Magnified section of part of the Eye.
Perhaps this account may be followed with some difficulty; let us, therefore, take a single facet, and trace it to its termination. Each facet being in fact a distinct eye, we shall be able, in so doing, to get a clear comprehension of the whole organ, which is after all only made up of a large number of these distinct eyes. Separating, then, one facet from the rest, we find this single eye to consist of several portions: 1. the six-sided facet; 2. the cone-shaped cylinder, clear and transparent; 3. a delicate fibre of nerve connected with the bottom of this cone; and, 4. the large nerve itself. The diagram on the next page will make this perfectly intelligible.
But it may be asked, What of the colouring matter? It exists in three places. 1. The first layer surrounds the cones (2), and separates them from one another, and from the nerve below in part. 2. The second layer surrounds the nerve fibres (3). And, 3. the last layer is at the junction of the nerve fibre (3) with the nerve itself (4).
This apparently complicated mechanism well deserves the reader's attention; nor should the subject be quitted until it is clearly understood. We are unable to enter into further particulars upon the structure and functions of this beautiful apparatus; but it must be added, that the following is the manner in which the ray of light becomes perceived by the insect. It first passes through the facet (a), next enters the cone (b), then strikes upon the nerve (c) which conveys the impression, taking the large nerve (d) to the brain. The colouring layers are intended to prevent any rays of light from passing to other parts of the insect's eye, and so confusing the impressions made upon its senses by external objects.
A single facet separated, and magnified.
The number of these facets, or, if we choose to call them so, distinct eyes, varies in different insects. In some there are comparatively few, in others an amazing multitude. The following list of their number is given by Müller, as observed by various entomologists:—