The dissection of the sting, the proboscis, and the compound eye of the bee was a task after Swammerdam's own heart, but so intricate that all his patience and skill could not save him from occasional slips. He bequeathed to his successors many noble examples of the way in which life-histories ought to be investigated.

Malpighi of Bologna may be called the first of the histologists, for as early as the second half of the seventeenth century he unravelled the tissues of many animals and plants. His work on plant-tissues was so closely accompanied by the similar researches of an Englishman, Nehemiah Grew, that it is not easy to assign the priority to either. Malpighi was the first to demonstrate the capillaries which connect the arteries with the veins, the first to investigate the glands of the human body and the sensory papillæ of the skin. At the request of our Royal Society he drew up an account of the structure and life-history of the silkworm, which is memorable as the earliest anatomical study of any insect. Malpighi also applied his microscope to the chick-embryo, and figured its chief stages. His exposition of the formation of the heart and vessels of the chick is a marvellous example of the quick appreciation of novel structures.

If we suppose the Micrographia of Hooke to be greatly enlarged, so as to become, instead of the passing occupation of a man busied with a hundred other interests, the main pursuit of a long and laborious life, we shall get a rough notion of the microscopic revelations of Leeuwenhoek. His researches were desultory, though not quite so desultory as Hooke's; he must have often spent months upon an investigation which Hooke would have dismissed in as many weeks. Both travelled over the whole realm of nature, and lacked that concentration which made the work of Swammerdam so productive and so lasting.

Antony van Leeuwenhoek.

From the portrait by Verkolje, prefixed to the Epistolæ ad Soc. Reg. Angl., Leyden, 1719.

Leeuwenhoek worked with simple lenses, ground and mounted by his own hands. It was easy to make lenses of high magnifying power, but hard to correct their optical defects, to bring a sufficiently strong light to bear upon the object, and to focus the lens. When he wished to send out his preparations for examination by others, he found it best to fix the objects in the focus, and to provide each with a separate lens. With such microscopes he managed to study and figure very minute objects, such as blood-corpuscles, spermatozoa, and bacteria. The spermatozoa were brought under his notice by a young Dutch physician named Hamm; but it was Leeuwenhoek's account of them, and his daring theory of their physiological rôle, which gave them such celebrity. To Leeuwenhoek we owe the first discovery of the rotifers, the infusoria, Hydra, the yeast-cell, the bacteria, and the generation of aphids without male parents.