1 84 The Bird 



the tree merges into Hmbs, and these into branches, twigs, 

 stems, and at last into the deUcate fohage. This last 

 we may hken to the, capillaries or hair-tubes in which 

 the blood does its real work of supplying nourishment 

 directly to the tissues, and where it receives the waste 

 matters, carrying them away in its current. 



When we have followed the divisions of a tree out 

 to the foliage, we may find that they touch and interlace 

 with the foliage of another tree, and this is very much 

 like what occurs in the coiu'se of the blood. The capil- 

 laries run together and form larger vessels, these in turn 

 coalesce, and soon the blood — dark now and filled with 

 the waste matters of the body-cells — is flowing through 

 only two large veins {vei7is alwa3's lead toward the heart). 

 These enter the right auricle, which opens into the right 

 ventricle. From here the blood rushes to the lungs to be 

 purified and back again to the left auricle and ventricle, 

 and its cycle is complete. 



If we look at a droj) of laird's blood (or that of any kind 

 of warm-blooded creature) under the microscope, we shall 

 see thousands upon thousands of oval discs, or corpuscles, 

 like tiny platters floating in a fluid. These flow about 

 under the cover-glass through little channels, mechanic- 

 ally and very slowly of course, and giving but a faint 

 idea of the way they must tumble and rush after each 

 other through the veins and arteries of the bird. Scat- 

 tered among these oval bodies will occasionally be seen 

 others of indefinite shape and white in colour. As we 

 watch one of these tiny cells, the thought suddenl}' comes 

 over us, — what are liirds indeed but collections of untold 



