and some other Grasses. 459 



the arrangement of the stones which form the arcli of a bridge. This coat 

 appears to answer to the testa of the seed, and also to the external or purple 

 one of the ergot, the colouring matter it contained having assumed a deeper 

 shade: this is made probable as there is observed on the exterior of some 

 ergots what appear to be the remains of the pericai'p, which adheres in irre- 

 gular little filmy pieces, and are occasionally seen external to the purple layer 

 when sections are viewed under the microscope with strong powers and trans- 

 mitted light, as in Tab. XXXIII. B. fig. 1. This happens when all the peri- 

 carp is not lifted up on the apex. Leveillé, however, and some others have 

 not been able to discover any coat ; for the former {op. cit. p. 5/3.) says, " On 

 ne remarque pas de membrane à sa surface : les auteurs disent qu'il n'en existe 

 pas, et en effet nous n'en avons jamais pu démontrer l'existence." 



On applying very high magnifying powers to thin sections of the central 

 part the structure is seen to be distinctly cellular, the cells however being 

 very small, and in the rj'e about four times less than those of the healthy 

 grain. Their arrangement is by no means regular, there being many varia- 

 tions in shape and size, as in Tab. XXXIII. B. fig. 1., which is a transverse slice, 

 Init in the longitudinal (fig. '2.) they have a greater tendency to be arranged 

 in rows. Their contents likewise vary, some cells having one granule, appa- 

 rently of an oily nature, which completely fills them, as in figs. 1. & 2.; 

 others liaving two or three small ones, placed sometimes in the centre, as 

 Phœbus observed; and others having granules which appear not oily, but 

 very like the minute particles that are seen to be mingled with the fecula in 

 the healthy grain. 



The purple coat is not, as Phœbus figures it, composed of elongated cellular 

 tissue, but of minute square cells, arranged in longitudinal rows between striœ 

 or thicker places in the covering of the ergot, which may easily be mistaken 

 for elongated cellular tissue, if a very high magnifying power be not used in 

 the observation. 



The terminal point or cap of the ergot, when examined microscopicallv, 

 appears to be a heterogeneous mass of structure ; being composed externally 

 of the cerebriform coating of withered pericarp and of the sporidia, whicli 

 cements together the various hairs that are found on the exterior of the grain, 

 and which incloses likewise what is conceived to be the remains of the peri- 



