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THE PHOLAS.

Of all kinds of shell fish, the Pholaes are the most wonderful. From their great powers of penetration, compared with their apparent weakness, they justly excite the astonishment of the curious observer. These animals are found in different places; sometimes clothed in their proper shell, at the bottom of the water; sometimes concealed in lumps of marly earth; and sometimes lodged, shell and all, in the body of the hardest marble. In their proper shell, they assume different figures; in general, they resemble a muscle. But their penetration into rocks, and their residence there, makes up the most wonderful part of their history.

This animal, when divested of its shell, resembles a roundish, soft pudding, with no instrument that seems in the least fitted for boring - into stones, or even penetrating the softest substance. It is furnished with two teeth indeed; but these are placed in such a situation as to be incapable of touching the hollow surface of its stony dwelling; it has also two covers to its shell, that open and shut at either end; but these are totally unserviceable to it as a miner. 'The instrument with which it performs all its operations, and buries itself in the hardest rocks, is only a broad fleshy substance, somewhat resembling a tongue, that is seen issuing from the

bottom of its shell. With this soft, yielding instrument, it perforates the most solid marbles; and having, while yet little and young, made its way, by a very narrow entrance, into the substance of the stone, it then begins to grow bigger, and thus to enlarge its apart

ment.

The seeming unfitness, however, of this animal for penetrating into rocks, and there forming a habitation, has induced many philosophers to suppose, that they entered the rock while it was yet in a soft state, and from the petrifying quality of the water, that the whole rock afterwards hardened round them by degrees. Thus any penetrating quality, it was thought, was unjustly ascribed to them, as they only bored into a soft substance, that was hardened by time. This opinion, however, has been confuted, in a very satisfactory manner, by Doctor Bohads who observed, that many of the pillars of the temple of Serapis at Puteoli were penetrated by these animals. From thence he very justly concludes, that the pholas must have pierced into them since they were erected; for no workmen would have laboured a pillar into form, if it had been honey-combed by worms in the quarry. In short, there can be no doubt that the pillars were perfectly sound when erected; and that the pholades have attacked them, during that time in which they continued buried under water, by means of the earthquake that swallowed up the city.

From hence it appears, that, in all nature, there is not a greater instance of perseverance and patience than what this animal is seen to exhibit. Furnished with the bluntest and softest auger, by slow, successive applications, it effects what other animals are incapable of performing by force: penetrating the hardest bodies only with its tongue. When, while yet naked and very small, it has effected an entrance, and has buried its body in the stone, it there continues for life at its ease; the seawater that enters at the little aperture, supplying it with luxurious plenty.

When the animal has taken too great a quantity of water, it is seen to spurt it out of its hole with some violence. Upon this seemingly thin diet, it quickly grows larger and larger, and soon finds itself under a necessity of enlarging its habitation and its shell. The motion of the pholas is slow beyond conception; its progress keeps pace with the growth of its body; and, in proportion as it becomes larger, it makes its way farther into the rock. When it has got a certain way in, it then turns from its former direction, and hollows downward; till, at last, when its habitation is completed, the whole apartment resembles the hole of a tobacco pipe ; the hole in the shank being that by which the animal entered.

Thus immured, the pholas lives in darkness, indolence and plenty; it never removes from

the narrow mansion into which it has penetrated and seems perfectly content with being inclosed in its own sepulchre. The influx of the sea-water, that enters by its little gallery, satisfies all its wants; and without any other food, it is found to grow from seven to eight inches long, and thick in proportion.

But they are not only supplied with their rocky habitation: they have also a shell to protect them this shell grows upon them in the body of the rock, and seems a very unnecessary addition to their defence, which they have procured for themselves by art.

Yet the pholas thus shut up, is not so solitary an animal as it would at first appear; for though it is immured in its hole without egress, though it is impossible for the animal, grown to a great size, to get out by the way it made in, yet many of this kind often meet in the heart of the rock, and, like miners in a siege, who sometimes cross each other's galleries, they frequently break in upon each others retreats. Whether

their thus meeting be the work of accident or of choice, few can take upon them to determine; certain it is, they are most commonly found in numbers in the same rock; and sometimes above twenty are discovered within a few inches of each other.

As to the rest, this animal is found in greatest numbers at Ancona, in Italy; it is found along the shores of Normandy and Poitou, in France;

it is found also upon some of the coasts of Scotland and, in general, is considered as a very great delicacy, at the tables of the luxurious.

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THE BARNACLE.

A SHELL SO common as the Barnacle, can hardly have escaped the observation of those who live near the coast, as it is frequently seen adhering to the shells of oysters, muscles, and lobsters, and covers the small rocks which abound on the sea shore. The shell is of a sugar-loaf shape, and when perfect, is covered by a lid, which the animal inside raises from time to time to admit the sea water, and collect such food as is fitted for its nourishment. It is open at the bottom, by which it sticks to the rock, and that with so much firmness, that it is difficult to separate it, even with a knife. The little inhabitants of these shells are very singularly formed, having twenty-four small feelers, which resemble so many feathers, and which serve them to secure the small sea insects on which they feed. Whenever the animal feels inclined to search for prey, it lifts the lid which covers the shell, and stretches out its feelers like so many arms, which remain extended till something comes within its reach; when the Barnacle immediately seisze upon the prize,

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