined white patch behind each foot, but I looked in vain for any indications of the glandular orifice which exists in the same part in the rhinoc- eros. The naked hide covering the broad back and sides is of a dark India-rubber color, impressed by numerous fine wrinkles crossing each other, but disposed almost transversely. When I first saw the beast it had just left its bath, and a minute drop of a glistening secretion was exuding from each of the conspicuous mucosebaceous pores, which are dispersed over the whole integument, at intervals of from eight lines to an inch. This gave the * Satan. hide, as it glistened in the sunshine, a very pecu- liar aspect. When the animal was younger the secretion had a reddish color, and being poured out more abundantly, the whole surface brcame paint- ed over with it every time he quitted his bath. Nothing can be more correct than this admirable description, with the exception of the alleged nakedness of the skin. The integument, at first sight, does appear naked ; but it is found, as I have stated above, on a close inspection, to be covered with very fine downy hairs, which will, probably, totally or partially vanish as the animal advances in age. The gambols and civilities of this denizen of the Nile are not confined to his keepers. I had been told that, when out in the giraffe-paddock, one of the giraffes had bowed down its head to him one day, and that the hippopotamus opened his mouth and took the giraffe's muzzle into the gulf, which seems to be his way of kissing. On Sunday, the 9th of June, I saw one of the giraffes do the same thing, with exactly the same result. He had, I have been told, formed an acquaintance with a giraffe which was to have been brought over with him, but was unfortunately drowned. Such is the quadruped whose animal magnetism Punch has so forcibly depicted attracting the crowds who are hurrying to its presence. If a mate and this is far from improbable should be sent over to join him in August by the same liberal and friendly potentate to whom we owe the present object of admiration, who shall predict the conse- quence of the double attraction ? The third Gordian did not live to see the por- tentous games for which he had caused so vast an assemblage of wild beasts to be brought to Rome. The milliarium s&culum was celebrated by Philip not without suspicion, almost amounting to proof, that the blood of his predecessor was on his head. Philip, in his turn, did not live long after the celebration of that prolonged festival, during which two thousand gladiators at once joined in the death- struggle for the gratification of the people. Defeat- ed by Decius, who had got himsdlf proclaimed emperor in Pannonia, Philip fell under the merci- less hands of his own soldiers near Verona, in the year of Christ 249, before he had completed his forty-fifth year, and before the fifth year of his enjoyment of his bad eminence had run its course. The hippopotamus, which formed a principal feat- ure in those murderous diversions, appears not only on the large brass of Otacilia Severa, but also on one of Philip, (about A. D. 247,) and on another of Hadrian. These, and the well-known plinth of the statue of Nilus, show how familiar this huge form was to Roman eyes. I have not heard whether Mr. Wyon has been directed to strike a medal to commemorate this substantial gift of his highness the Viceroy of Egypt, or whether Mr. Gibson has received a commission to immortalize him in marble ; but there can be no doubt that Sir Edwin Landseer must hand down his likeness to posterity. LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. 63 FOR behold, I will send serpents and cockatrices among you, which will not be charmed ; and they shall sting you, saith the Lord. Jerem. viii. 17. Such is the version given in Barker's Bible,* of the passage which figuratively threatens the sending of the Babylonians among the Jews, " who," as the old commentator writes in the margin, " shall utterly destroy them in such sort, as by no meanes they shall escape." The version now read in our churches runs thus For behold I will send serpents, cockatrices, among you t which will not be charmed, and they shall bite yju, saith the Lord ; and is more correct, zoologically speaking. What the serpents threatened were, is more apocryphal. The Greek version has " basilisks." Both basilisks and cockatrices at least those so- called venomous creatures of which such marvel- lous tales are to be found in old authors are fabulous creations. The Hebrew word is Tsep- huon or Tsiphoni, (Tsepha or Zepha,) and has been rendered as applicable to the aspic, the regu- lus, (another word for the basilisk,) the hemior- rhoos, the viper, and the cerastes. But whatever the species of serpents may be, the passage above cited, as well as others, which will readily occur to the scriptural scholar, shows the great antiquity of the art of charming ser- pents. Thus, in Psalm Iviii., we have the follow- ing description of the wicked : 4 Their poyson is even like the poyson of a ser- pent : like the deafe adder that stoppeth his eare. 5 Which heareth not the voyce of the inchanter, though he be most expert in charming.f These incantations were too tempting to be neglected by the poets. The shepherd in Virgil alludes to their destructive powers : Carminibus Circe socios mutavit Ulixi : Frigidus in pratis cantando rumpitur anguis.t Manilius and Ovid use nearly the same expres- sions. Tl e words of the former are Consultare fibras, et rumpere vocibus ang-ues. And the Poet of Love, the Moore of his day, writes : Carmine dissiliunt abruptis faucibus angues Inque suos fontes versa recurrit aqua. The Psylli, and their neighbors the Marmaridae, were among the most famous for their power over * 1615. t Barker's Bible. In the version now read in our churches the words are : 4 Their poison is like the poison of a serpent: they are like the deaf adiler that stoppelh her ear ; 6 Which will not hearken to the voice of charmers, charming never so wisely. And in the Book of Common Prayer the words are : 4 They are as venomous aa the poison of a serpent : even like the deaf adder that stoppeth her ears ; 5 Which refuseth to hear the voice of the charmer: charm he never so wisely. t Pfiarmaceutria, Eclog. viii. Amor. lib. ii. El. 1. serpents. These African charmers of snakes, and the Italian Marsi, carried, if we are to believe one half of the accounts recorded of their feats, this magic art to the highest point of infallibility. The magi played upon pipes made of the legs and bones of cats to call the serpents together ; upon the same principle, I suppose, that actuated the less ambitious enchanters, who, to rid themselves of mice, played upon a pipe made of their verte- brae, the dulcet and attractive notes of which brought every mouse within hearing to listen to the performance. Crates of Pergamus saith, that in Hellespont, about Parium, there was a kind of men, (whom he nameth Ophiogenes,) that if one were stung with a serpent, with touching only will ease the paine. And if they doe but lay their hands upon the wound, are wont to draw forth all the venom out of the body. And Varro testifies, that even at this day there be some there who warish and cure the stinging of serpents with their spittle, but there are but few such as he saith. Agatharchides writes that, in Affrick, the Psyllians (so called of King Psyllus, from whose race they were descend- ed, and whose sepulchre or tombe is at this day present to be seene in a part of the greater Syrtes) could do the like. These men had naturally that in their own bodies, which, like a deadly bane and poyson, would kill all serpents ; for the very air and sent that breathed from them was able to stu- pifie and strike them starke dead. And by this means they used to try the chastitie and honestie of their wives. For so soon as they were delivered of children, their manner was to expose and pre- sent the silly babes new borne, unto the utmost fell and cruel serpents they could find : for if they were not right, but gotten in adultery, the said serpents would not avoid and fly from them. This nation verily in generall hath been defeated and killed up in manner all by the Nasomenes, who now inhabit those parts wherein they dwelt : howbeit a kind remains still of them, from those that made shift away and fled, or else were not present at the said bloudy battel ; but there are very few of them at this day left.* The author of Thaumatographia, in his chapter on nutrition, alludes to the Ophiogenes of the Hellespont, and says that they fed upon serpents, and that a certain man who rejoiced in that diet, was thrown into a cask filled with them, and ie- mained intact. This probably was the envoy Hexagon, who said that he came from the Psylli or Marsi, and whom the Roman consuls, ty way of testing the trdth of his mission, cast into a vessel swarming with venomous snakes, which miraculously harmed him not. The Marsians in Italy at this present continue with the like naturall vertue against serpents : whom being reputed to be descended from ladie Circes son,f the people in this regard do highly esteem, and are verily persuaded that they have in them the same facultie by kinde. And what great wonder is this, considering that all men carry about them that which is poyson to serpents : for if it be true that is reported, they will no bet- ter abide the touching with man's spittle, than * Holland's Pliny. t Marsus. 64 LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. scalding water cast upon them : but if it happen to light within their chawes, or mouth, especially if it come from a man that is fasting, it is present death.* Ovid, in his poetical treatise on cosmetics,^ thus opens his lessons to his fair pupils : Disci te, 3 reptiles in this room for stuffed specimens. The inhabitants of that Oriental city who figure so awfully in the Arabian tale, turned into stone for their crimes, with the exception of the lonely one whose voice is heard reading the Koran in the midst of the petrified sinners, could not have looked more lifeless. Why is this 1 Because all predatory reptiles, especially snakes and lizards, take their prey by surprise ; and, added to this motionless habit, the animal's haunt, when on the lookout for prey, coincides generally so harmoniously with its color, that the bird or insect fearlessly approaches and is caught. Place, as a familiar example, a toad in a melon-bed a plan frequently adopted if the bed be infested with emmets. These insects approach the motionless toad, whose hue corresponds with the color of the earth of the bed, without suspicion, and are taken by the tongue of the reptile with a motion too quick for the eye to "follow. All that can be seen is the approach of the emmet within a cer- tain distance within, in fact, tongue-shot, and its there vanishing. The mechanism of this appa- ratus, by means of which the toad takes its prey, will be noticed hereafter. Throughout the animal creation, the adaptation 76 LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. of the color of the creature to its haunts is worthy of admiration, as tending to its preservation. The colors of insects, and of a multitude of the smaller animals, contribute to their concealment. Caterpillars which feed on leaves are generally either green, or have a large proportion of that hue in the color of their coats. As long as they remain still, how difficult it is to distinguish a grasshopper or young locust from the herbage or leaf on which it rests. The butterflies that flit about among flowers are colored like them. The small birds which frequent hedges have backs of a greenish or brownish green hue, and their bellies are generally whitish, or light colored, so as to harmonize with the sky. ' Thus they become less visible to the hawk or cat that passes above or below them. The wayfarer across the fields almost treads upon tlie skylark before he sees it rise warbling to heaven's gate. The goldfinch or thistlefinch passes much of its time among flow- ers, and is vividly colored accordingly. The partridge can hardly be distinguished from the fallow or stubble upon or among which it crouch- es, and it is considered an accomplishment among sportsmen to have a good eye for finding a hare sitting. In northern countries the winter dress of the hares and ptarmigans is white, to prevent detection among the snows of those inclement regions. If we turn to the waters, the same design is evident. Frogs even vary their color according to that of the mud or sand that forms the bottom of the ponds or streams which they frequent nay, the tree-frog (Hyla viridis) takes its specific name from the color, which renders it so difficult to see it among the leaves, where it adheres by the cupping-glass-like processes at the end of its toes. It is the same with fish, especially those which inhabit the fresh waters. Their backs, with the exception of gold and silver fish, and a few others, are comparatively dark ; and some practice is required before they are satisfactorily made out, as they come like shadows and so depart under the eye of the spectator. A little boy once called out to a friend to " come and see, for the bottom of the brook was moving along." The friend came, and saw that a thick shoal of gudgeons, and roach, and dace, was passing. It is difficult to detect the " ravenous luce," as old Izaak calls the pike, with its dark green and mottled back and sides, from the similarly tinted weeds among which the fresh-water shark lies at the watch, as motionless as they. Even when a tear- ing old trout, a six or seven-pounder, sails, in his wantonness, leisurely up stream, with his back-fin partly above the surface, on the look-out for a fly, few, except a well-entered fisherman, can tell what shadowy form it is that ripples the wimpling water. But the bellies of fish are white, or nearly so ; thus imitating in a degree the color of the sky, to deceive the otter, which generally takes its prey from below, swimming under the intended victim. Nor is this design less manifest in the color and appearance of some of the larger terrestrial animals ; for the same principle seems to be* kept in view, whether regard be had to the smallest insects or the quadrupedal giants of the land. I have often traced (writes an excellent observer) a remarkable resemblance between the animal and the general appearance of the locality in which it is found. This I first remarked at an early period of my life, when entomology occupied a part of my attention. No person following this interesting pursuit can fail to observe the extraordinary like- ness which insects bear to the various abodes in which they are met with. Thus among the long green grass we find a variety of long green insects, whose legs and antennae so resemble the shoots emanating from the stalks of the grass, that it requires a practised eye to distinguisli them. Throughout sandy districts, varieties of insects are met with of a color similar to the sand which they inhabit. Among the green leaves of the various trees of the forest innumerable leaf-colored insects are to be found ; while, closely adhering to the rough, gray bark of these forest-trees, we observe beautifully-colored, gray-looking moths, of various patterns, yet altogether so resembling the bark a.- to be invisible to the passing observer. In likr manner, among quadrupeds, I have traced a con siderable analogy ; for, even in the case of the stu pendous elephant, the ashy color of his hide & corresponds with the general appearance of ths gray thorny jungles which he frequents throughout the day, that a person unaccustomed to hunting elephants, standing on a commanding situation, might look down upon a herd and fail to detect their presence. And further, in the case of the giraffe, which is invariably met with among ven- erable forests, where innumerable blasted and weatherbeaten trunks and stems occur, I have re- peatedly been in doubt as to the presence of a troop of them, until I had recourse to my spy-glass ; and, on referring the case to my savage attendants, I have known even their optics to fail at one time mistaking their dilapidated trunks for camelopards, and again confounding real camelopards with thoso aged veterans of the forest.* The Wizard of the North, who had a keen eye for the harmonies of Nature and what poet, who is fond of field-sports, has not 1 frequently mani- fests the results of his observation on animals and their haunts in his immortalities, whether of verse or prose. So far was heard the mighty knell The stag sprung up on Cheviot Fell, Spread his broad nostril to the wind, Listed before, aside, behind, Then couched him down beside the hind, And q-iaked among the mountain fern, To hear that sound so dull and stern. When a stag lies with his neck stretched out and his horns lying backward in such a lair, or among other low cover, none but a very experi- enced stalker is likely to detect him. I remember, one very hard winter, passing more than once, in beating over a fallow field, what I at first took for a clod, but which proved to be a partridge frozen to death. As for the young of many birds who make their nests on the ground, * A Hunter's Life in South Africa* By Roualeyn Gordon Gumming, Esq. LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. 77 their colors so closely resemble the localities in which they are found, that they are hardly to be observed by any but a very keen eye. Thus White, writing of the stone-curlew, (Charadrius csdicnemus,) remarks, that the bird lays its eggs usually two, never more than three on the bare ground, without any protection, so that the coun- tryman in stirring his fallows often destroys them. The young (he adds) run immediately from the egg like partridges, &c. ; and are withdrawn to some flinty field by the dam, where they skulk among the stones, which are their best security ; for their feathers are so exactly of the color of our gray-spotted flints, that the most exact observer, unless he catches the eye of the young bird, may be eluded.* The similarity of color to that of their haunts, combined with the motionless habit above alluded to, serves, then, in the case of the reptiles, the double purpose of concealment for safety and lying in wait for prey, so as to give the victim the least possible warning. Few can see the snake in the grass, and the frogs on which it dines least of all. The sportsman treads on the viper, coiled up on a bright windy day at the edge of the copse, before he is aware of the presence of the reptile ; and so does his dog, unless he is shooting with a pointer, which, if he have a good nose and the wind, will infallibly stand as stiff as a crutch, and as if he had a whole covey before him. The ink that traced the last sentence on the paper was hardly dry when in came a friend, who related that two of his dogs, pointers, had been bitten by a viper, that lay coiled up in the grass by the banks of a canal near the house in which I write. The serpent struck twice, and each time bit the dog attacked on the lip. The dog first struck a very fine pointer, with a dash of the bloodhound in him staggered, was frightfully swollen, and his system so much affected that fears were entertained for his life. Copious doses of oil, and embrocations of the same with laud- anum, however, effected the cure. The mother of this dog received the second bite, but in her case the symptoms were much mitigated ; there was no staggering, and, as is usual in such cases, the virus must have been much diminished before the second wound was given. The viper, on this occasion, corroborated the statements of those who lay it down as an axiom that the true vipers, un- like other venomous serpents the cobra, for in- stance do not quit the scene of action after their murderous attacks. There it remained, and the master of the dogs took up a great stone and cast it upon the viper, without, however, crippling it, owing, probably, to some inequality in the surface of the ground whereon it rested. Then, but not till then, it made off. The owner of the dogs told me, that when they were bitten they uttered no cry. In general, they howl piteously when they feel the bite. * Selborne. Letter XVI. 6 In this case we have again an instance of the virtues of oil, insisted on in a former chapter. Cato's remedy was not so simple, for he says, (c. 102,) that if a serpent has stung an ox or any other quadruped, one must pound an acetabulum of melanthion, called by the physicians melanthion of Smyrna, in an hcmina of old wine, pour it into the nostrils of the beast, and lay hogs' dung to the wound. Nor is the savory remedy applicable to the restoration of brutes only, according to his experience ; for he confidently directs the same remedy to be applied to a human creature, if oc- casion require it. One may conceive the sort of reward reaped by the bubulcus by whose neglect the ox was exposed to the venomous bite, when the former was subjected to the tender mercies of the ergastularius in the prison* of the villa, under a dispensation which placed the life of the slave absolutely at the disposal of his master. In that part of The Way to get Wealth f inti- tuled " The English House-wife," dedicated to " The Right Honorable and most excellent Lady, Francis, Countesse Dowager of Exeter," with the running title of " The English House-wives Houshold Physick," we find a different formula set forth : To help all manner of swelling or aches in what part of the body soever it be, or stinging of any venomous beast, as Adder, Snake, or such-like, take Horehound, Smallage, Porrets, smal Mallows, and wild Tansey of each alike quantity, and bruise them or cut them small ; then seeth them altogether in a pan with milk, oatmeal, and as much Sheepa suet, or Dearessuet as a Hens egge, and let it boyl till it be a thick plaister, then lay it upon a blew wollen cloath, and lay it tq the griefe as hot as one can suffer it. In the section of the same choice book headed " Country Contentments," we find it thus writ* ten : If your dogge have been bitten by either Snake, Adder or any other venomous thing, take the hearb Calamint, and beat it in a morter with Turpentine and yellow Waxe, till it come to a Salve, and then apply it to the sore and it will heal it. Also if yoa boile the herb in milke, and give the dogge it to drink, it will expell all inward poison. In the " Table of Hard Words," it is stated that " Calamint is an ordinary hearb, and groweth by ditches sides, by high waies, and sometimes la. gardens." For " The Generall Cure of all Cattell," w read in chapter 69, which treats " Of venomous wounds, as biting with a mad dogge, tusks of Bores, Serpents or such like," in the case of the horse, as follows : For any of these mortall or venomous wounds, take Yarrow, Calamint, and the grains of wheat, and beat them in a morter with water of Sothern- wood, and make it into a salve, and lay it to the sore, and it will heale it safely. * Ergastulum, where the slaves were confined, bound or chained together, when they came from work, lest they should make their escape in the night. t Small 4to. London, 1657. 78 LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. But in the case of " The Oxe, Cow, etc." If your beast be bitten with a mad Dog, or anj other venomous beast, you shall take Plaintain anc beat it in a morter with Bolearrnoniacke, Sanguis Draconis, Early meale, and the whites of Egs, anc playster-wise lay it to the sore, renewing it once in fourteen hours. Most of these simple remedies except in the case of the " mad dog" were, doubtless, founc efficacious in these fortunate islands, where the only venomous serpent is the viper and its varie- ties, and the harmless common snake throws its enamelled skin among those beautiful wild flowers, whose dewy blossoms bring back to the mind's eye the images of the dear ones now gone to re- ceive their reward in heaven, who were wont to gaze lovingly with us upon those stars of the earth long, long ago. But we must go back to our reptile-house, where the murderous cobra, the deadly cerastes, the fatal puff-adder,* and the lethal rattlesnakes remind us of the danger that lurks in paths made ecoming covered by a membrane, and the tad- 3ole then breathes like a fish. The head, pro- ided with eyes and nostrils, has no neck, but is )ne with the now globular trunk, largely distended iy the extensive digestive canal ; and the large ail enables the animal to swim well and strongly, n a short time the hind legs show themselves icar the setting on of the tail, and are soon devel- iped. Then the anterior feet are protruded ; and as the limbs advance, the tail gradually lessens and shortens, shrinking till it entirely disappears. The mouth now becomes wider and loses the horny, hook-like appendages, the head stands out more from the body, and the eyes are furnished vith lids. The belly becomes more elongated, ut is diminished in proportion to the size of the nimal, and the intestines lose much of their //*- LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. 79 length. The true lungs begin to be formed ; and, as they advance, the internal gills are gradually obliterated. Thus the whole circulation is altered, and the young frog quits the water, exchanging its entirely aquatic and herbivorous life for a car- nivorous, and, for the most part, terrestrial exist- ence. These metamorphoses, which rfval those of the insects, may bs seen on a grander scale in the Eana paradoxa. The serpents have two auricles, but the batr?,- chians have, strictly speaking, only one, but it is separated in'ernally into two chambers. One worjr: more on the discrepancies of reptile organization, and we will cease to pursue an in- quiry which would be followed out with more aptitude in a work more conversant with compara- tive anatomy than this can pretend to be ; but the general reader, as well as the student, should keep those discrepancies steadily in view. The obser- vations, however, shall be confined to the varying skeletons. Take the cranium of a crocodile. A more solid, bony mass, you could hardly see. Now turn to that of a boa. The skull, you see, is made up of a considerable number of pieces, all admirably fitted and joined together, but with such an adaptation as easily to admit of separation. Why is this ? The long head and widely exten- sive jaws of the crocodile enable it to secure and take into the stomach a comparatively large prey. But the serpent frequently has to master and swal- low an animal utterly disproportioned to the usual gape of the mouth ; the skull is, therefore, so framed as easily to admit of partial dislocation, so that it may aid the dilatation of the jaws and throat, and facilitate deglutition. The ribs in the frogs, as before observed, are almost null ; in the serpents they are so lavishly developed and so freely articulated that they i re used as organs of motion. In the tortoises tl iy are implanted and incorporated with the rest ( '. the canapace. The ribs of the serpent ma? V- compared to the legs of a millipede situa'e'l internally, and operating externally principp'Jy by acting on the scutes of the belly on which it creeps. Some reptiles have not only a trnr breast-bone, but also an addition, which has Leon termed an abdominal sternum. This may be seen in the crocodiles, and seems to be produced !>y the ossification of the tendons of the recti muscles. But while some have two sterna, others have none at all. The chameleon, for instance, though the ribs are well formed, has no breast-bone. The tortoise, and the majority of saurians, are gifted with four sufficiently well- developed extremities. Chirotes and bipes have only two ; the former an anterior pair, the latter a posterior pair, and those but poorly framed. But though these and other great differences of organization are patem among the reptiles, every bone of every reptile is marked with such pecu- liarity of character as to indicate at once the clas; to which it belongs. A skilful comparative anat- omist can never mistake such a bone for that of any other race of animals. Professor Owen and other palaeontologists have largely profited by their knowledge of this peculiarity, as appears from the great and admirable work on British fossil reptiles by the professor, now in the course of publication.* From the great difference in the organization of this class, a great variety of motility was to be xpected : The motion of reptiles is as various as their structure, and exhibits a great diversity, particu- larly in the modes of progression. The slow march of the land tortoises, the paddling of the tur- tles, the swimming and walking of the crocodiles, the newts, and the protei, the agility of the lizards, the rapid serpentine advance of the snakes, the leaping of the frogs, offer a widely-extended scale of motion. If we add the vaulting of the dragons, and the flying of the pterodactyles, there is hardly any mode of animal progression which is not to be found among the reptiles. f When we examine the different systems pub- lished by zoologists with reference to the reptiles, we find, with few exceptions, the first place as- signed to the chelonians or tortoises ; and, before we proceed to notice the other forms, let us rapid- ly survey this highly-interesting order. The land-tortoises first claim attention. 28th July. I went to see the great tortoise (Testudo elephantopus) presented by the queen to the Zoological Society of London, and arrived at the garden in the Regent's Park between nine and ten o'clock. The morning had been rainy, but the sun bravely struggled through the clouds which cleared away before his radiant presence, as the story-book has it, and I saw the venerable reptile in its paddock before the newly-erected hut built for its reception near the otters' pond. It is the largest I ever beheld. The ancient seemed to be in a dreamy kind of doze, -with its head tucked into its shell, which glittered still moist with the rain that had fallen in the sunbeams a shell fit to make a lyre for Polypheme, if he had been inclined to try his hand when tired of the hundred reeds of decent growth that made a pipe for his capacious mouth. Though the weather had been very wet since its arrival a day or two previously, it did not seem to have availed itself of the shelter of its hut. Another comparatively small land- tortoise was also in the enclosure near a corner, but entirely exposed to the weather. One colos- sal anterior foot of the dozing giant rested on its sole ; its fellow was carelessly lying on its side. The soles of both the hind feet were on the turf. I scratched the sole of the anterior foot, which was exposed, and then the head. The sleeper was awakened, and put forth its long, serpentine neck, opened one eye very deliberately, and then the other as lazily, gave a gasp or two, withdrew the head, and then again protruded it. Cabbages, lettuces, and vegetable marrows, the latter equal- ling in tempting appearance those which the mad * A History of British Fossil Reptiles. By Richard Owen, F.R.S., &c. 4to. London: Printed for the Au- thor. t Penny Cyclopedia, vol. xix., p. 410. LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. gentleman placed upon the top of Mrs. Nickleby's wall, or projected into her garden, lay scattered in profusion around. In many of these the trenchant bill of the reptile had made incision ; and, as they had forgotten to provide the royal guest with a napkin, fragments of the last meal remained hanging about its horny lips. Large as the creature is, one may easily conceive the dis- appointment of the spectator who first sees it at rest. When it is in motion, and the huge body is raised on the pillar-like legs, it is a much more striking object. Professor Owen had been sum- moned to Buckingham Palace to see it before its removal to the garden in the Regent's Park, by the gracious direction of her majesty, and, in the presence of Prince Albert, proceeded to take the dimensions of the girth of the animal. To do this more effectually, he bestrode the reposing mass. While thus employed, the tortoise, who probably Never in that sort Had handled been before, What thing upon his back had got Did wonder more and more ; and walked off with the professor, to the great amusement of the prince, while the philosopher, as he rode along, calmly continued his measure- ment, which gave twelve feet as the circumference of this fine old Galapagosian. There appears to be good ground for believing that 175 summers and winters have passed over the head of this doughty devourer of vegetables ; and there is no reason for coming to the conclusion that, if left undisturbed in its native wilds, it might not see as many more. The great fossil testudinates of the Himalaya probably attained a much greater age ; and when we consider the regularity of living, and the quiet habits of the tortoises, the enduring nature of their organization, and their great tenac- ity of life, we may be pardoned if we hint at the probability that, under favorable circumstances, vitality might endure As of old for a thousand long years. The tortoises have no teeth to lose, no irritable nervous system to wear out the durable animated materials encased in their impenetrable armor. Dampier and Mr. Darwin saw these enormous reptiles in their native haunts on the islands of the Galapagos Archipelago. The former describes them as being so numerous, that 500 or 600 men might subsist on them for several months without any other provision ; adding, that they are extraor- dinarily large and fat, and that no pullet is bet- ter eating. The latter, in his excellent Journal, notices their numbers as being very great, and states his belief that they are to be found in all the islands of the Archipelago. In his walk among the little craters which there abound, the glowing heat of the day, the rough surface of the ground, and the intricate thickets, produced great fatigue ; but, with the true spirit of a naturalist, he says that he was well repaid by the Cyclopian scene. He met two large tortoises, each of which must have weighed at least 200 pounds. One was eating a piece of cactus ; and when Mr. Dar- win approached, it looked at him, and then quietly walked away ; the other gave a deep hiss, and drew in his head. Those huge reptiles, sur- rounded by the black lava and large cacti, ap- peared to his fancy like some antediluvian animals. Mr. Darwin was informed by Mr. Lawson, an Englishman, who, at the time of his visit, had charge of the colony, that he had seen several so large that it required six or eight men to lift them from the ground, and that some had yielded as much as 200 pounds of meat. The old males, readily distinguished by the greater length of their tails for that appendage is always longer in the male than in the female are the largest, the fe- males rarely growing to so great a size. They prefer the high, damp parts of the islands, but also inhabit the lower and arid districts. Those that live in the islands where there is no water, or in the arid parts of the others, feed chiefly on the cactus, whose succulent nature compensates for the want of liquid. But those which frequent the higher and moist regions, revel in a diet of the leaves of various trees, a kind of acid, austere berry, called guayavita ; and a pale green fila- mentous lichen, hanging in tresses from the boughs of trees. It must not, however, be con- cluded that these tortoises do not care about water ; for Mr. Darwin tells us that they are very fond of it, drinking large quantities when they can get it, and wallowing in the mud when they find it. The larger islands alone, it appears, possess springs, which are always situated towards the central parts, and at a considerable elevation. The tortoises which frequent the lower districts are therefore obliged, when thirsty, to travel from a long distance. Broad and well-beaten paths, the result of these travels, radiate off in every direction from the wells, even down to the sea- coast. This was not lost upon the Spaniards, who followed them up, and so discovered the watering-places. When Mr. Darwin landed at Chatham Island he could not imagine what animal travelled so methodically along the well-chosen tracks. Near the springs it was a curious spec- tacle, he observes, to behold many of these great monsters, one set eagerly travelling onwards, with outstretched necks, and another set returning, after having drunk their fill. He remarked that, when the tortoise arrives at the spring, it buries its head in the water above the eyes, quite regardless of any spectator, and greedily swallows great mouthsful, at the rate of about ten in a minute. According to Mr. Darwin, the inhabitants say that each visitor stays three or four days in the neigh- borhood of the water, and then returns to the lower country ; but they differed in their accounts respecting the frequency of those visits. Mr. Darwin thinks that the animal probably regulates them according to the nature of the food which it has consumed ; but he observes that it is certain that tortoises can subsist, even on those islands, where there is no other water than what falls dur- ing a few rainy days in the year. The rate of LEAxfE. FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. travelling m tne visits to the springs, or when going to any definite point, is said by those who have come to their conclusion from observations on marked individuals, to be about eight miles in two or three days, and they continue to move on- wards both by night and by day. Mr. Darwin watcned one large tortoise, and found that it walked at the rate of sixty yards in ten minutes ; that is, 3GO in the hour, or four miles a-day, allowing a little time for it to eat on the road. The love-pranks of the male are continued with a deliberation worthy of a creature whose motions in excavating the earth for hybernation are so ridiculously slow, that White describes the move- ment of the legs, when so employed, as little exceeding that of the hour-hand of a clock. Mr. Darwin relates that when the Galapagos tortoise is solus cum sold he utters a hoarse roar or bellowing, which can be heard at the distance of a hundred yards, and then is vocally silent for the rest of the year. The female, it is said, never makes her voice heard, if, indeed, she have one. The white spherical eggs are laid in October, the female depositing them together where the soil is sandy, and covering them up with sand. Where the ground is rocky she drops them indiscrimi- nately in any hollow. Seven were found placed in a line in a fissure. One measured by Mr. Darwin was seven inches and three eighths in circumference. As soon as the young tortoises are hatched they are exposed to the attacks of a buzzard, which has the habits of the caracara, and fall a prey in great numbers to that bird. Acci- dents, such as falls from precipices, seem to be the principal events against which these tortoises have to guard. Several of the inhabitants told Mr. Darwin that they had never found one dead without some such apparent cause. They believe that these animals are, like the majority of Per- sian cats, absolutely deaf; and Mr. Darwin declares with certainty that they do not overhear a person walking close behind them. He was amused, when overtaking one of these great mon- sters, as it was quietly pacing along, to see how suddenly, the instant he passed, it would draw in its head and legs, and, uttering a deep hiss, fall to the ground with a heavy sound, as if struck dead. He frequently got on their backs, and then, upon giving a few raps on the hinder part of the shell, they would rise up and walk away ; but he found it very difficult to keep his balance. The flesh of these tortoises is largely consumed, both fresh and salted. It is not unusual to collect them, barrel them up alive, put them on shipboard, and take them out as they are wanted, when they do not appear to have wasted much in consequence of their fast. From the fat a fine clear oil is prepared ; and when a tortoise is caught, the state of its fatness is ascertained by a very sum- mary process, which must be more satisfactory to the agent than the patient. The captor makes a slit with a knife in the skin near the animal's tail, so as to see inside its body whether the fat under the dorsal plate is thick. If it be not the tortoise is liberated for that time, walks away, and soon recovers so as to be none the worse for the oper- ation. Those who follow this somewhat trenchant course of experiment are soon made aware, that to secure one of these tortoises it is not sufficient to turn them like turtle ; for, as Mr. Darwin tells us, they are often able to regain their upright position after having been so left on their backs. In America people have an odd way of immor- talizing themselves, and leaving intimations to friends and succeeding visitors where they have been. When they find a tortoise, they turn it up, cut their names with a knife on the investing horny plates of the plastron or ventral portion of the shell, and then setting the reptile on its legs, give the walking inscription its liberty. But if we are to credit ancient legends, our royal tortoise and its Galapagosian brethren must hide their diminished heads. De Laet avers that they grow to such a size in Cuba, that one will carry five men on its back, and walk off with them. But some authors never like to be outdone, and the writer of Thaumatographia, who, to do him justice, is a most industrious collector of marvellous stories, gives us one on the authority of Leo that throws all other testudinarian tales into the shade. A traveller in Africa, weary and way-sore at the end of a fatiguing day, aftei seeking in vain for shelter, looked about, as tht shades of evening deepened, for some insulatet rock in the desert on which he might repost* secure from the fierce or poisonous animals tha infested those dreary wilds. At length, just a,. darkness overtook him, he saw what he wanted, climbed it, found a good flat place on its summit, lay down, and soon forgot the labors of the pas. day in a heavy slumber, from which he awoke no. till the sun was up, and then he found that hi. dormitory had been moved nearly three thousand paces from the spot where he had laid down. This made him look about him, when he dis- covered that what he had taken for a rock was a tortoise, that had gone on feeding during the night, but at so imperceptibly slow a pace that the sleeper was not aware of the motion. The great Galapagos tortoises which have hitherto been brought to this country have never lived long. They have thriven apparently till the time of hybernation arrived, and then have slept never to wake again. The returning spring has always found them dead. Whether they have not the means of properly laying themselves up and of reposing in the temperature exactly suited to their case, or have been fed too liberally on lettuce, which acts as an opiate when taken in any large quantity, are questions that have been con- sidered, but as yet have not been satisfactorily answered. Taking into the account their usual diet in a state of nature, it may be questioned whether it is advisable to feed these gigantic tor- toises so much on lettuces. The quantity of opium which must find its way into the system under so large a consumption must be very con- siderable ; and it would be as well to try the 82 LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. effect of a supply of other succulent vegetables, such as gourds and cabbages, with, a fair propor- tion of lettuce. And yet the " old tortoise" im- mortalized by White selected milky plants, such as lettuces, dandelions, and sow-thistles, as its favorite dish ; and for years continued to retire under ground about the middle of November, coming forth again about the middle of April. Its age was not known, but it had been kept for thirty years in a little walled court ; and in a neighboring village one was kept till it was sup- posed to be a hundred years old. The tortoise introduced into the garden of Lambeth Palace in the time of Archbishop Laud continued to live there till the year 1753, and its death was then attributed to the neglect of the gardener rather than to age. The author of Physico-theology,* to whom the writers of modern treatises are so largely indebted, saw it in August, 1712, " in my Lord Archbishop of Canterbury's garden," and speaks of it as having been there since the time of the prelatef who smoothed the path of the royal martyr from earth to heaven, and received, as the cold complaining eye of the victim was fixed steadily on him, the mysterious " Remem- ber !" from his dying lips. The shell of this tortoise was, and probably is, preserved in the library of the palace at Lambeth. White's tortoise for it afterwards became his, to the evident satisfaction of that charming natu- ralist and excellent man when it first appeared in the spring, discovered very little inclination towards food, but in the height of summer grew voracious. As the summer declined, so did its appetite ; and for the last six weeks in autumn it hardly ate at all. Its habits seemed to have differed widely from those of the great tortoises of the Galapagos. They, as we have seen, delighted, after a long abstinence probably, to plunge their heads into the water and to wallow in mud. White's tortoise appears to have lived in positive dread of the element. No part of its behavior (writes White) ever struck me more than the extreme timidity it always expresses with regard to rain ; and though it has a shell that would secure it against a loaded cart, yet does it discover as much solicitude about rain as a lady dressed in all her best attire, shuffling away on the first sprinklings, and running its head up in a corner. If attended to, it becomes an ex- cellent weather-glass ; for as sure as it walks elate, and as it were on tiptoe, feeding with great earnestness in the morning, so sure will it rain before night. Darwin's great tortoises marched by night as well as by day in their walks to the wells. White describes his as totally a diurnal animal, and never pretending to stir after it became dark ; and yet he declares that nothing could be more assiduous than the creature, night and day, in scooping the earth and forcing its great body into the cavity intended for its hybernaculum. This, however, it must be remembered, was a work of * Derham. t Juxon. necessity, in which delay would have been dan- gerous. Beginning its excavation on the first of November, it had no time to lose, with the biting frosts close at hand ; and if it had been overtaken by them it would have suffered even more than Captain Dalgetty, when he learned the rules of ser- vice so tightly under old Sir Ludovick Lesly that he was not likely to forget them in a hurry : Sir, I have been made to stand guard eight hours, being from twelve at noon to eight o'clock of the night, at the palace, armed with back and breast, head-piece, and bracelets being iron to the teeth, in a bitter frost, and the ice was as hard as ever was flint ; and all for stopping an instant 'o speak to my landlady, when I should have gone lo roll-call. White's tortoise was careful to avoid the other extreme of temperature : Though he loves warm weather, he avoids the hot sun ; because this thick shell, when once heated, would, as the poet says of solid armor, " scald with safety." He, therefore, spends the more sultry hours under the umbrella of a large cabbage leaf, or amid the waving forests of an asparagus bed. But as he avoids heat in the sum- mer, so in the decline of the year he improves the faint autumnal beams, by getting within the reflec- tion of a fruit wall ; and though he never has read that planes inclining to the horizon receive a greater share of warmth, he inclines his shell, by tilting it against the wall, to collect and admit every feeble ray. This pet was a huge sleeper ; for it not only remained under the earth from the middle of No- vember to the middle of April, its arbitrary stomach and lungs enabling it to refrain from eat- ing as well as breathing during that time, but slept the greater part of the summer ; for it went to bed in the longest days at four in the afternoon, and often did not stir in the morning till late. Besides, it retired to rest for every shower, and did not move at all on wet days. When one reflects (says White) on the stale of this strange being, it is a matter of wonder to find that Providence should bestow such a profusion of days, such a seeming waste of longevity, on a reptile that appears to relish it so little as to squan- der away more than two thirds of its existence in a joyless stupor, and be lost to all sensation for months together in the profoundest of slumbers. But notwithstanding this lethargic temperament the old tortoise knew its benefactress, and as soon as the good old lady came in sight, who had waited on it for more than thirty years, it hobbled towards her with awkward alacrity, but remained inattentive to strangers. There was too an annual period when he was unusually on the alert. We think we can see the worthy pastor of Selborne looking down, with the air of the melancholy Jaques, on his favorite, and exclaiming : Pitiable seems the condition of this poor em- barrassed reptile : to be cased in a suit of ponder- ous armor, which he cannot lay aside ; to be im- prisoned, as it were, within his own shell ; must preclude, we should suppose, all activity and dis- LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. 83 position for enterprise. Yet there is a season of the year (usually the beginning of June) when his exertions are remarkable. He then walks on tip- toe, and is stirring by five in the morning; and, traversing the garden, explores every wicket and interstice in the fences, through which he will escape if possible ; and often has eluded the care of the gardener, and wandered to some distant field. The motives that impel him to undertake these, rambles seem to be of the amorous kind ; his fancy then becomes intent on sexual attachments, which transport him beyond his usual gravity, and induce him to forget for a time his ordinary solemn deportment. It is very possible that Cupid may have then been bestriding him. White's description looks Tery like the restlessness of passion Nee tibi Vespero Sursjente decedunt amores, Nee rapidum fugiente solem. But the love of liberty and, not improbably, an annual migratory impulse in search of fresh pas- ture, may have been the prevailing motive. At all events, neither he nor the other fye^foixos are without their comforts. Each of them is inde- pendent of any capricious landlord, and both snail and tortoise, if they could speak, might say what it is a great privilege to be able to say, " Death alone can turn me out of this house." The tenacity of life with which the Testudinata are gifted would be hardly credible to those who have not closely studied the subject. No well- regulated mind can read of some of the experi- ments which have- been made to place the fact beyond all doubt without being shocked ; but averse as every good man must be to the infliction of pain or death, it is but fair to allow that such experiments may be more cruel in appearance than in reality. Redi's operations must have been attended with instant death if made upon the higher and warm-blooded vcrtebrata. His tortoises lived, and showed no signs of acute suffering. In the beginning of November he opened the skull of a land-tortoise, removed every particle of brain, and cleaned the cavity out. The animal was then set at liberty, but, instead of dying or remaining motionless, it groped its way about freely as its inclination directed, without the aid of sight ; for when the animal was deprived of its brain it closed its eyes, which it never opened afterwards. The wound was left open, but skinned over in three days, and the tortoise con- tinued to go about till the middle of May, when it died. On examining the skull, the cavity which had contained the brain was found empty and clean as it had been left, with the exception of one small, dry, black clot of blood. But this was not a solitary instance. Many other land-tortoises were subjected to the same treatment in November, January, February, and March. The result was similar, with some ex- ception ; for some moved about freely, but others, though they showed that they were alive by other motions, did not. Fresh-water tortoises, when made the subjects of the same experiment, acted like the others, but did not Jive so long. But Redi had a notion, that if the marine tortoises were deprived of their brain they would live for a very long time ; for having received a turtle which was very much wasted and faint, he opened its skull and treated it in every respect as he had treated the land-tortoises, and, emaciated as it was, it lived six days after the operation. But Redi proved the enduring vitality of these reptiles by a more decisive experiment. In the month of November he cut off the head of a large tortoise ; the headless animal did not expiie till twenty-three days had elapsed. This decapitated existent did not, indeed, move about like those which had only been robbed of their brain ; but when any mechanical stimulus, such as prick- ing or poking, was applied to the anterior or posterior extremities, the headless trunk drew them up with considerable liveliness, and exhibit- ed many other motions. To free himself from all doubt as to the vitality of these animals under such circumstances, Redi cut off the heads of four other tortoises. Twelve days after decapitation he opened two of them, when he beheld the heart beating, and saw the blood enter and leave it These were Redi's experiments : for them he is answerable. But it is only just to remark, that in this frightful state of life in death there may be more of irritability than sensation. The restoration of mutilated organs in the reptiles is wonderful to the uninitiated. Look at the eye : a subject for Newton. I remember to have seen in a large glass bowl a number of aquatic lizards, which were undergoing the curative and repro- ductive process, which kind nature had initiated ay, and carried out completely after they had been deprived of an anterior extremity or an eye. In both cases the organs were reproduced. The anterior extremity is nothing when compared to the organ of vision ; but, after all, the cornea through which we see such glorious sights is nothing but a modification of the skin, and the rest of that wonderful orb in a low grade of ani- mal nature may be easily supplied . It may occur to some that the clot in the cranium of Redi's brainless tortoise was an attempt to restore the great centre of the nervous system ; but the probability is, that nature was endeavoring to repair' the injury, and to secure as much of life as was to be obtained under the shocking circum- stances. The length of time during which Redi's head- less tortoise lingered will not surprise those who have seen how much life remains, and for how long, in a turtle after all its wasting by the un- healthy voyage. We have been taught, and truly with respect to the higher grade of animals, that: in the blood is the life. But in the case of the- testudinate which is to furnish forth the soup, the calippee, the steaks, the currie, for which and. upon which aldermen live, any one who wishes to descend into the abysses from which that am- brosial feast is furnished forth, may find a head- 84 LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. less trunk suspended neck downwards that it may bleed more freely, and the head placed bill upper- most on a cold plate for the resting-place of the severed neck. The snapping of the jaws of that distant head, and the movements of that suspended body, have startled more than one neophyte who has been taken down to see " what a turtle can do when its head is cut off;" especially if, as it has happened to some of my friends, their fingers have chanced to come within reach of the turtle's bill at the snapping moment. That such post-decapitation snaps and motions should raise horrible ideas of comparison is hardly to be wondered at ; and I remember this instance of the vitality of the turtle's head being brought foiward in corroboration of the sickening story of the blush on Charlotte Corday's face, when the biutal executioner struck it on the cheek as he held up the severed head to the execration of the friends of the imp Marat, the idol of the canaille that surrounded the guillotine. A friend saw an execution in Italy by an instrument resembling the Scottish maiden. He was very near the scene of death, and when the criminal's head was held up, he saw the eyes roll from right to left and from left to right. Those best qualified to judge are of opinion that this and similar movements are merely convulsive, and that the severed head does not feel. To say nothing of the stunning shock to the nervous system, more especially if the pon- derous trenchant axe falls upon the occiput, as it did in the case of the unfortunate Louis XVI., whose under-jaw was said to have been left on the trunk, either from his shrinking just before the fatal moment, or the shortness of his neck ; the blood-vessels of the brain must be so speedily emptied when a person suffers death by the guil- lotine, that all sensation must vanish in a very short space of time ; but it is very far from clear that the head does not continue to live during that short space, and if it feels even for a moment or two, who shall say that in those moments it may not suffer an eternity of agony and shame 1 It has been hinted, that during that diabolical French carnival, when terror reigned supreme, and frater- nity the fraternity of Cain and his brother had reached its culminating point, observations were made on "the newly-severed heads that gave evi- dence of action, if not of feeling, after their sep- aration from the bodies of the victims of the revo- lutionary tribunal. Some of our readers may have heard of another horror of that accursed time. At first, when the executions were few and far between, the body was thrown into quicklime ; but as the thirst for blood advanced, when the guillotine was en permanence, and, though it rested not, could not do the work of extermination fast enough ; when the cord, and the pike, and the sabre, and the musket, and the cannon, were all ^brought into action, and the noyades were added to the fusillades, the utilitarians began to think that the quicklime operation was destructive of much good animal matter. So the muscle of the slaughtered was converted into adipocere for the candle manufactory, and their skins furnished no small quantity of exquisite leather. Little did the beauty of that age, as she charmed all eyes at the ball, think whence came the light in which she shone, or that the delicate glove which set off her more delicate arm was not the spoil of the kid.* More than enough of these horrors may they never rise again to shock humanity in our time ! and " return we" as a most excellent judge was wont to say when leading back the jury from a digression into which he had seduced them, but always with the effect of arresting their attention more strongly to the issue which they had to try return we to the extraordinary vitality mani- fested by the Testudinata under the most adverse circumstances. A small tortoise was received in this country in the winter ; in a state of hibernation, doubtless. The condition of the little animal never occurred to the recipient. The head and limbs were tucked into the shell, and he put it into a drawer with a collection of snuff-boxes, intending to have it mounted as a companion to the rest. The drawer was not opened for many months, and when it was, it smelt, as the proprietor thought, rather musty. He therefore pulled it out on a fine, warm, moist, autumnal day, exposed it to the open air on the outside of a window, and went where his business called him. When he re- turned, he thought he would take a look at his drawer, and as soon as he cast a glance upon it, he saw, as he thought, one of his snuff-boxes walking about. He rubbed his eyes, and looked again. His senses had not deceived him, for there was the tortoise roused from his long, long sleep, by the genial atmosphere ; and, though it was not exactly in the state to make soup for a fairy alderman, it soon gained strength under kind treatment, and lived long. The alleged length of time during which sus- pended animation may be continued, with the power of again resuming the functions of life, would be considered as fit only for fable, were it not confirmed beyond all doubt. Hear honest and true Benjamin Franklin, who thus relates a some- what extraordinary anecdote of some flies which had undergone a similar fate to that of " poor Clarence," but with a much more happy result to some of the party : They had been drowned in Madeira wine, ap- parently about the time when it was bottled in Virginia, to be sent hither (to London.) At the opening of one of the bottles at the house of a friend where I then was, three drowned flies fell into the first glass which was filled Having heard it re- marked that drowned flies were capable of being revived by the rays of the sun, I proposed making the experiment upon these ; they were, therefore, exposed to the sun upon a sieve, which had been employed to strain them out of the wine. In less than three hours two of them began by degrees to recover life. They commenced by some convulsive * The skin of a human being, properly prepared, is very like line kid leather. LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. 85 motions in the thighs, and at length they raised themselves upon their legs, wiped their eyes with their fore-feet, beat and brushed their wings with their hind-feet, and soon after began to fly finding themselves in old England without knowing how they came thither. The third continued lifeless till sunset, when, losing all hopes of him, he was thrown away. The philosopher thus improves the occasion : I wish it were possible, from this instance, to invent a method of embalming drowned per- sons, in such a manner that they might be recalled to life at any period, however distant ; for, having a very ardent desire to see and observe the state of America an hundred years hence, I should prefer to any ordinary death the being immersed in a cask of Madeira wine, with a few friends, till that time, to be recalled to life by the solar warmth of my dear country.* Now, Heaven forbid, that in this incredulous time any doubt should be thrown upon this com- fortable story ; but I have somewhere met with another account of the extraordinary longevity of a fly. The relator, when in Germany, was promised by his host a superlative wine which had been ten years in bottle. The well-corked flask was produced, and while mine host was descanting on its age and merits, and holding it up to the light, he, to whom it was offered, be- held between his eye and the sun a fly vigorously struggling on the surface of the wine. Modest as he was, he could not resist his impulse to point out the struggler, observing that the venerable in- sect had, no doubt, been kept in health and vigor by the elixir vita in the bottle. The innkeeper and this is the strangest part of the story was abashed ; and in his confusion was surprised into a declaration that he never would tell another lie. The old nursery-book told us, and told us truly, under usual circumstances, that The tortoise securely from danger does dwell, When he tucks up his head and his tail in his shell. The true Terrapenes, or, as those land-tortoises are called by Jack, " Turpins," may defy the general chapter of accidents, though there may be no safety either for him or the poet, on whose bald head a raptorial bird may drop the reptile from on high, taking the calvarium for a stone. With a dorsal buckler constructed principally out of eight pair of ribs, united towards their middle by a succession of angular plates, into which the ribs are, as it were, inlaid ; and a plastron or breastplate composed of nine pieces, each of which, with one exception, are pairs, the ninth being placed between the four anterior pieces, with the two first of which it generally coheres, when it is not articulated with the four, and the whole form- ing in the adult a strong breast-and-belly plate compact in all its parts, and united on each side to the dorsal buckler, the whole being so framed and composed as to resist a very high degree of pres- sure, or a powerful blow the land-tortoise has only to offer the passive resistance of its defensive * Franklin's Memoirs, vol. ii., p. 227. armor to set at nought the attacks of ordinary en- emies. There is one genus of land-tortoises* which does not grow to such a size, or carry such ponderous armor, as those of the genus Testudo, that has a still further safeguard against the pre- datory animals to whose attempts it is exposed. In this form the anterior portion of the plastron, reaching backward to the space occupied by the two first pairs of sternal plates, is susceptible of motion. Under the strongly-marked suture of the second with the third pair, is the elastic ligament which serves for a hinge. When the animal wishes to open this movable lid, under which, when closed, the head and fore-feet are closely boxed up, it lowers the lid, protrudes its head.and fore-feet, and walks or feeds till danger ap- proaches, when it draws them in, raises the lid, and thus shuts itself up in a compact-box ; for the edges of this operculum on hinges fit close as wax to those of the carapace, which here forms a sort of animated door-case. Thus the animal has nothing to fear in front ; and behind, it is securely protected by its enlarged and deepened plastron, under which the posterior extremities and tail can be entirely and snugly drawn up. Among the marsh-tortoisesf there is a similar conformation ; and the species so protected have obtained the apt name of Box-tortoises. But, as if Nature were determined to show that she can vary any plan, however ingenious, she has thought fit to turn out of hand another phase of this box-like construction, and in Kinyxis we have it behind instead of before. The tortoises of this group are gifted with the power of moving the posterior part of their carapace, which they can lower and apply to their plastron, so as completely to close the box behind, as those of the genus Pyxis close the anterior part of their shells. But in Kinyxis there is no hinge-like apparatus as there is in Pyxis. In Kinyxis the bones bend ; and, in consequence of their thinness and elasticity, the carapace can be bent down at the will of the animal, so as to approximate the plastron. A sinuous line, on which the animal mechanism op- erates, is indicated externally between the penulti- mate and ante-penultimate marginal plate ; and this point, or rather, line of flexion, is furni?hed with a tissue partaking of the nature of fibre and cartilage. But which of the land-tortoises furnished the shell the chorded shell, dear to Apollo and the Muses ? Pausanias says, that it was a species which was found in the Arcadian woods ; and it very proba- bly was that now known as Testudo Grezca. Others declare that it was an African species (whose carapace and dried tendons gave out a sound when struck by Mercury, who found it after an inundation of the Nile) that furnished the hint for the lyre. The Elodians, or marsh-tortoises, are gifted with far greater activity than their terrestrial re- lations. They swim with great facility, and make * Pyxis. t Sternothaerus. 86 LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. a much quicker inarch on land, leading a preda- tory, quisquilious, amphibious life, and frequenting sluggish streams, the lake, the pond, and the marsh Their food consists principally of fresh- water molluscous animals, tailless and tailed batrachians,* and annelids, or worm-like crea- tures. The honeymoon of these elodians endures for many weeks at a certain time of the year ; and their prolonged loves are blest with a goodly batch of spherical eggs, without any calcareous shell, but as white as those of the other chelonians. The nest is a shallow cavity in the earth, scraped out by the female ; and the banks of the waters, wherein she spends much of her time, are general- ly selected ; for her instinct teaches her that such a locality offers a refuge to the young, who take refuge in the waters from their numerous enemies as soon as they are hatched. And here it may be observed that the Chersians, or land-tortoises, are, as a general rule, feeders on vegetables ; the Thalassians, or sea-tortoises, commonly known as turtles, both vegetarian (in some cases almost entirely so) and carnivorous ; while the Elodians, or marsh-tortoises, and the Potamians, or river-tortoises, which may both be classed under one common head, the gradation being almost insensible, are supported on animal food, the prey being generally taken in a living state. In conformity with this dispensation, the anterior extremity of the upper bill in the majority of species exhibits a large notch, and on each side of it a sufficiently strong tooth, reminding the ob- server of the beak of the higher raptorial birds. In some of this group, Nature, which in the chelonian forms which we have already noticed had contented herself with a lid either before or behind, carries out what may be termed the box principle, by making, as in the genus Cistudo, a movable lid both before and behind. In this sub- genus a cartilage attaches the wide oval plastron to the buckler. This cartilage is movable both before and behind, turning on the same transversal mesial hinge, and, at the will of the animal, pre- senting nothing but a well-closed box to the pry- ing eyes of the enemy. In Kinosternon, also, the oval sternum is movable before and behind on a fixed piece ; but in Staurotypus, the thick cruci- form sternum is movable in front only. In others again, Platysternon and Emysaura, for example, the plastron is immovable. The Potamians, or true river-tortoises, whose species have been confounded under the name of Trionyx, have among them some which grow to a considerable size. To say nothing of one which was kept by Pennant, and weighed twenty pounds, seventy pounds have been stated as the weight attained by certain individuals. Inhabiting the streams and rivers, or great lakes of the warmer regions of the earth, their habits are generally similar. Swimming with much ease either upon or beneath the surface of the water, they pursue * Anurous and urodcle batrachians of the learned. roung crocodiles, other reptiles and fishes, which heir agility enables them to make their prey. They are also said to be great destroyers of the ;ggs of the crocodiles, especially in the Nile and he Ganges. The angler baits his hook for them with small fishes or other living bait, unless his skill enables him so to play a dead or artificial one as to deceive the sharp eyes of these tortoises, whose flesh is considered very good for the table. .f he goes out with proper tackle, the sport is satisfactory enough ; but one of them took the fly of a justly-celebrated singer and skilful disciple of old Izaak's school, while he was fishing for trout. Ele thought he had got hold of an old boat ; but, unwieldy as his prize was, he would probably lave landed it if left to himself. His stupid at- tendant, however, rushed forward and seized the .ine, which, thus deprived of the spring of the rod, :ould not bear the strain, and the potamian got lear off. Islets, rocks, floating timber, or the trunks of "alien trees on the banks, are the favorite places of resort to which these tortoises come for repose during the night. But they are very wary, and the least noise sends them immediately into the water. They are troublesome customers to those who are not aware of their mode of attack. When they seize their prey, or are on the defensive, they suddenly and most rapidly dart out their retracted tiead and long neck, like lightning, biting most sharply ; and rarely relaxing their hold till they have taken the piece, into which they have fixed their cutting and pertinacious bill, out. The fisherman, therefore, either cuts off their heads as soon as he has secured them, or reins them up with a sort of bridle, so as to prevent the dreaded bite ; and, in this last state, I have been told, they are often exposed alive for sale in the markets. In the months of April or May, the sandy spots on the banks of the rivers or lakes which have a good exposure to the sun are sought out by the females, as the places of deposit of their eggs, to the amount of some fifty or sixty ; and in July the young make their appearance. The patience of a German is proverbial ; with the eternal pipe in his mouth, he calmly follows out his subject, and fol- lows it out well ; but when we find Monsieur Lesueur patiently counting the ova in the ovary of a potamian mother, and deliberately giving the results, we pause, and thank the gods who have disposed the mercurial mind of one of our near neighbors to quietly settle down to ovarian statis- tics. In the ovary of a pregnant potamian M. Lpsueur counted twenty ripe eggs, ready to come forth at the bidding of Dame Nature. Then he saw a quantity of ova, varying in size from that of a pin's head to the goodly volume of rotundity which they attain, when the calcareous coat, which is necessary for the protection of the egg when it is exposed to the dangers of this world, is super- added : what " the tottle of the whole" is, may be ascertained by those who feel disposed to in- quire of M. Lesueur ; and, if they will consult the oracle, they will rise from the consultation wiser LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. 87 men, unless they have sounded all the shallows and depths of testudinate life. But enough, arid, for the reader who is not zoologically disposed, more than enough. He has been led, if he has condescended to follow, from the land to the marsh, from the marsh to the lake, stream, and river, the residences of the ra- rious modifications of testudinate life. A short repose should be placed at his disposal, before, in the course of our narrative, he follows these great rivers of the old and new world, in which the fresh water tortoises disport themselves, into that ocean in which all rivers, great and small, are lost. But there, in that boundless waste of waters, we shall find that Nature has modified the Chelonian type into the Thalassian shape, which occupies a distinguished reptilian place in the present world, and in that which is gone forever,. THE extremities modified for walking on land, in the case of the Chersians, shuffling about in marshes and ponds in the case of the Elodians,* and swimming in rivers with a good garnish of claws to enable the Potamians f to scramble upon banks and logs, to say nothing of the help of the said claws in enabling them to secure their prey, take, in the Thalassians,! an unmistakable oar-like shape. No half-measures would enable a turtle to row placidly on the mirror-like sea, when The air is calm, and on the level brine Sleek Panope with all her sisters plays, or beat the billows when the ocean is agitated by storms such as burst forth in tropical latitudes. But these paddles have a double office to perform. They are formed to act, not only as organs of swimming, but as instruments of progression on the tide-furrowed shore, when the females travel up to deposit their eggs ; and to this end, in most of the species, the paddle is furnished with one or more nails, which greatly assist the animal in its advance on land. Only five well-defined recent species are known, if Mr. Gray be right in considering Chdone vir- gata and Chelonc maculosa of Dumeril and Bibron as varieties of Chdone mydas ; and this existing state of the limitation of the marine form of these reptiles opens a new and most interesting point of view, when compared with the fossil evidences of the development of this sub-family in the ancient seas of our globe. Professor Owen, in his valuable History of British Fossil Reptiles, describes no less than eleven well-defined fossil species of chelone found in Britain, to say nothing of fragments. Such a catalogue, as he justly ob- serves, leads to conclusions of much greater inter- est than the previous opinions respecting the chelonites of the London clay could have sug- gested. Whilst (writes the professor) these fossils were supposed to have belonged to a fresh water genus, the difference between the present fauna and that of the eocene period, in reference to the chelonian order, was not very great ; since the Emys (cistuda) Europew still abounds on the continent after which it is named, and lives long in our own islands in suitable localities. But the case assumes a very different aspect when we come to the conviction that the majority of the eocene chelonites belong to the true marine genus chelone ; and that the number of species of these extinct turtles already * Marsh tortoises. \ River tortoises. J Sea tortoises, or turtles. obtained from so limited a space as the Isle of Sheppy, exceeds that of the species of chelone now known to exist throughout the globe. The professor comes to no hasty conclusion, when he states that the ancient ocean of the eocene epoch was much less sparingly inhabited by turtles than that which now washes the shores of our globe ; and that these extinct turtles pre- sented a greater variety of specific modifications than are known in the seas of the warmer lati- tudes of the present day. Nor does the inference stop here ; for, as he well says in continua- tion, the indications which the English eocene turtles, in conjunction with other organic remains from the same formation, afford of the warmer climate of the latitude in which they lived, as compared with that which prevails there in the present day, accord with those which all the organic remains of the oldest tertiary deposits have hitherto yielded in reference to this interest- ing point. We have already seen that some of the fresh-water tortoises make the eggs and young of crocodilians and other reptiles their prey, and the conformation of some of these fossils furnishes the author of the work here cited with another generalizing observation. After remarking that abundance of food must have been produced under the influences of a climate such as that which the fossil turtles en- joyed, he proceeds to the inference that to some of the extinct species which, like the Chelone longiceps and Chelone planimentum, exhibit a form of head well adapted for penetrating the soil, or with modifications that indicate an affinity to the Trionyces was assigned the task of checking the undue increase of the now extinct crocodiles and gavials of the same epoch and locality, by de- vouring their eggs or their young, the trionyces themselves becoming, probably in return, an occa sional prey to the older individuals of the same carnivorous saurians. Thus did the lex talionis prevail long before lawyers stained paper with their well-galled ink. Thus was the balance kept up in bygone ages as it now is. The same principle of mutual extermination was, and is, and is to be ; and by this principle, which to the uninitiated must wear somewhat of an Acheroatic aspect, the greatest quantity of general happiness is secured in what would otherwise be an over- crowded world : but VCR victis. The well-arched, thick-walled, wagon-proof, portable castle, assigned by the distributive justice of Nature to the larger slow land tortoises, and 88 LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. those, consequently, more exposed to observatioi and attacks, is in the turtles modified to suit the element in which they principally live. The carapace forming the roof is less highly arched and both it and the floor or plastron are lighte and less completely ossified ; but as the head can not be drawn back under the carapace, as in the land tortoises, it is fortified by an additional bonj helmet. Besides these true turtles another marine genu, exists, differing remarkably from chelone ; this is the coriaceous turtle, Sphargis, which has the body incased in a sort of leathern armor, and has no nails on the paddles. This form seems to represent the soft fresh-water tortoises in some degree. The green turtle, (Chelone mydus,) now the cynosure of every aldermanic eye, owes its Eng- lish name to the hue of the delicate fat which enriches the soup and various savory dishes that form a course of turtle. Whether the Latin specific name was conferred on it by the Knight of the Polar Star from any punning justiciary allusion, does not seem to be certain. Notwithstanding the French names with which it is now the fash- ion to adorn every plat, be it at city feast, great club dinner to the lion of the day, or the more refined repast served in the Apollo chamber of a modern Lucullus, England may claim the honor of availing itself of the resources of its West Indian possessions, and making " turtle" famous. The French were a long way behind. In Le Cuisinier des Cuisiniers* there is not a single receipt for dressing real turtle. What the ideas of a Frenchman on the subject of Potage en Tortue were, may be gathered from the following :^ Potage en Tortue. Ce potage, qui est aujour- d'hui tres a la mode dans les grands maisons et chez les bons restaurateurs, manque dans la plupart des traites sur la cuisine. Beauvilliers, et Viard dans le Cuisinier royal, sont les seuls qui en expo- sent la recette, mais avec des variantes. After this exordium one is hardly prepared for the receipts themselves. Maticres employees par Beauvilliers. Mouton, e"paule ou gigot, ou parures de Carre's, debris de poissons, en quantite suffisante, dans un marmite, blond de veau, bouquet de persil, aromates, basilic ; la cuisson separe la chair des os. Le bouillon pass6 au travers d'une serviette, et clarifie' avec des blancs d'oeufs ; faire bouillir, reduire, ajouter du vin de Madere ; la moitie d'une tete de veau, echudee de^ la veille, desossee, cuite dans un blanc, coupee par petits morceaux ; dans le bouil- lon, vin de Madere ; poivre de cayenne, de kari ; dans le potage, des morceaux de veau; jaunes d'oeufs frais, durcis, a 1'instant du service. Now for the Matter es employees par Viard: Tranches de bceuf, parure de veau, poule ou parure de volaille, moitie consomme et moitie' blond de veau, carottes, oignons, cloux de girofle, dans une marmite ; moitie" de tete de veau, degor- gee et blanchie, coupee par petits morceaux dans * Paris, 1825. une autre marmite, petits piments enrage"es, macis de muscade, consomme, vin de Madere, champig- nons, ris de veau en tres petits morceaux, cre.tes de cpqs, rognons, quenelles de volailles ; dans la soupiere, ceufs poches et le potage dessus ; si le potage n'est pas assez corse ou assez fort en piment, glace de volaille, beurre de piment. Fire burn and caldron bubble ! Very good potage no doubt but no more like tortue than I to Hercules ; and, even for the mock- turtle here presented, any one may safely back Birch of Cornhill against N the French artist. When Cuvier last visited this country, and was feasted by some of our philosophers at the Albion, nothing struck him so much as the tortue, upon which his memory long dwelt ; and yet he had had the opportunity of testing the abilities of the first cooks of his own country. Soyer and other compatriots of his may have shone since that time ; but formerly turtle was eminently English. Nor is it of remote antiquity as an English dish Not much more than a hundred years have passed since its general introduction, and for a long time it was comparatively rare. But steam, which annihilates both space and time to make epicures as well as lovers happy, now brings a regular and rapid supply of really " fine lively turtle," very different from the wasted invalids which our West Indiamen of the olden time landed after their lag- ging voyage. Bristol was famous for it ; and some years ago the Montague Tavern bore away the bell. There was the best turtle I ever tasted, and thither did George IV. send for that which graced his royal table. Whether the mantle has descended on the shoulders of the present priest of Comus who officiates at the Montague, those of my readers, if I happen to have any, may ascertain who go to that ancient town, and make a pilgrimage up the hill to the " Parade," which used to be odoriferous with the savory emanations "rom the tavern redolent of sweet basil, the grosser "umes of the kitchen sublimed by the perfume of ftme-punch, /z/ne-sangaree, and limes themselves : accompaniments, by the way, rarely, if ever, seen in London ; where the lemon, fragrant as it is, unsatisfactorily does duty for the lime, two or three of which supreme condiments were placed n the napkin of every guest when turtle was pre- sented at Bristol. Our own lamented Chantrey, who, though fully alive to the merits of the good things of this world, was one of the most unselfish and liberal of men, had a story of a passage during one of he city feasts at which he was present. The jreat national sculptor for truly great and truly national he was sat next to a functionary before whom stood a large tureen of turtle-soup. This -itizen instantly possessed himself of the ladle, arefully fished out the coarser parts, and offered he plate containing them to Chantrey, who de- lined. " I watched," said he, " the progress of the )late : at last it was set down before the lord-may- r's chaplain ; and the expression of that man's ace, when he beheld it, I shall never forget." The LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. 89 functionary went on helping till he had cleared the soup of all but the green fat and richer parts, the whole of which he piled up in a capacious plate for himself. Then up spoke our sculptor and said, " If you will allow me to change my mind, I'll take a little turtle;" and the waiter who held the plate, placed it, to the horror of the dispensing expectant, before Chantrey, who im- mediately commenced spoon-exercise, as Jonathan delicately describes such evolutions ; " and this I did," said Chantrey, " to punish him for his greed." What was the unhappy functionary to do ? His own tureen was exhausted, and, in a half-frantic tone, he called to one of the waiters to bring him some turtle. But at city feasts the guests are very industrious, especially when turtle is the order of the day ; and the waiter, after trying about, brought back to our greedy citizen the identical plate of fatless flesh which had so astounded the chaplain, who had contrived to exchange his unwelcome portion for one more worthy of a sleek son of the Church : " and then," Chantrey would add, " my attentive neigh- bor's visage was awful to look upon!" There was no help for it ; so the disconcerted functionary betook himself to the rejected plate, with the additional discomfiture of seeing Chantrey send away his, still rich with calipee, fat, and fins. But this is mild compared with scenes which have arisen on such occasions in less refined times. Something, indeed, may be allowed for the weak- ness of human nature, and the excitement of the moment, when The tender morsels on the palate melt, And all the force of cookery is felt. But time was when the Graces seem to have been altogether banished from the great civic feasts, and the onslaught of the gastrophilists waxed fast and furious. Hogarth has touched this in the eighth plate of his inimitable " Industry and Idle- ness," when the industrious 'prentice has grown rich, and is Sheriff of London ; " representing to us," as worthy Dr. Trusler observes, " at one view, the various ways of what we call laying it in." Quin declared that it was not safe to sit down to a feast in one of the city halls without a baske't-hilted knife and fork. At a much later period, a well-known " special attorney," who had fought his way well on every other stage, found himself no match for those who surrounded him on lord-mayor's day. Whenever he endeavored to transfer a fat slice from the savory haunch be- fore him to his own plate, it was instantly speared by the forks of the foragers near him, and borne away to theirs, till at last he was compelled to resign the unequal contest, and lay down his din- ner arms in despair, though he had got well into " The Alderman's Walk." And yet civic hospi- tality does its best to enable the catechists who are invited to do their duty towards their neighbors, as far as plenty is concerned. At a turtle-feast, the usual allowance was, perhaps is for there has been no falling off of late in festal liberality six pounds, live weight, per head. Thus, in August, 1808, at the Spanish dinner at the City of London Tavern, 400 guests consumed 2500 Ibs. of turtle, if the newspapers of that day are wor- thy of credence. When we remember that the turtle is but the prologue to the play, we may form some notion of the performances of these valiant trenchermen, who must have gone near to rival the feats of some of the ancient heroes of the table. They, indeed, have left on record gastric achievements to be envied by aldermen of the most giant appetite. Did not Maximin con- sume forty pounds of flesh in a day nay, occa- sionally sixty pounds moistening his repast with a vessel of wine of the Capitol measure, contain- ing about eight of our gallons ? Great as he was in more senses than one, the brutal emperor, how- ever, must yield the palm to Phagon, who, at one dinner, consumed a whole boar, a hundred loaves, a wether, and a little hog, washing all down with more than an orca of wine. Claudius Albinus seems to have had a sweet tooth, and a more re- fined taste ; for one of his meals consisted of five hundred dried figs, the callistruthiae of the Greeks, one hundred Campanian peaches, ten melons of Ossia, and twenty pounds of grapes from the luscious vineyards of the blessed island of Leuce, that paradise of the Euxine Sea. These delica- cies paved the way for the volatile, consisting of one hundred gnat-snappers ; and then the orifice was satisfactorily closed upon forty oysters. Clau- dius, in this sweeping supper, seems to have re- versed the modern order of dishes, ending where an epicure of the nineteenth century begins. What his drinking capabilities were does not appear. But the stern Romans were in the habit of becoming somewhat hazy occasionally. Peo- ple do not like to have their various weaknesses paraded before the senate ; and Mark Antony bit- terly paid off Cicero's philippics. The son of the orator, by way of commentary, and bent on eclipsing the fame of his father's murderer as the greatest bibber of the empire, took off two gal- lons at a draught. Nivellius Torquatus threw the prowess of Marcus Cicero into the shade ; for, in the presence of Tiberius, he drank off three gal- lons without drawing breath ; and Firmus disposed of two buckets full of wine without flinching ; to say nothing of Offellius Buraetius, who spent the whole of his life in making himself a thorough- fare for wine. The accomplishment was worth something in those days. Three bacchanalian nights with Piso so endeared him to Tiberius whom the wags irreverently called Biberius that he made him praetor ; and for the same convivial qualities, the emperor gave Pomponius Flaccus the province of Syria. The road to preferment generally, under his reign, seems to have been the same rosy way, for " he also did prefer a man that was unknown, and sought for the quaestor's office, before the most noble men, for pledging at a banquet an amphora of wine, that he drank to him. And at that time, when the Lex Fannia was pub- lished, the matter was come so far, that many of 90 LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. the people of Rome would come drunk into the senate-house, and so consult of the affaires of the commonwealth." * Man is an imitative animal ; and the debates in our own houses of parliament occasionally exhibit symptoms that some of our legislators have dined, though they may not have exactly fulfilled that Greek symposial law that required the boon companion not to quit his cups till the morning star arose. Even in these degen- erate days, there are not wanting examples of those who have bid the liquid ruby flow copiously. Quin frequently carried off six good bottles of claret under his belt, after all the spirituous and vinous accompaniments of a turtle dinner. But neither calipash nor calipee gratified the palates of the ancient Romans. The hammer of Charon descended upon the Apicii and Lucullus centuries before the Nereids, who sport under the beams of the western star, sent the delicious offer- ing to the epicures of the old world, although the sea-nymphs of the East furnished the luxurious with an ornament for their tables, couches, and the pillars of their houses, from another species. f We can almost hear the lamentations of the fidg- ety, niggardly, self-tormenting Mamurra, poor in the midst of his riches, who Testudineum mensus quater hexaclinon Ingemuit citro nou satis esse suo.t The consumption of tortoise shell at Rome for ornamental purposes must have been very great ; the very door-posts of the rich were inlaid with M The supply, occasionally, must have been more than equal to the demand, if we may believe Vel- leius Paterculus, who relates that, when Caesar took Alexandria, the magazines were so rich in tortoise shell that he proposed to make that highly- prized ornament a principal feature in his African triumph. The first man that invented the cutting of tor- toise shells into thin plates, therewith to seele beds, tables, cupbords, and presses, was Carbilius Pollio, a man very ingenious and inventive of such toies, serving to riot and superfluous expense. || * Jonston. t Chelone imbricata. t Martial, Epig. ix. 60. Juvenal also alludes to the .uxury in his eleventh satire: Nemo inter curas et seria duxit habendum, Qualis in Oceani fluctu testudo nataret, Clarum Trojugenis factura, ac nobile fulcrum. Familiar as is the passage, we cannot mar the beauty of the Mantuan's verse by giving the sixth line alone: O Fortunatos nimium sua si bona norint Agricolas ! quibus ipsa procul discordihus armis, Fundit humo facilem victum justissima tellus. Si non ingentem foribus domus alia superbis Mane salulantum totis vomit aedihus undam ; Ncc varios inhiant pulchr& testudine pastes, Inhisasque auro vestes, Ephyreiaque aera ; Alba neque Assvrio fucalur lana veneno, Nee casia liquid! corrmnpitur usus olivi: At secura quies, et nescia fallere vita, Dives opum variarum, atlatis otia fundis, Speluncae, vivique lacus, at frigida Tempe, Mugitusque bourn, mollesque sub arbore somni Non absunt. H Holland's Pliny. And again, "Cornelius Nepos writeth, that before the victory of Sylla, who defeated The carapace entire was frequently used for a cradle and a bath for young children ; nor did the warrior disdain it as a shield. The size to which some of the species grew was enormous, if we are to believe ^Elian, Pliny, Diodorus, and others. There he found Tortoises in the Indian sea so great, that one only shel of them is sufficient for the roufe of a dwelling house. And among the Islands principally in the Red Sea, they use Tor- toise shells for boats and wherries upon the water. And, again, (book vi. c. 22,) Pliny, writing of the inhabitants of the Island of Taprobane, states that, They take also a great pleasure and delight in fishing, and especially in taking of tortoisses ; and so great they are found there, that one of their shels will serve to cover an house : and so the in- habitants do employ them instead of roufes. The largest skull of a turtle I ever saw is in the noble museum of the Royal College of Sur- geons of England. It is the cranium of a Log- gerhead Turtle, (Chelone. caouanna,) and is of the following portentous dimensions : Ft. In. Lin, Length, in a straight line from the back \ margin of the mastoid to the fore end > 13 6 of the premaxillary, . . . . ) Breadth, in a straight line, .... 11 6 Height, including lower jaw, ... 90 Circumference (horizontal,) .... 3 40 And now a few words on the natural history and capture of some of these Thalassians ; and first, of the delicate species, the greenish color of whose fat gives it one of its names, and is derived from the turtle-grass on which it principally feeds the green turtle, Tortue franche of our pseudo- republican neighbors ; Testudo mydas, Linn.; Che- lone mydas of more modern zoologists. The Atlantic Ocean and the West Indian seas are enriched with this luscious esculent. Turtle, (tortoises,) writes Sir Hans Sloane, are of several sorts; those of the sea call'd green Tur- tle, from their fats being of that colour, feed on conches or shell fish, are very good victuals, and sustain a great many, especially of the poorer sort of the Island. They are brought in sloops, as the season is for breeding or feeding, from the Cay- manes, or south Cayes of Cuba, in which forty sloops, part of one hundred and eighty, belonging to Port Royal, are always imployed. They are worth fifteen shillings apiece, best when with egg, and brought or put into pens, or palisadoed places, in the harbor of Port Royal, whence they are taken Marius, VJTO dining tables, and no more there were throughout Rome, all of silver. Fenestella saiih, that in his time (and he died the last yere of the reigne of Ty- berius Cassar the emperor) men began to bestow silver upon their cupboords and side livery tables: and even then also (by his saying) tortoise worke came in request, and was much used. Howbeit, somewhat before his daies, he writeth, that those cupboords were of wood, round and solid, of one entire piece, and not much bigger than the tables whereupon men eat their meat ; but when hee was_ a young boy, they were foure square, and of many peeces joyned together ; and then they began to be covered over with thin boords or painels, either of maple or citron wood." So that, after all, this is not the only age of veneer. LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. 91 and killed as occasion requires. They are much better when brought in first, than after languishing in those pens for want of food. Apicius certainly had Darteneuf on the hip when, in reply to the strictures of the latter on his not having made a voyage to Britain for the purpose of eating oysters, the ghost of the Roman retorted with the modern epicure's short-comings on his confession that, when in the flesh, he had not been to the West Indies to enjoy turtle.* Sloane gives a somewhat startling account of the effect of a turtle diet : They infect the blood of those feeding on them, whence their shirts are yellow, and their skin and face of the same color. Our aldermen had better have an eye to their linen and complexions. Sloane starts a theory on the color of his transatlantic friends, whose under- garments were "stained prodigiously:" This, I believe, (says he,) may be one of the reasons of the complexion of our European inhab- itants, which is changed, in some time, from white to that of a yellowish color, and which proceeds from this, as well as the jaundies, which is com- mon, sea air, &c. And then, he says, not without truth, that " all sorts of Sea Tortle, except the green, are reckon'd fishy and not good food." In his chapter " of Quadrupeds which are ovipa- rous, or lay eggs," he says The best, or green turtle, or tortoises, come to the Caymanes once a-year to lay their eggs in the sand, to be hatch 'd by the sun, and at that time the turtlers take them in great numbers ; at other times the turtles go to the south Cayes of Cuba, there to feed on the sea-grass growing under water, wherefore the turtlers go thither in quest of them ; and it may be, four men in a sloop may bring in thirty, forty, or fifty turtles, worth seventeen or eighteen shillings a-piece, more or less, according to their goodness. The female with egg is reck- on'd the best ; they sometimes get their loading in a day, but are usually six weeks in making the voyage ; they feed on turtle, bisquet bread and salt ; they catch the turtle with nets of yarn larger than whipcord. When they come home they put * Apicius. What grieves me most is, that 1 never eat a Turtle. They tell me that it is absolutely the best of all foods ! Darteneuf. Yes, I have heard the Americans say so ; but I never eat any ; for in my time they were not brought over to England. Apicius. Never eat any turtle ! How didst thou dare accuse me of not going to Sandwich, to eat oysters, and didst not thyself take a trip to America, to not on tur- tles ? But know, wretched man, that I am informed they are now as plentiful in England as sturgeon. There are turtle-bouts that go regularly to London and Bristol from the West Indies. I have just seen a fat alderman, who died m London last week, of a surfeit he got at a turtle feast in the city. Darteneuf. What does he say ? Does he tell you that turtle is better than venison ? Apicius. He says there was a haunch of venison un- touched, while every mouth was employed on the turtle ; .that he eat till he fell asleep in his chair, and that the food was so wholesome, he should not have died, if he had not unluckily caught cold in his sleep, which stopped his perspiration and hurt his digestion. Darteneuf. Alas ! how imperfect is human felicity, &c. LYTTELTON'S Dialogues of the Dead. 3d edit. 1760. them into the sea in four square penns, or palisa- doed places, where they keep aiive till there be occasion to kill them, which will be very long sometimes, tho' the sooner they are killed after taking, they are the fatter. The callipee, or under part of the breast and belly bak'd, is reckoned the best piece the liver and fat are counted delicacies. And then Sir Hans proceeds to repeat, as he has in another part of his book, besides that abova quoted, the statement that those who feed much upon them discharge at their pores a yellow serum, and that the fat is yellow, tastes like marrow, and gives the skin a yellow hue a statement which will not surprise those who know that the bones of pigs, in whose food madder is mixed, become colored accordingly. Such is Sloane's account of the Tesludo marina vulgaris of Ray ; Jurucua Brasiliensibus, and Tat- taruga Lusitanis, of the same ; Tortue franche of Rochefort, Du Tertre, and Labat. He then describes the Tcstudo marina Caou- anna dicta, Tortue caouanne, Rochef. Labat, Ray, Kaouanne of Du Tertre, calling it the Hawksbill turtle, describing it as " very little differing from the common sea sort, only in every part less," and " not so good victuals as the former, though as common in these seas." This is probably the Loggerhead turtle of authors. Sloane then gives an account of the Testudo caretla dicta, which I take to be the true hawksbill turtle, and of which, he says, they "are chiefly valued for their scales, commonly called tortoise shell ; and are found with the others." Pere Labat speaks of la tortue franche, the green turtle, as " la seule espece qui soit verita- blement bonne a manger ;" of le caret, the hawks- bill, as furnishing "ecaille de tortue:" " sa chair," he adds, " n'est pas bonne a manger;" he speaks of it as " d'une qualite purgative," as the good father found to his cost ; and indulgence in it nearly cost a reverend brother his life. Of la caouanne, the loggerhead, he writes with more correctness than Sloane, who probably saw only young specimens, that it is " plus grande que les deux autres. Son ecaille ne vaut rien. Sa chair n'est pas meilleure,elle est toujours maigre, filasseuse, coriace, et de mauvaise odeur. On ne laisse pas de la sailer pour les Negres, & qui tout est bon." It is, .perhaps, too much to say, that the tor- toiseshell of the loggerhead is entirely worthless, though it is comparatively valueless ; and, in- deed, that of the hawksbill is very inferior to the true article produced by Chelone imbricata. Labat tells us, that those who go to the turtle islands or other localities to fish for the green and hawksbill turtles, live on the flesh of turtles only for three or four months, without bread, without cassava with nothing, in short, but the fat and lean of those animals ; and he declares that, what- ever maladies these men may have when they set out upon this expedition, even if they should be affected with the most loathsome, they return per- fectly cured. 92 LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. He describes at some length the methods of capture. The first is, to watch them when they go to lay their eggs* in the sand, or when they come to reconnoitre ; and he says, that if their traces are observed on the sand, and the observer go to the same place on the seventeenth day after- wards, he will infallibly find the turtle come for the purpose of depositing her burden. She is then turned on her back, and, being unable to regain her usual position, is safe. But though a green turtle thus turned is secure, because her carapace is com- paratively flat, a hawksbill left in such a posture is no more safe than a galapagos tortoise when laid on its back, because the carapace of the hawksbill is more convex, and the animal itself more active ; the operator, therefore, after turning the turtle, places great stones round it, so as to counteract its efforts to regain its natural posture, or, as the hawksbill is only sought for its shell, the flesh being comparatively worthless, it is killed on the spot. The worthy father gives a hint to turtle-turners to beware of their jaws, for they bite, particularly the hawksbill, (caret,) furiously; and, if they can- not take out the piece, will not let go while they have life. The turtle-turners, therefore, carry a little bludgeon with them, with which they give the patient a rap on the head before they proceed to turn it. The second method of taking them is by strik- ing them with a sort of spear or harpoon (varre) when they come to the surface to breathe, or there lie asleep. The adventurers go at night gener- ally, where they have observed much cut turtle- grass floating, for that is a certain sign that the place is the haunt of turtles, who cut the grass in feeding, and some of it rises to the surface. The rest shall be told in the words of the graphic nar- rator : Celai qui tient la varre est sur le bout on la proue du canot. Le mot de varre est Espagnol, il signifie une gaule ou perche ; celle dont on se sert en cette peche est de sept a huit pieds de longueur et d'un bon pouce de diametre, a peu pres comme la hampe d'une halebarde. On fait entrer dans un des bouts un cloud carre" de sept a huit pouces de long y compris la douille dont il fait partie, cette douille a une boucle ou anneau de fer, ou simple- ment un trou, oil est attachee une longue corde proprement roulee sur 1'avant du canot, oil un des bouts est aussi attache, et la hampe est aussi at- tachee a une. autre petite corde dont le varreur tient un bout. Le varreur done e*tant debout sur 1'avant du canot, la varre a la main droite, examine tout autour de lui s'il voit paroitre quelque tortue, ce qui est assez ais6 dans la nuit, parce qu'on voit bouilloner la surface de 1'eau a 1'endroit oil la tor- tue veut lever la tete pour souffler, ou si la tortue dort sur 1'eau, ou qu'un male soit attache a une femelle, ce qu'on appelle un cavalage, Pecaille qui reluit et qui renechit la lumiere de la lune ou des e*toiles la lui fait appercevoir aussitot, a quoi on * According to Labat, a turtle of ordinary size lays as many as two hundred and fifty eggs, of the size of ten- nis-balls, and as round. The white, he says, never hardens, however lo z it may be submitted to cookery, hut th e yolk becomes hard, like that of the common fowl. doit ajouter que dans les nuits les plus obscurs, il reste toujours sur la surface de la terre et des eaux un peu de lumiere qui est suffisant a ceux qni se couchent sur le ventre pour voir a une distance assez considerable autour d'eux. Des qu'il apper- $oit la tortue, il marque avec le bout de sa varre a celui qui conduit le canot, le lieu oii il faut aller ; et quand il est a portee de la tortue il la varre, c'est a dire, il la frappe et la perce avec le cloud qui est ante dans la hampe. Aussitot que la tortue se sent blessee, elle fuit de toutes ses forces, et elle en- traine avec elle le canot avec une tres grande vio- lence ; le cloud qui est entre dans son ecaille ne la quitte pas, et le varreur qui a retire sa hampe, s'en sert pour enseigner a celui qui est a 1'arriere ou il doit gouverner. A pres qu'elle a bien couru les forces lui manquent, souvent meme elle etouffe faule de venir sur 1'eau pour respirer. Quand le varreur sent que la corde mollit, il la retire peu a peu dans le canot, et s'approchant ainsi de la tortue qu'il a fait revenir de 1'eau, morte ou extremement affaiblee, il la prend par une partie et son com- pagnon sur 1'autre et ils la mettent dans le canot, et en vont chercher une autre. II n'est pas necessaire qu'il y ait des ardillons au fer de la varre, ni que le varreur fasse entrer le fer gueres plus avant que 1'epaisseur de 1'ecaille, parce qu'aussitot que la tortue sent la douleur que le cloud lui fait en percant son ecaille, elle se resserre da telle fagon qu'on a bien plus de peine a retirer le cloud qu'on en avoit eu a le faire entrer. The great rapidity with which one of these rep tiles will run away with a boat ceases to be sur- prising when it is remembered that they are fre- quently found three feet and a half or four feet long, and two feet or two feet and a half wide, weighing three hundred pounds, and often more. Labat, who makes this observation, remarks that it is astonishing that wherever they are set down on land on their plastron, however distant they may be from the sea, to the sea they go without seek- ing about, without hesitation, and in the most direct line. The jolly Jesuit relates that he sometimes had the pleasure of bestriding a turtle with another person, when it carried them without difficulty, and sufficiently fast. Mais (he adds) c'est une voiture des plus rudes, car comme elle ne peut se soutenir sur ses quatre pattes toute a la fois, elle eleve le train de devant, et semble egratigner la terre en s'elangant, pendant que les pieds de derriere poussent en avant en fai- sant un effort qui produit un mouvement qui secoue et qui fatigue infiniment. He tells a story of an Indian, slave to M. de la Chardonniere. The slave was alone in a small canoe, fishing with a line, when he saw a turtle asleep on the surface of the sea. He quietly ap- proached, and passed a noose of a stout cord, which he chanced to have with him, round one of the pad- dles of the turtle, the other end of the cord being made fast to the bow of the canoe. The turtle awoke, and set off with all speed, and at first the Indian was under no apprehension at the rapidity with which he was carried out to sea. Sitting in the stern of his canoe, he steered with his paddle so as to avoid the waves, Hoping that the turtle would either get tired or be suffocated. But, alas ! LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. 93 he got capsized, or, as Jack says, turned the turtle, losing his paddle, his knife, and all his fishing tackle. Active as he was, he had all the difficulty in the world to right his canoe. While he was hard at work doing this, the turtle was acquiring fresh strength and vigor, and when he had righted his little bark it was soon upset again. In short, this happened nine or ten times within a day and two nights, during which he was towed by the turtle without the possibility of cutting or detach- ing the cord. At last this tartar of a turtle got tired, and, as good luck would have it, made for a shoal, where the Indian managed to kill it, being himself half dead with hunger, thirst, and fatigue. The third mode of capture noticed by Labat is by setting nets, colored red so that the turtles may not detect them, near the sandy shores where they go to lay their eggs ; and he was present when, in the evening, the nets were spread for a grande pcche. He describes the nature of their oil or fat to be so penetrating, that if it is placed on one side of the hand, and rubbed in with a hot cloth, it will make its way to the opposite side, and praises it as excellent for rheumatism. Catesby, in his Natural History of Canada, Flor- ida, and the Bahama Islands, says : The sea-tortoise is by our sailors vulgarly called turtle, whereof there are four distinct kinds ; the green .turtle, the hawksbill, the loggerhead turtle, and the trunk turtle. They are all eatable ; but the green turtle is that which all the inhabitants in America, that live between the tropics, subsist much upon. They much excel the other kinds of turtle, and are in great esteem for the wholesome and agreeable food they afford. Catesby was a good observer, and his informa- tion may be generally relied on. He tells us that all sorts of turtle, except the loggerhead, are tim- orous, and make little resistance when taken ; but that all the kinds during the season of love are very furious and regardless of danger. The male and female, he says, usually remain together about fourteen days. After describing the structure of the limbs as more fitted for swimming than walking, he remarks that .' .',,' They never go on shore but to lay their eggs, which is in April ; they then crawl up from the sea, above the flowing of high water, and dig a- hole above two feet deep in the sand, into which they drop in one night above an hundred eggs ; at which time they are so intent on nature's work, that they regard none that approach them, but will drop their eggs in a hat, if held under them ; but if they are disturbed before they begin to lay, they will forsake the place and seek another. They lay their eggs at three, and sometimes at four, differ- ent times, there being fourteen days between every time. * * When they have laid their complement of eggs, they fill the hole with sand, and leave them to be hatched by the heat of the sun, which is usu- ally performed in about three weeks. His description of the mode of capture varies little from that of Labat, except that he says noth- ing of nets. 7 The inhabitants of the Bahama Islands, by oftei practice, are very dexterous in catching them, par- ticularly the green turtle. In April they go ii> little boats to the coast of Cuba, and other neigh- boring islands, where, in the evening, especially in moonlight nights, they watch the going and return ing of the turtle to and from their nests ; at which time they turn them on their backs, where they leave them and proceed on turning all they meet, for they cannot get on their feet again when once turned. Some are so large that it requires three men to turn one of them. The way by which tur- tle are most commonly taken at the Bahama Islands, is by striking them with a small iron peg of two inches long ; this peg is put in a socket at the end of a staff twelve feet long. Two men usually set out for this work in a little light boat or canoe ; one to row and gently steer the boat, while the other stands at the head of it with his striker. The turtle are sometimes discovered by their swimming with their head and back out of the water ; but they are oftenest discovered lying at the bottom, a fathom or more deep. If the turtle perceives he is discovered, he starts up to make his escape ; the men in the boat pursuing him endeavor to keep sight of him, which they often lose, and recover again by the turtle putting his nose out of the water to breathe ; thus they pursue him, one paddling or rowing, while the other stands ready with his striker. It is sometimes half an hour before he is tired ; then he sinks at once to the bottom, which gives them an opportunity of striking him, which is by piercing the shell of the turtle through with the iron peg, which slips out of the socket, but is fastened by a string to the pole. If he is spent and tired by being long pursued, he tamely sub- mits when struck to be taken into the boat or hauled ashore. There are men who by diving will get on their backs, and by pressing down their hind part, and raising the fore part of them by force, bring them to the top of the water, while another slips a noose about their necks. There is nothing new under the sun. Hear Pliny through the quaint pen of Philemon Holland : Many waies the fishermen have to catch them, but especially in this manner ; they use in the morning, when the weather is calm and still, to flote aloft upon the water, with their backs to be seen all over ; and then they take such pleasure in breathing freely and at libertie that they forget themselves altogether ; insomuch as their shell in this time is so hardened and baked with the sun, that when they would they cannot dive and sinke under the water again, but are forced against their wills to flote above, and by that meanes are exposed as a prey unto the fishermen. Some say that they go forth in the night to land for to feed, where with eating greedily they be wearie ; so that in the morning, when they are returned again, they fall soon asleep above the water, and keepe such a snorting and routing in their sleepe, that they be- wray where they be, and so are easily taken ; and yet there must be three men about every one of them ; and when they have sworn unto the tor- toise, two of them turn him upon his backe, the third casts accord or halter about him, as hee lyeth with his belly upward, and then is he haled by many more together to the land. In the South Seas skilful divers get under the turtles, and surprise them when so floating. The spirit-stirring salmon-hunt in Redgauntlet 96 LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. sea-tortoises, must be reminded that the sphargis, as its name implies,* is so far from being mute, that it utters sounds very near akin to the bellow- ings of distress when entangled in the fatal net, OT oppressed with wounds. The carapace and plastron, with its longitudinal, string-like lines or ribs, may have suggested the lyrical name accord- ed to the species. We have said enough to put those hungry gentlemen on their guard who may feel disposed to consign it to the tureen. It at- tains a great size. Individuals weighing 700 and 800 pounds have been taken on our coasts. These were stragglers ; but instances are on rec- ord of their having been captured, temptingly fat, of the weight of 1500 or 1600 pounds. Nor do some of the species of chelone stop at that point with which the lovers of turtle are familiar. Some of that genus have been taken with a cara- pace measuring nearly seven feet in length, and more than fifteen feet in circumference ; and have turned the scale against from 800 to 900 pounds. When first hatched, the shells of the young turtles are said to be comparatively imperfect, and the little animals have a blanched appearance. Their welcome upon emerging into the light, as they swarm out of the sand like ants from an ant- hill, is but a rough one ; and few young animals are surrounded with more dangers. They in- stinctively make for the sea, but their numbers are greatly reduced by predatory birds and other enemies before it is reached ; and there and then the hungry fishes wait for them open-mouthed. Still, as in the case of all other races, the issue of the battle of life is in their favor, till the species dies out, like the extinct colossochelys, (Falconer,) whose weight must have been something enor- mous, or, like that chimera-like form of the ancient world, in which Nature seems freakishly to have united the sauto-chelysian, or half-lizard, half- tortoise shape, with the canines of a walrus.f The testudinata figure largely in the ancient pharmacopoeia, and they seem to have a claim to the patronage of the deities of health equal, at least, to that of the serpents. They must, more- over, have been the terror of the Canidias of the time. The flesh of land-tortoises serveth wel in per- fumes and suffumigations, for so it is as good as a countercharm to put by and repell all sorceries and inchantments ; a singular counterpoison also to resist any venome whatsoever. Great store of tor- toises be found in Affricke ; where they use to cut away the head and feet, and then employ the rest of the body as a soveraigne remedy against all poysons. Tortoise pottage appears to have rivalled viper brtth : If their flesh be eaten together with the broth wherein they are sodden, it is held to be very good fer to discusse and scatter the wens called the King's Evil, and to dissipat or resolve the hard- Sifaqayita, to otter a loud sound or roar, t Dicynodon. Discovered by A. G. Bain, Esq.. in sandstone rocks at the south-eastern extremity of Africa ; named and described by Professor Owen in Trans. Geol. Soc., vol. vii., part 2. nesse of the swelled spleene ; likewise to cure the falling sicknes, and to drive away the fits thereof. The bloud of tortoises clarifieth the eyesight and dispatcheth the cataracts, if they be anointed there- with. Many incorporat the said bloud in meale, and keep them reduced into the forme of pils ; which, when need requireth, they give in wine as a present help for the poyson of all serpents, spiders, and such like, yea, and the venom of toads. The gail of tortoises mixt with Atticke hony, serveth to cure the fiery rednesse of the eyes, if they be anointed therewith ; the same is good to be dropt into the wounds inflicted by the prick of scorpions. The ashes of the tortoise shel incorporat with wine and oile, and so wrought into a salve, heals the chaps and ulcers of the feet. These are but a few of the miracles of healing effected by the application of this panacea of the Roman apothecary's shop. Nor are the remedies incorporated in the tur- tles the " sea-tortoises" a whit less powerful or numerous. We spare the catalogue of cures, which those who are curious may read in the marvellous pages of him who has been called the martyr of nature ; only out of our benevolence, and by way of throwing those numerous specifics for the toothache that adorn those towering nuis- ances, the advertising vans, into the shade, in- forming the afflicted that, " Whosoever rubbeth their teeth with tortoise bloud, and use so to do a whole yeare together" remember that " shal be freed from the pain thereof for ever."* The ancient mariner not Coleridge's believed that the foot of a tortoise put on board would stop the way of the ship ; and the housewife of other days had no doubt that the shell of a tortoise placed on the pot as it simmered over the fire would prevent it from boiling over. The tortoise of ancient fable was sufficiently sage, except when he prevailed on the eagle to give him a lesson in flying, and suffered accord- ingly. To say nothing of his race with the hare, he was eminently reflective as well as persevering. And though he was tempted to murmur at first when he saw the lithe and leaping frogs clearing at a bound a space which cost him long and sore travel, as he dragged himself and his shell along upon the earth when he saw the eel and king stork at work upon them, and how their unarmed bodies exposed them to the stones thrown by a mere child, he repented and said " How much better to bear the weight of this shielding shell, than to be subject to so many forms of wounds and death." And when he beheld lo dancing a frantic hornpipe to the tune of a gadfly, did he not hug himself, and glancing at his panoply, exclaim " I don't care for flies ?"f To be sure, he was at times more honest than polite ; as when, on receiving Jove's command to meet the rest of animated nature on the occasion of his nuptials with Juno, he returned the some- what ungracious answer oTxos roduced ; but when the animal is shut up, deprived if free air and impoverished, the circulation be- omes sluggish, the vessels are not well filled, and he languid chameleon changes to a yellow-green, which continues during its imprisonment. Others, the late Sir John Barrow for instance, have observed that, previous to a change, the chameleon makes a long inspiration, when the >ody is inflated so as to appear twice its usual size, and, as the inflation subsides, the change of color is gradually manifested, the only permanent marks being two small dark lines along the sides ; and it has been argued, from this description, that he reptile owes its varied tints to the influence of oxygen. Mr. Houston is also of opinion that the ihange depends on the state of turgescency of the skin ; and Mr. Spittal regards it as connected with respiration and the state of the lungs. Theories upon theories, as varied as the tints which they profess to explain, have been broached to account "or these changes ; but, without dwelling longer upon them, let us turn to the solution of M. Milne Edwards, who, in an elaborate paper published in the Annales des Sciences Naturelles for January, 1834, came to the conclusion that the color of chameleons does not depend essentially on the greater or less inflation or expansion of their jodies, or the changes which might thence take >lace in the circulation or condition of the blood ; nor on the distance between the several tubercles or granules of the skin ; but, at the same time, he does not deny that those circumstances may prob- ably exercise some influence. He shows that there exist in the skin of these reptiles two layers of membranous pigment, one above the other, but so disposed as to appear simultaneously under the cutici<;, and sometimes in such a manner that the one may be hidden by the other ; and he insists that everything remarkable in the changes of the chameleon's color may be explained by the ap- pearance of the pigment of the lower layer to an extent more or less considerable in the midst of the pigment of the upper layer, or by its disap- pearance beneath that layer. That these displace- ments of the lower pigment do actually occur he proves, and he derives from those facts the proba- ble consequence that the chameleon's color changes, not only during life, but that it may vary after death. He also observes, that there is a close analogy between the mechanism which causes the changes of color in these lacertians and that which governs the appearance and disappearance of col- ored spots in the mantles of several of the cephal- opods or cuttles. So long ago as July, 1819, Signer Giosu Sangiovanni read to the Royal Academy of Sci- ences at Naples his able and interesting paper, intituled Descrizione di un particolare Sistema di Organi, e de* Fenomeni cA' esso produce ; scoverto ne 1 Molluschi Cefalopodi, in which he described the LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. 113 structure and properties of the colorific stratum of the skin of the cephalopoda, upon which the observations of M. Milne Edwards are in a great measure based. Professor Owen quotes it in his admirable article " Cephalopoda," in the Cyclo- peedia of Anatomy and Physiology ; and, as this part of the organization of those mollusks is the key to the changes of color in the chameleon, those who are interested in the subject may like to see a brief account of the mechanism by which the changes are effected in the marine animals. The epidermis of the cephalopods generally forms a thick, white, semi-transparent, elastic, external layer, which is easily detached by macer- ation. Professor Owen remarks, that the color- ific stratum of the integument forms, both in its structure and vital phenomena, one of the most curious and interesting parts of the organization of this singular class of animals, and that the nature of this layer, when thoroughly understood, may be expected to elucidate the mysterious opera- tions of light in producing and affecting the colors of animals. This stratum, which is analogous to the rete mucosum which gives color, or " com- plexion," as it is termed, to man, consists, he observes, of a very lax and fine vascular and nervous cellular tissue, containing an immense number of small closed vesicles, which vary in relative sizes in different species. These vesicles are of a flattened oval or circular form, and con- tain a fluid in which a denser coloring matter is suspended. The color is not always identical in all the vesicles, but, in general, corresponds more or less closely with the tint of the secretion of the ink-bag with which this race is furnished as a protection ; for, as is known to all who have observed their habits, their first act when surprised is to eject this inky fluid, succus nigrce. loliginis, that they may escape under cloud of the discolored water. In the common cuttle, Sepia, besides the vesicles which correspond to the ink in the color of their contents, there is another series of an ochre color. In the common pen-and-ink fish, Loligo vulgaris, there are three sorts of colored vesicles, yellow, rose-red, and brown. In Loligo sagitlata there are four kinds saffron, red, black- ish, and bluish. The paper Nautilus, Argonauta Argo, possesses vesicles of all colors, which have been observed in other cephalopods, and hence the variety and change of color which its skin presents when exposed to the light. The rest of this in- teresting organization will be best conveyed in the professor's own words : These vesicles have no visible communication either with the vascular or the nervous systems, or with each other ; yet they exhibit during the life- time of the animal, and long after death, rapid alternating contractions and expansions. If, when the animal is in a state of repose, and the vesicles are contracted and invisible, the skin be slightly touched, the colored vesicles show themselves, and in an instant, or sometimes with a more gradual motion, the color will be accumulated like a cloud or a blush upon the irritated surface. If a portion of the skin be removed from the body and immersed in sea-water, the lively contractions of the vesicles continue ; when viewed in this state under the microscope by means of transmitted light, the edges of the vesicles are seen well defined, and to pass in their dilatations and contractions over or under one another. If the separated portion of integu- ment be placed in the dark, and examined after a lapse of ten or fifteen minutes, all motion has ceased ; but the vesicles, when reexposed to a moderately strong light, soon, in obedience to that stimulus, recommence their motions. As the vibra- tile microscopic cilia have been recently traced through the higher classes of the animal kingdom, it is not an unreasonable conjecture that equally inexplicable motions of the coloring parts of the integument may also be detected in other classes than that in which we have just described them, and thus a clue may be obtained towards the expla- nation of the influence of geographical position OB the prevailing colors of the animal kingdom. This is a most seducing and interesting subject, well worthy of consideration and further experi- ment ; but at present we must return to our chameleons. Just see how admirably the adapta- tion is carried on throughout. The free foot, formed in some of the other lacertians for running nimbly over the sand or through the herbage, with the aid of the disposition of the other limb bones, is here changed into an organ essentially prehensile. The two wrist-bones, which are next to those of the forearm, are articulated upon one central piece, which receives the five bones that correspond to th metacarpal. Three of these are for the anterior toes, and two for the posterior ; and the whole five finger bones are bundled up in the integuments to the claws, three in the fore bundle and two in the hind bundle, forming a most efficient clinging instrument when applied to the branch of a tree. The toes of the hinder extremities are disposed in the same oppos- able manner. The creature in its natural state, planted firmly among the foliage, and holding tenaciously on by its feet and tail, varying its color at pleasure in the chequered light and shade, looks more like an excrescence of the tree than an animated being ;* and woe to the luckless insect that, deceived by appearances, ventures within reach of its unerring tongue ! For, though the shortness of its neck and its enormous occiput for- bid it to turn its head, which it can no more do than a carp or a codfish, the sweep of its vision is very great. Take up a chameleon's skull, and observe how large a space is occupied by the orbits. In these capacious receptacles ample room is afforded for the large globe and the muscles which are to direct it. The pupil looks like an ani- mated gem set in shagreen, and this versatile globe is capable of the most varied and extensive direo- tion. This, as worthy Dr. Goddard says, " she turneth backward or any way, without moving her * The Tarandus of Pliny will occur to those of our readers who are conversant with his wonderful maga- zine, where the beast is described as being as big as an ox, and when he pleaseth, assuming the color of an ass. But this is a small sample of his versatility, for "he reflects the colors of all shrubs, trees, flowers, and of the place where he lies, and hiding himself from fear, he is on that account very rarely taken." Nat. Hist. viii. 34. 114 LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. head ; and ordinarily the one a contrary or quite different way from the other." But (as another old writer observes) what is most extraordinary in this motion is to see one of the eyes move whilst the other remains immovable ; and the one to turn forward, at the same time that the other looketh behind ; the one to look up to the sky, when the other is fixed on the ground. And these motions to be so extreme, that they do carry the pupilla under the crest which makes the eye- brow, and so far into the canthi, or corners of the yes, that the sight can discern whatever is done just behind it, and directly before, without turning the head, which is fastened to the shoulders. The vermiform tongue of the woodpecker is known to most who have shot one, and the same organ is the principal agent by which the chame- leon takes its prey. Like that of the woodpecker, the tongue of the chameleon can be protruded to a considerable length. In the reptile, this organ is projected in a cylindrical and apparently erectile state from the sheath at the lower part of the mouth, where it remains when at rest, to the length of half-a-foot, and returns with a fly or other insect adhering to its glutinous tip, when the prey is secured within the teeth, which have no true roots, their trilobated crowns appearing to be soldered upon the edge of the upper part of a groove hollowed in the maxillary bone, and looking like an enamelled and denticulated finish to that edge. I have frequently seen chameleons take their food, although I never could succeed in inducing my own to break its fast. When one of them is about to feed, it rolls its shagreen eyeball till the pupil is brought to bear upon the intended victim. Motionless and patient, the reptile waits till the insect arrives within distance. Then the exten- sile tongue is protruded with unfailing aim pre- cisely to the extent required, and is retracted with the prey. I have seen them take mealworms frequently. When two mealworms were placed before a chameleon, one on one side and one on the other, at different distances, the eye of each side was levelled at the adjacent insect; and though the eyes were necessarily looking in dif- ferent directions, the tongue did its duty upon both one after the other, when they came within reach The motion of extension and retraction was no very rapid, but it must be remembered that those seen by me were in confinement in this country. So extraordinary a shape was not likely to be passed over by the ancients without attributes as odd as the animal itself ; and Democritus seems to have revelled in the marvellous qualities possessec by its several parts. Thus, we are told that thii remarkable tongue, ' ; pulled out of the head whiles the chamaeleon is quicke, promiseth good successe in judicial! trials" in compliment, doubtless, tc the lawyers, who Can with ease Change words and meanings as they please, but are as unerring as the chameleon's organ ir securing the substantial part of the litigation. There is not a creature in the world thought more fearefull than it ; which is the reason of that mutability whereby it turneth into such varietie of olors ; howbeit of exceeding great power against ill the sortes of hawkes or birds of prey ; for, by eport, let them fly and soar never so high over the hamaeleon, there is an attractive vertue that will etch them downe, so as they shall fall upon the hamaeleon, and yeeld themselves willingly as a srey to be torne, mangled, and devoured by other beasts. Pliny, who quotes the Greek, goes on to in- brm us that the same Democritus Telleth us a tale, that if one burne the head and hroat of the chamaeleon in a fire made of oken wood, there will immediately arise tempests of rainy stormes and thunder together ; and the liver will do as much (saith he) if it burne upon the tiles of an house. As for all the other vertues which he said author ascribe th to the chamaeleon, be- :ause they smell of witchcraft, and I hold them meere lies, I will overpasse them all, unlesse they >e some few for which he deserveth well to be aughed at, and would indeed be reproved by no other means better. And yet the critic, in his eighth book, gravely nforms us, that " the raven, when he hath killed the chamseleon, and yet perceiving that he is hurt and poisoned by him, flieth for remedy to the iaurell, and with it represseth and extinguishetn the venom that he is infected withal 1." Others relate that if a crow tasted the flesh of the reptile tie was a gone crow. Nevertheless, it is recorded that the inhabitants of Cochin China find them good meat by a pro- cess of cookery, however, somewhat similar to that directed by Mizald, when he instructs his scholars " how to roast and eat a goose alive," and, after dwelling upon every particular of the diabolical process, winds up by declaring that " it is mighty pleasant to behold!" The hapless chameleons were brought, we are told, to the Cochin Chinese market tied together in a string. The purchasers took them home, made a fine clear fire, unbound their chameleons, and then put them into the burning fiery furnace, where they at first endeavored to walk on the glowing coals, but overcome with agony fell down, were well broiled, taken out, their skins pulled off, and their caro candidissima minced fine, stewed in butter, and served up ; idque epularum genus apud ipsos in lautissimis amis commendatur. Ude was but a plagiarist in the matter of eels, after all. It may be worth knowing in these days of semi-Thuggism, which throw those of the Mo- hocks into the shade, that " the right forefoot of a chamaeleon hanged fast to the left arm within the skin of a hyaena, is singular against the perils and dangers by thieves and robbers ; as also to skar away hobgoblins and night spirits. In like manner, whosoever carry about them the right pap of this beast, may bee assured against al fright and feare." Talk of fernseed for invisibility Democ- ritus will tell you that " the left foote they use to torrifie in an oven with the herb called also cha- LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. 115 maeleon, and with some convenient ointment or liquor to make in certain trosches, whereof if a man do carry any in a box of wood about him he shall go invisible." In case of invasion, it is satisfactory to know that " whosoever hath about him the right shoulder of the chamaeleon, shall bee able to overthrow his adversarie at the barre, and to vanquish his enemie in the field ;" and we recommend this hint to Sir Francis Head for his second edition ; but remem- ber that, first, " hee must be sure to cast away and make riddance of the strings and sinews be- longing thereto, and to tread them under foot." In the ancient pharmacopeia, the chameleon was a perfect repertory of remedies. " Take the ashes," quoth Democritus, " of the left thigh or foot, chuse you whether, incorporate the same with the milke of a sow, and therewith annoint the feet, it wil be an occasion speedily to bring the gout upon them." Doctors differed then, as they do now, for the learned Trallianus prepared from it a most certain medicine for driving the gout away. But however this may be, " of the chamaeleon's gall, for the most part, folk are in manner verily persuaded, that it will rid the pin and web, the cataract also of the eies, with three daies anointing ; chase away serpents if it be dropped into the fire ; gather all wezils in a country to- gether, only by throwing it into the water ; and fetch offhaire if the body be anointed therewith." The catalogue might be extended voluminously ; but these few prescriptions will suffice for those who are not anxious to penetrate into the depths of the sanitary and other mysteries of Democritus and Co. That zoologists should have considered this form as isolated, aberrant as it appears to be from the general lacertian structure, cannot be matter of surprise. It seems to stand alone ; but if we closely examine its organization, we shall find that the apparent isolation is merely a modification of different parts adapted to the wants of the ani- mal, and that the sessile chamaeleon is as much a lizard as the nimble Lacerta agilis that vanishes from the sunbeam wherein it is basking before the dazzled eye of the intruder has well made out its colors. The form of the extremities throughout the tribe is exactly fitted to the condition to which it has pleased the Great Disposer to call them, and these conditions we find gradually altered, now dwindling,* now the front pair vanishing,! then the posterior pair obliterated with the front pair tolerably developed,^ till, at last, the whole of the extremities disappear ; and, in the innocent but much-persecuted blind-worm,^ we have a lizard in an entirely serpentine form. * Chamaesaura. t Bipes. t Chirotes. Anguis fragilis. I have frequently seen this in- nocuous animal put to death as the most poisonous of serpents. The answer to my remonstrances has been that I "knew nothing about it; an adder was bad enough, but this was an asker, with more poison in him than all the rest put together. No one that he bites ever recovers." This last assertion was not far from the truth ; for the harmless creature never bites except what it eats insects and worms. Nature is inexhaustible. The wizard conquered the indefatigable demon who "split Eildon Hills in three" in one night, by tasking him to make ropes of sea-sand. According to the usual natural instruments of progression, the task of endowing a creature with rapid motion on the ground without external feet or wings seems hardly less hopeless. Those who have seen a snake rapidly vanish among the herbage, or climb the side of a dry ditch, and escape among the thorns of the hedge, will allow that the task has been most efficiently performed. And how ? There is a great deal of geometrical neatness and nicety in the sinuous motion of snakes and other serpents, (says good Mr. Derham, canon of Wind- sor, and rector of Upminster, in Essex ;) for the assisting in which action, the annular scales under their body are very remarkable, lying cross the belly, contrary to what those in the back and the rest of the body do ; also, as the edges of the fore- most scales lie over the edges of their following scales ; so as that when each scale is drawn back, or set a little upright by its muscle, the outer edge thereof, (or foot, it may be called,) is raised also a little from the body, to lay hold on the earth, and so promote and facilitate the serpent's motion. This is what may be easily seen in the slough of the belly of the serpent kind. But there is another admirable piece of mechanism, that my antipathy to those animals hath prevented my prying into ; and that is, that every scale hath a distinct muscle, one end of which is tacked to the middle of its scale ; the other, to the upper edge of its following scale. This, Dr. Tyson found in the rattle-snake, and I doubt not is in the whole tribe. Certainly ; and Tyson and others, who either had not the Rev. W. Derham's antipathy or con- quered it, did not stop at externals, but went a little deeper into the matter. Blasius remarks that the knots of the vertebr of the viper are shorter towards the head, and hence that reptile can easily bend itself both back- wards and sideways. Tyson observes, in his Anatomy of the Rattlesnake, when treating of the vertebrae and the other curious articulations, that the round ball in the lower part of the upper ver- tebra? enters a socket of the upper part of the lower vertebrae, " like as the head of the osfemo- ris doth the acetabulurn of the 05 ischii ; by which contrivance, as also the articulation with one an- other, they have that free mouon of winding their bodies any way." In the skeleton of the largest python in th museum of the Royal College of Surgeons of England, which measures sixteen feet six inches in length, there are three hundred and forty-eight vertebrae. Of these two hundred and seventy-nine support free or movable ribs, the rest are caudal ver- tebrae. When the serpent begins to advance, the ribs of the opposite sides are drawn apart from each other, and the small cartilages at the end of them are bent upon the upper surfaces of the abdominal scuta, on which the ends of the ribs rest. The ribs move in pairs, and the scute under each pair is necessarily carried along with it. The scute lays hold of the 116 LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. ground by its posterior edge, and becomes a fixed point for renewed progression. Sir Everard Home, who gives this description of the serpent's motion, remarks that it is beautifully seen in climbing over an angle to get upon a flat surface ; and so it is. Nor will the observer find many species, not even excepting the pythons and boas, in which it is very well seen, where this subcu- ticular multipedous mode of going through the world is more visibly manifested than in the puff adders.* But Sir Everard justly says, that the large abdominal scuta of the boa may be considered as hoofs or shoes, best fitted for this kind of pro- gressive motion. Sir Everard further shows that there are five sets of muscles which bring the ribs forward. One set goes from the transverse process of each vertebra to the rib immediately behind it, which rib is attached to the next vertebra. The next set starts from the rib a little way from the spine, just where the former terminates, passes over two ribs, sending a slip to each, and is inserted into the third ; a slip also connects it with the next succeeding muscle. Under this comes the third set arising from the posterior side of each rib, and passes over two ribs, sending a lateral slip to the next muscle, being inserted into the . third rib behind it. The fourth set passes from one rib over the next. The fifth set goes from rib to rib. Within, the apparatus is not less beautifully adjusted. On the inside of the chest a strong set of muscles is attached to the anterior surface of each vertebra, and passes obliquely forwards over four ribs, to be inserted nearly in the middle of the fifth. Then comes from each rib a strong flat muscle advancing on each side before the viscera, to form the abdominal muscles, and unites in a middle tendon. Thus, the lower half of each rib, which is beyond the origin of this muscle, and only laterally connected to it by loose cellular membrane, is external to the belly of the animal, and is employed for the purpose of progression ; while the half of each rib next the spine, as far as the lungs extend, is made ancillary to respiration. At the termination of each rib is a small cartilage, corresponding in shape to the rib, and tapering to the point. The cartilages of the opposite ribs are not connected, so that when the ribs are drawn outwards by the muscles, they are separated, and rest their whole length on the inner surface of the abdominal scutes, to which they are connected by a set of short muscles, and they have also a con- nexion with the cartilages of the neighboring ribs by means of a set of short straight muscles. Endo\ ?d with this apparatus, the serpent, when moving, is altered in shape, from a circular or oval form to one approaching a triangular figure, the surface on the ground forming the base. But before Sir Everard entered into this inquiry, Sir Joseph Banks, with that instinctive acuteness which belonged to him, had remarked, as he watched a snake moving briskly along the carpet, thai na itiought he saw the ribs come forward, in * Clotho arietans. succession, like the feet of a caterpillar. Thin remark led Sir Everard to examine the reptile's motion with more attention. He put his hand under the serpent's belly, and while the snake was in the act of passing over his palm, he dis- tinctly felt the ends of the ribs pressing upon it, in regular succession, so as to leave no doubt on his mind that the ribs, forming so many pairs of levers, were the instruments by which the animal moved its body from place to place. Those who have crippled a common snake or a viper with a blow of a stick have seen how easily this beautiful machinery may be mutilated and rendered useless. When his nurse, by way of preventing her charge from straying into a copse, told him that snakes were there, the young Lion of the North said, " Then give me a switch, that I may go in and kill them all." The larger and con- stricting serpents are protected by the great mass of muscle from dislocation or injury of the spine by such a sudden stroke, but even they are com- pelled to relax their folds by a superior force. As Mr. Gordon Gumming was examining the spoor of the game by a South African fountain, he suddenly detected an enormous old rock-snake stealing in beneath a mass of rock beside him, not quite so large, perhaps, as that exhibited in the time of Augustus at Rome, and which Suetonius tells us was fifty cubits in length ; but still a ser- pent of very formidable dimensions. He was (says the hunter) truly an enormous snake ; and having never before dealt with this species of game, I did not exactly know how to set about capturing him. Being very anxious to pre- serve the skin entire, and not wishing to have re- course to my rifle, I cut a stout and tough stick, about eight feet long, and having lightened myself of my shooting-belt, I commenced the attack. Seiz- ing him by the tail, I tried to get him out of his place of refuge ; but I hauled in vain. He only drew his large folds firmer together ; I could not move him. At length I got a rheim round one of his folds, about the middle of his body, and Klein- boy and I commenced hauling away in good earnest. The snake, finding the ground too hot for him, re- laxed his coils, and suddenly bringing round his head to the front he sprang out at us like an arrow, with his immense and hideous mouth opened to its largest dimensions, and, before I could get out of his way, he was clean out of his hole, and made a second spring, throwing himself forward about eight or ten feet, and snapping his horrid fangs within a foot of my naked legs. Very fortunate for Mr. Gumming it was that the serpent did not succeed in fastening on him ; if it had done so, he would most undoubtedly have been encircled in its deadly embrace. Once with- in the constricting folds, Kleinboy would hardly have succeeded in extricating him alive, and we might never have seen one of the most stirring books published of late years. Our Nimrod, however, sprang out of his way, and getting hold of the green oough he had cut, he returned to the charge : The snake now glided along at top speed ; he knew the ground well, and was making for a mass LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. 117 of broken rocks, where he would have been beyond my reach, but before he could gain this place of refuge I caught him two or three tremendous whacks on the head. He, however, held on, and gained a pool of muddy water, which he was rapidly crossing, when I again belabored him, and at length reduced .his pace to a stand. We then hanged him by the neck to a bough of a tree, and in about fifteen minutes he seemed dead, but he again became very troublesome during the operation of skinning, twist- ing his body in all manner of ways. This serpent measured fourteen feet. There is no amount of torture that man aye, and woman too, will not inflict on an animal that does not cry out. If the eels, which the fish-wife or the cook skins with so much unconcern, could express their agonies audibly, nothing would in- duce either of those delicate females to continue the horrible and merciless operation ; but the eels are mute, and suffer accordingly. Two works of art, ancient and modern, rise before us ; one in all the simplicity and purity of marble ; the other glowing with all the enchant- ment of color. In the one, the agonized priest of Apollo and his hapless children vainly struggle in the folds of the serpents : Laocoonta petunt : et primum parva duorum Corpora natorum serpens amplexus uterque Implicat, et miseros morsu depascitur artus. Post ipsum auxilio subeuntem ac tela fereutem Corripiunt, spirisque ligant ingentibus ; et jam Bis medium amplexi, bis collo squamea circum Terga dati superant capite et cervicibus altis. Ille simul manibus tendit divellere nodos, Perfuses sanie vittas atroque veneno ; Clamores simul horrendos ad sidera tollit. In -that marvellous group, All made out of the carver's brain, the serpents are so represented, that the spectator feels that there is no hope for the victims. The very opposite, of it appears in the subject made musical by the exquisite Doric reed of Theocritus, and brought in all its grandeur before the eye by the bold and beautiful pencil of our own Reynolds. In the idyll of the Greek,* opening with one of the most charming material scenes and good nights ever presented to the imagination , the serpents are made to relax their folds when the spines of their backs waxed weary under the killing grasp of the Infant Hercules ; and in the British picture you see at once that they are dying, overcome by the vigor of the son of Jupiter. But as long as the locomotive machinery is in good order, the sinuous, graceful windings of the serpent, joined to the bright hues with which the skin of the majority of the species is enamelled, make it a pleasing object to those who can over- come the natural antipathy felt by so many at their presence, and incline them to sympathize with the Indian girl Stay, stay, thou lovely, fearful snake, Nor hide thee in yon darksome brake ; But let me oft thy form review, torra. x, 1, Thy sparkling eyes and golden hue ; From thence a chaplet shall be wove To grace the youth I dearest love. Then, ages hence, when thou no more Shalt glide along the sunny shore, Thy copied beauties shall be seen ; Thy vermeil red and living green In mimic folds thou shall display ; Stay, lovely, fearful adder stay ! To be sure, poets, as well as doctors, differ ; and Coleridge, in " that singularly wild and beau- tiful poem," tells us that A snake's small eye blinks dull and sly. And dull it is sometimes, but only before moulting, for the skin of the cornea comes off with the rest of the slough. When the serpent comes out in its new coat, with its bright eye and elegant action, it is as different from its former self as Talley- rand in solitary dishabille was from Talleyrand dressed in a brilliant assembly, through whose crowded mazes he would wind his way, his very lameness lending grace to his gently undulating progress. Those who define a serpent as an apod, or foot- less animal, carry their definition too far. The large constricting serpents, and not only those, hut eryx and tortrix, are furnished with the rudi- ments of hinder extremities, which appear to have escaped the notice of Sir Everard Home, but did not escape that of Dr. Mayer. Observing the spur, or nail, on each side of the vent in the bo'idce, the doctor examined further, and found it to be a true nail, in the cavity of which is a little semi-cartilaginous bone, ungual phalanx, articu- lated with another much better developed bone, which is concealed under the skin. This second bone of the rudimentary foot presented an external thick condyle, with which the ungual phalanx was articulated, and was furnished besides with a smaller internal apophysis. Proceeding in his investigation, he laid bare a rudimentary tibia with its muscles, and made out a complete pos- terior limb, such as it was, the foot being furnished with its abductor and adductor muscles. Upon these elements he founded his Phcenopoda, a family of Ophidians, having the rudiments of a foot visible externally, containing the genera boa, python, eryx, and tortrix. The author of the article " Boa," in the Penny Cydopcedia, where the details of this curious dis- covery are given, observes, that no one can read of the habits of these reptiles in a state of nature without perceiving the advantage which they gain, when, holding on by their tails on a tree, their heads and bodies in ambush, and half-floating on some sedgy river, they surprise the thirsty animal that seeks the stream. These hooks help the serpent to maintain a fixed point ; they become a fulcrum, which .gives a double power to his energies. We need not go to the Valley of Diamonds with Sinbad to find enormous serpents. The companions of other sailors have bee,n swallowed up by those monstrous reptiles, as was too clearly proved to the crew of the Malay proa, who an- 118 LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. chored for the night close to the island of Celebes. One of the party went on shore to look for betel- nut, and, on returning from his search, stretched his wearied limbs to rest on the beach, where he fell asleep, as his companions believed. They were roused in the middle of the night by his screams, and hurried on shore to his assistance. But they came too late. A monstrous snake had crushed him to death. All they could do was to wreak their vengeance on his destroyer, whose head they cut off, and bore it with the body of their shipmate to their vessel. The marks of the teeth of the serpent, which was about thirty feet in length, were impressed on the dead man's right wrist, and the disfigured corpse showed that it had been crushed by constriction round the head, neck, breast, and thigh. When the snake's jaws were extended, they admitted a body the size of a man's head. By great Apollo's arm the python slain, O'er many a rood lay stretch'd upon the plain. Latona's son did his work with the graceful ease of a divinity oh, that the work of Leontius* had been spared to us ! but the mortals who were opposed by the enormous python near Utica had a very different task to perform : Well knowne it is that Attilius Regulus, generall under the Romans during the wars against the Carthaginians, assailed a serpent near the river Bagrada,f which carried in length 120 foot ; and before he could conquer him was driven to discharge upon him arrows, quarrels, stones, bullets, and such- like shot, out of brakes, slings, and other engines of artillery, as if he had given assault to some strong warlike towne ; the proofe whereof was to be seen by the marks remaining in his skin and chawes, which, until the war of Numantia, remained in a temple or conspicuous place of Rome. But, though vanquished, the monster had his revenge ; for his huge carrion and corrupt gore so polluted the air and waters that his conquerors were obliged to move their camp, not, however, without taking his skin with them as spolia opima. General Peter Both made a better thing of it with a great Indian python, for he and his friends feasted on a magnificent wild boar, which the enemy had pouched just before its defeat and death-! The African or Asiatic pythons may have been in the eye of the sculptor of the Laocoon, but the models may have existed nearer home, " for that * This "famous imageur," as Philemon Holland calls him, who "expressed lively in brasse," executed, among other bronzes, "one Apollo playing upon his harpe ; as also another Apollo, and the serpent killed with his arrowes, which image he surnamed Dicaeus, i. e. t just ; for that when the city of Thebes was won by Alexander the Great, the gold which he hid in the bosome thereof when hee fled, was found there safe and not diminished, when the enemy was gone and he returned." t Some write " Bagradas " and "Magradas" (Me- jerda). t Bontius. Regulus was not the only great captain who had to encounter other than human enemies. It was, no doubt, very smart to say, Philip fought men, but Alexander women, we see in Italy other serpents named boae, so big and huge, that in the daies of the Emperor Clau- dius, there was one of them killed in the Vaticane, within the belly whereof there was found an infant all whole."* Europe is separate from Africa by no very wide gulf It is a narrow strait, You can see the blue hills over ; and the character of some of the vegetation of the south reminds the observer of that of Africa. But to see the true boae in their native forests we must cross the Atlantic ; and those who are not familiar with the story may have no objection to learn how Captain Stedman fared in an encounter with one twenty-two feet and some inches in length, during his residence in Surinam. whatever injustice there may have been in a sarcasm so dearly paid for; but, without standing up for the bravery of the men he conquered on their own soil men who fought valiantly pro aris et focis, Philip's son, according to Vincentius, was sorely beset by monsters as well as men. To say nothing of the "Hippodami," which rushed upon and devoured his troops as they were passing the Indian river, when, in indignation at those who had led his Macedonians into such peril without proper precautions, he ordered a hundred and fifty of his generals to be thrown into the stream, where the hippodami aforesaid did execu- tion upon them -justa peena afecerunt to say nothing of that episode, his soldiers had other horrors to con- front. His camp was pitched near a lake, and the weary Greeks were reposing after the heavy fatigues of the day, when, at the rising of the moon, down came an army of scorpions for their accustomed night- draught. They were followed by a host of cerastes and other serpents, of all sizes and colors, some red. some black, some white, and others glittering like gold. ' The whole country resounded with their hiss- ings. The affrighted soldiers threw themselves in- stinctively into the serried phalanx, and with their spears and shields crushed and pierced the invaders, and the light troops plied them with fire. After a fight of about two hours, some of the reptiles were killed, some got their drink, and the survivors, to the joy of the troops, departed to their hiding-places. Then, up to the third hour of the night, the garrison had a little rest, when down came immense serpents, as long and as big as columns, with two or three heads apiece. With these the Macedonians fought for more than an hour not by Shrewsbury clock and routed them, but not without the loss of thirty slaves and twenty soldiers. After the departure of the ser- pents appeared enormous crabs, with shells like crocodiles. Many of these were burnt, but many fought their way into the lake. The harassed troops now began to hope that their troubles were, for the present, ended, when down came white lions as big as bulls, great boars, lynxes, tigers, and horrible pan- thers ; and as soon as they were driven off, an army of bats as big as pigeons was about their ears. But, above all, there came a beast bigger than an elephant, black, with a head like a horse, and its forehead armed with three horns, called by the Indians "odonta." This- odonta, having drunk at the lake, espied the camp, and immediately charged it, notwithstanding the fires. In this last encounter six-and-thirty soldiers were slain ; and fifty-three falchions rendered useless. At length the monster died, transfixed by spears. While the men were thus employed, the quadrupeds were attacked and killed by an army of Indian rats. Those who would see what the hippodami were like, as well as the scorpions, serpents, crabs, (which, by the way, have the form of lobsters or crayfish,) white lions, panthers, bats, and, above all, the odonta that figured in this night attack, let them turn to the de- lectable woodcuts in the Prodigiorum ac Ostcntorum Chronicon Basileae, 1557. * Holland's Pliny. LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. 119 Captain Stedman was lying in his hammock, as his vessel floated down the river, when the senti- nel told him that he had seen and challenged something black moving in the brushwood on the beach, which gave no answer. Up rose the cap- tain, manned the canoe that accompanied his ves- sel, and rowed to the shore to ascertain what it was. One of his slaves cried out that it was no negro but a great snake, that the captain might shoot if he pleased. The captain, having no such inclination, ordered all hands to return on hoard. The slave, David, who had first challenged the snake, then begged leave to step forward and shoot it. This seems to have roused the captain, for he determined to kill it himself, and loaded with hall cartridge. The master and slave then proceeded. David cut a path with a bill-hook, and behind came a ma- rine with three more loaded guns. They had not gone above twenty yards through mud and water, the negro looking every way with uncommon vivacity, when he suddenly called out, " Me see snakee !" and, sure enough, there the reptile lay, coiled up under the fallen leaves and rubbish of the trees. So well covered was it that some time elapsed before the captain could perceive its head, not above sixteen feet from him, moving its forked tongue, while its vividly bright eyes appeared to emit sparks of fire. The captain now rested his piece upon a branch, to secure a surer aim, and fired. The ball missed the head, but went through the body, when the snake struck round with such astonishing force as to cut away all the underwood around it with the facility of a scythe mowing grass, and, flouncing with its tail, made the mud and dirt fly over their heads to a con- siderable distance. This commotion seems to have sent the party to the right about ; for they took to their heels and crowded into the canoe. David, however, entreated the captain to renew the charge, assuring him that the snake would be quiet in a few minutes, and that it was neither able nor inclined to pursue them, supporting his opinion by walking before the captain till the lat- ter should be ready to fire. They now found the snake a little removed from its former station, very quiet, with its head, as before, lying out among the fallen leaves, rotten bark, and old moss. Stedman fired at it immediately, but with no better success than at first ; and the enraged animal, being hut slightly wounded by the second shot, sent up such a cloud of dust and dirt as the captain had never seen, ex- cept in a whirlwind ; and away they all again retreated to their canoe. Tired of the exploit, Stedman gave orders to row towards the barge ; but the persevering David still entreating that he might be permitted to kill the reptile, the captain determined to make a third and last attempt in his company ; and they this time directed their fire with such effect that the snake was shot by one of them through the head. The vanquished monster was then secured by a running noose passed over its head, not without some difficulty, however ; for, though it was mor- tally wounded, it continued to writhe and twist about so as to render a near approach dangerous. The serpent was dragged to the shore, and made fast to the canoe, in order that it might be towed to the vessel, and continued swimming like an eel till the party arrived on board, where it was finally determined that the snake should be again taken on shore, and there skinned for the sake of its oil. This was accordingly done ; and David, having climbed a tree with the end of a rope in his hand, let it down over a strong forked bough, the other negroes hoisted away, and the serpent was suspended from the tree. Then David, quit- ting the tree, with a sharp knife between his teeth, clung fast upon the suspended snake, still twisting and twining, and proceeded to perform the same operation that Marsyas underwent, only that David commenced his work by ripping the subject up ; he then stripped down the skin as he descended. Stedman acknowledges, that though he perceived that the snake was no longer able to do the operator any harm, he could not without emotion see a naked man, black and bloody, cling- ing with arms and legs round the slimy and yet living monster. The skin and above four gallons of clarified fat, or rather oil, were the spoils secured on this occasion ; full as many gallons more seem to have been wasted. The negroes cut the flesh into pieces, intending to feast on it ; but the captain would not permit them to eat what he regarded as disgusting food, though they declared that it was exceedingly good and whole- some. The negroes were right and the captain was wrong ; the flesh of most serpents is very good and nourishing, to say nothing of the restora- tive qualities attributed to it, and noticed in a former paper. One of the most curious accounts of the benefit derived by man from the serpent race, is related by Kircher (see Mus. Worm.), where it is stated that near the village of Sassa, about eight miles from the city of Bracciano, in Italy, there is a hole or cavern, called la Grotta delli Serpi, which is large enough to contain two men, and is all perforated with small holes like a sieve. From these holes, in the beginning of spring, issue a prodigious number of small, different colored ser- pents, of which every year produces a new brood, but which seem to have no poisonous quality. Such persons as are afflicted with scurvy, leprosy, palsy, gout, and other ills to which flesh is heir, were laid down naked in the cavern, and, their bodies being subjected to a copious sweat from the heat of the subterraneous vapors, the young ser- pents were said to fasten themselves on every part, and extract, by sucking, every diseased or vitiated humor ; so that, after some repetitions of this treatment, the patients were restored to perfect health. Kircher, who visited this cave, found it warm, and answering in every way the description he had of it. He saw the holes, heard a mur- muring, hissing noise in them, and though he owns that he missed seeing the serpents, it not being 120 LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. the season of their creeping out, yet he saw great numbers of their exuviae or sloughs, and an elm growing hard by laden with them. The discovery of this air Schlangenbad was said to have been made by a leper going from Rome to some baths near this place, who, fortunately, losing his way, and being benighted, turned into this cave. Find- ing it very warm, and being very weary, he pulled off his clothes and fell into such a deep sleep that he did not feel the serpents about him till they had wrought his cure. Such instances of good-will towards man, com- bined with the periodical renovation of youthful appearance, by a change of the whole external skin, and the character of the serpent for wisdom, contributed, doubtless, to raise the form to a place among the deities. Wee may not forget that Genii were sometimes paynted by the Paynims in the forme and shape of man, having a home, betokening plentie orabound- ance in their hand ; as is yet to be seen in many olde and auncient stampes or coynes ; and some- times in the forme of serpents ; which may well serve to understand that verse of Persius Pinge duos angues, pueri, sacer est locus, &c. And this did not Servius forget, speaking of that serpent which ^Eneas (in his anniversaries or yearly sacrifices, celebrated to the name of his father Anchises) did see to creepe upon his tombe ; touching the which (as Virgill saith) ^Eneas was uncertaine whether it were the Genius of his father or of the place. And this may also helpe to the interpretation of another place in Theocritus, in his booke of Characters, (which I have also cor- rected from the vulgar and common reading,) where he saith, that a superstitious person, seeing by chaunce a serpent in his house, did consecrate unto it a little chappell in the same place. But my meaning is not here to speake of serpents, which (as Plutarch saith) were consecrated unto noble and heroicall persons, and which, after their deaths, did appeare neere to their corpses ; for this is not any part of our matter ; albeit a man may very well fit, unto the Genii, that same which he hath delivered touching this point.* Fond of milk and wine, these genii, like the lubricus anguis of Virgil's fifth book, tasted the libations and were regarded as sacred. Their aptitude for lameness was another quality which aided their elevation. The little girl men- tioned by Maria Edgeworth, of blessed memory, took out her little porringer daily to share her breakfast with a friendly snake that came from its hiding-place to her call ; and when the guest intruded beyond the due limits, she would give it a tap on the head with her spoon, and the admoni- tion, " Eat on your own side, I say." A lad whom I knew kept a common snake in London, which he had rendered so tame that it was quite at ease with him and very fond of its master. When taken out of its box, it would * A Treatise of Specters or Straunge Sights, Visions, and Apparitions appearing sensibly unto Men. At London. Printed by Val. S. for Matthew Lownes. 1COS. creep up his sleeve, come out at the top, wind itself caressingly about his neck and face, and when tired retire to sleep in his bosom. Carver, in his travels, relates an instance of docility, which, if true, surpasses any story of the kind I ever heard. An Indian belonging to the Menomonie, having taken a rattlesnake, found means to tame it ; and when he had done this treated it as a deity, calling it his great father, and carrying it with him in a box wherever he went. This he had done for several summers, when Mons. Pinnisance acci- dentally met with him at this carrying place, just as he was setting off for a winter's hunt. The French gentleman was surprised one day to see the Indian place the box which contained his god on the ground, and opening the door give him his liberty ; telling him, whilst he did it, to be sure and return by the time he himself should come back, which was to be in the month of May follow- ing. As this was but October, monsieur told the Indian, whose simplicity astonished him, that he fancied he might wait long enough, when May arrived, for the arrival of his great father. The Indian was so confident of his creature's obedience, that he offered to lay the Frenchman a wager of two gallons of rum, that at the time appointed he would come and crawl into his box. This was agreed on, and the second week in May following fixed for the determination of the wager. At that period they both met there again, when the Indian set down his box and called for his great father. The snake heard him not ; and the time being now expired, he acknowledged that he had lost. How- ever, without seeming to be discouraged, he offered to double the bet if his father came not within two days more. This was further agreed on ; when, behold, on the second day, about one o'clock, the snake arrived, and of his own accord crawled into the box, which was placed ready for him. The French gentleman vouched for the truth of this story, and, from the accounts I have often received of the docility of those creatures, I see no reason to doubt its veracity. Southey has taken advantage of this docility, when he brings before us the diabolical arch- priest, and his monstrous god , The general grave Was delved within a deep and shady dell, Fronting a cavern in the rock, ... the scene Of many a bloody rite, ere Madoc came. . . A temple as they deemed by Nature made, Where the snake-idol stood. Suddenly Neolin Sprung up aloft, and shrieked, as one who treads Upon a viper in his heedless path, The God ! the very God ! he cried, and howled One long, shrill, piercing modulated cry, Whereat from that dark temple issued forth A serpent huge and hideous. On he came Straight to the sound, and curled around the priest His mighty folds innocuous, overtopping His human height, and arching down his head, Sought in the hands of Neolin for food ; Then questing, reared and stretched and waved his neck, And glanced his forky tongue. Who then had seen The man, with what triumphant fearlessness, Arms, thighs, and neck, and body wreathed and ringed In those tremendous folds, he stood secure, Played with the reptile's jaws, and called for food, Food for the present God ! . . who then had seen LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. 121 The fiendish joy, which fired his countenance, Might well have weened that he had summoned up The dreadful monster from its native hell By devilish power, himself a fiend infleshed. Making every allowance for the exaggerations of the Spaniards, idolatry in general and snake- \ worship in particular must have been manifested in the country of Neolin in all its hideousness. Bernal Diaz* declares that The head of a sacrificed person was strung up ; the limbs eaten at the feast ; the body given to the wild beasts which were kept within the temple cir- cuits ; moreover, in that accursed house they kept vipers and venomous snakes who had something at their tails which sounded like morris-bells, and they are the worst of all vipers ; these were kept in cradles, and barrels, and earthen vessels, upon feathers, and there they laid their eggs, and nursed up their snakelings, and they were fed with the bodies of the sacrificed, and with dog's flesh. We learnt for certain, that, after they had driven us from Mexico, and slain above 850 of our soldiers and of the men of Narvaez, these beasts and snakes, who had been offered to their cruel idol to be in his company, were supported upon their flesh for many days. When these lions and tygers roared, and the jackals and foxes howled, and the snakes hissed, it was a grim thing to hear them, and it seemed like hell. " Mexico," says Mr. Bullock, "still possesses many objects of study for the antiquarian ;" and he goes on to tell us that sculptured idols are to be found in various parts of the city. The corner- stone of the building occupied by the lottery-office when he was there, and fronting the market for shoes, was the head of the serpent-idol, of great magnitude ; in his judgment it was not less than seventy feet in length when entire. Under the gateway of the house, nearly opposite the entrance to the mint, was a fine statue of a deity, having the human form in a recumbent posture, about the size of life. This was found in digging a well. The house at the corner of a street, at the south- east side of the great square, was built upon, and in part supported by, a fine circular altar of black basalt, ornamented with the tail and claws of a gigantic reptile. In the cloisters behind the Dominican convent was a noble specimen of the great serpent-idol, almost perfect and of fine work- manship, represented in the act of swallowing a human victim, which is crushed and struggling in its horrid jaws. The sacrificial stone, or altar, is buried in the square of the cathedral, within a hundred yards of the calendar stone. f The upper surface only is exposed to view, which seems to have been done designedly, to impress upon the populace an abhorrence of the horrible and sanguinary rites that had once been performed on this very altar. It is said by writers that 30,000 human victims were sacrificed at the coronation of Montezuma. Kirwan, in the preface to his metaphysics, states the annual number of human victims immolated in Mexico to be 25,000. I have seen the Indians themselves throw stones at it ; and I once saw a * Bernard Diaz del Castillo. t Popularly called Montezuma's watch. boy jump upon it, clench his fist, stamp with his foot, and use other gesticulations of the greatest abhorrence. As I had been informed that the* sides were covered with historical sculpture, J applied to the clergy for the further permission of having the earth removed from around it, which they not only granted, but, moreover, had it per formed at their own expense. I took casts of the whole. It is twenty-five feet in circumference, and consists of fifteen various groups of figures, repre- senting the conquests of the warriors of Mexico over different cities, the names of which are written over them. But the largest and most celebrated of the Mexican deities was known to be buried under the gallery of the university. It was liberally dis- interred at the expense of the University in a few hours ; and Mr. Bullock had the pleasure of seeing the resurrection of this horrible deity, before whom tens of thousands of human victims had been sacrificed. It is scarcely possible (observes our author) for the most ingenious artist to have conceived a statue better adapted to the intended purpose ; and the united talents and imagination of Brughel and Fuseli would in vain have attempted to improve it. The idol was hewn out of one solid block of basalt, nine feet high, its outlines giving an idea of a deformed human figure, uniting all that is horrible in the tiger and rattle-snake. Instead of arms it is supplied with two large serpents, and its drapery is composed of wreathed snakes, interwoven in the most disgusting manner, and the sides terminating in the wings of a vulture. Its feet are those of the tiger, with claws extended in the act of seizing its prey, and between them lies the head of another rattle-snake, which seems descending from the body of the idol. Its decora- tions accord with its horrid form, having a large necklace composed of human hearts, hands, and skulls, and fastened together by the entrails. It has evidently been painted in natural colors, which must have added greatly to the terrible effect it was intended to inspire in its votaries. If that grim stone could have spoken, what agonizing scenes it might have described ! The heart still panting was taken by the priest from the breast, and deemed the more acceptable to the deity if it smoked with life ; and the mangled limbs of the victim were then divided amongst the crowd as a feast worthy of the goddess. In the night of desolation, called by the Spaniards Noche Triste, in which -many were made prisoners by the Mexicans, the adventurous Cortez, and his few remaining companions in arms, were horror-stricken by witnessing the cruel manner in which their cap- tive fellow-adventurers were dragged to the sacrifi- cial stone, and their hearts, yet warm with vitality, presented by the priests to the gods ; and the more the separated seat of life teemed with animation, the more welcome was the offering to the goddess the more heart-rending the cries of the victims, the more grateful the sacrifice to this monster representative of deformity and carnage.* * Six Months in Mexico. Those who saw, as I did, the cast of this infernal deity, in Mr. Bullock's Ex- hibition in 1824, will acknowledge that his description is not overcharged. 122 LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. PART XIV. EVENTS come round in cycles. In 1750, the winter was as mild as that which has just passed, and the spring very early. In Sweden, the " steel nights," which are generally felt in all their rigor somewhere about the last week in February, were so entirely absent, that lands were sown in Upland in that week ; the usual time for sowing in Sweden seldom arriving before April. Harald Barck, who records this unusual mildness and its consequences, adds, that he is not ignorant that the lands in some of the northern provinces, especially those which abound in clay, require early sowing, that the ground may be broken with less trouble, and that the first shoots of .the barley may make their way through it before it grows stiff. He adds, that the people of Schonen, and others that dwell near the sea, sow late, whether the spring be early or not ; and that sometimes to their great loss, for no other reason than that they received this custom from their ancestors. The most northern inhabitants of Sweden find it necessary to sow as soon as the frost breaks up, that the short summer may per- fectly ripen the grain before the winter approaches. For as eggs require a fixed time for the exclusion of the young, so the barley does in different provinces to ripen the seed.* Harald then gives a table of the times of sowing in different local- ities, in different years, the latest time being the 18th of June, and the earliest the 16th of April. He concludes, from these observations, that the sowing of barley nearly coincides with the folia- tion of the birch, at least in Upland, and other places adjacent. He remarks, that it is a popular error, that less time passes between the sowing and ripening of wheat in their northern provinces than at Upsal, and that this happens, because the summer days are longer in the north, and there is scarcely any night to retard its growth. But this error is made evident by the grain ripening in as short a time in Schonen as in Lapland ; for bar- ley, in the champaign part of Schonen, is sown about the 29th of May, and reaped sooner than in Upland. But why barley ripens later in Upland and Wessmania, than in the other provinces of Sweden, he confesses to be an absolute secret to him.f With us, though Aquarius has been predomi- nant, there has been hardly any freezing none of any consequence though as late as the 12th of February, I saw ice on the water in St. James' Park, as if Jack Frost was determined to show that his power was not utterly extinct. But the yellow aconite and primroses were in bloom early in January ; and on the 10th of that month, baskets full of them were exposed for sale in Covent Garden Market. On the 12th the posies of wall-flowers, polyanthuses, and garden anemo- nes, were hawked about the streets ; and on the 19th, wall-flowers, with some of the blossoms ex- * Amaen. Acad. t Ibid. panded, which had been dug up for planting in the suburbs, and in the broken pan of the artisan, to remind him that there is such a place as the country, which he is beginning to forget, were pitched there in full panniers. On the llth and 12th of February, crocuses were to be seen expanding their golden chalices in some of the miniature London gardens gardens which, as the late Lord Canterbury said of poor dear Theodore Hook's at Fulham, look as if they might be kept in order with a pair of scissors and a toothpick ; but I saw those welcome heralds of spring, decked with their glowing tabards as early as the 2nd of that month some few years since. The Frost-genius takes his opportunities of convincing mortals that his reign has not passed away, by a demonstration of more than ordinary severity, as he did in 1783-4, when Paris espec- ially was frozen to her very marrow, and the greatest distress prevailed ; nor did the thaw per- manently tafce place till late in February. Louis XVI. and Marie Antoinette put forth all their benevolent powers to relieve the pinching misery of that icy grasp, and the blessings of the people were inscribed on obelisks of snow as durable as their gratitude. 19th January. A genial afternoon, with a good spice of an old May day in it, led me to the Zoological Gardens, where a Tapir was lounging about in the open air, as comfortable apparently as if it had been in South America. Hippo very much grown, and thriving admirably. His food still oatmeal and milk, and it must be told as the well-bred Hamet informed me in a whisper " Many horse-dung ;" of which latter condiment he consumes a great deal, and has long done so. This reminded me of a passage in Sparrman, in which he anticipates the possibility of bringing one of these animals to Europe. Speaking of the sucking hippopotamus which he captured and dis- sected, the Swedish doctor says, " I am apt to sup- pose that one a little older than this would not be very nice in its food ; as that which we caught was induced by hunger, as soon as it was let loose near the wagon, to put up with something not extremely delicate, which had been just dropped from one of our oxen." It is not at all improbable that the animal took this, not from pressure of hunger, but as a cor- rective to the milk, the curd of which was found in its stomach ; and it is possible, that the suck- ing hippopotamus, in a state of nature, may have recourse to the droppings of the parent for that purpose. This does not seem to have occurred to Sparrman, who, after relating his anecdote, observes, that this may appear very extraordinary in an animal with four stomachs ; but there have been instances of this kind known in common cat- tle, which in Herjedal, are partly fed with horse- dung. He states, that he has been assured, that this method of feeding cattle has been practised with great advantage in Upland when there has LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. 123 been a scarcity of fodder ; and that afterwards, these same cattle, even when they have not been in want of proper fodder, have taken to this food of their own accord, and have eaten it without anything else being mixed with it. The regimen has agreed with our Hippo wonderfully. No animal could be in better health. He was thoroughly enjoying existence in his bath, wherein he spends more time as he .grows older. The teeth are just come through, and he seemed to take pleasure in champing Pro- fessor Owen's stick when held near its mouth, as a child would use a coral. When he rises after his submersion, he shakes the water from his ears with a brisk motion ; this he invariably does when he emerges. The overlapping of the huge upper lip stands him in good stead when he wishes to expel the water from his mouth. He drives it backwards with considerable force, and the water rushes from under the overlap, as if from a gigantic pair of gills. When in its natural state, the animal feeds upon water-plants, scooped up by its enormous teeth, these sluices must be very convenient for getting rid of the mud and water. The great tortoise had buried its head in the sand in the Ostrich-house up to the shoulders ; but the greater portion of the shell and the lower extremities were exposed. I hope it may be alive, but I have my misgivings. Not one of the large tortoises that I recollect has survived. Yet White's old tortoise retired annually under his bunch of hepaticas, and lay sliug in the ground, open to every skyey influence, till rejoicing nature bade winter farewell. A smaller one rested its head upon the sand, but had not buried itself at all. I suspect that we do not know how to manage these creatures, which perish in consequence of the artificial life they lead. The hybernation is incomplete and this intermediate state, this life in death, neither one thing nor the other. The animal consequently loses its balance and dies ! So ! The Polar Bear has escaped a vinculo matrimonii, and remains in his bachelor's den on a separate maintenance. I thought how it would be. They led a regular cat and dog life ; she growling and snapping whenever he came near her, and he looking and acting like a thorough Jerry Sneak, and giving unmistakable evidence of his anxiety to get out of such company, by rearing himself up against the walls of his prison, and examining every part of it not without effect. For, some days since, he scaled the smooth wall of the yard, and, notwithstanding the inverted cheval-de-frise with which it was fortified, got clear of his prison and his termagant wife at once. He was discovered, early one morning, near the Dromedary-house, by a blacksmith who had come to his work. The blacksmith looked at the white bear, and the white bear looked at the blacksmith, who, like a valiant and wise smith, did not run, but stood his ground and shouted ; whereupon the bear retreated into a bush of laurel. Presently the bear put forth his nose, as if meditating an advance, when the smith shouted again, and the bear again drew back. This amcebaean scene continued till the shouts of the man collected some of the keepers, who instantly took measures for his recapture. He walked off, got upon the shed at the end of the new aviary, and descended thence into the paddock. Hereabouts, Cocksedge, who some years back boldly marched up to a crouching lion, of which he had the care, but which had escaped from the old temporary Carnivora-house near the spot where the Dromedary-house now stands, and was ogling some antelopes and deer in the adjoin- ing close with no amorous intentions, came up with the bear. Him he treated differently from the lion, whom he seized by the mane, and led back to his den ; but the bear having no mane, Cocksedge tackled " The Polar," as he is called in some of the Fair bills, in a different way. The brave keeper advanced with a strong rope, which had a running noose, and threw it over the monster's neck ; and then he pulled, and the bear pulled, till the rope broke. Bruin quietly lifted his arm, and, with his fore-paw, disembarrassed himself of the noose. Cocksedge, nothing daunted, caught him with another rope, and a struggle ensued, the infuriated beast biting the rope till he got free, and walking on, followed by a detachment of keepers, who managed, by heading him at proper intervals, and showing a bold front, to keep him out of the park. While they were trying to prevent this, he made a desperate, but, luckily, ineffectual rush at one of the men. At last, by dint of marches and counter-marches, they so managed their tactics, that they drove him gradu- ally up to the door of a den which stood invitingly open, and in he went, and was secured ; not, however, without dashing with all his weight and strength at the gate of his new prison. This escape led to an immediate order for caging the whole of the white-bear yard overhead with iron, where Bruin is again domiciled with his partner, a reconciliation having taken place ; and, now, with the exception of an occasional squabble, not uncommon in such cases, they get on very well together. But we must return to the reptile-house, and, like the witch of Ben-y-gloe, finish our snakes.* And here I would venture to suggest an im- * Those who have not had the pleasure of reading Mr. Scrope's stirring book on Deer-stalking had bet- ter possess themselves of it at once ; and there they will find the witch surrounded by all the horrors in which M. G. Lewis, that "jewel of a man," as Byron called him, could envelop her. Here is a morsel or two by way of a whet : She heard him on her mount of stone, Where, on snakes alive, she was feeding alone; And straight her limbs she anointed all With basilisk's blood, and viper's gall. But seeing, before away she sped, That her snakes, half-eaten, were not yet dead, She crushed their heads with fiendish spite, But had not the mercy to kill them quite. Now, if lords and ladies are curious to know What became of the witch when she left Ben-y-gloe, 'T is right to inform them, for fear of mistakes, That home she went, and finished her snakes. 124 LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. provement in the ordering and keeping the reptiles, which must materially affect the comfort and health of the fine specimens which are there preserved. Generally speaking, reptiles, snakes especially, are very fond of water, not merely for the purpose of drinking, but of taking a bath. Most of the boas and pythons, of which there is such a fine show, haunt the neighborhood of waters in their natural state ; and in the summer months, the serpents in the reptile-house may be observed availing themselves of the scanty accommodations afforded them. On the 28th of July, in the last year, there was not a single serpent, with the exception of what may be termed the more arid species, that was not making the most of the milk-pans of water, that did duty for baths. It was at once ludicrous and painful to see the efforts of the more gigantic snakes to cool their heated systems in an allowance of fresh water, which would be considered stinted in a long voyage. The rock-snake could do no more than get its head, and no great part of its neck, into its pan, and there the head lay motionless, except when it was, ever and anon, plunged under the surface, the brandished bifid tongue proclaiming the relish with which the fevered animal, enclosed in glass, enjoyed the limited relief. Think what a mag- nificent sight it would be to see the Oular Sawa,* and the grand Python Sebae, disporting in a well- filled bath of adequate dimensions. The pans do tolerably well for the smaller serpents, which show the gratification that they feel by coiling them- selves up in them with nothing but their head out. One of these was thus coolly reposing while a little fish, destined for its maw, was quietly swimming about in the pan, utterly unconscious of the deadly vicinage. But any one who has observed the graceful sinuosities of our pretty ringed snake,f in crossing a pond, must feel how much is lost by depriving the spectator of a satis- factory view of the animal while obeying its natural instincts, to the gratification of both. These snakes will take fish as well as frogs, but rarely, and then most probably in consequence of a scarcity of their ordinary batrachian diet. The snake generally takes the frog behind, as the lat- ter is fleeing from its deadly enemy ; and, in such cases, the frog is swallowed rump foremost, the hinder legs being protruded forwards and sticking out in a sort of amorphous bunch with the head, as the unhappy frog is gradually swallowed alive. It is very distressing to witness this operation, rendered more painful by the shrill cries of the frog ; and I have more than once liberated the agonized patient, while fishing, by striking the serpent's head and neck with the point of my rod a piece of humanity somewhat questionable, especially as I do not remember that I left off pulling out the trouts upon such occasions ; but then they did not cry. The process of deglutition is horrible to behold, and the martyred frog de- scends into its living sepulchre a living thing. * Python reticulatus. f Natru torquata. Mr. Bell saw a little one, which had been swal- lowed by a very large snake, leap out of the mouth of the latter, taking advantage of an unlucky gape of the snake after the operation was over an action which is not uncommon with serpents immediately after they have swallowed their prey ; and he heard, on another occasion, a frog distinctly utter its peculiar cry several min- utes after it had been swallowed by the snake ; this I can confirm. Sometimes two snakes seize upon one luckless frog at the same time a joint seizure, which is not very likely to happen when the animals are at liberty, and in their natural state, but which passed under the eyes of Mr. Bell, the litigant parties being in imprison- ment. He tells us that, on placing a frog in a large box, in which were several snakes, one of the latter instantly seized it by one of the hinder legs ; and, immediately afterwards, another of the snakes took forcible possession of the fore legs of the opposite side. Each continued its inroads upon the poor frog's limbs and body, till the upper jaws of the snakes met, atid one of them slightly bit the jaw of the other ; this was immediately retaliated, Mr. Bell thinks without any hostile feeling, quaere tamen, as the lawyers say ; for, after one or two such accidents, the strongest of the snakes commenced shaking the other, which still kept its hold of the frog, with great violence, from side to side, against the sides of the box. Then the combatants rested for a few moments, when the other returned to the attack ; and at length the one which had last seized the frog, having a less firm hold, was shaken off, and the conqueror swallowed the prey. Mr. Bell, who did not throw his warder down during this gentle passage of arms, then put another frog into the box, which was at once seized and swallowed by the unsuccessful combatant.* My observations agree with those of Mr. Bell in cases where the snake seizes the frog by the middle of the body. The serpent then turns the frog, and swallows it head foremost, as the great constricting serpents do by their prey when they have killed and crushed it by the pressure of their enormous folds. It is curious to observe the adaptation of power by these constrictors. When a comparatively small boa, or python, seizes a rabbit, it becomes a congeries of coils around the victim ; a large one applies one fold just sufficient to kill without the useless application of further muscular pressure. In taking lizards and birds, / the common snake swallows the prey head fore- most, for the obvious reason of security ; such, at least, is the result of my observation, as well as that of Mr. Bell, who kept a number of these ser- pents, one of which was an especial pet, and dis- tinguished its master from all other persons. When let out of its box it would immediately go to him, and creep under the sleeve of his coat, where it would lie revelling in the warmth. * British reptiles. LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. 125 Every morning, at breakfast, it came to his hand for its allowance of milk ; but it fled from stran- gers, and hissed if they meddled with it. By the way, Major Denham, in his African Travels, mentions an instance of the supposed vir- tues of the fat of serpents, when applied to beasts. Near Lari, he and his party killed an enormous snake, which he calls a species of coluber a python, probably measuring eighteen feet from the mouth to the tail. Five balls entered the ser- pent, but it was still moving off, when two Arabs, each armed with a sword, nearly severed the head from the body. On opening the reptile, several pounds of fat were found, and carefully taken off by the two native guides. They pronounced it to be a sovereign and much-prized remedy for diseased cattle. As I looked at the collection of venomous ser- pents, the least of which carried death under its lips, the out-of-the-way remedies which the savage and the half-civilized man successfully uses, came into my mind. Their cures, if we may believe honest witnesses, are far more frequent than those effected by European science. Labat, when in the West Indies, was called to confess a young negro, who had been bitten by a serpent seven feet long, and as big as a man's leg, three fingers' breadth above the ankle. The ser- pent had been killed, under the idea that when it was dead the poison, by some sympathetic law, would act with less force. The patient was lying on a plunk in the middle of his hut, between two fires, covered with blankets, and yet he said he was dying with cold, at the same time constantly crying for drink to assuage a devouring internal heat. He had also a prodigious desire to sleep. His leg was very strongly tied below and above his knee with a species of ozier, and both foot and leg were horribly swollen, and so was the knee, notwithstanding the ligatures. The worthy father confessed him, but was obliged to hold his hand, and keep moving it, to prevent him from sleeping during the ceremony. He afterwards recovered. Captain Forbes, in his highly interesting book, Dahomey and the Dahomans, relates that the natives have an infallible remedy for the bite of the deadly cobra. One of the captain's hammock- men had been bitten three times, but his father was a doctor. Walking one day through some long grass, the captain pointed to the bare legs of his attendant, and hinted at his danger. " None," said he ; "my father picks some grass, and if on the same day the decoction is applied, the wound heals at once." This did not seem strange to the captain, who had seen the fights between the cobra and the mongoose, in India. He says that the cobra has always the advantage at first, and the mongoose, apparently vanquished, retreats as far from his enemy as possible, but, on devouring some wild herb, revives, returns to the attack, and conquers. In short, he corroborates the accounts given by former travellers and observers, of these duels between the quadruped and the reptile. 9 The same author records that, in the kingdom of Dahomey, the killing by accident, or otherwise, of a fetish snake, was formerly punished by death ; but that the penalty is now mitigated to running the gauntlet through the fetish priests, who be- labor the criminal without mercy ; nor is he free till he reaches water, to wash out his sin. The captain states that the lions of Whydah are the snake fetish house and the market. The former is a temple built round a huge cotton-tree, in which are, at all times, many snakes of the boa species (python). These are allowed to roam about at pleasure ; but, if found in a house, or at a distance, a fetish man or woman is sought, whose duty it is to induce the reptile to return, and to reconduct it to its sacred abode, while all that meet it must bow down and kiss the dust. Morning and evening, many are to be seen pros- trated before the door, whether worshipping the snakes directly, or an invisible god, which is known under the name of " Seh," through these representatives, the gallant captain confesses that he is not learned enough to determine. The fascination of serpents has been stoutly maintained by some, and as strongly denied by others. Acrell notices this phenomenon as being confirmed by the evidence of several of his coun- trymen, who had been a long while resident at Philadelphia. They related that the American rattlesnake, which they described as the most in- dolent of serpents, unquestionably possessed this power. They declared that, as the snake lies under the shade of a tree, opening his jaws a little, he fixes his brightly glittering eyes upon any bird, or squirrel, which is in it. The squir- rel, so runs their account, utters a mournful and* feeble cry, and, as if foreseeing his fate, leaps from bough to bough on every side, seemingly to attempt a sudden escape ; but, struck with the fascination, he comes down the tree, and flings himself with a spring into the very jaws of his- enemy. The observations of some Englishmen, continues Acrell, seem to confirm the truth of this. They shut up a mouse with one of these fascinat- ing rattlesnakes in an iron box ; the mouse sat. in one corner the rattlesnake was opposite to it. The reptile fixed its eye, terrible as Vathek's, upon the little trembler, which was, at last, forced to throw itself into the mouth of the serpent. Acrell adds, that the same experiment was repeated in; Italy with a pregnant female viper with the same success.* A piece of evidence, apparently unintentional, . occurs in Captain Forbes' book, already noticed 1. On passing from the viceroy's house at Ahomey, (the grass very high,) he observed, within an inch of his leg, a small lizard, with its eyes fixed. It did not move on his approach. At the same moment, a cobra darted at it, and, before he could raise his stick, bore it away " rather a narrow* escape from death," as the captain quietly ob- serves. The captain makes no comment on that< * Am. Acad. 126 LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. part of the adventure here printed in italics ; nor does it seem to have occurred to him that he had under his eyes a proof of this deadly mesmerism. Catesby thus tells the tale as 't was told to him : The charming, as it is commonly called, or at- tractive power, which this snake (the rattlesnake) is said to have of drawing to it animals, and de- vouring them, is generally believed in America ; as for my own part, I never saw the action ; but a great many from whom I have had it related, all agree in the manner of the process ; which is, that the animals, particularly birds and squirrels, (which principally are their prey,) no sooner spy the snake than they skip from spray to spray, hovering and approaching gradually nearer their enemy, regard- less of any other danger ; but with distracted ges- tures and outcries, descend, though from the top of the loftiest trees, to the mouth of the snake, who openeth his jaws, takes them in, and in an instant swallows them. Animals of greater size, though they are not fascinated, are affected at the presence of these tteptiles by the most violent feelings of abhor- :xence. The largest I ever saw, says Catesby, was one :ibout eight feet in length, weighing between eight and nine pounds. This monster was gliding into -the house of Colonel Blake, of Carolina, and had certainly taken his abode there undiscovered, had not the domestic animals alarmed the family with : their repeated outcries : the hogs, dogs, and poul- try united in their hatred to him, showing the greatest consternation by erecting their bristles and ; feathers ; and, expressing their wrath and indig- nation, surrounded him, but carefully kept their distance; while he, regardless of their threats, glided slowly along. It is not an uncommon thing to have them come into houses; a very extraordinary instance of which happened to myself, in the same gentleman's i house, in the month of February, 1723 : the ser- ' vant, in making the bed in a ground-room (but a few minutes after I left it,) on turning down the clothes, discovered a rattlesnake lying coiled be- neath the sheets in the middle of the bed.* Catesby ' evidence relative to the power of fas- ccination is merely hearsay, it may be said; we will therefore call Lawson, an eye-witness : They (rattlesnakes) have the power, or art (I 'know not which to call it) to charm squirrels, 1 hares, partridges, or any such thing, in such a man- i ner, that they run directly into their mouths. This I have sr-en by a squirrel and one of those rattle- ;Snakes ; and other snakes have, in some measure, ; the same power.f I remember, many years ago, witnessing the effect produced by the sight of a serpent on the larger animals. I was enjoying my book it was 3The Lay of the Last Minstrel on a delicious cwarjn spring day, under one of the trees in the upper part of our pretty hanging orchard, then one sheet of blossom, when my attention was at- * Carolina. t History of Carolina, 1714. tracted by the loud outcries of several turkeys far away towards the lower part, where the fruit- trees ended. On looking up, I saw them sur- rounding a tuft of grass more than usually lux- uriant. They craned over at this tuft, which they surrounded, keeping at a respectful distance, however, with ruffled plumage and half-expanded tails, uttering the short, often repeated cry, pit, pit, pit, as turkeys do, when they are annoyed and frightened. As I advanced, their gestures and cries were redoubled ; and, upon coming up, I saw a very large common ringed snake coiled up in the tuft. At my approach, it started off, followed by myself and the turkeys, they still crying and gesticulat- ing, but saved itself in the hedge. I could not help asking myself whether the Transatlantic blood in their veins had not roused their latent instincts, and impressed their brains with the no- tion that they had come upon one of the smaller rattlesnakes. By the way, there is no longer a shadow of doubt that the serpents operated upon by the ser- pent-charmers at the Zoological Garden last year, had been deprived of their poison-fangs by mechan- ical means. Acrell, at the close of his statement relative to the alleged fascination of serpents, asks " Do we not see, in the summer, a parallel instance at home, in the toad, a most indolent animal, into whose mouth, as it lies in the shade or under a shrub, butterflies and other insects fly?" Certainly the insects do fly into the toad's mouth, but not, it may be suspected, without a little help ; and this reminds me of the promise to give my readers some notion of the mechanism by which the tongue of that reptile acts with such marvellous rapidity and certainty in securing its prey. Mr. Arscott, of Tehott, Devonshire 't is an old tale, but none the worse for that kept a pet toad, which, when he first knew it, was called by his father, " the* old toad;" and Mr. Arscott, fils, answers for a knowledge of it for thirty-six years. How long would it have lived ? Ay, that is the question, which a mischievous devil of a tame raven those ravens are certainly supremely diabolical took care should not be answered ; for he dabbed one of the poor toad's eyes out with his horny beak, after kenning' it, as if to satisfy himself, like one of Homer's heroes, where he could plant his dab so as to do it most mischief, as it came out one fine evening from the hole which its kind master had caused to be made for it under the third step, when he " new-laid the steps;" and, at the same time, otherwise mal- treated the poor sweltering pet. so that it was never the same toad again. The story is extant, and written in choice English, in the Appendix to Pennant's British Zoology, to which the reader is referred for the interesting details, which, while they show that the kind and observing nar- rator was ignorant of some things that modern science has made manifest, indicate the honest truth of his narrative. LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. 127 Well, it had frequented the steps before the iiall-door some years before he became acquainted with it. His father, who admired its size which was of the largest the son ever met with paid it a visit every evening. He himself con- stantly fed it, and brought it to be so tame, that it always came to the candle, and looked up as if expecting to be taken up and brought upon the table, where he always fed it with insects of all sorts. It was fondest of flesh magots, which he kept in bran. It would follow them, and, when within a proper distance, would fix its eye, and remain motionless for near a quarter of a minute, as if preparing for the stroke, " which was an instantaneous throwing its tongue at a great dis- tance upon the insect, which stuck to the tip by a glutinous matter;" and he adds, most truly, " the motion is quicker than the eye can follow." And here is the solution of the so-called fasci- nation in which Linnaeus himself believed ; for in the Systcma Natura (1766) the reader will find, under Rana Bufo, the following assertion : Insecta in fauces fascino revocat. I always imagined (says that acute observer, the younger Mr. Arscott) that the root of its tongue was placed in the forepart of its under jaw, and the tip towards its throat, by which the motion must be a half-circle ; by which, when its tongue recovered its situation, the insect at the tip would be brought to the place of deglutition. I was con- firmed in this by never observing any internal motion in the mouth, excepting one swallow the instant its tongue returned. Possibly I might be mistaken, for I never dissected one, but contented myself with opening its mouth and slightly inspect- ing it. No, my good Mr. Arscott, you were not mis- taken ; and you have described the process beau- tifully ; but how is the action performed? The anomalous structure and position of the tongue in most of the anurous or tailless batrachi- ans* that is, tailless in their last and most perfect state are very striking. Soft and fleshy almost throughout, that organ is, in the toad, unsupported at its base by any internal bone. The os hyo'idcs is altogether absent, and the tongue is attached anteriorly in the concavity formed by the two branches of the lower jaw towards the symphysis, so that its root, instead of being at the back of the fauces, is in the interior edge of the fore part of the lower jaw, and its free extremity is in the back part of the mouth, and before the aperture of the air-passages, when it is at rest. When in action, it becomes considerably elon- gated, and is projected sharply out of the mouth, as if it turned on a pivot in the anterior edge of the jaw ; so that, when thrown out, the surface which was under, when in repose in the mouth, comes uppermost ; and, when returned into the mouth, the surface which an instant previously was uppermost, resumes its original position, and is lowermost. A viscous secretion, which is very * In Dactylethra the tongue is attached at the back of the mouth ; and Pipa has none. tenacious, completes this engine of destruction ; and, when employed in the capture of prey, it reaches to a considerable distance, and returns with the insect into the mouth, where the morsel is generally compressed, involved in a further glutinous sort of saliva, and submitted to the action of deglutition. The muscular machinery by which this action, so important to the animal, is effected, is a beautiful example of adaptation ; for the muscles which regulate the motion of the bones and cartilages of the mouth act more especially upon the lower jaw, the bone of the mandible and the tongue, which is by their power shot forth and returned with the prey with such celerity, that, as has been before observed, he must have a very acute and prompt vision who can detect the action. Most observers will see that when an insect comes within tongue-shot of a toad when upon its feed, it disappears ; but few will detect the action of the tongue itself, if the reptile be healthy and lively. Mr. Arscott's old toad had none of that antipa- thy to spiders which old legends would have us believe existed betwe'en those reptiles and insects ; he used to eat five or six with his millipedes, which Mr. Arscott took to be his favorite food, and which were provided for the pet, till his master found out that flesh magots, by their con- tinual motion, formed the most tempting bait. When offered blowing flies and humble-bees, it would take them and, in short, any insect that moved ; and Mr. Arscott imagined that if a honey bee had been put before it, it would have eaten it, to its cost. Bees, however, are seldom stirring at the same time as toads, which oxious qualities whatever. According to ./Elian, death not only lurked in its breath, but its very aspect killed, so that the basilisk had in it a potent rival. " The precious jewel in its head " was considered to be the redeeming quality in the " ugly and venomous " creature. This jewel was not its brilliant and beautiful eye, which the earthy croaker was said to have exchanged with the heavenly lark,* but a stone well known to the collectors of the last century as the bufonite, toad-stone, crapau- dine, and krottenstein, supposed to be largely endowed with medical and magical powers, and familiar to the philosophers of the present, as one of the fossil palatal teeth of a fish (pycnodus). The whole animal was a repertorium for poi- soners before the modern Canidias had hit upon * The lore-sick Juliet exclaims : " It is the larke that sings so out of tune, Straining harsh discords and unpleasing sharps. Some say the larke makes sweet division ; This doth not so : for she divideth us. Some say the larke and loathed toad change eyes, now I would they had changed voices too." the powder of succession. The Roman ladies who did not love their lords, hastened their de- parture for the city of the dead by a bufonite potion,* or an infusion of rubetan juice in a cup of rich Celanian ;f and, as poisoning and witch- craft generally went hand in hand,J there is no cause for surprise that toads were choice contri- butions for the charmed pot of secret, black, and midnight hags. " Paddockefy calls " the witches in Macbeth ; and the reptile was the first ingre- dient in the caldron that raised the blood-boller'd Banquo, and seared the eye-balls of the murderous thane with the regal " show" of the disquieted spirit's line. The eleventh hag in Jonson's Masque of Queens, exultingly sings I went to the toad, breeds under the wall ; I charmed him out, and he came at my call. And Gesner ascribes a power to it which was believed to conduce to the quiet of mankind at the expense of their vigor. But those who assert the bad eminence of the toad for " swelterd venom," and those who deny it all noxious qualities Pennant was inclined to the latter opinion, and Cuvier believed it to be innocuous are both wrong. The exudation from the pimples, or follicles, on the true skin of the toad, especially about the head and shoulders, was proved by Dr. Davy to be a very acrid secretion, resembling the extract of aconite when applied to the tongue, and even acting upon the hands. Pressure causes this fluid to be emitted, occasion- ally to some distance, and the defence stands the toad often in good stead, especially when attacked by dogs, which have been frequently seen to drop the troublesome customer from their mouths, with a shake of the head even more eloquent than Lord Burleigh's. And yet this secretion, more acrid than the poison of serpents, produces no effect when introduced into the circulation. A chicken was inoculated with it, and no alteration was perceptible in its actions or health. Those who are interested in the marvellous stories of " antediluvian toads " will be well rewarded by consulting Dr. Buckland's paper on the subject in the fifth volume of the Zoological Journal. He made several experiments by shut- ting them up in cells, fashioned in a large block of oolitic limestone, and in another of compact siliceous sandstone, and buried the blocks with the imprisoned toads three feet deep in his garden. He placed others each in a small basin of plaster of Paris, four inches deep and five inches in diameter, and well luted them over with a cover- ing of the same material. These were buried with those immured in the blocks of stone. He inclosed some in three holes cut for the purpose in the trunk of an apple-tree. Two were placed * JUVENAL, Sat. vi. 558. f Ibid., Sat. i. 69. \ An malas Canidia tractavit dapes 1 HOB. Ep. iii. 8. Padda and Tassa are the names assigned to the toad in the Fauna Suecica. LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OP A NATURALIST. 129 in one hole : the others were imprisoned singly, and the holes were tightly plugged up. The result of these experiments was, a conclusion that toads cannot live a year excluded totally from atmospheric air, and that they cannot survive two years, if entirely prevented from obtaining food. But let us, before we depart, look into the reptile-house on a warm summer night. We enter with a dark lanthorn. The light is no sooner unveiled, than it seems to have a Prome- thean effect on the statue-like forms that were so still in the morning Now the scene is changed ; now all is action, terrible action ; and we behold the monstrous constricting serpents, and the hor- rible poisonous snakes, and the uncouth lizards, writhing, coiling, creeping, running, and pushing against the transparent walls of their crystal prison, till the nervous anxiety of some tempera- ments may be pardoned for huddling up to the keeper, and inquiring, with bated breath, whether the glass is python and boa-constrictor proof? March 27. The rain it raineth every day. The peck of dust, worth a king's ransom, will hardly be forthcoming, and the farmer begins to be uneasy about his oats. The garden in the Regent's Park is a swamp. Both the great and smaller tortoise in the ostrich-house are dead, as I feared. A small one that buries itself two or three feet deep in the earth, exposed to all the skyey influences, does well. Hippo is flourishing, and now has clover-chaff tea, with the boiled chaff as a change of diet. He drinks the tea, and then eats the sop. His tank in the open air is advanc- ing rapidly towards completion. The beautiful crested pigeons,* with their hybrid young one, are in fine condition. On the 8th September, in the last year, I found Goura Victorias on her nest, with her young one able to fly. On that day it was five weeks old. The male bird, Goura coro- nata, better known as " the great Amboyna pigeon," which belongs to her majesty, was strutting about on the ground. His productive alliance with the species which bears our gracious queen's name, is worthy of notice, particularly when the difference of climate is taken into the account. The egg there was only one from which the hybrid sprung, was sat on twenty-eight days before the young bird was hatched, by both parents ; but the male was most assiduous and the best nurse. An egg was laid and hatched in 1849, but the young one died a day or two after its exclusion. The birds showing a disposition to sit in 1850, the cover of a basket was placed upon the angle of a stout, forked pole, in the great aviary ; and a few birch twigs furnished to them. Out of these rough materials they made a nest. They sat side by side. The male always sat with his head fronting the spectator, or nearly so, as if he was keeping watch, and the female with hers exactly in the opposite direction, so that the head of the cwk was parallel to the tail of the hen. The * Goura coronata and Goura Victorias. young one was fed from the crops and mouths of both parents. And here we cannot but feel with John Hun- ter, who discovered the curious organization in the dove kind, which enables the parents to sup- port their young with the curd-like contents of their crops from their own bodies, in short, as the mammalia do in the early stages of the exist- ence of their offspring that the nourishment of animals admits, perhaps, of as much variety in the mode by which it is to be performed, as any circumstance connected with their economy, whether we consider their numerous tribes, the different stages through which every animal passes, or the food adapted to each in their dis- tinct conditions and situations. The food fitted for one stage of life is rejected at another. Animal life (as Hunter observes) may be divided into three states, or stages : the first com- prehending the production of the animal and its growth in the fetal state ; the second commencing when it emerges from that state by what is called the birth, but leaving it for a time, either medi- ately or immediately dependent on the parent for support ; the third when the animal is able to act for itself. As a general proposition, it may be laid down that the first and third stages are com- mon to all animals ; but some classes fishes and spiders, for instance pass directly from the first to the third, having no intermediate stage. The great physiologist then notices the infinite variety in which Nature provides for the support of the young in the second stage of animal life, and that brings him to the statement of his dis- covery. He tells us, and tells us truly, that the young pigeon, like the young quadruped, till it is capable of digesting the common food of its kind, is fed with a substance secreted for that purpose by the parent ; not, as in the mammalia, by the female alone, but by the male also, and perhaps more abundantly than by the female. Every person who has kept parrots, maccaws, and birds generally of that family, must have noticed the power possessed by them of throwing up the contents of the crop, and feeding each other. Hunter, in common with others, saw a cock paroquet regularly feed his hen, by first filling his own crop, and supplying her thence from his beak ; and he notices what every observer who has kept such birds must have remarked namely, that when they are very fond of the per- son who feeds and attends upon them, they per- form the action of throwing up food, and often do it. The cock pigeon, when he caresses the hen, goes through the same forms of action as when he feeds his young ; but Hunter adds, that he does not know if at this time he throws up anything from the crop. I have observed a similar action, during the breeding season in rooks ; and I have reason to believe that the cocks feed the hens while they are sitting, as well as the young, with food saved in a kind of gular pouch under the lower mandible, but I do not know whether they feed either the hens or the young with food which 130 LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. has undergone any alteration in the crop, or whether the hens feed their young or their mates with such provender. Hunter, from the observa- tions made by him on the parrot-kind, states that he has reason to suppose that they are endowed with the same power as the pigeons. As the breasts or udders of mammiferous fe- males become gradually enlarged and thickened at the time of uterine gestation, so, during incuba- tion, are the coats of the pigeon's crop ; and John Hunter, on comparing the state of that organ when the bird was not. sitting, with its appearance during incubation, found the difference very re- markable. In the first case, it was thin and mem- branous ; but by the time when the young- were about to be hatched, the whole, except the portion which lay under the trachea, became thicker, and assumed a glandular appearance, having its inter- nal surface very irregular. It was likewise evi- dently more vascular than in its former state, in order to the conveyance of a quantity of blood sufficient for the nourishing substance. * Whatever may be the consistence of this sub- stance when just secreted, it most probably very soon coagulates into a granulated white curd, for in such form," says Hunter, in continuation, " I have always found it in the crop ; and if an old pigeon is killed just as the young ones are hatch- ing, the crop will be found as above described, and in its cavity pieces of white curd, mixed with some of the common food of the pigeon, such as barley, beans, &c. If we allow either of the par- ents to feed the brood, the crop of the young pigeons when examined will be discovered to con- tain the same kind of curdled substance as that of the old ones, which passes from thence into the stomach, where it is to be digested." The joke about " pigeon's milk" is not so groundless, after all. But see how beautifully this dispensation is ordered, according to the ex- igencies of the nestling : The young pigeon is fed for a little time with this substance only, as about the third day some of the common food is found mingled with it ; as the pigeon grows older, the proportion of common food is increased ; so that by the time it is seven, eight, or nine days old, the secretion of the curd ceases in the old ones, and of course no more will be found in the crop of the young. It is a curious fact, that the parent pigeon has at first a power to throw up his curd without any mixture of common food, although, afterwards, both are thrown up, according to the proportion required for the young ones. I have called this substance curd, not as being literally so, but as resembling that more than any- thing I know ; it may, however, have a greater resemblance to curd than we are perhaps aware of, for neither this secretion, nor curd from which the whey has been pressed, seems to contain any sugar, and do not run into the acetous fermentation. The property of coagulating is confined to the substance itself, as it produces no such effect when mixed with milk. This secretion in the pigeon, like all other animal substances, becomes putrid by stand- ing, though not so readily as either blood or meat, it resisting putrefaction for a considerable time ; neither will curd much pressed become putrid so soon as either blood or meat.* Those who would wish to examine this phe- nomenon more closely will find preparations of the pigeon's crop in that noble museum,f which is John Hunter's best monument. No young birds are in so forlorn a state as young pigeons, if the parents are killed before the young can provide for themselves. Birds of other species, stimu- lated by the cries of the starving young which have been deprived of parental aid, can and do assist the little wretches, but none except an old pigeon with its crop in a proper state can save the life of a nestling dove. The gouras, by whose alliance a third colum- ban form of the same race has been ushered into this breathing world of ours, in their natural stale, are probably employed, like others of the dove kind, in disseminating the fragrant nutmegs through New Guinea, the Moluccas, and other islands. For Sonnerat declares, and with truth, that the pigeons which swallow the nuts whole are nourished by the enveloping case, which is alone digested, leaving the nut iiself uninjured, or rather more readily prepared for germinating on the soil whereon it is dropped. The Zoological Society possesses a very fine collection of Columbida, and a most interesting tribe they are. Messengers of love, of peace, and of war, they are allied very nearly, as we have seen above, to the mammalia in one part of their organization, and resemble them in some of their habits ; for pigeons do not drink like most birds by taking up a small quantity of water at a time, and throwing the head upward and back- ward, but, like horses or kine, suck up a long continuous draught without raising the head, till thirst is satisfied. Columba : whence the name 1 Varro declares from its cooing. Did'the same impression of its notes on the ancient British ear call forth a simi- lar appellation, and induce our ancestors to name the birds colommen, kylobman, kulm, kolm, and culver ? The perseverance with which some of the varieties, the carriers especially, when well trained, will return from very long distances, is wonderful : It blew and it rained. The pigeon disdained To seek shelter undaunted he flew ; Till wet was his wing, And painful the string, So heavy the letter it grew. This same faculty, which in comparatively modern times was degraded to giving notice to the * Animal Economy, edited by Professor Owen. Long- man and Co. f The museum of the Royal College of Surgeons of England, rendered doubly valuable by the learned and elaborate Catalogue by Professor Owen, in 5 vols. 4to. The preparations are numbered 3737 to 3741, both inclu- LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. 131 authorities that the finisher of the law had done his duty on the Tyburn hanging days Hogarth's graphic record of the custom will occur to most,* which afterwards sank to being the bearer of the news of the prize ring, and now-a-days con- veys the price of stocks to and from the continent, or brings the first intelligence of the winner of the Derby, kept Hirtius and Brutus constantly in- formed of each other's designs and movements, as the besieger, Antony, felt to his cost. In vain did he spread his nets and try every stratagem to bafils these couriers of the air : he had the morti- fication of seeing them going and returning to and fro over the beleaguered walls of Mutina. Anac- reon's dove was employed on a more gentle mis- sion. f And Taurosthenes sent one decked with purple to his happy father in the Island of JEgina with the news of his victory at the Olympic games on the day of the pigeon's arrival.J We have the authority of Sir John Maundeville he who made his way to the border of China in the reigns of our second and third Edward that the Asiatics used them for the same purpose as the Romans. In that contree, and other contrees bezonde, (says that knight, warrior, and pilgrim,) thei han a cus- tom whan thei schulle usen werre, and whan men holden sege abouten cytee or castelle, and thei withinnen dur not senden out messangers with let- tere, fro lord to lord, for to aske sokour, thei maken here letters and bynden them to the nekke of a colver, and letten the colver flee ; and the col- vern been so taughte, that they flee with the letters to the very place that men wolde sende them to. For the coheres been noryscht in tho places where thei ben sent to ; and thei senden hem thus far to beren here letters. And the coheres tetuornen azen where as thei ben norisscht, and so they don comrnounly. During the crusade of St. Louis they were so employed ; Tasso pressed them into the ser- vice in the siege of Jerusalem ;|| and Ariosto makes a dove the messenger that spread the news of Orrilo's death through Egypt. ^f The rapidity and power of flight of some of the species is almost incredible. The passenger pigeon** has been killed in the neighborhood of New York with its crop full of rice, which the bird could not have procured nearer than the fields of Georgia and Carolina. Audubon, who relates this startling, but, I believe, true fact, observes that, as their power of digestion is so great that they will decompose food entirely in twelve hours, the birds which were taken in the neighborhood of New York must have travelled between three and four hundred miles in six hours, an average of speed that reminds one of the famous horse Childers. He, however, could not have sus- tained his " flying" pace of a mile a minute for more than a very short period, whereas the bird is capable of keeping up its wonderful rate of * Etty's dove ascending at the moment of Joan's agony, and heralding the conclusion of the ardent logic of the stake, will also be remembered. t Ode 9. J JElian. Joinville. || Book xviii. IT Canto xv. ** Ectopistcs migratoria. Swainson. progression during many successive hours. The passenger pigeon would thus, as Audnbon ob- serves, be enabled, were it so inclined, to visit Europe in less than three days. Instances are not wanting of its presence here ; but the Amer- ican naturalist, who presented a number of these birds to the Earl of Derby in 1830, with whom they bred, seems to think that those which have been seen at liberty in this country had escaped from some aviary. Wagers have been laid and matches have been made to determine the rate of a carrier pigeon's flight. In 1808 a young man in the Borough un- dertook that his pigeons would fly thirty-five miles in one hour. Three were thrown up at five o'clock in the evening beyond Tunbridge Wells, and arrived at their owner's residence in fifty-three minutes, thus beating time by seven minutes. A gentleman had a wager on this event, and he sent a pigeon by the stage-coach to Bury St. Edmund's, with a request that the bird, two days after its arrival there, might be thrown up as the clock struck nine in the morning. This was done ; and at half-past eleven o'clock on that morning the pigeon was shown at the Bull Inn, Bishopsgate, into the loft of which respectable establishment it had entered, having made its way to that point in London in two hours and a half, and having traversed seventy-two aerial miles. When the trial of the annual prize for the best carrier pigeon was decided at Ghent on the 24th June, 1833, twenty-four birds which had been conveyed from that town were thrown up at Rouen at fifty-five minutes after nine o'clock in the morning. The distance is 150 miles, be the same, in lawyer's phrase, more or less, and the first pigeon arrived at Ghent in an hour and a half, sixteen came in within two hours and a half, and three in the course of the day. Four were lost. He who would train a carrier pigeon must take a young one that is fully fledged, and convey it in a basket or bag, at first not more than half a mile from home, and then turn it loose. After a repetition of this short journey twice or thrice, the future messenger should be taken to a distance of two, four, eight, ten, twelve, fifteen miles, and so on, and then turned loose, till it will return* from the most remote parts of the kingdom. The younger the bird is, if it have strength to fly well, the greater is the chance of educating it for a trusty bearer of a despatch. If this drilling is not commenced early, birds of the best breed can- not be trusted. Those who would succeed are careful to keep the pigeon about to be sent off in the dark without food for some seven or eight hours before it is loosed. When thrown up, the- bird rises, and when it has reached a good height,, will at first fly round and round, and then make off,, continuing on the wing without stop or stay, un- less prevented, till its well-known home is reached. A word to the wise by the way. Never throw up your bird in a fog or hazy weather, or 't is tem to one against its reaching its destination, or your 132 LEAVES FROM THE NOTE-BOOK OF A NATURALIST. seeing it again. Those who have been in the habit of travelling by the short stages or omni- ouses in the neighborhood of London to Hamp- ton and Sunbury, for instance must have ob- served one of these aerial messengers suddenly delivered from its darksome bag and thrown up by one of the " outsides" to find its way home. The spiral flight, when the birds are thrown up, is evidently flight of observation, and when they catch sight of any well-know landmark, away they go homeward. But they are lost if no such objects are within ken. Thus pigeons, when loosed from a balloon at a great height, after fly- ing round and round, have returned to the bal- loon for want of objects to guide them in their flight homeward. And yet there is on record a wonderful instance of their return to their domi- cile under circumstances of great difficulty, to say the least of it, as far as guide-marks are con- cerned. The battle of Solebay was fought on the 28th of May, 1672. Captain Carleton was a volun- teer on board the London man-of-war in that en- gagement, and he relates that on the first firing of the London's guns, a number of pigeons kept in the ship, and of which the commander was very fond, flew away. Nowhere were they seen near during the fight. It blew a brisk gale next day, and the British fleet was driven some leagues to the southward of the place where the birds for- sook the ship. The day after, back came the pigeons not in one flock, but in small parties of four or five at a time, till all the birds were safe on board. This unexpected return caused some conversa- tion on board ; when Sir Edward Sprage told those who expressed their surprise that he brought those pigeons with him from the Straights, and that when he left the Revenge for the London, all those birds, of their own accord, and without the trouble or care of carrying, left the Revenge, and removed with the seamen to the London.* Our tame varieties are generally considered, and with good reason, to be derived from the Blue Rock pigeon, or Rockier. f Pennant de- scribes this species as swarming in the Orkneys and Hebrides, and says that in the Orkneys they collect by thousands towards winter, and do "great damage to rick-yards. He saw in Hay, the bot- toms of the great chasms covered with their dung for many feet in thickness, which was drawn up in buckets,' and used successfully as manure. But great as is the facility with which they are domesticated, they occasionally show symp- toms of their original wildness. Pennant knew a dove-cot, not far from Orm's-head, where the pigeons resided, on account of the supply of food, till the breeding season, when liberty and love led them from the artificial pigeon-holes to those wild and vast rocks. This species abounds in the rocky islands of the Mediterranean, and was no stranger to Vir- * Cnrlftf,n''s Memoirs; and see Yarrell's highly intcrest- ijng British Birds. f Columba livia. gil, as the beautiful lines in the fifth ^Eneid* show. Even in this vast brick Babylon, some pigeons breed about Somerset House, both on the river and land side. They are probably birds which have been domesticated, and have escaped, pre- ferring a comparatively wild life, with the sup- plies afforded by the wharves and barges. The proneness to domestication in this bird, or rather in one of the varieties from it, was strongly contrasted with the impracticability of reconciling the ring-dove, cushat, or wood-pigeon, (Columba palumbus,) to captivity, in Colonel Montagu's ex- periment. It is true that he tamed them within doors, "so as to be exceedingly troublesome ;" but he never could produce a breed, either by themselves or with the tame pigeon. Two were bred up by him, together with a male pigeon, and were so tame as to eat out of the hand ; but the genial spring brought no signs of breeding, so they were suffered to take their liberty in the month of June, by opening the window of the room in which they were confined, the colonel thinking that the pigeon might induce them to return to their usual place of abode, either for food or to roost ; but no ; they instantly took to their natural habits, and the colonel saw them no more. The pigeon continued to return. The gouras, it will be remarked, contrary to the general habit of the Columbidae, laid only one egg, and the passenger pigeon, according to Wil- son, lays no more. In 1832, a pair of passengers began a nest on the 25th of April, in a fir-tree planted in one of the enclosures in the garden in the Regent's Park. The hen was the architect, but the cock was the laborer. Most perseveringly did he collect and convey to the selected spot, sticks, straws, and other nest materials. Every time became in with his build ing materials, he alighted on the back of the hen, so as not to disturb any part of the structure which she had finished. On the morning of the 26th, one egg was laid, and the hen immediately began to sit. The cock took his turn at incubation, and when sixteen days had passed, the young bird appeared. But if only one egg is laid by the passenger pigeon, the numbers of the species exceed belief, and they afford a most plentiful supply to our Transatlantic cousins. Their roosting-places in those deep and extensive forests exhibit an ex- traordinary spectacle. The dung-covered ground is strewn with the limbs of the trees broken down by their weight ; the grass and underwood are destroyed, and not unfrequently thousands of acres of trees are killed. Upon the discovery of one of these roosts, the whole country comes in to wage war upon the birds during the night, with all sorts of destructive engines ; guns, clubs, long poles, and sulphur-pots, are plied in all directions, till the invaders have filled their sacks and loaded their horses to their hearts' content. But the breeding-places are even more exten- sive than the roosts. These, in the states of Ohio, Kentucky, and Indiana, are generally in the back- * L. 213, UaDel})J)fa. It is one of the most interesting and valuable publications of the day. It is a literary repository, richly and amply filled with the most readable articles in the reviews and journals of Europe. Being issued every week, it keeps pace with the movements of the world, and exhibits the living, restless spirit of the age, as developed in its literature, science, com- merce, politics, and in the various arts of life. s NOTICES OF LITTELL'S LIVING AGE. fflfajette, Bober, T*T. 3}. Notwithstanding the wide range over which the Living Age has run in its grasp of materials, it still keeps up an unflagging interest, and richly merits the popularity it has attained. 35bcninjj CSajette. In closing our liter- ary labors for this year there is one publication which merits a notice ; and all our readers who have had an opportunity of judging will agree with us when we say that Litteirs Living Age is worthy of all praise. We have from time to time acknowl- edged the receipts of the weekly numbers ; but such a brief mention conveys no idea to a stranger of the value of this publication. It not only con- tains the cream of foreign publications, but the very essence, the very marrow, of eminent English literature, and a person who reads it will obtain as correct an idea of the spirit of the times, both so- c-ially and politically, as if he became the veriest book-worm, and possessed a supernatural power of reading every line that emanates from the press. It affords us pleasure to hear of the success of this issue. It is creditable to our citizens that it is supported by them, and we most sincerely wish that its proprietor may be the receiver of a golden harvest, for he is a skilful husbandman, growing good fruit, from well-eelected stock. JFreemnn, (Koncortt, jfWs. We wish the Living Age could take the place of the corrupting trash which is poured forth in such unceasing torrents, and is perverting taste and endangering the princi- ples of our youth. N. U. SEfasJjtnfltom'an, Uostott. Amid the multitudinous issues that daily come from the press, which have their brief hour and are laid aside, the work above announced stands conspicuous as a notable exception to casual interest or speedy neg- lect. Like the evergreen of winter, while all around has withered and perished, its perennial freshness gladdens and softens the asperities of the general deartn. We wish to call the attention of the large class of young men in our community to the merits of this work to point out to them the vast fund of valuable information which is tendered for almost the simple asking. We know of no publication in the whole range of literature which presents such facilities for the acquisition of knowledge. In its pages we find the products of the first minds of Eu- rope and America. The reader can, at will, revel in the delights of romance, follow the instructions if the historian, trace the devious ways of national politics, grasp the discoveries of science, or cull flowers from the ever-teeming fields of popular literature. There is no department of human lore which does not here open its lecture-room no teacher of the mysteries of nature that does not here present his inculcations. It is, therefore, one of the most valuable compilations of the age, and should be the text-book of all. To the thousands of young men in this country who are coming upon the stage of active usefulness, whose desire is to possess themselves of a thorough knowledge of what is transpiring among the nations of the earth, what publication is more fitted for their peculiar position 1 There is none. For six dollars a year, or twelve-and-a-half cents weekly, can this great boon be procured. How many there are who, almost daily, foolishly squander more than the weekly cost of this work, which, if in- vested in the way we suggest, would insure them a rare treasure-house of delight, entertainment, and instruction ! Young men, think of the oppor- tunity thus offered. 3Uj)tU)ltcan, W. SSnDjjetoater, $&a. We are exceedingly giad to see this most valuable of maga- zines on our table. What the reviews are to liter- ature in general, the Living Age is to the reviews a selection of the choice bits, the refined essence of the leading European and American journals. ^Journal, iJrobiDence, It. K. No periodical is more welcome than this, which sustains the high character it has so long enjoyed for the variety and excellence of its selections. To those who are un- able to take but a single periodical, LittelVs Living Age is the best, as it culls the choicest papers on all subjects, from the leading reviews and maga- zines of England. It also contains many smaller articles selected from the newspaper press of the United States. fs.) bserber. We renew our recommendation of the work to such of our readers as desire to possess the best literary productions of our time. The work is published in weekly parts of 48 large two-column pages, making four vol- umes, of over 600 pages each, per year. Its con- tents are principally derived from the periodicals of England, Scotland, and Ireland. They embrace those reviews which form the great staple of the quarterlies sparkling essays incidents of adven- ture in all climes speculations on passing political events notices of, and extracts from, new books tales, poetry, witticisms, &c. In short, the selec- tions are so judiciously made, that the " Living Age" is adapted to all who desire to keep informed of the movements of the period to professional and business men and it is also attractive and useful to women and children. It would be a " continual feast" for every family, gratifying the mental and moral appetite ; and one so ample as to ensure the neglect of much that is bad in taste and vicious in morals, but which, in this day of cheap publica- tions, can be guarded against only by furnishing a sufficient supply of a healthy character. Add to the foregoing, that the work possesses more than a temporary interest that its value is permanent that it can be got bound for 50 cents per volume, and thus the subscriber can make a rich addition to his library each year. Datl ^Tribune, Worcester, i&s. Of course it needs no comment from us, for every intelligent person will concur with us, when we say, that for a deep and solid reasoning in its articles, a purely literary and scientific work, it stands in the first rank of the literary works of the day. JSjrcelsfor, Wetoburflft, W. 3T. The Living Age we have often brought to the notice of our readers ; and, for their good, we cannot do it too often. It is conducted upon the plan of Littell's Museum, which long enjoyed an enviable popularity. It contains the very cream of the foreign literature which is worth republication ; and sprinkles that with choice articles from able native pens. The British reviews are very expensive ; and, after all, much of their contents is not adapted to the tastes or wants of American readers. Litteirs Living Age repub- hshes the best of the articles from the reviews and all the British periodicals of lighter cast. 9 NOTICES OF LITTELL'S LIVING AGE. HonOon (Ct.) Democrat. This is one of the most popular, most useful, and most exten- sively read periodicals of the present day. Unlike many of the monthlies that are published, and im- posed upon the community, this work abounds with useful and interesting- matter, bringing the past as well as the present age before us in full review, and bearing rich instruction, in so interesting a manner, that no one can read without pleasure and profit. It has received the highest encomiums of the first men of the age. ST&e Calendar, ?8artfortr, J)io. The very embodiment of the best spirit of the living litera- ture of our day. We have books that are books, and this is one of them. The scholars and ripa men of our country regard LitteWs Living Age as a work essential to them, and surely we need not add that it must be useful to every one who will read it. State ffiajette, J8ontjjomer2, &!. The work is unlike any other literary publication in the country, it being a reprint of all the choice articles of the foreign periodicals not of the Quar- terlies only, but also of the Monthlies, Weeklies and Dailies, as well as articles of extraordinary interest from American publications. It furnishes besides original contributions from able writers as foreign correspondents. Mr. Littell has been long connected with our periodical press, and is extensively known as a judicious and tasteful caterer to the wants of the literary community ; and we know of no publica- tion of a similar character whatever that we con- sider equal to it in interest and value, and the privation of which we should esteem so material a loss. fSramtnev, 3Loutsbille, Sj. If we were pro- hibited from reading more than one periodical, we should not feel much disposed to complain of the prohibition, if we were permitted to select Littell's Living Age. It is composed of the best articles of the best periodicals ; and is as much superior to any one of them as the master-piece of the Grecian artist was to any one of the beautiful women who furnished each some particular charm for the repre sentation of perfect beauty. We are delighted with each number as it comes to us. So highly have we been pleased with the work that we have purchased all the back volumes for the use of oui family. 33anner, (Earrolton, SU. A work which we cordially recommend to every family for its healthy moral tone, its large collection of biography, his- tory, voyages, and travels; its notices of recent and passing events ; besides its rich provision for the imagination. It is a desirable work for all who wish to keep themselves informed of the progress of the present age, in its political and moral bearing. Bails &Uberttser, UatJ), j!8e. Each weekly number contains a large amount of matter, consist- ing of selections of the most valuable portions of the whole literature of the age. Those who can afford only a limited yearly addition to their libra- ries should not hesitate to subscribe for this work. It has no embellishments, but its real worth is greater than that of all the other literary magazines in the country put together. Democrat, ffioncorB, W. 2$. Each number contains forty-eight pages of the choicest poetical and prose articles to be found in the periodicals of Europe and America. The se- lections are uniformly made with great judgment and care, making, in our estimation, the most valuable, as well as the cheapest, magazine in the United States. Again. The editor possesses rare judgment in " sifting the wheat" from the great mass of current Foreign Literature, and presenting to the American public only such as is worthy to work and live in the mind of the age. 10 NOTICES OF LITTELL'S LIVING AGE. Uoston ISost --No person can do better, who wishes to keep cognizant of the literature and grea events of the day, than to commence 1850 by sub- scribing for this cheap and valuable work. Uoston iEbening CKajette. Always excellent. We could write a column in its praise. 33oston 3J)ati)ftnHer. Littell's Living Age is rightly named, because it gives us, not the mouldy literature of past ages, but the fresh, vigorous and healthy productions of the men of to-day. American ffiafiinet, Boston. This truly valu- able publication is ever welcome. The editor is as one watching the tide of popular reading, and who thrusts down his hand when something rich and rare floats along, and makes it a part and parcel of the " age." Hell) SSnjjIanOer, Boston. It bears indubitable indications of the valued tact and nice discrimina- tion of its conductor, Mr. Littell. Again. Need we again commend this super-excellent work to our readers ? Not, perhaps, for its necessities ; for a generous patronage, and the universal commenda- tion of the press, render such a task superfluous. But to attract the attention of the young men of our land to its merits we will gladly speak of it weekly. There is no work in this country which, in so convenient a compass, and at so cheap a rate, furnishes a more varied, judicious or valuable read- ing to the knowledge-seeking student. Five dol- lars each to a club of four will secure this treasure for one year. Again. It must be gratifying to the publishers of this work, to notice that selec- tions from its pages are travelling the round of the press of this country a favorable comment on its popular cast. It has been well said that he who makes an able extract renders a service equivalent to that of one who writes a good article and this merit is peculiarly that of the conductor of the Age. Again. We can with truth endorse a contemporary, who says this celebrated weekly holds on its unrivalled course vigorously, bearing its rich freight of literary wares, gathered from every civilized region, to the " uttermost parts of the earth." Our experience has taught us that, with the Living Age, we have no need of the famous British Quarterlies, nor of most of the valuable productions of the British periodical press. Again. What do you read, good sir? Science, history, politics, poetry, or romance? Have the Age, then, by all means. To be without it, exist- ence loses much of its delights the mind half its enjoyment. We speak " by the book." SBostou Sfouvnal. The accumulation of new /jooks on almost all subjects, has become so rapid of late, that no man, even by incessant reading with out, sleep or rest, if possible, could wade through but a small portion of them. They shower down upon us from the sky ; they come up from he mighty deep ; they tumble upon us from the heights of Parnassus ; they rush upon us as mon- sters from Domdaniel caverns, and they spread around us in legions from Cyprian temples. What, then, shall we read 1 What new work, worth the precious hours of a fugitive existence, whether on science, history, poetry or romance, shall we select? The impartial Reviews and judicious Criticisms of the day will answer. But they are also many, and are becoming voluminous. On this account the plan and conduct of LITTELL'S LIVING AGE have met with such general approbation and patron- age/ It skims the cream of Reviews. It supplies 11 | the wants of a reading community, and like a Cicerone regulates the taste, and like a guide-board points out the way, in making discreet selections ; or in some cases serves to warn us from a waste of time, in the perusal of a book, however popular "A Stranger in Boston." (ffjjricttan deflector, JSoston. This sterling cosmopolite continues to send out its gatherings* from the standard periodical literature of the old world and new. It has reached a vigorous man- hood, and grows wiser and better as it grows older. The contents are rich and varied. The selections indicate an excellent taste and good judgment. The circulation of this periodical keeps on rapidly increasin. .Saturtraij Gambler. The Living Age is too well known to the American public to need any eulogium at our hands. The standing and reputation which it has attained are its best recom mendation. Dortlantt (,f&e.) STranscujpt. A man cannot be said to live, in his age if he do not keep himself informed of the course of its current of thought and action. And we verily believe that he can do this in no way so readily and so cheaply as by sub- scribing for the Living Age. This publication is no longer an experiment ; it is a fixed fact. And as a fact, it is doing more for the spread of know - edge among the people, than most men imagine. It gives us all that is worth knowing in the foreign quarterlies and monthlies, which are themselves beyond the reach of the mass of the people, and the most valuable of the many contributions to our own current literature. Much of the space in the number before us is devoted to articles of Ameri- can origin, and we think this feature of the Living Age will commend it still more to our people. We say to all who would cultivate an acquaintance with the great minds of the old and the new worlds, subscribe for the Living Age. fflfajette, 25ast STtjomaston, |&e. It is uni- "ormly filled with a variety of articles selected from the leading European monthlies, and there is no ;aste, however various or exacting, that will fail to ind in each number, at least one article fully repay- 'ng the cost of the whole, while, on the other hand, it never contains anything which can be styled objectionable. We could name a hundred articles scattered through the last year's series, which havo afforded us much interest and satisfaction, and, we lope, at the same time, an equal share of profit. [t is always rich in good things, arid we wish it jreat and continued prosperity. democrat, ^erefiitl) 3Sri&flf, W. ?. This work is acknowledged to be the freshest, most refined, and best literary work published, while its heapness places it within the reach of all. irrasburn; (Vt.) (Sajette. Preeminent among weekly publications in this country, stands Littell's living Age. The amount of matter in each num- )er is nearly equal to that contained in the foreign Juarterlies, consisting of selections from all the Reviews, domestic and foreign, as well as from the first newspapers in either hemispheres. For six dollars a year, one can really get, in this publica- ion, the spirit of the age, literary and political. CSreen i&otiritatn JFmman, jRflontpeUer, Ut. Incomparably the best of the kind published in America, it still fully holds its .own in the varied nterest and richness of its contents. NOTICES OF LITTELL'S LIVING AGE. Barnstable (J8s.) patriot. This republica- tion is one of the best, if not the very best, reprint of foreign literature which is offered to the American public. The pages of this valuable magazine are filled with judicious selections taken chiefly from the oldest, most popular and talented of the foreign periodicals : they are enriched also with selections from American authors and miscellaneous publica- tions, which give to them much spirit and variety. It is a synopsis of the best productions of many of the finest transatlantic writers of the day, and, as representing the present expression and progress of European and American literature, it is a com- pilation of more than ordinary or transient merit. of Commerce, Weto Yorfc Cittj. Its contents consist for the most part of articles extracted from the foreign periodicals of the day ; but its selections, instead of being confined exclu- sively to the elaborate essays of Quarterly Reviews, embrace within their range the lighter literature of the " Monthlies/' and even of the most valuable weekly newspapers. Occasionally, too, we are pleased to notice extracts from the columns of lead- ing American papers, whose editorials are fre- quently worthy of a more permanent existence, than can be secured to them by the issues of an ephemeral press.- An agreeable variety is thus given to the pages of Littell ; and hence it becomes in reality, what its name purports, a correct daguerreotype of the living age. It is, at once, "popular" in character, and, at the same time, well adapted " to raise the standard of public taste." ' (17t.) 35aale. In looking over its pages, one can hardly repress a feeling of amaze- ment at the amount, variety and richness of its con- tents. It is confined to no particular theme, and is bound to the maintenance of no exclusive party, sect, or school of philosophy. The selections are made and arranged with great discrimination ; so happily blending the grave and the gay, that the reader, no matter what his taste, so it be cultivated, will find much to commend. It contains weekly copious extracts from the standard foreign reviews, magazines and newspapers, culled with rare taste and judgment by the industrious editor, thus present- ing, in a condensed form, much highly interesting and valuable information, to which many might otherwise be denied access. Philosophy, History, Biography, Fiction, and Poetry, each, in turn, claim the attention of the delighted reader. We know of no periodical published in this country, possess- ing so many attractions for an intelligent, educated family. (lit.) JB^lt.LittelVs Living Age has been received, and read with much inter- est and profit to ourselves.'* It is truly a valuable work. Much has been said in praise of this periodical, and we can assure those who are not familiar with it, that report has not exaggerated its merits. O^t.) journal. There is probably no one periodical publication in the world, that contains so rich', extensive, and valuable a variety of contributions. American Courier, tyljilz. We really think, if " our million" knew the peculiar excellence of " LittelVs Living Age," its terms, &c., they woold render an additional printing machine neces- sary to supply the demand. 12 Aunt's iHercljants' iHasajint. Mr. LittelJ the editor and proprietor of this work, may be> regarded as the pioneer in re-producing in these United States the choicest literature of England. He started nearly, if not quite, a quarter of a cen- tury ago, the first journal of foreign literature ; and if his taste, zeal, and industry had been prop- erly appreciated, he would (if it were possible for one of his tireless energy and activity) have retired, ere this, on a well and honestly earned for- tune. A cotemporary, C. Edwards Lester, Esq., the editor of the " Gallery of Illustrious Ameri- cans," in his " Fly-Leaf of Art and Criticism,'' pays a high but well merited tribute to Mr. Littell and his " Living Age," which we take great pleas- ure in transferring to the pages of the Merchants' Magazine, with our unhesitating assent to the just- ness of our cotemporary's criticism : " LITTELL'S LIVING AGE. This best of all the Eclectics has nearly reached its three hun- dreth number, and from week to week its appear- ance is looked for with interest by more readers of taste and intellectual culture than any other heb- dominal in the country. Mr. Littell was the foun- der of this school of publications. His Museum of foreign Literature was for twenty years the chief medium through which the periodical literature of Europe was diffused through America. The Liv- ing Age has existed about six years, and during that period it has gained a wider circulation, and become a far more valuable work. It exceeds all similar publications, in being a weekly, in the liv- ing and electric spirit of its articles, in their immense volume and variety, and in the punctu- ality of its appearance. If an extraordinary arti- cle comes out in Blackwood, or any of the great reviews, his readers are sure to be among the first to get it. Any number of the Living Age is relia- ble reading to slip into the pocket for a leisure evening, a steamboat, or a railway car, and if there has been a change in it, it has steadily been grow- ing better from the beginning. The twenty-two bound volumes of this work contain more LITERA- TURE than has ever been crowded into the same space, and as a reference book, or one for family reading, make up a richer, racier, and a more varied library than can be had for the same expense in any form." 33anjjor (ifce.) Bemocrat. This charming and ever popular weekly periodical, makes its appearance regularly ; and keeps up its character with unabated impartiality and taste. We cannot too warmly press this excellent serial upon the con- sideration of every admirer of solid and instructive reading. 3SatJ) (jffte.) Bads &pberttser. Littell's Liv- ing Age comes to us with unvarying regularity. It contains about all that is worthy of preservation in the reviews and literary publications of the day. We repeat what we have before said, that in Teal worth it is of more value than all the other maga- zines in the country. Wetoport (3&. .) StDberttser. It contains a variety of exceedingly entertaining 'matter, which is as diversified as one could wish. We are con- stantly alluding to this valuable work, as contain- ing the best selections from the English and Ameri- can periodicals, and are anxious to see it in the tands of all our readers.