THE WONDERS OF THE SHORE. 73 
tail) ; here, 8. filicula, as delicate as tangled threads 
of glass; here, abietina; here, rosacea. The lob- 
sters’ horns are Antennaria antennina; and mingled 
with them are Plumulariz, always to be distin- 
guished from Sertularie by polypes growing on 
one side of the branch, and not on both. Here is 
falcata, with its roots twisted round a sea-weed. 
Here is cristata, on the same weed; and here is 
a piece of the beautiful myriophyllum, which has 
_ been battered in its long journey out of the deep 
water about the ore rock. For all these you must 
consult Johnson’s “Zoophytes,’ and for a dozen 
smaller species, which you would probably find 
tangled among them, or parasitic on the sea-weed. 
Here are Flustre, or sea-mats. This, which smells 
very like Verbena, is Flustra coriacea (Pl. I. Fig. 2). 
That scurf on the frond of ore-weed is F. lineata 
(PL I. Fig. 1). The glass bells twined about this 
Sertularia are Campanularia syringa (Pl. I. Fig. 9); 
and here is a tiny plant of Cellularia ciliata (Pl. I. 
Fig. 8). Look at it through the field-glass ; for it 
is truly wonderful. Each polype cell is edged with 
