CHAPTER iy. 
ZOOPHYTES. 
^ S£t —..*.«** 
tbe great divisions which form the s ,fl • ? \ h °!° kmgdom as well as 
“"<*■ nothing morf .Ufflcull Slt 7U “° fl “ 
analogy between beings of tvnoc ! to 86120 u P'm any real 
The arrangements which n lturLr°t ° f organization bo dissimilar 
■“* Scribe anirJs T ^ * 6 
and species— are admirable Mntrivi^for f ° rL . e ^’ famillea > genera, 
creatures numerous as the sands of ltatui g the study of 
Precious means of logical distributin' t v • ^ Withoilt this 
before the task of describing tl , ’ mdmd,ml mind would recoil 
Porary animal life. Rut the 1 “’ 1Umerable phalanxes of contcm- 
methodical divisions are pure fi MVGr forget that these 
form no part of nature; for 1 ms n il’- t0 lminan invention: they 
no leaps, natura non faoit saltw ? i n ' U '! ns dcdd 118 that nature makes 
nature passes in a manner almost y . WhlC V. ie means to teI1 ns that 
organization to another altogether • m8eiisilj1 y from one stage of 
It is, however when we °f human systems 
and ^le kingdom that we ^^ 1 ' t? 
