TUBULARIAD.E. 473 



each part has devoured a worm as long as itself." Still 

 more wonderful is the fact, that if turned inside out, 

 the parts at once accommodate themselves to their new 

 condition, and carry on all their functions as before 

 the accident. Indeed, this animal seems so peculiarly 

 endowed with the germs of vitality in every part of its 

 body, that it may be cut into ten pieces, and everyone 

 will" become a new, perfect, living animal. This seems 

 bordering on the vegetable kingdom, in which it is 

 common to propagate by means of slips from the mature 

 shrub. 



The best known of the British species are Hydra vul- 

 garis, Common polype, H. viridis, Green polype, H. Fusca, 

 Brown polype, H. verrucosa, and H. lutea. 



Every reflecting person who reads even the slight 

 sketch we have given of this polype must be struck \vitl 

 astonishment at a creature so primitive in structure, pos- 

 sessing the actions, sensations, and powers of higher 

 organised beings. The stomach is but one simple Struc- 

 tureless membrane or cell, the external surface-cells form- 

 ing a kind of double skin, the inside a mere wall of cells 

 running crosswise, possessed of a velvet-like surface, and 

 red or brown coloured grains held together by a glutinous 

 substance. This singular formation, with some of the 

 functions of animal life, has led to many learned surmises 

 and discussions tending to the most important results in 

 the science of physiology. 



TUBULARIAD"^. The Tubular or Vaginated Polypes are 

 of an arborescent appearance ; the animals live near the 

 ends of branches, and are found attached to stones, sea- 

 weeds, and shells. 1 The Tubularia indivisa, " Individed 

 tubes," are found on shells, with a living head resembling 

 a fine scarlet cluster of blossoms. Ellis says, " they seem 

 part of an oat-straw with the joints cut off." At the summit 

 protrudes the scarlet-coloured polypes, well furnished with 

 tentacula, and connected with a pinkish fluid that fills tha 

 tubes. It was in these that Dr. Roget discovered the 

 singular peculiarity of a circulation, similar to that seen. 

 in many plants. He says, " In a specimen of the Tubu- 



(1) These pro frronped with Hydroida, and at the head of the family stand 

 Van Beneclcn'a Hydractinia ; and Gaertner's Coryne. 



