At first the tadpoles are very tiny, only a quarter of an inch in length; and they cling in tufts to the under side of the water plants. After that, I suppose, everybody knows what happens.

There is still another curious difference between hens’ eggs and frogs’. When a frog lays an egg, that egg is nothing else but just egg—the little frog has not begun at all to form inside it. But when a hen lays an egg, while there is no little creature in that either, still the egg has already begun to get ready to turn into a chick. Some animals go farther than this, so that when their eggs are laid, the little creature is already formed inside, and so has only the last part of his growing left to be done outside. Certain fishes, certain reptiles, and various other animals besides, actually put off laying the eggs until so late that the young is all ready for hatching. Such eggs are laid and hatched at the same time, or even hatched first and laid afterwards.

All the four-footed creatures which have fur and hair, horses, cattle, dogs, cats, monkeys, and the like, manage in this way. And because this kind of egg doesn’t get knocked about, it does not need to have either hard shell nor thick jelly to protect it, but only a thin skin. For this reason, and because the egg hatches a few moments before it is laid, people are apt to miss it entirely, and so to get the idea that these animals have no eggs at all. But they have—one egg for each little animal.

We pretend that the bunny rabbits at Easter are hatched from the colored Easter eggs. They really are hatched out of rabbits’ eggs. No one notices the remnants of the rabbits’ egg, because what little there is soon dries up to almost nothing, or else the old mother rabbit eats it. Besides, one has all one can do to look at the new bunnies. Nevertheless, all little animals come out of eggs, puppies, colts, lambs, calves, kittens, every kind of living creature that is big enough for you to see, and a good many besides that are so small that you have to look for them with a microscope.

III
Little Fishes In The Brook

Of all eggs, the most interesting, I think, are the fishes’. Nearly all of these are pretty small, little round whitish globules like sugar pills. Some, like the eggs of trout and salmon which one finds in the gravel banks of rapid streams, are as large as fair-sized beads. Many, like the eggs of sea fish which float near the surface of the ocean, would go thru the eye of a darning needle.

The point, however, which makes them especially interesting is that so many of them are like tiny glass marbles. The membrane around them is so clear, and the substance of the egg itself so transparent, that with a magnifying glass, one can look right thru the egg, and see the little white fleck inside grow from nothing at all to a real fish, long enough to reach clear round the egg and lie with its tail almost in its mouth.

Some eggs are much clearer than others. The clearest are, at first, like clear glass, so that they can not be seen at all under water. Soon, however, a tiny vague white spot begins to form on the lower side. Then one can make out that the egg is covered with a rather thick membrane, that within this is a narrow, clear space filled with water, while within this and still smaller, floats the tiny yolk which is the real egg that is going to become the little fish.