174 



DADDS VETERINARY MEDICINE AND SURGERY. 



and smell it very anxiously ; and if they, by these means, dis- 

 cover the fly, they immediately turn aside and hasten to a distant 

 part of the field. I once saw, in a meadow or field, upon the 

 cliffs of Margate, a fly of this sort teasing a horse that was con- 

 fined to a small space by a spike stuck in the ground, to which a 

 cord was tied. He could not get away from its attack, and became 

 quite furious, for in kicking at the fly with his fore-foot, which he 

 did vehemently, he often struck the bone of the lower jaw, creating 

 excessive pain ; for in that direction, while grazing, the fly comes 

 to the beard of the lower lip. 



2 



THE (ESTRUS HEMORRHOIDALIS. 



1. The female about to deposit au egg. I 



2. The egg maguified. i 



5. The male fly. 



3. Thebot. 



4. The chrysalis. 



The eggs of this species are difficult to be seen upon the horse's 

 skin or beard, owing to the agitation of the beast, and from the 

 color of the egg being dark, like that of the skin of the horse. 

 The animal has been generally too impatient, while undergoing 

 this operation, to let me examine them very well. I ascertained, 

 however, its form by pressing one of these eggs from the abdomen. 



The larvffi, or grubs, of this species inhal)it the stomach as the 

 former, generally adhering to the white lining, and are disposed 

 promiscuously in dense clusters, after the same manner. They 

 may, however, be distinguished from them by being, in general, 

 smaller and longer in proportion to their bulk. 



