The principal family is that of the Distomidæ, a family par excellence cosmopolitan; as inconstant in their progress as capricious in the choice of their companions. Each distome resembles a small leech which has a sucker in the centre of the belly, and as this sucker was once considered to be perforated, the name of Distoma was given to them.

These parasites are the more interesting to us, from the fact that, though we are not the final resting-place of certain species, we nevertheless find them pass through us on their way. There are two species which occasionally lodge in the liver of man without being peculiar to him, for they properly belong to the sheep. Two other distomes have lately been described by Dr. Bilharz, which are fortunately only known at present in Cairo, and which are interesting, both with respect to their organization and to their manner of life.

The genealogy of the distomidæ is now generally well known; that which remains to be discovered is the itinerary of each particular species; and in several zoological laboratories experiments are daily made with certain species and the hosts which they are supposed

to seek. These investigations have already yielded the best results in the laboratories of Giessen and of Leipzic, under the direction of Leuckart.

The genealogy of the distomidæ is as follows: the young distome, when it leaves the egg, is wrapped in a ciliated tunic, and, under the guise of a microscopic infusorial, it abandons itself to all the vagaries of a free and vagabond life; this is the bright period of its life. “It is a youth starting, with all the steam up, without help and without guidance, in the midst of the ocean; if it meets an island on its passage, that is to say, the body of an aquatic larva or a mollusc, it disembarks, brings forth its young, and disappears; its purpose is fulfilled. If it find no island or continent it sinks and perishes, for it carries no provisions with it; it has no organ which permits it to take nourishment on its passage.” If life is short, even in the case of a young distome, it is passed in the midst of the water: if fortune is favourable to it, it will at last meet with a living abode, where it will find all that is necessary to the comfort of a parasite.

Abundance always reigns in these living oases; and as these new colonists are really exiles, who will never again see their native country, ciliary oars are useless to them, and their descendants differ entirely from their common mother.

Under the ciliated tunic of the mother appears a daughter under the form of a bag, who is born almost at the same time as herself, and concerning whom we may quote here the words of Réaumur: “Singular and mysterious duality in unity; two beings, living one within the other, which are still only a single individual. Has nature accustomed us to such profusion? Do we

ever see her retrograde thus from a more complicated organization to one more simple?” That which this great observer did not dare to believe has yet been realized, and in many cases development is clearly recurrent.

Led by a marvellous instinct, and obeying an irrevocable mission, the distomidæ, as well as the monostomidæ, and others besides them, when they claim an asylum from molluscs, introduce into the living body of their new host, not an isolated embryo, but a young animal already impregnated with a rich posterity; if she remain mistress of the situation, this posterity will forcibly invade the various organs, without any consideration whether their host may not give way under the weight of this sudden invasion.