CHAPTER IX. 



ELEMENTARY HISTOLOGY. 



When examined under the microscope, all the different tissues 

 and organs of the body are found to consist of elementary bodies 

 called cells and of an intercellular substance, connecting the 

 several cells together ; in much the same way as a wall is built 

 of bricks cemented together with mortar. These cells, of which a 

 white blood corpuscle is a typical example, vary much in shape, 

 size, and structure in different tissues, but are to be considered 

 as fundamentally equivalent to one another. The intercellular 

 substance varies very much in quantity; it may be almost 

 absent, so that the several cells are practically in contact with 

 one another ; or it may be so abundant as to separate them 

 widely ; it is to be viewed as formed by the cells, and, therefore, 

 as secondary in importance to these. 



When drawing histological preparations, it is well to look out 

 for, amd draw, a few red blood corpuscles, to the same scale as the 

 rest of the d/rawing. The blood corpuscles fwm most useful 

 standa/rds of m,easurement, as their dimeiisions are already known 

 (p. 37). 



A. Epithelium. 



Epithelium consists of cells placed side by side so as to form 

 layers, which form the surface covering, or epidermis, of the 

 body, and line the alimentary canal, the blood vessels, and the 

 various internal cavities of the body. It may be defined as a 

 continuous sheet of cells lining a free surface. At the external 

 apertures of the body, the epidermis is directly continuous with 

 the epithelial lining of the internal cavities. 



The layers may be one or more cells in thickness ; in the 

 former case the epithelium is said to be simple, in the latter 

 stratified. 



Epithelium is of different kinds, according to the shape and 

 structure of its component cells. 



