Many of the ichneumon flies, spheges, and wasps, head of the hornet, sting of ditto, collectors of the bee, many sorts of muscæ, or flies with two wings, especially those whose bodies are highly coloured; acari or ticks; phalangium cancroides, see [Plate XVIII.] Fig. 1 and 6. Some spiders, but the eyes of all; the oniscus or wood-louse, julus, and scolopendra.

The feathers of peacocks, and many other birds, have a grand effect when viewed in the opake microscope, as have also some species of ferns, mosses, and wood cut transversely. Madrepores, millepores, sponges, corallines, &c. exhibit wonderful appearances not discernible to the naked eye. Parts of echini or sea eggs, spines of ditto; these may also be cut transversely to shew their construction. Minute shells dissected, skin of many species of fish, particularly the lump-sucker, see [Plate XVIII.] Fig. 2. Sole fish, [Plate XIX.] Fig. 5. and the rasp fish from Otaheite; also the skins of snakes, lizards, guanas, &c. &c.

The exterior form, and even the interior structure of the generality of vegetable seeds, have been supposed by some so much alike in the several kinds, and of so little curiosity and beauty in the whole, that they have scarcely been regarded by the curious; but when nearly examined with the help of microscopes, they are found to be worthy of a greater attention; those which appear most like to one another when viewed by the naked eye, often proving as different, when thus examined, in their several forms and characters, as the different genera of any other bodies in the creation. If their external forms carry all this variety and beauty about them, their internal structure, when laid open by different sections, appears yet more admirable.

The seed of the greater maple, which we commonly, but improperly call the sycamore tree,[148] consists of a pod and its wing; two of these grow upon a pedicle, with the pods together, which makes them resemble the body of an insect with its expanded wings: the wings are finely vasculated, and the pods are winged with a fine white down resembling silk; this contains a round compact pellet, covered with a brown membrane that sticks very closely to it. When this is pulled off, instead of discerning a kernel, as in other seeds, there appears an entire green plant folded up in a most surprizing manner. The pedicle of this is about two-eighths of an inch long, and its seminal leaves of about six-eighths each; between these the germina of the next pair of leaves are plainly visible to the naked eye, but with a microscope they are seen with the greatest beauty and perfection.

[148] The Acer pseudo-platanus, Hudsoni Fl. Angl. p. 445. Parkinson calls it acer majus, adding, sycomorus falso dictum. Hudson, however, agrees with Hunter in his edition of Evelyn’s Sylva, in affixing to it the English term greater maple or sycamore. Edit.

The seed of the musk scabious is beautiful in its shape and structure. The calix or cup which contains the seed is of an octagonal form, and makes an appearance like a fine vase, having scallopped edges, and toward the inner part of the edge a white ruffled membrane. The ribs run down from its mouth, which is bell-fashioned, and becoming narrower downward, form obtuse angles by continuing from the bend to form the bottom of the vase. Between these ribs, down to the beginning of the narrow part, it is clear, though not wholly transparent, and from thence to the bottom the ribs are hairy. This vase contains the seed, wherein appears first its thick body, which runs up with a narrow neck, till it divides into five spiculated fibres, whose spiculæ are determined upwards, and are thereby prepared to cause the seed to recede from any thing that might injure it on being touched. The bodies of the vases, when first ripe, are of a fine lemon yellow, but grow by long keeping darker; and the bason formed by the roots of the minute fibres is of a fine green, but the fibres themselves of a shining brown, like brown sugar-candy, as their spines are also.

These, and a number of similar beauties in this part of the creation, are described at large by Dr. Parsons, in his work entitled, “The Microscopic Theatre of Seeds.”[149] Most kinds of seeds should be prepared for a microscopical examination by steeping them in warm water till their coats are separated, and their seminal leaves may then be opened without laceration. But seeds, while dry, and without any preparation, are of an almost infinite variety of shapes, and afford a number of pleasing objects for the microscope.

[149] This curious work was published in the year 1745. It was the author’s intention to have comprised the whole design in four volumes quarto, but the first volume only appeared. It contains the etymology, synonyma, and description of the several plants and their flowers, with an account of their medical virtues, and an explanation of botanical terms. As the work is in but few hands, and a copy not easy to be procured, I flatter myself that extracts from those parts containing the microscopical descriptions will form an agreeable addition to these Essays; which the reader will accordingly meet with in the following [chapter]. Edit.

One of the most interesting scenes in microscopical botany is exhibited in mouldiness. Those miniature plants seem to bear the same relation to the vegetable kingdom that the animalcula infusoria do to the animal; they were formerly considered as shapeless and unformed masses, but we now view them with surprize and pleasure taking their place in the great scale of organized beings, and presenting us with some of the most striking characteristics of vegetables.

OF TRANSPARENT OBJECTS.