The short list here presented to the reader must, from the nature of the subject, be very imperfect; for the whole of the animal, vegetable, and mineral kingdoms, with all their numerous subdivisions, furnish objects for the microscope; and there is not one of them, that, when properly examined, will not afford instruction and entertainment to the rational investigator of the works of creation. The Systema Naturæ of Linnæus may therefore be regarded as a catalogue of universals for microscopic observation, each of which comprehends a variety of particulars. The list here given can be considered as little more than a directory, to point out to those who have only begun to study this part of natural history a few of those objects which merit their attention, and which, from their beauties, may incite them to pursue the study with greater ardor.
OF OPAKE OBJECTS.
Ores and minerals afford an immense variety of very beautiful and splendid objects. From amongst these the observer may select the peacock or coloured copper ore, green crystallized ditto, lead ore, crystallized ditto, crystals of lead, small grained marcasites, coloured mundic, cinnabar, native sulphur, needle and other antimony, moss copper, &c. A mixture of small pieces of ores, &c. of different kinds, produces a pleasing effect. Sands in general exhibit something not discoverable with the naked eye. Sand from the sea-shore is often intermixed with minute shells, particularly that from Rimini, in Italy. Mr. Walker has published a specimen of the small microscopic shells which are found on our own coast. From this work we learn, that there are shell-fish as small as the minutest insects, and possessed of beauties of which we can form no conception till we have seen them. Mr. Walker’s work is entitled, “A Collection of the minute and rare Shells lately discovered in the Sand on the Sea-shore near Sandwich.”[147] There is a sand from Africa full of small garnets. The ketton, or kettering stone, is a pleasing object; when examined by the microscope, we find the grain of it very different from that of other stones, being composed of innumerable minute balls, which barely touch each other, and yet form a substance much harder than free-stone; the grains are, in general, so firmly united together at the points of contact, that it is hardly possible to separate them without breaking one or both of the grains. See Hooke’s Micrographia.
[147] This publication will be more particularly noticed in the ensuing [chapter]. Edit.
Insects of all kinds, both foreign and domestic, are pleasing objects; but as the foreign ones are not so easily met with, I shall mention but a few of them, confining myself principally to those of this country. Among the exotic insects, none appear more beautiful in the microscope than the curculio imperialis, Brazil or diamond beetle; the buprestis ignita, or large beetle from China; the meloe vesicatorius, Linn. the cantharis or Spanish fly of the shops; several species of locusts, grasshoppers, &c. Among the English beetles, we may reckon the scarabæus auratus or rose chaffer, scarabæus nobilis, scarabæus horticola, silpha aquatica, cassida nobilis and nebulosa. Coccinella or lady-cow; of these there are great varieties both in size and colour, some red and black, others black and red, and some yellow and black. Chrysomela graminis, chrysomela fastuosa, chrysomela nitidula, chrysomela sericea, chrysomela melanopa, chrysomela asparagi, see [Plate XX.] Fig. 2. Curculio frumentarius, lapathi, betula, nucum, scrophularia, argenteus, a beautiful little insect resembling the diamond beetle, but in miniature; curculio albinus, very beautiful, but scarce in this country. Leptura aquatica, these are of various colours, as blue, purple, bronze, and crimson. Arcuata arietis, very common, and is often called the wasp beetle. Cicindela campestris, on dry banks. Carabus nitens, found in Yorkshire, a beautiful insect; many small carabi. Gryllus, gryllo-talpa or mole cricket, this insect, and the grasshoppers, are many of them too large to be observed at one view, but the head, fore and hind feet, elytra, &c. viewed separately, are fine objects. Cicada sanguinolenta, nervosa, interrupta, notonecta striata, minutissima, head and claws of the nepa cinerea or water-scorpion, and the whole variety of cimices or field bugs. The wings of butterflies and moths; the chrysalis of the common white butterfly is extremely fine.
I wish it were in my power to invite the reader to consider the pupa state of these insects, as he would find them interesting in various points of view. Perhaps the following passage from an ingenious writer may have this effect.
“Some of these creatures crawl for a time as helpless worms upon the earth, like ourselves; they then retire into a covering, which answers the end of a coffin or a sepulchre, wherein they are invisibly transformed, and come forth in glorious array, with wings and painted plumes, more like the inhabitants of the heavens than such worms as they were in their former state. This transformation is so striking and pleasant an emblem of the present, the intermediate, and glorified state of man, that people of the most remote antiquity, when they buried their dead, embalmed and inclosed them in an artificial covering, so figured and painted, as to resemble the caterpillar in the intermediate state; and as Joseph was the first we read of that was embalmed in Egypt, where this custom prevailed, it was probably of Hebrew original.”
The eggs of moths and butterflies, particularly the phalæna neustria, see [Plate X.] Fig. 1 to 6. The bodies and heads of many libellulæ.