develops itself on the brain of the sheep, and occasions the disease known by the name of “gid.” This disease may be produced artificially. The sheep which swallows the eggs of this tænia shows the first symptoms of it towards the seventeenth day. If we kill it at this time, we find on the surface of the brain, either at the base or the summit, or sometimes between the hemispheres and the cerebellum, one or more white vesicles of the size of a pea, and on which no traces of buds are yet to be seen. This vesicle, of a milky-white colour, and filled with liquid, is the scolex. Near these vesicles are to be seen some very irregular yellow furrows, like tubes abandoned by some tubicolar annelid; this is the gallery through which the vesicular worm has proceeded to the place where it has been found.

Fig. 54.—Cœnurus of the sheep. 1, the enclosed scolex; 2, Hydatic vesicle, with the scolices in their place within it.

A fortnight later, that is to say, about the thirty-second day, the cœnurus is as large as a small nut, and one can see with the naked eye some small nebulous corpuscles, separate from each other, of the same form and size; these are the buds or scolices which have risen up, but which, as yet, have neither hooks nor suckers.

We give the representation of one of these vesicles, on the internal walls of which young scolices have been developed; this is nearly of the natural size. Fig. 2, a, a, shows these scolices of nearly

the natural size. Fig. 1 represents an isolated and magnified scolex; A, shows the segments of the future proglottides; D, the suckers; C, the hooks; H, the vesicle which contains them.

Eggs of the same tænia have been given to sheep at Copenhagen and at Giessen, and Messrs. Eschricht and R. Leuckart have obtained the same result as we had at Louvain. On the fifteenth or sixteenth day the first symptoms of “gid” declared themselves. At about the thirty-eighth day the crown of hooks appeared, the suckers were formed, and the whole head of the scolex was sketched out. All these heads can leave or enter the sheath at the will of the animal. It is truly a polycephalous animal when the scolices are expanded. This worm continues to grow for a long time in the cranial cavity, and produces by its presence the gravest results. The sheep necessarily dies at last, unless we remove the parasite by means of the trepan.

The cœnurus, at this point of development, swallowed by a dog, undergoes great changes in a few hours. The proscolex, or large vesicle, withers; the different scolices unsheath their cephalic extremity, become free, penetrate into the intestine with the food, and attach themselves to its walls, so as to form as many colonies of tænia as there are distinct heads. A dog which has swallowed a single cœnurus may therefore contain a considerable number of tæniæ.

The development of this worm proceeds very rapidly, and it only requires three or four weeks to attain many feet in length. The organization of this worm, in the state of strobila and of proglottis, is in every respect like that of the Tænia serrata; we have even endeavoured in