THE POWER OF MOTION. 



CHAPTER II. 

 THE POWER OF MOTION IN PLANTS. 



It would be foreign to tlic object of tliis work to say much on 

 this interesting subject. Reference has previously been made to 

 the motion of protoplasm in living cells, to the closing and 

 opening of the leaves when dried or moistened, and the growth of 

 nodes on the lower side to aid in straightening up a culm which 

 has fallen down. The following will serve to illustrate what may 

 not be new to all of the readers of these pages : 



A thrifty hop-vine went winding up nine or ten feet to the top 

 of a stake, and then four feet and two inches above any support, 

 when it tipj^ed over in the direction of the prevailing Avind. It 

 swung slowly around, sometimes making a revolution in from 

 one to two hours. If another stick be within roach of the 

 revolving top, it Avill seize the support and go on climbing as 

 before. 



Every one knows that asparagus or celery, placed on the side, 

 will soon show the tips bending upward, and that the stems and 

 leaves of a geranium set in the window will soon bend towards 

 the light. These are familiar, and on that account may not 

 awaken much curiosity, but it must seem wonderful to learn, for 

 the first time, that the power of moving in circles or ellipses, or 

 zigzag lines, is universal, so far as we know, to all young growing 

 stems and all their branches. The same is true of the young 

 leaves and all of the young roots. "' Every growing part of 

 every jilant is continually circumnutating or bowing around." 

 (Darwin). This motion is produced by the increased turgescence 

 of the cells, together Avith the extensibility of their cell-walls on 

 the convex side. 



As Darwin says, " It Avould appear as if the changes in the 

 cells required periods of rest. A young root may be 



