122 



grow ? do they disperse themselves ? does each build its own dwell- 

 ing ? or where do they remain ? shall our successors learn nothing 

 on these matters ? 



Goeze's figures are very good. 



The commonly received view of the relation between the cysts and 

 their ^c^«Hococc« appears to have been first advanced by Delia Chiaje 

 in his Elmintografia Umana, p. 30*. 



" The said worms, oval, narrowed at the two extremities and en- 

 larged in the middle, are scattered irregularly over the interior of the 

 vesicle. The extremity of the head is garnished with a crown of hooks 

 deprived of suckers. In proportion as they enlarge, these little micro- 

 scopical bodies take on, little by little, a spherical form, the hooks 

 become detached, and new Echinococci are produced in such little 

 bodies, which have transformed themselves into Hydatids. The new 

 worms are the children (figliuolini) of the primitive Hydatid, which 

 was a similar microscopic body. They have a proper vitality, different 

 from that of the vesicle which contains them." 



Miiller, ' Jahresbericht,' 1836, describes the Echinococcus-cysts 

 and their contents found in the urine of a young man labouring under 

 renal disease. 



The cysts had a laminated outer coat ; some contained Echinococci 

 and some none, but in other respects they were completely alike. The 

 Echinococci exactly resembled the ordinary figures. 



" In a few of the free ones, a trace of a membranous cord, looking 

 as if it had been torn off, appeared at the posterior end of the body ; 

 as if the worms had at an earlier period been fixed." 



Miiller could not make out whether the Echinococci were fixed to 

 the interior of the secondary vesicle or not. 



Tschudi, 'Die Blasenwiirmer, 1837,' observed the retrograding 

 yellow Echinococci, which he assumes to be returning to the vesicular 

 form. He considers that the " corpuscles " are ova, and that by their 

 development in the interior of one of these retrograded Echinococci, 

 the secondary cysts are formed. 



Gluge, 'Annales des Sciences Naturelles, 1837,' describes the 

 corpuscles of the Echinococci very carefully and minutely. He was 

 the first to notice the peculiar structure of the endocyst. He says, 

 " I have constantly seen in it a kind of arborization very similar to the 

 formation in fibrinous exudations during the first stage of inflamma- 

 tion. We see these transparent bodies with slightly irregular contours 

 resembling empty blood vessels and ramifying like them. I do not 

 know whether these are true vessels, I merely draw attention to 

 the fact." 



In the same year (1837) the second edition of Burdach's 'Physio- 

 logic' appeared. It contains an admirable chapter by Von Siebold, 

 upon the development of the Entozoa. Burdach's work is so little 

 known, and so inaccessible in this country — that I think it worth 

 while to subjoin the whole of what Von Siebold says upon this sub- 

 ject :— 



* Compendia di Elmintografia Umana. Napoli 1825. Compilato da Stephano 

 Delle Chiaje. 



