The microscope has made us familiar with the mysteries of a minute creation which we should not otherwise have comprehended. These creatures are found inhabiting the waters and the land, and they exist in the intestinal structure of plants and animals, preying upon the nutritive juices which pass through their systems. Although these beings are so exceedingly small that even the most practised observer cannot detect them with the naked eye, they are proved, by careful examination under the microscope, to be in many cases elaborately organized. Ehrenberg has discovered in them filamentary nerves and nervous masses, and even vessels appropriated to the circulation of fluids, showing that they belong really to a high condition of existence.
Passing over many links in that curious chain which appears to bind the animal kingdom into a complete whole, we come to the articulata of Cuvier—the homogangliata of Owen.
All those creatures which we have been hitherto considering are too imperfect in the construction of their simple organizations to maintain a terrestrial existence; they are, therefore, confined to a watery medium. In the articulata, we have evidences of higher attributes, and indications of instincts developed in proportion to the increased perfection of organization. Commencing with the annelidans, all of which, except the earthworms, are inhabitants of the waters, we proceed to the myriapoda, presenting a system intermediate in every respect between that of worms and insects; we then find embraced in the same order, the class insecta, which includes flies and beetles of all kinds; and, as the fourth division of articulated beings, the arachnidans or spiders; and, lastly, the marine tribe of crustaceans.
The most remarkable phenomena connected with these animals are the metamorphoses which they undergo. The female butterfly, for instance, lays eggs, which, when hatched, produce caterpillars: these live in this state for some time, feeding upon vegetables, and, after casting their skins as they increase in size, at last assume an entirely different state, and, dormant in their oblong case, they appear like dead matter. This chrysalis, or pupa, is generally preserved from injury by being embedded in the earth, from which, after a season, a beautifully perfect insect escapes, and, floating on the breeze of summer, enjoys its sunshine, and revels amidst its flowers.
No less remarkable is the metamorphosis of the caducibranchiate amphibia, passing through the true fish condition of the tadpole to the perfect air-breathing and four-footed animal, the frog.
A metamorphosis of the crustaceans, somewhat similar to that which takes place in insects, has been of late years creating much discussion amongst naturalists: but the question appears to be now settled by the careful and long-continued observations of Mr. Thompson and Mr. R. C. Couch.
A wide line of demarcation marks the separation of the invertebrata from the four great classes of vertebrate animals—fishes, reptiles, birds, and mammalia. Every part of the globe,—the ocean and the inland lake,—the wide and far-winding river, and the babbling stream,—the mountain and the valley,—the forest with its depth of shade, and the desert with its intensity of light,—the cold regions of the frost-chained north, and the fervid clime within the tropics—presents for our study innumerable animals, each fitted for the conditions to which it is destined; and through the whole we find a gradual elevation in the scale of intelligence, until at last, separated from all by peculiar powers, we arrive at man himself.
In each of these four classes the animals are furnished with a bony skeleton, which is in the young animal little more than cartilage; but, as growth increases, lime becomes deposited, and a sufficient degree of hardness is thus produced to support the adult formation. Some anatomists have endeavoured to show that even in the mechanical structure of the bony fabrics of animals, we are enabled to trace a gradual increase in the perfection of arrangement, from the fish until the most perfect is found in man. Many of the mammalia, however, are furnished with skeletons which really surpass that of man. These belong to animals which depend for subsistence upon their muscular powers, and with whom man is, in this particular, on no equality. What is the lord of the creation, compared with the antelope for fleetness, or with the elephant and many other animals for strength?
As we ascend the scale of animal life we find a more perfectly developed nervous system; and the relative size of the brain, compared with that of the brute, is found progressively to increase, until it arrives at the utmost perfection in man. On the system of nerves depends sensation, and there can be no doubt that the more exalted the order of intelligence displayed, the more exquisitely delicate is the nervous system. Thus, in this world, refined genius must necessarily be attended with a condition of sensibility which, too frequently, to the possessor is a state of real disease.