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REPTILIA. 
THE THIRD ORDER OF REPTILES. 
THE SERPENTS (Ophidia). 
These have no feet, and are consequently, of all others, the Reptiles which most merit the 
name. Their extremely elongated body progresses by means of folds pressed backwards against 
the ground. They divide into three families. 
THE FIRST FAMILY OF OPHIDIANS,— 
The Orvets — 
Retains the skull, teeth, and tongue of the preceding group of Seps, and the eye has three lids, &c. 5 
whence they are merely Seps without feet. Such are I 
The Orvets {Anguis, Lin.), — ^ 
Externally characterized by imbricated scales, which cover them all over. We subdivide them into 
four subgenera, the three first of which have a shoulder-bone and pelvis beneath the skin, ' 
The Pseudopodes {Pseudopus, Merrem) have the tympanum visible externally, and a small prominence on each 
side of the anus, which contains an ossicle analogous to a femur, articulated to a true pelvis beneath the skin ; 
the anterior limbs are only represented by an inconspicuous depression, and have no internal humerus. One of J 
the lungs is a fourth shorter than the other. The scales are square, thick, and semi-imbricated, and between 
those of the upper and lower parts is a groove of smaller scales on each side. | 
The Ophisaurs (Ophisaurus, Daud.), merely differ in the absence of external rudiments of limbs, but retain the ' 
tympanum, and have one lung a third shorter than the other. 
The Orvets {Anguis, Cuvier), have no trace of limbs externally visible, and their tympanum even is couched 
beneath the skin ; their maxillary teeth are crooked and compressed, and they have none on the palate. The body 
is surrounded with imbricated scales, without any lateral fold, as in the preceding ; and one of the lungs is shorter ; |i 
by half than the other. [A species, known as the Slow-worm, or Blind-worm, is of common occurrence in Britain, !j 
and throughout Europe. When alarmed, it constricts its muscles, and is then singularly brittle.] ■' 
These three subgenera have still an imperfect pelvis, a small sternum, scapulars, and also clavicles, hidden :: 
beneath the skin ; and the absence of these several bones characterizes I 
The Acontias {Acontia, Cuv.), which, in the structure of their head and eye-lids, still resemble the preceding ; 
their anterior ribs are connected all round, beneath the trunk, by cartilaginous prolongations ; and they have one | 
middle-sized lung, and another very short one. Their teeth are small and conical, and I think that I have per- 
ceived some on the palate. They are easily known by having the muzzle closed by a sort of mask. ' 
THE SECOND FAMILY OF OPHIDIANS,— ' 
The True Serpents, — | 
Which is much more numerous, is eomposed of genera with neither sternum nor vestige of shoulder, 
but the ribs of which still encircle a great part of the trunk, and the vertebrae are still articulated by 
a convex facet applied to a concave facet of the succeeding one. They have no third eyelid, nor 
tympanum ; but the small bone of the ear exists beneath the skin, and its handle passes behind the | ■ 
tympanic bone. Several have also, under the skin, a vestige of hind-limbs, which in some even shows : j[ 
itself externally in the form of a small hook. j | 
We subdivide them into two tribes. t 
That of the Double-Marcheurs [which progress either head or tail foremost,] have still the lower • ; 
jaw fixed as in all the preceding Reptiles, by a tympanic bone, articulated direct to the cranium, the i ! 
two rami of this jaw anchylosed at the symphysis, and those of the upper fixed to the skull, and to i 
the intermaxillaries ; so that their swallow cannot dilate as in the following tribe, and their head is of ! ^ 
even size with their whole body ; a form which enables them to progress backwards or forwards with i 
the same facility. The bony frame of the orbit is incomplete behind, and the eye is very small. 
Finally, their body is covered with scales, the anus very near its extremity, the trachea long, and the ' 
heart placed far backwards. None of them is known to be venomous. i 
There are two genera, one of which approximates to the Chalcides and Bimanes, and the other to 
the Orvets and Acontias. 
The Amphisb^enes {AmpMsbana, Lin.) — ' 
Have the whole body surrounded with circular ranges of square scales, as in the Chalcides and Bimanes ' jl 
