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expanding on all sides, resemble so many sheaves of 

 wheat ; or you may more appropriately fancy you behold, 

 the armoury of some belligerent sea-fairy, with stacks of 

 arms enough to accoutre a numerous host. But if you 

 look closely at the weapons themselves, they rather re- 

 semble those which we are accustomed to wonder at in 

 missionary museums, — the arms of some ingenious but 

 barbarous people from the South Sea Islands, — than such 

 as are used in civilised warfare. Here are long lances, 

 made like scythe-blades, set on a staff, with a hook at the 

 tip, as if to capture the fleeing foe and bring him within 

 reach of the blade. Among them are others of similar, 

 shape, but with the edge cut into delicate slanting notcheSj 

 which run along the sides of the blade like those on the 

 edge of our reaping-hooks. These are chiefly the weapons 

 of the lower bundle ; those of the upper are still more im- 

 posing. The outmost are short curved clubs, armed with 

 a row of shark's teeth to make them more fatal; these 

 surround a cluster of spears, the long heads of which are 

 furnished with a double row of the same appendages, and 

 lengthened scymitars, the curved edges of which are cut 

 into teeth like a saw. Though a stranger might think I 

 had drawn copiously on my fancy for this description, I 

 am sure, with your eye upon what is on the stage of the 

 microscope at this moment, you will acknowledge that the 

 resemblances are not at all forced or unnatural. To add 

 to the effect, imagine that all these weapons are forged out 

 of the clearest glass instead of steel ; that the larger bun^ 

 dies may contain about fifty, and the smaller half as many, 

 each ; that there are four bundles on every segment, and 

 that the body is composed of twenty-five such segments ; 

 and you will, have a tolerable idea of the garniture and 

 armature of this little Worm, that grubs about in the mud 

 at low-water mark. 



Should it ever be your fortune to fall in with a species 

 of Sea-mouse (Aphrodite hystrix), which, inhabits our 



