S62 SPLANCHNOLOGY. 



the opening appears as a long verticle ovoid slit, the fisaura 

 Tnagna, presenting two lips and two commissures. The lahiay 

 or lips, are forn^ed by an external soft unctuous layer of skin, 

 destitute of hair, but rich in pigment, and an inner one ci 

 mucous membrane ; between these is a quantity of fat and 

 areolar tissue, most abundant in the young animal, and the 

 erectile vaginal hulh, divided into two branches, which leave the 

 clitoris, and pass along the sides of the vulva, terminating in 

 round lobes ; this structure is filled with blood during copulation, 

 rendering co-aptation very complete. The superior commissure 

 is very acute, and reaches almost to the anus ; the space between 

 the two is the perineum. The .inferior commissure is obtuse 

 and rounded. 



In the interior of th^ vulva, and in a depression on its floor 

 called the fossa navicularisj lies the clitoris, which originates 

 by two crura from the ischial arch, and is attached to the 

 symphysis by a suspensory ligament. The clitoris passes back- 

 wards, jutting towards the inferior commissure, its free extremity 

 being lodged in the fossa navicularis, and enveloped by a mucous 

 covering, tbe prepuce of the clitoris. The structure of the 

 clitoris resembles that of the corpora cavernosa of the male ; and, 

 having a fibrous cr,psule, erectile tissue, and cavernous vessels, it 

 becomes erect during copulation. 



The external orifice of the urethra, the meatus urinarius, 

 opens on the inferior surface of the vulva, about four inches from 

 its external opening ; it is larger than the tnale opening, and 

 surmounted by a fold of mucous membrane, which acts as a 

 valve. The hymen is a thin semilunar fold of mucous membrane, 

 which separates, usually imperfectly, the vulva from the vagina, 

 l3ring immediately before the meatus ; it is ruptured during the 

 first act of copulation, which gives rise to a number of small 

 round elevations surrounding the entrance of the vagina, called 

 the. carunculce myrtiformes. 



The mucous membrane lining the vulva is pale rose-coloured, 

 and covered with mucous follicles, which are more numerous near 

 the opening of the urethra, and sebaceous glands, the glandular 

 odoriferw, which secrete an odorous unctuous substance, and are 

 found for the most part under the prepuce of the clitoris and on 

 the labia. 



