examination of Tree-ferns would seem to have offered him an
occasion for doing so. Von Mohl, like his contemporaries, was
satisfied with calling everything that is neither epidermis, cork
or vascular bundle, parenchyma, without distinctly defining the expression.
Here we leave von Mohl and his labours for the present, to return once more in the following chapter to the share which he took in the further progress of phytotomy. We shall perhaps best realise his importance in the history of the science, if we try to think of all that we have now seen him doing for it as still undone. There would then be a huge gap in modern phytotomic literature, which must have been filled up by others before there could be any further addition to the knowledge of cells and tissues founded on the history of their development; for it can hardly be conceived that the advance to which we owe the present condition of vegetable anatomy, could have been based upon ideas such as those of Meyen, Link, and Treviranus, without von Mohl's preliminary discoveries.