822 INSECT A— FLEA. 



transparency of its external covering. When the louse feeds, the blood is 

 s6en to rush, like a torrent, into the stomach ; and its gieediness is so great, 

 that the excrements contained in the intestines are ejected at the same time, 

 to make room for this new supply. 



The louse has neither beak, teeth,. nor any kind of mouth. In the place 

 of ail these, it has a proboscis or trunk ; or, as it may be otherv/ise called, 

 a pointed hollow sucker, with which it pierces the skin, and sucks the human 

 blood, taking that for food only. The stomach is lodged partly in the breast 

 and back; but the greatest portion of it is in the abdomen. When it is 

 empty, it is colorless ; but when filled, it is plainly discernible, and its mo- 

 tion seems very extraordinary. It then appears working with very strong 

 agitations, and somewhat resembles an animal within an animal. Superfi- 

 cial observers are apt to take this for the pulsation of the heart ; but if the ani- 

 mal be observed when it is sucking, it will be found that the food takes a direct 

 passage from the trunk to the stomach, where the remainder of the old aliment 

 will be seen mixing with the new, and agitated up and down on every side. 



There is scarcely any animal that multiplies so fast as this unwelcome 

 intruder. It has been pleasantly said, that a louse becomes a grandfather 

 in the space of twenty-four hours. This fact cannot be ascertained ; but 

 nothing is more true than, that the moment the nit, which is no other than 

 the egg of the louse, gets rid of its superfluous moisture, and throws off its 

 shell, it then begins to breed in its turn. Nothing so much prevents the in- 

 crease of this nauseous animal, as cold and want of humidity ; the nits must 

 be laid in a place that is warm, and moderately moist to produce any thing. 

 That is the reason that many nits laid on the hairs in the night time, are 

 destroyed by the cold of the succeeding day, and so stick for several months, 

 till they at last come to lose even their external form. So numerous were 

 the disgusting vermin in Mexico, that the ancient monarchs of that country 

 endeavored to rid the subjects of them by imposing an annual tribute of a 

 certain quantity. Bags full of lice w^ere found in Montezuma's palace, by 

 the Spanish invaders. 



THE FLEA.i 



If the flea be examined with a microscope, it will be observed to have a 

 small head, large eyes, and a roundish body. It has two feelers, or horns, 

 which are short, and composed of four joints; and between the§e lies its 



* Pulex irritans, Lin. The order Sijphonaptera, under which this genus comes, has the 

 body compressed ; mouth with a sucker of two pieces, inclosed between two articulated 

 laminae, which united, form a rostrum or proboscis, either cylindrical or conical, and of 

 which the base is covered with scales. 



