This is a class of animals between
birds and fishes, generally crawling or swimming,
of a cold temperature, sluggish habits, slow digestion,
and obtuse senses. They include serpents, lizards,
tortoises, frogs, toads, salamanders, the proteus
and siren. The reptilia are divided into four
orders, the division being founded upon the difference
in the quantity of their respiration, and the diversity
of their organs of motion.
ORDER I - CHELONIA,
TORTOISE.
These animals are of various sizes,
some living on the land, and some on the sea.
They are remarkable for longevity. Mr. Murray
says, “The size to which this creature occasionally
attains is quite monstrous. I remember, some
years ago, to have seen one, then semi-torpid, exhibited
near Exeter ’Change, London, which weighed several
hundred weight. Its shell was proportionably
thick, and its other dimensions bore a corresponding
ratio. It was stated to be about eight hundred
years old.”
ORDER II - SAURIA,
LIZARDS.
The more formidable species of this
tribe are inhabitants of the warmer countries of the
globe. The larger kinds prey upon animals, the
smaller upon insects.
THE CROCODILE.
This animal is found on the banks
of the Nile, Niger, and Ganges.
In crossing the Ba-Woolima, Mungo
Park’s attendant, Isaaco, met with a strange
and nearly fatal adventure. In attempting to drive
six asses across the river, just as he had reached
the middle, a crocodile rose close to him, and instantly
seizing him by the left thigh, pulled him under water.
With wonderful presence of mind, he felt the head of
the animal, and thrust his finger into its eye.
This forced it to quit its hold: it soon, however,
returned to the charge, and, seizing him by the other
thigh, again pulled him under water. Isaaco had
recourse to the same expedient, and thrust his fingers
a second time into its eyes with such force, that
it again quitted him, rose to the surface, floundered
about as if stupid, and then swam down the stream.
Isaaco, in the mean time, reached the bank of the
river, bleeding very much the wound in
his left thigh being four inches long, that on the
right somewhat less, but very deep, besides several
single teeth-marks on his back. In six days,
however, he recovered so as to be able to travel.
At Chantilly, in France, there was,
in the year 1828, a crocodile so perfectly tame and
well-disposed, that he was caressed with impunity by
the keeper, who endeavored, although not always with
success, to induce visitors to follow his example.
He never attempted to bite any one, but seemed pleased
by being fondled.
THE ALLIGATOR.
This creature is similar in habits
and appearance to the crocodile. It is found
only in America, and is most abundant in the tropical
regions. The anecdotes which display its ferocity
are numerous; but we choose one which exhibits it
in a different character. Mr. Jesse had one which
he made so perfectly tame, that it followed him about
the house like a dog, scrambling up the stairs after
him, and showing much affection and docility.
Its great favorite, however, was a cat; and the friendship
was mutual. When the cat was reposing herself
before the fire, the alligator would lay himself down,
place his head upon the cat, and in this attitude
go to sleep. If the cat was absent, the alligator
was restless; but he always appeared happy when puss
was near him. The only instance in which he showed
any ferocity was in attacking a fox, which was tied
up in the yard. Probably, however, the fox had
resented some playful advances which the other had
made, and thus called forth the anger of the alligator.
In attacking the fox, he did not make use of his mouth,
but beat him with so much severity with his tail, that,
had not the chain which confined the fox broken, he
would probably have killed him. The alligator
was fed on raw flesh, and sometimes with milk, for
which he showed great fondness. In cold weather,
he was shut up in a box, with wool in it; but having
been forgotten one frosty night, he was found dead
in the morning.
THE SALAMANDER.
Recently, as David Virtue, a mason
in Scotland, was dressing a heavy barley millstone
from a large block, after cutting away a part, he
found a lizard of this species imbedded in the stone.
It was about an inch and a quarter long, of a brownish-yellow
color, and had a round head, with bright, sparkling,
projecting eyes. When first found, it was apparently
dead; but after being about five minutes exposed to
the air, it showed signs of life. It soon became
lively, and ran about with much celerity; and about
half an hour after the discovery, was brushed off
the stone, and killed. When found, it was coiled
up in a round cavity of its own form, being an exact
impression of the animal. There were about fourteen
feet of earth above the rock, and the block in which
the lizard was found was seven or eight feet in the
rock; so that the whole depth of the animal from the
surface was twenty-one or twenty-two feet. The
stone had no fissure, was quite hard, and one of the
best which is got from the quarry of Cullaloe; the
stone is reckoned one of the hardest in Scotland.
ORDER III - OPHIDIA,
SERPENTS.
This order of animals is greatly diversified
in their size, color, and qualities. Some are
but five inches in length, and others reach the enormous
extent of thirty feet. Some are inoffensive, and
others are in the highest degree venomous. They
are in general regarded with horror by mankind, and
a universal instinct seems to call upon us to destroy
them.
Anecdotes. Mr. Strohecker,
of Pennsylvania, had a daughter three years of age,
who, for a number of successive days, was remarked
to leave home with a piece of bread in her hand, and
go to a considerable distance. The mother’s
attention was attracted by the circumstance, who desired
the father to follow the infant, and observe what she
did with the bread. On coming up to her, he found
she was busy feeding several snakes called bastard-rattlesnakes.
He immediately took the infant away, and proceeded
to his house for his gun, and on returning killed
two of them at a shot, and another a few days afterwards.
The child called these reptiles, in the same manner
as chickens are called; and when her father told her
she would certainly be bitten by them if she attempted
it again, she innocently replied, “No, father,
they won’t bite me; they only eat the bread
I give them.”
It has been a common opinion that
serpents possess a peculiar power of fascination.
This is probably a vulgar error; yet the following
story is told of the daughter of a Dutch farmer near
Niagara. It was on a warm summer day that she
was sent to spread out wet clothes upon some shrubbery
near the house. Her mother conceived that she
remained longer than was necessary, and seeing her
standing unoccupied at some distance, she called to
her several times, but no answer was returned.
On approaching, she found her daughter pale, motionless,
and fixed in an erect posture. The perspiration
rolled down her brow, and her hands were clinched
convulsively. A large rattlesnake lay on a log
opposite the girl, waving his head from side to side,
and kept his eyes steadfastly fastened upon her.
The mother instantly struck the snake with a stick;
and the moment he made off, the girl recovered herself,
and burst into tears, but was for some time so weak
and agitated that she could not walk home.
ORDER IV - BATRACHEA,
THE FROG KIND.
THE FROG.
A Thief. A correspondent
of the Penny Magazine, who lived close to the outlet
of a small lake, used to bestow a great deal of care
and attention upon the rearing of young ducklings;
but, after all, he had the mortification to find his
efforts fruitless. The old ones would hatch fine
healthy broods; but as soon as they were strong enough
to waddle to a sedgy stream that issued from the adjoining
lake, one or two daily disappeared, to the gentleman’s
great annoyance. Having suffered these continual
depredations for two or three seasons, he one day
noticed a nice duckling gradually disappear under the
water; but judge of his surprise when he beheld a
large bull-frog crawl out upon the prostrate trunk
of a tree, with the duckling’s feet still protruding
from his capacious mouth! The mystery was thus
solved; the bull-frogs had swallowed all the young
ducks!
Curious. Some years
ago, the city of Metz was afflicted by one among the
seven plagues of Egypt, namely, frogs; certain streets
were filled with these animals, and no one was able
to conjecture from whence they came, until it was
explained by a dealer in frogs applying to the tribunals
for the recovery of his property. He had shut
up about six thousand frogs, designed for food, in
a particular place belonging to the fish-market, where
they were discovered by some children, who took part
away to sell, and on leaving the troughs in the fish-market,
forgot to close them. Profiting by the opening
thus left, the frogs began to spread themselves in
various parts, and even got into some of the neighboring
houses, whose inhabitants found much difficulty in
ejecting the unwelcome intruders.
An Escape. A butcher
in Glasgow found an ordinary-sized living frog in
the stomach of a cow, which he had just killed.
When laid down, it was full of spirit, and leaped
about the slaughter-house, to the astonishment of
a considerable crowd. The cow was killed between
three and four o’clock in the afternoon; it
was supposed she had swallowed the frog when drinking.
THE TOAD.
Not the least wonderful part of the
history of the toad is the circumstance of its being
frequently found in the bed of solid rocks, and the
internal cavities of trees.
Anecdotes. We find
it mentioned in the “Edinburgh Philosophical
Journal,” that “a specimen of a toad, which
was taken alive from the centre of a solid mass of
stone, has been sent to the College Museum of Edinburgh
by Lord Duncan.” It is mentioned, in the
“Transactions of the Academy of Sciences,”
at Paris, that a live toad was found in the centre
of an elm-tree, and another in an oak. Both trees
were quite sound, and in a healthy condition.
To these facts we may add another: It is related
by Sir Thomas Dick Lauder, who is a close observer
of nature, that, on his estate in East Lothian, a
large toad was found in the heart of a smooth, straight
beech-tree, at the height of thirty feet from the
ground, where it was confined in a circular hole.
A gentleman who resided at Keswick,
England, one evening in the latter end of July, observed
a rustling among the strawberries in his garden, and
on examining what it was, found that a toad had just
seized a field-mouse, which had got on the toad’s
back, scratching and biting to get released, but in
vain. The toad kept his hold, and, as the strength
of the mouse failed, he gradually drew the unfortunate
little animal into his mouth, and gorged him.