Natural History of British Zoophytes. 235 



left undisturbed in a glass of fresh sea water, they push their 

 tentacula beyond the mouth of the cell by straightening the bo- 

 dy ; and then expanding them in the form of a funnel or bell, 

 they will often remain quiet and apparently immoveable for a long 

 time, presenting a very pretty and most interesting object to an 

 observer of " the minims of nature." If, however, the water is agitat- 

 ed they withdraw on the instant, probably by the aid of the posterior 

 ligament or muscle ; — the hinder part of the body is pushed aside 

 up the cell, the whole is sunk deeper, and by this means the tentacu- 

 la, gathered into a close column, are brought within the cell, the aper- 

 ture of which is shut by the same series of actions. The polypes of 

 the same polypidom often protrude their thousand heads at the same 

 time, or in quick but irregular succession, and retire simultaneously 

 or nearly so, but at other times I have often witnessed a few only 

 to venture on the display of their glories, the rest remaining conceal- 

 ed ; and if, when many are expanded, one is singled out and touch- 

 ed with a sharp instrument, it alone feels the injury and retires, 

 without any others being conscious of the danger, or of the hurt in- 

 flicted on their mate. 



Of the hydraform polypes a sketch of their anatomy has already 

 been given in the beginning of this chapter. They differ from the 

 ascidian in their figure, which is somewhat globular or cylindrical and 

 straight; in the position of the body, which is vertical; in the homoge- 

 neity of their composition, which is a semitransparent glairy gelatine, 

 full of microscopic coloured granules;* and very remarkably, in being 



bility and voluntary motion, it is not improbable that in them the nervous sub- 

 stance is mixed with their gelatinous or mucous mass, without being demonstrable 

 as a particular tissue." — Tiedemarm's Comp. Phys. p. 64. 



* Trembley having ascertained that the colour of the polype resides in these 

 granules, and that it varies with the quality of their food, of which the nutritive 

 part or chyme passes first into the granules of the stomachal cavity and then 

 gradually into those placed more towards the surface, infers that they area kind of 

 glands or rather vesicles, which have the power of sucking in and again transpir- 

 ing the nutritive fluid — Hist, des Polypes, p. 132. Lamarck adopts this opi- 

 nion, Anim. s. Vert. ii. 9, which is probably correct, but it ought to be remem- 

 bered that it is somewhat hypothetical. Consult in relation to this subject Ro- 

 get's Bridgewater Treatise, Vol. ii, p. 77-8, Cams' Comp. Anat. Eng. Trans. 

 Vol. i. p. 25, §. 23 ; and the reader will find Edwards' and Dutrocuet's opinions 

 on the nature of the elementaty corpscules in Bostock's Elementary System of 

 Physiology, Vol. iii, p. 348 et seq. Tiedemann sums up our actual knowledge in 

 the following sentence — " In animals of a simple structure, polypi, entozoa, and 

 some others, in which no vascular system for the movement of the humours has 

 hitherto been discovered, the nutritious assimilated liquid passes directly into 

 the parenchyma of the body, with which it enters into combination." — Comp. 

 Physiology, p. 35. 



