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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Buffon's Natural History, Volume III (of 10),
+by Georges Louis Leclerc, Comte de Buffon, Translated by James Smith Barr
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Buffon's Natural History, Volume III (of 10)
+ Containing a Theory of the Earth, a General History of Man, of the Brute Creation, and of Vegetables, Minerals, &c. &c.
+
+
+Author: Georges Louis Leclerc, Comte de Buffon
+
+
+
+Release Date: May 12, 2014 [eBook #45639]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BUFFON'S NATURAL HISTORY, VOLUME
+III (OF 10)***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Chris Curnow, Tom Cosmas, and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made
+available by Internet Archive (https://archive.org)
+
+
+
+Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
+ file which includes the original illustrations.
+ See 45639-h.htm or 45639-h.zip:
+ (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/45639/45639-h/45639-h.htm)
+ or
+ (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/45639/45639-h.zip)
+
+
+ Images of the original pages are available through
+ Internet Archive. See
+ https://archive.org/details/buffonsnaturalhi03buff
+
+
+Transcriber's note:
+
+ Text enclosed by underscores is in italics (_italics_).
+
+
+
+
+
+ _Barr's Buffon._
+
+ Buffon's Natural History,
+
+ CONTAINING
+
+ A THEORY OF THE EARTH,
+ A GENERAL
+ _HISTORY OF MAN_,
+ OF THE BRUTE CREATION, AND OF
+ VEGETABLES, MINERALS,
+ _&c._ _&c._
+
+ FROM THE FRENCH.
+
+ WITH NOTES BY THE TRANSLATOR.
+
+ IN TEN VOLUMES.
+
+ VOL. III.
+
+ London:
+ PRINTED FOR THE PROPRIETOR,
+ AND SOLD BY H. D. SYMONDS, PATERNOSTER-ROW.
+
+ 1807.
+
+ T. Gillet, Printer, Wild-Court.
+
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS
+
+ OF
+
+ THE THIRD VOLUME.
+
+
+ _Page_
+
+ History of Animals 1
+
+ Chap. VI. _Experiments on the Method of Generation_ 81
+
+ Chap. VII. _Comparison of my Observations with those
+ of Leeuwenhoek_ 134
+
+ Chap. VIII. _Reflections on the preceding Experiments_ 159
+
+ Chap. IX. _Varieties on the Generation of Animals_ 208
+
+ Chap. X. _On the Formation of the Foetus_ 226
+
+ Chap. XI. _On the Expansion, Growth, and Delivery of
+ the Foetus_ 260
+
+ _Recapitulation_ 309
+
+
+ History of Man.
+
+ Chap. I. _Of the Nature of Man_ 317
+
+ Chap. II. _Of Infancy_ 334
+
+
+
+_Directions for placing the Plates._
+
+
+ Page 88, Fig. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6.
+ 106, Fig. 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12.
+ 140, Plate III.
+ 148, Plate IV.
+
+
+
+
+BUFFON'S
+
+NATURAL HISTORY.
+
+
+
+
+_HISTORY OF ANIMALS._
+
+
+Aristotle admits, with Plato, of final and efficient causes. These
+efficient causes are sensitive and vegetative souls, that give form to
+matter which, of itself, is only a capacity of receiving forms; and
+as in generation the female gives the most abundant matter, and it
+being against his system of final causes to admit that what one could
+effect should be performed by many, he concludes, that the female
+alone contains the necessary matter to generation; and, as another of
+his principles was, that matter itself is unformed, and that form is
+a distinct being from matter, he affirmed that the male furnished the
+form, and, consequently, nothing belonging to matter.
+
+Descartes, on the contrary, who admitted but a few mechanical
+principles in his philosophy, endeavoured to explain the formation
+of the foetus by them, and thought it in his power to comprehend,
+and make others understand, how an organized and living being could
+be made by the laws of motion alone. His admitted principles differed
+from those used by Aristotle; but both, instead of examining the thing
+itself, without prepossession and prejudice, have only considered it
+in the point of view relative to their systems of philosophy, which
+could not be attended with a successful application to the nature of
+generation, because it depends, as we have shewn, on quite different
+principles. Descartes differs still more from Aristotle, by admitting
+of the mixture of the seminal liquor of the two sexes; he thinks both
+furnish something material for generation, and that the fermentation
+occasioned by the mixture of these two seminal liquors causes the
+formation of the foetus.
+
+Hippocrates, who lived under Perdicas, a considerable time before
+Aristotle, established an opinion, which was adopted by Galen, and a
+great number of physicians who followed him; his opinion was, that the
+male and female had each a prolific fluid, and supposed, besides, that
+there were two seminal fluids in each sex, the one strong and active,
+the other weak and inactive.[A] That a mixture of the two strongest
+fluids produce a male child, and of the two weakest a female; so
+that, according to him, they each contain a male and a female seed.
+He supports this hypothesis by the following circumstance; that many
+women, who produce only girls by their first husbands, have produced
+boys by a second; and that men, who have had only girls by their first
+wives, have had boys by others. It appears to me, that if even this
+circumstance could be well established, it would not be necessary
+to give to the male and female two kinds of seminal liquor for an
+explanation; because it may easily be conceived, that women, who have
+brought forth only girls by their first husbands, and produced boys
+with other men, were only those who furnished more particles proper
+for generation with their first husband than with the second; or that
+the second husband furnished more particles proper for generation
+with the second wife than with the first; for when, in the instant of
+conception, the organic molecules of the male are more abundant than
+those of the female, the result will be a male, and when those of
+the female abounds a female will be produced; nor is it in the least
+surprising that a man should have a disadvantage in this respect with
+some women, while he will have a superiority over others.
+
+[A] See Hippocrates, lib. de Genitura, page 129, & lib. de dięta, page
+198, Lugd. Bat. 1665, vol. I.
+
+This great physician supposes, that the seed of the male is a secretion
+of the strongest and most essential parts of all that is humid in the
+human body; and he thus explains how this secretion is made: "Venę
+& nervi, he says, ab omni corpore in pudendum vergunt, quibus dum
+aliquantulum teruntur & calescunt ac implentur, velut pruritus incidit,
+ex hoc toti corpori voluptas ac caliditas accidit; quum vero pudendum
+teritur & homo movetur, humidum in corpore calescit ac diffunditur,
+& a motu conquassatur ac spumescit, quemadmodum alii humores omnes
+conquassati spumescunt.
+
+"Sic autem in homine ab humido spumescente id quod robustissimum est ac
+pinguissimum secernitur, & ad medullam spinalem venit; tendunt enim in
+hanc ex omni corpore vię, & diffundunt ex cerebro in lumbus ac in totum
+corpus & in medullum; & ex ipsa medull proacedunt vię, ut & ad ipsum
+humidum perferatur & ex ipsa secedat; postquam autem ad hanc medullam
+genitura pervenerit, procedit ad renes, hac enim via tendit per venas,
+& si renes fuerint exulcerati, aliquando etiam sanguis defertur: a
+renibus autem transit per medois testes in pudendum, proce dit autem
+non qua urina, erum alia ipsi via est illi contigua, &c."[B]
+
+[B] See Fęsius's Translation, vol. I. page 129.
+
+Anatomists will no doubt discover that Hippocrates is not correct
+in tracing the road of the seminal liquor; but that does not affect
+his opinion, that the semen comes from every part of the body, and
+particularly the head, because, he says, those whose veins have been
+cut which lie near the ears only bring forth a weak, and very often an
+unfertile semen. The female has also a seminal fluid, which she emits,
+sometimes within the matrix, and sometimes without, when the internal
+orifice is more open than it should. The semen of the male enters into
+the matrix, where it mixes with that of the female; and as each has
+two kinds of fluid, the one strong and the other weak, if both furnish
+their strong, a male will be the result, and if their weak, a female;
+and if in the mixture there are more particles of the male liquor than
+the female, then the infant will have a greater resemblance to the
+father than to the mother, and so on the contrary. It might here be
+asked Hippocrates what would happen when the one furnished its weak
+semen and the other its strong? I cannot conceive what answer he could
+make, and that alone is sufficient to cause his opinion of two seeds in
+each sex to be rejected.
+
+In this manner then, according to him, the formation of the foetus is
+made: the seminal fluids first mix in the matrix, where they gradually
+thicken by the heat of the body of the mother; the mixture receives and
+attracts the spirit of the heat, and when too warm part of the heat
+flies out, and the respiration of the mother sends a colder spirit in;
+thus alternatively a cold and a hot spirit enter the mixture, which
+give life, and cause a pellicle to grow on the surface, which takes a
+round form, because the spirits, acting as a centre, extend it equally
+on all sides. "I have seen, says this great man, a foetus of six days
+old; it was a ball of liquor surrounded with a pellicle; the liquor
+was reddish, and the pellicle was spread over with vessels, some red
+and others white, in the midst of which was a small eminence, which I
+thought to be the umbilical vessels, by which the foetus receives
+nourishment and the spirit of respiration from the mother. By degrees
+another pellicle is formed, which surrounds the first; the menstrual
+blood, being suppressed, abundantly supplies it with nutriment, and
+which coagulates by degrees, and becomes flesh; this flesh articulates
+itself in proportion as it grows, and receives its form from the
+spirit; each part proceeds to take its proper place; the solid
+particles go to their respective situations and the fluid to theirs:
+each matter seeks for that which is most like itself, and the foetus
+is at length entirely formed by these causes and these means."
+
+This system is less obscure and more reasonable than that of Aristotle,
+because Hippocrates endeavours to explain every matter by particular
+reasons: he borrows from the philosophy of his times but one single
+principle, which is, that heat and cold produce spirits, and that those
+spirits have the power of ordering and arranging matter. He has viewed
+generation more like a physician than a philosopher, while Aristotle
+has explained it more like a metaphysician than a naturalist; which
+makes the defects of Hippocrates's system particular and less apparent,
+while those of Aristotle's are general and evident.
+
+These two great men have each had their followers; almost all the
+scholastic philosophers, by adopting Aristotle's philosophy, received
+his system of generation, while almost every physician followed
+the opinion of Hippocrates; and seventeen or eighteen centuries
+passed without any thing new being said on the subject. At last, at
+the restoration of literature, some anatomists turned their eyes
+on generation, and Fabricius Aquapendente was the first who made
+experiments and observations on the impregnation and growth of the eggs
+of a fowl. The following is the substance of his observations.
+
+He distinguished two parts in the matrix of a hen, the one superior
+and the other inferior. The superior he calls the Ovarium, which is
+properly no other than a cluster of small yellow eggs of a round form,
+varying in size from the bigness of a mustard-seed to that of a large
+nut or medlar. These small eggs are fastened together by one common
+pellicle, and form a body which nearly resembles a bunch of grapes.
+The smallest of these eggs are white, and they take another colour in
+proportion as they increase.
+
+Having examined these eggs immediately after the communication of the
+cock, he did not perceive any remarkable difference, nor any of the
+male semen in any one of these eggs; he therefore supposed that every
+egg, and the ovarium itself, became fruitful by a subtle spirit, which
+came from the semen of the male; and he says, that in order to secure
+this fecundating spirit, nature has placed at the external orifice of
+the vagina of birds a kind of net-work or membrane, which permits, like
+a valve, the entrance of this seminal spirit, but at the same time
+prevents it from re-issuing or evaporating.
+
+When the egg is loosened from the common pellicle, it descends by
+degrees through a winding passage into the internal part of the matrix.
+This passage is filled with a liquor nearly similar to the white of
+an egg; it is also in this part that the eggs begin to be surrounded
+with this white liquor, with the membrane which occasions it, the two
+ligaments (_chalazę_) which passes over the white, and connects it
+with the yolk and shell, which are formed in a very short time before
+they are laid. These ligaments, according to Fabricius, is the part of
+the egg fecundated by the seminal spirit of the male; and it is here
+where the foetus first begins to form. The egg is not only the true
+matrix, that is to say, the place of the formation of the chick, but
+it is from the egg all generation depends. The egg produces it as the
+agent: it supplies both the matter and the organs; the ligaments are
+the substance of formation; the white and the yolk are the nutriment,
+and the seminal spirit of the male is the efficient cause. This
+spirit communicates to the ligaments at first an alterative faculty,
+afterwards a formative, and lastly the power of augmentation, &c.
+
+These observations of Fabricius have not given us a very clear
+explication of generation. Nearly at the same time as this anatomist
+was employed in these researches, towards the middle of the sixteenth
+century, the famous Aldrovandus[C] also made observations on eggs; but
+as Harvey judiciously observes, he followed Aristotle much closer than
+experiment. The descriptions he gives of the chicken in the egg are
+not exact. Volcher Coiter, one of his scholars, succeeded much better
+in his enquiries; and Parisanus, a physician of Venice, having also
+laboured on this subject, they have each given a description of the
+chicken in the egg, which Harvey prefers to any other.
+
+[C] See his Ornithology.
+
+This famous anatomist, to whom we are indebted for the discovery of the
+circulation of the blood, has composed a very extensive treatise on
+generation; he lived towards the middle of the last century, and was
+physician to Charles I. of England. As he was obliged to follow this
+unfortunate prince in his misfortunes, he lost what he had written on
+the generation of insects among other papers, and he composed what he
+has left us on the generation of birds and quadrupeds from his memory.
+I shall concisely relate his observations, his experiments, and his
+system.
+
+Harvey asserts that man and every animal proceed from an egg; that the
+first produce of conception in viviparous animals is a kind of an egg,
+and that the only difference between viviparous and oviparous is, that
+the foetus of the first take their origin, acquire their growth, and
+arrive at their entire expansion in the matrix; whereas the foetus of
+oviparous animals begins to exist in the body of the mother, where they
+are merely as eggs, and it is only after they have quitted the body of
+the mother that they really become foetuses; and we must remark, says
+he, that in oviparous animals, some hold their eggs within themselves
+till they are perfect, as birds, serpents and oviparous quadrupeds;
+others lay their eggs before they are perfect, as fish, crustaceous,
+and testaceous animals. The eggs which these animals deposit are only
+the rudiments of real eggs, they afterwards acquire bulk and membranes,
+and attract nourishment from the matter which surrounds them. It is the
+same, adds he, with insects, for example, and caterpillars, which only
+seem imperfect eggs, which seek their nutriment, and at the end of a
+certain time arrive to the state of chrysalis, which is a perfect egg.
+There is another difference in oviparous animals: for fowls and other
+birds have eggs of different sizes, whereas fish, frogs, &c. lay them
+before they are perfect, have them all of the same size; he indeed
+observes, that in pigeons, who only lay two eggs, all the small eggs
+which remain in the ovarium are of the same size, and it is only the
+foremost two which are bigger than the rest. It is the same, he says,
+in cartilaginous fish, as in the thornback, who have only two eggs
+which increase and come to maturity, while those which remain in the
+ovarium are, like those in fowls, of different sizes.
+
+He afterwards makes us an anatomical exposition of the parts necessary
+to generation, and observes, that in all birds the situation of the
+anus and vulra are contrary to the situation of those parts in other
+animals; the anus being placed before and the vulra behind;[D] and
+with respect to the cock, and all small birds, that they generate by
+external friction, having in fact no intermission nor real copulation;
+with male ducks, geese, and ostriches, it is evidently otherwise.
+
+[D] Most of these articles are taken from Aristotle.
+
+Hens produce eggs without the cock, but in a very small number, and
+these eggs, although perfect, are unfruitful: he does not agree with
+the opinion of country people, that two or three days cohabitation
+with the cock is sufficient to impregnate all the eggs a hen will lay
+within the year, but admits that he separated a hen from a cock for the
+space of twenty days, and that all the eggs she laid during that space
+were fecundated. While the egg is fastened to the ovarium, it derives
+its nutriment from the vessel of the common pellicle. But as soon as
+it is loosened from it, it derives the white liquor which fills the
+passages in which it descends, and the whole, even to the shell, is
+formed by this mode.
+
+The two ligaments (_chalazę_) which Aquapendente looks on as the shoot
+produced by the seed of the male, are found in the infecund eggs
+which the hen produces without the communication with the cock, as
+in those which are impregnated: and Harvey very judiciously remarks,
+that those parts do not proceed from the male, and are not those which
+are fecundated; the fecundated part of an egg is a very small white
+circle which is on the membrane that covers the yolk, and forms there
+a small spot, like a cicatrice, about the size of a lentil. Harvey
+also remarks, that this little cicatrice is found in every fecund or
+infecund egg, and that those who think it is produced by the seed of
+the male are deceived. It is of the same size and form in fresh eggs,
+as in those which have been kept a long time; but when we would hatch
+them, and when the egg receives a sufficient degree of heat, either by
+the hen, or artificially, we presently see this small spot increase and
+dilate nearly like the sight of the eye. This is the first change, and
+is visible at the end of a few hours incubation.
+
+When the egg has undergone a proper warmth for twenty-four hours,
+the yolk, which was before in the centre of the shell, approaches
+nearer to the cavity at the broad end; this cavity is increased by the
+evaporation of the watery part of the white, and the grosser part sinks
+to the small end. The cicatrice, or speck, on the membrane of the yolk,
+rises with it to the broad end, and seems to adhere to the membrane
+there: this speck is then about the bigness of a small pea, in the
+middle of it a white speck is discernible, and many circles, of which
+this point seems to form the centre.
+
+At the end of the second day these circles are larger and more
+visible; the streak also appears divided by these circles into two,
+and sometimes three parts of different colours; a small protuberance
+also appears on the external part, and nearly resembles a small eye,
+in the pupil of which there is a point, or little cataract; between
+these circles a clear liquor is contained by a very delicate membrane,
+and the speck now appears more to be placed in the white than on the
+membrane of the yolk. On the third day the transparent liquor is
+considerably increased, as is also the small membrane which surrounds
+it. The fourth day, a small streak of purple-coloured blood is observed
+at the circumference of the speck or ball, at a little distance from
+the centre of which a point may be seen of a blood colour, and which
+beats like a heart. It appears like a small spark at each diastole, and
+disappears at each systole; from this animated speck issue two small
+blood vessels, which these small vessels throw out as branches into
+this liquor, all of which come from the same point, nearly in like
+manner as the roots of a tree shoot from the trunk.
+
+Towards the end of the fourth day, or at the beginning of the fifth,
+the animated speck is so much increased as to appear like a small
+bladder filled with blood, and by its contractions and dilations
+is alternatively filled and emptied. In the same day this vessel
+very distinctly appears to divide into two parts, each of which
+alternatively impel and dilute the blood in the same manner. Around
+the shortest sanguinary vessel which we have spoken of a kind of cloud
+is seen, which, although transparent, renders the sight of this vessel
+more obscure; this cloud constantly grows thicker and more attached
+to the root of the blood vessel, and appears like a small globe: this
+small globe lengthens and divides into three parts, one of which is
+globular, and larger than the other two; the head and eyes now begin to
+appear, and at the end of the fifth day, the place for the vertebra is
+seen in the remainder part of this globe.
+
+The sixth day the head is seen more clearly, the outlines of the eyes
+now appear, the wings and thighs lengthen, and the liver, lungs, and
+beak, are distinctly observed; the foetus now begins to move and
+extend its head, although it has as yet only the internal viscera; for
+the thorax, abdomen, and all the external coverings of the fore part,
+of the body are wanting. At the end of this day, or at the beginning
+of the seventh, the toes appear, the chick opens and moves its beak,
+and the anterior parts of the body begin to cover the viscera; on the
+seventh day the chicken is entirely formed, and from this time until
+it comes out of the egg, nothing happens but only an expansion of those
+parts it acquired within these first seven days: at the fourteenth or
+fifteenth day the feathers appear, and at the twenty-first it breaks
+the shell with its beak, and procures its enlargement.
+
+These observations of Harvey appear to have been made with the greatest
+exactness; nevertheless we shall point out how imperfect they are,
+and that he has fallen himself into the error he reproaches others
+with, making experiments to support his favourite hypothesis, that
+the heart was the animated speck which first appeared; but before we
+proceed on this matter, it is but just to give an account of his other
+observations, and of his system.
+
+It is well known that Harvey made many experiments on hinds and does.
+They receive the male towards the middle of September: a few days after
+copulation the horns of the matrix become thicker, and at the same time
+more lax. In each of the cavities five carunculas appear. Towards the
+26th or 28th of the above month the matrix thickens still more, and the
+five carunculas are swelled nearly to the shape and size of a nurse's
+nipple; by opening them, an infinity of small white specks are found.
+Harvey pretends to have remarked, that there was neither then, nor
+immediately after copulation, any alteration or change in the ovarium,
+and that he has never been able to find a single drop of the seed of
+the male in the matrix, although he has made many researches for that
+purpose.
+
+Towards the end of October, or beginning of November, when the
+females separate from the males, the thickness of the horns begins
+to diminish, the internal surfaces of their cavities are swelled,
+and appear fastened together; the carunculas remain, and the whole,
+which resembles the substance of the brain, is so soft that it cannot
+be touched. Towards the 13th or 14th of November, Harvey says, that
+he perceived filaments, like the threads of a spider's web, which
+traversed the cavities of the horns and the matrix itself: these
+filaments shoot out from the superior angle of the matrix, and by
+their multiplication form a kind of membrane, or empty tunic; a day
+or two after this tunic is filled with a white, aqueous and glutinous
+matter, which adheres to the matrix by a kind of mucilage; and in the
+third month this tunic, or pouch, contains an embryo about the breadth
+of two fingers long, and another internal pouch, called the amnios,
+containing a transparent crystalline liquor, in which the foetus
+swims. The foetus at first was but an animated speck, like that in
+the egg of a fowl. All the rest is performed in the same manner as that
+related of the chick; the only difference is in the eyes, which appears
+much sooner in the fowl than in the deer. The animated speck appears
+about the 19th or 20th of November, a day or two after which the oblong
+body, which contains the foetus, is seen; in six or seven days more
+it is so much formed that the sex and limbs may be distinguished; but
+the heart and viscera are yet uncovered, and it is two days more before
+the thorax and the abdomen cover them, which is the last work and
+completion of the edifice.
+
+From these observations upon hens and deer, Harvey concludes, that
+all female animals have eggs, that in these eggs a separation of a
+transparent crystalline liquor contained in the amnios is made, and
+that another external pouch, the chorion, contains the whole liquors of
+the egg; that the first thing which appears in the crystalline liquor
+is the sanguinary and animated spirit; in a word, that the formation of
+viviparous animals is made after the same manner as oviparous; and he
+explains the generation of both as follows.
+
+Generation is the work of the matrix, in which no seed of the male
+ever enters; the matrix conceives by a kind of contagion, which the
+male liquor communicates to it, nearly as the magnet communicates
+its magnetic virtue to steel. This male contagion not only acts upon
+the matrix but over all the female body, which is wholly fecundated,
+although the matrix only has the faculty of conception, as the brain
+has the sole faculty of conceiving ideas. The ideas conceived by the
+brain, are like the images of the objects transmitted by the senses;
+and the foetus, which may be considered as the idea of the matrix, is
+like that which produces it. This is the reason that a child has a
+resemblance to its father, &c.
+
+I shall not follow this anatomist any farther; what I have mentioned
+is sufficient to judge of his system; but we have some remarks to make
+on his observations. He has given them in a manner most likely to
+impose; seems to have often repeated his experiments, and to have taken
+every necessary precaution to avoid deception; from which it might
+be imagined he had seen all he writes upon, and observed them with
+the greatest accuracy. Nevertheless, I perceive both uncertainty and
+obscurity in his descriptions; his observations are related chiefly on
+memory; and although he often says the contrary, Aristotle appears to
+have been his guide more than experience; for he has only seen in eggs
+what Aristotle has before mentioned; and that most of his observations
+which may be deemed essential had been made before him, we shall be
+perfectly convinced if we pay a little attention to what follows:
+
+Aristotle knew that the ligaments (Chalazę) were of no service to the
+generation of the chicken. "Quę ad principium lutei grandines hęrent,
+nil conferunt ad generationem, ut quidam suspicantur."[E] Parisanus,
+Volcher, Coiter, Aquapendente, and others, remarked the cicatrice as
+well as Harvey: Aquapendente supposed it of no use; but Parisanus
+pretended that it was formed by the male semen, or at least that the
+white speck in the middle of the cicatrice was the seed of the male
+which would produce the chicken. "Est-que, says he, illud galli semen
+alba & tenuissima tunica abductum, quod substat duabus communibus
+toti ovo membranis, &c." Therefore the only discovery which properly
+belongs to Harvey is, his having observed that this cicatrice is found
+in infecund as well as fecundated eggs; for others had observed, like
+him, the dilation of the circles, and the growth of the white speck;
+and it appears that Parisanus had seen it much better; this is all
+which he remarks in the two first days of incubation; and what he says
+of the third day, is only a repetition of Aristotle's words. [F]"Per id
+tempus ascendit jam vetellus ad superiorem partem ovi acutiorem, ubi
+& principium ovi est & foetus excluditur; corque ipsum apparet, in
+albumine sanguinei puncti, quod punctum salit & movet sese instar quasi
+animatum; ab eo meatus venarum specie duo, sanguinei pleni, flexuosi,
+qui, crescente foetu, feruntur in utramque tunicam ambientem, ac
+membrana sanguineas fibras habens eo tempore albumen continet sub
+meatibus illis venarum similibus; ac paulo post discernitur corpus
+pufillum initio, ommino & candidum, capite conspicuo, atque in eo
+oculis maxime turgidis qui diu sic permanent, sero enim parvi fiunt ac
+considunt. In parte autem corporis inferiore, nullum extat membrum per
+initia, quod respondeat superioribus. Meatus autum illi qui a corde
+prodeunt, alter ad circumdantem, membranam tendit, alter ad luteum,
+officio umbilici."
+
+[E] Hist. Anim. lib. vi. cap. 2.
+
+[F] Hist. Anim. lib. vi. cap. 4.
+
+Harvey attacks Aristotle for saying that the yolk ascends towards the
+small end of the egg, and concludes, that he had not seen any thing
+himself, but had apparently received his information from some good
+observer of Nature. Harvey was wrong in thus reproaching Aristotle, and
+in asserting that the yolk always ascends towards the broad end of the
+egg, for that depends on the position of the egg during the time of
+incubation, for the yolk always ascends to the uppermost part, as being
+lighter than the white, whether it be to the broad or the small end.
+William Langley, a physician at Dordrecht, who made observations on the
+hatching of eggs, in 1655, twenty years before Harvey, was the first
+who made this remark.[G]
+
+[G] See Wm. Langley Observ. edę a justo Schradero, Amst. 1674.
+
+But to return to the passage we have quoted. By that we see that the
+crystalline liquor, the animated speck, the two circles, the two
+blood vessels, &c. are described by Aristotle precisely as Harvey
+had seen them. This anatomist also pretends that the animated speck
+is the heart, that this heart is formed the first, and that the
+viscera and other parts are joined afterwards. All this has been
+spoken of by Aristotle, and seen by Harvey, and nevertheless it is
+not conformable to truth. To be assured of this we need only repeat
+the same experiments on eggs, or only read with attention those of
+Malpighius,[H] which were made about 40 years after those of Harvey.
+
+[H] Malpighii pullus in ovo.
+
+This excellent observer of Nature examined, with attention, the
+cicatrice, which is the essential part of the egg; he found it was
+large in all impregnated eggs, and small in those which were not
+impregnated; and he discovered in eggs which had never been sat upon,
+that the white speck, spoken of by Harvey as the first which becomes
+animated, is a small pouch or ball, which swims in a liquor inclosed
+by the first circle, and in the middle of this ball he observed the
+embryo. The membrane of this small pouch, which is the amnios, being
+very thin and transparent, permitted him easily to see the foetus
+it surrounded. Malpighius, with reason, concludes, from this first
+observation, that the foetus exists in the egg before incubation, and
+that its first outlines are then very strong. It is not necessary to
+point out how opposite this experiment is to the opinion of Harvey,
+for he saw nothing of a form for the two first days of incubation, and
+it was the third day before the sign of the foetus appears, which is
+the animated speck: whereas according to Malpighius, the outlines of
+the foetus exist in the egg before incubation has commenced.
+
+After being assured of this important matter, Malpighius examined, with
+like attention, the cicatrice of unimpregnated eggs, which, as we have
+observed, is smaller than those which have been impregnated; it has
+often irregular circumscriptions, and sometimes differs in different
+eggs. Near its centre, instead of the ball that encloses the foetus,
+there is a globular mole, which does not contain any thing organized,
+and which being opened does not present any thing formed or arranged,
+but only some appendages filled with a thick but transparent fluid; and
+this unshapen mass is surrounded with many concentric circles.
+
+After six hours incubation the cicatrice is considerably dilated,
+and the ball formed by the amnios is easily discovered; this ball is
+filled with a liquor, in the middle of which the head of the chicken
+and back-bone are distinctly seen. In about six hours more the little
+animal is seen more distinctly; in another six hours the head is
+grown larger, and the spine lengthened; and at the end of twenty-four
+hours the neck begins to lengthen, the vertebrę of the back appears
+of a white colour, and the head to turn to one side. The vertebrę are
+disposed on each side of the spine, like small globules; and almost
+at the same time the small wings begin to shoot, and the head, neck,
+and breast are lengthened. After thirty hours nothing new appears,
+but every part of the little animal is considerably increased,
+especially the _amnios_. Around this membrane the umbilical vessels
+are seen of a darkish colour. At the end of thirty-eight hours, the
+chicken being grown much larger, its head is large, and in which
+are distinguished three vessels surrounded with membranes, which
+also cover the back bone, through which the vertebrę are still seen.
+In forty hours, continues Malpighius, it was wonderful to see the
+chicken alive, floating in the liquor; the back bone was increased,
+the head was turned on one side, the vesicles of the brain were less
+apparent, the first outlines of the eyes appeared, the heart beat, and
+the circulation of the blood was begun. Malpighius then gives the
+description of the vessels and course of the blood, and reasonably
+supposes that, though the heart does not beat before thirty-eight or
+forty hours incubation, it still existed before that time, like the
+other parts of the chicken; but on examining the heart in a dark room,
+he discovered not the least glimpse of light to proceed from it, as
+Harvey insinuates.
+
+At the end of two days the chicken is seen floating in the liquor of
+the amnios; in which the head, composed of vesicles, is turned on one
+side; the back bone and vertebrę are lengthened; the heart, which then
+hung out of the breast, beat three times; for the fluid it contains
+is impelled into the ventricles of the heart, from thence into the
+arteries, and afterwards into the umbilical vessels. He remarks, that
+having separated the chick from the white of the egg, the motion of
+the heart still continued for a whole day. After two days and fourteen
+hours, or sixty-two hours of incubation, the chicken, although grown
+stronger, remained with its head bent downwards in the liquor,
+contained by the amnios; the veins and arteries were seen among the
+vessels of the brain; the lineaments of the eyes, and the spinal
+marrow, also appear extending the length of the vertebrę.
+
+At the end of the third day the head of the chicken appeared crooked;
+besides the eyes five vessels were seen in the head filled with a
+liquid matter; the first outlines of the wings and thighs were to be
+distinguished, and the body began to gather flesh; the pupil of the
+eye, and also the crystalline and vitreous humour were discernible. At
+the fourth day the vesicles of the brain were nearer each other; the
+eminences of the vertebrę were more prominent, the wings and thighs
+assumed a greater solidity as they increased in length; the whole body,
+covered with a jelly-like flesh, was now surrounded within the body by
+a thin membrane, and the umbilical vessels that unite the animal to
+the yolk, appeared to come from the abdomen. On the fifth and sixth
+days the vesicles of the brain began to be covered; the spinal marrow,
+divided into two parts, began to take solidity and stretch along the
+trunk; the wings and thighs lengthened; the feet began to spread; the
+belly was closed up and tumid; the liver was distinctly seen, and
+appeared of a dusky white; the ventricles of the heart were discerned
+to beat very distinctly; the body of the chicken was covered with a
+skin, and the traces of the feathers were visible; the seventh day
+the head appeared very large, the brain was entirely covered with its
+membranes; the beak began to appear betwixt the eyes, and the wings,
+the thighs, and the legs had acquired their perfect figure.
+
+I shall not follow Malpighius any farther, as the remainder relates
+only to the expansion of the parts till the twenty-first day, when the
+chicken breaks the shell with its beak; though before that time it is
+heard to chirrup in its imprisonment. The heart is the last part which
+receives its proper form, for it is eleven days before the arteries
+are seen to join, and the ventricles become perfectly conformable and
+united.
+
+We are now in a condition to judge of the value of Harvey's experiments
+and observations. There is great appearance this anatomist did not
+make use of a microscope, which in fact was not brought to perfection
+in his days, or he would not have asserted there was no difference
+between the cicatrice of an impregnated and an unimpregnated egg; he
+would not have said the seed of the male produced no alteration in
+the egg, especially in the cicatrice; he would not have affirmed that
+nothing was perceptible till the third day, that the animated speck was
+the first that appeared, and into which the white speck was changed.
+He would have seen that the white speck was a ball which contained the
+whole apparatus of generation, and that every part of the foetus are
+there from the moment the hen has connection with the cock. He would
+also have learnt, that without this connection it contains only an
+unshapen mass, which could never become animated, because in fact it is
+not organized like an animal, and because it is only when this mass,
+which we must look upon as an assemblage of the organic particles of
+the female semen, is penetrated by the organic particles of the male
+semen, that there results from it an animal, which is formed at the
+moment, but whose motion is imperceptible till the end of forty hours
+after: he would not have asserted that the heart is first formed, and
+that the other parts are joined to it by a juxta-position, since it
+is evident from Malpighius's observations, that the outlines of every
+part are all immediately formed, but only appear in proportion as they
+dilate; on the whole, if he had seen what Malpighius saw, he would not
+have affirmed that no impression of the male seed remained in the eggs,
+and that it was only by contagion that they are fecundated, &c.
+
+It is also just to remark, that what Harvey has said on the parts of
+the generation of a cock is not exact; he asserts that the cock has no
+genital member, and that there is no intromission; nevertheless it is
+certain that this animal, instead of one has two, and that they both
+act at the same time, and which action is a very strong compression, if
+not a true copulation;[I] and it is by this double organ that the cock
+emits the seminal liquor into the matrix of the hen.
+
+[I] See Reyn. Graaf, page 242.
+
+Let us now compare the experiments made by Harvey on hinds with those
+of De Graaf on doe rabbits; we shall find that although De Graaf
+supposes, with Harvey, that all animals proceed from eggs, yet there is
+a great difference in the mode which these two anatomists have observed
+in the first steps of formation, or rather expansion, of the foetuses
+of viviparous animals.
+
+After having exerted every effort to establish, by reasons drawn from
+comparative anatomy, that the testicles of viviparous females are real
+ovaries, De Graaf explains how the eggs are loosened from the ovaries
+and fall into the horns of the matrix; he then relates what he observed
+in a rabbit, which he dissected half an hour after copulation. The
+horns of the matrix, he says, were more red than before, but no other
+change in the rest of the parts: there was also no appearance of any
+male seed, neither in the vagina, matrix, nor horns of the matrix.
+
+Having dissected another six hours after copulation he observed the
+follicules, or coats, which he supposes contained the eggs in the
+ovary, ware become red, but found no male seed either in the ovaria or
+elsewhere. He dissected another twenty-four hours after copulation,
+and remarked in one ovarium three, and in the other five follicules
+that were changed, the transparency being become dark and red. In one
+dissected twenty-seven hours after copulation he perceived the horns
+of the womb had become more red and strictly embraced the ovaries. In
+another, that he opened forty hours after copulation, he found in one
+of the ovaries seven, follicules, and in the other three that were
+changed. Fifty-two hours after copulation he examined another and
+found one follicle changed in one of the ovaries and four in another,
+and having opened these follicules he found a glandular liquor, in the
+middle of which there was a small cavity, where he did not perceive
+any liquor, which made him suppose that the transparent liquor,
+commonly contained in the follicules, and which, he says, is enclosed
+in its own membranes, might have been separated by a kind of rupture:
+he searched after this matter in the passages, and in the horns of
+the matrix themselves, but he found none; he only perceived that the
+internal membrane of the horns of the matrix was very much swelled. In
+another, dissected three days after copulation, he observed that the
+superior extremity of the passage, which communicates with the horns
+of the matrix, strictly embraced the ovaries; and having separated it
+he perceived three follicules, longer and harder than usual. After
+searching with the greatest attention the passages above-mentioned he
+found in the right passage one egg, and in the right horn of the matrix
+two more, not bigger than a grain of mustard-seed: those little eggs
+were each closed in double membranes, and the inner one was filled
+with a very limpid liquor. Having examined the other ovarium he found
+four follicules that were changed, three of which were white and had a
+little liquor within them; but the fourth was of a darker colour, and
+contained no liquor, which made him judge that from this the egg had
+been separated. Pursuing his enquiries he found an egg in the superior
+extremity of the other horn, and exactly like those he had discovered
+in the right one. He says that the eggs which are separated from the
+ovary are ten times smaller than those which are fastened to it; and
+he thinks that this difference is occasioned from the eggs containing,
+when they are in the ovaries, another matter, and that is the glandular
+liquor he remarked in the molecules.
+
+Four days after copulation he opened another, and found in one of the
+ovaries four, and in the other three follicules, emptied of their eggs;
+and in the horns corresponding to these he found an equal number of
+eggs. These eggs were larger than the first that he found three days
+after copulation, and were about the size of a small bird-shot; he also
+remarked that the internal membrane in these eggs was separated from
+the external, and appeared like a second egg in the first. In another,
+dissected five days after copulation, he found five empty follicules
+in the ovaries, and as many eggs in the matrix, to which they adhered.
+These eggs were about the size of duck-shot, and the internal membrane
+was more apparent than in the one he had observed before. In one which
+he opened six days after copulation there were six empty follicules
+in one ovaria, and only five eggs in the corresponding horn, and they
+appeared in one mass; in the other ovaria were four empty follicules
+and but one egg; these eggs were as big as swan-shot. He opened another
+on the seventh day after copulation, and found seven empty follicules;
+he also perceived several internal tumours in the matrix, from whence
+he took eggs the size of a pistol-bullet. Its membrane was more
+distinct than before, but contained only a very clear liquor. In one,
+eight days after copulation, he found in the matrix tumours, or cells,
+which contained the eggs, but they were very adherent, for he could not
+loosen them. In another, nine days after copulation, the cells, which
+contained the eggs, were greatly increased, and he saw that the liquor
+inclosed by the internal membrane had now got a light cloud floating
+upon it. He opened another ten days after copulation and the cloud was
+thicker, and formed an oblong body, like a little worm. At last, on the
+twelfth day after copulation, the figure of the embryo was distinctly
+to be perceived, which two days before only presented the figure of an
+oblong body; it was even so apparent that the different members might
+be distinguished. In the region of the breast he perceived two red and
+two white specks, and in the abdomen a mucilaginous substance, somewhat
+reddish. Fourteen days after copulation the head of the embryo was
+become large and transparent, the eyes prominent, the mouth open, the
+rudiments of the ears appeared; the back-bone, of a whitish colour,
+was bent towards the breast, and small blood-vessels came from each
+side, whose ramifications ran along the back as far as the feet; the
+two red specks, being considerably increased, appeared to be no other
+than the ventricles of the heart; by the sides of these red specks
+were two white ones, which were the rudiments of the lungs. In the
+abdomen the outlines of the liver were seen of a reddish colour, and a
+little intricate mass, like a ravelled thread, which was the stomach
+and intestines. After this the process was no more than a growth and
+expansion of every part till the thirty-first day, when the female
+rabbit brings forth her young.
+
+From these experiments De Graaf concludes, that all viviparous
+females have eggs; that these eggs are contained in the testicles,
+called ovaries; that they cannot disengage themselves till they are
+impregnated, because, he says, the glandular substance, by means of
+which the eggs quit their follicules, is not produced till after an
+impregnation. He also insists, that those who suppose they have seen
+eggs in only two or three days increased in size, must have been
+mistaken, for these eggs remain a longer time in the ovary, although
+fecundated, and instead of immediately increasing, they rather diminish
+until they are descended from the ovaries into the matrix.
+
+By comparing these observations with those of Harvey, we shall easily
+perceive that the principal circumstances have escaped the latter;
+and although there are many errors in the reasoning and experiments
+of De Graaf, nevertheless this anatomist, as well as Malpighius, has
+made better observations than Harvey. They agree in the principal
+points, and are both contrary to Harvey; the latter had never seen
+the alterations which happen to the ovary; he did not see the small
+globules in the matrix which contain the apparatus of generation, and
+which De Graaf calls _eggs_. He had not even a supposition that the
+foetus existed in this egg; and though his experiments gave us nearly
+an exact account of what occurs during the growth of the foetus,
+they give us no information either of the moment of fecundation or of
+the first development. Schrader, a Dutch physician, who held Harvey
+in great veneration, owns that we must not put too great a reliance
+in that anatomist in many things, and especially on what he says of
+the fecundative moment, for the chicken in fact is in the egg before
+incubation, and that Joseph de Aromatarius was the first who observed
+it.[J] Although Harvey pretended that every animal proceeds from an
+egg, he did not imagine that the testicles of females contained these
+eggs, and has only repeated what Aristotle has said on this subject.
+The first who speaks of having discovered eggs in female ovaries is
+Steno, who says, in dissecting a female sea-dog he saw eggs in the
+testicles, although that animal is viviparous; and he adds, that the
+testicles of women are analogous to the ovaries of oviparous animals,
+whether the eggs fall in any manner into the matrix, or whether there
+only falls the matter they contain. Although Steno is the first who
+discovered these pretended eggs, De Graaf claims the merit to himself,
+and Swammerdam has disputed it with him, insisting that Van Horn had
+perceived these eggs before De Graaf. It is true this last writer
+stands charged with asserting many things experience has found to be
+false. He pretended that a judgment might be formed of the number of
+foetuses contained in the matrix by the number of cicatrices, or
+empty follicules, in the ovary, which is not true, as we may see by the
+observations of Verrheyen,[K] and by those of M. Mery,[L] and by some
+of De Graaf's own observations, where he found fewer eggs in the matrix
+than cicatrices in the ovaries. Besides, we shall make it appear that
+what he says concerning the separation of the eggs, and the manner in
+which they descend into the matrix, is not exact; that no eggs exist in
+the female testicles; that what is seen in the matrix is not an egg;
+and that nothing can be worse founded than the systems endeavoured to
+be established on the observations of this famous anatomist.
+
+[J] See Observ. Justi Schraderi, Amst. 1674.
+
+[K] Vol. I. chap. iii. Brussels edit. 1710.
+
+[L] Hist. of the Academ. 1704.
+
+This pretended discovery of eggs in the testicles of females attracted
+the attention of most anatomists; they, however, only met with small
+bladders in the testicles of female viviparous animals, these they did
+not hesitate to look on as real eggs: they therefore gave the name
+of _ovaries_ to the testicles, and called the vesicles eggs, They
+also said, with De Graaf, that there are eggs of different sizes in
+the ovarium; that the largest in the ovarium of women was not above
+the size of a small pea; that they were very small in the young,
+but increased with age and intercourse with men; that twenty might
+be counted in each ovarium; that these eggs are fecundated in the
+ovarium by the spirited part of the seminal liquor of the male; that
+afterwards they loosen and fall into the matrix, where the foetus is
+formed, from the internal substance of the egg and the placenta of the
+external matter; that the glandular substance, which does not exist
+in the ovarium till after a fruitful copulation, serves to compress
+the egg, and make it quit the ovarium, &c. But Malpighius having
+examined things more minutely, detected many of their errors before
+they were even received; yet most physicians adopted the sentiments
+of De Graaf, without any attention to the observations of Malpighius;
+which, notwithstanding, are very important, and to which his scholar
+Valisnieri has given a great deal of weight.
+
+Malpighius and Valisnieri, of all naturalists, speak with the greatest
+foundation on the subject of generation. We shall therefore give an
+account of their experiments and remarks, to which we cannot pay too
+much attention.
+
+Malpighius having examined a great number of the testicles of cows
+and other female animals, affirms that he found vesicles of different
+sizes in the testicles of all of them, whether young or adults; these
+vesicles are inclosed by a thick membrane, in the inner parts of which
+there are blood-vessels, filled with a kind of lymph, or liquor, which
+hardens by the heat of the fire like the white of an egg.
+
+In time a firm yellow body grows which adheres to the testicles. It
+is prominent and increases to the size of a cherry, occupying the
+greatest part of the ovarium. The body is composed of many little
+angular tubes, and its position is irregular; it is covered with a
+coat, or membrane, spread over with nerves and blood-vessels. The
+appearance and form of this yellow body are not always the same, but
+vary according to time. When not above the size of a millet seed,
+it is nearly globular, and if divided appears composed of a kind of
+variegated net-work. Very often an external covering is observed,
+composed of the same substance as the yellow body, around the vesicles
+of the ovarium.
+
+When the yellow body is become nearly of the size of a pea, it is the
+shape of a pear, in which is a small cavity filled with liquor; as is
+also the case when grown to the size of a cherry. In some of these
+yellow substances, when increased to their full maturity, Malpighius
+says, a small egg, with its appendages, not bigger than a millet
+seed, may be seen near the centre; when they have cast out their eggs
+they are empty, resemble a cavernous passage, and the cavities which
+inclose them are about the size of peas. He thinks this yellow and
+glandular substance nature produces to preserve the egg, and assist
+it in leaving the testicles, and perhaps to contribute towards the
+generation of the egg itself; consequently, he says, the vesicles,
+which are always observed in the ovary, and which are of different
+sizes, are not real eggs that may be fecundated, but only serve for the
+production of the yellow body where the egg is to be formed. On the
+whole, although these yellow substances are not found at all times in
+all testicles, we nevertheless always find the first traces of them,
+and Malpighius having seen the marks of them in young heifers, cows
+that were with calf, and in pregnant women, he reasonably concludes
+that this yellow and glandular substance is not, as De Graaf has
+supposed, the effect of fecundation, but what produces the infecund
+eggs, which leave the ovary without any communication with the male, as
+well as to those which leave it after communication. When the latter
+falls into the tubes of the matrix, all the rest is performed as De
+Graaf has described.
+
+These observations of Malpighius shew that the testicles of females
+are not real ovaries, as most anatomists believe; that the vesicles
+they contain are not eggs; that these vesicles never fall into the
+matrix; and that the testicles, like those of the male, are kinds
+of reservoirs, containing a liquor which must be looked upon as an
+imperfect seed of the female, that is perfected in the yellow glandular
+body which fills the internal cavity, and is shed when the glandular
+substance has acquired its full maturity. But before we decide on this
+important point, we must relate the observations of Valisnieri; and we
+shall perceive that, though Malpighius and Valisnieri have made good
+observations, they have not carried them far enough, nor drawn those
+consequences from them which their observations might naturally have
+produced, because they were both prejudiced for the system of eggs, and
+of the foetus pre-existing therein.
+
+Valisnieri began his experiments in 1692, on the testicles of a sow,
+whose testicles are not composed like those of a cow, sheep, mare,
+bitch, female ass, she goat, nor most other viviparous females, for
+they resemble a small bunch of grapes, whose seeds are round and
+prominent outwardly. Between these seeds there are smaller, which have
+not arrived to maturity. These seeds do not appear to be surrounded
+with one common membrane; they are, he says, similar to those yellow
+substances which Malpighius observed in cows; they are round, of a
+reddish colour, their surface sprinkled over with sanguinary vessels
+like the eggs of viviparous animals, and together form a mass larger
+than the ovary; we may, with a little address, and by dividing the
+membrane, separate these grains one by one, and draw them from the
+ovary, where they each leave an impression.
+
+These glandular substances are not of the same colour in every sow, in
+some they are red, in others more clear; and they are of all sizes,
+from the most minute point to that of a grape. On opening them we find
+a triangular cavity filled with a limpid liquor, which coagulates
+by the fire, and becomes white like that contained in the vesicles.
+Valisnieri hoped to meet with the egg in one of those cavities, but
+although he sought for it with the utmost assiduity in the glandular
+substance of the ovaries of four different sows, and afterwards in
+those of other animals, yet he could never discover the egg which
+Malpighius asserts to have met with once or twice.
+
+Below these glandular substances the vesicles of the ovary were
+seen, and which were in a greater or lesser number as the glandular
+substances are thicker or smaller, for in proportion as the glandular
+substances increase, the vesicles diminish. Some of these vesicles were
+the size of a lentil, and others as small as a millet-seed. In crude
+testicles twenty, thirty, or thirty-five vesicles might be counted,
+but when boiled a greater number are seen; and they are so strongly
+connected by fibres and membraneous vessels, that it is impossible to
+separate them without a rupture.
+
+Having examined the testicles of a sow which never had littered, he
+found there, as in the rest, glandular bodies, and their triangular
+cavities filled with lymph, but never met with the egg either in the
+one or the other. The vesicles of this sow which had never littered
+were greater in number than in those which had littered or conceived.
+In the testicles of another sow which had conceived, and whose young
+were much expanded, he found two large glandular substances, that
+were empty, and others smaller, in their common state. Having also
+dissected many others when with young, he found that the number of
+glandular substances was always greater than that of the foetus,
+which confirms our observations on De Graaf's experiments, and proves
+they are not exact; what he terms the follicules of the ovary being
+only the glandular substances, whose number always exceed that of the
+foetus. In the ovaries of a sow but a few months old, the testicles
+were large, and sprinkled with vesicles pretty well tumefied: between
+these vesicles there were four rising glandular substances in one of
+the testicles, and more in the other.
+
+After having finished his experiments on sows, Valisnieri repeated
+those of Malpighius on the testicles of cows, and found that all he had
+said was conformable to truth; only Valisnieri owns that he has never
+been able to find the egg which Malpighius thought he had seen once or
+twice in the internal cavity of glandular bodies. Valisnieri proceeded
+in his experiments upon a variety of other animals to discover this
+egg, but in vain; nevertheless his prejudice for that system induced
+him, contrary to his experience, to admit the existence of eggs, which
+neither he nor any other man ever did or ever will see. It is scarcely
+possible to make a greater number of experiments, or better than he has
+done. He observes, as something particular to a ewe, that there are
+never more glandular substances in the testicles than foetuses in
+the matrix. In young ewes, which have never been with the male, there
+is but one glandular substance in each testicle, which when worn away,
+another is found; and if a ewe has only one foetus in her matrix,
+there is but one glandular substance in the testicles; if there are
+two foetuses there will be two glandular substances. This substance
+occupies the greatest part of the testicles; after it disappears
+another is formed for the purpose of another generation.
+
+In the testicles of a she-ass he perceived vesicles the size of small
+cherries, which evidently prove they are not eggs, since, being of that
+size, they could not enter into the horns of the matrix, which are too
+narrow in this animal for their reception.
+
+The testicles of a female dog, wolf, or fox, have a kind of cowl, or
+covering, which is produced by the expansion of the membrane that
+surrounds the horns of the matrix. In a bitch, whose heat was just
+began, and had not been brought to a dog, Valisnieri found this cowl,
+which is not adherent to the testicle, internally bathed with a
+liquor like whey: he discovered also two glandular substances in the
+right testicle, which run almost its whole length. These glandular
+substances had each a small nipple, with a little orifice, from which
+of itself issued a clear liquor like whey, and when pressed, a greater
+quantity came out, which made him imagine, that this liquor was the
+same as that found within the cowl: he blew into this orifice, by the
+means of a small pipe, and immediately the glandular body was puffed
+up; and having introduced a bristle, he easily penetrated to the end of
+it: he opened this glandular substance the same way as the bristle was
+entered, and found within a cavity which communicated with the orifice,
+and which also contained a good deal of liquor. Valisnieri was also
+in hopes to discover the egg, but, notwithstanding all his endeavours
+and strict attention, he never could perceive it. He remarked, that
+the extremity of these nipples, from which this liquor flowed, was
+contracted by a sphincter, which served to shut up, or open the orifice
+of the nipple: he found also in the left testicle two glandular bodies
+with the like cavities, nipples, orifices, and liquor distilling from
+them. Still not being able to find the egg, neither in this liquor,
+nor in the cavity which contained it, he boiled two of these glandular
+substances, hoping that by this means he might discover the object he
+was in pursuit of, but it was all in vain.
+
+Having opened another bitch, eight or nine days after she had been with
+the male, he found no difference in the testicles; there were three
+glandular substances like the preceding ones, and, like them, distilled
+a liquor from the nipples. Here he also persevered in his fruitless
+researches after the egg. By the help of a microscope, he perceived the
+glandular substances were a kind of vascular net-work, formed by an
+infinite number of small globular vesicles which served to filtre the
+liquor that issues through the end of the nipple.
+
+After this he opened another bitch whose heat was off, and having
+introduced air between the testicle and its covering, he found it
+dilated like a bladder by means of inflation; having raised this cowl,
+he found three glandular substances on the testicle, but they had no
+apparent nipple, nor orifice, nor did any liquor distil from them.
+
+In another bitch that had pupped two months, and had five puppies, he
+found five glandular substances, which were become very small, and
+began to obliterate, without leaving any cicatrices: there still
+remained a small cavity in the middle, but it was dry and empty.
+
+Not content with these, and many more experiments, Valisnieri, who
+would not give up his researches after the pretended egg, called
+together the most expert anatomists of his country, among whom was M.
+Morgagni, and having opened a young bitch at the time of her first
+heat, and had been with a male three days before, they examined
+the vesicles of the testicles, the glandular substances with their
+nipples, orifice, and liquor which flowed from them, and in their
+internal cavities, but not an egg was to be found. After this he made
+experiments on female goats, foxes, cats, and a great number of mice,
+&c. He always found vesicles in the testicles of all those animals,
+and often the glandular substances, and the liquor they contained, but
+never any egg.
+
+At length, desirous of examining the testicles of a woman, he had an
+opportunity of opening a farmer's wife, a young woman that was killed
+by a fall from a tree. She had been married several years, but although
+of a good habit of body, yet she had never borne a child. He sought if
+the cause of her sterility was not discoverable in the testicles; and
+he found the vesicles all replete with a blackish and corrupted matter.
+
+In the testicles of a girl of eighteen, who had been brought up in a
+convent, and, according to all appearances, was a virgin, he found
+the right testicle somewhat larger than the left: its shape was oval,
+and its surface a little unequal. This inequality was produced by the
+protuberance of five or six vesicles of this testicle which advanced
+forwards; one of which was more prominent than any of the rest. Having
+opened this vesicle, a spirit of lymph issued out: around it there
+was a glandular substance in form of a crescent of a yellowish colour
+rather bordering on the red. He cut the remainder part of the testicle
+transversely, and found many vesicles filled with a limpid liquor, and
+remarked that the corresponding trunk to this testicle was very red and
+a little longer than the other, as he had frequently observed in female
+animals, when in their amorous season.
+
+The left testicle was as round as the right, it was whiter, and its
+surface more smooth; for although there were some vesicles a little
+prominent, yet there were not any in form of a nipple; they were all
+alike, without any glandular substance, and the corresponding trunk
+was neither inflamed nor red.
+
+In a little girl of five years old, he found the testicles with the
+vesicles, blood vessels, fibres and nerves complete.
+
+In the testicles of a woman sixty years of age, he found some vesicles,
+and the vestiges of a glandular substance, which were as so many thick
+points of matter of a dark brownish colour.
+
+From all these observations Valisnieri concludes, that the business
+of generation is carried on in the female testicles, which he looked
+upon as ovaries, although he never found any eggs in them, but on the
+contrary, evidently saw that the vesicles were not eggs. He also says,
+that it is not necessary for the seed of the male to enter into the
+matrix to impregnate the egg: he supposes that the egg comes from the
+nipple of the glandular substance, after impregnation in the ovarium;
+that from thence it falls into the trunk, and descends by degrees, till
+at last it fastens to the matrix. He adds, he is persuaded that the
+egg is concealed in the glandular substance, and that all the business
+of generation is performed in the cavity, although neither he nor any
+other anatomist, have ever seen or been able to find it.
+
+According to Valisnieri the spirit of the male seed ascends to the
+ovarium, forces its way into the egg, and gives motion to the foetus
+that pre-exists therein. In the ovarium of the first woman were eggs,
+which not only inclosed in miniature every child she brought forth,
+but of the whole human race. That if we cannot conceive this infinite
+chain of individuals contained in one, it is the fault of our minds,
+the weakness of which is every day perceptible; but it is, upon that
+account, no less true, that every animal which has been, is, and will
+be, were created all at one time, and inclosed in the first females.
+The resemblance of children to parents only proceeds, continues he,
+from the imagination of the mother, the power of which is so great on
+the foetus that it can produce on it spots, marks, disproportions,
+and extraordinary births, as well as perfect resemblances.
+
+This system of the eggs, which is unreasonable, and without foundation,
+would, nevertheless, have obtained the unanimous suffrages of all
+physicians, if, when it was first endeavoured to be established,
+another system had not been formed on the discovery of spermatic
+animals.
+
+This discovery, for which we are indebted to Leeuwenhoeck and
+Hartsoeker, has been confirmed by Andri, Valisnieri, Bourguet, and
+many other observers of Nature. I shall relate what has been said
+concerning the spermatic animals which are found in the seminal liquor
+of all males: they are in such vast numbers that the semen seems to be
+entirely composed of them; and Leeuwenhoeck pretends to have seen many
+millions of them in a drop smaller than the smallest grain of sand.
+Although we do not meet with any in female animals they abound in all
+males, both in the semen emitted naturally and that in the testicles,
+as well as in the seminal vesicles. If the semen of a man is exposed
+to a moderate heat it thickens, and the motions of all the animalcules
+immediately cease, but if allowed to cool it becomes thinner, and the
+animals preserve their motion till the liquor thickens as it dries
+away. The thinner the liquor becomes the more the animalcule increase,
+and if water is added it will appear like a substance of small animals.
+When the motion of these animalcule is nearly finished, whether from
+heat, or any other cause, they seem to assemble closer together, and
+have a whirling motion in the centre of a small drop which may have
+been taken out for observation, and appear all to perish at one and the
+same time, whereas in the larger portion of the liquor they are easily
+seen to perish successively.
+
+The animalculę, say they, have different figures in different animals;
+nevertheless they are all long, slender, without any appearance of
+limbs, and move with rapidity. The fluid which contains them, as we
+have already observed, is heavier than blood. The semen of a bull
+afforded Verrheyen, by a chemical process, first phlegm, afterwards a
+considerable quantity of foetid oil, but little volatile salt, and
+much more earth than he could have thought.[M] This author appears
+surprised that in rectifying the distilled liquor he could not draw any
+spirit from it, and being persuaded it contained a great quantity, he
+attributed the evaporation to its great subtility: but may it not be
+more reasonably imagined that it contains very little or no spirits,
+as neither its consistency nor smell announce any ardent spirit, and
+which is only plentifully found in fermented liquors? besides, with
+respect to volatile spirits, the horns, bones, and other solid parts
+of animals, afford more than all the liquor of the animal body. What
+anatomists have called animal spirits, _aura seminalis_, may possibly
+not exist; and it is certainly not these spirits which agitate the
+particles seen moving in the seminal liquors; but we will here relate
+the principal observations that have been made on this subject.
+
+[M] See Veerheyen, sup. anat. tom. ii. page 69.
+
+Leeuwenhoeck observed, in the semen of a cock, animals which resemble
+the figure of an eel, but so exceedingly minute, that he pretends fifty
+thousand would not equal in size a grain of sand; and in that of a
+rat many millions would be required to make the thickness of a hair,
+&c. This observer imagined that the whole substance of the semen was
+only a mass of these animalcules. He perceived these animalculę in
+the semen of men, quadrupeds, birds, fishes, insects, &c. In that of
+grasshoppers they were long and slender. They are attached, he says, by
+their extremities, and the inferior of which he calls the tail, had a
+quick motion, like that of the tail of a serpent, when the upper part
+is motionless. He further adds, that in the semen of young animals the
+animalculę are motionless, but as the age for reproduction comes on
+they move about with great vivacity.
+
+In the semen of a male frog he observed animalculę, at first they
+were imperfect and motionless, but some time afterwards he found them
+living: they were so very small, he says, that ten thousand would
+scarcely equal the size of a single egg of the female. It was only
+those in the seminal liquor of the frog which had life and motion.
+
+In the semen of a man, and that of a dog, he pretends to have seen two
+kinds, which he looked upon as males and females. Having inclosed the
+seed of a dog in a vial, he says, that numbers of the animalculę died
+the first day; the second and third there died still more, and very
+few remained alive the fourth. But having repeated this experiment
+on the semen of the same dog, he found, at the end of seven days,
+live animalculę, some of which swam with as much swiftness as in
+fresh-extracted semen; and having opened a bitch which had been three
+times with the same dog, he could not perceive by the naked eye any
+seminal liquor of the male in either of the horns of the matrix; but
+by help of a microscope he discovered the spermatic animals of the
+dog in both horns of the matrix, and great numbers of them in that
+part of the matrix adjoining to the vagina, which, says he, evidently
+proves that the male semen enters the matrix, or at least that the
+spermatic animals of the dog had got there by their own motion, which
+is sufficient to carry them four or five inches in half an hour. In the
+matrix of a doe rabbit, which had just received the buck, he likewise
+observed an infinite number of spermatic animals; he says, that their
+bodies are round, with long tails, and that they often change their
+forms, especially when the humid matter in which they swim evaporates
+and dries.
+
+Leeuwenhoeck's experiments have been frequently repeated and found
+conformable to truth. There have been some inclined to exceed him in
+these discoveries. Dr. Dalenpatius having observed the seminal liquor
+of a man, not only pretended to have discovered animals like tadpoles,
+whose bodies appeared nearly the size of a grain of wheat, and their
+tails four or five times longer than their bodies, and which moved
+with great agility, but, what is still more marvellous, he observed
+one of these animals quit its covering; upon which it was no longer an
+animalcule, but had become a human body, the two legs of which, he
+affirms, were very discernible, as were the arms, breast, and head.[N]
+But by the figures which this author has given of this pretended
+embryo, it is evident his assertion is false. He might suppose he
+saw what he relates, but he was mistaken; for the embryo, such as he
+describes, was more formed on quitting this covering, and the state
+of a spermatic worm, than it would have been at the end of a month or
+five weeks in the matrix of its mother; therefore this observation of
+Dalenpatius, instead of having been confirmed by other observations,
+has been rejected by every naturalist, the most exact and accurate of
+which have only discovered, in the seminal liquor of man, round and
+oblong bodies, which seemed to have long tails, but without any kind of
+members.
+
+[N] See Nouvelles de la Republique des Lettres, Ann. 1699, page 552.
+
+It might be said that Plato had spoken of these spermatic animals
+which become human forms; for he says, "Vulva quoque matrix que in
+foeminis eadem ratione animal avidem generandi, quando procul a
+foetu per ętatis florem, aut ultra diutius detinetur, ęgre fert
+moram ac plurimum indignatur, passimque per corpus oberrans, meatus
+spiritus intercludit, respirare non finit, extremis vexat angustiis,
+morbis denique omnibus premit, quosque atrorumque Cupido amorque quasi
+ex arboribus foetum fructumve producunt, ipsum deinde decerpunt, &
+in matricem velut agrem inspargunt; hinc animalia primum talia, ut nec
+propter parvitatem videantur, necdum appareant formata, concipiunt: mox
+quę conflaverant, explicant, ingentia, intus enutriunt, demum educunt
+in lucem, animaliumque generationem perficiunt." Hippocrates, in his
+treatise _De Dięta_, seems also to insinuate, that the seed of animals
+is replete with animalcules. Democritus speaks of certain worms which
+take the human figure, and Aristotle says, that the first men came out
+of the earth in the form of worms; but neither the authority of Plato,
+Hippocrates, Democritus, Aristotle, nor the observation of Dalenpatius,
+can make us receive the idea that these spermatic worms are small human
+bodies, concealed under a covering; for it is evidently contrary to
+experience and observation.
+
+Valisnieri and Bourguet, whom we have quoted, discovered small worms
+in the seed of a rabbit, one of whose extremities was thicker than
+the other; they were very lively and active, struck the liquor with
+their tails, and twisted and turned themselves like snakes. At last
+(says Valisnieri) I clearly perceived them to be real animals, "e gli
+riconobbi, e gli giudicai senza dubitamento alcuno per veri, verissimi
+arciverissimi vermi[O]." This author, who was prejudiced with the
+system of eggs, has, nevertheless, admitted of spermatic worms, and
+taken them for real animals.
+
+[O] Opere dell. Cav. Valisnieri, vol. II. page 105.
+
+M. Andry having made observations on these spermatic worms of a man,
+pretends that they are only found in the age proper for generation;
+that in the younger years, and in old age, they do not exist: that in
+those affected with venereal disorders there are very few, and those
+are languishing, and for the most part dead: that in impotent persons
+we do not see any alive; that these worms in the semen of men have
+larger heads than in that of other animals, which agrees, he says, with
+the figure of the foetus and the child; and he adds, those people who
+too frequently enjoy female amours, have generally but few or none of
+these animalcules in their semen.
+
+Leeuwenhoeck, Andry, and many others, strenuously opposed the
+egg system; they had discovered in the semen of all males living
+animalcules; they proved that these animalcules could not be regarded
+merely as dwelling in this liquor, since their bulk was greater than
+that of the liquor itself; and that nothing like them was found
+either in the blood, or in the other animal liquors. They asserted,
+that females furnished nothing similar, nothing alive; and it was
+therefore evident that the fecundity attributed to them belonged,
+on the contrary, to males alone: and that the discovery of these
+spermatic animals in the semen tended more to the explanation of
+generation than all that had been before supposed; since, in fact,
+what was most difficult to conceive in generation, was the production
+of the living part, all the rest being only accessary operations,
+and therefore no doubt could remain but these little animals were
+destined to become men, or perfect animals of their kind. When it was
+opposed to the partizans of this system, that it did not seem natural
+to suppose that so many millions of animalcules, every one of which
+might become a human being, should be employed for a purpose of which
+one alone was to reap the advantage; when it was asked them, why this
+useless profusion of the shoots of human beings? they answered, that
+it was only consonant with the common munificence of nature: that
+out of many millions of seeds which plants and trees produce, but a
+very few succeed, and therefore we must not be surprised at the same
+circumstance in spermatic animals. When the infinite minuteness of the
+spermatic worm, compared to man, was objected to them, they answered,
+by the example of the seed of trees; and they added, with some
+foundation, metaphysical reasonings, by which they proved that great
+and small being only relations, the transition from small to great, or
+from great to small, was executed by nature with still more facility
+than we can conceive.
+
+Besides, continue they, have we not very frequent examples of
+transformation in insects? do we not see small aquatic worms become
+winged animals, by only throwing off their coats, which were their
+apparent and external forms? and may not spermatic animals, by a
+similar transformation, become perfect animals? All therefore, they
+conclude, concurs to favour this system of generation, and confuting
+that founded on eggs; and if there are eggs in viviparous females,
+the same as in the oviparous, these eggs will only be the necessary
+matter for the growth of the spermatic worm, which enters into the
+egg by the pedicle that adheres to the ovarium, and where it meets
+with food ready prepared for it. All the worms which find not this
+passage through the pedicle into the egg will perish, and that one
+which alone has traced its way will arrive at its transformation. The
+difficulty of meeting with the passage in the pedicle of the egg, can
+only be compensated by the infinite number of spermatic worms. It is a
+million to one that any particular spermatic worm will meet with the
+pedicle of the egg, and therefore what at first appears a profusion is
+highly necessary. When one has entered, no other can introduce itself,
+because, say they, the first worm entirely shuts up the passage, or
+there is a valve at the entrance of the pedicle, which is free when
+the egg is not absolutely full; but when the worm has filled the egg,
+the valve can no longer open although impelled by another worm. This
+valve is very well imagined, because, if the first worm should chance
+to return, it opposes its egress, and obliges it to remain and undergo
+the transformation. The spermatic worm then becomes the foetus, the
+substance of the egg its food, the membranes, its covering, and when
+the nutriment in the egg is nearly exhausted, the foetus adheres to
+the internal skin of the matrix, and thus derives nourishment from the
+parent's blood, till by its weight, and augmentation of its strength,
+it breaks through its imprisonment, and comes perfect into the world.
+
+By this system it was not the first woman who inclosed all mankind, but
+the first man who contained all posterity in his body. The pre-existing
+germs are no longer embryos without light, inclosed in the eggs, and
+contained one in another, ad infinitum; but they are small animals, the
+little homunculę organized and actually living, included in each other
+in endless succession, and to which nothing is wanting for them to
+become perfect animals, and human beings, but expansion, assisted by a
+transformation similar to that which winged insects undergo.
+
+As our present physicians are divided on these two systems of spermatic
+worms and eggs, and as all those who have lately written on generation
+have adopted one or the other of these opinions, it seems necessary to
+examine them with care, and to shew that they are not only sufficient
+to explain the phenomena of generation, but are also founded on
+suppositions void of all probability.
+
+Both suppose an infinite progression; which, as we have said, is not so
+much a reasonable supposition as an illusion of the mind. A spermatic
+worm is more than a thousand million times smaller than a man; if,
+therefore, we suppose the body of a man as an unit, the size of the
+spermatic worm can only be expressed by the fraction 1/1000000000; and
+as man is with respect to the spermatic worm of the first generation,
+what this worm is to that of the second generation, the size of the
+last spermatic worm cannot be expressed but by a number composed of
+nineteen cyphers; and so likewise the size of the spermatic worm of the
+third generation will require 28 cyphers; that of the fourth generation
+37; the fifth 46, and the sixth 55 cyphers. To form an idea of the
+minuteness represented by this fraction, let us take the dimensions
+of the sphere of the universe from Sol to Saturn, and supposing the
+sun a million times larger than the earth, and about a thousand
+solar diameters distant from Saturn, we shall perceive that only 45
+cyphers are required to express the number of cubic lines contained
+in this sphere; and, by reducing each cubic line into a thousand
+millions of atoms, 54 cyphers are only required to express that
+number; consequently a human being will be greater, with relation to a
+spermatic worm of the sixth generation, than the sphere of the universe
+is with relation to the smallest atom which is possible to be perceived
+by the assistance of a microscope. What would it be if we were to carry
+it to ten generations? The minuteness would be so great as to leave us
+no mode of expressing it. The probability of this opinion, therefore,
+evidently disappears in proportion as the object diminishes. This
+calculation may be applied to eggs as well as spermatic worms, and the
+want of probability is general to both; it will, no doubt, be said,
+that matter being divisible, _ad infinitum_, there is no impossibility
+in this diminution of size; and although it is not probable, yet we
+must regard this division of matter as possible, since we can always,
+by thought, divide an atom into a number of parts. But I answer, that
+the same illusion is made use of on this infinite divisibility as
+on every other geometrical and arithmetical infinity; they are only
+abstractions of the mind, and have no existence in nature. If we look
+on infinite divisibility of matter as an absolute infinity, it is easy
+to demonstrate that in that sense it does not exist; for, if once we
+suppose the smallest atom possible, by that supposition this atom will
+necessarily be indivisible, since if it were divisible it would no
+longer be the smallest atom possible, which would be contrary to the
+supposition. It therefore seems to me, that every hypothesis where a
+progress, _ad infinitum_, is admitted, ought to be rejected not only as
+false, but as void of all probability; and as the system of eggs and
+spermatic worms supposes this progress, they should not be admitted in
+philosophy.
+
+Another great difficulty against these two systems is, that in the egg
+system the first woman contained the male and female eggs: the male
+eggs contained only a generation of males; and that, on the contrary,
+the female eggs contained thousands of generations, both of males and
+females; insomuch that, at the same time, and in the same woman, there
+was always a certain number of eggs capable of developing themselves to
+infinity, and another number which would be unfolded but once. The same
+circumstance must occur in the other system, and therefore I ask if
+there is the smallest appearance of probability in these suppositions?
+
+A third difficulty arises against these two systems, which is, the
+resemblance that children bear, sometimes to the father and sometimes
+to the mother, and sometimes to both; and the evident marks of
+extraordinary difference in mules, &c. If from the spermatic worm of
+the father the foetus is produced, how can the child resemble the
+mother; and if the foetus is pre-existing in the egg of the mother,
+how can the child resemble its father? or if the spermatic worm of a
+horse, or the egg of a she-ass contains the foetus, how can the mule
+participate in the nature and figure of both the horse and the ass?
+
+These general difficulties, which are invincible, are not the only
+ones that can be made against these systems; there are particular ones
+which are no less potent. To begin with the system of spermatic worms,
+may it not be asked of those who admit of it, how they think this
+transformation is made? and object to them, that insects have not, nor
+cannot have any relation with what they suppose. For the worm which is
+to become a fly, or the caterpillar which is to become a butterfly,
+passes through a middle state, and when it ceases to be a chrysalis,
+it is completely formed and has acquired its full size, and is then in
+a condition of engendering; whereas in the pretended transformation
+of the spermatic worm into man, it cannot be said to be in a state of
+chrysalis, and even if we should suppose one during the first days of
+conception, why does not the production of this chrysalis, instead of
+an unformed embryo, suppose an adult and perfect being? We plainly see
+how analogy is here violated; and that far from confirming this idea of
+the transformation of the spermatic worm, it is instantly destroyed by
+examination.
+
+Besides, the worm which is transformed into a fly proceeds from an egg;
+the egg is the produce of the copulation of the male and female, and
+includes the foetus, which must afterwards enter into a chrysalis,
+before it arrives at its state of perfection, as a fly; in which form
+alone it has an engendering power; whereas the spermatic worm has no
+faculty of generation, nor proceeds from an egg. Even should we allow
+the semen to contain eggs, from whence issue spermatic worms, the same
+difficulty will still remain, for these supposed eggs have not the
+copulation of the two sexes for their principle of existence, as in
+insects; consequently the partizans of that opinion cannot pretend
+any similarity, nor derive any advantage from the transformation of
+insects; which rather destroys the basis of their explanation.
+
+When the innumerable multitude of spermatic worms are opposed to those
+physicians who are prejudiced by this system, they answer, as before
+observed, by the examples of plants and trees. But this comparison
+is not entirely just, because all the spermatic worms excepting one
+perish by absolute necessity, which is not the case with the seeds of
+a tree or plant, for those which do not become vegetables, serve as
+food for other organized bodies, and for the expansion and reproduction
+of animals; whereas we do not see any use for the spermatic worms, or
+any end to which we can refer their prodigious superfluity. On the
+whole, I only make this remark in reply to what is, or may be said on
+this matter; for I own, that no arguments drawn from final causes will
+either establish or destroy a physical system.
+
+Another objection made against this opinion is, there being, to all
+appearance, an equal number of separate worms in the seed of all kinds
+of animals, for, say they, it is natural to imagine, that in those
+kinds where foetuses are most abundant, as in fishes, insects, &c.
+the number of spermatic worms should be more numerous than in those
+where generation is least abundant, as in man, quadrupeds, birds, &c.
+for if they are the immediate cause of production, why is there no
+proportion between their number and that of the foetus? Besides,
+there is no proportionable difference in the size of most kinds of
+spermatic worms, those of large animals being as small as those of the
+least. Those of a rat, and those of a man, are nearly the same, and
+when there is any difference it is no ways relative to the size of
+the individual. The Calmar, which is a very small fish, has spermatic
+worms above one hundred thousand times larger than those of a man or a
+dog. Another proof these worms are not the immediate and only cause of
+generation.
+
+The particular difficulties that may be raised against this egg system
+are no less considerable. If the foetus exists in the egg before the
+communication of the male with the female, why do we not perceive the
+foetus as well in those eggs produced before as after copulation?
+We have before recounted the observations of Malpighius, who says
+he always found the foetus in those eggs produced by hens that had
+received the cock, and only a mass or mole in the cicatrice of those
+who had not; it is therefore very clear that the foetus does not
+exist in the egg till after impregnation.
+
+Another difficulty against this system is, that not only the foetus
+is not seen in eggs before the junction of the sexes, but even the
+existence of eggs in viviparous animals is by no means proved. Those
+physicians who pretend that the spermatic worm is the foetus
+enveloped in a covering, are at least assured of spermatic worms; but
+those who affirm that the foetus is pre-existing in the egg, have no
+proof of the existence of the egg itself; on the contrary, there is a
+probability, almost equivalent to a certainty, that these eggs do not
+exist.
+
+Although the partizans of the egg system do not agree what must be
+looked on as the true egg in the female testicle, nevertheless they all
+think that impregnation is made in the testicle called the _ovarium_,
+without paying any attention that if it was so most foetuses would be
+found in the abdomen instead of the matrix, for the superior extremity
+of the trunk being separated from the ovarium, the pretended eggs must
+often fall into the abdomen. Now, it is certain that this case is
+extremely rare, and, I believe, never happened, unless occasioned by
+some accident.
+
+The general difficulties and objections against these two systems
+have been noticed by the author of _Venus Physique_, whose treatise,
+although very short, has more philosophical ideas than there are in
+many folio volumes on generation. As this book is very public, and
+the accuracy with which it is written will not permit any extract, I
+shall only observe, this author is the first who has returned into the
+road of truth, from which we were farther strayed than ever, since the
+supposition of the egg system, and the discovery of spermatic animals.
+Nothing therefore remains farther to be said, and I shall conclude with
+relating a few particular experiments, some of which have appeared
+favourable, and others contrary, to these systems.
+
+In the History of the Academy of Sciences of Paris, 1701, some
+objections are proposed by M. Mery against the egg system. This able
+anatomist supports, with reason, that the vesicles found in the female
+testicles are not eggs, but are so adherent to the internal substance
+of the testicle that they cannot be naturally separated therefrom;
+that if they could separate themselves from this substance it would
+be impossible for them to get out, because the common membrane, which
+surrounds all the testicle, is a web of too firm a texture to admit of
+a conception; that a vesicle, or round soft egg, could open a passage
+in it; and as the greatest number of physicians and anatomists were
+prejudiced in favour of the egg system, and, from the experiments of De
+Graaf, believed that the number of cicatrices in the testicles marked
+the number of foetuses, M. Mery mentions the testicles of a woman,
+where there was such a quantity of these cicatrices, that, agreeable to
+this system, would have supposed a fecundity almost beyond imagination.
+These difficulties excited other partizans of the egg system to make
+new researches. M. Duverney examined and dissected the testicles of
+cows and sheep: he pretended that the vesicles were eggs, because there
+were some less adherent to the testicles than others, and insisted it
+was natural to believe, that when they came to perfect maturity they
+were separated altogether, especially as by inflating the internal
+cavity of the testicle the air passed between these vesicles and the
+adjoining parts. M. Mery only answers that this not a sufficient proof,
+since these vesicles have never been seen separate from the testicles.
+M. Duverney remarked the glandular bodies on the testicles, but he did
+not look on them as an essential and necessary part towards generation,
+but merely as accidental exuberances, like gall-nuts, on the oak.
+M. Littre, whose prejudice for the egg system was still greater,
+pretended, not only that the vesicles were eggs, but even asserted
+he had discovered in one of them a well-formed foetus, of which he
+distinguished the head and trunk very perfectly, and even gave the
+dimensions. But besides this wonder being only seen by that gentleman,
+and no other naturalist, it is sufficient to read his Memoire[P] to
+perceive how doubtful was the fact. By his own words we find the matrix
+was schirrhous, that the testicle was corrupted, and that the vesicle,
+or egg, which contained this imaginary foetus was smaller than the
+other vesicles, or eggs, which did not contain any thing, &c.
+
+[P] Anno 1701, page 3.
+
+A famous experiment, in favour of the egg system, is supplied by De
+Nuck; he opened a bitch three days after copulation; he drew out one of
+the horns of the matrix, and made a ligature in the middle, so that the
+upper part of the passage could have no communication with the lower;
+after which he replaced this horn, and closed up the wound, with which
+the bitch seemed but little incommoded. At the end of twenty-one days
+he opened it again, and found two foetuses in the upper part, that
+is between the testicles and the ligature; but in the lower part there
+was no foetus. In the other horn of the matrix, which had not been
+tied by a ligature, he found three foetuses, which were regularly
+disposed, which proves, he says, that the foetus does not proceed
+from the seed of the male, but exists in the female egg. Supposing this
+experiment, which has only been made once, was always followed with the
+same effect, we should not then be right in concluding that fecundation
+is made in the ovary, and that eggs are detached therefrom which
+contain the foetus completely formed. It would only prove that the
+foetus may be formed in the upper parts of the horns of the matrix as
+well as in the lower; and it seems very natural to imagine that the
+ligature, compressing the middle of the horns of the matrix, impelled
+the seminal liquors, which are in the lower parts, to issue out, and
+thus destroy the business of generation in them.
+
+Thus we have gone through the opinions of anatomists and physicians
+on the subject of generation; and it now only remains for me to
+recount what I have been enabled to draw from my own researches
+and experiments, and it will then be seen whether my system is not
+infinitely more agreeable to Nature than any of those I have given an
+account of.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+EXPERIMENTS ON THE METHOD OF GENERATION.
+
+
+I often reflected on the above system, and was every day more and more
+convinced that my theory was infinitely the most probable. I then began
+to suppose that, by a microscope, I might be able to attain a discovery
+of the living organic particles, from which I thought every animal
+and vegetable drew their origin. My first supposition was, that the
+spermatic animalcules seen in the seed of every male, might possibly be
+these organic particles; on which I reasoned as follows:
+
+If every animal and vegetable contain a quantity of living organic
+particles, these particles would be found in their seed, and in a
+greater quantity than in any other substance, because the seed is an
+extract of what is most analogous to the individual, and the most
+organic; and the animalcule we see in the seed of males are, perhaps,
+only these same living organic molecules, or at least the first union,
+or assemblage of them. But if this is so, the seed of the female must
+also contain similar living organic molecules, and, consequently, we
+ought to find moving bodies there as well as in the male: and since the
+living organic particles are common both to animals and vegetables,
+we should also find them in the seeds of plants, in the nectarium,
+and in the stamina, which are the most essential parts of vegetables,
+and which contain the organic molecules necessary for reproduction. I
+then seriously thought of examining the seminal liquors of both sexes,
+and the germs of plants, with a microscope. I thought, likewise, that
+the reservoirs of the female seed might possibly be the cavities of
+the glandular bodies, in which Valisnieri and others had uselessly
+sought for the egg; and at length determined to undertake a course of
+observations and experiments. I first communicated my ideas to Mr.
+Needham, a gentleman well known for his microscopical observations,
+and read to him the first part of this work; he seemed to approve of
+these ideas, and did me the favour to lend me his microscope which
+was infinitely superior to my own. At the same time I communicated my
+system and project of experiments to Messrs. Daubenton, Gueneau, and
+Dalibard, all of whom encouraged me to persevere in my determination,
+and from whom, in the course of making those experiments, I received
+much assistance, particularly from Mr. Daubenton.
+
+Persons not experienced in the use of the microscope will not be
+displeased that I here insert some remarks which will be useful to
+them, if they repeat the following experiments, or make new ones.
+We should give the preference to double microscopes, in which we
+see objects perpendicularly, from their having a plain or concave
+mirror, which shews the objects clear; the concave mirror is the
+most preferable when the observations are made with the strongest
+lens. Leeuwenhoek, who undoubtedly has been the greatest and most
+indefatigable of all microscopical observators, is said to have
+only made use of simple microscopes, with which he viewed objects
+horizontally. If this is true, it is necessary to remark, that most of
+the plates given by Leeuwenhoek of microscopical objects, especially
+spermatic animals, represents them much thicker and longer than he
+really saw them, which renders the microscopes we speak of preferable
+to the horizontal, as they are more stable; the motion of the hand,
+with which the microscope is held, producing a little trembling, which
+causes the object to appear wavering, and never presents the same part
+for any time. Besides, there is always a motion in the liquors caused
+by the agitation of the external air, at least, if we do not put the
+liquor between two plates of glass, or even fine talc, which diminishes
+somewhat of its transparency, and greatly lengthens the experiment; but
+the horizontal microscope, whose tables are vertical, has the still
+greater inconvenience, that the most ponderous parts of the drop of
+liquor fall to the bottom; consequently there are three motions, that
+of the trembling of the hand, the agitation of the fluid by the action
+of the air, and also that of the parts of the liquor falling to the
+bottom: from the combination of which, certain small globules, which
+we see in these liquors, may appear to move by their own motion and
+powers, while they only obey the compounded power of those three causes.
+
+When we put a drop of liquor on the table of the double microscope,
+although horizontally placed, and in the most advantageous situation,
+we still see one common motion in the liquor, which forces all what it
+contains to one side. We must wait till the fluid is in an equilibrium
+and at rest, before we make our observations; for it often occurs,
+that this motion of the fluid hurries away many globules, and forms
+a kind of whirling motion, which returns one of these globules in
+a very different direction to the others. The eye is then fixed on
+the globules, and seeing one take a different course from the rest,
+supposes it an animal, or at least a body, which moves of itself,
+whereas its motion is only owing to that of the fluid; and as the
+liquor is apt to dry and thicken in the circumference of the drop,
+endeavours must be made to fix the lens on the centre of it. The drop
+should also be as large as possible, and contain as much liquor as will
+permit a sufficient transparency, to see perfectly what it contains.
+
+Before we begin to make observations, we should have a perfect
+knowledge of our microscope. There is no glass whatsoever but in which
+there are some spots, bubbles, threads, and other defects, which
+should be nicely inspected, in order that such appearances should not
+be represented as real and unknown objects: we must also endeavour
+to learn what effect the imperceptible dust has which adheres to the
+glasses of the microscope; a perfect knowledge of which may be acquired
+by observing the microscope several times.
+
+To make proper observations, the sight, or focus, of the microscope
+must not precisely fall on the surface of the liquor, but a little
+above it; as not so much reliance should be placed on what passes upon
+the surface, as what is seen in the body of the liquor. There are often
+bubbles on the surface which have irregular motions produced by the
+contact of the air.
+
+We can see much better with the light of two short candles, than in the
+brightest day, provided this light is not agitated, which is avoided by
+putting a small shade on the table, inclosing the three sides of the
+lights and the microscope.
+
+It will often appear as though dark and opaque bodies become
+transparent, and even take different colours, or form concentrical and
+coloured rings, or a kind of rainbow on the surface; and other matters,
+which are seen at first sight transparent and clouded, become black and
+obscure; these changes are not real, but only depend on the obliquity
+the sight falls on the body with, and the height of the plain in which
+they are found.
+
+When there are bodies in a liquor which seem to move with great
+swiftness, especially when they are on the surface, they form a
+furrowed motion in the liquor, which appears to follow the moving body,
+and which we might be inclined to mistake for a tail. This appearance
+deceived me at first, but I clearly perceived my error, when these
+little bodies met others which stopped them; for there was no longer
+any appearance of tails. These are the remarks which occurred during
+my experiments, and which I submit to those who would make use of the
+microscope for the observation of liquors.
+
+[Illustration: _PLATE I._]
+
+
+EXPERIMENTS.
+
+I. I took from the seminal vessels of a man, who died a violent death,
+and whose body was still warm, all the liquor therein contained, and
+put it into a small bottle; of this I put a drop on the table of the
+microscope, without the addition of water or any other liquor. The
+first thing which presented, was a vapour which steamed from the liquor
+towards the lens, and obscured it. These vapours being dissipated, I
+perceived large filaments, (_fig. 1._) which in some places seemed to
+extend into different branches, and in others to intermingle together.
+These filaments clearly appeared to be internally agitated by an
+undulating motion, and looked like hollow tubes which contained some
+moving substance. I distinctly saw two of these filaments (_fig. 2._)
+were joined together, and had a vibration nearly like that of two
+extended strings, which are tied at the two extremities, and pulled
+asunder in the middle. These filaments were composed of globules which
+touched each other, and resembled beads. I afterwards saw filaments
+which swelled in certain parts, and I observed, that on the side so
+swelled small globules came out, which had a distinct motion like that
+of a pendulum; these small bodies were fastened to the filaments by
+a small thread, (_fig. 3._) which lengthened gradually as the little
+body moved; and at last I saw these little bodies entirely separated
+from the large filament, carrying after them the small thread which
+connected them. As this liquor was very thick, and the filaments too
+near each other, I dilated another drop with rain water, in which
+I was assured there were no animals. I then saw the filaments much
+separated, and very distinctly perceived the motion of these little
+bodies, which was now more free, and they swam much quicker; and if
+I had not seen them separate from the filaments, and carry along
+with them their thread, I should have taken the moving body in this
+second observation for an animal, and the thread for its tail. I then
+attentively observed one of these filaments, that was much thicker than
+these small bodies, and I had the satisfaction of seeing two of those
+bodies which separated with difficulty, drag along with them a long and
+small thread, which obstructed their motion.
+
+This seminal liquor was at first very thick, but by degrees it became
+more fluid; in less than an hour it was almost transparent; and in
+proportion as this fluidity increased, the phenomena changed, as I
+shall relate.
+
+II. When the seminal liquor attained more fluidity, the filaments were
+no longer to be seen, but the little bodies appeared in great numbers;
+they have for the most part a motion like that of a pendulum, and they
+draw after them a long thread, which it may clearly be perceived they
+want to get rid of; their motion forwards is very slow, vibrating to
+the right and left. The motion of a boat fastened in the midst of a
+rapid stream to one fixed point, pretty well represents the motion
+of these bodies, excepting that the boat remains in the same place,
+whereas they advance by degrees; but they do not always keep the
+same parts in the same direction; but at each vibration they take a
+considerable rolling motion; so that, besides their horizontal motion,
+they have one of a vertical balance, which proves that these bodies
+are of a globular figure, or, at least, that their lowest part is not
+sufficiently extended to maintain them in the same position.
+
+III. At the end of two or three hours, when the liquor was more fluid,
+we saw a greater quantity of these moving bodies. They seemed to be
+more free; the threads were shorter; their progressive motion was more
+direct, and their horizontal motion was greatly diminished; for the
+longer the threads are, the greater is the angle of their vibration;
+and in proportion as these threads diminish in length, the vibratory
+motion lessens, and the progressive motion increases. The vertical
+balance still subsisted, and was always plainly perceptible.
+
+IV. In five or six hours the liquor attained its utmost fluidity. Most
+of these moving substances were entirely disengaged from their threads;
+they were of an oval figure, (_fig. 4._) and moved progressively
+with great swiftness, and by their various motions had a stronger
+resemblance than ever to real animals. Those who had their threads
+still adhering, were not so brisk as the others; and among these that
+had not threads, some seemed to change their shape and size, some were
+round, some oval, and others thicker at their extremities than in the
+middle; the balancing and rolling motion was still observable.
+
+V. At the end of twelve hours a kind of gelatinous matter was settled
+at the bottom of the bottle: it was of an ash-colour, and of a
+tolerable consistency; the liquor that swam above was almost as clear
+as water, with a kind of bluish tint, resembling water in which a
+little soap had been dissolved; nevertheless it still preserved its
+viscidity. The moving bodies had then a great activity, were loosened
+from their threads, and moved in all directions. I saw some of them
+change their form, and from oval become round; and others separate,
+and from one oval form two. As they became smaller, their activity
+increased.
+
+VI. In twenty-four hours the liquor had deposited a greater quantity of
+gelatinous matter. I diluted it with water, but it did not readily mix,
+and required a considerable time to dissolve. It then appeared composed
+of an infinite number of opaque tubes that formed a kind of net-work,
+in which no regular disposition nor the least motion could be seen:
+in the clear liquor some few small bodies were still moving. The next
+morning there were also a very few; but after that time I saw no more
+in this liquor than in the globules, without any appearance of motion.
+
+These experiments were repeated several times with the most possible
+exactness; and I am persuaded that those threads above mentioned are
+not tails, nor do they make any part of the individual body; for these
+threads have no proportion with the rest of the body; they are of
+different sizes, although the moving bodies are always nearly of the
+same, at the same time. The globule appears embarrassed in its motion,
+as its tail is longer or shorter; sometimes it cannot advance, but move
+only from right to left, or from left to right, when the tail is very
+long; and it is clearly seen that they use great efforts to get rid of
+them.
+
+VII. Having taken the seminal liquor from another man but just dead,
+and still warm, I put a drop of it on the table of the microscope, and
+it immediately liquified; it had at first a condensed appearance, and
+seemed to form a compact web, composed of long and thick filaments,
+which grew from the thickest part of the liquor. These filaments
+separated in proportion as the liquor became more fluid, and at
+length they divided into globules, which at first seemed not to have
+sufficient power to set themselves in motion, but this power increased
+as they separated from the filament, from which they made many efforts
+to disengage themselves. Each of them in this struggle drew out tails
+from the filaments of different sizes, some of which were so thin
+and so long as to have no proportion with the bodies, which were all
+so much the more embarrassed as these threads or tails increased in
+length. The angle of their vibratory motion was also much greater as
+those filaments were longer: and their progressive motion so much the
+more remarkable as these tails were shorter.
+
+VIII. Having continued these observations for fourteen hours, I
+perceived that these threads, or tails, were continually lessening, and
+became so fine, that at last their extremities were no longer visible,
+and at length the whole entirely disappeared. At this time the globules
+absolutely ceased their horizontal vibrations; their progressive motion
+was direct, although they had always the vertical balancing motion,
+like the rolling of a ship. When disencumbered of these threads, the
+bodies were oval, transparent, and perfectly like those pretended
+animals seen in the liquor of an oyster on the seventh day, and still
+more to those found in the jelly of roast veal at the end of the fourth
+day.
+
+IX. Between the tenth and eleventh hour the liquor became extremely
+fluid, and all the globules appeared to proceed in ranks from one and
+the same side; (_fig. 5._) they passed over the table of the microscope
+in less than four seconds; they were ranged seven or eight in front,
+and moved on successively, as troops march in files. I observed this
+singular instance for more than five minutes; and as their course
+did not finish, I was desirous of finding the source: and, having
+gently moved my glass, I perceived that all these moving globules came
+from a kind of mucilage, (_fig. 6._) where the filamentary net-work
+continually produced them more abundant and much quicker than the
+filaments had ten hours before. There was still a remarkable difference
+between these moving bodies produced in the thick liquor, and those
+produced when the liquor became more fluid; these last had no thread
+behind them, their motion was quicker, and they went in flocks like
+sheep. I observed the mucilage from whence they issued for some time,
+and perceived it diminished, and was successively converted into
+moving globules, till the diminution of more than half the bulk; after
+which, the liquor being too dry, this mucilage became obscure in its
+middle, and all the environs were divided by the small threads which
+appeared to be formed from the bodies of these moving globules which
+were destroyed as it dried up, not in one single mass, but in long
+threads, regularly disposed, with quadrangular intervals, forming a
+net-work, very like to a cobweb, on which the moisture hung in an
+infinite number of globules.
+
+X. I perceived by the first experiment, that these little moving
+bodies change their form, and I thought they in general diminished,
+but of that I was not certain. In this last observation, at the
+twelfth and thirteenth hour I observed it more distinctly; at the same
+time remarking that though diminished considerably in size, yet they
+increased in specific gravity; especially when their motion was nearly
+finished, which generally happened all at once and they sunk to the
+bottom, forming a sediment of an ash-colour, plainly perceptible to the
+naked eye, and which appeared through the microscope to be composed of
+globules adherent to on another, sometimes by threads, and at others
+in knots, but always in a regular manner.
+
+XI. Having procured the seed of a dog, emitted naturally, I observed
+that this liquor was clear, and had but little tenacity. I put it in
+a phial, and having examined it with a microscope, without diluting
+it with water, I perceived moving bodies entirely like those I had
+observed in the human semen; they had threads, or tails, perfectly
+the same; they were also nearly of the same size; in a word, they
+resembled, as perfectly as possible, those I saw in the human liquor,
+liquified during two or three hours. I then sought for the filaments
+which I had seen in the human liquor, but it was useless; I perceived
+only some long threads entirely like those which served as tails to
+the globules. These threads were not attached to any globules, nor had
+they any motion. Those globules which were in motion, and had tails,
+appeared to me to move quicker than those in the human semen: they had
+scarcely any horizontal vibrations, but a rolling motion. They were not
+in a great number; and, although their progressive motion was stronger,
+they took more time to cross the microscope than those I had before
+remarked. I observed this liquor for three hours, but perceived no
+change: after which I examined it at another time for four hours, and
+remarked, that the number of moving bodies diminished by degrees; the
+fourth day there was still some, though they were very few, and often
+I only found one or two in a drop of liquor. The second day most of
+them were deprived of their tails; the third day very few retained
+them, yet, at the last day, there still remained some which had them;
+the liquor had then deposited a whitish sediment, which appeared to be
+composed of immoveable globules, and many threads, that seemed to be
+tails separated from the globules. There were also some attached to the
+globules, which appeared to be the dead bodies of these little animals,
+but whose forms were different from those that moved, for they appeared
+larger than the moving globules, or the rest, which remained without
+motion at the bottom of the liquor, and appeared to have a fissure or
+opening.
+
+XII. Another time, having taken the seminal liquor of the same dog, I
+again perceived the fore-mentioned phenomena; and I saw, besides, in
+one of the drops of this liquor, a mucilaginous part, which produced
+moving globules, as in the ninth experiment, (_fig. 6._) and these
+globules formed a current, and went in ranks like troops. This mucilage
+appeared to me animated with an internal inflated motion, which
+produced small bloated appearances in different parts, and from whence
+issued these bloated forms, or moving globules, with a nearly-equal
+swiftness, and in the same direction. The bodies of these globules were
+not different from the rest, excepting they had no tails. I observed
+that many of them changed their shape, and lengthened considerably,
+till they became little cylinders, after which the two extremities of
+the cylinders were bloated, and divided into two globules, both moving
+and following the same direction as that before they were united.
+
+XIII. The phial, which contained this liquor, having been broke by
+accident, I, a third time, took the liquor of the same dog, but whether
+the animal was wearied by too reiterated emissions, or by other
+causes, the seminal liquor contained none of the above bodies, but was
+transparent and viscous, like the serum of blood; I examined it then,
+and at one, two, three, and even twenty-four hours afterwards, but it
+presented nothing new: there was not a single moving body to be seen,
+nor any mucilage; in a word, nothing that I had seen before.
+
+XIV. I then opened a dog, and separated the testicles and the adherent
+vessels, but I perceived no seminal vesicles, and apparently the seed
+in those animals passes directly from the testicles into the urethra.
+I found but a small quantity of liquor in the testicles, although the
+dog was adult and vigorous. In the small quantity I could collect I
+could not discover any bodies that were in motion. I only perceived a
+great quantity of very small globules, most of which were motionless,
+and some of the smallest had some trifling approximating motion, which
+I could not follow, because the drops I gathered were so exceedingly
+minute that they dried in two or three minutes after they were placed
+in the microscope.
+
+XV. Having cut the testicles of this dog into two parts, I infused
+it in water, and closely sealed up the vessel. Three days after I
+examined this infusion, which I made with the design of discovering
+whether the flesh did not contain moving bodies, and I saw a great
+quantity of moving bodies of a globular and oval form, like those I
+had seen in the seminal liquor of the dog, excepting they had not any
+threads. They moved in all manner of directions with great swiftness. I
+observed these bodies, which appeared animated for some time, and saw
+many change their form; I perceived some to lengthen, and others to
+contract, while some swelled at both extremities: there were numbers
+that were smaller and thicker than the rest; but they were all in
+motion, and were about the size and figure of those I have described in
+the fourth experiment.
+
+XVI. The next morning the number of these globules were increased,
+but they appeared smaller; their motion was more rapid and irregular;
+they had also another appearance with respect to their form and manner
+of moving, which seemed confused; the next and several days after,
+till the fifteenth day, there were moving bodies in the water, whose
+size gradually diminished till they were no Longer visible. The last,
+which I perceived with great difficulty, was on the nineteenth and
+twentieth days, and they moved with greater rapidity than ever. Upon
+the water a kind of pellicle was formed, which appeared to be composed
+of the coverings of those moving bodies, small threads, scales, &c. but
+entirely motionless; this pellicle, and the moving bodies could not
+come into the liquor by means of external air, since the bottle had
+been kept carefully sealed.
+
+XVII. I then successively opened ten rabbits, on different days, to
+examine their seminal liquors; the first had not a drop, either in the
+testicles or seminal vessels. In the second I was no more successful,
+although I was assured he was the father of a very numerous progeny.
+I succeeded no better in the third. I then imagined that the presence
+of the female might be requisite; I therefore put males and females
+into cages so contrived that it was impossible for them to copulate. At
+first these endeavours did not succeed; for, on opening two, not a drop
+of seminal liquor was to be found; however, in the sixth that I opened,
+a large white rabbit, I found, in the seminal vesicles, as much liquor
+as could be contained in a teaspoon; this matter resembled calves'
+jelly, was nearly transparent, and of a citron colour. Having examined
+it with the microscope, I perceived it to resolve, by slow degrees,
+into filaments and thick globules, many of which appeared fastened to
+each other; but I did not remark any distinct motion in them, only
+as the matter liquefied, it formed a kind of current by which these
+filaments and globules seemed to be drawn all to one side. I expected
+to find this matter take a greater degree of fluidity, but that did not
+happen, for, after it was a little liquefied, it dried, and I could
+perceive nothing further than what is above mentioned. When this matter
+was mixed with water, the latter did not appear to have power to dilute
+it.
+
+XVIII. Having opened another rabbit, I only found a very small quantity
+of seminal matter, which was of a colour and consistency entirely
+different from the former; it was scarcely tinctured of a yellow hue,
+and was much more fluid. As there was but very little, I feared it
+would dry too hastily, and therefore mixed it with water: from the
+first observation, I did not perceive the filaments I had seen in the
+other, but I discovered three globules, all in a trembling and restless
+motion; they had also a progressive motion, but it was very slow; some
+moved round the others, and most appeared to turn upon their centres. I
+could not pursue this observation because the liquor so soon got dry.
+
+XIX. I opened another of these rabbits, but could not discover any of
+this matter; in the seminal vessels of another, I found almost as much
+congealed liquor as in XVIIth Experiment: I examined it in the same
+manner as the rest, but it afforded me no greater discovery. I infused
+the whole I had collected, in almost double the quantity of water, and
+after briskly shaking them together, I suffered them to settle for ten
+minutes; after which, on inspecting this infusion, I saw the same large
+globules as before; there were but few and those very distant from each
+other. They had approximating motions with respect to each other, but
+they were so slow, as to be scarcely discernable; two or three hours
+after, these globules seemed to be diminished, their motion was become
+more distinct, and they appeared to turn upon their centres. Although
+this trembling motion was more than their progressive, nevertheless
+they were clearly seen to change their situation irregularly with
+respect to each other. Six or seven hours after the globules were
+become still less, and their action was increased: they appeared to me
+to be in much greater numbers, and all their motions distinct. The next
+morning, there was a prodigious multitude of globules in motion, which
+were at least three times smaller than those that at first appeared.
+I observed these globules for eight days, and observed that many of
+them seemed to join together, after which their motion ceased; this
+union, however, appeared to me only superficial and accidental. Some
+were larger than others; most were round and spherical, and some of
+them were oval. The largest were most transparent, and the smallest
+were almost black. This difference did not proceed from the light, for
+in whatever situation these small globules were in, they were always of
+the same appearance; the motions of the small were much more rapid than
+the large ones, and what I remarked most clearly and most generally
+in all, was their diminution of size, so that at the eighth day they
+were so exceedingly small as to be hardly perceptible, and at last
+absolutely disappeared.
+
+XX. At length having obtained, with no small difficulty, the seminal
+liquor of another rabbit, as it would have been conveyed to the female,
+I remarked it to be more fluid than that which had been taken from
+the seminal vesicles, and the phenomena which it offered were also
+very indifferent; for in this liquor there were moving globules and
+filaments without motion; and also a kind of globules with threads or
+tails, resembling those of a dog or a man, but only appearing smaller
+and brisker (_fig. 7._) They passed over the microscope in an instant,
+their tails appeared shorter than those of other spermatic animals,
+and I own I am not certain whether some of those tails were not false
+appearances, produced by the furrows which these moving globules formed
+in the liquor, as they moved with too great a rapidity to admit of my
+clearly observing them; besides, the liquor, though sufficiently fluid
+at first, very speedily dried away.
+
+XXI. After this I resolved to examine the seminal liquor of a ram; I
+applied to a butcher, who supplied me with the necessary parts of at
+least twelve or thirteen, directly after they were killed, but I could
+not find liquor sufficient for any experiment, either in the epididymis
+or seminal vesicles. In the little drops I was able to collect, I only
+perceived globules which had no motion. As I made these experiments in
+March, I supposed by repeating them in October, the season of female
+attachments, I should discover more seminal liquor in these vessels.
+I cut many of these testicles in two longitudinally, and collected a
+small quantity of liquor, but found nothing more in them.
+
+[Illustration: _PLATE. II._]
+
+XXII. I took three of these testicles, of three different rams, cut
+each of them into four parts, and put them into separate bottles, with
+as much water as was sufficient for them. Securing these bottles from
+the admission of air I suffered the infusion to remain for four days,
+after which I examined the liquor of each by the microscope, and found
+them all replete with an infinity of moving bodies, most part of which
+were oval, and the rest globular; they were pretty thick, and resembled
+those described in the VIIIth experiment; their motion was neither
+brisk, uncertain, nor very rapid, but equal, uniform, and in all
+directions. These moving bodies were nearly of the same size in each
+liquor, but differed one bottle with the other. They had no tails, nor
+were there any filaments or threads in this liquor; during the fifteen
+or sixteen days they were retained, they often changed their form, and
+seemed successively to throw off their external coverings; they also
+became every day smaller, and on the sixteenth day, they were no longer
+perceptible.
+
+XXIII. In the month of October I opened a ram, and found a great
+quantity of seminal liquor in the epididymis; having examined it with
+the microscope, I perceived an innumerable multitude of moving bodies,
+so numerous, that all the liquor seemed to be entirely composed of
+them; as it was too thick, I diluted it with water, but I was surprised
+to see the motion of these bodies suddenly stop, though I perceived
+them very distinctly; having many times repeated the same observation,
+I perceived that the water which diluted the seminal liquors of a man,
+a dog, &c. seemed to coagulate that of a ram.
+
+XXIV. I then opened another ram, and in order to prevent the seminal
+liquor from coagulating, I permitted the parts of generation to remain
+in the body of the animal, and covered it over with warm clothes. By
+these precautions I observed the seminal liquor in its fluid state;
+it was replete with an infinity of oblong moving bodies, (_fig. 8._)
+traversing in various directions; but as soon as the liquor grew cold,
+the motion of all these bodies immediately ceased. I diluted the
+liquor with warm water, when the motion of the small bodies remained
+for three or four minutes. The quantity of these moving bodies was so
+great in this liquor, that although diluted, they nearly touched each
+other. They were all of the same size and form, but none of them had
+tails. Their motion was not very quick, and when it stopped by the
+coagulation of the liquor, they did not change their form.
+
+XXV. As I was persuaded, not only by my own theory, but also by the
+observations of all those who had made experiments before me, that the
+female, as well as the male, has a seminal and prolific liquor; and,
+as I had no doubt, but the reservoir of this liquor was the glandular
+body of the testicle, where prejudiced anatomists attempted to find the
+egg, I purchased several dogs and bitches, and some male and female
+rabbits, which I kept separate from each other; and in order to have a
+comparative object with the liquor of the female, I again observed the
+seminal liquor of a dog, and discovered there the same moving bodies as
+described in the XIth experiment.
+
+XXVI. While I was thus occupied, a bitch was dissected which had been
+four or five days in heat, and had not received the dog. The testicles
+were readily found, and on one of them I discovered a red, glandular,
+prominent body, about the size of a pea, which perfectly resembled
+a little nipple; on the outside was a visible orifice formed by two
+lips; one of which jutted out more than the other. Having introduced a
+small instrument into this orifice, a liquor dropped from it, which we
+carefully caught to examine with the microscope. The surgeon replaced
+the testicles in the body of the animal, which was yet alive, in order
+to keep them warm. I then examined this liquor with a microscope, and,
+at the first glance, had the satisfaction to see moving bodies with
+tails, exactly like those I just before saw in the seminal liquor
+of the dog. (_fig. 9._) Messrs. Needham and Daubenton, who observed
+them with me, were so surprized at this resemblance, that they could
+scarcely believe but that these spermatic animals were the same,
+and thought I had forgotten to change the table of the microscope,
+or that the instrument with which we had gathered the liquor of the
+female, might before have been used for the dog. Mr. Needham then
+took different instruments, and having obtained some fresh liquor,
+he examined it first, and saw there the same kind of animals, and
+was convinced, not only of the existence of spermatic animals in the
+seminal liquor of the female, but likewise of their resemblance to
+those of the semen of the male. We repeated it ten times at least, in
+different drops of the same liquor, without perceiving the smallest
+variation in the phenomena.
+
+XXVII. Having afterwards examined the other testicle, I found a
+glandular body in its growing state; it had not any external orifice,
+was much smaller, and not so red as the first. Having opened it, I
+found no liquor; but only a small fold in the internal part, which I
+judged to be the origin of the cavity that was to contain the liquor.
+This second vesicle had some very small lymphatic vesicles externally.
+I pierced one of them with a lancet, and a clear and limpid liquor
+flowed out, which I examined with the microscope; it contained nothing
+similar to that of the glandular body; it was a clear matter, composed
+of small globules, which were motionless. Having often repeated this
+observation, I was assured, that this liquor in the vesicles was only
+a kind of lymph, which contains nothing animated, or similar to that
+seen in the female seed, which is formed and perfected in the glandular
+bodies.
+
+XXVIII. Fifteen days after I opened another bitch that had been in
+heat seven or eight days, but had not received the dog. I found the
+testicles contiguous to the extremities of the horns of the matrix;
+these horns were very long, their external tunic surrounded the
+testicles, and they appeared covered with that membrane like a cowl.
+In each testicle I found a glandular body in its full maturity. The
+first was half open, and there was a passage which penetrated into the
+testicle, and which was replete with seminal liquor; the second was
+somewhat more large and prominent, and the orifice, or canal, which
+contained the liquor was below the nipple. I took these two liquors,
+and having compared them, found them perfectly alike. The seminal
+liquor of the female is at least as liquid as that of the male. Having
+afterwards examined the two liquors with the microscope, I perceived
+the like moving bodies, (_fig. 10._) and the same phenomena, as in the
+seminal liquor of the other. I saw besides many globules which moved
+very briskly, and endeavoured to disengage themselves from the mucilage
+that surrounded them: there was a great quantity of them as in the seed
+of the female.
+
+XXIX. From these glandular bodies I pressed out all the liquor, and
+having collected it, I found enough to last for four or five hours
+observations. I remarked that it deposited somewhat to the bottom, or
+at least began to thicken. I took one drop of this, which was thicker
+than the rest, and having put it on the microscope, perceived that the
+mucilaginous part of the seed was condensed, and formed a continued
+net-work. On the external border of this net-work, there was a torrent,
+or current, composed of globules, which moved with rapidity. These
+globules were lively, active, and appeared to be disengaged from their
+mucilaginous covering, and their tails. This stream perfectly resembled
+the course of the blood in small transparent veins; for they appeared
+not only to be animated by their own powers, but also to be impelled
+by a common force, and constrained to follow in a herd. From this
+experiment, and the XIth and XIIth, I concluded, that when the fluid
+begins to coagulate and thicken, these active globules break and tear
+their mucilaginous coverings, and escape by that side where the liquor
+remains most fluid. These moving bodies had then neither threads nor
+tails; they were for the most part oval, and appeared to be flat at the
+bottom, for they had no rolling motion.
+
+XXX. The horns of the matrix were externally soft; I opened them
+longitudinally, and only found a very small quantity of liquor, which,
+upon examination, appeared to contain the same as that pressed from the
+glandular substance of the testicle. These glandular bodies are placed
+so as easily to sprinkle this liquor on the horns of the matrix; and
+I am persuaded that, as long as the amorous season remains, there is
+a continual dropping of this liquor from the glandular substance into
+the horns of the matrix; that this dropping remains till the glandular
+substance has emptied the vesicles; it then becomes fluid by degrees,
+is effaced, and only leaves a little reddish cicatrice on the external
+part of the testicle.
+
+XXXI. I took this seminal liquor of the female, with the same quantity
+of that just emitted from the male, and mixed them together, and having
+examined this mixture with the microscope, I perceived nothing new, the
+liquor remaining the same, and the moving bodies were so similar, that
+it was impossible to distinguish those of the male from those of the
+female; I only thought their motion appeared a little slackened.
+
+XXXII. Having dissected a young bitch that had never been in heat, I
+only discovered a small protuberance on one of the testicles, which
+I supposed to be the origin of a glandular body. The surface of the
+testicles was smooth and even, and the lymphatic vessels could scarcely
+be seen externally, until the tunic, which covered the testicles, was
+separated; but these vesicles were not considerable, and contained but
+a small quantity of liquor, in which I could only perceive some little
+globules without any motion.
+
+XXXIII. In another bitch, which was younger, and only three or four
+months old, there was no appearance of glandular bodies on the
+testicles; they were white, smooth, and covered with a cowl like the
+rest. There were some little vesicles which contained little or no
+liquor; and it was with great difficulty we could perceive any vesicles
+externally. I compared one of these testicles with that of a young
+dog of nearly the same age, and they appeared internally of a fleshy
+nature, and perfectly similar. I do not mean to contradict what some
+anatomists have said concerning the testicles of dogs, but only that
+the appearance of the internal substance of the female testicles is
+like that of the males, when the glandular substances are not yet
+grown.
+
+XXXIV. The genital parts of a cow, which had been just killed, was
+sent to me, covered over with hot cloths, and put into a basket with
+a live rabbit, which likewise squatted on a cloth at the bottom, so
+that I received them almost as warm as when taken out of the body. I
+immediately inspected the testicles, and found them of the size of
+a hen's, or, at least, a pigeon's egg. One of these testicles had a
+glandular body, about the size of a pea, protuberating outwardly like a
+small nipple, but it was not pierced, nor had any external orifice: it
+was close and hard. I pressed it with my fingers, but no liquor issued
+from it. I observed, before this testicle was dissected, there were
+two other glandular substances at a distance from the other; but these
+were just begun to grow; their colour was a whitish yellow, whereas
+that which seemed to have pierced the membrane of the testicle was of
+a rose colour. I opened this last, and examined it with the greatest
+attention, but could not discover that it contained any liquor, I
+therefore judged that it was far distant from its maturity.
+
+XXXV. The other testicle had no glandular body which had pierced the
+common membrane that covered the testicle, there were only two small
+ones, which began to form a little protuberance below this membrane.
+I opened both of them but no liquor issued therefrom: they were hard,
+whitish, and with a little yellow tint; each of them had four or five
+lymphatic vesicles, very easily distinguishable on their surface, and
+appearing transparent. I judged they contained a quantity of liquor,
+and having pierced them with a lancet, the liquor issued out to some
+inches distance. I collected a sufficient quantity of this liquor to
+observe it easily; I only saw some very minute immoveable globules; and
+although I continued my examination for two days, I neither discovered
+alteration, change, nor motion, therein.
+
+XXXVI. Eight days after, two more genital parts were brought to me
+in the same mode as the last. I was assured that one was taken from
+a young cow that had never calved, and the other from one that had
+had several, but was not old. I first examined the testicles of the
+latter, and on one of them I found a glandular substance, as large and
+as red as a cherry, which appeared a little soft towards the nipple. I
+distinguished three small holes, in which a hair might be introduced.
+Having pressed this substance with my fingers a small quantify of
+liquor issued, which I placed on the table of a microscope, and had the
+satisfaction to see some moving globules there, but quite different
+from those which I had seen in other seminal liquors (_fig. 11._).
+These globules were obscure and little; their progressive motion,
+although distinct, was, nevertheless, very slow. The liquor was not
+thick; the little globules had no appearance of threads, or tails, and
+they were not all in motion. This is all I was able to perceive in the
+liquor this glandular substance afforded me, for although I pressed
+it again, it only afforded a less quantity, mixed with blood. I again
+discovered it in the small moving globules, but they seemed to be at
+least four times smaller than the sanguinary globules.
+
+XXXVII. This glandular body was situate at one of the extremities by
+the side of the horn of the matrix, and the liquor, which it prepares,
+must fall upon this horn; nevertheless, on opening this horn I found
+no material quantity of liquor. This glandular body penetrated very
+forward in the testicle, and occupied more than a third of its internal
+substance. I opened them longitudinally, and found a pretty large
+cavity, but entirely void of any liquor. At some distance from this
+glandular body there was a small one of the same kind, about the size
+of a lentil. There were also two small cicatrices, about the same size,
+which formed two small indentations, of a deep red colour: they were
+the remains of obliterated glandular bodies. Having afterwards examined
+the other testicle, I counted four cicatrices and three glandular
+bodies; the foremost of which had pierced the membrane, was of a flesh
+colour, and the size of a pea. It was solid, and without any orifice
+or liquor: the two others were smaller, harder, and of a deep orange
+colour. On the first testicle only two or three apparent lymphatic
+vesicles remained. I counted eight on the external part, and having
+examined the liquor of these vesicles I perceived only a transparent
+matter, without any moving bodies.
+
+XXXVIII. I then examined the testicles of the young cow which had not
+calved, which, notwithstanding, were something larger than the other,
+but it is true there were no cicatrices on either of them; the one
+was smooth and very white, and a number of lymphatic vesicles were
+sprinkled about it, but there was not the least mark of a glandular
+body. On the other testicle I perceived the marks of two glandular
+substances, the one had just began to grow, and the other was the size
+of a pea; there was also a great number of lymphatic vesicles, which I
+pierced with a lancet, but the liquor did not contain any thing; having
+pierced the two small glandular bodies some blood alone issued thereout.
+
+XXXIX. I divided each testicle of both cows into four parts, and,
+having put them into separate phials, I poured as much water on as
+would cover them, and after having closely corked them up, I suffered
+to infuse for six days; I then examined these infusions, and discovered
+an innumerable quantity of living moving bodies (_fig. 12._); they
+were all, in these infusions, extremely small, moved with a surprising
+rapidity in all directions. I observed them for three days, and they
+always appeared to diminish, till at last, on the third day, they
+entirely disappeared.
+
+XL. The following day they brought to me the genital parts of three
+more cows. I immediately searched the testicles to find one where the
+glandular substance was in perfect maturity; but in two of them I
+only discovered some growing glandular substances on the testicles.
+I could not learn whether these cows had calved or not, but there
+was a great appearance they had all been in season, for there were
+a great number of cicatrices on all these testicles. In the third I
+found a testicle, on which was a glandular substance, as thick and as
+red as a cherry; it was inflamed, and seemed to be in full maturity.
+Its extremity was a nipple, with a small hole; I pressed it a little
+between my fingers, and a quantity of liquor issued out. I found in
+this liquor moving globules, exactly like those in the liquor pressed
+from the glandular body of the other cow, I have before spoken of in
+experiment XXXVI. They appeared to be more numerous, their progressive
+motions were not so slow, and their size larger. Having observed them
+for some time I perceived some to lengthen and change their form. I
+then introduced a very fine instrument into the little hole of the
+glandular substance, and having opened it I found the internal cavity
+replete with liquor; this liquor offered me the same phenomena, and the
+same moving globules, as I before observed in experiment XXXVI. with
+either filaments, threads, or tails attached to them. The liquor of
+the vesicle presented me with nothing more than nearly a transparent
+matter, which did not contain one moving thing.
+
+XLI. At different times they brought me the genitals of several other
+cows. In some I found the testicles loaded with an almost mature
+glandular substance; in others they were of different growths, and
+I remarked nothing new, excepting that in the two testicles of two
+different cows I perceived the glandular substance in a decayed state;
+the base of one was as broad as the circumference of a cherry; the
+extremity of the nipple was soft, wrinkled, and shrivelled; the two
+small holes were very perceptible, from whence the liquor had flowed.
+With some difficulty I introduced a small hair, but there was no liquor
+in the canal, nor in the internal cavity, which was still to be seen.
+The flaccidity of these glandular substances begins, therefore, at
+the most external part, or extremity of the nipple. They diminish at
+first in height, and afterwards in breadth, as I observed in another
+testicle, where this glandular substance had diminished more than three
+fourths.
+
+XLII. As the testicles of doe rabbits, as well as the glandular bodies
+formed there, are very small, I could observe nothing very exactly
+with respect to their seminal liquor. I only discovered, that the
+testicles of doe rabbits are different, and that none of those I saw
+resembled what De Graaf represents in his engravings; for the glandular
+substances did not enclose the lymphatic vesicles; and I never saw a
+pointed end, as he has depicted them.
+
+XLIII. I found on the testicles of some cows a kind of bladders,
+replete with transparent liquor. I remarked they were of different
+sizes, the largest about that of a pea; they were fastened to the
+external membrane of the testicle by a strong membraneous pedicle,
+as was also another, still smaller; and a third, nearly of the same
+size as the second, appeared to be only a lymphatic vesicle, much
+more apparent than the rest. I imagined these bladders, which the
+anatomists have called _hydatides_, might possibly be of the same
+nature as the lymphatic vesicles of the testicles, for having examined
+the liquor they contained I found it to be perfectly similar; it was a
+transparent and homogeneous liquor, which did not contain one moving
+substance.
+
+XLIV. At the same time I made observations on the liquor in an oyster;
+on the water in which pepper had been boiled; on the water wherein
+pepper had been only infused; and on the water wherein I had put some
+vegetable seed; the bottles which contained these waters were firmly
+closed, and in two days I perceived in the oyster liquor a great
+quantity of oval and globular substances, which seemed to swim like
+fish in a pond, and had all the appearance of being animals; however
+they had no limbs nor tails, but were very large, transparent, and
+visible. I perceived them change their forms, and become smaller for
+seven or eight days successively; and at length I and Mr. Needham
+observed animals similar to those in an infusion of jelly of roast
+veal, which had been also very exactly corked; so that I am persuaded
+they are not real animals, at least according to the received
+acceptation of the words, as we shall hereafter explain.
+
+The infusion of the seed presented an innumerable multitude of moving
+globules which appeared animated like those of the seminal liquors,
+and in the infusions of the flesh of animals: these were also large,
+and in violent motion during the first days, but they diminished by
+degrees, and disappeared only from their minuteness.
+
+I perceived the same thing, but later, in the liquor wherein pepper
+had been boiled, and the like, though still later, in that which had
+not boiled; from hence I supposed that what is called fermentation may
+possibly be only the effect of the motion of these organical parts
+of animals and vegetables; and in order to see what difference there
+was between this kind of fermentation and that of minerals, I placed
+a little powdered stone on the microscope, and sprinkled thereon a
+drop of aquafortis, which however produced a different phenomena,
+consisting of great balls, which ascended to the surface, and almost
+instantaneously obscured the focus of the microscope: this was a
+dissolution of the grosser parts, which being completed it became
+motionless, and had not the smallest resemblance to the other infusions
+I had observed.
+
+XLV. I examined the seminal liquor in the roes of different fish; such
+as carp, tench, barbel, &c. which I took out while they were living,
+and having observed three different liquors with great attention, I
+perceived a great quantity of obscure globules, all in motion. I took
+several more of these fish alive, and with my fingers gently compressed
+that part of the belly where this liquor is emitted; and in that which
+I obtained, I perceived an infinity of moving globules therein, very
+black and very small.
+
+XLVI. Before I finish this chapter I shall relate the experiments of
+Mr. Needham on the seed of a kind of cuttle fish, called calmar. This
+able naturalist having sought for spermatic animals in the milts of
+many different fish, found them in the roe of a calmar, apparent to
+the naked eye. During the summer he dissected calmars at Lisbon, but
+found no appearance of any roe, nor any reservoir which appeared to be
+destined for the reception of the seminal liquor; and it was in the
+middle of December that he began to discern the first traces of a new
+vessel replete with a milky juice. This reservoir increased, and the
+seed which it contained was diffused very abundantly. By examining this
+liquor with the microscope, he perceived only small opaque globules,
+which floated in a kind of serous matter, without the least appearance
+of life. But some time after, in the milt of another calmar, he found
+these organic parts completely formed; they seemed like spiral springs
+shut up in a kind of transparent case. They appeared as perfect at
+first as they did at last, excepting that by degrees they contracted
+and formed a kind of screw. The lid of the case was a species of
+valve that opened outwardly, and by which all the contents might
+issue; it contained another valve, a barrel, and a spongy substance;
+therefore the whole machine consisted in an external, transparent, and
+cartilaginous case, whose upper extremity is terminated by a round
+head, formed by the case itself, and which performs the office of a
+valve. In this external case is contained a transparent tube, which
+encloses the spring, piston, or valve, barrel, or spongy substance.
+The screw occupies the upper part of the tube and case, the piston and
+barrel are placed in the middle, and the spongy substance occupies
+the lower part. These machines pump up the lacteal liquor, of which
+the spongy substance is full; and before the animal spawns, the whole
+milt is no more than a composition of these organic parts, which have
+absolutely pumped up the lacteal liquor. As soon as these little
+machines are taken from the body of the animal, and deposited either
+in water, or held in the air, they begin to act; the spring ascends,
+followed by the piston, the barrel, and the spongy substance which
+contains the liquor; and as soon as the spring and the tube which
+contain it begin to quit the case, the spring folds up; and all that
+remains within begins to move, till the spring, the sucker, &c. are
+entirely come out: as soon as that is done, the remainder immediately
+follow, and the lacteal liquor, which has been pumped out, and which
+was contained in the spongy substance flows out by the barrel.
+
+As this observation is very singular, and incontestibly proves that
+the moving bodies found in the milt of the calmar are not animals, but
+simple machines, a kind of pumps, I have deemed it necessary to give
+Mr. Needham's own words.[Q]
+
+[Q] See New Discoveries made with the microscope by Mr. Needham, chap.
+vi. Leyden, 1747.
+
+"When the small machines, he says, are arrived to their perfect
+maturity, many of them act the moment they are in the open air;
+nevertheless most of them may be commodiously placed, so as to be
+seen with a microscope, before their action begins; and even to make
+them act, the upper extremity of the external case must be moistened
+with a drop of water which then begins to expand, while the two small
+ligaments which issue from the case twist and turn in different
+manners: at the same time, the screw ascends slowly, the volutes, which
+are at its upper end, approach and act against the top of the case:
+those at the bottom also advance, and seem to be continually followed
+by others which come from the piston. I say, they seem to be followed,
+because I do not think they are so effectually, but only a deception
+produced by the nature and motion of the screw. The piston and barrel
+also follow the same direction, extend lengthways, and at the same time
+move towards the top of the case, which is perceived by the vacuum
+at the bottom. As soon as the screw, with the tube in which it is
+enclosed, begins to appear externally from the case, it folds, because
+it is retained by its two ligaments: nevertheless, all the internal
+contents continue to move gently and gradually, until the screw,
+piston, and bladder, are entirely come out. When that is done, the rest
+follow directly after. The piston separates from the barrel, and the
+apparent ligament, which is below the latter, swells and acquires a
+diameter equal to that of the spongy substance which follows it. This,
+although much larger than when in the case, becomes still five times
+longer than before. The tube which incloses it all is straightened in
+its middle, and forms two kinds of knots, about a third of its length
+distant from each extremity: the semen then flows through, and is
+composed of small opaque globules, which float in a serous matter,
+without shewing any signs of life, and which are precisely such as I
+have said to have seen them when they were diffused in the reservoir
+of the milt. In the figure, the part between the two knots seems to
+be broken: when it is examined attentively, we find that what causes
+it to appear as such, is, that the spongy substance with in the tube
+is broken in nearly equal pieces, which the following phenomena will
+clearly prove. Sometimes it happens, that the screw and the tube break
+by the piston, which remains in the barrel; then the tube closes in
+a moment, and takes a conical figure, by contracting, as much as it
+is possible, above the end of the screw, which demonstrates its great
+elasticity in that part: and the manner in which it accommodates itself
+with the figure of the substance it incloses, when it receives the
+least change, proves, that it is equal in every other respect."
+
+Mr. Needham from this conceives that we might imagine the actions
+of all this machine were owing to the spring of the screw, but he
+proves, by many experiments, that the screw, on the contrary, only
+obeys a power which resides in the spongy part. As soon as the screw
+is separated from the rest, it ceases its action, and loses all its
+activity. The author afterwards makes this reflection on this singular
+machine:
+
+"If, says he, I had seen the animalcule pretended to be in the semen of
+living animals, perhaps I might be in a condition to determine whether
+they are really living creatures, or simple machines prodigiously
+minute, and which are in miniature, what the vessels of the calmar are
+in the great."
+
+By this, and some other analogies, Mr. Needham concludes, there is a
+great appearance that the spermatic worms of other animals are only
+organized bodies and machines, like to those of the calmar, whose
+actions are made at different times; "for, says he, let us suppose,
+that in the prodigious number of spermatic worms seen on the table
+of a microscope, there are some thousands which act at the same time,
+that will be sufficient to shew us, they are all alive. Let us also
+conceive, adds he, that the motion of these spermatic worms remains,
+like that of the machines of the calmar, about half a minute; then the
+succession of action of these small machines, will remain a long time,
+and the pretended animals will appear to decrease successively. Besides
+why should the calmar alone have machines in its seed, whereas every
+other animal has spermatic worms, and real animals? Analogy is here
+of such great weight, that it does not appear possible to refuse it."
+Mr. Needham likewise very justly remarks, that even the observations
+of Leeuwenhoek, seems to indicate that the spermatic worms have a
+great resemblance with the organized bodies in the seed of the calmar.
+"I have, says Leeuwenhoek, speaking of the cod, taken those real
+substances for hollow and extended animalcule, because they were four
+times as large as the living animalcule." And in another part, "I have
+remarked, he says, speaking of the seed of a dog, that the animalcules
+often change their form, especially when the liquor in which they
+float evaporates. The progressive motion does not extend above the
+diameter of a hair."[R]
+
+[R] See Leeuwenh. Arch. Nat. page 306, 309, 310.
+
+After considering all these circumstances Mr. Needham conjectures,
+that the supposed spermatic animals might possibly be only natural
+machines, substances much more simply organized than the bodies of
+animals. I have seen with the microscope, these machines in the calmar,
+and the description he gives of them, is very faithful and exact. His
+observations then shew us, that the seminal liquor is composed of
+parts which seek to be organized; that it, in fact, produces organized
+substances, but that they are not as yet, either animals or organized
+substances, like the individual which produced them. We might suppose,
+that these substances are only instruments which serve to perfect the
+seminal liquor, and strongly impel it; and that it is by their brisk
+and internal action, that it most intimately penetrates the seminal
+liquor of the female.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+COMPARISON OF MY OBSERVATIONS WITH THOSE OF LEEUWENHOEK.
+
+
+Although I made the preceding experiments with all the circumspection
+possible; and although I repeated them a number of times, I am
+persuaded that many things escaped my notice; I have only related what
+I saw, and what all the world may see, with a little art and much
+practice. In order to be free from prejudices, I endeavoured to forget
+what other naturalists asserted to have seen, conceiving that by so
+doing, I should be more certain of only seeing in fact what really
+appeared; and it was not till after I had digested my observations,
+that I compared them with those of Leeuwenhoek, &c. I by no means
+pretend to have greater abilities in microscopical observations than
+that great naturalist, who passed more than sixty years in making
+various experiments.
+
+Notwithstanding the authority his observations may justly claim, it
+is surely permitted to examine and compare others with them. Truth
+can only be gained by such examinations, and errors discovered,
+particularly as we do it without any partiality, and in the sole view
+of establishing something fixed and certain on the nature of those
+moving bodies seen in the seminal liquors.
+
+In November 1677, Leeuwenhoek, who had already communicated to the
+Royal Society of London many microscopical observations on the optic
+nerve, the blood, the juice of the plants, the texture of trees,
+rain-water, &c. addressed to Lord Brouncker, President of the Society,
+in the following words: "Postquam Exc.[S] &c. Dominus Professor
+Cranen me visitatione sua sępius honorarat, litteris rogavis, Domino
+Ham concrato suo, quasdam observationum mearum, videndas darem. Hic
+dominus Ham me secundo invisens, secum in laguncula, vitrea semen
+viri, gonorrhęa laborantis, sponte destillatum, attulit, dicens, se
+post paucissimas temporis minutias (cum materia ilia jam in tantum
+esset resoluta ut fistulę vitreę immitti posset) animalcula viva in
+eo observasse, quę caudam & ultra 24 horas non viventia judicabat;
+idem referebat se animalcula observasse mortua post sumptam ab ęgroto
+therebintinam. Materiam prędicatam fistulę vitreę immissam, pręsente
+Domino Ham, observavi, quasdamque in ea creaturas viventes, at post
+decursum 2 aut 3 horarum eamdem solus materiam observans, mortuas vidi.
+
+[S] See Phil. Trans. No. 141, page 1041.
+
+"Eamdem materiam (semen virile) non ęgroti alicujus, non diuturna
+conservatione corruptam, vel post aliquot momenta fluidiorem factam,
+sed sani viri statim post ejectionem, ne interlabentibus quidem sex
+arterię pulsibus, sępiuscule observavi, tantamque in ea viventium
+animalculorum multitudinem vidi, ut interdum plura quam 1000 in
+magnitudine arenę sese moverent; non in toto semine, sed in materia
+fluida crassiori adhęrente, ingentem illam animalculorum multitudinem
+observavi; in crassiori vero seminis materia quasi sine motu jacebant,
+quod inde provenire mihi imaginabar, quod materia illa crassa ex tam
+variis cohęreat partibus, ut animalcula in ea se movere nequirent;
+minora globulis sanguini ruborem adferentibus hęc animalcula erant, ut
+judicem, millena millia arenam grandiorem magnitudine non ęquatura.
+Corpora corum rotunda, anteriora obtusa, posteriora ferme in aculeum
+desinentia habebant; cauda tenui longitudine corpus quinquies sexiesve
+excedente, & pellucida crassitiem vero ad 25 partem corporis habente
+prędita erant, adeo ut ea quoad figuram cum cyclaminis minoribus,
+longam caudam habentibus, optime, comparare queam; motu caudę
+serpentino, aut ut anguillę in aqua natantis progrediebantur; in
+materia vero aliquantulum crassiori caudam octies deciesve quidem
+evibrabant antequam latitudinem capilli procedebant. Interdum mihi
+imaginabar me internoscere posse adhuc varias in corpore horum
+animalculorum partes, quia vero continuo eas videre nequibam, de iis
+tacebo. His animalculis minora adhuc animalcula, quibus non nisi
+globuli figuram attribuere possum, permissa erant.
+
+"Memini me ante tres aut quatuor annos, rogatu Domini Oldenburg, B. M.
+semen virile observasse, & prędicta animalia pro globulis habuisse;
+sed quia fastidiebam ab ulteriori inquisitione, & magis quidem a
+descriptione, tunc temporis eam omisi. Jam quoad partes ipsas, ex
+quibus crassam seminis materiam, quoad majorem sui partem consistere
+sępius cum admiratione observavi, ea sunt tam varia ac multa vasa, imo
+in tanta multitudine hęc vasa vidi, ut credam me in unica seminis gutta
+plura observasse quam anatomico per integrum diem subjectum aliquod
+secanti occurrant. Quibus visis, firmiter credebam nulla in corpore
+humano jam formato esse vasa, quę in semine virili bene constituto non
+reperiantur. Cum materia hęc per momenta quędam aėri fuisset exposita,
+prędicta vasorum multitudo in aquosam magnis oleaginosis globulis
+permistam materiam mutabatur, &c."
+
+The Secretary of the Royal Society, in answer to this letter, says,
+that it would be proper to make the like experiments on the seed of
+other animals, as dogs, horses, &c. not only to form a better judgment
+on the first discovery, but to know the differences which might be
+found in the number, and the figure of those animalcules. And with
+relation to the vessels of the thickest part of the seminal liquors,
+he greatly doubts they were only filaments without any organization,
+"quę tibi videbatur vasorum congeries, fortassis seminis sunt
+quędam filamenta, haud organice constructa, sed dum permearunt vasa
+generationi inservientia in istiusmodi figuram elongata. Non dissimili
+modo ac sępius notatus sum salivam crassiorem ex glandularum faucium
+foraminibus editam quasi e convolutis fibrilis constantem."[T]
+
+[T] See the Secretary's answer to Leeuwenhoek's Letter in the Phil.
+Trans. No. 141, page 1043.
+
+Leeuwenhoek answered him on the 18th of March, 1678, in the following
+words: "Si quando canes coeunt marem a foemina statim seponas materia
+quędam tenuis & aquosa (lympha scilicet spermatica) e pene solet
+paulatim exstillare; hanc materiam numerosissimis animalculis repletam
+aliquoties vidi, eorum magnitudine quę in semine virili conspiciuntur,
+quibus particulę globulares aliquot quinquagies majores permiscebantur.
+
+"Quod ad vasorem in crassiori seminis virilis portione spectabilium
+observationem attinet, denuo non semel iteratam, saltem mihimetipsi
+comprobasse videor; meque omnino persuasum habeo, cuniculi, canis,
+felis, arterias venasve fuisse a peritissimo anatomico haud unquam
+magis perspicue observatas, quam mihi rasa in semine virili, ope
+perspicilli, in confectum venere.
+
+"Cum mihi prędicta vasa primum innotuere, statim etiam pituitam, tum
+& salivam perspicillo applicavi; verum his minime existentia animalia
+frustra quęsivi.
+
+"A cuniculorum coitu lymphę spermaticę guttulam, unam et alteram,
+e femella exstillantem, examini subjeci, ubi animalia prędictorum
+similia, sed longe pauciora, comparuere. Globuli item quam plurimi,
+plerique magnitudine animalium, iisdem permisti sunt.
+
+"Horum animalium aliquot etiam delineationes transmisi, figura _a_
+(_plate 3._) exprimit corum aliquot vivum (in semine cuniculi arbitror)
+eaque forma qua videbatur, dum aspicientem me versus tendit. A B C,
+capitulum cum trunco indicant; C D, ejusdem caudam, quam pariter ut
+suam anguilla inter natandum vibrat. Horum millena millia, quantum
+conjectare est, arenulę majoris molem vix superant, (_fig. b, c, d,_)
+sunt ejusdem generis animalia, sed jam mortua.
+
+[Illustration: _PLATE. III._]
+
+"(_Fig. e._) Delineatur vivum animalculum, quemadmodum in semine canino
+sese aliquoties mihi attentius intuenti exhibuit. E F G, caput cum
+trunco indigitant, G H ejusdem caudam, (_fig. f, g, h,_) alia sunt in
+semine canino quę motu & vita privantur, qualium etiam vivorum numerum
+adeo ingentem vidi, ut judicarem portionem lymphę spermaticę arenulę
+mediocri respondentem, eorum ut minimum decena millia continere."
+
+By another letter written to the Royal Society, the 31st of May,
+1678, Leeuwenhoek adds, "Seminis canini tantillum microscopio
+applicatum iterum contemplatus sum, in eoque antea descripta animalia
+numerosissime conspexi. Aqua pluvialis pari quantitate adjecta, iisdem
+confestim mortem accersit. Ejusdem seminis canini portiuncula in vitreo
+tubulo uncię partem duodecimalem crasso servata, sex & triginta horarum
+spatio contenta animalia vita destitua pleraque, reliqua moribunda
+videbantur.
+
+"Quo de vasorum in semine genitali existentia magis constaret,
+delineationem eorum aliqualem mitto, ut in figura ABCDE, (_fig. i._)
+quibus literis circumscriptum spatium arenulam mediocrem vix superat."
+
+I have copied these first remarks of Leeuwenhoek from the Philosophical
+Transactions, because, in matters of this kind, observations made
+without any systematical view are those which are the most faithfully
+described, and even this able naturalist no sooner formed a system on
+spermatic animals, than he began to vary in essential points.
+
+It is evident by the above dales, that Hartsoeker is not the first who
+published, if he was the first who discovered spermatic animals. In
+the Journal de Sēavans, in the year 1774, there is a letter from Mr.
+Huguens, on the subject of a microscope, made by one small ball of
+glass, with which he asserts he perceived animals in the water, wherein
+pepper had been infused for two or three days, as Leeuwenhoek before
+had observed with the like microscopes, but whose balls were not so
+minute. "There are also other seeds, he continues, which engender such
+animals, as coriander seeds, &c. and I have seen the same thing in the
+pith of the birch tree, after having kept it for four or five days; and
+some have observed them in the water where nutmegs and cinnamon have
+been soaked. These animals may be said to engender from some corruption
+or fermentation: but there are others which must have a different
+origin; as those in the seed of animals, which seem in such great
+numbers, as to be almost composed of them; they are all transparent,
+have a quick motion, and their figures are like the tadpole."
+
+Huguens does not mention the author of this discovery; but in the
+Journal of the 29th of August in the same year, there is an extract
+of a letter of M. Hartsoeker, in which he gives the method of forming
+these glass balls by means of the flame of a lamp; and the author of
+the Journal says, "By this method he has discovered that little animals
+are engendered in urine which has been kept for some days, and have
+the figure of little eels: he found some in the seed of a cock, which
+appeared of the same form, but quite different from those found in the
+seed of other animals, which resemble tadpoles, or young frogs, before
+their legs are formed." The author seems to attribute the invention to
+Hartsoeker; but if we reflect on the uncertain manner in which it is
+there represented, and on the particular manner in which Leeuwenhoek
+speaks in his letter, written and published above a year before, we
+must allow him to be the first who made this observation; but between
+them a contest took place as to the discovery which has never been
+decided. Be this as it will, Leeuwenhoek was undoubtedly the first
+inventor of the microscope, whose focuses are balls of glass formed by
+the flame of a lamp. But to return to his observations.
+
+I shall first remark, that what he says of the number and motion of
+these pretended animals is true; but the figure of the body is not
+always the same as he describes it: sometimes the part which precedes
+the tail is round and at others long; often flat, and frequently
+broader than it is long, &c. and with respect to the tail, it is often
+much larger and shorter than he asserts. The motion of vibrations
+which he gives to the tail, and by means of which he pretends that the
+animalcules advance progressively in this fluid, has never appeared
+to me as he has described it. I have seen these moving substances
+make eight or ten oscillations from the right to the left, or vice
+versa, without advancing the breadth of a hair; and I have even seen
+many more which could not advance at all; because this tail, instead
+of being of any assistance to them was, on the contrary, a thread
+attached either in the filaments or mucilaginous parts of the liquor,
+and rather retained the moving substance like as a thread fastened to
+the point retains the ball of a pendulum; and when this tail had any
+motion, it only resembled a thread which forms a curve at the end of
+an oscillation. I have seen these threads, or tails, fastened to the
+filaments which Leeuwenhoek stiles vessels; I have seen them separate
+after many reiterated efforts of the moving bodies; I have seen them
+at first lengthen, then diminish, and at last totally disappear. I
+therefore think these tails should be considered as accidental parts,
+and not as essential to the bodies of these pretended animals. But
+what is most remarkable, Leeuwenhoek precisely says, in his letter
+to Lord Brouncker, that, besides these animals that had tails, there
+were also smaller animals in this liquor, which had no other form than
+that of a globule. "His animalculis (caudatis scilicet) minora adhuc
+animalcula, quibus non nisi globuli figuram attribuere possum, permista
+erant." This is the truth; but after Leeuwenhoek had advanced that
+these animals were the only efficient principle of generation, and that
+they were transformed into human figures, he has only regarded those
+as animals which had tails; and as it was consistent for animals that
+were transformed into human figures, to have a constant form, he never
+afterwards mentions those smaller animalcules without tails; and I
+was greatly surprised, on comparing the copy of this letter with that
+he published twenty years after, in his 3d volume, where, instead of
+the above words, the following are found: "Animalculis hisce permistę
+jacebant alię minutiores particulę, quibus non aliam quam globulorum
+seu sphęricam figuram assignare queo;" which is quite different. A
+particle of matter to which he attributes no motion, is very different
+from an animalcule: and it is astonishing that Leeuwenhoek, in
+copying his own works, has altered this essential article. What he
+adds immediately after likewise merits attention: he says, that by
+the desire of Mr. Oldenburg he had examined this liquor three or four
+years before, when he took these animalcules for globules; that is,
+there are times when these pretended animalcules are no more than
+globules, without any remarkable motion, and others when they move with
+great activity; sometimes they have tails, and at others they have
+none. Speaking in general of spermatic animals he says, "Ex hisce
+meis observationibus cogitare coepi, quamvis antehac de animalculis
+in seminibus masculinis agens, scripserim, me in illis caudas non
+detexisse, fieri tamen posse ut illa animalcula ęque caudis fuerint
+instructa ac nunc comperi de animalculis in gallorum gallinaceorum
+semine masculino;" another proof that he has often seen spermatic
+animals of all kinds without tails.
+
+In the second place we must remark, that the filaments which are
+seen in the seminal liquor before it is liquefied were discovered by
+Leeuwenhoek, and that in his first observations, before he had made
+any hypothesis on spermatic animals, he considered these filaments as
+veins, nerves, and arteries; and firmly believed all the parts and
+vessels of the human body might clearly be seen in the seminal liquor.
+This opinion he persisted in, in defiance of the representations
+which Oldenburg made to him on this subject from the Royal Society:
+but as soon as he thought of transforming these pretended spermatic
+animals into men, he no longer mentioned these vessels; and instead
+of looking on them as nerves, arteries, and veins, of the human body
+already formed in the seed; he did not even attribute to them the
+functions they really possess, the producing of these moving bodies:
+and he says, vol. I. p. 7, "Quid fiet de omnibus illis particulis seu
+corpusculis pręter illa animalcula semini virili hominum inhęrentibus?
+Olim & priusquam hęc scriberem, in ea sententia fui, prędictas strias
+vel vasa ex testiculis principium secum ducere, &c." And in another
+part he says, that if he had formerly written any thing on the subject
+of these vessels found in the seed, we must pay no attention to it.
+
+[Illustration: _PLATE. IV._]
+
+We shall observe in the third place, that if we compare the figures
+_a, b, c, d_, (PLATE III.) copied from the Philosophical Transactions,
+with those which Leeuwenhoek had engraved many years after, (PLATE IV.)
+we shall find considerable difference, especially in the figures of
+the dead animals, of a rabbit and in those of a dog, (which plate we
+have also copied for the satisfaction of our readers) from all which
+we may conclude, that Leeuwenhoek has not always observed objects
+entirely alive: that the moving bodies, which he looked upon as
+animals, appeared to him under different forms; and that he has varied
+in his assertions, with a view of making the species of men and animals
+perfectly consistent; he has not only varied in the basis of these
+experiments, but even in the manner of making them, for he expressly
+says, that he always diluted the liquor with water, in order to
+separate, and to give more motion to these animalcules: nevertheless,
+in his letter to Lord Brouncker, he says, that having mingled an equal
+quantity of rain water with the seminal liquor of a dog, in which he
+had before perceived an infinity of living animalcules, yet the mixing
+of this water killed them. The first experiment of Leeuwenhoek's
+therefore was made, like mine, without any mixture; and it even seems,
+that he was not of opinion to mix any water with the liquor till a
+long time after; because he thought he had discovered, by his first
+essay, that water caused the death of the animalculę; which however is
+not the fact. I think that the mixture of the water only dissolves the
+filaments very suddenly; for I have seen but very few filaments in all
+the experiments I have made after mixing the water with the seminal
+liquor.
+
+As soon as Leeuwenhoek was persuaded that spermatic animals were
+transformed into men, and other animals, he imagined he saw two sorts
+in the seminal liquor of every animal, the one male, and the other
+female; and this difference, according to him, served not only for the
+generation of themselves, but for the production of males and females,
+which was very difficult to conceive by a simple transformation. He
+speaks of the male and female animalcule, in his letter printed in the
+Philosophical Transactions, No. 145, and in many parts of his works,[U]
+but he does not describe the difference of these male and female
+animalcules, and which in fact never existed but in his own imagination.
+
+[U] See vol I. page 163, and vol. III. page 101, of his works.
+
+The famous Boerhaave having asked Leeuwenhoek, if he had not observed
+in spermatic animals different degrees of growth and size? Leeuwenhoek
+answered, that having dissected a rabbit, he observed in the semen an
+infinite number of living animals. "Incredibilem, says he, viventium
+animalculorum, numerum conspexerunt, cum hęc animalcula scypho
+imposita vitreo & illic emortua, in rariores ordines disparassent, &
+per continuos aliquot dies sępius visu examinassem, quędam ad justam
+magnitudinem nondum excrevisse adverti. Ad hęc quasdam observavi
+particulas perexiles & oblongas, alias aliis majores, &, quantum oculis
+apparebat, cauda destitutas; quas quidem particulas non nisi animalcula
+esse credidi, quę ad justam magnitudinem non excrevissent."[V]
+Here then are animalcules of different sizes, some with tails and
+others without, which much better agrees with my experiments, than
+with Leeuwenhoek's own system. We differ only in one particular; he
+says, that those without tails were young animalculę, which were not
+arrived at their full growth; while I, on the contrary, have seen
+these pretended animals quit the filaments with tails or threads, and
+afterwards lose them by degrees.
+
+[V] See vol. IV. pages 280 and 281.
+
+In the same letter to Boerhaave, he says, in the semen of a ram, he
+perceived animalcules following each other in swarms like a flock of
+sheep. "A tribus circiter annis testes arietis, adhuc calentes, ad ędes
+meas deferri curaveram, cum igitur materiam ex epididymibus eductam,
+ope microscopii contemplarer, non sine ingenti voluptate advertebam
+animalcula omnia, quotquot innatabant semini masculino, eundem
+natando cursum tenere, ita nimirum ut quo itinere priora prinatarent
+eodem posteriora subsequerentur, adeo ut hisce animalculis quasis
+sit ingenitum, quod oves factitare vidimus, scilicet ut precedentium
+vestigiis grex universus incedat." This observation, which Leeuwenhoek
+made in 1713, and which he looks upon as singular and novel, proves
+to me, that he had never examined the seminal liquors of animals with
+attention, at least sufficient to give very exact descriptions of them.
+Leeuwenhoek was sixty-one years old in 1713, had made microscopical
+observations for more than forty-five years, had published the
+discovery of spermatic animals for about thirty-six years, and then,
+for the first time, saw in the seminal liquor of a ram, what is seen in
+all seminal liquors, and what I have described in Experiment IX. in the
+seed of a man; Experiment XII. in the seed of a dog; and in Experiment
+XXIX. in that of a bitch. It is not necessary to suppose the spermatic
+animals of the ram are endowed with instinct, to explain the floating
+of these animals, in flocks like sheep, since those of a man, dog, or
+bitch, does the same; and which motion depends solely on particular
+circumstances, whose principle is, that all the fluid matter of the
+seed is on one side, while the thick matter is on the other; for then
+all the bodies in motion will be disengaged from the mucilage, and
+follow the same road into the most fluid part of the liquor.
+
+In another letter, written the same year, to Boerhaave, he relates some
+further observations he made on rams, and says, that he has seen, in
+the _vasa deferentia_, flocks of animals which float all on one side,
+and others which go in a contrary direction; and he adds, "Neque illud
+in unica epididymum parte, sed & in aliis quas pręcideram partibus,
+observavi. Ad hęc, in quadam parastatarum resecta portione complura
+vidi animalcula, quę necdum in justam magnitudinem adoleverant, nam
+et corpuscula illis exiliora & caudę triplo breviores erant quam
+adultis. Ad hęc, caudas non habebant desinentes in mucronem, quales
+tamen adultis esse passim comperio. Pręterea in quandam parastatarum
+portionem incidi, animalculis quantum discernere potui, destitutam,
+tantum illi quędam perexiguę inerant particulę, partim longiores,
+partim breviores, sed altera sui extremitate crassiunculę; istas
+particulas in animalcula transituras esse non dubitabam." It is easy
+to see, by this passage, that Leeuwenhoek had seen, in this seminal
+liquor, what I found in all; that is to say, moving bodies of different
+sizes, figures, and motions; and which agrees much better with the idea
+of organic particles in motion than of that with real animals.
+
+It appears, therefore, that Leeuwenhoek's observations are not contrary
+to mine, although he has drawn very different conclusions from them. I
+am persuaded that if any person would take the trouble of making the
+like experiments they would not have any difficulty in discovering from
+whence these differences proceed, and would find that I have advanced
+nothing which is not conformable to truth; and to enable the reader to
+decide thereon, I shall subjoin a few remarks.
+
+The filaments I have spoken of are not always to be perceived in the
+seminal liquor of a man. To discover them it must be examined the
+moment it is taken from the body, and even then it will sometimes
+happen that there is not one to be seen. Sometimes the seminal liquor
+presents, especially when it is very thick, only large globules, which
+may be even distinguished with a common lens. By inspecting them with
+the microscope they appear like young oranges; they are very opaque,
+and a single one often fills up the whole table of the microscope.
+The first time I saw these globules I thought they were some foreign
+matters fallen into the liquor, but having examined different drops
+I discovered that the whole was composed of these thick globules. I
+selected one of the roundest, and whose size was such that, its centre
+being in the middle of the table of the microscope, I could at the
+same time observe the whole circumference; at first it was absolutely
+opaque; a short time afterwards I perceived a bright luminous ring
+to form on its surface, which remained about half an hour, and then
+approached by degrees towards the centre, which became clear, and of
+different colours, while the remainder of the globule continued opaque.
+This light, which brightened in the centre of the globule, resembled
+those seen in the great air bubbles. The globule then began to get
+a little flat, and acquire a small degree of transparency. Having
+examined it more than three hours I perceived no more alteration,
+nor any appearance of motion, either internally or externally. I
+then imagined, that by mixing this liquor with water, these globules
+might be changed; in fact they did change, but they presented only a
+transparent and homogeneous liquor, wherein was nothing remarkable. I
+suffered the seminal liquor to liquefy of itself, and examined it at
+the end of six, twelve, and twenty-four hours, but saw nothing more
+than a fluid; without the smallest resemblance of life or motion. I
+only relate this observation to shew that there are times when the
+common phenomena are not to be seen in the seminal liquor.
+
+At times all the moving bodies appear to have tails, especially in
+the semen of a man and a dog; the motion is then the least brisk, and
+performed with difficulty. If this liquor is suffered to dry, the tails
+or threads are deprived of motion the first; the anterior extremity
+continues to vibrate for some time, and then all motion entirely
+ceases. These substances may be preserved in this state of dryness for
+a long time: if a small drop of water is mixed therewith, their figure
+changes, they are reduced into many globules, which sometimes appear to
+be in motion, as well by their approximation to each other, as by the
+trepidation and twirling round their centres.
+
+These moving bodies in the seminal liquor of a man, dog, or bitch, so
+nearly resemble each other, as to admit of mistaking one for the other,
+especially if they are examined the moment the liquor is drawn from
+the animal. Those of the rabbit appear smaller and brisker; but these
+differences proceed more from the different states in which the liquor
+is at the time of observation, than from the nature of the liquor
+itself, which ought to be different in different kinds of animals;
+for example, in that of a man I have seen streaks of thick filaments,
+(_fig. 3._) and have perceived the moving bodies separate themselves
+from these filaments from whence they appeared to proceed; but I have
+never seen any thing like it in the semen of a dog; where, instead
+of filaments, or separated streaks, it is commonly a mucilage whose
+texture is more compact, and in which we with difficulty discern any
+filamentary parts; yet this mucilage gives birth to moving bodies like
+those in the semen of men.
+
+The motions of these bodies remain a longer time in the liquor of a
+dog, than in that of a man; from which it is more easy to be certain of
+the alteration of form above mentioned. The moment the liquor issues
+from the body of the animal we perceive the animalcules to have tails;
+in twelve, twenty-four, or thirty-six hours after, we shall find they
+have lost those tails, and are then no more than ovals in motion, often
+much brisker than at first.
+
+The moving bodies are always a little below the surface of the liquor.
+On the surface some large transparent air bubbles, which have no
+motion, generally appear, though sometimes these bubbles stir and
+seem to have a progressive motion, but which is nothing more than the
+agitation of the air. Below the moving substances we often see others
+much smaller, and which only appear like globules, having no tails,
+but the greatest number of which are oftentimes in motion. I have
+also generally remarked, that in the infinite number of globules, in
+all those liquors, those which are very small, are commonly black, or
+darker than the rest; and that those which are extremely minute and
+transparent, have but little or no motion; they appear also to weigh
+specifically heavier, for they are always the deepest in the liquor.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+REFLECTIONS ON THE PRECEDING EXPERIMENTS.
+
+
+By the experiments we have just described, I was assured that females,
+as well as males, have a seminal liquor which contains moving
+substances; that these substances were not real animals, but only
+living organic particles; and that those particles exist, not only in
+the seminal liquors of the two sexes, but even in the flesh of animals,
+and in the germs of vegetables. To discover whether all the parts of
+animals, and all the germs of vegetables, contained living organic
+particles, I caused infusions of the flesh of different animals to
+be made, and of more than twenty kinds of seeds of different plants;
+and after they had infused four or five days, in phials closely stopt
+up, I had the satisfaction to see moving organic parts in them all;
+some appeared sooner, and others later; some preserved their motion
+for months together, while others were soon deprived of it; some
+directly produced large moving globules, that had the appearance of
+real animals, which changed their figures, separated, and became
+successively smaller: others produced only small globules, whose
+motions were very brisk; others produced filaments which lengthened
+and seemed to vegetate, swelled, and afterwards thousands of moving
+globules issued therefrom; but it is useless to detail my observations
+on the infusion of plants, since Mr. Needham has published so excellent
+a treatise on the subject. I read the preceding treatise to that able
+naturalist, and often reasoned with him on the subject, particularly
+on the probability that the germs of vegetables contained similar
+moving bodies to those in the seed of male and female animals. He
+thought those views sufficiently founded to deserve to be pursued; and
+therefore began to make experiments on all parts of vegetables; and I
+must own that the ideas I gave him on this subject have reaped greater
+profit under his hands than they would have done from me. I could quote
+many examples, but shall confine myself to one, because I indicated the
+circumstance I am going to relate.
+
+To determine whether the moving substances seen in the infusions
+of flesh were true animals, or only, as I supposed, moving organic
+particles, Mr. Needham imagined that he had only to examine some
+roasted meat, because if they were animals the fire must destroy
+them; and if not animals, they might still be found there as well as
+when the meat was raw; having therefore taken the jelly of veal, and
+other roasted meat, he infused them for several days in water, closely
+corked up in phials, and upon examination he found in every one of
+them a great quantity of moving substances. He shewed me some of these
+infusions, and among the rest that of the jelly of veal, in which there
+were moving substances, perfectly like those in the seminal liquor of
+a man, a dog, and a bitch, when they have no threads, or tails; and
+although we perceived them to change their figures, their motions so
+perfectly resembled those of an animal which swims, that whoever saw
+them, without being acquainted with what has been already mentioned,
+might certainly have taken them for real animals. I shall only add,
+that Mr. Needham assured himself, by a multiplicity of experiments,
+that all parts of vegetables contain moving organic particles, which
+confirms what I have said, and extends my theory on the composition of
+organized beings, and their reproduction.
+
+All animals, both male and female, and all vegetables whatsoever, it is
+therefore evident are composed of living organic parts. These organic
+parts are in the greatest abundance in the seminal liquor of animals,
+and in seeds of vegetables. It is from the union of these organic
+parts returned from all parts of the animal or vegetable body, that
+reproduction is performed, and is always like the animal or vegetable
+in which it operates; because the union of these organic parts cannot
+be made but by the means of an internal mould, in which the form of
+an animal or vegetable is produced. It is in this also the essence of
+the unity and continuity of the species consists, and will so continue
+while the great Creator permits their existence.
+
+But before I draw general conclusions from the system I am
+establishing, I must endeavour to remove some objections which might be
+made, and mention some other circumstances which will serve to place
+this matter in a better light.
+
+It will be asked, why I deny those moving substances in the seminal
+liquors to be animals, since they have constantly been regarded as
+such by Leeuwenhoek, and every other naturalist, who has examined
+them? I may also be told, that living organic particles are not
+perfectly intelligible, if they are to be looked upon as animalculę;
+and to suppose an animal is composed of a number of small animals,
+is nearly the same as saying that an organized being is composed of
+living organic particles. I shall therefore endeavour to answer these
+objections in a satisfactory manner.
+
+It is certain that almost all naturalists agree in looking on the
+moving substances in seminal liquors as real animals; but it is no less
+certain, from my own observations, and those of Mr. Needham, on the
+seed of the calmar, that these moving substances are more simple and
+less organized beings than animals.
+
+The word _animal_, in the acceptation we commonly receive it,
+represents a general idea formed of particular ideas drawn from
+particular animals. All general ideas include many different ones,
+which approach, or are more or less distant from each other, and
+consequently no general idea can either be exact or precise. The
+general idea which we form of an animal may be taken principally from
+the particular idea of a dog, a horse, and other beasts, which appear
+to us to act and move according to the impulse of their will, and which
+are besides composed of flesh and blood, seek after their food, have
+sexes, and the faculty of reproduction. The general idea, therefore,
+expressed by the word _animal_, must comprehend a number of particular
+ideas, not one of which constitutes the essence of the general idea,
+for there are animals which appear to have no reason, will, progressive
+motion, flesh nor blood, and which only appear to be a congealed
+substance: there are some which cannot seek their food, but only
+receive it from the element they live in: there are some which have no
+sensation, not even that of feeling, at least in any sensible degree:
+there are some have no sexes, or are both in one; there only belongs,
+therefore, to the animal a general idea of what is common also to the
+vegetable, that is, the faculty of reproduction.
+
+The general idea then is formed from the whole taken together, which
+whole being composed of different parts, there is consequently between
+these parts degrees and links. An insect, in this sense, is something
+less of an animal than a dog; an oyster still less than an insect; a
+sea-nettle, or a fresh-water polypus, still less than an oyster; and
+as nature acts by insensible links, we may find beings which are still
+less animated than a sea-nettle, or a polypus. Our general ideas are
+only artificial methods to collect a quantity of objects in the same
+point of view; and they have, like the artificial methods we shall
+speak of, the defect of never being able to comprehend the whole.
+They are likewise opposite to the walk of nature, which is uniform,
+insensible, and always particular, insomuch that by our endeavouring to
+comprehend too great a number of particular ideas in one single word,
+we have no longer a clear idea of what that word conveys; because, the
+word being received, we imagine that it is a line drawn between the
+productions of nature; that all above this line is _animal_, and all
+below it _vegetable_; another word, as general as the first, and which
+is used as a line of separation between organized bodies and inanimate
+matter. But as we have already said, these lines of separation do
+not exist in nature; there are beings which are neither animals,
+vegetables, nor minerals, and which we in vain might attempt to arrange
+with either. For example, when Mr. Trembly first observed the polypus,
+he employed a considerable time before he could determine whether it
+was an animal or a plant; and possibly from this reason that it is
+perhaps neither one nor the other, and all that can be said is, that it
+approaches nearest to an animal; and as we suppose every living thing
+must be either an animal or a plant, we do not credit the existence of
+an organized being, that cannot be referred to one of those general
+names; whereas there must, and in fact are, a great number of organized
+beings which are neither the one nor the other. The moving substances
+perceived in seminal liquors, in infusions of the flesh of animals, in
+seed, and other parts of plants, are all of this kind. We cannot call
+these animals, nor can we say they are vegetables, and certainly we can
+still less assert they are minerals.
+
+We can therefore affirm, without fear of advancing too much, that the
+grand division of nature's productions into _Animals_, _Vegetables_,
+and _Minerals_, do not contain every material being; since there are
+some that exist which cannot be classed in this division. We have
+already observed, that nature passes by insensible links from the
+animal to the vegetable, but from the vegetable to the mineral the
+passage is quick, and the distance considerable; from whence the law of
+nature's passing by imperceptible degrees appears untrue. This made me
+suppose that by examining nature closely we shall discover intermediate
+organized beings, which without having the power of reproduction, like
+animals and vegetables, would nevertheless have a kind of life and
+motion; other beings which, without being either vegetables or animals,
+might possibly enter into the composition of both, and likewise other
+beings which would be only the assemblage of the organic molecules I
+have spoken of in the preceding chapters.
+
+In the first class of these kind of beings eggs must be placed; those
+of hens, and other birds, are fastened to a common pedicle, and draw
+their nourishment and growth from the body of the animal, but when
+fastened to the ovary, they are not then real eggs, but only yellow
+globules which separate from the ovary as soon as they have attained a
+certain growth. Their internal organization is such that they derive
+nourishment from the lymph, the matrix of the hen, and by which they
+form the white membranes, and at last the shell. The egg therefore has
+a kind of life and organization, a growth, expansion, and a form which
+it assumes by its own powers. It does not live like an animal, nor
+vegetate like a plant, nor is possessed of the power of reproduction;
+nevertheless it grows, acts externally, and is organized. Must we not
+then look upon it as a being of a separate class, and which ought not
+to be ranked either with animal or mineral? for if it is pretended that
+the egg is only an animal production, destined for the nutriment of
+the chicken, and should be looked upon as a part of the hen; I answer,
+that the eggs, whether impregnated or not, will be always organized
+after the same mode: that impregnation only changes an almost invisible
+part; and that it attains its perfection and growth, as well externally
+as internally, whether it contains the chicken or not, and that
+consequently it ought to be considered as a separate being.
+
+What I have said will appear more clear, if we consider the formation
+and growth of the eggs of fish; when the female deposits them in the
+water they are only the outlines of eggs, which being separated from
+the body of the animal, attract and appropriate to themselves the
+particles which agree the best for their nourishment, and grow thus
+by intussusception. In the same manner as the hen's egg acquires the
+white and membranes in the matrix, wherein it floats, so the eggs of
+fish acquire their membranes and white in the water; and whether the
+male impregnates them, by emitting on these the liquor of its roe, or
+whether they remain unimpregnated, they do not the less attain their
+entire perfection. It appears to me, therefore, that the eggs should
+be considered as organized bodies, which being neither animals nor
+vegetables, are a genus apart.
+
+A second class of beings, of the same kind, are the organized bodies
+found in the semen of all animals, and which, like those in the milt of
+a calmar, are rather natural machines than animals. These are properly
+the first assemblages which result from the organic molecules we have
+so much spoken of, and they are, perhaps, the parts which constitute
+the organized bodies of animals. They are found in the semen of all
+animals, because the semen is only the residue of the organic molecules
+that the animal takes in with its aliment, and which, as we have
+already observed, are those parts most analogous to the animal itself,
+and most organic; it is those particles which compose the matter of the
+semen, and consequently we must not be astonished to find organized
+bodies therein.
+
+To be perfectly convinced that these organized bodies are not real
+animals, we need only reflect on the preceding experiments. The moving
+bodies in the seminal liquor have been taken for animals, because they
+have a progressive motion, and are thought to have a tail; but if we
+consider, on one hand, the nature of this progressive motion, which
+finishes in a very short time without ever renewing its motion; and
+on the other, the nature of these tails, which are only threads which
+the moving bodies draw after them, we shall begin to hesitate; for an
+animal goes sometimes slow, sometimes fast, and sometimes remains in
+a state of rest; these moving bodies, on the contrary, always continue
+the same motion, and I have never seen them stop and renew their
+movement again. I ask, whether this kind of continued motion, without
+any rest, is common to animals, and if that ought not to make us doubt
+these moving bodies being real animals? An animal of any kind must also
+have a constant form and distinct limbs; but these moving bodies vary,
+and change their forms every moment, have no distinct limbs, and their
+tails appear as a part which does not belong to the individual. Can
+we then imagine these bodies to be real animals? In seminal liquors
+filaments are seen which lengthen and appear to vegetate; after which
+they swell and produce moving bodies. These filaments may be kinds
+of vegetables, but the moving bodies which spring from them cannot
+be animals, for a vegetable has never yet been seen to produce an
+animal. These moving bodies are found in all vegetable and animal
+substances; they are not produced by the modes of generation, they
+have no uniformity of species, and therefore can neither be animals
+nor vegetables. They are to be met with in the flesh of animals, and
+in the substance of vegetables, but are most numerous in their seeds;
+is it not therefore natural to regard them as living organic particles
+which compose the animal or vegetable; as particles which having motion
+and a kind of life, ought, by their union, to produce moving and living
+beings, and so form animals and vegetables?
+
+But in order to leave this matter as little in doubt as possible,
+let us examine other substances. Can it be said, the active machines
+which Mr. Needham perceived in the milt of the calmar were animals?
+Can it be thought that eggs, which are active machines of another
+kind, are also animals? If we turn our eyes to the representation of
+almost all the moving bodies Leeuwenhoek saw in different matters,
+shall we not be convinced, even at the first inspection, that those
+bodies are not animals, since not one of them has any limbs, but
+are all either globular or oval? If we afterwards examine what this
+celebrated naturalist says, when he describes the motion of these
+pretended animals, we can no longer doubt of his being in an error
+when he considered them as such; and we shall be still more and more
+confirmed that they are only moving organic particles by the following
+examples: Leeuwenhoek gives[W] the figure of the moving bodies which he
+observed in the liquor of a male frog. This figure only represents a
+slender body, long, and pointed at one of its extremities; and of this
+he says, "Uno tempore caput (thus he calls the thickest extremity of
+this moving body) crassius mihi apparebat alio; plerumque agnoscebam
+animalculum haud ulterius quam a capite ad medium corpus, ob caudę
+tenuitatem, & cum idem animalculum paulo vehementius moveretur (quod
+tamen tarde fiebat) quasi volumine quodam circa caput ferebatur. Corpus
+fere carebat motu; cauda tamen in tres quatuorve flexus volvebatur."
+This then is the change of form which I mentioned to have seen, the
+mucilage from which the moving bodies use all their efforts to be
+disengaged, the slowness of their motion before they are disengaged;
+and the animal, according to Leeuwenhoek, one part of which is
+in motion, and the other dead: for he afterwards says, "Movebant
+posteriorem solum partem, quę ultima, morti vicinia esse judicabam."
+All this does not agree with an animal, but with what I have spoken
+of; excepting that I never saw the tail move but by the agitation
+of the body. He afterwards says, speaking of the seminal liquor of a
+cod, "Non est putandum omnia animalcula in semine aselli contenta uno
+eodemque tempore vivere, sed illa potius tantum vivere quę exitui seu
+partui viciniora sunt, quę & copiosiori humido innatant prę reliquis
+vita carentibus, adhuc in crassa materia, quam humor eorum efficit,
+jacentibus."
+
+[W] Vol. I. p. 51.
+
+If these are animals, why have they not all life? why are they in the
+most fluid part of the liquor alive, while those in the thickest are
+not so? Leeawenhoek did not perceive that the thick matter, the origin
+of which he attributes to the humour of the animalculę, is nothing but
+a mucilaginous matter which produces them. By diluting this mucilage
+with water, he would have given life to the whole of them. Even this
+mucilage is oftentimes only a mass of those bodies which are set
+in motion on being separated; and consequently this thick matter,
+instead of being a humour, produced by the animalcules, is only the
+substance of the animals themselves, or rather, as we have already
+observed, the matter from which they originate. Speaking of the seed
+of a cock, Leeuwenhoek says, in his letter to Grew, "Contemplando
+materiam (seminalem) animadverti ibidem tantam abundantiam viventium
+animalium, ut ea stuperem; forma seu externa figura sua nostrates
+anguillas fluviatiles referebant, vehementissima agitatione movebantur;
+quibus tamen substrati videbantur multi & admodum exiles globuli, item
+multę plan-ovales figurę, quibus etiam vita posset attribui, & quidem
+propter earundem commotiones; sed existimabam omnes hasce commotiones
+& agitationes pro venire ab animalcules, sicque etiam res se habebat;
+attamen ego non opinione solum, sed etiam ad veritatem mihi persuadeo
+has particulas planam & ovalem figuram habentes, esse quędam animalcula
+inter se ordine suo disposita & mixta vitaque adhuc carentia." Here
+we see in the same seminal liquor animalcules of different forms;
+and I am convinced, by my own experiments, that if Leeuwenhoek had
+closely observed these oval substances, he would have discovered that
+they moved by their own powers, and that consequently they were as
+much alive as the rest. This change perfectly coincides with what
+I have said, that they are organic particles which take different
+forms, and not constant species of animals; for in the present case,
+if the bodies, which have the figure of an eel, are true spermatic
+animalcules, each, destined to become a cock, which supposes a very
+perfect organization, and a very constant form, what will those be
+which have an oval figure, and what end do they answer? He says indeed
+afterwards, that these ovals maybe conceived to be the same animals,
+by supposing their bodies to be twisted in a spiral form; but then
+how shall we conceive that an animal, whose body is constrained, can
+move without being extended? I maintain, therefore, that these oval
+substances are no other than the organic particles separated from their
+threads, and that the eels were the separated parts which dragged those
+threads after them, as I have many times perceived in other seminal
+liquors.
+
+Leeuwenhoek, who imagined all these moving bodies were animals, and
+established a system thereon; who also pretended, that spermatic
+animals must become men and animals, now suspected they were only
+natural machines, or organic particles in motion; for he does not doubt
+these spermatic animals contained the great animal in miniature, he
+says, "Progeneratio animalis ex animalculo in seminibus masculinis
+omni exceptione major est; nam etiamsi in animalculo ex semine masculo
+unde ortum est, figuram animalis conspicere nequeamus, attamen satis
+superque certi esse possumus figuram animalis ex qua animal ortum est,
+in animalculo quod in semine masculo reperitur, conclusam jacere sive
+esse; & quanquam mihi sępius conspectis animalculis in semine masculo
+animalis, imaginatus fuerim me posse dicere, en ibi caput, en ibi
+humeros, en ibi femora; attamen eum ne minima quidem certitudine de iis
+judicium ferre potuerim, hujusque certi quid statuere supersedeo, donec
+tale animal, cujus semina mascula tam magna erunt, ut in iis figuram
+creaturę ex qua provenit, agnoscere queam, invenire secunda nobis
+concedat fortuna." This fortunate chance, which Leeuwenhoek desires,
+presented itself to Mr. Needham. Every part of the spermatic animals of
+the calmar are easy to be seen without a microscope; but they are not
+young calmars, as Leeuwenhoek thinks, nor even animated, although they
+are in motion, but only machines which must be regarded as the first
+produce of the union of organic particles.
+
+Although Leeuwenhoek had not such an opportunity of undeceiving
+himself, he nevertheless had another phenomena which ought to have had
+that effect; for example, he had remarked that the spermatic animals of
+a dog often change their figures, especially when the liquor was on the
+point of evaporating; that these pretended animals had a hole in the
+head when they were dead, and that this hole did not appear when they
+were alive; he had seen that the part which he looked upon as the head
+was full and plump when it was alive, and flaccid and flat when dead.
+All this ought to have led him to doubt whether these moving bodies
+were real animals; and consider it as agreeing better with a machine,
+which empties itself like that of the calmar, than with a moving animal.
+
+I have said that these moving bodies, these organic particles, do
+not move like animals, nor have an interval of rest. Leeuwenhoek has
+observed the same: "Quotiescunque, says he, animalcula in semine
+masculo animalium fucrim contemplatus, attamen illa se unquam ad
+quietem contulisse, me nunquam vidisse, mihi dicendum est, si modo
+sat fluidę superesset materię in qua sese commode movere poterant;
+et eadem in continuo manent motu, & tempore quo ipsis moriendum
+appropinquante, motus magis magisque deficit, usquedum nullus prorsus
+motus in illis agnoscendus sit." It appears difficult to conceive that
+animals can exist, from the moment of their birth till that of their
+death, in a continual rapid motion without the least interval of rest;
+and I cannot possibly imagine how these animals in the semen of a dog,
+which Leeuwenhoek saw the seventh day in as rapid motion as they were
+when they were first taken from the body of the animal, preserved
+a motion during that time so exceedingly swift, that no animal has
+sufficient power to move in for an hour; especially if we consider the
+resistance which proceeds from the density and the tenacity of the
+liquor. This kind of continued motion, on the contrary, agrees with
+the organic particles, which, like artificial machines, produce their
+effects in a continual operation, and which stop when that effect is
+over.
+
+Among the great number of Leeuwenhoek's experiments, he, without
+doubt, often perceived spermatic animals without tails; and he
+endeavours to explain this phenomena by a supposition; for example,
+he says, speaking of the semen of a cod, "Ubi vero ad lactum accederem
+observationem, in iis partibus quas animalcula esse censebam neque
+vitam neque caudam dignoscere potui; cujus rei rationem esse
+existimabam, quod quamdiu animalcula natando loca sua perfecte mutare
+non possunt tam diu etiam cauda concinne circa corpus maneat ordinata,
+quodque ideo singula animalcula rotundum repręsentent corpusculorum."
+
+It would have been better to have said, as it in fact is, that the
+spermatic animals of these fish have tails at certain times and none
+at others, than to suppose their tails twisted so exactly round their
+bodies as to give them the shape of a globule. But this must not lead
+us to think that Leeuwenhoek only attended to the moving bodies which
+he saw with tails, but rather that he did not describe the others,
+because, although they were in motion, he did not regard them as
+animals; and this is the cause that all the spermatic animals he has
+depicted resemble each other, and drawn with tails, since he only
+took them for real animals in that state; and that when he saw them
+under other forms, he thought them imperfect, or rather that they
+were dead. On the whole it appears, by my experiments, that far from
+displaying their tails the more as they are in a more perfect condition
+of swimming, as Leeuwenhoek says, they, on the contrary, lose their
+tails in a gradual manner, till at last these tails, which are no more
+than foreign bodies of the animalcules, and which they drag after them,
+entirely disappear.
+
+In another part Leeuwenhoek, speaking of the spermatic animals of man,
+says, "Aliquando etiam animadverti inter animalcula particulas quasdam
+minores & subrotundas; cum vero se ea aliquoties eo modo oculis meis
+exhibuerint, ut mihi imaginarer eas exiguis instructas esse caudis,
+cogitare coepi annon hę forte particulę forent animalcula recens
+nata; certum enim mihi est ea etiam animalcula per generationem
+provenire, vel ex mole minuscula ad adultam procedere quantitatem: &
+quis sit annoa ea animalcula, ubi moriuntur, aliorum animalculorum
+nutritioni atque augmini inserviant?" By this passage it appears that
+Leeuwenhoek had seen animals without tails in the seminal liquor of
+a man, and that he is obliged to suppose them to be just born, and
+not adult; but I have observed quite the contrary; for the moving
+bodies are never larger than when they separate from the filaments,
+and begin to move. When they are entirely disengaged from the mucilage
+they become smaller, and continue decreasing as long as they remain
+in motion. With respect to the generation of these animals, which
+Leeuwenhoek speaks of as certain, I am persuaded no sign of generation
+has ever been discovered; all he says is advanced on mere suppositions,
+which it is easy to prove by his own observations; for example, he
+says that the milt of certain fish, as the cod, fills by degrees with
+seminal liquor, which after the fish has emitted, the milt dries up,
+leaving only a membrane destitute of any liquor. "Eo tempore, says
+he, quo ascellus major lactes suos emisit, rugę illę, seu tortiles
+lactium partes, usque adeo contrahuntur, ut nihil pręter pelliculas
+seu membranę esse videantur." How then does he understand that this
+dry membrane, in which there is no longer either seminal liquor or
+animalcules, can reproduce animals of the same kind the succeeding
+year? if there was a regular generation in these animals, there could
+not be this interruption, which in most fishes lasts for a whole year.
+To draw himself out of this difficulty, he says, "Necessario statuendum
+erit, ut ascellus major semen suum emiserit, in lactibus etiamnum
+multum materię seminalis gignendis animalculis aptę remansisse, ex qua
+materia plura oportet provenire animalcula seminalia quam anno proxime
+elapso emissa fuerant." This supposition, that there remains something
+in the seminal liquor in the milts to produce spermatic animals for
+the succeeding year, is absolutely contrary to observations, for the
+milt is in this interval only a thin and absolutely dry membrane. But
+what reply can be made to a still further opposition to this point,
+there being fish like the calmar, the seminal liquor of which is not
+only renewed every year, but even the reservoir which contains it? Can
+it be said, that there remains a seminal matter in the milt for the
+production of the animals for the succeeding year, when even the milt
+does not remain? it is therefore very certain that these pretended
+spermatic animals are not multiplied, like other animals, by the mode
+of generation; which alone is sufficient to make us presume, that those
+particles which move in the seminal liquors are not real animals. Thus
+Leeuwenhoek, who in the passage above quoted says, it is certain that
+spermatic animals multiply and propagate by generation, nevertheless
+owns, in another part, that the manner in which these animals are
+produced is very obscure, and that he leaves to others the task of
+clearing up this matter. "Persuadebam mihi," says he, speaking of the
+spermatic animals of the dormouse, "hęcce animalcula ovibus prognasci,
+quia diversa in orbem jacentia & in semet convoluta videbam; sed unde,
+quęso, primam illorum originem derivabimus? in animo nostro concipiemus
+horum animalculorum semen jam procreatum esse in ipsa generatione,
+hocque semen tam diu in testiculis hominum hęrere, usquedum ad annum
+ętatis decimum-quartum vel decimum-quintum aut sextum pervenerint,
+eademque animalcula tum demum vita donari vel in justam staturam
+excrevisse, illoque temporis articulo generandi maturitatem adesse!
+sed hęc lampada aliis trado." I do not think it necessary to make any
+remarks on what Leeuwenhoek says on this subject: he saw spermatic
+animals without tails, and round, in the seed of a dormouse; "in semet
+convoluta," says he, because he supposes that they should have tails,
+and instead of being certain, as he before had been, that the animals
+propagate by generation, he here seems convinced of the contrary. But
+when he had observed the generation of pucerons, and was assured[X]
+that they engendered without copulation, he caught the idea to explain
+the generation of spermatic animals. "Quemadmodum, says he, animalcula
+hęc quę pediculorum antea nomine designavimus (the pucerons) dum adhuc
+in utero materno latent, jam prędita sunt materia seminali ex qua
+ejusdem generis proditura sunt animalcula, pari ratione cogitare licet
+animalculę in seminibus masculinis ex animalium testiculis non migrate
+seu ejici quin post se relinquant minuta animalcula aut saltem materiam
+seminalem ex qua iterum alia ejusdem generis animalcula proventura
+sunt idque absque coitu; eadem ratione qua supradicta animalcula
+generari observavimus." This supposition gives no more satisfaction
+than the preceding: for we do not understand by this comparison of
+the generation of these animalcules with that of a puceron, why they
+are not found in the seminal liquor of a man, before he has attained
+the age of fourteen or fifteen years; nor do we know from whence
+they proceed, nor how they are renewed every year in fish, &c. and
+it appears, that whatever efforts Leeuwenhoek made to establish the
+generation of spermatic animals on some probability, it still remained
+an entire obscurity, and would, perhaps, perpetually have remained so,
+if the preceding experiments had not evinced that they are not animals,
+but moving organic particles contained in the nutriment the animal
+receives, and which are found in great numbers in the seminal liquor,
+which is the most pure, and in the most organic extracts drawn from
+this nutriment.
+
+[X] See vol. II. page 499, and vol. III. page 271.
+
+Leeuwenhoek acknowledges that he had not always found animalcules
+in the seminal liquor of males; in that of the cock, for example,
+which he had often examined, he saw spermatic animals in the form
+of eels but once, and some years after he could not discover any
+under that form, but observed some with large heads and tails, which
+his designer could not perceive. He says also, that one season he
+could not find living animals in the seminal liquor of the cod. All
+these disappointments proceeded from his desire of finding tails to
+these animals; and although he perceived little bodies in motion, he
+did not consider them as animals, because they were without tails,
+notwithstanding it is under that form they are generally seen, either
+in seminal liquors, or infusions of animal or vegetable substances. He
+says, in the same place, that he was never able to make his designer
+perceive the spermatic animalcules of a cod, which he had so often
+seen himself.--"Non solum, says he, ob eximiam eorum exilitatem, sed
+etiam quod eorum corpora adeo essent fragilia, ut corpuscula passim
+dirumperentur; unde factum fuit ut nonnisi rare, nec sine attentissima
+observatione, animadverterem particulas planas atque ovorum in morem
+longas, in quibus ex parte caudas dignoscere licebat; particulas
+has oviformes existimavi animalcula esse dirupta, quod particulę hę
+diruptę quadruplo fere viderentur majores corporibus animalculorum
+vivorum." When an animal of any kind ceases to live, it does not then
+suddenly alter its form, and from being long, like a thread, becomes
+round like a ball; neither does it become four times larger after
+its death than it was before. Nothing that Leeuwenhoek says here
+agrees with the nature of animals; but, on the contrary, the whole
+corresponds with a kind of machine, which, like those of a calmar,
+empty themselves after having performed their functions. But let us
+pursue this observation; he says, he has seen the spermatic animals
+of the cod in different forms, "multa apparebant animalcula sphęram
+pellucidam representantia;" he has also seen them of different sizes,
+"hęc animalcula minori videbantur mole, quam ubi eadem antehac in tubo
+vitreo rotundo examinaveram."
+
+There needs nothing more to shew that there are no constant and
+uniform species of these animalcules; and that consequently they are
+not animals, but only organic particles in motion, which, by their
+different combinations, take different forms and sizes. These organic
+moving particles are found in great quantities in the extract and
+residue of our nutriment. The matter which adheres to the teeth, and
+which in healthy people has the same smell as the seminal liquor, is
+only a residue of the food, and a great number of these pretended
+animals are also found there, some of which have tails, and resemble
+those in the seminal liquor. Mr. Baker had four different kinds of
+them engraved, and which were all of a cylindrical or oval make, or
+globules with and without tails. I am persuaded, after having strictly
+examined them, that not any of them are real animals, but are like
+those in the seed, only living organical parts of the nutriment which
+present themselves under different forms, Leeuwenhoek, who did not
+know how to account for these pretended animals in the matter which
+adhered to the teeth, supposed them to proceed from certain food they
+were previously in, as cheese, &c. but we find them among the teeth of
+those who do not eat cheese, as well as in those that do; besides, they
+have not the least resemblance to mites, nor the other animalcules seen
+in rotten cheese. In another place he says, these animals of the teeth
+may proceed from the cistern water that is drank, because he observed
+animals like them in dew and rain water, especially in that which
+stagnates upon lead and tiles; but with which we can prove there is not
+the least resemblance.
+
+Most seminal liquors dilute of themselves, and liquefy when exposed to
+the air or a certain degree of cold; but they thicken when a moderate
+degree of heat is communicated to them. I have exposed some of these
+liquors to a very intense cold, as water on the point of freezing, but
+it did no injury to these supposed animals; they continued to move with
+the same swiftness, and as long as those which had not been so exposed,
+but those which had suffered but a little warmth soon ceased to move,
+because the liquor thickened. If the moving bodies were animals,
+they were of a complexion and temperament quite different from all
+others, to whom a gentle and moderate heat strengthens their powers and
+motions, which the cold stops and destroys.
+
+Notwithstanding it may be thought I have dwelt too long upon this
+subject, I cannot conclude it without making one remark, from which
+some useful conclusions may be drawn. These pretended spermatic
+animals, which are only living organic particles of the nutriment, not
+only exist in the seminal liquors of the two sexes, and in the residue
+of the nutriment which adheres to the teeth, but also in the chyle
+and excrements. Leeuwenhoek having met with them in the excrements
+of frogs, and other animals, which he dissected, was at first very
+much surprised, and notable to conceive from whence these animals
+proceeded, so entirely like those he had observed in the seminal
+liquors, accuses himself of having, in dissecting the animal, opened
+the seminal vessels, and that the seed had by that means been mixed
+with the excrements. But having afterwards found them in the excrements
+of other animals, and even in his own, he no longer knew to what to
+attribute them. Leeuwenhoek, it is worthy remark, never met with
+them in his own excrements, but when they were liquid. Every time he
+was disordered and the stomach did not perform its functions, and was
+relaxed, he discovered these animalcules; but when the concoction of
+the food was well performed, and the excrement was hard, there was not
+a single one, although it was diluted with water. This seems perfectly
+to agree with all we have before advanced: for when the stomach and
+intestines perform their functions, the excrements are only the grosser
+parts of the nutriment; and all that is really nutritive and organic
+passes into the vessels which serve to nourish the animal; whereas if
+the stomach and intestines are not in a condition to comminute the
+food, then it passes with the inanimate parts, and we find the living
+organic molecules in the excrements; from whence it may be concluded,
+that those which are often lax must have less seminal liquor, and be
+less proper for generation, than those of a different habit of body.
+
+In all I have said, I constantly supposed the female furnished a
+seminal liquor, which was as necessary to generation as that of the
+male. I have endeavoured to establish in Chap. I. that every organized
+body must contain living organic particles, and I have endeavoured to
+prove Chap. II. and III. that nutrition and reproduction operates by
+the same cause; that nutrition is made by the intimate penetration
+of these organic particles through each part of the body, and that
+reproduction operates by the superfluity of these same organic
+particles collected together from all parts of the body and deposited
+in proper reservoirs. I have explained in Chap. IV. how this theory
+must be understood in the generation of man and animals which have
+sexes. Females then being organized bodies like males, they must also
+have some reservoirs for the superfluity of organic particles returned
+from every part of their bodies. This superfluity cannot come there
+through any other form than that of a liquor, since it is an extract of
+all parts of the body; and this liquor is that to which I have given
+the name of the female semen.
+
+This liquor is not, as Aristotle pretends, an infecund matter of
+itself, which enters neither as matter nor form into the business
+of generation, but as essentially prolific as that of the male,
+containing characteristic parts of the feminine sex, which the female
+alone can produce, the same as the male contains particles necessary
+to form the masculine organs; and each of them contains every other
+organic particle that can be looked on as common to both sexes; which
+causes that, by their mixture, the daughter may resemble her father,
+and the son his mother. This semen Hippocrates says, is composed of
+two liquors; the one strong, for the production of males; and the
+other weak, for the production of females. But this supposition is
+too extended; I do not see how it is to be conceived that a liquor,
+which is the extract of every part of the female body, should contain
+particles for the formation of the male organs.
+
+This liquor must enter by some way into the matrix of animals which
+bear and nourish their foetus within the body, and in others, as
+oviparous animals, it must be absorbed by the eggs, which may be looked
+upon as portable matrixes. Each of these matrixes contains a small
+drop of this prolific liquor of the female, in the part that is called
+the _cicatrice_. When there has been no communication with the male,
+this prolific drop collects under the form of a small mole, or mass,
+as Malpighius observes; but when impregnated by that of the male; it
+produces a foetus which receives its nutriment from the juices of the
+egg.
+
+Eggs, instead of being parts generally found in every female, are
+therefore only instruments made use of by Nature to serve as the matrix
+in females which are deprived of that organ. Instead also of being
+active and essential to the first fecundation, they only serve as
+passive and accidental parts for the nutrition of the foetus already
+formed by the mixture of the liquor of the two sexes in a particular
+part of this matrix. Instead also of being existing bodies, inclosed,
+_ad infinitum_, one within the other, eggs, on the contrary, are bodies
+formed from the superfluity of a more gross and less organic part of
+the food, than that which produces the seminal and prolific liquor; and
+are in oviparous females something equivalent, not only to the matrix,
+but even to the menstrua in the viviparous.
+
+We should be perfectly convinced, that eggs are only destined by Nature
+to serve as a matrix in animals who have not that viscera, by those
+females producing eggs independant of the male. In the same manner as
+the matrix exists in viviparous animals, as a part appertaining to the
+female sex, hens, which have no matrix, have eggs in their room, which
+are successively produced of themselves, and necessarily exist in the
+female independently of any communication with the male. To pretend
+that the foetus is pre-existing in the eggs, and that these eggs are
+contained, _ad infinitum_, within each other, is nearly the same as
+to pretend that the foetus, is pre-existing in the matrix, and that
+the matrix of the first female inclosed all that ever were or will be
+produced.
+
+Anatomists have taken the word _egg_ in several acceptations and
+meanings. When Harvey took for his motto, _Omnia ex ovo_, he understood
+by the word egg, as applied to viviparous animals, the membrane which
+includes the foetus and all its appendages: he thought, he perceived
+this egg, or membrane, form immediately after the copulation of the
+male and the female. But this egg does not proceed from the ovium
+of the female; and he has even maintained, that he did not remark
+the least alteration in this testicle, &c. We perceive there is here
+nothing like what is commonly understood by the word egg unless the
+figure of the bag may be supposed to have some resemblance thereto.
+Harvey, who dissected so many viviparous females, did not, he says,
+ever perceive any alteration in the ovaria; he looked on them even
+as small glands, perfectly useless to general ion,[Y] although they
+undergo very remarkable changes and alterations in them, since we
+may perceive in cows the glandular bodies grow from the size of a
+millet seed to that of a cherry. This great anatomist was led into
+this error by the smallness of the glandular bodies in the species
+of deer, to which he principally paid his attention. C. Peyerus, who
+also made many experiments on them, says, "Exigui quidem sunt damarum
+testiculi, sed post coitum foecundum, in alterutro eorum, papilla,
+sive tuberculum fibrosum, semper succrescit; scrofis autem pręgnantibus
+tanta accidit testiculorum mutatio, ut mediocrem quoque attentionem
+fugere nequeat."[Z] This author imagines, with some reason, that the
+minuteness of the testicles of does, is the cause of Harvey's not
+having remarked the alterations; but he is wrong in advancing that the
+alterations he had remarked, and which had escaped Harvey's notice, did
+not happen till after impregnation.
+
+[Y] See Harvey Exercit. 64 and 65.
+
+[Z] Vide Conradi Peyeri Merycologia.
+
+It appears that Harvey was deceived in many other essential points;
+he asserts, that the seed of the male does not enter into the matrix
+of the female, and even that it cannot; yet Verheyen found a great
+quantity of the male seed in the matrix of a cow, which he dissected
+six hours after copulation.[AA] The celebrated Ruysch asserts, that
+having dissected a woman who had been caught in the act of adultery,
+and was assassinated, he found, not only in the cavity of the matrix,
+but also in the trunks, a quantity of the seminal liquor of the
+male,[AB] Valisnieri affirms, that Fallopius and other anatomists
+had also discovered male seed in the matrix of many women. After the
+positive testimony of these great anatomists, there can remain no doubt
+but Harvey was deceived in this important point; especially when to
+these are added that of Leeuwenhoek, who found the male seed in the
+matrix of a great number of females of different species.
+
+[AA] See Verheyen Sup. Anat. Tra. v. cap. iii.
+
+[AB] See Ruysch, Thes. Anat. p. 90, tab. VI, fig. I.
+
+Harvey makes another error in speaking of an abortion in the second
+month, where the mass was as large as a pigeon's egg, but without any
+foetus regularly formed; whereas, it is maintained by Ruysch, and
+many other anatomists, that the foetus is perceptible, even to the
+naked eye, in the first month. The History of the Academy mentions
+a foetus, that was completely formed in twenty-one days after
+impregnation. If to these authorities we add that of Malpighius,
+who perceived the chicken in the cicatrice, immediately after the
+egg was laid by the hen, we cannot doubt, but that the foetus is
+formed immediately after copulation; consequently, we must not pay any
+credit to what Harvey says on the parts increasing one after the other
+by juxta-position, since they are all existent from the first, and
+gradually expand until the whole is complete.
+
+De Graaf took the acceptation of the word egg in a quite different
+light to Harvey: he insists that the testicles of women were true
+ovaries, and contain eggs like those of oviparous, animals, only that
+they are much smaller, do not quit the body, and are never detached
+till after impregnation, when they descend from the ovary into the
+horns of the matrix. The experiments of De Graaf have contributed most
+to establish the existence of these pretended eggs, which yet is not at
+all founded; for this famous anatomist is deceived, first, by mistaking
+the vesicles of the ovarium for eggs, whereas they are inseparable from
+it, form parts of its substance, and are filled with a kind of lymph.
+Secondly, he is also deceived when he considers the glandular bodies
+to be the covering of those eggs, or vesicles; for it is certain,
+by Malpighius's, Valisnieri's, and my own observations, that the
+glandular bodies neither surround nor contain one of those vesicles.
+Thirdly, he is deceived still more when he supposes the glandular body
+is never formed till after fecundation; as they are invariably found in
+every female who has attained the age of puberty. Fourthly, he is no
+less deceived when he believes that the globules which he saw in the
+matrix, and which contained the foetuses, ware the same vesicles,
+or eggs, which had fallen from the ovariam, and which, he remarks,
+were become ten times smaller than they were in the ovary. This remark
+alone, one would imagine, Should have made him perceive his error.
+Fifthly, he is wrong in saying that the glandular bodies are only the
+coverings of the fecundated eggs, and that the number of coverings,
+or empty follicles, always answer to the number of foetuses. This
+assertion is entirely contrary to truth: for on the testicles of all
+females we find a greater number of glandular bodies, or cicatrices,
+than there are productions of foetuses, and they are also found in
+those which have never brought forth. To this we may add, that neither
+he, Verheyen, nor any other person, have ever seen these eggs, much
+less these pretended coverings, on which they have, notwithstanding,
+established their system.
+
+Malpighius, who perceived the growth of the glandular bodies in the
+female testicles, was deceived when he thought he had seen the egg in
+their cavities, since they contain only liquor; nor indeed has anything
+like an egg ever been discovered.
+
+Valisnieri, who was not deceived in facts, has yet drawn false
+conclusions in asserting that, although neither himself, nor any
+anatomist in whom he could confide, ever found the egg in the cavity of
+the glandular body, yet it must there exist.
+
+Let us, therefore, examine what may be fairly called the real
+discoveries of these naturalists. Graaf was the first who perceived
+there were alterations in the female testicles; and he had reason
+to affirm, they were parts essential and necessary to generation.
+Malpighius demonstrated that these alterations were occasioned by the
+glandular bodies which grew to perfect maturity, afterwards they become
+flaccid, obliterated, and left only a slight cicatrice remaining.
+Valisnieri has placed this discovery in a very clear light; he has
+shewn that these glandular bodies are found in the testicles of every
+female; that they are augmented considerably in the season of love,
+that they increase at the expence of the lymphatic vesicles of the
+testicles, and that at the time of their maturity they were hollow and
+filled with liquor. This, then, is all that can be reduced to truth on
+the subject of the pretended ovaries and eggs of viviparous animals.
+What must we conclude therefrom? Two things appear very evident: the
+one, that there does not exist any eggs in the female testicles; the
+other, that there exists a liquor in the vesicles of the testicle, and
+in the cavity of the glandular bodies. We have demonstrated by the
+preceding experiments, that this last liquor is the true seed of the
+female, since it contains, like that of the male, spermatic animals, or
+rather organic moving particles.
+
+We must, therefore, now be assured, that females have, as well as
+males, a seminal liquor. After all that has been advanced, we cannot
+doubt but the seminal liquor is the superfluity of the organic
+nutriment, which is sent back from all parts of the body into the
+testicles and seminal vesicles of the males, and into the testicles
+and glandular bodies of females. This liquor, which issues by the
+nipple of the glandular bodies, continually sprinkles the horns of the
+matrix, and may easily procure admission either by the suction of the
+membrane of these horns, or by the little opening which is at the upper
+extremity, and thus enter into the matrix; but in the supposition of
+these pretended eggs, which were ten or twenty times larger than the
+opening of the horns of the matrix, we cannot comprehend how they could
+enter therein.
+
+The liquor emitted by females, when they are excited, and which,
+according to de Graaf, issues from the neck of the matrix, and the
+orifice of the urethra, may be a superabundant portion of the seminal
+liquor which continually distills from the glandular bodies on the
+trunks of the matrix. But, possibly, this liquor may be a secretion
+of another kind, and perfectly useless in generation. To decide this
+question observations with a microscope are requisite; but _all_
+experiments are not permitted even to philosophers. I can only say,
+that I am inclined to believe that the same spermatic animals would
+be met with in this liquor as in that of the glandular bodies. I can
+quote an Italian doctor on this subject, who made this observation with
+attention, and which is thus related by Valisnieri: "Aggiugne il lodato
+fig. Bono d'avergli anco veduti (animali spermatici) in questa linfa o
+siero, diro cosi voluttuoso, che nel tempore dell'amorosa zuffa scappa
+dalle femine libidinose, senza che si potesse sospettare che fossero
+di que' del maschio, &c." If this circumstance is true, as I do not
+doubt, it is certain, that this liquor is the same as that found in
+the glandular bodies, and that, consequently, it is the true seminal
+liquor: and although anatomists have not discovered the communication
+between the vacuities of de Graaf and the testicles, that does not
+prevent it being once in the matrix, from issuing out by the vacuities
+about the exterior orifice of the urethra.
+
+From hence we must conclude that the most abandoned women will be the
+least fruitful, because they emit that liquor which ought to remain in
+the matrix for the formation of the foetus. Thus we see why common
+prostitutes seldom have children, and why women in hot countries, where
+they have stronger desires than in the cold, are much less fertile; but
+we shall have occasion to speak of this hereafter.
+
+It is natural to think that the seminal liquor of the male or female
+would not be fertile but when it contains moving bodies; nevertheless
+that is still a question, and I should be led to think, as there are
+different states of this liquor, that in which these organic particles
+are seen in motion is not absolutely necessary for the purpose of
+generation. The Italian physician, above quoted, never perceived
+spermatic animals in his semen till he had attained a middle age,
+although he was father of several children before, and continued to
+have them afterwards.
+
+These spermatic bodies, which move, may be looked upon as the first
+assemblages of the organic molecules which proceed from every part of
+the body; when a quantity of them collect they may be perceived with
+the microscope; but if they collect only in small quantity the body
+which they form will be too minute to be perceived, and in this case we
+shall not be able to distinguish any in the seminal liquor. A very long
+continuance of observations would be necessary to determine what can be
+the cause of all the differences remarked in the states of this liquor.
+
+I can assert, from having often tried it, that by infusing the seminal
+liquors in water closely corked, at the end of three or four days
+an infinite multitude of moving bodies will be found, although the
+seminal liquors had no motion on being first taken from the body of
+the animal. Flesh, blood, chyle, urine, nay all animal or vegetable
+substances, contain organic particles, which move at the end of some
+days in an infusion of water; they appear to act and move nearly in the
+same manner, and though produced from different bodies are perfectly
+similar, without any of them having a power peculiar to themselves.
+If these bodies must absolutely be termed animals, it must be allowed
+they are so imperfect that they ought to be looked upon as the outlines
+of them, or rather as bodies simply composed of particles the most
+essential to the existence of an animal; for natural machines, such as
+those found in the roe of a calmar, although they put themselves in
+action at certain times, are certainly not animals, although they are
+organized, acting, and, as I may say, living beings.
+
+If it is once allowed, that the productions of Nature follow in an
+uniform order, and advance by imperceptible degrees and links, we shall
+have no difficulty in conceiving there are organic bodies existing,
+which belong neither to animals, vegetables, nor minerals.
+
+It is certain, however, that all animals and vegetables contain an
+infinity of organic living molecules. These molecules successively
+take different forms, and different degrees of motion and activity,
+according to different circumstances They are in a much greater number
+in the seminal liquor of both sexes, and in the germs of plants, than
+in other parts of the animal or vegetable. There exists, then, a
+living substance in animals and vegetables, common to both, and which
+substance is necessary to their nutrition. An animal procures nutriment
+from an animal or vegetable substance, and the vegetable can likewise
+be nourished from an animal or vegetable in a decomposed state. This
+nutritive substance, common to both, is always living, always active,
+and produces an animal or vegetable, as it finds an internal mould or
+an analogous matrix, as we have explained in the first chapters; but
+when this active substance collects in great abundance, in those parts
+where it can unite, it forms in the animal body other living creatures,
+such as the tape-worm, ascarides, and worms, which are sometimes found
+in the veins, in the sinus of the brain, in the liver, &c. These kinds
+of animals do not owe their existence to the animals of the same
+species, and we may, therefore, suppose, they are produced by this
+organic matter when it is extravasated, or is too abundant for the
+lacteal vessels to absorb. We shall hereafter have occasion to examine
+more largely the nature of those worms, and many other animals which
+are formed in a similar manner.
+
+When this organic matter, which may be looked on as an universal seed,
+is collected in any great quantity, as in the seminal liquors, and in
+the mucilaginous parts of the infusion of plants, its first effect is
+to vegetate, or rather to produce vegetating beings. These zoophytes
+swell, extend, ramify, and produce globules, ovals, and other small
+bodies, of different figures, which have all a kind of animal life, a
+progressive motion, which is often very swift, and sometimes very slow.
+These globules themselves decompose, change their figures, and become
+smaller; and in proportion as they diminish in size the rapidity of
+their motion augments.
+
+I have sometimes thought that the venom of the viper, and other active
+poisons, even that of the bite of a mad dog, might possibly be this
+active matter too rarefied; but I have not as yet had time to make the
+experiments which I had projected on this matter, as well as on drugs
+used in medicine; all that I can at present ascertain is, that all
+infusions of the most active drugs swarm with moving bodies, which form
+therein in much less time than in other substances.
+
+Almost all microscopic animals are of the same nature as the organized
+bodies which move in the seminal liquor, in the infusions of vegetables
+and the flesh of animals; the eel-like bodies in flour, vinegar, and
+water, in which lead has been soaked, are beings of the same nature as
+the first, and have a like origin.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+VARIETIES IN THE GENERATION OF ANIMALS.
+
+
+The matter which serves for the nutrition and reproduction of animals
+and vegetables is therefore the same; it is a productive and universal
+substance, composed of organic molecules, and whose union produces
+organized bodies. Nature always works on the same fund, which is
+inexhaustible, but the means she employs to stamp its value are
+different, and these differences, or general agreements, deserve
+attention, because it is from thence we must derive our reasons to
+account for exceptions and particular varieties.
+
+In general large animals are less productive than small. The whale,
+elephant, rhinoceros, camel, horse, the human species, &c. only
+produce one, and very seldom two, at a birth; whereas small animals,
+as rats, herrings, insects, &c. produce a great number at a time. Does
+not this difference proceed from there being more food required to
+support a large body than to nourish a small one, and from hence the
+former has less superfluous organic particles, which would convert
+into semen, than the latter? It is certain that small animals eat more
+in proportion than large ones; but it is likewise probable that the
+prodigious multiplication of the small animals, as bees, flies, and
+other insects, may be attributed to their being endowed with very fine
+and slender limbs and organs, by which they are in a condition to chuse
+what is most substantial and organic in the vegetable or animal matters
+from whence they derive their nutriment. A bee, who lives on the
+purest parts of flowers, certainly receives more organic particles in
+proportion than a horse who feeds on the grosser parts of vegetables,
+hay, &c. The horse produces but one at one time, whereas the bee will
+bring forth three thousand.
+
+Oviparous animals are in general smaller than the viviparous, and
+produce also more at a birth. The duration of the foetus in the
+matrix of viviparous animals likewise opposes their increase, nor can
+there be any new generation take place during gestation, or while they
+are suckling their young; whereas oviparous animals produce at the same
+time both matrix and foetuses, which they cast out of the body, and
+are therefore almost always in a state of reproduction; and it is well
+known that by preventing a hen from setting, and largely feeding, the
+number of her eggs will be considerably increased. If hens cease to
+lay when they sit, it is because they have ceased to feed; and it is
+the fear lest their eggs should not produce which causes them not to
+quit their nests but once a day, and that for a very short time, during
+which they take a little nutriment, but not one-tenth part of what they
+take at other times.
+
+Animals which produce but a small number at a time, acquire the chief
+part of their growth before they are fit for engendering, whereas those
+which multiply numerously generate before they have received half their
+growth. The human species, the horse, the ass, the goat, and the ram,
+are not able to engender until they have obtained nearly the whole of
+their growth. It is the same with pigeons and other birds, who lay but
+a few eggs; but those which produce in great numbers, as poultry, fish,
+&c. engender much sooner. A cock is capable of engendering at the age
+of three months, when he has not attained a third part of his growth;
+a fish, which at the end of twenty years will weigh thirty pounds,
+engenders in the first or second year, when perhaps it does not weigh
+half a pound. But exact observations on the growth and duration of
+the life of fish are still wanting: their age may be nearly known by
+examining the annual layers of their scales; but we are not certain how
+far that may extend. I have seen carp in the Comte de Maurepas' canals,
+at his castle at Pont Chartrain, which were said to be 150 years old,
+and they appeared as brisk and lively as the common carp. I will not
+say, with Leeuwenhoek, that fish are immortal, or at least can never
+die with age; all must perish in time, that is; all which have a
+beginning, a birth, must arrive to an end, or death; but fish, living
+in an uniform element, and being sheltered from the vicissitudes and
+all the injuries of the air, must live a longer time in the same state
+than other animals, especially if these vicissitudes of the air be, as
+a great philosopher asserts, the principal causes of the destruction of
+living beings. But what must contribute to the long duration of their
+life is, that their bones are softer than those of other animals, and
+do not harden with age. The bones of fish lengthen, and grow thick
+without taking any more solidity; whereas the bones of other animals
+continually increase in hardness and density, until at length, being
+absolutely full, the motion of their fluid ceases, and death ensues. In
+their bones the repletion or obstruction, which is the cause of natural
+death, is formed by such slow and insensible degrees, that fish must
+require much time to arrive at what we call old age.
+
+All quadrupeds covered with hair are viviparous; all those covered
+with scales oviparous. May we not then believe than in oviparous
+quadrupeds, a much less waste is made by transpiration, than the
+cloathing of scales retains; whereas in animals covered with hair
+this transpiration is more free and abundant? and is it not partly
+by this superabundance of nutriment, which cannot be carried off by
+transpiration, that those animals multiply so abundantly, and are
+enabled to go so long without food? All birds and all insects that fly
+are oviparous, excepting some kinds of flies which bring forth their
+young alive. These flies have no wings at their birth, but they shoot
+out and grow by degrees, and which they cannot use before they are of
+full growth. Scaly fish are likewise oviparous; as are all reptiles
+which have no legs, such as snakes and different kinds of serpents;
+they change their skins, which are composed of small scales. The viper
+is only a slight exception to the general rule, for it is not truly
+viviparous, as it produces eggs, from which the young are hatched; it
+is certain this is performed in the body of the mother, who instead
+of casting those eggs, like other oviparous animals, she retains and
+hatches them in her own body. The salamander, in which eggs and young
+ones are found at the same time, as observed by M. de Maupertuis, is
+an exception of the same kind in oviparous quadrupeds.
+
+Most animals are perpetuated by copulation; yet many birds seem only
+strongly to compress the females; indeed the ostrich, Crane, and
+some few others, are so well supplied as to leave intromission no
+ways equivocal. Male fish approach the female in the spawning time;
+they seem even to rub their bellies against each other, for the male
+often turns upon its back to meet the belly of the female; but the
+necessary part for copulation does not exist in them; and the male
+fish approaches the female only to emit the liquor in their milts on
+the eggs, which the female then deposits; and it seems rather to be
+attracted by the eggs than the female; for when she ceases throwing out
+the eggs, he instantly forsakes her, and with eagerness pursues the
+eggs, which the stream carries away, or that the wind disperses. Male
+fish may be seen to pass and repass every spot where eggs are deposited
+several times. It is certainly not for the love he bears the female
+that all these motions are made, because it is not to be presumed he
+always knows her; often being seen to emit his liquor on all eggs that
+he comes near, and that often before he has met with the female to
+which they belonged.
+
+There are therefore animals, distinguished by sexes, which have proper
+parts for copulation, and some which are deficient in them; others, as
+snails, have both, and the two sexes in the same individual; others,
+as vine-fretters, have no sex, and engender in themselves separately;
+although they couple together when they please, we cannot determine
+whether that is a conjunction of sexes; if it is so, we must suppose
+that Nature has included in this small individual more faculties for
+generation than in any other kind of animal, and that it not only has
+the power of reproducing distinctly, but also the means of multiplying
+by the communication of another individual.
+
+But whatever difference takes place in generation, Nature, by a new
+production, prepares the body for it, and which, whether manifested
+outwardly, or concealed internally, always precedes generation. The
+ovaries of oviparous animals, and the testicles of female viviparous
+animals, before the season of impregnation, experience a considerable
+change. Oviparous animals produce eggs, which at first are attached to
+the ovaries, by degrees they increase in size, until they fall into
+the canal of the matrix, where they acquire their white membranes, and
+shell. This production has marks of the fecundity of the female, and
+without which generation cannot be performed: so in viviparous females
+there are always one or more glandular bodies on the testicles, which
+by degrees grow under the membrane that surrounds them; these glandular
+bodies enlarge and pierce, or rather impel and lift up the membrane of
+the testicle; when their maturity is complete, a small slit or several
+small holes appear at their extremities, by which the seminal liquor
+escapes, and falls into the matrix: these glandular bodies are new
+productions that precede generation, and without which there would not
+be any.
+
+In males there is also a similar change which always precedes their
+capacity for generating. In oviparous animals a great quantity of
+liquor fills a considerable reservoir, and which reservoir itself is
+sometimes formed every year; as in the calmar and some other fish. The
+testicles of birds swell surprisingly just preceding their amorous
+season. In viviparous males the testicles also swell considerably in
+those who have seasons, and in general there is a swelling and an
+extension of the genital members in all species, which, although it be
+external, must be regarded as a new production necessarily preceding
+generation.
+
+In the body of every animal, male or female, new productions are formed
+which precede generation; and when there is no real production there
+is always a swelling, and considerable extension in some of the parts.
+There are species in which this new production is not only manifest,
+but even the whole body seems to be renewed before generation can be
+performed; as is the case with insects whose various metamorphoses
+seem to be only for the purpose of generating; for the growth of the
+animal is completed before it is transformed. It ceases from taking
+nutriment, has no organs for generation, no means of converting the
+nutritive particles, of which they abound, into eggs or seminal liquor,
+and therefore this superfluity unites and moulds itself at first into
+a form something like that of the original. The caterpillar becomes
+a butterfly, because, for these reasons, it is unable to produce
+small organized beings like itself; the organic particles, always
+active, take another form, by uniting, whose figure answers in part,
+and even in essential constitution, to that of the caterpillar, but
+in which the organs of generation are developed, and may receive
+and transmit the organic particles of the nutriment which forms the
+eggs, and the individuals of the species. The individuals which
+proceed from the butterfly ought not to be butterflies, because the
+nutriment, from whence the organic particles proceed, was taken while
+in the form of caterpillars; the produce therefore must be similar,
+and not butterflies, which is only an occasional production of the
+superabundant nutriment; a method adapted by Nature to accomplish the
+purposes of generation in these species, as by the glandular bodies and
+milts in other animals.
+
+When the superabundant quantity of organic nutriment is not great,
+as in man and most large animals, generation is not made till the
+growth of the animal is nearly complete, and then it is confined to
+the production of a small number of individuals. When these particles
+are more abundant, as in many kinds of birds, and in oviparous fishes,
+generation is completed before the animal has received its full
+growth, and their production of individuals is very numerous. When
+the quantity of particles is still greater, as in insects, it first
+forms a large organic body, which, though retaining the essential
+constitution of its original, differs in many parts, as the butterfly
+from the caterpillar, but shortly produces an astonishing number of
+young, similar in form to the animal which selected the nutriment. When
+the superabundance is greater still, and when at the same time the
+animal has the necessary organs for generation, as the vine-fretter, it
+immediately produces a generation in every individual, and afterwards
+a transformation, like other insects. The vine-fretter becomes a fly,
+but cannot produce any thing, because it is only the remainder of the
+organized particles which had not been made use of in the production of
+the young.
+
+Almost every animal except man has stated times for generation. Spring
+is marked out for birds. Carp, and many kinds of fish, spawn in June
+and August. Barbel, and other kinds, in spring. Cats have three
+seasons, in January, May, and September. Roebucks, in December. Wolves
+and Foxes, in January. Horses, in summer. Stags, in September and
+October; and almost all insects generate in autumn: these last seem to
+be totally exhausted by generation, and die a short time after. Other
+animals, though not exhausted, become extremely lean and very weak,
+and require a considerable time to repair the loss which is made of
+the organic substance. Others are exhausted still less, and are soon
+restored to an engendering state; while man is scarcely in the least
+affected; his loss is speedily repaired, and therefore may be said to
+be at all times in a state for propagation; all which depends solely
+on the particular construction of the animal organs. The grand limits
+Nature has placed in the mode of existence are equally conspicuous
+in the manner of receiving and digesting the food, in the manner of
+retaining it in, or excluding it from, the body, and in the means by
+which the organic molecules, necessary for reproduction, are extracted.
+In a word, we shall find throughout all nature, that all what can be,
+is.
+
+The same difference exists in the time of female gestation; some, as
+mares, carry their young eleven or twelve months; others, as women,
+cows, &c. nine months; others, as foxes, wolves, &c. five months;
+bitches, nine weeks; cats, six weeks; rabbits, thirty-one days. Most
+birds come out of the egg at the end of twenty-one days; though some,
+as canary birds, hatch in thirteen or fourteen days. The variety is
+as great here as in every thing else relative to animals. The largest
+animals which produce only few, are those which go the longest with
+young; this still more confirms what we have already said, that the
+quantity of organic food is in proportion less in large than in small
+animals; for it is from the superfluity of the mother's food that the
+foetus derives what is necessary to the growth and expansion of its
+parts, and since this expansion demands much more time in large than
+in small animals, it is a proof that the quantity of matter which
+contributes is not so abundant in the first as in the last.
+
+There is, therefore, an infinite variety in animals, with respect to
+the time and manner of gestation, engendering, and bringing forth; and
+this variety is found even in the causes of generation; for although
+the general principle of production is this organic matter common to
+all that lives or vegetates, the manner in which the union is made,
+must have infinite combinations, which must all proceed from the source
+of new productions. My experiments clearly demonstrate, that there are
+no pre-existing germs, and at the same time prove that the generation
+of animals and vegetables is not equivocal; there are, perhaps, as
+many beings, either living or vegetating, which are produced by the
+fortuitous assemblage of organic molecules, as by a constant and
+successive generation. It is to those productions we should apply
+the axiom of the ancients, "Corruptio unius, generatio alterius."
+The corruption and composition of animals and vegetables produce an
+infinite number of organized bodies; some, as those of the calmar, form
+only kinds of machines, which, although very simple, are exceedingly
+active; others, as the spermatic animalcules, seem by their motion, to
+imitate animals; others imitate vegetables by their manner of growing
+or extending; there are others, as those of blighted corn, which may
+be made to live and die alternately, and as often as we please; there
+are still others, even in great quantities, which are at first kinds of
+vegetables, afterwards become species of animals, then return again to
+vegetables, and so on alternately. There is a great appearance, that
+the more we shall observe this race of organized beings, the more we
+shall discover varieties, always so much the more singular as they are
+the more remote from our sight, and from the varieties of other animals
+that have already become known to us.
+
+For example, spurred barley, which is produced by an alteration or
+decomposition of the organic substance of the grain, is composed of
+an infinity of little organized bodies, like to eels. By infusing
+the grain for ten or twelve hours in water, we find them to have a
+remarkable twirling, and a slight progressive motion; when almost dry,
+they cease to move, but by adding fresh water their motion returns.
+The same effects may be produced for months, or even years; insomuch
+that we can make these little machines act as often and as long as we
+please without destroying them, or their losing any of their power or
+activity. Their threads will sometimes open, like the filaments of
+semen, and produce moving globules; we may therefore suppose them to be
+of the same nature, only more fixed and solid.
+
+Eels, in paste made with flour, have no other origin than the union of
+the organic particles of the most essential parts of the grain: the
+first which appear are certainly not produced by many others; yet,
+although they have not been engendered, they engender others. By
+cutting them with the point of a lancet, we may perceive small eels
+come from their bodies in great numbers; the body of the animal appears
+to be only a sheath or bag which contains a multitude of other little
+animals, which perhaps are themselves only sheaths of the same kind, in
+which the organic matter assimilates, and takes the form of eels.
+
+There requires a great number of observations to be made to establish
+classes and races between such singular beings, which are at present so
+little known; there are some which may be regarded as real zoophytes,
+which vegetate, and at the same time appear to twirl and move like
+animals. There are some that at first appear to be animals, which
+afterwards join and form kinds of vegetables. A little attention to the
+decomposition of a grain of wheat infused in water will elucidate all I
+have asserted. I could add more examples, but I have related these only
+to point out the varieties there are in generation. There are certainly
+organized beings which we regard as animals, but which are not
+engendered by others of the same kind; there are some which are only
+a kind of machines, whose action is limited to a certain effect, and
+which can act but once in such a certain time, as those in the calmar;
+and there are others, as we have just remarked, which we can cause to
+act as long and as often as we please. There are vegetating beings
+which produce animated bodies, as the filaments of the human seed,
+from whence the active globules spring, and which move by their own
+powers. In the corruption, fermentation, or rather the decomposition
+of animal and vegetable substances, there are organized bodies which
+are real animals, and can propagate their like, although they have
+not been so produced. The limits of these varieties are perhaps still
+greater than we can imagine. We may extend our ideas, and exert every
+effort to reduce the effects of Nature to certain points, and class her
+productions to certain classes, yet an infinite number of links will
+always escape us.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+OF THE FORMATION OF THE FOETUS.
+
+
+It appears to be clearly ascertained by the experiments of Verheyen,
+who in one of them found the seed of a bull in the matrix of a cow;
+and by those of Ruysch, Fallopius, Leeuwenhoek, and many others, who
+perceived the male semen in the uterus of women, and numberless other
+animals, that the seminal liquor of the male enters by some means
+into the matrix of the female. It is probable, that in the time of
+copulation the orifice of the matrix opens to receive the seminal
+liquor, but if that is not the case, the active and prolific substance
+of this liquor, may penetrate the membranes of the matrix; for the
+seminal liquor being, as we have proved, almost all composed of organic
+molecules, which are in great motion, and extremely minute, they may
+pass across the coat of the closest membranes, and penetrate those of
+the matrix with the greatest facility.
+
+What proves that the active part of this liquor may not only pass
+through the pores of the matrix, but even penetrate its substance, is
+the sudden change that immediately takes place after conception. The
+menses are suppressed, the matrix becomes softer, swells, and appears
+inflamed. All these alterations can only happen by the action of an
+external cause; by the penetration of some part of the seminal liquor
+into the substance even of the matrix. This penetration not only
+operates on the external surface of the matrix, but on all the other
+parts of which this viscera is composed, like that penetration by which
+nutrition and expansion is produced.
+
+We shall be easily persuaded that it is so, when we consider that
+the matrix, during the time of gestation, not only augments in bulk
+but also in quantity of matter, and that it has a kind of life or
+vegetation, which is continually increasing till the time of delivery;
+for if the matrix was only a pouch, a destined receptacle to receive
+the seed and contain the foetus, it would extend and grow thin in
+proportion as the foetus increased in size; but in reality the matrix
+not only extends in proportion as the foetus grows larger, but
+receives at the same time a thickness and solidity. This augmentation
+is a real growth, like the expansion of the body in young animals,
+which can only be produced by the intimate penetration of the organic
+molecules analogous to the substance of the parts: and as this
+expansion of the matrix never happens but after impregnation, we cannot
+doubt its being produced by the liquor of the male, especially as the
+expansion takes place before the foetus has sufficient bulk to dilate
+it.
+
+It seems certain, by my experiments, that the female has a seminal
+liquor which commences to be formed in the testicles, and is completed
+in the glandular bodies: this liquor distills through the small holes,
+at the extremities of these bodies; and may, like that of the male,
+enter into the matrix in two different manners, either by these holes
+at the extremities, or through the membraneous coat of the matrix.
+
+These seminal liquors are both extracts from all parts of the body, and
+in the mixture of them there is every thing necessary to form a certain
+number of males and females; and the more the animal abounds with this
+liquor, and the more that abounds with organic molecules, the greater
+is their number of young; as we have already remarked is the case with
+the small animals, and diminishes in the large.
+
+But to pursue our subject with greater attention, we shall first
+examine the particular formation of the human foetus, and afterwards
+return to the other animals. In the human species, as well as in large
+animals, the seminal liquors of the male and female do not contain a
+great abundance of organic molecules, and therefore seldom produce
+more than one at a time: the foetus is a male, if the number of the
+organic molecules of the male predominates in the mixture, and a female
+if the contrary; and it resembles the father or the mother as they
+happen to abound in the mixture of the two liquors.
+
+I conceive, therefore, that the seminal liquor of both are two matters
+equally active and necessary for generation; and this I think is
+sufficiently proved by my experiments, since I have seen the same
+moving bodies in the one as the other. I perceived that the liquor
+of the male enters into the matrix, where it meets with that of the
+female: that they have a perfect analogy, and are both not only
+composed of similar parts by their form, but also in their motions and
+actions; as we have remarked in Chap. VI.
+
+By the mixture of these two liquors I conceive the activity of the
+organic molecules of each is stopped, and that the actions of one
+counterbalance that of the other, insomuch that each particle ceasing
+to move, remains in the place most analogous to itself, and that they
+will naturally take the same position, and will dispose themselves in
+the same order they held in the animal body; those that came from the
+head will arrange themselves in the head of the foetus, those of the
+back the same, and so of every other part; consequently they will form
+a small organized being, in every thing like the animal from which they
+are extracted.
+
+It must be observed that this mixture of organic molecules of the two
+sexes contains similar and different particles; the similar ones
+are those which have been extracted from every part common to both
+sexes. The different particles are those which have been extracted
+from the parts whereby the sexes are distinguished; thus there is,
+in this mixture, double the number of organic molecules to form the
+head, or the heart, or such other parts common to both, whereas there
+are only what are requisite to form the parts of the sex. Now the
+similar particles may act upon each other without being disordered,
+and collect together as if they had been extracted from the same body;
+but the dissimilar parts cannot act on each other, nor unite together,
+because they have not any relation; hence these particles will preserve
+their nature without mixture, and will fix of themselves the first,
+without the need of being penetrated by the others. Thus the molecules
+proceeding from the sexual parts will be the first fixed, and all the
+rest which are common to both, will afterwards fix indiscriminately,
+whether they are those of the male or female, and form an organized
+being which, in its sexual parts, will perfectly resemble its father,
+if it is a male, and its mother if a female; but which may resemble
+one another, or both, in all the other parts of the body.
+
+It seems to me that if this was well understood, we shall in a great
+measure be enabled to answer the objections made to the sentiments pf
+Aristotle, and which might also be advanced against this system. The
+question is, Why each individual, male and female, does not produce of
+itself an animal of its own sex? It must be acknowledged this question
+seems to carry weight with it; but having reflected a long time on this
+subject I think I have found an answer, and which I shall endeavour to
+explain.
+
+It is certainly evident, from what we have said in the preceding
+chapters, and the experiments we have described, that reproduction is
+effected by the union of organic molecules returned from each part
+of the body of the animal, or vegetable, into one or many common
+reservoirs; and that they are the same molecules which serve for
+nutriment and expansion of the body. This appears to me to have been
+so clearly proved, that I apprehend no scruple can remain as to the
+foundation of the theory; but I admit there may be some reason to ask,
+Why each animal and vegetable does not produce its own likeness, since
+each individual returns from every part of its body, and collects
+in a common reservoir, all the organic molecules necessary for the
+formation of a small organized being? Why then is not this organized
+being formed? and why, in almost every animal, is a mixture of the
+liquors of the two sexes required to produce an animal? If I content
+myself with answering, that in almost all vegetables, and all kinds
+of animals which multiply by cutting, that it appears the design of
+Nature that each individual should increase its own species, and that
+we must regard as an exception to this rule, the use which is made of
+the sexes in other kind of animals; it may be said, that the exception
+is more universal than the rule itself. This difficulty will be very
+little weakened, if we were to say, that each individual perhaps would
+produce its like, if it had proper organs, and contained the necessary
+matter towards the nutriment of the embryo; because females have both
+this matter, and organs, and yet do not produce either male or female
+foetus without the intervention of the male; which intervention of
+sexes in all animals is essential and absolutely necessary.
+
+Although the testicles and seminal vesicles of a man, contain all the
+necessary molecules to form a male, yet the local establishment and
+arrangement of these molecules cannot be made, because the effect of
+an union is prevented by the continual circulation of the seed both
+by absorption, and the action of the new organic molecules which
+constantly come into this reservoir from all parts of the body. The
+same circumstances taking place with the organic molecules of the
+female, is an evident reason why neither can produce of themselves,
+because when the seminal liquors of the male and female are mixed,
+they have more analogy to each other, than with the parts of the
+body of the female where the mixture is performed. By admitting of
+this explication, it may be asked, Why the common mode of generation
+in animals does not agree with it; for, upon that supposition, each
+individual would produce like snails, and impregnate each other, and
+each individual receiving the organic molecules the other furnished,
+the union would be made of itself, and by the sole power of the
+affinity of these molecules among themselves? I own, if it was by this
+cause alone the organic molecules could unite it would be natural
+to conclude, that the shortest mode to perform the reproduction of
+animals, would be to give to one individual both sexes. But it is
+quite contrary to the general rule pursued by Nature, as this manner of
+generation is confined to snails, and a small number of other animals.
+This answer cannot be said to fully satisfy the question, as it merely
+supposes the male does not produce, as it cannot receive any thing from
+the female, and that having besides no proper viscera to contain and
+nourish the foetus.
+
+We may also suppose that the activity of the organic molecules, in
+the semen of one individual, has need of being counterbalanced by the
+activity or force of those of another individual, in order to fix
+and bring them into a kind of equilibrium, a state of rest highly
+necessary to the formation of the animal; and that this activity in
+the organic molecules can only be counterbalanced by there being a
+contrary action in those which come from the male, and those proceeding
+from the female; so that, in this sense, all living or vegetating
+beings must have two sexes, conjointly and separately, to produce
+their resemblances. But this answer is too general to be entirely
+clear; nevertheless, if we pay attention to all the phenomena, we
+shall find some explanation resulting therefrom. The mixture of those
+two liquors produces not only a male or female foetus, but also
+other organized bodies, which have a kind of growth or expansion. The
+placenta, membranes, &c. are produced at the same time as the foetus.
+There are, therefore, in the seminal liquor of the male or female, or
+in the mixture of both, not only organic molecules necessary for the
+production of the foetus, but also those which form the placenta and
+membranes. We know not from whence these molecules come, since there
+is no part of the body, either of the male or female, from which they
+could be sent back. From hence it seems it must be admitted, that the
+molecules of the seminal liquors of each, being alike active, form
+organized bodies every time they can fix, by acting mutually one on the
+other: that the particles employed to form a male, will be those of the
+masculine sex, which will fix the first, and form the sexual parts; and
+that those common to both sexes will then fix indifferently to form the
+rest of the body, and that the placenta and membranes are then formed
+from the superabundant particles, which have not been used to form
+the foetus; if, as we suppose, the foetus is a male, then there
+remains to form the placenta, and membranes, all the organic particles
+peculiar to the feminine sex which have not been employed; and also
+all those of both which shall not have entered the composition of the
+foetus, and which cannot be less than one half. So likewise, if the
+foetus is a female, the same abundance will be left for the formation
+of the placenta, and membranes, and the whole effects be the same,
+excepting it will have the superfluity of the male, instead of that of
+the female.
+
+But, it may be said, that in that case the placenta and membranes
+ought to become another foetus, which would be a female, if the
+first was a male; and a male if the first was a female; for the first
+having consumed the organic molecules of the sexual parts of only
+one individual, and half those common to both, there remains all the
+molecules of the sexual parts of the other individual, and the other
+half of those common to both. To this I answer, that the first union
+of the organic molecules prevents a second, at least, under a similar
+form; that the foetus, being the first formed, exercises an external
+power, which disorders the arrangement of the other organic molecules,
+prevents the formation of a second foetus, and throws them into a
+state from which the form of the placenta and membranes result.
+
+We are assured by the experiments and observations we have made, that
+every living being contains a great quantity of living and active
+molecules. The life of the animal or vegetable appears to be only the
+result of all the young lives (if that expression is permitted me) of
+each of these active molecules, whose life is primitive, and appears
+impossible to be destroyed. We have found these living molecules in
+every living or vegetating being, and are assured, that they are alike
+necessary for nutrition, and consequently, for the reproduction of
+animals or vegetables. It is not, then, difficult to conceive, that a
+certain number of those molecules united should compose a living being.
+Each of these particles possessing animation, an assemblage of them
+must be endowed with life, and thus these living organic molecules,
+being common to all living beings, they necessarily form any particular
+animal or vegetable, according as they are arranged. Now, this
+arrangement absolutely depends on the form of the individuals which
+furnish those molecules. If they are furnished by an animal, they will
+arrange under the form of an individual like to it, exactly as they
+were arranged when they served for the expansion of the animal itself;
+but must we not then suppose that this arrangement cannot be made
+either in animals or vegetables, but by the means of a kind of base,
+round which the molecules might unite to form the foetus? Now, it is
+plain, this basis is furnished by particles peculiar to the different
+sexes, as I shall explain.
+
+While the molecules of either sex remain by themselves, their action
+produces no effect, because they are without any opposition from any
+different kind of particles; but, when these molecules are mixed, then
+there are dissimilar parts, and those serve for the base and point of
+rest to the other molecules, and fix their activity.
+
+In this supposition that the organic molecules, which, in the mixture
+of the seminal liquors of the two individuals, represent the sexual
+parts of the male, can alone serve for a base to the organic molecules
+proceeding from every part of the female, and those peculiar to the
+female sex as a base to them which are extracted from the male, we
+might conclude, that the sexual part of the male infant is formed of
+the organic molecules of the father, and from those of the mother, for
+the rest of the body: and that, on the contrary, the female partakes
+of its mother only in sex, and takes the rest of its body from its
+father. Boys, therefore, ought, excepting the parts of the sex, to have
+a greater resemblance to their mother than to their father, and girls
+more to the father than to the mother; but this consequence is not,
+perhaps, conformable to experience.
+
+By considering, under this point of view, generation by sexes, we
+should conclude it to be the most general mode of reproduction, as
+it is in fact. Beings, whose organization is the most complete, as
+animals, whose bodies compose a whole, which can neither be separated
+nor divided, and whose powers are con-centered to one single point, can
+only reproduce by this mode; because they contain only particles which
+resemble each other, and whose union can only be made by different
+particles, furnished by another individual. Those where organization is
+less perfect, as that of vegetables, whose bodies may be divided and
+separated without being destroyed, can be reproduced by other modes.
+First, because they contain dissimilar particles; secondly, because
+their forms not being so determinate and fixed as that of animals,
+the particles may supply the functions of each other, and change
+according to circumstances; as we see roots become branches, and shoot
+out leaves when exposed to the air, which causes that the vegetable
+particles obtain a local establishment, become fixed, and are enabled
+to multiply, by various modes.
+
+It will be the same with animals, whose organization is less perfect,
+as the fresh water polypus, and others, which can reproduce by division
+of their parts. These organized beings are not so much a single animal,
+as a number united under one common covering, as trees are composed of
+a multiplicity of young trees, (see Chap, II.) Pucerons, which engender
+singly, also contain dissimilar particles, since, after producing
+their young they change into flies which do not produce at all. Snails
+communicate mutually these dissimilar particles, and afterwards they
+both produce. Thus, in all known matters of generation, we see that the
+requisite union of organic particles, can only be made by the mixture
+of different particles, which serve as a basis capable of fixing their
+motions.
+
+If to the idea of the word _sex_, we give all the extent here supposed,
+we shall say, that sexes are found throughout all nature; for then
+sex will mean only the parts which furnish the organic particles,
+different from the common particles, and which must serve as a fixed
+point for their union. But, enough of reasoning on a question that
+can be at once resolved, by saying, that God having created sexes, it
+necessarily follows that animals should reproduce by their connection.
+In fact, we are not made, as I have formerly said, to give a reason
+for every _why_. We are not in a state of explaining _why_ Nature,
+almost throughout her works, makes use of sexes for the reproduction of
+animals, or why sexes exist; we ought, therefore, to content ourselves
+with reasoning on what is, on things as they are, since we cannot go
+beyond, by forming suppositions which will remove us from the sphere
+we ought to contain ourselves in, and to which the small extent of our
+knowledge is limited.
+
+Quitting, therefore, all doubtful conjectures, I shall rest on facts
+and observations. I find, that the reproduction of beings is formed in
+many different manners; but, at the same time, I clearly perceive, that
+it is by the union of the organic particles sent back from every part
+of the individual, that the reproduction of vegetables and animals are
+effected. I am certain of the existence of these organic and active
+molecules in the seminal liquors of male and female animals and seed
+of vegetables; and cannot doubt but every species of reproduction
+is accomplished by the union of these organic molecules. Nor can I
+doubt, that in the generation of animals, and particularly in that of
+man, that the male and female particles mix in the formation of the
+foetus, since we see infants which resemble both father and mother;
+and what confirms this conclusion is, that those parts, common to both
+sexes, mix promiscuously; whereas those never mix which represent the
+sexual parts. For we every day see children with eyes like the father,
+and the forehead and mouth like the mother; but we never find a like
+mixture of the sexual parts; it never happens that they have the
+testicles of the father, and the vagina of the mother, for even the
+fact of hermaphrodites is very doubtful.
+
+In the parts of generation of the two sexes in the human species,
+there is so much resemblance, and so singular a conformity, that we
+might be inclined to think those which appear so different externally,
+are at bottom the same organs, only more or less developed; this was
+the opinion of the ancients, and M. Daubenton's ideas on this subject
+appear to me very ingenious.
+
+The formation of the foetus is, then, made by the union of the
+organic particles contained in the mixture of the seminal liquor
+of both sexes; this union produces the local establishment of the
+particles, which determines them to arrange themselves as they were in
+the individuals which furnished them; insomuch, that the molecules,
+which proceed from the head, cannot, by virtue of these laws, place
+themselves in the legs, or any other part of the foetus. All these
+molecules must be in motion when they unite, and in a motion which must
+cause them to tend to a kind of centre, about which the union is made.
+This centre, or fixed point, which is necessary to the union of the
+molecules, and which, by its re-action and inertia, fixes the activity,
+and destroys the motion, is, probably, the first assemblage of the
+molecules which proceed from the sexual parts of the other individual;
+they must arrange under the form of an organized body which will not be
+another foetus, for the reasons we have before given.[AC]
+
+[AC] In this, as in some other places, our author has gone into a
+diffuse repetition which we have considered unnecessary and therefore
+avoid.
+
+On the whole, I conceive there are organic particles of the sexual
+parts, which serve as a fixed point, or a centre of union, around which
+all the other parts that form the embryo collect. I speak of it only
+as probable; but as they are the only particles which differ, I have
+thought it more natural to imagine, that it is around these different
+particles the union is formed than those which are common to both sexes.
+
+We have before observed, that those who have imagined the heart was the
+first formed, are deceived: those who say it is the blood, are no less
+so. All is formed at the same time. If we only consult observation, the
+chicken is seen in the egg before it has been sat upon; we perceive the
+spine of the back and the head, and, at the same time, the appendages
+which form the placenta. I have opened a great number of eggs, before
+and after incubation; and I am convinced, by my sight, that the chicken
+exists entirely in the middle of the cicatrice, the moment it comes
+from the body of the hen. The heat, communicated to it by incubation,
+only expands the parts by setting the liquors in motion; but it is not
+possible to determine which parts of the foetus are fixed in the
+instant of formation.
+
+I have always said, that the organic molecules were fixed, and that
+their uniting was caused only by their loss of motion. This appears
+to me certain: for, if we separately examine the seminal liquor of
+the male and female, we shall see an infinity of small bodies in
+great motion, but being mixed, their motion is instantly suspended,
+and heat is necessary to renew their activity; for the chicken which
+exists in the centre of the cicatrice is without any motion before
+incubation; and even twenty-four hours after, when it begins to become
+perceptible with a microscope, there is not the least appearance of
+motion then, nor even the day following. During the first day it is
+only a small white mucilaginous mass, which is of a consistence on
+the second, and insensibly increases, but whose motion is very slow,
+and does not at all resemble that of the organic particles which move
+rapidly in the seminal liquor. Besides, I have reason to say, that
+this motion of the organic molecules is absolutely destroyed; for if
+we keep an egg without exposing it to a degree of heat necessary to
+expand the chicken, the embryo, although formed entirely, will remain
+without any motion; and the organic molecules of which it is composed,
+will remain fixed without being able to give motion and life to the
+embryo which has been formed by their union. Thus, after the motion
+of the organic molecules has been destroyed, after the union of these
+molecules, necessary to form an animal body, there is still an external
+agent required to animate and give it life and motion; and this agent
+is heat, which, by rarefying the liquors, obliges them to circulate
+and put also every organ in action, which afterwards do no more than
+develope and grow, provided that this external heat continues to assist
+them in their functions.
+
+Before the action of this external heat, not the least appearance of
+blood is to be seen; and it is not till twenty-four hours after, that
+I have perceived any change in the colour of the vessels. The blood
+first appears in the placenta, which communicates with the body of
+the chicken: but this blood seems to lose its colour as it approaches
+the body of the animal; for the chicken is entirely white, and we
+with difficulty discover in the first, second, and third days after
+incubation, a few small sanguinary points which are close to the body
+of the animal, but which seem not to make part of it, although it is
+these sanguinary points which afterwards form the heart. Thus, the
+formation of the blood is a change occasioned in the liquors by the
+motion heat communicates to them, and this blood is formed even out of
+the body of the animal, the whole substance of which is then only a
+kind of mucilage, or thick jelly.
+
+The foetus, as well as the placenta, derives the necessary nutriment
+for expansion, by a kind of absorption, and they assimilate the organic
+parts of the liquor in which they float: for the placenta cannot be
+said to nourish the animal, no more than the animal nourishes the
+placenta; since, if the one nourished the other, the first would soon
+appear to diminish, while the other increased, whereas both increase
+together, I have indeed observed in eggs, that the placenta at first
+increases much more in proportion than the foetus, and therefore
+it may nourish the animal, or rather convey the nutriment to it, by
+intussusception.
+
+What we have just said concerning the chicken, is easily applied
+to the human foetus, which is formed by the union of the organic
+molecules of the two sexes. The membranes, and placenta, are formed
+from the superabundance of the particles which have entered into the
+composition of the embryo: which is then inclosed in a double membrane,
+where there is also a quantity of liquor, which is, perhaps, at first,
+but a portion of the semen of the father and the mother; and as the
+foetus does not quit the matrix, it enjoys, from the instant even
+of its formation, an external heat necessary for its expansion; this
+heat communicates a motion to liquors, and sets the organs in play, and
+blood is formed in the placenta, and in the body of the embryo, by the
+motion occasioned by this heat. It may be even said, that the formation
+of the blood of the infant is as independent of the mother, as that
+which passes into the egg, is of the hen which hatches it, or of the
+oven which heats it.
+
+It is certain, that the foetus, placenta, and membranes, grow by
+intussusception: for, in the earliest days of conception, the pouch,
+which contains the whole product of generation, is not adherent to
+the matrix. De Graaf, in his experiments on doe rabbits, made these
+globules, wherein the whole business of generation lies, move about
+in the matrix. Thus, in the first stages, they increase and grow by
+drawing nutriment from the liquors which bathe the matrix, to which
+they are afterwards attached by a mucilage, in which small vessels are
+formed with time, as we shall hereafter explain.
+
+But, not to quit the subject, let us return to the immediate formation
+of the foetus, on which there are many remarks to be made, both as
+to its situation, and the different circumstances which may prevent or
+stop its formation.
+
+In the human species, the seed of the male enters into the matrix, the
+cavity of which is considerable; and when it meets with a sufficient
+quantity of female semen, a mixture of the organic particles succeed,
+and the formation of the foetus ensues: the whole, perhaps, is done
+instantaneously, especially if the liquors are both in an active and
+flourishing state. The place where the foetus is formed, is the
+cavity of the matrix, because the seed of the male can enter there
+more easily than into the trunks; and as this viscera has but one
+small orifice, which is always shut, excepting when the ardour of
+love causes it to open, the materials of generation remain there
+with safety, and scarcely ever reissue but by rare and unfrequent
+circumstances: but as the liquor of the male sprinkles the vagina,
+before it penetrates the matrix, by the activity of the organic
+molecules which compose it, it may go farther into the trunks, and,
+perhaps, into the ovarium. As the liquor of the female has already its
+perfection in the glandular bodies of the testicles, from which it
+flows and moistens the trunks and other parts before it descends into
+the matrix, and as it may issue out of the vacuities left around the
+neck of the matrix, it is not impossible, that the mixture of the two
+liquors may be made in all these different places. It is, therefore,
+probable that foetuses are often formed in the vagina, but which fall
+out as soon as they are formed, because there is nothing to retain
+them. It may also sometimes happen, that foetuses are formed in the
+trunks; but this case is very rare, and cannot happen but when the
+seminal liquor of the male enters the matrix in great plenty.
+
+The collection of anatomical observations makes mention of foetuses
+not only being found in the trunks, but also in the testicles. In
+the History of the Old Academy of Sciences, (vol. II. page 91.) we
+meet with an observation on this subject. M. Theroude, a surgeon at
+Paris, shewed the academy an unformed mass, which he found in the
+right testicle of a girl of eighteen years of age. In it were two
+open slits, furnished with hair like two eye-lids, above which was a
+kind of forehead, with a black line instead of eyebrows; immediately
+over that were many hairs matted together in two separate lines, one
+of which was seven, and the other three inches long; under the great
+angle of the eye, two of the grinding teeth appeared to shoot, hard,
+thick, and white; they had their prongs, and a third tooth thicker than
+the rest above them. There appeared likewise other teeth at different
+distances from each other: two between these, of the canine nature,
+issued from an opening where the ear is placed. In the same volume,
+page 144, it is related, that M. Mery found, in the testicle of a woman
+who had conceived, a bone of the upper jaw, with many teeth therein,
+so perfect that some appeared to be of more than ten years growth. We
+find, in the _Journal de Medicine_, for January 1683, published by the
+Abbé de la Roque, the history of a lady who died with the ninth child,
+which was formed in or near one of the testicles, which is not very
+clearly explained. The foetus was about an inch in size, completely
+formed, and the sex easily to be distinguished. We also find, in the
+Philosophical Transactions, some observations on the testicles of
+women, wherein teeth, hair, and bones, have been found. If all these
+circumstances are true, we must suppose, that the seminal liquor of
+the male sometimes ascends, although very seldom, to the testicles of
+the female. Yet, notwithstanding all this, I have some difficulty to
+believe it; first, because the circumstances, which appear to prove
+it, are extremely rare: secondly, because a perfect foetus has never
+been seen in the testicles but by M. Littre, who seems to relate it in
+a very suspicious manner: thirdly, because it is not impossible, that
+the seminal liquor of the female alone may produce organized masses,
+as moles, hair, bones, flesh, and, in short, because if we give credit
+to anatomists, foetuses may be formed in the testicles of men, as
+well as in those of women: for we find, in the History of the Royal
+Academy, vol. II. p. 298, an observation of a surgeon, who says, he
+discovered in the scrotum of a man, the figure of a child inclosed in
+his membranes: and that the head, feet, eyes, bones, and cartilages,
+were distinguishable. If all these observations were equally true, we
+must necessarily adopt one of these two hypotheses, either that the
+seminal liquor, of each sex, cannot produce any thing without being
+mixed with that of the other sex, or that either of them can produce
+irregular masses of itself. By keeping to the first, we should be
+obliged to admit, to explain in all the circumstances we have related,
+that the liquor of the male sometimes ascends to the testicle, and,
+by mixing with the seminal liquor of the female, forms organized
+bodies; and so may also the female fluid, by being plentiful in the
+vagina, penetrate, during the time of copulation, into the scrotum of
+the male, nearly as the venereal virus often reaches that part; and
+that in this case, an organized body may be found in the scrotum, by
+the mixture of the male and female fluids; or, if we admit the other
+hypothesis, which appears to be the most probable, and suppose, that
+the seminal liquor of each individual may produce organized masses,
+then we may be able to say, that all these bony, fleshy, and hairy
+productions, sometimes found in the testicles of females, and in
+the scrotum of males, may derive their origin from the liquor of
+the individual in which they are found. But enough of observations
+upon facts, which appear to be as uncertain as inexplicable, for I am
+much inclined to believe, that, in certain circumstances, the seminal
+liquor of each individual may produce something alone and of itself,
+and that young girls might form moles without any communication with
+the male, as hens form eggs without having received the cock. I might
+support this opinion with observations which appear to me as credible
+as those I have quoted. M. de la Saone, physician and anatomist of the
+Academy of Sciences, published a memoir on this subject, in which he
+asserts, that religious nuns, though strictly cloistered, had formed
+moles. Why should that be impossible, since hens form eggs without
+communication with the cock? and in the cicatrice of these eggs we
+perceive a mole, with appendages, instead of a chicken? The analogy
+appears to me to have sufficient power for us, at least to doubt, or
+suspend our determination. Be this as it will, it is certain that the
+mixture of the two liquors are required to form a foetus, and that
+this mixture cannot come to any effect but when it is in the matrix,
+where the anatomists have sometimes found foetuses; and it is natural
+to imagine, that those which have been found out of the matrix, and
+in the cavity of the abdomen, have escaped by the extremity of the
+trunks, or by some accidental opening, and that they never fall from
+the testicles into the abdomen, because it is almost an impossibility
+that the seminal liquor of the male can ascend so high. Leeuwenhoek has
+computed the motion of these pretended spermatic animals to be four or
+five inches in forty minutes, which would be more than sufficient for
+the animalcules to traverse from the vagina into the matrix, from the
+matrix into the trunks, and from the trunks into the testicles, in an
+hour or two, provided all the liquor had that motion. But how is this
+to he conceived, that the organic molecules, whose motion ceases as
+soon as the liquid fails, can arrive as far as the testicles, unless
+brought there by the liquor in which they swim? This progressive
+motion cannot be given by the organic molecules to the liquor which it
+contains, therefore, whatever activity these molecules may be supposed
+to have, we cannot see how they can arrive at the testicles, and form a
+foetus there, unless the liquor itself was pumped up and attracted
+thither, a supposition not only gratuitous but even against all human
+probability.
+
+The doubts which this supposition gives rise to, confirm the opinion
+that the male fluid penetrates the matrix, and enters therein by the
+orifice, or across the membraneous coat of the viscera. The female
+fluid may also enter into the matrix, either by the opening at the
+upper extremity of the trunks, or across the skin even of the trunks
+and matrix. M. de Weirbrech, an able anatomist of Petersburg, confirms
+this opinion:----"Res omni attentione dignissima (says he) oblata mihi
+est in utero feminę alicujus a me dissectę; erat uterus ea magnitudine
+qua esse solet in virginibus, tubęque ambę apertę quidem ad ingressum
+uteri, ita ut ex hoc in illas cum specillo facile possem transire
+ac flatum injicere, sed in turbarum extremo nulla dabatur apertura,
+nullus aditus; fimbriarum enim ne vestigium quidem aderat, sed loco
+illarum bulbus aliquis pyriformis materia subalbida fluida turgens, in
+cujus medio fibra plana nervea, cicatriculę ęmula, apparebat, quę sub
+ligamentuli specie usque ad ovarii involucra protendebatur.
+
+"Dices, eadem a Regnero de Graaf jam olim notata. Equidem non negaverim
+illustrem hunc prosectorem in libro suo de organis mulieribus non modo
+similem tubam delineasse, Tabula XIX, fig. 3, sed & monuisse, 'tubas
+quamvis secundum ordinariam naturę dispositionem in extremitate sua
+notabilem semper coarctationem habeant, pręter naturam tamen aliquando
+claudi;' verum enimvero cum non meminerit auctor an id in utraque
+tuba ita deprehenderit; an in virgine; an status iste pręternaturalis
+sterilitatem inducat: an vero conceptio nihilominus fieri possit;
+an a principio vitę talis structura suam originem ducat; sive an
+tractu tempora ita degenerare tubę possint; facile perspicimus multa
+nobis relicta esse problemata quę, utcumque soluta, multum negotii
+facessant in exemplo nostro. Erat enim hęc femina maritata, viginti
+quatuor annos nata, quę filium pepererat quem vidi ipse, octo jam
+annos natum. Dic igitur tubas ab incunabulis clausas sterilitatem
+inducere: quare hęc nostra femina peperit? Dic concepisse tubis
+clausis; quomodo ovulum ingredi tubam potuit? Dic coaluisse tubas post
+partum: quomodo id nosti? Quomodo adeo evanescere in utroque latere
+fimbrię possunt, tanquam nunquam adfuissent? Si quidem ex ovario ad
+tubas alia daretur via, pręter illarum orificium, unico gressu omnes
+superarentur difficultates; sed fictiones intellectum quidem adjuvant,
+rei veritatem non demonstrant; pręstat igitur ignorationem fateri,
+quam speculationibus indulgere[AD]." The difficulties which occurred
+to this able author are insurmountable in the egg system, but which
+disappear in our explanation. This observation seems only to prove what
+we have observed, that the seminal liquor of both male and female may
+penetrate the coat of the matrix, and enter across the pores of the
+membranes; to be assured of it, it is only necessary to pay attention
+to the alteration that the seminal liquor of the male causes to the
+viscera, and to the kind of vegetation or expansion that it causes
+there. Besides, the liquor which issues by the vacuities of De Graaf,
+being of the same nature as the liquor of the glandular bodies, it is
+very evident that this liquor comes from the testicles, and yet there
+is no vessel through which it can pass; consequently we must conclude,
+that it penetrates the spongy coat of all these parts, and that it not
+only enters the matrix, but even can issue out when these parts are in
+irritation.
+
+[AD] Vide Comment. Acad. Petropol, vol IV. page 261 and 262.
+
+But even should we refuse this idea of penetration, we cannot deny
+that the liquor of the female, which flows from the glandular bodies
+of the testicles, may enter by the opening at the extremity of the
+trunk, as that of the male does by the orifice of the viscera; and that
+consequently these two liquors may mix of themselves in this cavity,
+and form there the foetus in the manner we have explained.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+OF THE EXPANSION, GROWTH, AND DELIVERY OF THE FOETUS, &C.
+
+
+In the expansion of the foetus, two different degrees of growth make
+different kinds of expansion. The first, which succeeds immediately
+after the formation of the foetus, is not proportionable in all
+the parts of which it is composed. The more distant it is from the
+formation, the more in proportion are its parts, and it is only after
+it has quitted the womb of its mother that the growth of the parts is
+made in nearly an equal manner. It must not be imagined that the figure
+of the foetus, at the moment of formation, is absolutely like that of
+an adult. It is certain that the embryo contains every part which, must
+compose a man, but they differ in their successive expansion.
+
+In an organized body, as that of an animal, we may suppose some parts
+are more essential than others, and though some may be useless or
+superfluous, there are some on which the rest seem to depend for their
+expansion and disposition. We must consider some as fundamental parts,
+without which the animal cannot exist, and which are more accessory and
+external, and appear to derive their origin from the first, and which
+seem to be formed as much for the ornament, symmetry, and external
+perfection of the animal, as for the necessity of its existence, and
+the exercise of the essential functions of life. These two kinds of
+different parts expand successively, and are almost equally apparent
+when the foetus quits the womb; but there are others which Nature
+seems to keep in reserve, as the teeth, which do not appear for some
+time, and also the glandular bodies in the testicles of females, the
+beards of males, &c. which do not shew themselves till the age of
+puberty.
+
+In order to discover the fundamental and essential parts of an animal
+body, we must pay attention to the number, situation, and nature of
+the whole; those which are simple, those whose position is invariable,
+and those without which the animal cannot exist, will be the essential
+parts; those, on the contrary, which are double, or in a greater
+number, those whose size and position vary, and those which may be
+retrenched from the animal without destroying or even doing it an
+injury, may be looked upon as less necessary, and more accessory, to
+the animal machine. Aristotle has said that the only parts essential to
+animals were those with which they take their nutriment, and throw out
+the superfluous parts of it from the body. From the mouth to the arms
+are simple parts, which no other can supply. The head and spine of the
+back are also simple parts, whose position is invariable. The spine of
+the back serves for a foundation to the fabric of the body; and it is
+from the marrow which it contains that the motion and action of most
+of the members and organs proceed; it is also this part which appears
+one of the first in the embryo. Now these simple parts which appear
+the first are all essential to the existence and form of the animal.
+There are many more double than simple parts in the body of an animal,
+and seem to be produced on each side of the simple parts by a kind of
+vegetation; for these double parts are similar in form, and different
+in position. The left hand exactly resembles the right, because it is
+composed of the same number of parts; nevertheless, if it was placed
+in the situation of the right, we could not make use of it for the
+same purposes, and should have reason to regard it as a very different
+member. It is the same with respect to the other double parts; they are
+similar as to form, and different as to the position which is connected
+to the body of the animal; and by supposing a line to divide the body
+into two equal parts, the position of all the similar parts would refer
+to this line as a centre.
+
+The spinal marrow, and the vertebrę which contains it, appear to be the
+real axis, to which we must refer all the double parts of the animal,
+for they seem to derive their origin, and to be only symmetrical
+branches issuing from this trunk or common base, for we see the ribs
+shoot out on each side of the vertebrę in the young chicken as the
+young branches shoot out from the principal branch of a tree. In all
+embryos the middle of the head and vertebrę appear to be the first
+formed; afterwards we see on the two sides of a vesicle which forms the
+middle of the head two other vesicles which appear to proceed from the
+first. These two vesicles contain the eyes and the other double parts
+of the head; so likewise we perceive little tubercles shoot out in
+equal numbers from each side of the vertebrę, which extend by degrees
+and form the ribs, and other double parts of the trunk. On the side
+of this trunk already formed, as the conclusion, the legs and arms
+appear. This first expansion is very different from that which is made
+afterwards; it is the production of parts which appear for the first
+time; that which succeeds is only a growth of all the parts already
+created.
+
+This symmetrical order of all the double parts found in every animal,
+the regularity of their position, the equality of their extension and
+growth, and the perfect resemblance between them, seem to indicate that
+they derive their origin from the simple parts; that there must reside
+in these simple parts a power which acts equally on each side, or,
+which answers the same meaning, they are the fixed points against which
+the power that produces the expansion of the double parts is exercised.
+That the power which acts on the right is equalled by that of the left
+side, and consequently they are counterbalanced by this re-action.
+
+From hence we may infer, that if there is any defect or excess in the
+matter which is to serve for the formation of the double parts, as the
+powers which impel them on each side are equal, the defect or excess
+must be formed the same both on the right and left; for example, if,
+from a defect of matter, a man has but two fingers instead of five on
+the right hand, he will have but two on the left hand; or if, by an
+excess of matter, he has six fingers on one hand, he will have six on
+the other; or if the matter be vitiated, and causes an alteration in
+the right part, it will be the same on the left. This fact is very
+often seen. Most monsters are made with symmetry; the disarrangement
+of the parts of monsters appears to be made with order: Nature,
+therefore, even in her errors, mistakes as little as possible.
+
+This harmony of position in the double parts of animals is found also
+in vegetables; branches shoot out from buds on every side; the veins in
+the leaves are equally disposed as to the principal vein; and although
+symmetrical order appears to be less exact in vegetables than in
+animals, it is only because it is more varied, and its limits are more
+extended, and less precise; but we may nevertheless easily discover
+this order, and distinguish the simple and essential parts from those
+which are double, and the latter we must regard as having taken their
+origin from the former. We shall more fully discuss this point, as far
+as relates to vegetables, when we come to treat of them.
+
+It is not possible to determine under What form the double parts exist
+before expansion, nor in what manner they are folded, nor what figure
+results from their position by connection with the simple parts. The
+body of the animal, in the instant of formation, certainly contains
+every part which is to compose it; but the relative position of these
+parts must be very different then from what it becomes afterwards.
+It is the same with vegetables, for if we observe the expansion of
+a young leaf, we shall perceive that it is folded on both sides the
+principal vein, and that its figure does not resemble at that time what
+it afterwards assumes.
+
+When we amuse ourselves by folding paper to form crowns, boats, &c.
+the different folds of the paper seem to have no resemblance to the
+form which must result by the unfolding; we only see that these folds
+are always made in an uniform order, and exactly the same on one side
+as that we have made on t he other; but it would be a problem beyond
+known geometry, to determine the figures which may result from all the
+unfoldings of a certain given number of folds. All what immediately
+relates to the position, is beyond our mathematical sciences. This art,
+which Leibnitz calls _Analysis Situs_, is not yet found out; though the
+art, which would shew us the connections that result from the position
+of things, would perhaps be more useful than that which has only bulk
+for its object, for we have often more need to know the form than the
+matter.
+
+In the unfolding of Nature's productions, not only the folded parts
+take new positions, but they acquire, at the same time, extent and
+solidity. Since we cannot therefore determine the result of the simple
+unfolding of a folded form, in which, as in a piece of folded paper,
+there is but one change of position between the parts, without any
+augmentation or diminution of the bulk or mass of the matter, how is
+it possible for us to judge of the complex unfolding of the body of
+an animal, in which not only the relative position of the parts, but
+also their mass of matter, undergoes considerable changes? We cannot,
+therefore, reason upon this subject, but by drawing some inductions
+from the examination of the things at the different periods of their
+unfolding, and by assisting ourselves with the observations that we
+have had the opportunity to make.
+
+It is true we see the chick in the egg before incubation; it floats
+in a transparent liquor, contained in a small purse, formed by a very
+fine membrane in the centre of the cicatrice; but this chick is then
+only a particle of inanimate matter, in which we cannot discern any
+organization, nor any determined figure. We judge by the external form
+that one of the extremities is the head, and the rest to be the spine
+of the back. It appears that this is the first product of fecundation
+resulting from the mixture of the seed of the male and female;
+nevertheless, before asserting this as a fact, there are many things
+should be considered. When the hen has cohabited with the cock for a
+few days, and afterwards separated from him, the eggs she produces for
+a month after separation are as fertile as those she produced during
+the time of cohabitation with the male, and unfold at the same time;
+they only require twenty-one days sitting, and the embryo of the one
+will be as forward and as completely formed as that of the other. From
+hence we might think, that this form, under which the chick at first
+appears to us in the egg, does not immediately proceed from a mixture
+of the two liquors, but that it existed in other forms during the time
+the egg remained in the body of the mother; for the embryo in the form
+we see it before incubation, requires only heat to unfold and bring it
+forth. Now, if it had this form twenty days, or a month before, when
+the egg was first fecundated, why was it not hatched by the internal
+heat of the hen? and why is not the chicken perfectly formed in those
+eggs which are fecundated twenty-one days before the hen lays them?
+
+This difficulty is not so great as it appears; for we must conceive,
+that in the time of the cock's cohabitation with the hen, each egg
+receives in its cicatrice, wherein the female liquor is contained,
+a small portion of the semen of the male. The egg attached to the
+ovary is in oviparous females, what the glandular substance is in the
+testicles of viviparous females. The cicatrice of the egg corresponds
+with the glandular bodies in which the seminal liquor of the female
+resides; that of the male penetrates and mixes there with it; from
+this mixture, the formation of the embryo instantly results. The first
+egg which the hen lays after coition is fecundated, and capable of
+producing a chicken; those which she lays afterwards were fecundated at
+the same instant; but as there is still wanting essential parts to this
+egg, the production of which is independent of the seed of the male,
+as the white, membranes, and shell, the young embryo contained in the
+cicatrice cannot unfold in this imperfect egg, although assisted by the
+internal heat of the mother. It remains, therefore, in the cicatrice
+in the state in which it was formed, until the egg has acquired all
+the parts necessary to the growth and nourishment of the chicken: and
+it is not till the egg has attained its perfection that the embryo
+begins to unfold: this unfolding is performed by the external heat of
+incubation; but it is certain, if the egg could be confined within the
+body of the hen for 21 days after it was completely formed, the chicken
+would be produced, unless the internal heat of the hen should prove too
+powerful, for the degrees of heat necessary to hatch chickens are not
+very extended, and the least defect or excess is equally prejudicial
+to their unfolding. The last eggs the hen lays, containing the same as
+the first, proves nothing more than that the egg must acquire entire
+perfection before the embryo can unfold itself; and for want of the
+heat necessary to this unfolding, eggs may be kept a considerable time
+before incubation, without preventing the produce of the chickens they
+contain.
+
+It appears, therefore, that the state of the embryo, when the egg is
+laid by the hen, is the first state which succeeds fecundation; that
+the form under which we see it is the first form resulting from the
+intimate mixture, and form the penetration of the two seminal liquors;
+and consequently by following, as Malpighius has done, this unfolding
+from hour to hour, we discover all that is possible to be known, unless
+we could see the two liquors mix before our eyes, and how the first
+arrangement of the particles are made, which produces the first form of
+the embryo.
+
+If we reflect on this fecundation (which is made at the same time) of
+these eggs, which are laid successively, and along time after each
+other, we shall find new arguments against the existence of eggs in
+viviparous animals; for if the females of viviparous animals, or if
+women contained eggs, like hens, why are there not many fecund at
+the same time? why are not some of them produced in nine months,
+and others at distant periods? and when women have two or three
+children, why do they all come into the world at one time? If these
+foetuses were produced by the means of eggs, would not they come
+successively, according as the eggs come to perfection, after the time
+of impregnation? And would not super-foetation be as frequent as they
+now are scarce, or as natural as they appear to be accidental?
+
+We cannot follow the unfolding of the foetus in the matrix as we
+pursue that of the chick in the egg; the opportunities of observing it
+are few, and we can only know what anatomists, surgeons, and midwives
+have written thereon. It is by collecting all their particular
+observations, and by comparing their remarks and their descriptions,
+that we have made the following abridged history of the human foetus.
+
+There is a great appearance that, immediately after the mixture of
+the two seminal liquors, the whole materials of generation exist in
+the matrix under the form of a globe; since we know, by anatomists,
+that three or four days after conception there is a small oval ball in
+the matrix, this ball is formed by an extremely fine membrane, which
+incloses a limpid liquor like the white of an egg. We can then perceive
+some small united fibres in this liquor, which are the first outlines
+of the foetus. A net-work of fine fibres collects on the surface of
+the ball, which extends from one of the extremities to the middle.
+These are the first vestiges of the placenta.
+
+Seven days after conception we may distinguish, by the naked eye, the
+first lineaments of the foetus, as yet unformed; being only a mass of
+transparent jelly, which has acquired some small degree of solidity;
+the head and trunk are easily discernible, because this mass is of an
+oblong form, and the trunk is more delicate and somewhat longer. Some
+small fibres, in form of a plume of feathers, spring from the body
+of the foetus, and which turn towards the membrane in which it is
+included; these fibres are to form the umbilical cord.
+
+Fifteen days after conception, the head, and the most apparent
+features of the face, are distinguishable; the nose resembles a small
+prominent and perpendicular thread affixed to a line, which indicates
+the division of the lips. Two small black points are in the places of
+the eyes, and two little holes in those of the ears; the body of the
+foetus has also received some growth. On each side of the upper and
+inferior parts of the trunk, little protuberances appear, which are the
+first outlines of the arms and legs.
+
+Eight days after, that is in three weeks, the body of the foetus
+has only increased about a line; but the arms and legs, the hands and
+feet, are apparent; the growth of the arms is more quick than that
+of the legs, and the fingers separate sooner than the toes. At this
+time internal organization begins to be discernible; the bones appear
+like small threads as fine as hairs; the ribs are disposed regularly
+from the two sides of the back bone; and as well as the arms, legs,
+fingers, and toes, are represented by very small threads.
+
+At a month the foetus is more than an inch long; it naturally takes
+a curved posture, in the middle of the liquor which surrounds it, and
+the membranes which contain the whole are increased in extent and
+thickness; the mass is oval, and it is then about an inch and an half
+in its greatest, and an inch and a quarter the smallest diameter.
+The human figure is no longer equivocal, every part of the face is
+already discernible; the body is fashioned, the thighs and belly are
+seen, the limbs formed, the toes and fingers divided, the skin thin
+and transparent, the viscera marked by fibres, the vessels as fine
+as threads, and the membranes extremely delicate, the bones are as
+yet soft, and have only taken solidity in some few parts; the vessels
+which compose the umbilical cord, are as yet in a straight line by
+the side of each other; now the placenta only occupies a third of the
+whole mass; whereas in the beginning it occupied the half. It appears,
+therefore, that its growth, in superficial extent, has not been so
+great as that of the foetus, and the rest of the mass; but it has
+increased much more in solidity; its thickness has become greater in
+proportion than the membranes of the foetus, both of which are now
+easily distinguished.
+
+According to Hippocrates, the male foetus is developed sooner than
+the female. He says all parts of the body in the first are apparent in
+thirty, whereas the latter are not so till the expiration of forty-two
+days.
+
+In six weeks the foetus is nearly two inches long; the human figure
+begins to be more perfect; the head is only larger in proportion than
+the other parts of the body; the motion of the heart is perceived about
+this time. It has been seen to beat in a foetus of sixty days, a long
+while after it had been taken out of the womb of its mother.
+
+In two months the foetus is more than two inches long; the
+ossification is discernible as far as the middle of the arm, thigh,
+and leg, and in the point of the lower jaw, which is then very forward
+before the upper. These, however, are only ossified points; but by the
+effect of a more ready expansion, the clavicles are wholly ossified.
+The umbilical cord is formed, and the vessels which compose it, begin
+to twist nearly like threads which compose a rope: but this cord is
+still very short in comparison of what it becomes hereafter.
+
+In three months the foetus is nearly three inches long, and weighs
+about three ounces. Hippocrates says, that it is at this time the
+motion of the male foetus begins to be felt by its mother; but that
+those of the female are not felt till after the fourth; there are women
+who affirm they have felt the motions of the child at the beginning of
+the second month. It is very difficult to be certain on this subject,
+the sensations excited by the first motions of the foetus depending,
+perhaps more on the sensibility of the mother than the strength of the
+child.
+
+Four months after conception the length of the foetus is six or
+seven inches; every part of its body is so greatly augmented as to
+be perfectly distinguished from each other; even the nails appear on
+the fingers and toes. The testicles of the males are shut up in the
+belly above the kidneys; the stomach is filled with somewhat of a
+thick humour, like that which incloses the amnios. We find a milky
+fluid in the little vessels, and in the large ones a black liquid
+matter. There is a little bile in the gall, and some urine in the
+bladder. As the foetus floats freely in the liquid which surrounds
+it, there is always a space between the body and membranes in which it
+is contained. These coverings grow at first more than the foetus;
+but after a certain time it is quite the contrary. Before the end
+of the third month the head is bent forward, the chin rests on the
+breast, the knees are lifted up, the legs bent backwards upon the
+thighs (sometimes the knees are so high as almost to touch the jaws),
+the arms are generally folded across the breast, and one of the
+hands, and often both touch the face. The foetus afterwards takes
+different situations, as it acquires strength. Experienced midwives
+have pretended to be certain that it changes much oftener than is
+commonly thought, and which they prove by several observations; first,
+the umbilical cord is often found twisted round the body and limbs of
+the child, in a manner which necessarily supposes, that the foetus
+has moved in many directions, and taken different positions; secondly,
+a mother feels the motions of the foetus sometimes on one side of
+the womb and sometimes on another; and it often strikes against many
+different places, which must be occasioned by different positions, and
+supposes that it takes different situations; thirdly, as it floats in
+a liquid which surrounds it on all sides, it can very easily turn and
+extend itself by its own strength; and it must also take different
+situations according to the various attitudes of the mother; for
+example, when she lies down, the foetus must be in another situation
+to what it was when she stood upright.
+
+Most anatomists have said, that the foetus is constrained to bend
+its body, because it is too confined in its covering; but this opinion
+does not appear well founded, for in the first five or six months there
+is more space than is required for the foetus to extend, and yet
+during that time it is bent and folded. We also see the chicken is in
+a curved posture in the liquor of the amnios, although this membrane
+and its liquor are sufficient to contain a body five or six times as
+large as the foetus. Thus we may conclude that this curved form of
+the foetus is natural, and not the effect of force. I am somewhat of
+Harvey's opinion, who says, it takes this attitude because it is the
+most favourable to rest and sleep; and as the foetus sleeps almost
+continually, it naturally takes the most advantageous situation. "Certe
+(says this famous anatomist) animalia omnia, dum quiescunt & dormiunt,
+membra sua ut plurimum adducunt & complicant, figuramque ovalem ac
+conglobatam quęrunt: ita pariter embryones qui ętatem suam maxime
+somno transigunt, membra sua positione ea qua plasmantur (tanquam
+naturalissima ac maxime indolenti quietique aptissima) componunt[AE]."
+
+[AE] Harvey on Generation, page 257.
+
+The matrix, as we have already said, takes a very ready growth after
+conception, and it continues also to increase in proportion with the
+foetus; but the foetus at length outgrows the matrix, and then,
+especially when it approaches maturity, it may be too much confined,
+and agitate the matrix by reiterated motions and violent efforts. The
+mother sensibly feels the impression of these painful sensations,
+and which are called periodic pains after the labour commences. The
+more power the foetus exerts to dilate the matrix the greater it
+finds the resistance, from the natural compression of the parts. From
+thence all the effect falls on the orifice, which has been increasing
+by degrees during the latter months of pregnancy. The head of the
+foetus, forcibly inclining against the sides of the orifice, dilates
+it, by a continual pressure, till the moment of delivery, when it opens
+sufficiently for the child to escape from the womb.
+
+What makes it probable that the labour-pains proceed only from the
+dilatation of the orifice of the matrix is, that this dilatation is
+the only means to discover whether the pains felt are in fact the
+pains of labour, for women often feel very sensible pains, which
+are not those that immediately precede delivery. To distinguish
+the false from true pains, it has been recommended for the midwife
+to touch the orifice of the matrix, as if the pains be true the
+dilatation will always increase, and if they are false pains, that
+is to say, pains which proceed from some other cause than that of
+the approaching delivery, the orifice will contract rather than
+dilate, or at least will not continue to dilate. From hence we have
+sufficient foundation to imagine, that these pains proceed from a
+forced dilatation of the orifice. The only thing which embarrasses on
+this occasion is that alternative of rest and sufferings the mother
+endures. This circumstance of the effect does not perfectly agree
+with the cause which we have just indicated; for the dilatation of
+an orifice, which is made by degrees, should produce a constant and
+continued pain, without any intervals of ease. But possibly the whole
+may be attributed to the separation of the placenta, which we know
+is fastened to the matrix by a number of papillę, which penetrate
+into the vacuities or cavities of this viscera; therefore may it not
+be supposed that they do not separate from their cavities all at the
+same time; that each separation causes those acute pains, and the
+intervals between are those of ease and rest? The effect in this
+case perfectly answers the cause, and we can support this conjecture
+by another observation.--Immediately before delivery there issues a
+whitish and viscous liquor, like that which flows from the nipples of
+the placenta when drawn out of their places, which makes it probable
+that this liquor, which then issues from the matrix, is produced by the
+separation of some of the papillę of the placenta.
+
+It often happens that the foetus quits the matrix without bursting
+the membranes, and consequently without the contained liquor flowing
+out. This kind of delivery appears to be most natural, and resembles
+that of most animals; nevertheless, the human foetus commonly pierces
+its membranes by the resistance it meets with at the orifice of the
+matrix. It also sometimes brings away part of the amnios, and even the
+chorion, upon its head like a cap. When these membranes are pierced or
+torn, the liquors, called the _waters_, which they contain flow out,
+and the sides of the orifice of the matrix, and the vagina, being thus
+moistened, give way more easily to the passage of the child. After the
+flowing of this liquor there remains sufficient room in the matrix for
+the midwife to return the child, if the position is unfavourable. When
+the foetus is come out the delivery is not entirely completed, the
+placenta and membranes remain in the matrix, and the new-born infant
+adheres to them by the umbilical cord; the hand of the midwife, or the
+weight of the body of the infant alone, draws them out by means of this
+cord. Those organs which were necessary to the life of the foetus
+become useless, and even noxious to the new-born infant. They are
+instantly separated from the body of the child, by tying the umbilical
+cord about an inch distance from the navel, and by cutting it about
+an inch from the ligature. The remainder of this cord dries away, and
+separates of itself from the navel, about the sixth or seventh day.
+
+On examining the foetus previous to its birth we may form some idea
+of its natural functions. It has organs, which are necessary to it
+while in the womb of its mother, but which become useless. For the
+better understanding the mechanism of these functions, we must explain
+a little more particularly the nature of those necessary parts, the
+umbilical cord, the membranes, the liquor which they contain and the
+placenta. The umbilical cord, which is attached to the body of the
+foetus at the navel, is composed of two arteries and one vein; these
+prolong the circulation of the blood, but the vein is larger than the
+arteries. At the extremity of the cord each of these vessels divide
+into an infinity of ramifications, which extend between two membranes.
+They separate at equal distances from the common trunk; so that these
+ramifications are round and flat, and are called, when thus collected,
+the _placenta_. The external surface, which is applied against the
+matrix, is convex; the internal concave. The blood of the foetus
+circulates in the cord, and in the placenta. The arteries of the cord
+spring from two large arteries of the foetus, and carry the blood
+through the arterial ramifications of the placenta; from thence it
+passes into the venous branches which carry it into the umbilical
+vessels; these communicate with a vein of the foetus, in which
+vessels it is received.
+
+The concave surface of the placenta is clothed by the chorion; the
+convex is also covered by a kind of soft membrane, easily torn, which
+seems to be a continuation of the chorion, and the foetus is included
+under the double coat of the chorion and the amnios. The form is
+globular, because the intervals between the membranes and the foetus
+are filled with a transparent liquor. This liquor is contained by the
+amnios, which is the internal membrane, it is thin and transparent; it
+folds round the umbilical cord at its insertion into the placenta, and
+covers it the whole length to the navel of the foetus. The chorion
+is the external membrane; it is thick and spongy, sprinkled with
+sanguinary vessels, and composed of many coats, the exterior of which
+covers the convex surface of the placenta. It follows the inequalities,
+and covers the papillę, which spring from the placenta, and are
+received in the cavities found at the bottom of the matrix, called
+_lacunę_. The foetus adheres to the matrix by these insertions.
+
+Some anatomists have thought that the human form had, like those of
+certain quadrupeds; a membrane called _allantois_, destined to receive
+the urine; and they have pretended to have found it between the chorion
+and the amnios, or in the middle of the placenta at the root of the
+umbilical cord, under the form of a very large bladder, in which the
+urine entered by a long pipe that composed part of the chord, and which
+opened on one side into the bladder, and on the other in this allantois
+membrane, being similar to the urachus in other animals. They owned,
+however, that it was not near so large in the human foetus as in
+quadrupeds, but that it was divided into many tubes, so minute, that
+they could scarcely be perceived, and that the urine passed into their
+cavities.
+
+The experience and observations of most anatomists are contrary to
+this supposed discovery. They admit there is a kind of ligament which
+adheres by one end to the external surface of the bottom of the
+bladder, and extends to the navel; but it becomes so delicate, on
+entering into the cord, as to be nearly reduced to nothing: in common
+this ligament is not hollow, and we can see no orifice at the bottom of
+the bladder.
+
+The foetus has no communication with the open air, and the
+experiments made upon the lungs prove they have never respired; for
+they sink to the bottom when put in water: whereas those of infants
+who have breathed always float on the top; the foetus then does not
+respire in the womb, consequently it cannot form any sound by its
+voice; and therefore what has been related of the groaning and crying
+of children before their birth may be considered as fables. After the
+flowing of the waters it may happen, that the air has found an entrance
+into the cavity of the matrix, and then the infant may begin to respire
+before it is brought forth. In this case it may be able to cry, as
+the chicken cries before the shell of the egg is broken, which it can
+do from there being air in the cavity which is between the external
+membrane and the shell. This air is found in all eggs, and is produced
+by the internal fermentation of matters contained in them[AF].
+
+[AF] See La Statique des Vegetaux, Chap. vi.
+
+The lungs of the foetus being without any motion, have no more blood
+enter into them than is requisite to nourish and make them grow; and
+there is another road opened for the course of its circulation. The
+blood in the right auricle of the heart, instead of passing into the
+pulmonary artery, and returning, after having ran through the lungs
+into the left auricle by the pulmonary vein, passes immediately into
+the left by an opening, called the _foramen ovale_, which is in the
+partition of the heart between the two auricles. It enters afterwards
+into the aorta, which distributes it by its ramifications, at going
+out of which the venous branches receive it, and bring it back to the
+heart by uniting all in the _vena cava_, which terminates at the right
+auricle of the heart. The blood which this auricle contains, instead
+of passing entirely by the foramen ovale, may escape in part into the
+pulmonary and the aorta by an arterial canal, which goes immediately
+from the one to the other. It is by these roads that the blood of the
+foetus circulates without entering into the lungs, as it enters into
+those of children, adults, and every animal which breathes.
+
+It has been thought that the blood of the mother passes into the body
+of the foetus, by means of the placenta and umbilical cord. It
+was supposed that the sanguinary vessels of the matrix opened into
+the vacuities, and those of the placenta into the nipples, and that
+they joined one to the other; but experience is quite contrary to
+this opinion; for if the arteries of the umbilical cord is injected
+the liquor returns by the veins, and not any part of it escapes
+externally. Besides, the nipples may be drawn from the vacuities
+where they are lodged, without any blood issuing either from the
+matrix or placenta: a milky liquor only issues from both, and which,
+we have already observed, serves the foetus for nutriment. This
+liquor possibly enters into the veins of the placenta, as the chyle
+enters into the subclavian vein; and perhaps the placenta in a great
+measure performs the office of the lungs in bringing the blood to
+maturity. It is certain that the blood appears much sooner in the
+placenta than in the foetus, and I have often observed in eggs that
+have been under the hen for a day or two, that the blood appeared at
+first in the membranes, and that their sanguinary vessels are very
+large and numerous, while the whole body of the chicken, excepting
+the point where these blood-vessels terminate, is only a white and
+almost transparent matter, in which there is not the smallest sign of a
+sanguinary vessel.
+
+It has been imagined, that the liquor of the amnios is a nutriment
+the foetus receives by its mouth. Some naturalists pretend to have
+observed this liquor in the stomach, and to have seen some foetuses
+to which the umbilical cord was entirely wanting, and others who had
+but a very small portion, which did not at, all adhere to the placenta;
+but in this case might not the liquor have entered into the body of
+the foetus by the small portion of the umbilical cord, or by the
+umbilical vessel itself? Besides, to these observations we may oppose
+others. Some foetuses have been found whose lips were not separated,
+and others without any opening in the oesophagus. To conciliate
+these circumstances, some anatomists have thought that the aliments
+passed into the foetus partly by the umbilical cord, and partly by
+the mouth: none of these opinions appear to have any foundation. It
+is not the question to examine the growth of the foetus alone, and
+to seek from whence and by what it draws its nutriment, but how the
+growth of the whole is made; for the placenta, liquor, and membrane
+increase in size as well as in the foetus; and consequently the
+instruments and canals employed to receive or carry this nutriment to
+the foetus, have a kind of life themselves. The expansion of the
+placenta and membranes is as difficult to conceive as that of the
+foetus; and we might say, with equal propriety, that the foetus
+nourishes the placenta, as that the placenta nourishes the foetus.
+The whole mass is floating in the matrix, and without any adherence at
+the commencement of this growth: therefore the nourishment can be only
+made by an absorption of the milky matter contained in the matrix. The
+placenta appears first to draw this nutriment, to convert this milk
+into blood, and to carry it to the foetus by veins. The liquor of the
+amnios appears to be only this milky liquor depurated, the quantity of
+which increases by a like absorption, proportionate to the increase
+of the membranes, and the foetus probably absorbs the liquor, which
+appears to be the necessary nutriment for its expansion. For we must
+observe, that for the first two or three months the foetus contains
+very little blood; it is as white as ivory, and appears to be composed
+of lymph which has taken some solidity; and as the skin is transparent,
+and all the parts very soft, we may easily conceive that the liquor
+in which the foetus swims may penetrate them, and thus furnish the
+necessary matter for its nutrition and expansion. It may be supposed
+that the foetus in the latter stages takes its nutriment by the
+mouth, since in the stomach we find a liquor similar to that in the
+amnios, urine in the bladder, and excrements in the intestines; and as
+we find neither urine nor _meconium_ in the amnios, there is reason to
+conclude that the foetus does not void its excrements, especially
+as some are born without having the anus pierced, although they had a
+great quantity of _meconium_ in the intestines.
+
+Although the foetus does not immediately adhere to the matrix, but
+is only attached to it by small external nipples, though it has no
+communication with the blood of its mother, but is as independant of
+her who bears it, in many respects, as the egg is of the hen that
+hatches it, yet it has been pretended, that all which affects the
+mother affects the foetus; that the impressions of the one act on
+the brain of the other; and to this imaginary influence resemblances,
+monsters, and especially marks on the skin of some children, have been
+attributed. I have examined many of these marks, and they all appear
+to me to have been caused by a derangement in the texture of the
+skin. Every mark must have a figure which will resemble something or
+other; but I am certain the resemblances so formed depend rather on
+the imagination of those who see them than on that of the mother. On
+this subject the marvellous has been carried as far as it could go. It
+has not been only said that the foetus carried real representations
+of the longings of its mother, but that, by a singular sympathy, the
+marks, which represent strawberries, cherries, &c. change their colour,
+and become deeper in the season of those fruits. With a little more
+consideration, and less prejudice, this colour may be seen to change
+much oftener, and that it must happen every time the motion of the
+blood is accelerated, whether by the heat of summer or from any other
+cause. These marks are either yellow, red, or black, because the blood
+gives these tints to the skin when it enters in too great quantities
+into the vessels. If these marks have the longings of the mother for
+their cause, why have they not the forms and colours as varied as the
+objects of her desires? What a curious assemblage of figures would be
+seen if all the whimsical desires of the mother were written on the
+skin of the child?
+
+As our sensations have no resemblance to the objects which cause
+them, it is impossible that desire, fear, horror, or any passion, or
+internal emotion, can produce real representations of those objects;
+and the child being in this respect as independant of the mother as the
+egg is of the hen, I should as soon believe that a hen, which saw the
+neck of a cock twisted, would hatch chickens with wry necks, as that,
+by the power of imagination, a woman, who happened to see a man broke
+upon the wheel, would bring forth a child with its limbs broken in the
+same manner.
+
+But even supposing this circumstance attested, I should still support
+the opinion, that the imagination of the mother had not been the cause,
+for what is the effect of horror? an internal motion, a convulsion
+in the body of the mother, which might shake, compress, and agitate
+the womb. What can result from this commotion? nothing similar to the
+cause, for if this commotion was very violent the foetus might be
+killed, wounded, or deformed in some of its parts; but how is it to
+be conceived that this commotion can produce any thing resembling the
+fancy of the mother in the foetus, unless we believe, with Harvey,
+that the matrix has the faculty of conceiving ideas, and realizing them
+on the foetus?
+
+But, it may be urged, if it was not affected by the imagination of
+the mother, why did the child come into the world with broken limbs?
+However rash it may appear to explain a matter which is extraordinary
+and uncertain, and of which we have no right to exact a solution,
+yet this question appears to me answerable in a satisfactory manner.
+Circumstances of the most rare and extraordinary kind happen as
+necessarily as those which are frequent and common. In the infinite
+combinations which matter can take, the most extraordinary arrangements
+must sometimes happen; hence we might venture to wager, that in a
+million, or a thousand millions of children, there will be one born
+with two heads, four legs, or with broken limbs; it may, therefore,
+naturally happen, without the concurrence of the mother's imagination,
+that a child should be born with broken limbs. This may have happened
+more than once, and the mother, while pregnant, might have been
+present at the breaking on the wheel, and therefore the defect of the
+child's formation has been attributed to what she had seen, and to
+her impressed imagination. But, independant of this general answer,
+we may give a more direct explanation. The foetus, as we have
+said, has nothing in common with the mother; its functions, organs,
+blood, &c. are all particular, and belong to itself; the only thing
+which it derives from its mother is the liquor, or nutritive lymph,
+which filtrates from the matrix. If this lymph is bad, or envenomed
+with the venereal virus, the child will be alike disordered; and it
+may be imagined, that all the diseases which proceed from vitiated
+humours may be communicated from the mother to the child. We know that
+the small-pox is communicative, and we have but too many examples
+of children who are, directly after their birth, the victims of the
+debauches of their parents. The venereal virus attacks the most solid
+parts of the bones, and it appears to act with more force towards
+the middle of the bone, where ossification commences; I conceive,
+therefore, that the child here spoken of has been attacked by the
+venereal disorder while in its mother's womb, and from that cause it
+came into the world with its bones broken through the middle.
+
+Rickets may also produce the same effect. There is a skeleton of a
+rickety child in the French king's cabinet, whose arms and legs have
+callosities in the middle of their bones. By the inspection of this
+skeleton, it appeared evident that the bones had been broken during the
+time it was in the womb, and that afterwards the bones re-united, and
+formed these callosities.
+
+But enough of a subject which credulity alone has rendered marvellous.
+Prejudice, especially that sort which is founded on the marvellous,
+will always triumph over reason, and we should have but little
+philosophy if we were astonished at it. We must not therefore ever
+expect to be able to persuade women, that the marks on their children
+have no connection with their unsatisfied longings. Yet might it not be
+asked them, before the birth of the child, of what particular longings
+they had been disappointed, and consequently what will be the marks
+their children will bear? I have often asked this question, and have
+only made persons angry without having ever convinced them.
+
+The time that a woman goes with child is generally about nine months;
+but it is however sometimes longer and sometimes shorter. Many children
+are born at seven or eight months, and some not till after the ninth;
+but in general the deliveries which precede the term of nine months
+are more frequent than the others. The common time of a natural
+delivery extends to twenty days, that is, from eight months fourteen
+days to nine months and four hours.
+
+Many children are born before the 260th day, and although these
+deliveries precede the general term, they are not abortions, because
+these children mostly live. It is commonly thought that children born
+at eight months cannot live, or at least that many more of them die
+than those born at seven months. This opinion appears to be a paradox;
+and by consulting experience I think we shall find it an error. The
+child brought forth at eight months is more formed, and consequently
+more vigorous, and likely to live than that which is born at the
+seventh. Nevertheless this opinion is pretty generally received, and
+founded on the authority of Aristotle.
+
+The beginning of the seventh month is the earliest term for delivery;
+if the foetus is brought forth sooner it dies, and is termed an
+abortion. There are, however, great limits for the time of human
+delivery, since they extend from the seventh to the tenth, and perhaps
+to the eleventh month.
+
+Women who have had many children assert, that girls remain longer
+in the womb than boys. If this is really the case, we must not be
+surprized at female children being born at ten months. When children
+come before nine months they are not so well proportioned as those
+who are not brought into the world till ten months, the bodies of the
+latter are sensibly larger and better formed; their hair is longer,
+the growth of the teeth, although still hid under the gums, is more
+advanced; the voice is clearer, and the tone more deep.
+
+There is much uncertainty on the occasional causes of delivery, and we
+do not perfectly know what obliges the infant to quit the womb. Some
+imagine, that the foetus having acquired a certain size, the matrix
+is too confined for its longer stay, and that the constraint felt
+by the foetus, obliges it to use every effort to quit its prison;
+others say, and it is nearly to the same purport, that the weight of
+the foetus becomes so great, that the matrix is forced to open to
+free itself from the burthen. These reasons do not appear satisfactory;
+for the matrix must always have capacity and strength to contain
+and sustain the weight of a foetus of nine months, since it often
+contains two, and it is certain that the weight and size of the twins
+of eight months are more considerable than the weight and size of a
+single child of nine. Besides, it often happens that a child born at
+nine months is smaller than the foetus of eight months, although it
+continues in the womb.
+
+Galen pretends, that the child remains in the matrix till it is able
+to receive its food by the mouth, and that it only forces its escape
+from the need of nutriment. Others have said, that the foetus always
+receives its nourishment by the mouth from the liquor of the amnios;
+but which becomes at length so contaminated, by the transpiration and
+urine of the foetus, that it becomes disgustful, and obliges the
+foetus to use every exertion to quit its confinement. These reasons
+do not appear better than the first; for it would from thence follow,
+that the weakest and smallest foetuses would remain longer in the
+womb than the strongest and largest, which never happens; besides,
+it is not food that the foetus seeks immediately after it is born,
+for it can stay some time without it; on the contrary, it seems most
+desirous to disembarrass itself from the nutriment it took when in the
+womb of its mother, and to return the meconium. Other anatomists have
+supposed that the excrement accumulated in the bowels of the foetus,
+gives it great pain, and causes it to make such efforts, that the
+matrix is at length obliged to give way, and to open a passage for its
+escape. I acknowledge I am not better satisfied with this explanation
+than the rest; because, why cannot the foetus void its excrements
+in the amnios, if it was pressed so to do? Now this never happens; it
+appears, on the contrary, that this necessity of voiding the meconium
+is not felt till after the birth, when the motion of the diaphragm,
+occasioned by that of the lungs, compresses the intestines and causes
+this evacuation; for the meconium has never been found in the amnios of
+a foetus of ten months who had not respired, whereas a foetus of
+six or seven months voids this meconium a short time after respiration.
+
+Other anatomists, and among them Fabricius de Aquapendente, have
+supposed the foetus quitted the matrix through the need of procuring
+refreshment by means of respiration. This cause appears to me still
+more remote than all the rest, because the foetus can have no idea of
+respiration without having respired.
+
+After having weighed all these explanations, I suppose the foetus's
+quitting the matrix depends on a quite different cause. The flowing of
+the menstrua is periodical, and at determined intervals; and although
+conception suppresses its appearance, it does not destroy the cause;
+for notwithstanding the blood does not appear at the accustomed times,
+yet a kind of revolution takes place, like that which is made before
+conception. Thus it is, there are many women whose menstrua are not
+suppressed in the first two or three months. I imagine, therefore,
+that when a woman has conceived, the periodical revolution is made as
+regular as before; but as the matrix is swelled, the excretory canals
+cannot give issue to the blood, at least unless it arrives there with
+such force, and in such quantities, as to open a passage in spite of
+the resistance, that is opposed to it. In this case blood will appear,
+and if it flows in a great quantity abortion will ensue, and the matrix
+take the form it had before. But if the blood only forces one part
+of these canals, the business of generation will not be destroyed,
+although the blood appears, because the greatest part of the matrix
+still remains in the state which is necessary for that purpose.
+
+When no blood appears, as is generally the case, the first periodical
+revolution is remarkable and felt by the same pains and symptoms. From
+the first suppression of the menses, therefore, a violent action on
+the matrix is made, and provided the action is augmented, it destroys
+the product of generation. It may from thence be concluded, that every
+conception which is made just before the useful return of the menses
+seldom succeeds, and that the action of that blood easily destroys the
+weak roots of a germ so tender and so delicate. The conceptions, on the
+contrary, which are made just after the periodical evacuations succeed
+the best, because the produce of the conception has more time to grow,
+strengthen, and resist the action of the blood, by the time the next
+revolution happens.
+
+The foetus having undergone this first trial, and having resisted
+it, receives more strength and growth, and is more in a condition to
+contend against the succeeding revolutions. Miscarriages may and do
+happen in all the periodical revolutions; but they are less frequent
+in the fourth and fifth months, than either at the beginning or near
+the end. We have assigned the reasons why they are more frequent at the
+beginning; it therefore only remains to explain why they are also more
+frequent towards the end.
+
+The foetus generally comes into the world during the tenth
+revolution. When it is born at the eighth or ninth it lives, and these
+deliveries are not looked upon as miscarriages, because the child,
+although not so perfectly formed, is still sufficiently so for the
+purpose of life. It has been pretended, that examples have been seen
+of children born at the seventh and even at the sixth revolution, that
+is, at five or six months, which have lived. There is, therefore, no
+difference between a birth and a miscarriage but what is relative to
+the living powers of the infant. In general the number of miscarriages
+in the first, second, and third months are very considerable for the
+reasons we have given ; and the number of deliveries of the seventh and
+eighth months are also very great, in comparison with the miscarriages
+of the fourth, fifth, and sixth months, because in this middle period
+the product of generation has received more solidity and strength, and
+having resisted the action of the four first periodical revolutions, a
+more violent force than the preceding is required to destroy it. The
+same reason subsists, with additional force, for the fifth and sixth
+months. But the foetus, which till then is weak, and can act only by
+its own feeble strength, begins to get strong, and move with vigour;
+and at the eighth revolution the foetus, uniting its efforts with
+those of the matrix, facilitates its exclusion, and it may come into
+the world in the seventh month, and be capable of living, especially
+if it happens, as is sometimes the case, to have more than ordinary
+strength for that period. But if it comes into the world only through
+the weakness of the matrix, which could not resist the action of the
+blood in this eighth revolution, the delivery would be regarded as a
+miscarriage, and the child would not live. But these cases are very
+rare, for if the foetus has resisted the seven first revolutions,
+only particular accidents can prevent it from resisting the eighth. The
+foetus, which has acquired this same degree of strength and vigour
+only a little later, will come into the world at the ninth revolution;
+and those which require nine months to obtain this same strength, will
+come at the tenth revolution, which is the most common and general
+term; but when the foetus has not acquired in nine months this degree
+of perfection, it may remain in the womb till the eleventh, and even
+till the twelfth revolution; that is, till the tenth or eleventh month,
+as we have many examples.
+
+This opinion, that it is the menstrua which is the occasional cause of
+delivery at different times, may be confirmed by many other reasons.
+The females of every animal which have no menses, bring forth at
+nearly the same terms, and there is but a very slight variation in
+the duration of their gestation. We may, therefore, suppose that this
+variation, which is so great in women, comes from the action of the
+menstrual blood, which is constantly exerted at every periodic return.
+
+We have observed, that the placenta adheres to the papillę, or the
+matrix, only by nipples; that there is no blood either in these
+nipples or in the vacuities they are niched into, and that when they
+are separated (which is easily done) a milky liquor only issues from
+them. Now, how happens it that delivery is always accompanied with a
+considerable hęmorrhage, at first of pure blood, and afterwards mixed
+with a watery liquor? This blood does not proceed from the separation
+of the placenta, as the nipples are drawn out without any effusion of
+blood. Delivery, which entirely consists, of this separation, should
+not, therefore, produce any blood. Is it not then more accordant with
+reason to suppose, that it is the action of the blood which causes
+delivery, and that it is this menstrual blood which forces the vessels
+as soon as the matrix is emptied, and which begins to flow immediately
+after delivery as it did before conception?
+
+It is known, that in the first months of pregnancy that which
+contains the seed of generation is not adherent to the matrix. By
+the experiments of De Graaf it has been seen, that by blowing on the
+little ball we can make it move. The adhesion to the matrix is never
+very strong, and at first the placenta with difficulty adheres to the
+internal membrane of the viscera, and those parts are only contiguous,
+or joined by a mucilaginous matter, which has scarcely any adhesion.
+Why then does it occur, that in miscarriages of the first and second
+month this ball never escapes without a great effusion of blood? It is
+certainly not caused by the passage of the ball quitting the matrix,
+since it does not adhere to it; but it is, on the contrary, by the
+action of this blood that the ball is driven out. Must we not then
+conclude this blood to be menstrual, which by forcing the canals,
+through which it had been accustomed to pass before impregnation,
+destroys the product of conception by retaking its common road?
+
+It appears, therefore, that the periodical revolution of the menstrual
+blood has great influence on delivery, and that it is the cause why the
+times of delivery in women vary so much more than in every other female
+who is not subject to the periodical evacuation, and which always
+bring forth at the same times. It also appears that this revolution,
+occasioned by the action of the menstrual blood, is not the sole cause
+of birth, but that the action of the foetus itself contributes
+towards it, since there are instances of a child escaping from the womb
+after the death of the mother, which necessarily supposes an action
+proper and particular in itself.
+
+The space of time which cows, sheep, and other animals go with young
+is always the same, and their deliveries are not attended with an
+hęmorrhage. May we not then conclude, that the blood voided by women
+after delivery is the menstrual blood, and that the human foetus
+being born at such different terms, can only be by the actions of this
+blood on the matrix during every periodical revolution? It is natural
+to imagine, that if the females of viviparous animals had menses like
+women, their deliveries would be followed with an effusion of blood,
+and happen at different terms. The foetuses of animals come into the
+world clothed with their membranes (and it seldom happens that the
+membranes are broken), and the waters flow before the delivery; whereas
+it is very rare a child is brought forth with its membranes entire.
+This seems to prove that the human foetus makes more efforts than
+other animals to quit its prison; or that the matrix of a woman does
+not so naturally incline to the passage of the child, for it is the
+foetus which tears its membranes, by the efforts it makes against the
+resistance it meets with at the orifice of the viscera.
+
+
+RECAPITULATION.
+
+All animals procure nutriment from vegetables, or other animals which
+feed upon vegetables; there is, therefore, one common matter to both,
+which serves for the nutrition and expansion bf every thing which
+lives or vegetates. This matter cannot perform them but by assimilating
+itself to each part of the animal or vegetable, and by intimately
+penetrating the texture and form of these parts, which I have called
+the _internal mould_. When this nutritive matter is more abundant than
+is necessary to nourish and expand the animal or vegetable, it is
+sent back from every part of the body, and deposited in one or more
+reservoirs, in the form of a liquor; this liquor contains all the
+molecules analogous to all parts of the body; and consequently all
+that is necessary for the reproduction of a young being, perfectly
+resembling the first. Commonly this nutritive matter does not become
+superabundant, in most kinds of animals, till they have acquired the
+greatest part of their growth; and it is for this reason that animals
+are not in a state of engendering before that time.
+
+When this nutritive and productive matter, which is universally
+spread abroad, has passed through the internal mould of an animal or
+vegetable, and has found a proper matrix, it produces an animal or
+vegetable, of the same kind; but when it does not meet with a proper
+matrix, it produces organized beings different from animals and
+vegetables, as the moving and vegetating bodies seen in the seminal
+liquor of animals, in the infusion of the germ of plants, &c.
+
+This productive matter is composed of organic particles, always active,
+the motion and action of which are fixed by the inanimate parts of
+matter in general, and particularly by oily and saline bodies, but as
+soon as they are disengaged from this foreign matter, they retake their
+action, and produce different kinds of vegetations and other animated,
+beings.
+
+By the microscope, the effects of this productive matter may be
+perceived in the seminal liquors of animals of both sexes. The seed of
+the female viviparous animals is filtered through the glandular bodies
+which grow upon their testicles, and these glandular bodies contain a
+large quantity of seminal fluid in their internal cavities. Oviparous
+females have, as well as the viviparous, a seminal liquor, which is
+still more active than the viviparous. The seed of the female is in
+general like that of the male, when, they are both in a natural state:
+they decompose after the same manner, contain similar organic bodies,
+and they alike offer the same phenomena.
+
+All animal or vegetable substances include a great quantity of this
+organic and productive matter. To perceive it, we need only separate
+the inanimate parts in which the active particles of this matter are
+engaged. And this is done by infusing animal or vegetable substances
+in water. The salts will dissolve, the oils separate, and the organic
+particles will be seen by their putting themselves in motion. They are
+in greater abundance in the seminal liquors than in any other parts,
+or rather, they are less entangled by the inanimate parts. In the
+beginning of this infusion, when the flesh is but slightly dissolved,
+the organic matter is seen under the form of moving bodies, which are
+almost as large as those of the seminal liquors: but, in proportion as
+the decomposition augments, these organnic particles diminish in size
+and increase in motion; and when the flesh is entirely decomposed,
+or corrupted, these same particles are exceedingly minute, and their
+motion exceedingly rapid. It is then that their matter may become a
+poison, like that of the tooth of a viper, wherein Mr. Mead perceived
+an infinite number of small pointed bodies, which he took for salts,
+although they are only these same organic particles in a state of
+great activity. The pus which issues from wounds abounds with little
+insects, and it may take such a degree of corruption as to become
+one of the most subtle poisons; for every time this active matter is
+exalted to a certain point, which may be known by the rapidity and
+minuteness of the moving bodies it contains, it will become a species
+of poison. It is the same with the poison of vegetables. The same
+matter which serves to feed us when in its natural state, will destroy
+us when corrupted. Spurred barley, for instance, throws the limbs of
+men and animals into a gangrene who feed on it. It is also evident by
+comparing the matter which adheres to our teeth, which is the residue
+of our food, with that from the teeth of a viper or mad dog, which is
+only the same matter too much exalted, and corrupted to the last degree.
+
+When this organic and productive matter is found collected in a great
+quantity in some part of an animal, where it is obliged to remain,
+it forms living beings which have been ever regarded as animals;
+the tęnia, ascarides, all the worms found in the veins, liver, in
+wounds, in corrupted flesh, and pus, have no other origin; the eels in
+paste, vinegar, and all the pretended microscopical animals are only
+different forms which this active matter takes of itself, according to
+circumstances, and which invariably tends to organization.
+
+In all animal and vegetable substances, decomposed by infusion, this
+productive matter manifests itself immediately under the form of
+vegetation. Filaments are seen to form, which grow and extend like
+plants. Afterwards these extremities and knots swell and burst, to give
+passage to a multitude of bodies in motion, which appear to be animals;
+so that it seems as if all nature began by a motion of vegetation. It
+is seen by microscopical objects, and likewise by the expansion or
+unfolding of the animal embryo; for the foetus at first has only a
+species of vegetable motion.
+
+Sound food does not furnish any of these moving molecules for a
+considerable time. Several days infusion in water is required for fresh
+meat, grain, kernels, &c. before they offer to our sight any moving
+bodies; but the more matters are corrupted, decomposed, or exalted, the
+more suddenly these moving bodies manifest themselves; they are all
+free from other matters in seminal liquors; but a few hours infusion
+is required to see them in pus, spurred barley, honey, drugs, &c.
+
+There exists therefore, an organic matter, universally diffused in
+all animal and vegetable substances, which alike serves for their
+nutrition, their growth, and their reproduction. Nutrition is performed
+by the intimate penetration of this matter in all parts of the animal
+or vegetable body. Expansion or growth is only a kind of more extended
+nutrition, which is made and performed as long as the parts have
+sufficient ductility to swell and extend; and reproduction is made
+by the same matter when it superabounds in the body of the animal
+or vegetable; each part of the body sends back, to the appropriate
+reservoirs, the organic particles which exceed what are sufficient
+for their nourishment. These particles are absolutely analogous to
+each part from which they are sent back, because they were destined
+to nourish those parts from hence, when all the particles sent back
+from, collect together, they must form a body similar to the first,
+since each particle is like that part from which it was detached; thus
+it is that reproduction is effected in all kinds of trees, plants,
+polypuses, pucerons, &c. where one individual can produce its like; and
+it is also the first mode which Nature uses for the reproduction of
+animals which have need of the communication of different sexes; for
+the seminal liquors of both sexes contain all the necessary molecules
+for reproduction; but something more is required for its effectual
+completion, which is the mixture of these two liquors in some places
+suitable to the expansion of the foetus which must result therefrom,
+which place is the matrix of the female.
+
+There are, therefore, no pre-existing germs, no germs contained one in
+the other, _ad infinitum_; but there is an organic matter perpetually
+active, and always ready to form, assimilate, and produce beings
+similar to those which receive it. Animals and vegetables, therefore,
+can never be extinct; so long as there subsist individuals the species
+will ever be new; they are the same at present as they were three
+thousand years ago, and will perpetually exist, by the powers they are
+endowed with, unless annihilated by the will of the Almighty Creator.
+
+
+
+
+HISTORY OF MAN.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+OF THE NATURE OF MAN.
+
+
+Though so much interested in acquiring a thorough knowledge of
+ourselves, yet I do not know if man is not less acquainted with the
+human, than with any other existence. Provided by nature with organs,
+calculated solely for our preservation, we only employ them to receive
+foreign impressions. Intent on multiplying the functions of our senses,
+and on enlarging the external bounds of our being, we rarely make use
+of that internal sense which reduces us to our true dimensions, and
+abstracts us from every other part of the creation. It is, however, by
+a cultivation of this sense alone that we can form a proper judgment
+of ourselves. But how shall we give it its full activity and extent?
+How shall the soul, in which it resides, be disengaged from all the
+illusions of the mind? We have lost the habit of employing this sense;
+it has remained inactive amidst the tumult of our corporeal sensations,
+and dried up by the heat of our passions; the heart, the mind, the
+senses, have all co-operated against it.
+
+Unalterable in its substance, and invulnerable by its essence, it
+still, however, continues the same. Its splendor has been overcast,
+but its power has not been diminished: it may be less luminous, but
+its guidance is not the less certain. Let us then collect those rays,
+of which we are not yet deprived, and its obscurity will decrease; and
+though the road may not in every part be equally filled with light, we
+yet shall have a torch that will prevent us from going astray.
+
+The first and most difficult step which leads to the knowledge of
+ourselves, is a distinct conception of the two substances that
+constitute our being. To say simply, that the one is unextended,
+immaterial, and immortal, and that the other is extended, material, and
+mortal, is only to deny to the one, what we affirm the other possesses.
+What knowledge is to be acquired from this mode of negation? Such
+negative expressions can exhibit no positive ideas: but to say that we
+are certain of the existence of the former, and that of the latter is
+less evident; that the substance of the one is simple, indivisible, and
+has no form, since it only manifests itself by a single modification,
+which is thought; that the other is a less substance than a subject,
+capable of receiving different forms, which bear a relation to our
+senses, but are all as uncertain and variable as the organs themselves;
+that is to say something; it is to ascribe to each such distinct and
+positive properties as may lead us to an elemental knowledge of both,
+and to a comparison between them.
+
+From the smallest reflection on the origin of our knowledge, it is
+easy to perceive that it is by comparison alone we acquire it. What
+is absolutely incomparable, is utterly incomprehensible; of this
+God is the only example; he exceeds all comprehension, because he
+is above all comparison. But whatever is capable of being compared,
+contemplated, and considered relatively, in different lights, may
+always come within the sphere of our understanding. The more subjects
+of comparison we have for examining any object, the more methods there
+are for obtaining a knowledge of it, and with greater facility.
+
+The existence of the soul is fully demonstrated. To be and to think are
+with us identically the same. This truth is more than intuitive; it is
+independent of our senses, of our imagination, of our memory, and of
+all our other relative faculties. The existence of our bodies, and of
+external objects, is however held in uncertainty by every unprejudiced
+reasoner; for what is that extension of length, breadth, and thickness,
+which we call our body, and which seems to be so much our own, but as
+it relates to our senses? What are even the material organs of those
+senses, but so many conformities with the objects that affect them?
+And with regard to our internal sense, has it any thing similar or
+in common with these external organs? Have the sensations excited by
+light or sound any resemblance to that tenuous matter, which seems to
+diffuse light, or to that tremulous undulation, which sound produces in
+the air? The effects are certainly produced by the necessary conformity
+there is between the eyes and ears, and those matters which act upon
+them. Is not that a sufficient proof, that the nature of the soul is
+different from that of matter?
+
+It is then a certain truth, that the internal sensation is altogether
+different from its cause; as also, if external objects exist, they are
+in themselves very different from what we conceive them. As sensation
+therefore bears no resemblance to the thing by which it is excited;
+does it not follow, that the causes of our sensations, necessarily
+differ from our ideas of them? The extension which we perceive by our
+eyes, the impenetrability, of which we receive an idea by the touch in
+all those qualities, whose various combinations constitute matter, are
+of a doubtful existence; since our internal sensations of extension,
+impenetrability, &c. are neither extended nor impenetrable, and have
+not even the smallest affinity with those qualities.
+
+The mind being often affected with sensations, during sleep, very
+different from those which it has experienced by the presence of
+the same objects, does it not lead to a belief, that the presence
+of objects is not necessary to the existence of our sensations; and
+that, of consequence, our mind and body may exist independent of
+those objects? During sleep, and after death, for example, our body
+has the same existence as before; yet the mind no longer perceives
+this existence, and the body with regard to us, has ceased to be. The
+question is therefore, whether a thing which can exist, and afterwards
+be no more, and which affects us in a manner altogether different from
+what it is, or what it has been, may yet be a reality of indubitable
+existence.
+
+That something exists without us, we may believe, though not with a
+positive assurance; whereas of the real existence of every thing within
+us, we have a certainty. That of our soul, therefore, is incontestable,
+and that of our body seems doubtful; because the mind has one mode of
+perception when we are awake, and another when we are asleep; after
+death, it will perceive by a method still more different, and the
+objects of its sensations, or matter in general, may then cease to
+exist with respect to it, as well as our bodies with which we have no
+further connection.
+
+But let us admit this existence of matter; and that it even exists as
+it appears to our senses, yet by comparing the mind with any material
+object, we shall find differences so great, and qualities so opposite
+that every doubt will vanish of the latter being of a nature totally
+different, and infinitely superior.
+
+The mind has but one form, which is simple, general, and uniform.
+Thought is this form; has nothing in it of division, extension,
+impenetrability, nor any other quality of matter; of consequence,
+therefore, our mind, the subject of this form, is indivisible, and
+immaterial. Our bodies on the contrary, and all other objects have
+many forms, each of which is compounded, divisible, variable, and
+perishable; and has a relation to the different organs, through which
+we perceive them. Our bodies, and matter in general, therefore, have
+neither permanent, real, nor general properties, by which we can
+attain a certain knowledge of them. A blind man has no idea of those
+objects, which sight represents to us; a leper, whose skin has lost
+the sense of feeling, is denied all the ideas which arise from the
+touch; and a deaf man has no knowledge of sounds. Let these three
+modes of sensation be successively destroyed, yet the mind will exist,
+its external functions will subsist, and thought will still manifest
+it within the man so deprived. But divest matter of all its qualities;
+strip it of colour, of solidity, and of every other property which
+has any relation to our senses, and the consequence will be its
+annihilation. Our mind, then, is unperishable, but matter may, and will
+perish.
+
+It is the same with all the other faculties of our soul when compared
+with the most essential properties of matter. As the mind wills and
+commands, so the body obeys in every thing within its power. The
+mind forms, at pleasure, an intimate union with any object; neither
+distance, magnitude, nor figure, can obstruct this union, when the mind
+wills it, it is effected in an instant. The body can form no union;
+whatever touches it too closely injures it; it requires a long time in
+order to approach another body; it every where meets with resistance,
+and obstacles, and from the smallest shock its motion ceases. Is will
+then nothing more than a corporeal movement; and is contemplation but a
+simple contact? How could this contact take place upon a remote object
+or abstracted subjects? How could this movement be accomplished in an
+indivisible instant? Is it possible to have a conception of motion
+without having a conception of space and time? Will, therefore, if it
+be a motion, is not a material one; and if the union of the mind with
+its object be a contact, it is effected at a distance: and is not this
+contact a penetration? qualities which are absolutely opposite to those
+of matter, and which of consequence can only belong to the immaterial
+being.
+
+But I fear I have already dwelt too long on a subject which, by many,
+may be considered as foreign to our purpose; and it might be asked,
+"Ought Metaphysical Considerations on the Soul to find a place in a
+System of Natural History?" Were I conscious of abilities equal to
+the discussion of a topic so exalted, this reflection, I must own,
+would have little weight with me; and I have contracted my remarks
+only because I was afraid I should not be able to comprehend a subject
+so enlarged and so important in its full extent. Why retrench from
+the Natural History of Man the history of his noblest part? Why thus
+preposterously debase him; by considering him merely as an animal,
+while he is of a nature so different, and so superior, to that of
+the brutes, that those must be immersed in ignorance like the brutes
+themselves who ever thought of confounding them.
+
+Man, as to the material part of his existence, certainly bears a
+resemblance to other animals, and in comprehending the circle of
+natural beings there is a necessity for placing him in the class of
+animals. Nature, however, has neither classes nor species; it contains
+only individuals. These species and classes are nothing but ideas which
+we have ourselves formed and established, and though we place man in
+one of such classes we do not change his being; we do not derogate from
+his dignity; we do not alter his condition. In a word, we only place
+him at the head of those who bear a similitude to him in the material
+part of his being.
+
+In comparing man with the animal we find in both an organized body,
+senses, flesh, blood, motion, and a multitude of other resemblances.
+But these resemblances are all external, and not sufficient to justify
+a decision, that the human and the animal natures are similar. In
+order to form a proper judgment of the nature of each we ought to
+have as distinct a knowledge of the internal qualities of an animal
+as we have of our own. As the knowledge of what passes within animals
+is impossible to be attained, and as we know not of what order and
+kind its sensations may be, in relation to those of man, we can only
+judge from a comparison of the effects which result from the natural
+operations of both.
+
+Let us, then, take a view of these effects; and, while we admit of
+all the particular resemblances, limit our investigation to the most
+general distinctions. It will be allowed, that the most stupid man is
+able to manage the most acute animal; he governs it, and renders if
+subservient to his purposes; and this, not so much on account of his
+strength or skill as by the superiority of his nature, and from his
+being possessed of reason, which enables him to form a rational system
+of action and method, by which he compels the animals to obey him.
+The strongest and most acute animals do not give law to the inferior,
+nor hold them in servitude. The stronger, it is true, devour the
+weaker, but this action implies no more than an urgent necessity, or
+a rage of appetite; qualities very different from that which produces
+a series of actions, all tending to the same end. Did animals enjoy
+this faculty, should we not see some of them assume dominion over
+others, and oblige them to furnish their food, to watch over them, and
+to attend them when sick or wounded? Now, throughout the creation of
+animals, there is no vestige of such subordination, no appearance that
+one of them knows, or is sensible of, the superiority of his own nature
+over that of others. It follows, then, that they must all be considered
+as of one nature, and that the nature of man is not only highly
+superior to that of the brute, but also entirely different from it.
+
+Man, by outward signs, indicates what passes within him; he
+communicates his sentiments by speech, which is a sign common to the
+whole human species. The savage and the civilized man have the same
+powers of utterance; both speak naturally, and so as to be understood.
+No other animal is endowed with this expression of thought; nor is that
+defect owing, as some have imagined, to the want of proper organs.
+Anatomists have found the tongue of an ape to be as perfect as that
+of a man. The ape, therefore, if he had thought, would have speech,
+and if its thoughts had aught analogous to ours, this speech would
+have an analogy to ours also. Supposing its thoughts were peculiar to
+its species, it still would hold discourse with those of its kind, a
+circumstance of which we should have heard had it been endowed with the
+powers of speech. So far then is the ape from having any thought like
+ours, that it has not even any order of thoughts of its own. As they
+express nothing by combined and settled signs, they of consequence are
+void of thought, or at most have it in a very small degree.
+
+That it is from no organical defect animals are denied the gift of
+speech is plain, as several species of them may be taught to pronounce
+words, and even repeat sentences of some length. Perhaps many others
+might be found capable of articulating particular sounds[AG]; but
+to make them conceive the ideas which such sounds denote is an
+impracticable task. They seem to repeat and articulate merely as an
+echo, or an artificial machine. It is not in the mechanical powers, or
+the material organs, but in the intellectual faculties, that they are
+deficient.
+
+[AG] Leibnitz mentions a dog which had been taught to pronounce several
+German and French words.
+
+As all language supposes a chain of thought, it is on that account
+that brute animals have no speech, for even allowing something in
+them which resembles our first apprehensions, our most gross and
+mechanical sensations, they still will be found incapable of forming
+that association of ideas which can alone produce reflection; and in
+this consists the essence of thought. To this inability of connecting
+and separating ideas it is that they are destitute of thought and
+speech, as also that they neither can invent nor improve any thing.
+Were they endowed with the power of reflection, even in the most
+subordinate degree, they would be capable of making some kind of
+proficiency, and acquire more industry; the modern beaver would build
+with more art and solidity than the ancient; and the bee would daily
+be adding new improvements to its cell; for if we suppose this cell as
+perfect already as it can be, we ascribe to the insect an intelligence
+superior to our own; by which it could discern at once the last degree
+of perfection to which its work might be carried, while we ourselves
+are for ever in the dark as to this degree, and stand in need of much
+reflection, time, and practice, in order to perfect even one of our
+most trivial arts.
+
+Whence can arise the uniformity that is in all the works of animals?
+Why does each species invariably perform the same actions in the same
+manner? And why does not one individual perform them better or worse
+than another? Can there be a stronger proof that their operations are
+merely the effects of mechanism and materiality? If they possessed
+the smallest spark of that light which is inherent in mankind, their
+works would display variety at least, if not perfection, and one
+individual would, in its performance, make some little difference from
+what another had done. But this is far from being the case. One plan
+of action is common to the whole species, and whoever would attribute
+a mind or soul to animals, must of necessity allow but one to each
+species, of which each individual would be an equal partaker, and as
+thereby it would be divisible, it would consequently be material, and
+of a nature widely different from ours.
+
+Why, on the other hand, are the productions and performances of men
+so various, and so diversified? Why is a servile imitation more
+troublesome to us than an original design? It is because our souls are
+our own, and independent of any other, and because we have nothing in
+common with our species but the matter which forms our body, and in
+which our resemblance to brute animals is confined.
+
+Were internal sensations dependent on corporeal organs, should we
+not see as remarkable difference in the works of animals of the same
+species as in those of men? Would not those which were the most happily
+organized, build their nests and contrive their cells in a manner
+more solid, elegant, and commodious? And if any individual possessed
+a superior genius, would it not take an opportunity to manifest that
+superiority in its actions? But nothing of this kind has ever happened,
+and therefore the corporeal organs, however perfect or imperfect,
+have no influence on the nature of the internal sensations. Hence we
+may conclude, that animals have no sensations of this kind; that such
+sensations have no connection with matter, no dependence in their
+nature on the texture of corporeal organs, and that of consequence
+there must be a substance in man different from matter, which is the
+subject and the cause that produces and receives those sensations.
+
+But these proofs of the immateriality of the human mind may be carried
+still farther. In all the works of nature there are imperceptible
+gradations maintained. This truth, which in no other instance admits
+of exception, is here expressly contradicted. Between the faculties of
+man and those of the most perfect animal the distance is infinite; an
+evident proof that man is of a different nature from the brute species,
+and that of himself he forms a distinct class, between which and that
+of animals there is an immense chasm. If man belonged to the class
+of animals, there would be a certain number of beings in nature less
+perfect than man, and more perfect than beast, in order to complete
+the gradation from a man to the monkey. But this is not the case; the
+transition is immediate from the thinking being to the material being;
+from intellectual faculties to mechanical powers; from order and design
+to blind motion; from reflection and choice to sensual appetite.
+
+Enough has been here advanced to demonstrate the excellence of our
+nature, and of the immense distance which the bounty of the Creator has
+placed between man and the brute. The former is a rational being, the
+latter a being devoid of reason. And as there is no medium between the
+positive and the negative, between the rational and irrational being,
+it is evident that man is of a nature entirely different from that of
+the animal; that all the resemblance he bears to it is merely external;
+and that to judge of him by this resemblance, is wilfully to shut our
+eyes against that light, by which we ought to distinguish truth from
+falsehood.
+
+Having thus considered man as to his internal properties, and proved
+the immateriality of his soul; we shall now proceed to examine his
+external part, and give the history of his body. We have already traced
+him from his formation to his birth, and after taking a view of the
+different ages of his life, we shall conduct him to that period when he
+must be separated from his body, and then resign him to the common mass
+of matter to which he belongs.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+OF INFANCY.
+
+
+Nothing can give us a more striking idea of imbecility, than the
+condition in which an infant appears on its first entrance into the
+world. Incapable of making use of its organs, or senses, the infant is
+in want of every assistance. It is an image of pain and misery; it is
+more helpless than the young of any other animal; it seems as if every
+moment would finish its doubtful existence; it can neither move nor
+support itself; hardly has it strength enough to exist or announce, by
+its cries, the sufferings it experiences; as if nature chose to apprise
+it, that it was born to suffer, and that it has obtained a place among
+the human species to partake of its infirmities and sorrows.
+
+Let us not disdain to consider that state through which we have all
+passed; let us view human kind in the cradle; let us enquire by what
+degrees this delicate machine, this new-born and hardly existing body,
+acquires motion, consistency, and strength.
+
+The infant at its birth comes from one element into another. On
+emerging from its watery residence in the womb, it becomes exposed
+to the air, and instantly experiences the impressions of that active
+fluid. The air acts upon the olfactory nerves and upon the organs of
+respiration, and thereby produces a shock, a kind of sneezing which
+expands the chest, and allows the air a passage into the lungs; the
+vesicles of which it dilates, and the air remaining for some time
+becomes warm and rarified to a certain degree; after which this spring
+of the fibres thus dilated re-acts upon this light fluid, and expels
+it from the lungs. Instead of undertaking to explain the causes of
+the alternate motion of respiration, we shall confine ourselves to an
+elucidation of its effects. This function is essential to the existence
+of man and of several species of animals. It is by respiration that
+life is preserved; and when it is once begun, it never ceases till
+death. Yet there is reason to believe that the foramen ovale is not
+closed immediately after the birth; and of consequence a part of
+the blood may continue to pass through that aperture. All the blood
+cannot, therefore, at first have a communication with the lungs; and
+it is probable a new-born child might sustain a privation of air for
+a considerable time without losing its existence. Or at least the
+possibility of this, I once seemingly confirmed fey an experiment
+upon some young dogs. I put a pregnant bitch, of the large greyhound
+species, just as she was about to litter, into a tub filled with warm
+water, where after fastening her in such a manner that the lower parts
+were covered with some water, she brought forth three puppies, which
+were accordingly received into a liquid as warm as they had left.
+After washing them in this water, I removed the puppies, without giving
+them time to breathe, into a smaller tub filled with warm milk; I chose
+milk in order that they might receive nourishment if they required
+it. In this milk they were kept immersed above half an hour: and when
+taken out they were all found alive. They began to breathe, and to
+discharge some moisture by the mouth. Having allowed them to respire
+for half an hour, I again put them into warm milk, and left them a
+second half-hour; at the expiration of which two of them were taken
+out vigorous and seemingly no wise incommoded, but the third appeared
+rather in a languishing state; this I caused to be carried to the
+mother, which by this time had produced, in the natural way, six other
+puppies; and though it had been brought forth in water and had lived
+in milk one half hour before, and another after it had breathed, it
+yet received so little injury from the experiment, that it presently
+recovered and was as strong and lively as the rest of the litter. After
+allowing the other two about an hour to breathe, I put them once more
+into the warm milk, in which they remained another half hour. Whether
+they swallowed any of this liquor or not is uncertain; but on being
+taken out they appeared nearly as vigorous as ever. After being carried
+to the mother, however, one died the same day; but whether by any
+accident, or by what it had suffered while immersed in the liquid, and
+deprived of air, I could not determine. The other lived, as well as the
+first, and both throve equally with those which had not gone through
+the same trials. This experiment I never carried farther; but I saw
+enough to convince me that respiration is less necessary to a new-born,
+than to a grown animal; and that it might be possible, with proper
+precautions, to keep the foramen ovale from being closed, and thus
+produce excellent divers, and different kinds of amphibious animals,
+which might live equally in air or in water.
+
+The air, on its first admission into the lungs, generally meets with
+some obstacle, occasioned by a liquid collected in the wind-pipe. This
+obstacle is more or less great, in proportion as the liquid is more
+or less viscous. At its birth, however, the infant raises its head,
+which before reclined on its breast, and by this movement the canal of
+the wind-pipe is lengthened, the air obtains a place, and forces the
+liquid into the lungs: and by dilating the bronchia, it distributes
+over their coats the mucous substance which opposes its passage. The
+superfluity of this moisture is presently dried up by the renewal of
+the air; or, if the infant is incommoded by it, it coughs, and at
+length relieves itself by expectoration, which, as it has not yet the
+strength to spit, is seen to flow from the mouth.
+
+As we remember nothing of what happened to us at this period, it is
+impossible to determine what feelings the impression of air produces
+in a new-born infant. Its cries, however, the instant it first draws
+breath, are pretty certain signs of the pain it feels from the action
+of the air. Till the moment of its birth, the infant is accustomed to
+the mild warmth of a tranquil liquid; and we may suppose, that the
+action of a fluid, whose temperature is unequal, gives too violent a
+shock to the delicate fibres of its body. By warmth and by cold it
+seems to be equally affected; in every situation it complains, and pain
+appears to be its first, its only sensation.
+
+For some days after they are brought into the world, most animals
+have their eye-lids closed. Infants open them the moment of their
+birth, but they are fixed and dull; they want that lustre which they
+afterwards acquire; and when they move, it is rather an accidental
+roll than an act of vision. The pupil of the eye is seen to dilate, or
+contract, in proportion to the quantity of light it receives, yet is
+incapable of distinguishing objects, because the organs of vision are
+still imperfect; the tunica cornea, or horny tunicle is wrinkled, and
+perhaps the retina is also too soft to receive the images of external
+objects, and admit the sense of seeing.
+
+The same remark is equally applicable to the other senses; they have
+not acquired that consistency which is necessary to their operations;
+and even when they have, a long time must elapse before the sensations
+of the infant can be just and complete. The senses are so many
+instruments which we must learn to employ. Of these sight, which seems
+to be the noblest and the most admirable, is also the most uncertain
+and delusive; and were its effects not every moment corrected by the
+testimony of touching we should constantly be misled and draw false
+conclusions. This sense of touching is the measure and criterion of
+all the others; it alone is essential to the animal's existence; and
+is alone diffused universally over its body. Yet, even this sense,
+in an infant just born, is imperfect; by its cries, indeed, it gives
+indication of pain; but it has no expression to denote pleasure. It
+is forty days before it begins to smile; about the same time also it
+begins to weep; its former expressions of pain being unaccompanied with
+tears. On the countenance of a new born infant there appears no vestige
+of the passions, the features of the face not having acquired that
+consistence and form which are necessary for expressing the sentiments
+of the soul. All the other parts of its body are alike feeble and
+delicate; its motions are unsteady and uncertain; it is unable to
+stand upright; its legs and thighs are still bent, from the habit it
+contracted in the womb; it has not strength enough to stretch forth its
+arms or to grasp any thing with its hands; and, if abandoned, it would
+remain on its back, without being able to turn itself.
+
+From all which it appears, that the pain felt by infants soon after
+their birth, and which they express by crying, is a sensation merely
+corporeal, similar to that of other animals, who also cry the minute
+they are brought forth; as also, that the mental sensations do not
+begin to manifest themselves till forty days have elapsed; smiling
+and weeping being produced by two internal sensations, which both
+depend on the action of the mind. The former is the effect of an
+agreeable emotion, which can only arise from the sight, or resemblance
+of an object known, beloved, and desired; the latter is that of a
+disagreeable impression, compounded of sympathy, and anxious concern
+for ourselves; both imply a certain degree of knowledge, as well as an
+ability to compare, and to reflect. Smiles and tears, therefore, are
+signs peculiar to the human species, for expressing mental pleasure or
+pain; while cries, and the other signs of bodily pain and pleasure, are
+common to man, and to the greatest part of the animal creation.
+
+But let us return to the material organs and affections of the
+body. The size of an infant born at the full time, is usually about
+twenty-one inches; this is not without exception, some falling short
+of and others exceeding this measurement. In children of twenty-one
+inches, the breast, measured by the length of the sternum, is nearly
+three inches; and in those of fourteen, only two inches. At nine
+months, the foetus generally weighs from twelve to fourteen pounds.
+The head is large in proportion to the rest of the body; but this
+disproportion gradually wears off as the size of the child increases.
+Its skin is very soft, and from its transparency, by which the blood
+beneath appears, it is also of a reddish cast. It is even pretended,
+that those children whose skins are the most red when born, will
+afterwards be the fairest, and the most beautiful.
+
+The form of the body and the members of a new born infant, are by no
+means perfect: all the parts are too round, and even when the child
+is in good health, they seem swelled. At the end of three days,
+there generally appears a kind of jaundice; and at this time there
+is generally milk in the breasts of the infants, which is squeezed
+out with the fingers. The superfluous juices, and the swelling of the
+different parts diminish by degrees, as the child increases in growth.
+
+In some children just born, the brain-pan may be observed to palpitate;
+and in all, the action of the sinuses, or arteries of the brain, may be
+felt at this place. Over this aperture is formed a kind of scurf, which
+is sometimes very thick, and must be rubbed with brushes in proportion
+as it begins to dry. This matter seems to have some analogy with that
+of the horns of some animals, which also derive their origin from an
+aperture of the skull, and from the substance of the brain. We shall
+hereafter take an opportunity to shew, that the extremities of the
+nerves become solid by being exposed to the air, and that it is this
+nervous substance produces claws, nails, horns, &c.
+
+The fluid contained in the amnios leaves a viscous, whitish matter upon
+the infant, which is sometimes so adhesive, that it must be diluted
+with some mild liquid before it can be removed. In this country we
+never wash the infant but in warm water; yet there are whole nations,
+who inhabit climates much more severe than ours, that plunge their
+children into cold water the minute they are born, without their
+suffering the least injury. The Laplanders are even said to leave their
+infants in snow, till by the cold their respiration is nearly stopped,
+and then plunge them into a bath of warm water. They are treated thus
+roughly thrice every day during the first year, and afterwards as often
+every week, do they undergo an immersion in cold water. The people of
+the North are persuaded that the practice of cold bathing renders men
+more healthy and robust; and it is for this reason they enure their
+progeny to it from their birth. The truth is, we are ignorant with
+the extent of what our body is capable of suffering, acquiring, or
+losing by the power of habit. The Indians in the isthmus of America,
+for example, receive no injury from plunging into cold water when in
+a sweat; and as the most speedy remedy for intoxication, the women
+throw their husbands into the river when they are drunk; the minute
+after delivery, mothers scruple not to bathe in cold water with their
+infants, and yet dangerous as we should consider this practice, these
+women are rarely known to die in child-bearing.
+
+A few minutes after birth the infant discharges urine, and this
+generally when it feels the heat of the fire: and sometimes also the
+meconium or excrement which have been collected in the intestines
+during its residence in the matrix. This last evacuation is not always
+performed so soon, but if it does not happen in the course of the first
+day, the child is often affected with a pain in the bowels; in which
+case methods are taken to facilitate the discharge. The meconium is
+black, and when the infant is effectually eased of it, the subsequent
+stools are of a whitish cast. This change generally happens on the
+second or third day, and then the excrement becomes more foetid than
+the meconium; a proof that the bile and other bitter humours of the
+body begin to intermix with it. This fact tends to support our former
+remark, that the foetus did not receive any food by its mouth, but
+received all its nourishment by absorption.
+
+The infant is allowed time to throw off the slime and meconium, which
+are in its bowels and intestines, before it is allowed to suck. As
+these substances might sour the milk, and produce bad effects, it is
+first made to swallow a little wine and sugar, in order to fortify the
+stomach, and to procure such evacuations as may be necessary to prepare
+it for receiving and digesting its food; nor ought it to receive the
+breast till 10 or 12 hours after the birth.
+
+Hardly has the infant left the womb of its mother, and enjoyed the
+liberty of extending its limbs, when it is again put into a more cruel
+confinement. The head of the helpless infant is fixed to one position;
+its arms and legs put in strict bondage, and it is laced with bandages
+so strait as not to be able to move a single joint. Well is it when the
+compression is not so great as to obstruct the respiration, or that
+the midwife has taken the precaution to lay it upon its side, that the
+natural moisture may emit of itself from the mouth, since it is denied
+the power of turning its head in order to facilitate this emission.
+Do not then those nations act more wisely than we who cover or clothe
+their children without shackling them in swathing-bands? the Siamese,
+the Japanese, the Indians, the Negroes, the Savages of Canada, of
+Virginia, or Brazil, and almost all the inhabitants of South America,
+lay their infants naked upon a suspended bed of cotton or put them into
+their cradles lined with fur. Those practices are certainly liable to
+less inconveniences than ours. In swaddling a child, it is impossible
+but the restraint must give it uneasiness; and the efforts it makes to
+disentangle itself have a greater tendency to injure the form of the
+body, than any position it might assume was it left at full liberty.
+Swathing-bands may be compared to stays, which young girls are made to
+wear in order to preserve their shapes, but which nevertheless occasion
+more diseases and deformities than they are supposed to prevent.
+
+If the efforts which children make for liberty, when confined in the
+swaddling-clothes, are hurtful, the inaction in which they are held by
+it, is perhaps still more so. Want of exercise naturally retards the
+growth of their limbs, and diminishes the strength of their bodies;
+and of consequence such children as enjoy the liberty of moving at
+pleasure, must be the most vigorous. It was for this reason that the
+ancient Peruvians gave their infants the full freedom of their arms in
+a swathing-bag; afterwards, as their children grew, they put them up to
+the middle in a hole dug in the earth, and lined with linen; by this
+method they had their arms free, and could move their heads and bend
+their bodies, without falling or hurting themselves. So soon as they
+were able to step, they were presented with the breast, at a little
+distance, as an incentive for them to walk. The children of Negroes are
+often exposed to much greater fatigues, in order to come at the nipple,
+they cling round one of their mother's haunches with their legs, and
+support themselves without any assistance from her; seizing the breast
+they continue to suck in perfect safety, notwithstanding she is all the
+while in motion, or at work. These children begin to walk, or rather
+creep on their knees and hands, in the second month; and this exercise
+qualities them for running afterwards in this manner, almost as nimble
+as they do upon their feet.
+
+
+_END OF THE THIRD VOLUME._
+
+
+T. Gillet, Printer, Wild Court.
+
+
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's note:
+
+All paragraphs split by illustrations were rejoined.
+
+All obvious typographical errors were corrected.
+
+In the Table of Contents, Chapter VI's starting page was corrected
+to 81.
+
+On page 203, the word sospetare was changed to sospettare.
+
+Chapter XI (p. 260) was mislabeled as "IX" and was corrected.
+
+Likewise, Chapter II (page 334) was mislabeled "III" and
+was corrected.
+
+Otherwise, all text is as presented in the printed version.
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BUFFON'S NATURAL HISTORY, VOLUME III
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+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
+<head>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1" />
+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Buffon's Natural History, Volume III (of 10), by Georges Louis Leclerc, Comte de Buffon</title>
+ <style type="text/css">
+
+body {margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;}
+
+p {margin-top: .75em; text-align: justify;
+ margin-bottom: .75em; text-indent: 1.5em;}
+
+hr {width: 33%; margin-top: 1em; margin-bottom: 1em;
+ margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; clear: both;}
+
+hr.chap {width: 65%; margin-top: 2em;}
+hr.full {width: 95%; margin-top: 2em;}
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+
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+/* Transcriber's notes */
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+/* Footnotes */
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+<body>
+<h1 class="center">The Project Gutenberg eBook, Buffon's Natural History, Volume III (of 10),
+by Georges Louis Leclerc, Comte de Buffon, Translated by James Smith Barr</h1>
+<p>This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at <a
+href="http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a></p>
+<p>Title: Buffon's Natural History, Volume III (of 10)</p>
+<p> Containing a Theory of the Earth, a General History of Man, of the Brute Creation, and of Vegetables, Minerals, &amp;c. &amp;c.</p>
+<p>Author: Georges Louis Leclerc, Comte de Buffon</p>
+<p>Release Date: May 12, 2014 [eBook #45639]</p>
+<p>Language: English</p>
+<p>Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1</p>
+<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BUFFON'S NATURAL HISTORY, VOLUME III (OF 10)***</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h4 class="center">E-text prepared by Chris Curnow, Tom Cosmas,<br />
+ and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
+ (<a href="http://www.pgdp.net">http://www.pgdp.net</a>)<br />
+ from page images generously made available by<br />
+ Internet Archive<br />
+ (<a href="https://archive.org">https://archive.org</a>)</h4>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<table border="0" style="background-color: #ccccff;margin: 0 auto;" cellpadding="10">
+ <tr>
+ <td valign="top">
+ Note:
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ Images of the original pages are available through
+ Internet Archive. See
+ <a href="https://archive.org/details/buffonsnaturalhi03buff">
+ https://archive.org/details/buffonsnaturalhi03buff</a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<div class="trans_notes">
+<p>This eBook contains several links to <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/45602/45602-h/45602-h.htm">Buffon's Natural Histroy Vol. II</a>
+on The Internet Archive.</p>
+</div>
+<hr class="pg" />
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class="fig_center" style="width: 243px;">
+<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="243" height="342" alt="" />
+</div>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_i" id="Page_i">[i]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="caption3"><i>Barr's Buffon.</i></p>
+
+<div class="fig_center" style="width: 118px;">
+<img src="images/bar_dbl_1.png" width="118" height="15" alt="diamond" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption1">Buffon's Natural History.</p>
+
+<p class="center">CONTAINING</p>
+
+<p class="caption3">A THEORY OF THE EARTH,</p>
+
+<p class="caption3 smaller">A GENERAL</p>
+
+<p class="caption2"><i>HISTORY OF MAN</i>,</p>
+
+<p class="caption2 smaller">OF THE BRUTE CREATION, AND OF<br />
+VEGETABLES, MINERALS,<br />
+<i>&amp;c.</i> <i>&amp;c.</i></p>
+
+<p class="caption3 smaller">FROM THE FRENCH.</p>
+
+<p class="center">WITH NOTES BY THE TRANSLATOR.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center">IN TEN VOLUMES.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center">VOL. III.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class="fig_center" style="width: 118px;">
+<img src="images/bar_dbl_2.png" width="118" height="15" alt="" />
+</div>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class="fig_center" style="width: 69px;">
+<img src="images/txt_london.png" width="69" height="21" alt="London" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="center">PRINTED FOR THE PROPRIETOR,</p>
+
+<p class="center">SOLD AND BY H. D. SYMONDS, PATERNOSTER-ROW.</p>
+
+<hr class="r10" />
+
+<p class="center">1807.</p>
+
+<p class="center">T. Gillet, Printer, Wild-Court</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+
+<p class="caption2"><a name="ToC"></a>CONTENTS<br />
+OF<br />
+THE THIRD VOLUME.</p>
+
+
+<table summary="ToC">
+<tr>
+ <td></td>
+ <td></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><i>Page</i></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td></td>
+ <td class="caption2">History of Animals</td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Chap. VI.</td>
+ <td class="tdl"><i>Experiments on the Method of Generation</i></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_81">81</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Chap. VII.</td>
+ <td class="tdl"><i>Comparison of my Observations with those of Leeuwenhoek</i></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_134">134</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Chap. VIII.</td>
+ <td class="tdl"><i>Reflections on the preceding Experiments</i></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_159">159</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Chap. IX.</td>
+ <td class="tdl"><i>Varieties on the Generation of Animals</i></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_208">208</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Chap. X.</td>
+ <td class="tdl"><i>On the Formation of the F&#339;tus</i></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_226">226</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Chap. XI.</td>
+ <td class="tdl"><i>On the Expansion, Growth, and Delivery of the F&#339;tus</i></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_260">260</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><i>Recapitulation</i></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_309">309</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+
+<p class="caption2">History of Man.</p>
+
+<table summary="ToC">
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Chap. I. <i>Of the Nature of Man</i></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_317">317</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td class="tdl">Chap. II. <i>Of Infancy</i></td>
+ <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_334">334</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="caption2"><i>Directions for placing the Plates.</i></p>
+
+
+<table summary="LoI">
+<tr>
+ <td>Page</td>
+ <td class="tdl"><a href="#Page_88">88</a>,</td>
+ <td class="tdl">Fig. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><a href="#Page_106">106</a>,</td>
+ <td class="tdl">Fig. 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><a href="#Page_140">140</a>,</td>
+ <td class="tdl">Plate III.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td></td>
+ <td class="tdl"><a href="#Page_148">148</a>,</td>
+ <td class="tdl">Plate IV.</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<p class="caption1"><a name="BUFFONS" id="BUFFONS">BUFFON'S</a><br />
+
+NATURAL HISTORY.</p>
+
+<p class="caption2"><a name="HISTORY_OF_ANIMALS" id="HISTORY_OF_ANIMALS"><i>HISTORY OF ANIMALS.</i></a></p>
+
+
+<p>Aristotle admits, with Plato, of final
+and efficient causes. These efficient
+causes are sensitive and vegetative souls, that
+give form to matter which, of itself, is only a
+capacity of receiving forms; and as in generation
+the female gives the most abundant matter,
+and it being against his system of final
+causes to admit that what one could effect
+should be performed by many, he concludes,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span>
+that the female alone contains the necessary
+matter to generation; and, as another of his
+principles was, that matter itself is unformed,
+and that form is a distinct being from matter,
+he affirmed that the male furnished the form,
+and, consequently, nothing belonging to matter.</p>
+
+<p>Descartes, on the contrary, who admitted
+but a few mechanical principles in his philosophy,
+endeavoured to explain the formation of
+the f&#339;tus by them, and thought it in his power
+to comprehend, and make others understand,
+how an organized and living being could be
+made by the laws of motion alone. His admitted
+principles differed from those used by
+Aristotle; but both, instead of examining the
+thing itself, without prepossession and prejudice,
+have only considered it in the point of
+view relative to their systems of philosophy,
+which could not be attended with a successful
+application to the nature of generation, because
+it depends, as we have shewn, on quite
+different principles. Descartes differs still
+more from Aristotle, by admitting of the mixture
+of the seminal liquor of the two sexes;
+he thinks both furnish something material for
+generation, and that the fermentation occasioned
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span>
+by the mixture of these two seminal
+liquors causes the formation of the f&#339;tus.</p>
+
+<p>Hippocrates, who lived under Perdicas, a
+considerable time before Aristotle, established
+an opinion, which was adopted by Galen, and
+a great number of physicians who followed
+him; his opinion was, that the male and female
+had each a prolific fluid, and supposed,
+besides, that there were two seminal fluids in
+each sex, the one strong and active, the other
+weak and inactive.<a name="FNanchor_1" id="FNanchor_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[A]</a> That a mixture of the
+two strongest fluids produce a male child, and
+of the two weakest a female; so that, according
+to him, they each contain a male and
+a female seed. He supports this hypothesis
+by the following circumstance; that many
+women, who produce only girls by their first
+husbands, have produced boys by a second;
+and that men, who have had only girls by their
+first wives, have had boys by others. It appears
+to me, that if even this circumstance
+could be well established, it would not be necessary
+to give to the male and female two
+kinds of seminal liquor for an explanation; because
+it may easily be conceived, that women,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span>
+who have brought forth only girls by their
+first husbands, and produced boys with other
+men, were only those who furnished more
+particles proper for generation with their first
+husband than with the second; or that the second
+husband furnished more particles proper
+for generation with the second wife than with
+the first; for when, in the instant of conception,
+the organic molecules of the male are
+more abundant than those of the female, the
+result will be a male, and when those of the
+female abounds a female will be produced;
+nor is it in the least surprising that a man
+should have a disadvantage in this respect with
+some women, while he will have a superiority
+over others.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_1" id="Footnote_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1"><span class="label">[A]</span></a> See Hippocrates, lib. de Genitura, page 129, &amp; lib. de
+dięta, page 198, Lugd. Bat. 1665, vol. I.</p></div>
+
+<p>This great physician supposes, that the seed
+of the male is a secretion of the strongest and
+most essential parts of all that is humid in the
+human body; and he thus explains how this
+secretion is made: "Venę &amp; nervi, he says,
+ab omni corpore in pudendum vergunt, quibus
+dum aliquantulum teruntur &amp; calescunt ac implentur,
+velut pruritus incidit, ex hoc toti corpori
+voluptas ac caliditas accidit; quum vero
+pudendum teritur &amp; homo movetur, humidum
+in corpore calescit ac diffunditur, &amp; a motu conquassatur
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span>
+ac spumescit, quemadmodum alii humores
+omnes conquassati spumescunt.</p>
+
+<p>"Sic autem in homine ab humido spumescente
+id quod robustissimum est ac pinguissimum
+secernitur, &amp; ad medullam spinalem venit; tendunt
+enim in hanc ex omni corpore vię, &amp;
+diffundunt ex cerebro in lumbus ac in totum
+corpus &amp; in medullum; &amp; ex ipsa medull proacedunt
+vię, ut &amp; ad ipsum humidum perferatur
+&amp; ex ipsa secedat; postquam autem ad hanc medullam
+genitura pervenerit, procedit ad renes,
+hac enim via tendit per venas, &amp; si renes fuerint
+exulcerati, aliquando etiam sanguis defertur:
+a renibus autem transit per medois testes
+in pudendum, proce dit autem non qua urina,
+erum alia ipsi via est illi contigua, &amp;c."<a name="FNanchor_2" id="FNanchor_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[B]</a></p>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_2" id="Footnote_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2"><span class="label">[B]</span></a> See Fęsius's Translation, vol. I. page 129.</p></div>
+
+<p>Anatomists will no doubt discover that Hippocrates
+is not correct in tracing the road of the seminal
+liquor; but that does not affect his opinion,
+that the semen comes from every part of
+the body, and particularly the head, because, he
+says, those whose veins have been cut which
+lie near the ears only bring forth a weak, and
+very often an unfertile semen. The female has
+also a seminal fluid, which she emits, sometimes
+within the matrix, and sometimes without,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>
+when the internal orifice is more open than it
+should. The semen of the male enters into
+the matrix, where it mixes with that of the
+female; and as each has two kinds of fluid,
+the one strong and the other weak, if both
+furnish their strong, a male will be the result,
+and if their weak, a female; and if in the
+mixture there are more particles of the male
+liquor than the female, then the infant will
+have a greater resemblance to the father than
+to the mother, and so on the contrary. It
+might here be asked Hippocrates what would
+happen when the one furnished its weak semen
+and the other its strong? I cannot conceive
+what answer he could make, and that
+alone is sufficient to cause his opinion of two
+seeds in each sex to be rejected.</p>
+
+<p>In this manner then, according to him, the
+formation of the f&#339;tus is made: the seminal
+fluids first mix in the matrix, where they
+gradually thicken by the heat of the body of
+the mother; the mixture receives and attracts
+the spirit of the heat, and when too warm part
+of the heat flies out, and the respiration of the
+mother sends a colder spirit in; thus alternatively
+a cold and a hot spirit enter the mixture,
+which give life, and cause a pellicle to grow
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span>
+on the surface, which takes a round form, because
+the spirits, acting as a centre, extend it
+equally on all sides. "I have seen, says this
+great man, a f&#339;tus of six days old; it was a
+ball of liquor surrounded with a pellicle; the
+liquor was reddish, and the pellicle was spread
+over with vessels, some red and others white,
+in the midst of which was a small eminence,
+which I thought to be the umbilical vessels, by
+which the f&#339;tus receives nourishment and the
+spirit of respiration from the mother. By degrees
+another pellicle is formed, which surrounds
+the first; the menstrual blood, being
+suppressed, abundantly supplies it with nutriment,
+and which coagulates by degrees, and
+becomes flesh; this flesh articulates itself in
+proportion as it grows, and receives its form
+from the spirit; each part proceeds to take its
+proper place; the solid particles go to their respective
+situations and the fluid to theirs: each
+matter seeks for that which is most like itself,
+and the f&#339;tus is at length entirely formed by
+these causes and these means."</p>
+
+<p>This system is less obscure and more reasonable
+than that of Aristotle, because Hippocrates
+endeavours to explain every matter by
+particular reasons: he borrows from the philosophy
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>
+of his times but one single principle,
+which is, that heat and cold produce spirits,
+and that those spirits have the power of ordering
+and arranging matter. He has viewed
+generation more like a physician than a philosopher,
+while Aristotle has explained it more
+like a metaphysician than a naturalist; which
+makes the defects of Hippocrates's system
+particular and less apparent, while those of
+Aristotle's are general and evident.</p>
+
+<p>These two great men have each had their
+followers; almost all the scholastic philosophers,
+by adopting Aristotle's philosophy, received
+his system of generation, while almost every physician
+followed the opinion of Hippocrates;
+and seventeen or eighteen centuries passed
+without any thing new being said on the
+subject. At last, at the restoration of literature,
+some anatomists turned their eyes on
+generation, and Fabricius Aquapendente was
+the first who made experiments and observations
+on the impregnation and growth of
+the eggs of a fowl. The following is the substance
+of his observations.</p>
+
+<p>He distinguished two parts in the matrix
+of a hen, the one superior and the other inferior.
+The superior he calls the Ovarium,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
+which is properly no other than a cluster of
+small yellow eggs of a round form, varying in
+size from the bigness of a mustard-seed to that
+of a large nut or medlar. These small eggs are
+fastened together by one common pellicle, and
+form a body which nearly resembles a bunch of
+grapes. The smallest of these eggs are white,
+and they take another colour in proportion as
+they increase.</p>
+
+<p>Having examined these eggs immediately
+after the communication of the cock, he did
+not perceive any remarkable difference, nor
+any of the male semen in any one of these
+eggs; he therefore supposed that every egg,
+and the ovarium itself, became fruitful by a
+subtle spirit, which came from the semen of
+the male; and he says, that in order to secure
+this fecundating spirit, nature has placed at the
+external orifice of the vagina of birds a kind of
+net-work or membrane, which permits, like
+a valve, the entrance of this seminal spirit, but
+at the same time prevents it from re-issuing or
+evaporating.</p>
+
+<p>When the egg is loosened from the common
+pellicle, it descends by degrees through a
+winding passage into the internal part of the
+matrix. This passage is filled with a liquor
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>
+nearly similar to the white of an egg; it is also
+in this part that the eggs begin to be surrounded
+with this white liquor, with the membrane
+which occasions it, the two ligaments
+(<i>chalazę</i>) which passes over the white, and connects
+it with the yolk and shell, which are
+formed in a very short time before they are
+laid. These ligaments, according to Fabricius,
+is the part of the egg fecundated by the seminal
+spirit of the male; and it is here where the
+f&#339;tus first begins to form. The egg is not
+only the true matrix, that is to say, the place
+of the formation of the chick, but it is from
+the egg all generation depends. The egg produces
+it as the agent: it supplies both the matter
+and the organs; the ligaments are the substance
+of formation; the white and the yolk
+are the nutriment, and the seminal spirit of the
+male is the efficient cause. This spirit communicates
+to the ligaments at first an alterative
+faculty, afterwards a formative, and lastly the
+power of augmentation, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>These observations of Fabricius have not
+given us a very clear explication of generation.
+Nearly at the same time as this anatomist was
+employed in these researches, towards the
+middle of the sixteenth century, the famous
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>
+Aldrovandus<a name="FNanchor_3" id="FNanchor_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[C]</a> also made observations on eggs;
+but as Harvey judiciously observes, he followed
+Aristotle much closer than experiment. The
+descriptions he gives of the chicken in the egg
+are not exact. Volcher Coiter, one of his scholars,
+succeeded much better in his enquiries;
+and Parisanus, a physician of Venice, having
+also laboured on this subject, they have each
+given a description of the chicken in the egg,
+which Harvey prefers to any other.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_3" id="Footnote_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3"><span class="label">[C]</span></a> See his Ornithology.</p></div>
+
+<p>This famous anatomist, to whom we are indebted
+for the discovery of the circulation of
+the blood, has composed a very extensive treatise
+on generation; he lived towards the middle
+of the last century, and was physician to
+Charles I. of England. As he was obliged to
+follow this unfortunate prince in his misfortunes,
+he lost what he had written on the generation
+of insects among other papers, and he
+composed what he has left us on the generation
+of birds and quadrupeds from his memory. I
+shall concisely relate his observations, his experiments,
+and his system.</p>
+
+<p>Harvey asserts that man and every animal
+proceed from an egg; that the first produce
+of conception in viviparous animals is a kind of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
+an egg, and that the only difference between
+viviparous and oviparous is, that the f&#339;tus of
+the first take their origin, acquire their growth,
+and arrive at their entire expansion in the
+matrix; whereas the f&#339;tus of oviparous animals
+begins to exist in the body of the mother,
+where they are merely as eggs, and it is only
+after they have quitted the body of the mother
+that they really become f&#339;tuses; and we
+must remark, says he, that in oviparous animals,
+some hold their eggs within themselves
+till they are perfect, as birds, serpents and
+oviparous quadrupeds; others lay their eggs
+before they are perfect, as fish, crustaceous,
+and testaceous animals. The eggs which
+these animals deposit are only the rudiments
+of real eggs, they afterwards acquire bulk
+and membranes, and attract nourishment from
+the matter which surrounds them. It is the
+same, adds he, with insects, for example, and
+caterpillars, which only seem imperfect eggs,
+which seek their nutriment, and at the end
+of a certain time arrive to the state of chrysalis,
+which is a perfect egg. There is another
+difference in oviparous animals: for fowls and
+other birds have eggs of different sizes, whereas
+fish, frogs, &amp;c. lay them before they are perfect,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>
+have them all of the same size; he indeed
+observes, that in pigeons, who only lay two
+eggs, all the small eggs which remain in the
+ovarium are of the same size, and it is only the
+foremost two which are bigger than the rest.
+It is the same, he says, in cartilaginous fish, as
+in the thornback, who have only two eggs
+which increase and come to maturity, while
+those which remain in the ovarium are, like
+those in fowls, of different sizes.</p>
+
+<p>He afterwards makes us an anatomical exposition
+of the parts necessary to generation,
+and observes, that in all birds the situation of
+the anus and vulra are contrary to the situation
+of those parts in other animals; the anus being
+placed before and the vulra behind;<a name="FNanchor_4" id="FNanchor_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">[D]</a> and with
+respect to the cock, and all small birds, that
+they generate by external friction, having in
+fact no intermission nor real copulation; with
+male ducks, geese, and ostriches, it is evidently
+otherwise.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_4" id="Footnote_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4"><span class="label">[D]</span></a> Most of these articles are taken from Aristotle.</p></div>
+
+<p>Hens produce eggs without the cock, but
+in a very small number, and these eggs, although
+perfect, are unfruitful: he does not
+agree with the opinion of country people, that
+two or three days cohabitation with the cock
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
+is sufficient to impregnate all the eggs a hen
+will lay within the year, but admits that he
+separated a hen from a cock for the space of
+twenty days, and that all the eggs she laid during
+that space were fecundated. While the
+egg is fastened to the ovarium, it derives its
+nutriment from the vessel of the common pellicle.
+But as soon as it is loosened from it, it derives
+the white liquor which fills the passages in
+which it descends, and the whole, even to the
+shell, is formed by this mode.</p>
+
+<p>The two ligaments (<i>chalazę</i>) which Aquapendente
+looks on as the shoot produced by the
+seed of the male, are found in the infecund
+eggs which the hen produces without the communication
+with the cock, as in those which
+are impregnated: and Harvey very judiciously
+remarks, that those parts do not proceed from
+the male, and are not those which are fecundated;
+the fecundated part of an egg is a very
+small white circle which is on the membrane
+that covers the yolk, and forms there a small
+spot, like a cicatrice, about the size of a lentil.
+Harvey also remarks, that this little cicatrice
+is found in every fecund or infecund egg, and
+that those who think it is produced by the seed
+of the male are deceived. It is of the same
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>
+size and form in fresh eggs, as in those which
+have been kept a long time; but when we
+would hatch them, and when the egg receives
+a sufficient degree of heat, either by the hen, or
+artificially, we presently see this small spot increase
+and dilate nearly like the sight of the
+eye. This is the first change, and is visible at
+the end of a few hours incubation.</p>
+
+<p>When the egg has undergone a proper
+warmth for twenty-four hours, the yolk,
+which was before in the centre of the shell,
+approaches nearer to the cavity at the broad
+end; this cavity is increased by the evaporation
+of the watery part of the white, and the
+grosser part sinks to the small end. The cicatrice,
+or speck, on the membrane of the yolk,
+rises with it to the broad end, and seems to adhere
+to the membrane there: this speck is then
+about the bigness of a small pea, in the middle
+of it a white speck is discernible, and many
+circles, of which this point seems to form the
+centre.</p>
+
+<p>At the end of the second day these circles
+are larger and more visible; the streak also
+appears divided by these circles into two, and
+sometimes three parts of different colours; a
+small protuberance also appears on the external
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
+part, and nearly resembles a small eye, in the
+pupil of which there is a point, or little cataract;
+between these circles a clear liquor is
+contained by a very delicate membrane, and
+the speck now appears more to be placed in
+the white than on the membrane of the yolk.
+On the third day the transparent liquor is considerably
+increased, as is also the small membrane
+which surrounds it. The fourth day, a
+small streak of purple-coloured blood is observed
+at the circumference of the speck or ball,
+at a little distance from the centre of which a
+point may be seen of a blood colour, and
+which beats like a heart. It appears like a
+small spark at each diastole, and disappears at
+each systole; from this animated speck issue
+two small blood vessels, which these small
+vessels throw out as branches into this liquor,
+all of which come from the same point, nearly
+in like manner as the roots of a tree shoot from
+the trunk.</p>
+
+<p>Towards the end of the fourth day, or at the
+beginning of the fifth, the animated speck is so
+much increased as to appear like a small bladder
+filled with blood, and by its contractions and
+dilations is alternatively filled and emptied. In
+the same day this vessel very distinctly appears
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
+to divide into two parts, each of which alternatively
+impel and dilute the blood in the same
+manner. Around the shortest sanguinary vessel
+which we have spoken of a kind of cloud
+is seen, which, although transparent, renders
+the sight of this vessel more obscure; this
+cloud constantly grows thicker and more attached
+to the root of the blood vessel, and
+appears like a small globe: this small globe
+lengthens and divides into three parts, one of
+which is globular, and larger than the other
+two; the head and eyes now begin to appear,
+and at the end of the fifth day, the place for the
+vertebra is seen in the remainder part of this
+globe.</p>
+
+<p>The sixth day the head is seen more clearly,
+the outlines of the eyes now appear, the
+wings and thighs lengthen, and the liver, lungs,
+and beak, are distinctly observed; the f&#339;tus
+now begins to move and extend its head, although
+it has as yet only the internal viscera;
+for the thorax, abdomen, and all the external
+coverings of the fore part, of the body are wanting.
+At the end of this day, or at the beginning
+of the seventh, the toes appear, the chick
+opens and moves its beak, and the anterior
+parts of the body begin to cover the viscera;
+on the seventh day the chicken is entirely
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
+formed, and from this time until it comes out
+of the egg, nothing happens but only an expansion
+of those parts it acquired within these
+first seven days: at the fourteenth or fifteenth
+day the feathers appear, and at the twenty-first
+it breaks the shell with its beak, and procures
+its enlargement.</p>
+
+<p>These observations of Harvey appear to have
+been made with the greatest exactness; nevertheless
+we shall point out how imperfect they
+are, and that he has fallen himself into the error
+he reproaches others with, making experiments
+to support his favourite hypothesis, that the
+heart was the animated speck which first appeared;
+but before we proceed on this matter,
+it is but just to give an account of his other
+observations, and of his system.</p>
+
+<p>It is well known that Harvey made many
+experiments on hinds and does. They receive
+the male towards the middle of September:
+a few days after copulation the horns of
+the matrix become thicker, and at the same
+time more lax. In each of the cavities five carunculas
+appear. Towards the 26th or 28th
+of the above month the matrix thickens still
+more, and the five carunculas are swelled nearly
+to the shape and size of a nurse's nipple;
+by opening them, an infinity of small white
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
+specks are found. Harvey pretends to have
+remarked, that there was neither then, nor immediately
+after copulation, any alteration or
+change in the ovarium, and that he has never
+been able to find a single drop of the seed of
+the male in the matrix, although he has made
+many researches for that purpose.</p>
+
+<p>Towards the end of October, or beginning
+of November, when the females separate from
+the males, the thickness of the horns begins to
+diminish, the internal surfaces of their cavities
+are swelled, and appear fastened together; the
+carunculas remain, and the whole, which resembles
+the substance of the brain, is so soft
+that it cannot be touched. Towards the 13th
+or 14th of November, Harvey says, that he perceived
+filaments, like the threads of a spider's
+web, which traversed the cavities of the horns
+and the matrix itself: these filaments shoot out
+from the superior angle of the matrix, and by
+their multiplication form a kind of membrane,
+or empty tunic; a day or two after this tunic
+is filled with a white, aqueous and glutinous
+matter, which adheres to the matrix by a kind
+of mucilage; and in the third month this
+tunic, or pouch, contains an embryo about
+the breadth of two fingers long, and another
+internal pouch, called the amnios, containing
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
+a transparent crystalline liquor, in which the
+f&#339;tus swims. The f&#339;tus at first was but an
+animated speck, like that in the egg of a fowl.
+All the rest is performed in the same manner as
+that related of the chick; the only difference is
+in the eyes, which appears much sooner in the
+fowl than in the deer. The animated speck
+appears about the 19th or 20th of November, a
+day or two after which the oblong body, which
+contains the f&#339;tus, is seen; in six or seven
+days more it is so much formed that the sex and
+limbs may be distinguished; but the heart and
+viscera are yet uncovered, and it is two days
+more before the thorax and the abdomen cover
+them, which is the last work and completion
+of the edifice.</p>
+
+<p>From these observations upon hens and deer,
+Harvey concludes, that all female animals have
+eggs, that in these eggs a separation of a transparent
+crystalline liquor contained in the amnios
+is made, and that another external pouch,
+the chorion, contains the whole liquors of the
+egg; that the first thing which appears in the
+crystalline liquor is the sanguinary and animated
+spirit; in a word, that the formation of
+viviparous animals is made after the same manner
+as oviparous; and he explains the generation
+of both as follows.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Generation is the work of the matrix, in
+which no seed of the male ever enters; the matrix
+conceives by a kind of contagion, which
+the male liquor communicates to it, nearly as
+the magnet communicates its magnetic virtue
+to steel. This male contagion not only acts
+upon the matrix but over all the female body,
+which is wholly fecundated, although the matrix
+only has the faculty of conception, as the
+brain has the sole faculty of conceiving ideas.
+The ideas conceived by the brain, are like the
+images of the objects transmitted by the senses;
+and the foetus, which may be considered as the
+idea of the matrix, is like that which produces
+it. This is the reason that a child has a resemblance
+to its father, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>I shall not follow this anatomist any farther;
+what I have mentioned is sufficient to judge of
+his system; but we have some remarks to
+make on his observations. He has given them
+in a manner most likely to impose; seems to
+have often repeated his experiments, and to
+have taken every necessary precaution to avoid
+deception; from which it might be imagined
+he had seen all he writes upon, and observed
+them with the greatest accuracy. Nevertheless,
+I perceive both uncertainty and obscurity
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
+in his descriptions; his observations are
+related chiefly on memory; and although he
+often says the contrary, Aristotle appears to
+have been his guide more than experience; for
+he has only seen in eggs what Aristotle has
+before mentioned; and that most of his observations
+which may be deemed essential had
+been made before him, we shall be perfectly
+convinced if we pay a little attention to what
+follows:</p>
+
+<p>Aristotle knew that the ligaments (Chalazę)
+were of no service to the generation of the
+chicken. "Quę ad principium lutei grandines
+hęrent, nil conferunt ad generationem,
+ut quidam suspicantur."<a name="FNanchor_5" id="FNanchor_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">[E]</a> Parisanus, Volcher,
+Coiter, Aquapendente, and others, remarked
+the cicatrice as well as Harvey: Aquapendente
+supposed it of no use; but Parisanus
+pretended that it was formed by the male
+semen, or at least that the white speck in the
+middle of the cicatrice was the seed of the male
+which would produce the chicken. "Est-que,
+says he, illud galli semen alba &amp; tenuissima
+tunica abductum, quod substat duabus communibus
+toti ovo membranis, &amp;c." Therefore
+the only discovery which properly belongs
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>
+to Harvey is, his having observed that
+this cicatrice is found in infecund as well as
+fecundated eggs; for others had observed, like
+him, the dilation of the circles, and the growth
+of the white speck; and it appears that Parisanus
+had seen it much better; this is all which
+he remarks in the two first days of incubation;
+and what he says of the third day, is only a repetition
+of Aristotle's words. <a name="FNanchor_6" id="FNanchor_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">[F]</a>"Per id tempus
+ascendit jam vetellus ad superiorem partem ovi
+acutiorem, ubi &amp; principium ovi est &amp; f&#339;tus
+excluditur; corque ipsum apparet, in albumine
+sanguinei puncti, quod punctum salit &amp; movet
+sese instar quasi animatum; ab eo meatus venarum
+specie duo, sanguinei pleni, flexuosi,
+qui, crescente f&#339;tu, feruntur in utramque
+tunicam ambientem, ac membrana sanguineas
+fibras habens eo tempore albumen continet
+sub meatibus illis venarum similibus; ac paulo
+post discernitur corpus pufillum initio, ommino
+&amp; candidum, capite conspicuo, atque in
+eo oculis maxime turgidis qui diu sic permanent,
+sero enim parvi fiunt ac considunt. In
+parte autem corporis inferiore, nullum extat
+membrum per initia, quod respondeat superioribus.
+Meatus autum illi qui a corde prodeunt,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
+alter ad circumdantem, membranam
+tendit, alter ad luteum, officio umbilici."</p>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_5" id="Footnote_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5"><span class="label">[E]</span></a> Hist. Anim. lib. vi. cap. 2.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_6" id="Footnote_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6"><span class="label">[F]</span></a> Hist. Anim. lib. vi. cap. 4.</p></div>
+
+<p>Harvey attacks Aristotle for saying that the
+yolk ascends towards the small end of the egg,
+and concludes, that he had not seen any thing
+himself, but had apparently received his information
+from some good observer of Nature.
+Harvey was wrong in thus reproaching Aristotle,
+and in asserting that the yolk always ascends
+towards the broad end of the egg, for that
+depends on the position of the egg during the
+time of incubation, for the yolk always ascends
+to the uppermost part, as being lighter than the
+white, whether it be to the broad or the small
+end. William Langley, a physician at Dordrecht,
+who made observations on the hatching
+of eggs, in 1655, twenty years before Harvey,
+was the first who made this remark.<a name="FNanchor_7" id="FNanchor_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor">[G]</a></p>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_7" id="Footnote_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7"><span class="label">[G]</span></a> See Wm. Langley Observ. edę a justo Schradero, Amst.
+1674.</p></div>
+
+<p>But to return to the passage we have quoted.
+By that we see that the crystalline liquor, the
+animated speck, the two circles, the two blood
+vessels, &amp;c. are described by Aristotle precisely
+as Harvey had seen them. This anatomist
+also pretends that the animated speck is the
+heart, that this heart is formed the first, and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
+that the viscera and other parts are joined
+afterwards. All this has been spoken of by
+Aristotle, and seen by Harvey, and nevertheless
+it is not conformable to truth. To be assured
+of this we need only repeat the same experiments
+on eggs, or only read with attention those
+of Malpighius,<a name="FNanchor_8" id="FNanchor_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8" class="fnanchor">[H]</a> which were made about 40
+years after those of Harvey.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_8" id="Footnote_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8"><span class="label">[H]</span></a> Malpighii pullus in ovo.</p></div>
+
+<p>This excellent observer of Nature examined,
+with attention, the cicatrice, which is the essential
+part of the egg; he found it was large in all
+impregnated eggs, and small in those which were
+not impregnated; and he discovered in eggs which
+had never been sat upon, that the white speck,
+spoken of by Harvey as the first which becomes
+animated, is a small pouch or ball, which
+swims in a liquor inclosed by the first circle,
+and in the middle of this ball he observed the
+embryo. The membrane of this small pouch,
+which is the amnios, being very thin and transparent,
+permitted him easily to see the f&#339;tus it
+surrounded. Malpighius, with reason, concludes,
+from this first observation, that the f&#339;tus exists
+in the egg before incubation, and that its first
+outlines are then very strong. It is not necessary
+to point out how opposite this experiment
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>
+is to the opinion of Harvey, for he saw
+nothing of a form for the two first days of incubation,
+and it was the third day before the
+sign of the f&#339;tus appears, which is the animated
+speck: whereas according to Malpighius, the
+outlines of the f&#339;tus exist in the egg before
+incubation has commenced.</p>
+
+<p>After being assured of this important matter,
+Malpighius examined, with like attention, the
+cicatrice of unimpregnated eggs, which, as we
+have observed, is smaller than those which have
+been impregnated; it has often irregular circumscriptions,
+and sometimes differs in different
+eggs. Near its centre, instead of the
+ball that encloses the f&#339;tus, there is a globular
+mole, which does not contain any thing organized,
+and which being opened does not present
+any thing formed or arranged, but only
+some appendages filled with a thick but transparent
+fluid; and this unshapen mass is surrounded
+with many concentric circles.</p>
+
+<p>After six hours incubation the cicatrice is
+considerably dilated, and the ball formed by the
+amnios is easily discovered; this ball is filled
+with a liquor, in the middle of which the head
+of the chicken and back-bone are distinctly
+seen. In about six hours more the little animal
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
+is seen more distinctly; in another six
+hours the head is grown larger, and the spine
+lengthened; and at the end of twenty-four
+hours the neck begins to lengthen, the vertebrę
+of the back appears of a white colour,
+and the head to turn to one side. The vertebrę
+are disposed on each side of the spine,
+like small globules; and almost at the same
+time the small wings begin to shoot, and the
+head, neck, and breast are lengthened. After
+thirty hours nothing new appears, but every
+part of the little animal is considerably increased,
+especially the <i>amnios</i>. Around this membrane
+the umbilical vessels are seen of a darkish
+colour. At the end of thirty-eight hours,
+the chicken being grown much larger, its head
+is large, and in which are distinguished three
+vessels surrounded with membranes, which
+also cover the back bone, through which the
+vertebrę are still seen. In forty hours, continues
+Malpighius, it was wonderful to see
+the chicken alive, floating in the liquor; the
+back bone was increased, the head was turned
+on one side, the vesicles of the brain were
+less apparent, the first outlines of the eyes
+appeared, the heart beat, and the circulation
+of the blood was begun. Malpighius then
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
+gives the description of the vessels and course
+of the blood, and reasonably supposes that,
+though the heart does not beat before thirty-eight
+or forty hours incubation, it still existed
+before that time, like the other parts of the
+chicken; but on examining the heart in a
+dark room, he discovered not the least glimpse
+of light to proceed from it, as Harvey insinuates.</p>
+
+<p>At the end of two days the chicken is seen
+floating in the liquor of the amnios; in which
+the head, composed of vesicles, is turned on
+one side; the back bone and vertebrę are
+lengthened; the heart, which then hung out
+of the breast, beat three times; for the fluid it
+contains is impelled into the ventricles of the
+heart, from thence into the arteries, and afterwards
+into the umbilical vessels. He remarks,
+that having separated the chick from
+the white of the egg, the motion of the heart
+still continued for a whole day. After two
+days and fourteen hours, or sixty-two hours
+of incubation, the chicken, although grown
+stronger, remained with its head bent downwards
+in the liquor, contained by the amnios;
+the veins and arteries were seen among the
+vessels of the brain; the lineaments of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
+eyes, and the spinal marrow, also appear extending
+the length of the vertebrę.</p>
+
+<p>At the end of the third day the head of the
+chicken appeared crooked; besides the eyes
+five vessels were seen in the head filled with a
+liquid matter; the first outlines of the wings
+and thighs were to be distinguished, and the
+body began to gather flesh; the pupil of the
+eye, and also the crystalline and vitreous humour
+were discernible. At the fourth day the
+vesicles of the brain were nearer each other;
+the eminences of the vertebrę were more
+prominent, the wings and thighs assumed a
+greater solidity as they increased in length; the
+whole body, covered with a jelly-like flesh,
+was now surrounded within the body by a thin
+membrane, and the umbilical vessels that unite
+the animal to the yolk, appeared to come
+from the abdomen. On the fifth and sixth
+days the vesicles of the brain began to be
+covered; the spinal marrow, divided into
+two parts, began to take solidity and stretch
+along the trunk; the wings and thighs lengthened;
+the feet began to spread; the belly was
+closed up and tumid; the liver was distinctly
+seen, and appeared of a dusky white; the
+ventricles of the heart were discerned to beat
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
+very distinctly; the body of the chicken was
+covered with a skin, and the traces of the feathers
+were visible; the seventh day the head
+appeared very large, the brain was entirely
+covered with its membranes; the beak began
+to appear betwixt the eyes, and the wings, the
+thighs, and the legs had acquired their perfect
+figure.</p>
+
+<p>I shall not follow Malpighius any farther,
+as the remainder relates only to the expansion
+of the parts till the twenty-first day, when the
+chicken breaks the shell with its beak; though
+before that time it is heard to chirrup in its
+imprisonment. The heart is the last part
+which receives its proper form, for it is eleven
+days before the arteries are seen to join, and
+the ventricles become perfectly conformable
+and united.</p>
+
+<p>We are now in a condition to judge of the value
+of Harvey's experiments and observations.
+There is great appearance this anatomist did
+not make use of a microscope, which in fact
+was not brought to perfection in his days, or
+he would not have asserted there was no difference
+between the cicatrice of an impregnated
+and an unimpregnated egg; he would
+not have said the seed of the male produced
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>
+no alteration in the egg, especially in the
+cicatrice; he would not have affirmed that
+nothing was perceptible till the third day, that
+the animated speck was the first that appeared,
+and into which the white speck was changed.
+He would have seen that the white speck was
+a ball which contained the whole apparatus of
+generation, and that every part of the f&#339;tus
+are there from the moment the hen has connection
+with the cock. He would also have
+learnt, that without this connection it contains
+only an unshapen mass, which could never become
+animated, because in fact it is not organized
+like an animal, and because it is only
+when this mass, which we must look upon as
+an assemblage of the organic particles of the
+female semen, is penetrated by the organic
+particles of the male semen, that there results
+from it an animal, which is formed at the
+moment, but whose motion is imperceptible
+till the end of forty hours after: he would not
+have asserted that the heart is first formed, and
+that the other parts are joined to it by a juxta-position,
+since it is evident from Malpighius's
+observations, that the outlines of every part
+are all immediately formed, but only appear in
+proportion as they dilate; on the whole, if he
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>
+had seen what Malpighius saw, he would not
+have affirmed that no impression of the male seed
+remained in the eggs, and that it was only by
+contagion that they are fecundated, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>It is also just to remark, that what Harvey
+has said on the parts of the generation of a
+cock is not exact; he asserts that the cock has
+no genital member, and that there is no intromission;
+nevertheless it is certain that this
+animal, instead of one has two, and that they
+both act at the same time, and which action
+is a very strong compression, if not a true copulation;<a name="FNanchor_9" id="FNanchor_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9" class="fnanchor">[I]</a>
+and it is by this double organ that
+the cock emits the seminal liquor into the matrix
+of the hen.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_9" id="Footnote_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9"><span class="label">[I]</span></a> See Reyn. Graaf, page 242.</p></div>
+
+<p>Let us now compare the experiments made
+by Harvey on hinds with those of De Graaf on
+doe rabbits; we shall find that although De
+Graaf supposes, with Harvey, that all animals
+proceed from eggs, yet there is a great difference
+in the mode which these two anatomists
+have observed in the first steps of formation, or
+rather expansion, of the f&#339;tuses of viviparous
+animals.</p>
+
+<p>After having exerted every effort to establish,
+by reasons drawn from comparative anatomy,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>
+that the testicles of viviparous females
+are real ovaries, De Graaf explains how the
+eggs are loosened from the ovaries and fall into
+the horns of the matrix; he then relates what
+he observed in a rabbit, which he dissected half
+an hour after copulation. The horns of the
+matrix, he says, were more red than before,
+but no other change in the rest of the parts:
+there was also no appearance of any male seed,
+neither in the vagina, matrix, nor horns of the
+matrix.</p>
+
+<p>Having dissected another six hours after copulation
+he observed the follicules, or coats,
+which he supposes contained the eggs in the
+ovary, ware become red, but found no male
+seed either in the ovaria or elsewhere. He
+dissected another twenty-four hours after copulation,
+and remarked in one ovarium three,
+and in the other five follicules that were changed,
+the transparency being become dark and
+red. In one dissected twenty-seven hours
+after copulation he perceived the horns of the
+womb had become more red and strictly embraced
+the ovaries. In another, that he opened
+forty hours after copulation, he found in one of
+the ovaries seven, follicules, and in the other
+three that were changed. Fifty-two hours
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>
+after copulation he examined another and found
+one follicle changed in one of the ovaries and
+four in another, and having opened these follicules
+he found a glandular liquor, in the middle
+of which there was a small cavity, where
+he did not perceive any liquor, which made
+him suppose that the transparent liquor, commonly
+contained in the follicules, and which,
+he says, is enclosed in its own membranes,
+might have been separated by a kind of rupture:
+he searched after this matter in the passages,
+and in the horns of the matrix themselves,
+but he found none; he only perceived
+that the internal membrane of the horns of the
+matrix was very much swelled. In another,
+dissected three days after copulation, he observed
+that the superior extremity of the passage,
+which communicates with the horns of
+the matrix, strictly embraced the ovaries; and
+having separated it he perceived three follicules,
+longer and harder than usual. After searching
+with the greatest attention the passages above-mentioned
+he found in the right passage one
+egg, and in the right horn of the matrix two
+more, not bigger than a grain of mustard-seed:
+those little eggs were each closed in double
+membranes, and the inner one was filled with
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
+a very limpid liquor. Having examined the
+other ovarium he found four follicules that
+were changed, three of which were white and
+had a little liquor within them; but the fourth
+was of a darker colour, and contained no liquor,
+which made him judge that from this the
+egg had been separated. Pursuing his enquiries
+he found an egg in the superior extremity
+of the other horn, and exactly like those he had
+discovered in the right one. He says that
+the eggs which are separated from the ovary
+are ten times smaller than those which are
+fastened to it; and he thinks that this difference
+is occasioned from the eggs containing,
+when they are in the ovaries, another matter,
+and that is the glandular liquor he remarked in
+the molecules.</p>
+
+<p>Four days after copulation he opened another,
+and found in one of the ovaries four, and in the
+other three follicules, emptied of their eggs;
+and in the horns corresponding to these he
+found an equal number of eggs. These eggs
+were larger than the first that he found three
+days after copulation, and were about the
+size of a small bird-shot; he also remarked
+that the internal membrane in these eggs was
+separated from the external, and appeared like
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>
+a second egg in the first. In another, dissected
+five days after copulation, he found five empty
+follicules in the ovaries, and as many eggs in
+the matrix, to which they adhered. These
+eggs were about the size of duck-shot, and the
+internal membrane was more apparent than in
+the one he had observed before. In one which
+he opened six days after copulation there were
+six empty follicules in one ovaria, and only
+five eggs in the corresponding horn, and they
+appeared in one mass; in the other ovaria were
+four empty follicules and but one egg; these
+eggs were as big as swan-shot. He opened
+another on the seventh day after copulation,
+and found seven empty follicules; he also perceived
+several internal tumours in the matrix,
+from whence he took eggs the size of a pistol-bullet.
+Its membrane was more distinct than
+before, but contained only a very clear liquor.
+In one, eight days after copulation, he found in
+the matrix tumours, or cells, which contained
+the eggs, but they were very adherent, for he
+could not loosen them. In another, nine days
+after copulation, the cells, which contained the
+eggs, were greatly increased, and he saw that
+the liquor inclosed by the internal membrane
+had now got a light cloud floating upon it.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>
+He opened another ten days after copulation
+and the cloud was thicker, and formed an oblong
+body, like a little worm. At last, on the
+twelfth day after copulation, the figure of the
+embryo was distinctly to be perceived, which
+two days before only presented the figure of
+an oblong body; it was even so apparent that
+the different members might be distinguished.
+In the region of the breast he perceived two
+red and two white specks, and in the abdomen
+a mucilaginous substance, somewhat reddish.
+Fourteen days after copulation the head of the
+embryo was become large and transparent, the
+eyes prominent, the mouth open, the rudiments
+of the ears appeared; the back-bone, of a whitish
+colour, was bent towards the breast, and small
+blood-vessels came from each side, whose ramifications
+ran along the back as far as the feet;
+the two red specks, being considerably increased,
+appeared to be no other than the ventricles
+of the heart; by the sides of these red specks
+were two white ones, which were the rudiments
+of the lungs. In the abdomen the outlines
+of the liver were seen of a reddish colour,
+and a little intricate mass, like a ravelled
+thread, which was the stomach and intestines.
+After this the process was no more than a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
+growth and expansion of every part till the
+thirty-first day, when the female rabbit brings
+forth her young.</p>
+
+<p>From these experiments De Graaf concludes,
+that all viviparous females have eggs; that
+these eggs are contained in the testicles, called
+ovaries; that they cannot disengage themselves
+till they are impregnated, because, he says, the
+glandular substance, by means of which the
+eggs quit their follicules, is not produced till
+after an impregnation. He also insists, that
+those who suppose they have seen eggs in only
+two or three days increased in size, must have
+been mistaken, for these eggs remain a longer
+time in the ovary, although fecundated, and
+instead of immediately increasing, they rather
+diminish until they are descended from the
+ovaries into the matrix.</p>
+
+<p>By comparing these observations with those
+of Harvey, we shall easily perceive that the
+principal circumstances have escaped the latter;
+and although there are many errors in the
+reasoning and experiments of De Graaf, nevertheless
+this anatomist, as well as Malpighius,
+has made better observations than Harvey.
+They agree in the principal points, and are
+both contrary to Harvey; the latter had never
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>
+seen the alterations which happen to the ovary;
+he did not see the small globules in the matrix
+which contain the apparatus of generation, and
+which De Graaf calls <i>eggs</i>. He had not even
+a supposition that the f&#339;tus existed in this
+egg; and though his experiments gave us nearly
+an exact account of what occurs during
+the growth of the f&#339;tus, they give us no information
+either of the moment of fecundation
+or of the first development. Schrader,
+a Dutch physician, who held Harvey in great
+veneration, owns that we must not put too
+great a reliance in that anatomist in many
+things, and especially on what he says of the
+fecundative moment, for the chicken in fact is
+in the egg before incubation, and that Joseph
+de Aromatarius was the first who observed
+it.<a name="FNanchor_10" id="FNanchor_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10" class="fnanchor">[J]</a> Although Harvey pretended that every
+animal proceeds from an egg, he did not imagine
+that the testicles of females contained these
+eggs, and has only repeated what Aristotle has
+said on this subject. The first who speaks
+of having discovered eggs in female ovaries is
+Steno, who says, in dissecting a female sea-dog
+he saw eggs in the testicles, although that animal
+is viviparous; and he adds, that the testicles
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>
+of women are analogous to the ovaries
+of oviparous animals, whether the eggs fall in
+any manner into the matrix, or whether there
+only falls the matter they contain. Although
+Steno is the first who discovered these pretended
+eggs, De Graaf claims the merit to
+himself, and Swammerdam has disputed it with
+him, insisting that Van Horn had perceived
+these eggs before De Graaf. It is true this
+last writer stands charged with asserting many
+things experience has found to be false. He
+pretended that a judgment might be formed of
+the number of f&#339;tuses contained in the matrix
+by the number of cicatrices, or empty follicules,
+in the ovary, which is not true, as we
+may see by the observations of Verrheyen,<a name="FNanchor_11" id="FNanchor_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11" class="fnanchor">[K]</a>
+and by those of M. Mery,<a name="FNanchor_12" id="FNanchor_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12" class="fnanchor">[L]</a> and by some of
+De Graaf's own observations, where he found
+fewer eggs in the matrix than cicatrices in the
+ovaries. Besides, we shall make it appear
+that what he says concerning the separation of
+the eggs, and the manner in which they descend
+into the matrix, is not exact; that no
+eggs exist in the female testicles; that what is
+seen in the matrix is not an egg; and that nothing
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
+can be worse founded than the systems
+endeavoured to be established on the observations
+of this famous anatomist.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_10" id="Footnote_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10"><span class="label">[J]</span></a> See Observ. Justi Schraderi, Amst. 1674.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_11" id="Footnote_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11"><span class="label">[K]</span></a> Vol. I. chap. iii. Brussels edit. 1710.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_12" id="Footnote_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12"><span class="label">[L]</span></a> Hist. of the Academ. 1704.</p></div>
+
+<p>This pretended discovery of eggs in the
+testicles of females attracted the attention of
+most anatomists; they, however, only met
+with small bladders in the testicles of female
+viviparous animals, these they did not hesitate
+to look on as real eggs: they therefore gave
+the name of <i>ovaries</i> to the testicles, and called
+the vesicles eggs, They also said, with De
+Graaf, that there are eggs of different sizes in
+the ovarium; that the largest in the ovarium
+of women was not above the size of a small
+pea; that they were very small in the young,
+but increased with age and intercourse with
+men; that twenty might be counted in each
+ovarium; that these eggs are fecundated in the
+ovarium by the spirited part of the seminal liquor
+of the male; that afterwards they loosen
+and fall into the matrix, where the f&#339;tus is
+formed, from the internal substance of the egg
+and the placenta of the external matter; that
+the glandular substance, which does not exist
+in the ovarium till after a fruitful copulation,
+serves to compress the egg, and make it quit
+the ovarium, &amp;c. But Malpighius having
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>
+examined things more minutely, detected many
+of their errors before they were even received;
+yet most physicians adopted the sentiments
+of De Graaf, without any attention to the
+observations of Malpighius; which, notwithstanding,
+are very important, and to which
+his scholar Valisnieri has given a great deal
+of weight.</p>
+
+<p>Malpighius and Valisnieri, of all naturalists,
+speak with the greatest foundation on the
+subject of generation. We shall therefore
+give an account of their experiments and remarks,
+to which we cannot pay too much
+attention.</p>
+
+<p>Malpighius having examined a great number
+of the testicles of cows and other female
+animals, affirms that he found vesicles of different
+sizes in the testicles of all of them,
+whether young or adults; these vesicles are
+inclosed by a thick membrane, in the inner
+parts of which there are blood-vessels, filled
+with a kind of lymph, or liquor, which hardens
+by the heat of the fire like the white of an
+egg.</p>
+
+<p>In time a firm yellow body grows which
+adheres to the testicles. It is prominent and
+increases to the size of a cherry, occupying
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>
+the greatest part of the ovarium. The body is
+composed of many little angular tubes, and its
+position is irregular; it is covered with a coat,
+or membrane, spread over with nerves and
+blood-vessels. The appearance and form of
+this yellow body are not always the same, but
+vary according to time. When not above the
+size of a millet seed, it is nearly globular, and
+if divided appears composed of a kind of variegated
+net-work. Very often an external
+covering is observed, composed of the same
+substance as the yellow body, around the vesicles
+of the ovarium.</p>
+
+<p>When the yellow body is become nearly of
+the size of a pea, it is the shape of a pear, in
+which is a small cavity filled with liquor; as
+is also the case when grown to the size of a
+cherry. In some of these yellow substances,
+when increased to their full maturity, Malpighius
+says, a small egg, with its appendages,
+not bigger than a millet seed, may be seen near
+the centre; when they have cast out their
+eggs they are empty, resemble a cavernous
+passage, and the cavities which inclose them
+are about the size of peas. He thinks this
+yellow and glandular substance nature produces
+to preserve the egg, and assist it in leaving
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
+the testicles, and perhaps to contribute towards
+the generation of the egg itself; consequently,
+he says, the vesicles, which are
+always observed in the ovary, and which are
+of different sizes, are not real eggs that may
+be fecundated, but only serve for the production
+of the yellow body where the egg is to be
+formed. On the whole, although these yellow
+substances are not found at all times in all
+testicles, we nevertheless always find the first
+traces of them, and Malpighius having seen the
+marks of them in young heifers, cows that
+were with calf, and in pregnant women, he
+reasonably concludes that this yellow and
+glandular substance is not, as De Graaf has
+supposed, the effect of fecundation, but what
+produces the infecund eggs, which leave the
+ovary without any communication with the
+male, as well as to those which leave it after
+communication. When the latter falls into
+the tubes of the matrix, all the rest is performed
+as De Graaf has described.</p>
+
+<p>These observations of Malpighius shew
+that the testicles of females are not real ovaries,
+as most anatomists believe; that the
+vesicles they contain are not eggs; that these
+vesicles never fall into the matrix; and that
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>
+the testicles, like those of the male, are kinds
+of reservoirs, containing a liquor which must
+be looked upon as an imperfect seed of the female,
+that is perfected in the yellow glandular
+body which fills the internal cavity, and is shed
+when the glandular substance has acquired its
+full maturity. But before we decide on this
+important point, we must relate the observations
+of Valisnieri; and we shall perceive that,
+though Malpighius and Valisnieri have made
+good observations, they have not carried them
+far enough, nor drawn those consequences
+from them which their observations might naturally
+have produced, because they were both
+prejudiced for the system of eggs, and of the
+f&#339;tus pre-existing therein.</p>
+
+<p>Valisnieri began his experiments in 1692,
+on the testicles of a sow, whose testicles are not
+composed like those of a cow, sheep, mare,
+bitch, female ass, she goat, nor most other
+viviparous females, for they resemble a small
+bunch of grapes, whose seeds are round and
+prominent outwardly. Between these seeds
+there are smaller, which have not arrived to
+maturity. These seeds do not appear to be
+surrounded with one common membrane;
+they are, he says, similar to those yellow substances
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>
+which Malpighius observed in cows;
+they are round, of a reddish colour, their surface
+sprinkled over with sanguinary vessels like
+the eggs of viviparous animals, and together
+form a mass larger than the ovary; we may,
+with a little address, and by dividing the membrane,
+separate these grains one by one, and
+draw them from the ovary, where they each
+leave an impression.</p>
+
+<p>These glandular substances are not of the
+same colour in every sow, in some they are red,
+in others more clear; and they are of all sizes,
+from the most minute point to that of a grape.
+On opening them we find a triangular cavity
+filled with a limpid liquor, which coagulates
+by the fire, and becomes white like that contained
+in the vesicles. Valisnieri hoped to meet
+with the egg in one of those cavities, but although
+he sought for it with the utmost assiduity
+in the glandular substance of the ovaries
+of four different sows, and afterwards in those
+of other animals, yet he could never discover
+the egg which Malpighius asserts to have met
+with once or twice.</p>
+
+<p>Below these glandular substances the vesicles
+of the ovary were seen, and which were in a
+greater or lesser number as the glandular substances
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
+are thicker or smaller, for in proportion
+as the glandular substances increase, the vesicles
+diminish. Some of these vesicles were the size
+of a lentil, and others as small as a millet-seed.
+In crude testicles twenty, thirty, or thirty-five
+vesicles might be counted, but when boiled
+a greater number are seen; and they are so
+strongly connected by fibres and membraneous
+vessels, that it is impossible to separate them
+without a rupture.</p>
+
+<p>Having examined the testicles of a sow
+which never had littered, he found there, as in
+the rest, glandular bodies, and their triangular
+cavities filled with lymph, but never met with
+the egg either in the one or the other. The
+vesicles of this sow which had never littered
+were greater in number than in those which
+had littered or conceived. In the testicles of
+another sow which had conceived, and whose
+young were much expanded, he found two
+large glandular substances, that were empty,
+and others smaller, in their common state.
+Having also dissected many others when with
+young, he found that the number of glandular
+substances was always greater than that of the
+f&#339;tus, which confirms our observations on
+De Graaf's experiments, and proves they are
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
+not exact; what he terms the follicules of
+the ovary being only the glandular substances,
+whose number always exceed that of the f&#339;tus.
+In the ovaries of a sow but a few months old,
+the testicles were large, and sprinkled with
+vesicles pretty well tumefied: between these
+vesicles there were four rising glandular substances
+in one of the testicles, and more in the
+other.</p>
+
+<p>After having finished his experiments on
+sows, Valisnieri repeated those of Malpighius
+on the testicles of cows, and found that all he
+had said was conformable to truth; only Valisnieri
+owns that he has never been able to find
+the egg which Malpighius thought he had seen
+once or twice in the internal cavity of glandular
+bodies. Valisnieri proceeded in his experiments
+upon a variety of other animals to discover
+this egg, but in vain; nevertheless his
+prejudice for that system induced him, contrary
+to his experience, to admit the existence
+of eggs, which neither he nor any other man
+ever did or ever will see. It is scarcely possible
+to make a greater number of experiments, or
+better than he has done. He observes, as something
+particular to a ewe, that there are never
+more glandular substances in the testicles than
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
+f&#339;tuses in the matrix. In young ewes, which
+have never been with the male, there is but one
+glandular substance in each testicle, which
+when worn away, another is found; and if a
+ewe has only one f&#339;tus in her matrix, there is
+but one glandular substance in the testicles; if
+there are two f&#339;tuses there will be two glandular
+substances. This substance occupies the
+greatest part of the testicles; after it disappears
+another is formed for the purpose of another
+generation.</p>
+
+<p>In the testicles of a she-ass he perceived vesicles
+the size of small cherries, which evidently
+prove they are not eggs, since, being of that
+size, they could not enter into the horns of the
+matrix, which are too narrow in this animal
+for their reception.</p>
+
+<p>The testicles of a female dog, wolf, or fox,
+have a kind of cowl, or covering, which is produced
+by the expansion of the membrane that
+surrounds the horns of the matrix. In a bitch,
+whose heat was just began, and had not been
+brought to a dog, Valisnieri found this cowl,
+which is not adherent to the testicle, internally
+bathed with a liquor like whey: he discovered
+also two glandular substances in the right testicle,
+which run almost its whole length. These
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>
+glandular substances had each a small nipple,
+with a little orifice, from which of itself issued
+a clear liquor like whey, and when pressed, a
+greater quantity came out, which made him
+imagine, that this liquor was the same as that
+found within the cowl: he blew into this orifice,
+by the means of a small pipe, and immediately
+the glandular body was puffed up; and
+having introduced a bristle, he easily penetrated
+to the end of it: he opened this glandular substance
+the same way as the bristle was entered,
+and found within a cavity which communicated
+with the orifice, and which also contained a
+good deal of liquor. Valisnieri was also in
+hopes to discover the egg, but, notwithstanding
+all his endeavours and strict attention, he
+never could perceive it. He remarked, that the
+extremity of these nipples, from which this liquor
+flowed, was contracted by a sphincter,
+which served to shut up, or open the orifice of
+the nipple: he found also in the left testicle two
+glandular bodies with the like cavities, nipples,
+orifices, and liquor distilling from them. Still
+not being able to find the egg, neither in this
+liquor, nor in the cavity which contained it, he
+boiled two of these glandular substances, hoping
+that by this means he might discover the object
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span>
+he was in pursuit of, but it was all in
+vain.</p>
+
+<p>Having opened another bitch, eight or nine
+days after she had been with the male, he found
+no difference in the testicles; there were three
+glandular substances like the preceding ones,
+and, like them, distilled a liquor from the nipples.
+Here he also persevered in his fruitless
+researches after the egg. By the help of a microscope,
+he perceived the glandular substances
+were a kind of vascular net-work, formed by an
+infinite number of small globular vesicles which
+served to filtre the liquor that issues through
+the end of the nipple.</p>
+
+<p>After this he opened another bitch whose
+heat was off, and having introduced air between
+the testicle and its covering, he found it dilated
+like a bladder by means of inflation; having
+raised this cowl, he found three glandular substances
+on the testicle, but they had no apparent
+nipple, nor orifice, nor did any liquor
+distil from them.</p>
+
+<p>In another bitch that had pupped two months,
+and had five puppies, he found five glandular
+substances, which were become very small, and
+began to obliterate, without leaving any cicatrices:
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
+there still remained a small cavity in
+the middle, but it was dry and empty.</p>
+
+<p>Not content with these, and many more experiments,
+Valisnieri, who would not give up
+his researches after the pretended egg, called
+together the most expert anatomists of his
+country, among whom was M. Morgagni, and
+having opened a young bitch at the time of her
+first heat, and had been with a male three days
+before, they examined the vesicles of the testicles,
+the glandular substances with their nipples,
+orifice, and liquor which flowed from
+them, and in their internal cavities, but not an
+egg was to be found. After this he made experiments
+on female goats, foxes, cats, and a
+great number of mice, &amp;c. He always found
+vesicles in the testicles of all those animals, and
+often the glandular substances, and the liquor
+they contained, but never any egg.</p>
+
+<p>At length, desirous of examining the testicles
+of a woman, he had an opportunity of
+opening a farmer's wife, a young woman that
+was killed by a fall from a tree. She had been
+married several years, but although of a good
+habit of body, yet she had never borne a child.
+He sought if the cause of her sterility was not
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>
+discoverable in the testicles; and he found the
+vesicles all replete with a blackish and corrupted
+matter.</p>
+
+<p>In the testicles of a girl of eighteen, who had
+been brought up in a convent, and, according
+to all appearances, was a virgin, he found the
+right testicle somewhat larger than the left:
+its shape was oval, and its surface a little unequal.
+This inequality was produced by the
+protuberance of five or six vesicles of this testicle
+which advanced forwards; one of which
+was more prominent than any of the rest. Having
+opened this vesicle, a spirit of lymph issued
+out: around it there was a glandular substance
+in form of a crescent of a yellowish colour rather
+bordering on the red. He cut the remainder
+part of the testicle transversely, and found many
+vesicles filled with a limpid liquor, and remarked
+that the corresponding trunk to this testicle
+was very red and a little longer than the other,
+as he had frequently observed in female animals,
+when in their amorous season.</p>
+
+<p>The left testicle was as round as the right, it
+was whiter, and its surface more smooth; for
+although there were some vesicles a little prominent,
+yet there were not any in form of a nipple;
+they were all alike, without any glandular
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
+substance, and the corresponding trunk was
+neither inflamed nor red.</p>
+
+<p>In a little girl of five years old, he found the
+testicles with the vesicles, blood vessels, fibres
+and nerves complete.</p>
+
+<p>In the testicles of a woman sixty years of
+age, he found some vesicles, and the vestiges
+of a glandular substance, which were as so
+many thick points of matter of a dark brownish
+colour.</p>
+
+<p>From all these observations Valisnieri concludes,
+that the business of generation is carried
+on in the female testicles, which he looked upon
+as ovaries, although he never found any eggs in
+them, but on the contrary, evidently saw that
+the vesicles were not eggs. He also says, that
+it is not necessary for the seed of the male to
+enter into the matrix to impregnate the egg: he
+supposes that the egg comes from the nipple of
+the glandular substance, after impregnation in
+the ovarium; that from thence it falls into the
+trunk, and descends by degrees, till at last it
+fastens to the matrix. He adds, he is persuaded
+that the egg is concealed in the glandular substance,
+and that all the business of generation
+is performed in the cavity, although neither he
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>
+nor any other anatomist, have ever seen or
+been able to find it.</p>
+
+<p>According to Valisnieri the spirit of the
+male seed ascends to the ovarium, forces its
+way into the egg, and gives motion to the
+f&#339;tus that pre-exists therein. In the ovarium
+of the first woman were eggs, which not only
+inclosed in miniature every child she brought
+forth, but of the whole human race. That if
+we cannot conceive this infinite chain of individuals
+contained in one, it is the fault of our
+minds, the weakness of which is every day
+perceptible; but it is, upon that account, no
+less true, that every animal which has been, is,
+and will be, were created all at one time, and
+inclosed in the first females. The resemblance
+of children to parents only proceeds, continues
+he, from the imagination of the mother, the
+power of which is so great on the f&#339;tus that
+it can produce on it spots, marks, disproportions,
+and extraordinary births, as well as perfect
+resemblances.</p>
+
+<p>This system of the eggs, which is unreasonable,
+and without foundation, would, nevertheless,
+have obtained the unanimous suffrages
+of all physicians, if, when it was first endeavoured
+to be established, another system had
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
+not been formed on the discovery of spermatic
+animals.</p>
+
+<p>This discovery, for which we are indebted
+to Leeuwenhoeck and Hartsoeker, has been
+confirmed by Andri, Valisnieri, Bourguet, and
+many other observers of Nature. I shall relate
+what has been said concerning the spermatic
+animals which are found in the seminal
+liquor of all males: they are in such vast numbers
+that the semen seems to be entirely composed
+of them; and Leeuwenhoeck pretends
+to have seen many millions of them in a drop
+smaller than the smallest grain of sand. Although
+we do not meet with any in female
+animals they abound in all males, both in the
+semen emitted naturally and that in the testicles,
+as well as in the seminal vesicles. If the semen
+of a man is exposed to a moderate heat it
+thickens, and the motions of all the animalcules
+immediately cease, but if allowed to
+cool it becomes thinner, and the animals preserve
+their motion till the liquor thickens as it
+dries away. The thinner the liquor becomes
+the more the animalcule increase, and if water
+is added it will appear like a substance of small
+animals. When the motion of these animalcule
+is nearly finished, whether from heat, or
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
+any other cause, they seem to assemble closer
+together, and have a whirling motion in the
+centre of a small drop which may have been
+taken out for observation, and appear all to
+perish at one and the same time, whereas in
+the larger portion of the liquor they are easily
+seen to perish successively.</p>
+
+<p>The animalculę, say they, have different
+figures in different animals; nevertheless they
+are all long, slender, without any appearance
+of limbs, and move with rapidity. The fluid
+which contains them, as we have already observed,
+is heavier than blood. The semen of a
+bull afforded Verrheyen, by a chemical process,
+first phlegm, afterwards a considerable quantity
+of f&#339;tid oil, but little volatile salt, and much
+more earth than he could have thought.<a name="FNanchor_13" id="FNanchor_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13" class="fnanchor">[M]</a> This
+author appears surprised that in rectifying the
+distilled liquor he could not draw any spirit
+from it, and being persuaded it contained a
+great quantity, he attributed the evaporation to
+its great subtility: but may it not be more reasonably
+imagined that it contains very little or
+no spirits, as neither its consistency nor smell
+announce any ardent spirit, and which is only
+plentifully found in fermented liquors? besides,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>
+with respect to volatile spirits, the horns, bones,
+and other solid parts of animals, afford more
+than all the liquor of the animal body. What
+anatomists have called animal spirits, <i>aura seminalis</i>,
+may possibly not exist; and it is certainly
+not these spirits which agitate the particles
+seen moving in the seminal liquors; but
+we will here relate the principal observations
+that have been made on this subject.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_13" id="Footnote_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13"><span class="label">[M]</span></a> See Veerheyen, sup. anat. tom. ii. page 69.</p></div>
+
+<p>Leeuwenhoeck observed, in the semen of a
+cock, animals which resemble the figure of an
+eel, but so exceedingly minute, that he pretends
+fifty thousand would not equal in size a grain
+of sand; and in that of a rat many millions
+would be required to make the thickness of a
+hair, &amp;c. This observer imagined that the
+whole substance of the semen was only a mass
+of these animalcules. He perceived these animalculę
+in the semen of men, quadrupeds,
+birds, fishes, insects, &amp;c. In that of grasshoppers
+they were long and slender. They are
+attached, he says, by their extremities, and the
+inferior of which he calls the tail, had a quick
+motion, like that of the tail of a serpent, when
+the upper part is motionless. He further adds,
+that in the semen of young animals the animalculę
+are motionless, but as the age for reproduction
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>
+comes on they move about with great
+vivacity.</p>
+
+<p>In the semen of a male frog he observed
+animalculę, at first they were imperfect and
+motionless, but some time afterwards he found
+them living: they were so very small, he says,
+that ten thousand would scarcely equal the size
+of a single egg of the female. It was only
+those in the seminal liquor of the frog which
+had life and motion.</p>
+
+<p>In the semen of a man, and that of a dog,
+he pretends to have seen two kinds, which he
+looked upon as males and females. Having
+inclosed the seed of a dog in a vial, he says,
+that numbers of the animalculę died the first
+day; the second and third there died still more,
+and very few remained alive the fourth. But
+having repeated this experiment on the semen
+of the same dog, he found, at the end of seven
+days, live animalculę, some of which swam
+with as much swiftness as in fresh-extracted
+semen; and having opened a bitch which had
+been three times with the same dog, he could
+not perceive by the naked eye any seminal
+liquor of the male in either of the horns of
+the matrix; but by help of a microscope he
+discovered the spermatic animals of the dog
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>
+in both horns of the matrix, and great numbers
+of them in that part of the matrix adjoining to
+the vagina, which, says he, evidently proves
+that the male semen enters the matrix, or at
+least that the spermatic animals of the dog had
+got there by their own motion, which is sufficient
+to carry them four or five inches in half
+an hour. In the matrix of a doe rabbit, which
+had just received the buck, he likewise observed
+an infinite number of spermatic animals;
+he says, that their bodies are round, with long
+tails, and that they often change their forms,
+especially when the humid matter in which
+they swim evaporates and dries.</p>
+
+<p>Leeuwenhoeck's experiments have been
+frequently repeated and found conformable to
+truth. There have been some inclined to
+exceed him in these discoveries. Dr. Dalenpatius
+having observed the seminal liquor of a
+man, not only pretended to have discovered
+animals like tadpoles, whose bodies appeared
+nearly the size of a grain of wheat, and their
+tails four or five times longer than their bodies,
+and which moved with great agility, but, what
+is still more marvellous, he observed one of
+these animals quit its covering; upon which it
+was no longer an animalcule, but had become
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
+a human body, the two legs of which, he affirms,
+were very discernible, as were the arms,
+breast, and head.<a name="FNanchor_14" id="FNanchor_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14" class="fnanchor">[N]</a> But by the figures which
+this author has given of this pretended embryo,
+it is evident his assertion is false. He
+might suppose he saw what he relates, but he
+was mistaken; for the embryo, such as he
+describes, was more formed on quitting this
+covering, and the state of a spermatic worm,
+than it would have been at the end of a month
+or five weeks in the matrix of its mother;
+therefore this observation of Dalenpatius, instead
+of having been confirmed by other observations,
+has been rejected by every naturalist,
+the most exact and accurate of which
+have only discovered, in the seminal liquor
+of man, round and oblong bodies, which seemed
+to have long tails, but without any kind of
+members.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_14" id="Footnote_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14"><span class="label">[N]</span></a> See Nouvelles de la Republique des Lettres, Ann. 1699,
+page 552.</p></div>
+
+<p>It might be said that Plato had spoken
+of these spermatic animals which become human
+forms; for he says, "Vulva quoque matrix
+que in f&#339;minis eadem ratione animal
+avidem generandi, quando procul a f&#339;tu per
+ętatis florem, aut ultra diutius detinetur, ęgre
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
+fert moram ac plurimum indignatur, passimque
+per corpus oberrans, meatus spiritus intercludit,
+respirare non finit, extremis vexat angustiis,
+morbis denique omnibus premit, quosque
+atrorumque Cupido amorque quasi ex arboribus
+f&#339;tum fructumve producunt, ipsum
+deinde decerpunt, &amp; in matricem velut agrem
+inspargunt; hinc animalia primum talia, ut
+nec propter parvitatem videantur, necdum appareant
+formata, concipiunt: mox quę conflaverant,
+explicant, ingentia, intus enutriunt,
+demum educunt in lucem, animaliumque generationem
+perficiunt." Hippocrates, in his
+treatise <i>De Dięta</i>, seems also to insinuate, that
+the seed of animals is replete with animalcules.
+Democritus speaks of certain worms which
+take the human figure, and Aristotle says, that
+the first men came out of the earth in the form
+of worms; but neither the authority of Plato,
+Hippocrates, Democritus, Aristotle, nor the
+observation of Dalenpatius, can make us receive
+the idea that these spermatic worms are
+small human bodies, concealed under a covering;
+for it is evidently contrary to experience
+and observation.</p>
+
+<p>Valisnieri and Bourguet, whom we have
+quoted, discovered small worms in the seed of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>
+a rabbit, one of whose extremities was thicker
+than the other; they were very lively and active,
+struck the liquor with their tails, and
+twisted and turned themselves like snakes. At
+last (says Valisnieri) I clearly perceived them to
+be real animals, "e gli riconobbi, e gli giudicai
+senza dubitamento alcuno per veri, verissimi
+arciverissimi vermi<a name="FNanchor_15" id="FNanchor_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15" class="fnanchor">[O]</a>." This author,
+who was prejudiced with the system of eggs,
+has, nevertheless, admitted of spermatic worms,
+and taken them for real animals.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_15" id="Footnote_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15"><span class="label">[O]</span></a> Opere dell. Cav. Valisnieri, vol. II. page 105.</p></div>
+
+<p>M. Andry having made observations on these
+spermatic worms of a man, pretends that they
+are only found in the age proper for generation;
+that in the younger years, and in old age, they
+do not exist: that in those affected with venereal
+disorders there are very few, and those are
+languishing, and for the most part dead: that
+in impotent persons we do not see any alive;
+that these worms in the semen of men have
+larger heads than in that of other animals,
+which agrees, he says, with the figure of the
+f&#339;tus and the child; and he adds, those
+people who too frequently enjoy female amours,
+have generally but few or none of these animalcules
+in their semen.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Leeuwenhoeck, Andry, and many others,
+strenuously opposed the egg system; they had
+discovered in the semen of all males living animalcules;
+they proved that these animalcules
+could not be regarded merely as dwelling in
+this liquor, since their bulk was greater than
+that of the liquor itself; and that nothing like
+them was found either in the blood, or in the
+other animal liquors. They asserted, that females
+furnished nothing similar, nothing alive;
+and it was therefore evident that the fecundity
+attributed to them belonged, on the contrary,
+to males alone: and that the discovery
+of these spermatic animals in the semen tended
+more to the explanation of generation than all
+that had been before supposed; since, in fact,
+what was most difficult to conceive in generation,
+was the production of the living part, all
+the rest being only accessary operations, and
+therefore no doubt could remain but these little
+animals were destined to become men, or perfect
+animals of their kind. When it was opposed
+to the partizans of this system, that it did
+not seem natural to suppose that so many millions
+of animalcules, every one of which might
+become a human being, should be employed for
+a purpose of which one alone was to reap the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
+advantage; when it was asked them, why this
+useless profusion of the shoots of human beings?
+they answered, that it was only consonant with
+the common munificence of nature: that out
+of many millions of seeds which plants and
+trees produce, but a very few succeed, and
+therefore we must not be surprised at the same
+circumstance in spermatic animals. When
+the infinite minuteness of the spermatic worm,
+compared to man, was objected to them, they
+answered, by the example of the seed of trees;
+and they added, with some foundation, metaphysical
+reasonings, by which they proved
+that great and small being only relations, the
+transition from small to great, or from great to
+small, was executed by nature with still more
+facility than we can conceive.</p>
+
+<p>Besides, continue they, have we not very frequent
+examples of transformation in insects? do
+we not see small aquatic worms become winged
+animals, by only throwing off their coats,
+which were their apparent and external forms?
+and may not spermatic animals, by a similar
+transformation, become perfect animals? All
+therefore, they conclude, concurs to favour
+this system of generation, and confuting that
+founded on eggs; and if there are eggs in viviparous
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
+females, the same as in the oviparous,
+these eggs will only be the necessary matter for
+the growth of the spermatic worm, which enters
+into the egg by the pedicle that adheres to
+the ovarium, and where it meets with food ready
+prepared for it. All the worms which find
+not this passage through the pedicle into the
+egg will perish, and that one which alone has
+traced its way will arrive at its transformation.
+The difficulty of meeting with the passage in
+the pedicle of the egg, can only be compensated
+by the infinite number of spermatic worms. It
+is a million to one that any particular spermatic
+worm will meet with the pedicle of the egg,
+and therefore what at first appears a profusion
+is highly necessary. When one has entered, no
+other can introduce itself, because, say they,
+the first worm entirely shuts up the passage, or
+there is a valve at the entrance of the pedicle,
+which is free when the egg is not absolutely
+full; but when the worm has filled the egg, the
+valve can no longer open although impelled by
+another worm. This valve is very well imagined,
+because, if the first worm should chance to
+return, it opposes its egress, and obliges it to
+remain and undergo the transformation. The
+spermatic worm then becomes the f&#339;tus, the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>
+substance of the egg its food, the membranes,
+its covering, and when the nutriment in the
+egg is nearly exhausted, the f&#339;tus adheres to
+the internal skin of the matrix, and thus derives
+nourishment from the parent's blood, till
+by its weight, and augmentation of its strength,
+it breaks through its imprisonment, and comes
+perfect into the world.</p>
+
+<p>By this system it was not the first woman
+who inclosed all mankind, but the first man
+who contained all posterity in his body. The
+pre-existing germs are no longer embryos without
+light, inclosed in the eggs, and contained
+one in another, ad infinitum; but they are
+small animals, the little homunculę organized
+and actually living, included in each other in
+endless succession, and to which nothing is
+wanting for them to become perfect animals,
+and human beings, but expansion, assisted by
+a transformation similar to that which winged
+insects undergo.</p>
+
+<p>As our present physicians are divided on
+these two systems of spermatic worms and
+eggs, and as all those who have lately written
+on generation have adopted one or the other
+of these opinions, it seems necessary to examine
+them with care, and to shew that they are not
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>
+only sufficient to explain the phenomena of
+generation, but are also founded on suppositions
+void of all probability.</p>
+
+<p>Both suppose an infinite progression; which,
+as we have said, is not so much a reasonable
+supposition as an illusion of the mind. A spermatic
+worm is more than a thousand million
+times smaller than a man; if, therefore, we
+suppose the body of a man as an unit, the size
+of the spermatic worm can only be expressed by
+the fraction 1/1000000000; and as man is with
+respect to the spermatic worm of the first generation,
+what this worm is to that of the second
+generation, the size of the last spermatic worm
+cannot be expressed but by a number composed
+of nineteen cyphers; and so likewise the size
+of the spermatic worm of the third generation
+will require 28 cyphers; that of the fourth
+generation 37; the fifth 46, and the sixth 55
+cyphers. To form an idea of the minuteness
+represented by this fraction, let us take the
+dimensions of the sphere of the universe from
+Sol to Saturn, and supposing the sun a million
+times larger than the earth, and about a thousand
+solar diameters distant from Saturn, we
+shall perceive that only 45 cyphers are required
+to express the number of cubic lines
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>
+contained in this sphere; and, by reducing
+each cubic line into a thousand millions of
+atoms, 54 cyphers are only required to express
+that number; consequently a human being
+will be greater, with relation to a spermatic
+worm of the sixth generation, than the sphere
+of the universe is with relation to the smallest
+atom which is possible to be perceived by the
+assistance of a microscope. What would it
+be if we were to carry it to ten generations?
+The minuteness would be so great as to leave
+us no mode of expressing it. The probability
+of this opinion, therefore, evidently disappears
+in proportion as the object diminishes. This
+calculation may be applied to eggs as well as
+spermatic worms, and the want of probability
+is general to both; it will, no doubt, be said,
+that matter being divisible, <i>ad infinitum</i>, there
+is no impossibility in this diminution of size;
+and although it is not probable, yet we must
+regard this division of matter as possible, since
+we can always, by thought, divide an atom into
+a number of parts. But I answer, that the
+same illusion is made use of on this infinite
+divisibility as on every other geometrical and
+arithmetical infinity; they are only abstractions
+of the mind, and have no existence in nature.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
+If we look on infinite divisibility of matter as
+an absolute infinity, it is easy to demonstrate
+that in that sense it does not exist; for, if once
+we suppose the smallest atom possible, by that
+supposition this atom will necessarily be indivisible,
+since if it were divisible it would no
+longer be the smallest atom possible, which
+would be contrary to the supposition. It therefore
+seems to me, that every hypothesis where a
+progress, <i>ad infinitum</i>, is admitted, ought to be
+rejected not only as false, but as void of all
+probability; and as the system of eggs and
+spermatic worms supposes this progress, they
+should not be admitted in philosophy.</p>
+
+<p>Another great difficulty against these two
+systems is, that in the egg system the first
+woman contained the male and female eggs:
+the male eggs contained only a generation of
+males; and that, on the contrary, the female
+eggs contained thousands of generations, both
+of males and females; insomuch that, at the
+same time, and in the same woman, there was
+always a certain number of eggs capable of
+developing themselves to infinity, and another
+number which would be unfolded but once.
+The same circumstance must occur in the
+other system, and therefore I ask if there is
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>
+the smallest appearance of probability in these
+suppositions?</p>
+
+<p>A third difficulty arises against these two
+systems, which is, the resemblance that children
+bear, sometimes to the father and sometimes
+to the mother, and sometimes to both;
+and the evident marks of extraordinary difference
+in mules, &amp;c. If from the spermatic
+worm of the father the f&#339;tus is produced, how
+can the child resemble the mother; and if the
+f&#339;tus is pre-existing in the egg of the mother,
+how can the child resemble its father? or if
+the spermatic worm of a horse, or the egg of
+a she-ass contains the f&#339;tus, how can the mule
+participate in the nature and figure of both the
+horse and the ass?</p>
+
+<p>These general difficulties, which are invincible,
+are not the only ones that can be made
+against these systems; there are particular ones
+which are no less potent. To begin with the
+system of spermatic worms, may it not be asked
+of those who admit of it, how they think this
+transformation is made? and object to them,
+that insects have not, nor cannot have any relation
+with what they suppose. For the worm
+which is to become a fly, or the caterpillar
+which is to become a butterfly, passes through
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>
+a middle state, and when it ceases to be a chrysalis,
+it is completely formed and has acquired
+its full size, and is then in a condition of engendering;
+whereas in the pretended transformation
+of the spermatic worm into man, it
+cannot be said to be in a state of chrysalis, and
+even if we should suppose one during the first
+days of conception, why does not the production
+of this chrysalis, instead of an unformed
+embryo, suppose an adult and perfect being?
+We plainly see how analogy is here violated;
+and that far from confirming this idea of the
+transformation of the spermatic worm, it is
+instantly destroyed by examination.</p>
+
+<p>Besides, the worm which is transformed into
+a fly proceeds from an egg; the egg is the
+produce of the copulation of the male and female,
+and includes the f&#339;tus, which must afterwards
+enter into a chrysalis, before it arrives
+at its state of perfection, as a fly; in which
+form alone it has an engendering power;
+whereas the spermatic worm has no faculty
+of generation, nor proceeds from an egg.
+Even should we allow the semen to contain
+eggs, from whence issue spermatic worms, the
+same difficulty will still remain, for these supposed
+eggs have not the copulation of the two
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>
+sexes for their principle of existence, as in insects;
+consequently the partizans of that opinion
+cannot pretend any similarity, nor derive
+any advantage from the transformation of insects;
+which rather destroys the basis of their
+explanation.</p>
+
+<p>When the innumerable multitude of spermatic
+worms are opposed to those physicians
+who are prejudiced by this system, they answer,
+as before observed, by the examples of
+plants and trees. But this comparison is not
+entirely just, because all the spermatic worms
+excepting one perish by absolute necessity,
+which is not the case with the seeds of a tree
+or plant, for those which do not become vegetables,
+serve as food for other organized bodies,
+and for the expansion and reproduction
+of animals; whereas we do not see any use for
+the spermatic worms, or any end to which
+we can refer their prodigious superfluity. On
+the whole, I only make this remark in reply
+to what is, or may be said on this matter;
+for I own, that no arguments drawn from final
+causes will either establish or destroy a physical
+system.</p>
+
+<p>Another objection made against this opinion
+is, there being, to all appearance, an equal
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>
+number of separate worms in the seed of all
+kinds of animals, for, say they, it is natural to
+imagine, that in those kinds where f&#339;tuses are
+most abundant, as in fishes, insects, &amp;c. the
+number of spermatic worms should be more
+numerous than in those where generation is least
+abundant, as in man, quadrupeds, birds, &amp;c.
+for if they are the immediate cause of production,
+why is there no proportion between their
+number and that of the f&#339;tus? Besides, there
+is no proportionable difference in the size of
+most kinds of spermatic worms, those of large
+animals being as small as those of the least.
+Those of a rat, and those of a man, are nearly
+the same, and when there is any difference it is
+no ways relative to the size of the individual.
+The Calmar, which is a very small fish, has
+spermatic worms above one hundred thousand
+times larger than those of a man or a dog.
+Another proof these worms are not the immediate
+and only cause of generation.</p>
+
+<p>The particular difficulties that may be raised
+against this egg system are no less considerable.
+If the f&#339;tus exists in the egg before the communication
+of the male with the female, why
+do we not perceive the f&#339;tus as well in those
+eggs produced before as after copulation? We
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>
+have before recounted the observations of Malpighius,
+who says he always found the f&#339;tus in
+those eggs produced by hens that had received
+the cock, and only a mass or mole in the cicatrice
+of those who had not; it is therefore
+very clear that the f&#339;tus does not exist in the
+egg till after impregnation.</p>
+
+<p>Another difficulty against this system is,
+that not only the f&#339;tus is not seen in eggs before
+the junction of the sexes, but even the
+existence of eggs in viviparous animals is by
+no means proved. Those physicians who pretend
+that the spermatic worm is the f&#339;tus enveloped
+in a covering, are at least assured of
+spermatic worms; but those who affirm that
+the f&#339;tus is pre-existing in the egg, have no
+proof of the existence of the egg itself; on the
+contrary, there is a probability, almost equivalent
+to a certainty, that these eggs do not
+exist.</p>
+
+<p>Although the partizans of the egg system do
+not agree what must be looked on as the true
+egg in the female testicle, nevertheless they all
+think that impregnation is made in the testicle
+called the <i>ovarium</i>, without paying any attention
+that if it was so most f&#339;tuses would be
+found in the abdomen instead of the matrix,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
+for the superior extremity of the trunk being
+separated from the ovarium, the pretended
+eggs must often fall into the abdomen. Now,
+it is certain that this case is extremely rare,
+and, I believe, never happened, unless occasioned
+by some accident.</p>
+
+<p>The general difficulties and objections
+against these two systems have been noticed
+by the author of <i>Venus Physique</i>, whose treatise,
+although very short, has more philosophical
+ideas than there are in many folio volumes
+on generation. As this book is very
+public, and the accuracy with which it is written
+will not permit any extract, I shall only
+observe, this author is the first who has returned
+into the road of truth, from which we
+were farther strayed than ever, since the supposition
+of the egg system, and the discovery
+of spermatic animals. Nothing therefore remains
+farther to be said, and I shall conclude
+with relating a few particular experiments,
+some of which have appeared favourable, and
+others contrary, to these systems.</p>
+
+<p>In the History of the Academy of Sciences
+of Paris, 1701, some objections are proposed
+by M. Mery against the egg system. This
+able anatomist supports, with reason, that the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>
+vesicles found in the female testicles are not
+eggs, but are so adherent to the internal substance
+of the testicle that they cannot be naturally
+separated therefrom; that if they could
+separate themselves from this substance it would
+be impossible for them to get out, because the
+common membrane, which surrounds all the
+testicle, is a web of too firm a texture to admit
+of a conception; that a vesicle, or round soft
+egg, could open a passage in it; and as the
+greatest number of physicians and anatomists
+were prejudiced in favour of the egg system,
+and, from the experiments of De Graaf, believed
+that the number of cicatrices in the
+testicles marked the number of f&#339;tuses, M.
+Mery mentions the testicles of a woman, where
+there was such a quantity of these cicatrices,
+that, agreeable to this system, would have supposed
+a fecundity almost beyond imagination.
+These difficulties excited other partizans of the
+egg system to make new researches. M. Duverney
+examined and dissected the testicles of
+cows and sheep: he pretended that the vesicles
+were eggs, because there were some less adherent
+to the testicles than others, and insisted
+it was natural to believe, that when they came
+to perfect maturity they were separated altogether,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
+especially as by inflating the internal
+cavity of the testicle the air passed between
+these vesicles and the adjoining parts. M.
+Mery only answers that this not a sufficient
+proof, since these vesicles have never been seen
+separate from the testicles. M. Duverney remarked
+the glandular bodies on the testicles,
+but he did not look on them as an essential and
+necessary part towards generation, but merely
+as accidental exuberances, like gall-nuts, on
+the oak. M. Littre, whose prejudice for the
+egg system was still greater, pretended, not
+only that the vesicles were eggs, but even asserted
+he had discovered in one of them a
+well-formed f&#339;tus, of which he distinguished
+the head and trunk very perfectly, and even
+gave the dimensions. But besides this wonder
+being only seen by that gentleman, and no
+other naturalist, it is sufficient to read his Memoire<a name="FNanchor_16" id="FNanchor_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16" class="fnanchor">[P]</a>
+to perceive how doubtful was the fact.
+By his own words we find the matrix was
+schirrhous, that the testicle was corrupted, and
+that the vesicle, or egg, which contained this
+imaginary f&#339;tus was smaller than the other
+vesicles, or eggs, which did not contain any
+thing, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_16" id="Footnote_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16"><span class="label">[P]</span></a> Anno 1701, page 3.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span></p></div>
+
+<p>A famous experiment, in favour of the egg
+system, is supplied by De Nuck; he opened a
+bitch three days after copulation; he drew out
+one of the horns of the matrix, and made a ligature
+in the middle, so that the upper part of
+the passage could have no communication with
+the lower; after which he replaced this horn,
+and closed up the wound, with which the bitch
+seemed but little incommoded. At the end of
+twenty-one days he opened it again, and found
+two f&#339;tuses in the upper part, that is between
+the testicles and the ligature; but in the lower
+part there was no f&#339;tus. In the other horn of
+the matrix, which had not been tied by a ligature,
+he found three f&#339;tuses, which were regularly
+disposed, which proves, he says, that
+the f&#339;tus does not proceed from the seed of
+the male, but exists in the female egg. Supposing
+this experiment, which has only been
+made once, was always followed with the same
+effect, we should not then be right in concluding
+that fecundation is made in the ovary, and
+that eggs are detached therefrom which contain
+the f&#339;tus completely formed. It would
+only prove that the f&#339;tus may be formed in
+the upper parts of the horns of the matrix as
+well as in the lower; and it seems very natural
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>
+to imagine that the ligature, compressing
+the middle of the horns of the matrix, impelled
+the seminal liquors, which are in the lower
+parts, to issue out, and thus destroy the business
+of generation in them.</p>
+
+<p>Thus we have gone through the opinions of
+anatomists and physicians on the subject of
+generation; and it now only remains for me
+to recount what I have been enabled to draw
+from my own researches and experiments, and
+it will then be seen whether my system is not
+infinitely more agreeable to Nature than any
+of those I have given an account of.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="caption2"><a name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI.</a></p>
+
+<p class="caption2">EXPERIMENTS ON THE METHOD OF GENERATION.</p>
+
+
+<p>I often reflected on the above system, and
+was every day more and more convinced
+that my theory was infinitely the most probable.
+I then began to suppose that, by a
+microscope, I might be able to attain a discovery
+of the living organic particles, from
+which I thought every animal and vegetable
+drew their origin. My first supposition was,
+that the spermatic animalcules seen in the seed
+of every male, might possibly be these organic
+particles; on which I reasoned as follows:</p>
+
+<p>If every animal and vegetable contain a
+quantity of living organic particles, these particles
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
+would be found in their seed, and in a
+greater quantity than in any other substance,
+because the seed is an extract of what is most
+analogous to the individual, and the most organic;
+and the animalcule we see in the seed of
+males are, perhaps, only these same living organic
+molecules, or at least the first union,
+or assemblage of them. But if this is so, the
+seed of the female must also contain similar
+living organic molecules, and, consequently,
+we ought to find moving bodies there as well
+as in the male: and since the living organic
+particles are common both to animals and vegetables,
+we should also find them in the seeds
+of plants, in the nectarium, and in the stamina,
+which are the most essential parts of vegetables,
+and which contain the organic molecules
+necessary for reproduction. I then seriously
+thought of examining the seminal liquors of
+both sexes, and the germs of plants, with a
+microscope. I thought, likewise, that the reservoirs
+of the female seed might possibly be
+the cavities of the glandular bodies, in which
+Valisnieri and others had uselessly sought for
+the egg; and at length determined to undertake
+a course of observations and experiments.
+I first communicated my ideas to Mr. Needham,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
+a gentleman well known for his microscopical
+observations, and read to him the first
+part of this work; he seemed to approve of these
+ideas, and did me the favour to lend me his microscope
+which was infinitely superior to my
+own. At the same time I communicated my
+system and project of experiments to Messrs.
+Daubenton, Gueneau, and Dalibard, all of
+whom encouraged me to persevere in my determination,
+and from whom, in the course of making
+those experiments, I received much assistance,
+particularly from Mr. Daubenton.</p>
+
+<p>Persons not experienced in the use of the microscope
+will not be displeased that I here insert
+some remarks which will be useful to them,
+if they repeat the following experiments, or
+make new ones. We should give the preference
+to double microscopes, in which we see objects
+perpendicularly, from their having a plain or
+concave mirror, which shews the objects clear;
+the concave mirror is the most preferable when
+the observations are made with the strongest
+lens. Leeuwenhoek, who undoubtedly has
+been the greatest and most indefatigable of all
+microscopical observators, is said to have only
+made use of simple microscopes, with which he
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>
+viewed objects horizontally. If this is true, it
+is necessary to remark, that most of the plates
+given by Leeuwenhoek of microscopical objects,
+especially spermatic animals, represents
+them much thicker and longer than he really
+saw them, which renders the microscopes we
+speak of preferable to the horizontal, as they
+are more stable; the motion of the hand, with
+which the microscope is held, producing a little
+trembling, which causes the object to appear
+wavering, and never presents the same part for
+any time. Besides, there is always a motion in
+the liquors caused by the agitation of the external
+air, at least, if we do not put the liquor
+between two plates of glass, or even fine talc,
+which diminishes somewhat of its transparency,
+and greatly lengthens the experiment; but the
+horizontal microscope, whose tables are vertical,
+has the still greater inconvenience, that
+the most ponderous parts of the drop of liquor
+fall to the bottom; consequently there are
+three motions, that of the trembling of the hand,
+the agitation of the fluid by the action of the air,
+and also that of the parts of the liquor falling to
+the bottom: from the combination of which,
+certain small globules, which we see in these liquors,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
+may appear to move by their own motion
+and powers, while they only obey the
+compounded power of those three causes.</p>
+
+<p>When we put a drop of liquor on the table
+of the double microscope, although horizontally
+placed, and in the most advantageous situation,
+we still see one common motion in the liquor,
+which forces all what it contains to one side.
+We must wait till the fluid is in an equilibrium
+and at rest, before we make our observations;
+for it often occurs, that this motion of the fluid
+hurries away many globules, and forms a kind
+of whirling motion, which returns one of these
+globules in a very different direction to the
+others. The eye is then fixed on the globules,
+and seeing one take a different course from the
+rest, supposes it an animal, or at least a body,
+which moves of itself, whereas its motion is
+only owing to that of the fluid; and as the liquor
+is apt to dry and thicken in the circumference
+of the drop, endeavours must be made
+to fix the lens on the centre of it. The drop
+should also be as large as possible, and contain
+as much liquor as will permit a sufficient
+transparency, to see perfectly what it
+contains.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Before we begin to make observations, we
+should have a perfect knowledge of our microscope.
+There is no glass whatsoever but in
+which there are some spots, bubbles, threads,
+and other defects, which should be nicely inspected,
+in order that such appearances should
+not be represented as real and unknown objects:
+we must also endeavour to learn what
+effect the imperceptible dust has which adheres
+to the glasses of the microscope; a perfect
+knowledge of which may be acquired by observing
+the microscope several times.</p>
+
+<p>To make proper observations, the sight, or
+focus, of the microscope must not precisely fall
+on the surface of the liquor, but a little above
+it; as not so much reliance should be placed
+on what passes upon the surface, as what is seen
+in the body of the liquor. There are often
+bubbles on the surface which have irregular
+motions produced by the contact of the air.</p>
+
+<p>We can see much better with the light of
+two short candles, than in the brightest day,
+provided this light is not agitated, which is
+avoided by putting a small shade on the table,
+inclosing the three sides of the lights and the
+microscope.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It will often appear as though dark and
+opaque bodies become transparent, and even
+take different colours, or form concentrical
+and coloured rings, or a kind of rainbow on
+the surface; and other matters, which are
+seen at first sight transparent and clouded, become
+black and obscure; these changes are not
+real, but only depend on the obliquity the sight
+falls on the body with, and the height of the
+plain in which they are found.</p>
+
+<p>When there are bodies in a liquor which
+seem to move with great swiftness, especially
+when they are on the surface, they form a furrowed
+motion in the liquor, which appears to
+follow the moving body, and which we might
+be inclined to mistake for a tail. This appearance
+deceived me at first, but I clearly perceived
+my error, when these little bodies met
+others which stopped them; for there was no
+longer any appearance of tails. These are
+the remarks which occurred during my experiments,
+and which I submit to those who would
+make use of the microscope for the observation
+of liquors.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="center bbox">
+<a name="fig_1"></a><a name="fig_2"></a><a name="fig_3"></a>
+<a name="fig_4"></a><a name="fig_5"></a><a name="fig_6"></a>
+<span class="caption3"><i>PLATE I.</i></span>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="Plate I">
+<tr>
+ <td>Fig. 1<br /><img src="images/fig_1.png" width="264" height="260" alt="" /></td>
+ <td>Fig. 2<br /><img src="images/fig_2.png" width="265" height="260" alt="" /></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td>Fig. 3<br /><img src="images/fig_3.png" width="264" height="262" alt="" /></td>
+ <td>Fig. 4<br /><img src="images/fig_4.png" width="264" height="262" alt="" /></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td>Fig. 5<br /><img src="images/fig_5.png" width="269" height="262" alt="" /></td>
+ <td>Fig. 6<br /><img src="images/fig_6.png" width="263" height="261" alt="" /></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption3">EXPERIMENTS.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_I"></a>I. I took from the seminal vessels of a man,
+who died a violent death, and whose body was
+still warm, all the liquor therein contained, and
+put it into a small bottle; of this I put a drop
+on the table of the microscope, without the addition
+of water or any other liquor. The first
+thing which presented, was a vapour which
+steamed from the liquor towards the lens, and
+obscured it. These vapours being dissipated,
+I perceived large filaments, (<a href="#fig_1"><i>fig. 1.</i></a>) which in
+some places seemed to extend into different
+branches, and in others to intermingle together.
+These filaments clearly appeared to be internally
+agitated by an undulating motion, and looked
+like hollow tubes which contained some moving
+substance. I distinctly saw two of these filaments
+(<a href="#fig_2"><i>fig. 2.</i></a>) were joined together, and had
+a vibration nearly like that of two extended
+strings, which are tied at the two extremities,
+and pulled asunder in the middle. These
+filaments were composed of globules which
+touched each other, and resembled beads. I
+afterwards saw filaments which swelled in certain
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
+parts, and I observed, that on the side so
+swelled small globules came out, which had a
+distinct motion like that of a pendulum; these
+small bodies were fastened to the filaments by
+a small thread, (<a href="#fig_3"><i>fig. 3.</i></a>) which lengthened gradually
+as the little body moved; and at last I
+saw these little bodies entirely separated from
+the large filament, carrying after them the
+small thread which connected them. As this
+liquor was very thick, and the filaments too
+near each other, I dilated another drop with
+rain water, in which I was assured there were
+no animals. I then saw the filaments much
+separated, and very distinctly perceived the
+motion of these little bodies, which was now
+more free, and they swam much quicker; and
+if I had not seen them separate from the filaments,
+and carry along with them their thread,
+I should have taken the moving body in this
+second observation for an animal, and the
+thread for its tail. I then attentively observed
+one of these filaments, that was much thicker
+than these small bodies, and I had the satisfaction
+of seeing two of those bodies which separated
+with difficulty, drag along with them a
+long and small thread, which obstructed their
+motion.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>This seminal liquor was at first very thick,
+but by degrees it became more fluid; in less
+than an hour it was almost transparent; and
+in proportion as this fluidity increased, the
+phenomena changed, as I shall relate.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_II"></a>II. When the seminal liquor attained more
+fluidity, the filaments were no longer to be
+seen, but the little bodies appeared in great
+numbers; they have for the most part a motion
+like that of a pendulum, and they draw
+after them a long thread, which it may clearly
+be perceived they want to get rid of; their
+motion forwards is very slow, vibrating to the
+right and left. The motion of a boat fastened
+in the midst of a rapid stream to one fixed
+point, pretty well represents the motion of
+these bodies, excepting that the boat remains
+in the same place, whereas they advance by
+degrees; but they do not always keep the same
+parts in the same direction; but at each vibration
+they take a considerable rolling motion;
+so that, besides their horizontal motion, they
+have one of a vertical balance, which proves
+that these bodies are of a globular figure, or,
+at least, that their lowest part is not sufficiently
+extended to maintain them in the same
+position.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_III"></a>III. At the end of two or three hours, when
+the liquor was more fluid, we saw a greater
+quantity of these moving bodies. They
+seemed to be more free; the threads were
+shorter; their progressive motion was more
+direct, and their horizontal motion was greatly
+diminished; for the longer the threads are, the
+greater is the angle of their vibration; and in
+proportion as these threads diminish in length,
+the vibratory motion lessens, and the progressive
+motion increases. The vertical balance
+still subsisted, and was always plainly
+perceptible.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_IV"></a>IV. In five or six hours the liquor attained
+its utmost fluidity. Most of these moving substances
+were entirely disengaged from their
+threads; they were of an oval figure, (<a href="#fig_4"><i>fig. 4.</i></a>)
+and moved progressively with great swiftness,
+and by their various motions had a stronger
+resemblance than ever to real animals. Those
+who had their threads still adhering, were not
+so brisk as the others; and among these that
+had not threads, some seemed to change their
+shape and size, some were round, some oval,
+and others thicker at their extremities than in
+the middle; the balancing and rolling motion
+was still observable.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_V"></a>V. At the end of twelve hours a kind of
+gelatinous matter was settled at the bottom of
+the bottle: it was of an ash-colour, and of a
+tolerable consistency; the liquor that swam
+above was almost as clear as water, with a kind
+of bluish tint, resembling water in which a
+little soap had been dissolved; nevertheless it
+still preserved its viscidity. The moving bodies
+had then a great activity, were loosened from
+their threads, and moved in all directions. I
+saw some of them change their form, and from
+oval become round; and others separate, and
+from one oval form two. As they became
+smaller, their activity increased.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_VI"></a>VI. In twenty-four hours the liquor had deposited
+a greater quantity of gelatinous matter.
+I diluted it with water, but it did not readily
+mix, and required a considerable time to dissolve.
+It then appeared composed of an infinite
+number of opaque tubes that formed a
+kind of net-work, in which no regular disposition
+nor the least motion could be seen: in
+the clear liquor some few small bodies were
+still moving. The next morning there were
+also a very few; but after that time I saw no
+more in this liquor than in the globules, without
+any appearance of motion.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>These experiments were repeated several
+times with the most possible exactness; and I
+am persuaded that those threads above mentioned
+are not tails, nor do they make any part
+of the individual body; for these threads
+have no proportion with the rest of the body;
+they are of different sizes, although the moving
+bodies are always nearly of the same, at
+the same time. The globule appears embarrassed
+in its motion, as its tail is longer or
+shorter; sometimes it cannot advance, but
+move only from right to left, or from left to
+right, when the tail is very long; and it is
+clearly seen that they use great efforts to get
+rid of them.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_VII"></a>VII. Having taken the seminal liquor from
+another man but just dead, and still warm, I
+put a drop of it on the table of the microscope,
+and it immediately liquified; it had at first a
+condensed appearance, and seemed to form a
+compact web, composed of long and thick
+filaments, which grew from the thickest part
+of the liquor. These filaments separated in proportion
+as the liquor became more fluid, and
+at length they divided into globules, which at
+first seemed not to have sufficient power to set
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span>
+themselves in motion, but this power increased
+as they separated from the filament, from which
+they made many efforts to disengage themselves.
+Each of them in this struggle drew
+out tails from the filaments of different sizes,
+some of which were so thin and so long as to
+have no proportion with the bodies, which were
+all so much the more embarrassed as these
+threads or tails increased in length. The angle
+of their vibratory motion was also much greater
+as those filaments were longer: and their progressive
+motion so much the more remarkable
+as these tails were shorter.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_VIII"></a>VIII. Having continued these observations
+for fourteen hours, I perceived that these
+threads, or tails, were continually lessening,
+and became so fine, that at last their extremities
+were no longer visible, and at length the
+whole entirely disappeared. At this time the
+globules absolutely ceased their horizontal vibrations;
+their progressive motion was direct,
+although they had always the vertical balancing
+motion, like the rolling of a ship. When
+disencumbered of these threads, the bodies were
+oval, transparent, and perfectly like those pretended
+animals seen in the liquor of an oyster
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span>
+on the seventh day, and still more to those
+found in the jelly of roast veal at the end of the
+fourth day.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_IX"></a>IX. Between the tenth and eleventh hour
+the liquor became extremely fluid, and all the
+globules appeared to proceed in ranks from
+one and the same side; (<a href="#fig_5"><i>fig. 5.</i></a>) they passed
+over the table of the microscope in less than
+four seconds; they were ranged seven or eight
+in front, and moved on successively, as troops
+march in files. I observed this singular instance
+for more than five minutes; and as their
+course did not finish, I was desirous of finding
+the source: and, having gently moved my
+glass, I perceived that all these moving globules
+came from a kind of mucilage, (<a href="#fig_6"><i>fig. 6.</i></a>)
+where the filamentary net-work continually
+produced them more abundant and much
+quicker than the filaments had ten hours before.
+There was still a remarkable difference
+between these moving bodies produced in the
+thick liquor, and those produced when the liquor
+became more fluid; these last had no thread
+behind them, their motion was quicker, and
+they went in flocks like sheep. I observed the
+mucilage from whence they issued for some
+time, and perceived it diminished, and was successively
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>
+converted into moving globules, till
+the diminution of more than half the bulk;
+after which, the liquor being too dry, this mucilage
+became obscure in its middle, and all
+the environs were divided by the small threads
+which appeared to be formed from the bodies
+of these moving globules which were destroyed
+as it dried up, not in one single mass, but in
+long threads, regularly disposed, with quadrangular
+intervals, forming a net-work, very like
+to a cobweb, on which the moisture hung in an
+infinite number of globules.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_X"></a>X. I perceived by the first experiment,
+that these little moving bodies change their
+form, and I thought they in general diminished,
+but of that I was not certain. In this last
+observation, at the twelfth and thirteenth hour
+I observed it more distinctly; at the same time
+remarking that though diminished considerably
+in size, yet they increased in specific gravity;
+especially when their motion was nearly finished,
+which generally happened all at once and
+they sunk to the bottom, forming a sediment of
+an ash-colour, plainly perceptible to the naked
+eye, and which appeared through the microscope
+to be composed of globules adherent
+to on another, sometimes by threads, and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>
+at others in knots, but always in a regular
+manner.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_XI"></a>XI. Having procured the seed of a dog,
+emitted naturally, I observed that this liquor
+was clear, and had but little tenacity. I
+put it in a phial, and having examined it with
+a microscope, without diluting it with water,
+I perceived moving bodies entirely like those
+I had observed in the human semen; they had
+threads, or tails, perfectly the same; they were
+also nearly of the same size; in a word, they
+resembled, as perfectly as possible, those I saw
+in the human liquor, liquified during two or
+three hours. I then sought for the filaments
+which I had seen in the human liquor, but it
+was useless; I perceived only some long threads
+entirely like those which served as tails to the
+globules. These threads were not attached
+to any globules, nor had they any motion.
+Those globules which were in motion, and
+had tails, appeared to me to move quicker than
+those in the human semen: they had scarcely
+any horizontal vibrations, but a rolling motion.
+They were not in a great number; and, although
+their progressive motion was stronger,
+they took more time to cross the microscope
+than those I had before remarked. I observed
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>
+this liquor for three hours, but perceived no
+change: after which I examined it at another
+time for four hours, and remarked, that the
+number of moving bodies diminished by degrees;
+the fourth day there was still some,
+though they were very few, and often I only
+found one or two in a drop of liquor. The
+second day most of them were deprived of
+their tails; the third day very few retained
+them, yet, at the last day, there still remained
+some which had them; the liquor had then deposited
+a whitish sediment, which appeared to
+be composed of immoveable globules, and
+many threads, that seemed to be tails separated
+from the globules. There were also
+some attached to the globules, which appeared
+to be the dead bodies of these little animals,
+but whose forms were different from those that
+moved, for they appeared larger than the moving
+globules, or the rest, which remained without
+motion at the bottom of the liquor, and
+appeared to have a fissure or opening.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_XII"></a>XII. Another time, having taken the seminal
+liquor of the same dog, I again perceived
+the fore-mentioned phenomena; and I
+saw, besides, in one of the drops of this liquor,
+a mucilaginous part, which produced moving
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>
+globules, as in the ninth experiment, (<a href="#fig_6"><i>fig. 6.</i></a>)
+and these globules formed a current, and went
+in ranks like troops. This mucilage appeared
+to me animated with an internal inflated motion,
+which produced small bloated appearances
+in different parts, and from whence issued these
+bloated forms, or moving globules, with a
+nearly-equal swiftness, and in the same direction.
+The bodies of these globules were not
+different from the rest, excepting they had no
+tails. I observed that many of them changed
+their shape, and lengthened considerably, till
+they became little cylinders, after which the
+two extremities of the cylinders were bloated,
+and divided into two globules, both moving
+and following the same direction as that before
+they were united.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_XIII"></a>XIII. The phial, which contained this liquor,
+having been broke by accident, I, a third
+time, took the liquor of the same dog, but
+whether the animal was wearied by too reiterated
+emissions, or by other causes, the seminal
+liquor contained none of the above
+bodies, but was transparent and viscous, like
+the serum of blood; I examined it then, and
+at one, two, three, and even twenty-four hours
+afterwards, but it presented nothing new: there
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>
+was not a single moving body to be seen, nor
+any mucilage; in a word, nothing that I had
+seen before.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_XIV"></a>XIV. I then opened a dog, and separated
+the testicles and the adherent vessels, but I perceived
+no seminal vesicles, and apparently the
+seed in those animals passes directly from the
+testicles into the urethra. I found but a small
+quantity of liquor in the testicles, although the
+dog was adult and vigorous. In the small
+quantity I could collect I could not discover
+any bodies that were in motion. I only perceived
+a great quantity of very small globules,
+most of which were motionless, and some of
+the smallest had some trifling approximating
+motion, which I could not follow, because
+the drops I gathered were so exceedingly minute
+that they dried in two or three minutes
+after they were placed in the microscope.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_XV"></a>XV. Having cut the testicles of this dog
+into two parts, I infused it in water, and
+closely sealed up the vessel. Three days after
+I examined this infusion, which I made with
+the design of discovering whether the flesh did
+not contain moving bodies, and I saw a great
+quantity of moving bodies of a globular and
+oval form, like those I had seen in the seminal
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
+liquor of the dog, excepting they had not any
+threads. They moved in all manner of directions
+with great swiftness. I observed these bodies,
+which appeared animated for some time,
+and saw many change their form; I perceived
+some to lengthen, and others to contract, while
+some swelled at both extremities: there were
+numbers that were smaller and thicker than the
+rest; but they were all in motion, and were
+about the size and figure of those I have described
+in the fourth experiment.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_XVI"></a>XVI. The next morning the number of
+these globules were increased, but they appeared
+smaller; their motion was more rapid
+and irregular; they had also another appearance
+with respect to their form and manner
+of moving, which seemed confused; the
+next and several days after, till the fifteenth
+day, there were moving bodies in the water,
+whose size gradually diminished till they were
+no Longer visible. The last, which I perceived
+with great difficulty, was on the nineteenth
+and twentieth days, and they moved with
+greater rapidity than ever. Upon the water a
+kind of pellicle was formed, which appeared to
+be composed of the coverings of those moving
+bodies, small threads, scales, &amp;c. but entirely
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span>
+motionless; this pellicle, and the moving bodies
+could not come into the liquor by means
+of external air, since the bottle had been kept
+carefully sealed.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_XVII"></a>XVII. I then successively opened ten rabbits,
+on different days, to examine their seminal
+liquors; the first had not a drop, either in
+the testicles or seminal vessels. In the second I
+was no more successful, although I was assured
+he was the father of a very numerous progeny.
+I succeeded no better in the third. I then imagined
+that the presence of the female might be
+requisite; I therefore put males and females
+into cages so contrived that it was impossible
+for them to copulate. At first these endeavours
+did not succeed; for, on opening two, not
+a drop of seminal liquor was to be found;
+however, in the sixth that I opened, a large
+white rabbit, I found, in the seminal vesicles,
+as much liquor as could be contained in a teaspoon;
+this matter resembled calves' jelly, was
+nearly transparent, and of a citron colour.
+Having examined it with the microscope, I
+perceived it to resolve, by slow degrees, into filaments
+and thick globules, many of which
+appeared fastened to each other; but I did not
+remark any distinct motion in them, only as the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>
+matter liquefied, it formed a kind of current
+by which these filaments and globules seemed
+to be drawn all to one side. I expected to find
+this matter take a greater degree of fluidity, but
+that did not happen, for, after it was a little liquefied,
+it dried, and I could perceive nothing
+further than what is above mentioned. When
+this matter was mixed with water, the latter
+did not appear to have power to dilute it.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_XVIII"></a>XVIII. Having opened another rabbit,
+I only found a very small quantity of seminal
+matter, which was of a colour and consistency
+entirely different from the former; it was
+scarcely tinctured of a yellow hue, and was
+much more fluid. As there was but very
+little, I feared it would dry too hastily, and
+therefore mixed it with water: from the first
+observation, I did not perceive the filaments I
+had seen in the other, but I discovered three
+globules, all in a trembling and restless motion;
+they had also a progressive motion, but it was
+very slow; some moved round the others, and
+most appeared to turn upon their centres. I
+could not pursue this observation because the
+liquor so soon got dry.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_XIX"></a>XIX. I opened another of these rabbits,
+but could not discover any of this matter; in
+the seminal vessels of another, I found almost
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>
+as much congealed liquor as in <a href="#ex_XVII"><span class="smcap">XVII</span></a>th Experiment:
+I examined it in the same manner as the
+rest, but it afforded me no greater discovery.
+I infused the whole I had collected, in almost
+double the quantity of water, and after briskly
+shaking them together, I suffered them to
+settle for ten minutes; after which, on inspecting
+this infusion, I saw the same large globules
+as before; there were but few and those
+very distant from each other. They had approximating
+motions with respect to each
+other, but they were so slow, as to be scarcely
+discernable; two or three hours after, these
+globules seemed to be diminished, their motion
+was become more distinct, and they appeared
+to turn upon their centres. Although this trembling
+motion was more than their progressive,
+nevertheless they were clearly seen to change
+their situation irregularly with respect to each
+other. Six or seven hours after the globules
+were become still less, and their action was increased:
+they appeared to me to be in much
+greater numbers, and all their motions distinct.
+The next morning, there was a prodigious multitude
+of globules in motion, which were at
+least three times smaller than those that at
+first appeared. I observed these globules for
+eight days, and observed that many of them
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span>
+seemed to join together, after which their motion
+ceased; this union, however, appeared to
+me only superficial and accidental. Some were
+larger than others; most were round and spherical,
+and some of them were oval. The largest
+were most transparent, and the smallest were
+almost black. This difference did not proceed
+from the light, for in whatever situation these
+small globules were in, they were always of
+the same appearance; the motions of the small
+were much more rapid than the large ones, and
+what I remarked most clearly and most generally
+in all, was their diminution of size, so
+that at the eighth day they were so exceedingly
+small as to be hardly perceptible, and at last
+absolutely disappeared.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_XX"></a>XX. At length having obtained, with no
+small difficulty, the seminal liquor of another
+rabbit, as it would have been conveyed to the
+female, I remarked it to be more fluid than
+that which had been taken from the seminal
+vesicles, and the phenomena which it offered
+were also very indifferent; for in this liquor
+there were moving globules and filaments without
+motion; and also a kind of globules with
+threads or tails, resembling those of a dog or
+a man, but only appearing smaller and brisker
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>
+(<a href="#fig_7"><i>fig. 7.</i></a>) They passed over the microscope in
+an instant, their tails appeared shorter than
+those of other spermatic animals, and I own I
+am not certain whether some of those tails were
+not false appearances, produced by the furrows
+which these moving globules formed in
+the liquor, as they moved with too great a rapidity
+to admit of my clearly observing them;
+besides, the liquor, though sufficiently fluid at
+first, very speedily dried away.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_XXI"></a>XXI. After this I resolved to examine the
+seminal liquor of a ram; I applied to a butcher,
+who supplied me with the necessary parts of at
+least twelve or thirteen, directly after they were
+killed, but I could not find liquor sufficient for
+any experiment, either in the epididymis or
+seminal vesicles. In the little drops I was able
+to collect, I only perceived globules which had
+no motion. As I made these experiments in
+March, I supposed by repeating them in October,
+the season of female attachments, I should
+discover more seminal liquor in these vessels.
+I cut many of these testicles in two longitudinally,
+and collected a small quantity of liquor,
+but found nothing more in them.</p>
+
+<div class="fig_center bbox">
+<a name="fig_7"></a><a name="fig_8"></a><a name="fig_9"></a>
+<a name="fig_10"></a><a name="fig_11"></a><a name="fig_12"></a>
+<span class="caption3"><i>PLATE. II.</i></span>
+<table summary="Plate II">
+<tr>
+ <td>Fig. 7<br /><img src="images/fig_7.png" width="269" height="261" alt="" /></td>
+ <td>Fig. 8<br /><img src="images/fig_8.png" width="261" height="254" alt="" /></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td>Fig. 9<br /><img src="images/fig_9.png" width="266" height="257" alt="" /></td>
+ <td>Fig. 10<br /><img src="images/fig_10.png" width="257" height="255" alt="" /></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td>Fig. 11<br /><img src="images/fig_11.png" width="272" height="268" alt="" /></td>
+ <td>Fig. 12<br /><img src="images/fig_12.png" width="264" height="255" alt="" /></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_XXII"></a>XXII. I took three of these testicles, of three
+different rams, cut each of them into four
+parts, and put them into separate bottles, with
+as much water as was sufficient for them. Securing
+these bottles from the admission of air
+I suffered the infusion to remain for four days,
+after which I examined the liquor of each by
+the microscope, and found them all replete
+with an infinity of moving bodies, most part
+of which were oval, and the rest globular;
+they were pretty thick, and resembled those
+described in the <a href="#ex_VIII"><span class="smcap">VIII</span></a>th experiment; their
+motion was neither brisk, uncertain, nor very
+rapid, but equal, uniform, and in all directions.
+These moving bodies were nearly of the same
+size in each liquor, but differed one bottle with
+the other. They had no tails, nor were there
+any filaments or threads in this liquor; during
+the fifteen or sixteen days they were retained,
+they often changed their form, and seemed
+successively to throw off their external coverings;
+they also became every day smaller, and
+on the sixteenth day, they were no longer perceptible.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_XXIII"></a>XXIII. In the month of October I opened
+a ram, and found a great quantity of seminal
+liquor in the epididymis; having examined it
+with the microscope, I perceived an innumerable
+multitude of moving bodies, so numerous,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
+that all the liquor seemed to be entirely
+composed of them; as it was too thick,
+I diluted it with water, but I was surprised to
+see the motion of these bodies suddenly stop,
+though I perceived them very distinctly; having
+many times repeated the same observation,
+I perceived that the water which diluted the
+seminal liquors of a man, a dog, &amp;c. seemed
+to coagulate that of a ram.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_XXIV"></a>XXIV. I then opened another ram, and
+in order to prevent the seminal liquor from
+coagulating, I permitted the parts of generation
+to remain in the body of the animal, and
+covered it over with warm clothes. By these
+precautions I observed the seminal liquor in
+its fluid state; it was replete with an infinity of
+oblong moving bodies, (<a href="#fig_8"><i>fig. 8.</i></a>) traversing in
+various directions; but as soon as the liquor
+grew cold, the motion of all these bodies immediately
+ceased. I diluted the liquor with
+warm water, when the motion of the small
+bodies remained for three or four minutes.
+The quantity of these moving bodies was so
+great in this liquor, that although diluted, they
+nearly touched each other. They were all of
+the same size and form, but none of them had
+tails. Their motion was not very quick, and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
+when it stopped by the coagulation of the liquor,
+they did not change their form.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_XXV"></a>XXV. As I was persuaded, not only by my
+own theory, but also by the observations of all
+those who had made experiments before me,
+that the female, as well as the male, has a
+seminal and prolific liquor; and, as I had no
+doubt, but the reservoir of this liquor was the
+glandular body of the testicle, where prejudiced
+anatomists attempted to find the egg, I
+purchased several dogs and bitches, and some
+male and female rabbits, which I kept separate
+from each other; and in order to have a comparative
+object with the liquor of the female, I
+again observed the seminal liquor of a dog, and
+discovered there the same moving bodies as
+described in the <a href="#ex_XI"><span class="smcap">XI</span></a>th experiment.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_XXVI"></a>XXVI. While I was thus occupied, a
+bitch was dissected which had been four or five
+days in heat, and had not received the dog.
+The testicles were readily found, and on one
+of them I discovered a red, glandular, prominent
+body, about the size of a pea, which perfectly
+resembled a little nipple; on the outside
+was a visible orifice formed by two lips;
+one of which jutted out more than the other.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span>
+Having introduced a small instrument into
+this orifice, a liquor dropped from it, which
+we carefully caught to examine with the microscope.
+The surgeon replaced the testicles
+in the body of the animal, which was yet alive,
+in order to keep them warm. I then examined
+this liquor with a microscope, and, at the
+first glance, had the satisfaction to see moving
+bodies with tails, exactly like those I just before
+saw in the seminal liquor of the dog.
+(<a href="#fig_9"><i>fig. 9.</i></a>) Messrs. Needham and Daubenton,
+who observed them with me, were so surprized
+at this resemblance, that they could
+scarcely believe but that these spermatic animals
+were the same, and thought I had forgotten
+to change the table of the microscope,
+or that the instrument with which we had gathered
+the liquor of the female, might before
+have been used for the dog. Mr. Needham
+then took different instruments, and having obtained
+some fresh liquor, he examined it first,
+and saw there the same kind of animals, and
+was convinced, not only of the existence of
+spermatic animals in the seminal liquor of the
+female, but likewise of their resemblance to
+those of the semen of the male. We repeated
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>
+it ten times at least, in different drops of the
+same liquor, without perceiving the smallest
+variation in the phenomena.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_XXVII"></a>XXVII. Having afterwards examined the
+other testicle, I found a glandular body in its
+growing state; it had not any external orifice,
+was much smaller, and not so red as the first.
+Having opened it, I found no liquor; but only
+a small fold in the internal part, which I
+judged to be the origin of the cavity that was
+to contain the liquor. This second vesicle
+had some very small lymphatic vesicles externally.
+I pierced one of them with a lancet,
+and a clear and limpid liquor flowed out,
+which I examined with the microscope; it
+contained nothing similar to that of the glandular
+body; it was a clear matter, composed
+of small globules, which were motionless.
+Having often repeated this observation, I was
+assured, that this liquor in the vesicles was
+only a kind of lymph, which contains nothing
+animated, or similar to that seen in the female
+seed, which is formed and perfected in the
+glandular bodies.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_XXVIII"></a>XXVIII. Fifteen days after I opened another
+bitch that had been in heat seven or eight
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>
+days, but had not received the dog. I found
+the testicles contiguous to the extremities of
+the horns of the matrix; these horns were very
+long, their external tunic surrounded the testicles,
+and they appeared covered with that
+membrane like a cowl. In each testicle I
+found a glandular body in its full maturity.
+The first was half open, and there was a passage
+which penetrated into the testicle, and which
+was replete with seminal liquor; the second
+was somewhat more large and prominent, and
+the orifice, or canal, which contained the liquor
+was below the nipple. I took these two
+liquors, and having compared them, found
+them perfectly alike. The seminal liquor of
+the female is at least as liquid as that of the
+male. Having afterwards examined the two
+liquors with the microscope, I perceived the
+like moving bodies, (<a href="#fig_10"><i>fig. 10.</i></a>) and the same
+phenomena, as in the seminal liquor of the
+other. I saw besides many globules which
+moved very briskly, and endeavoured to disengage
+themselves from the mucilage that surrounded
+them: there was a great quantity of
+them as in the seed of the female.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_XXIX"></a>XXIX. From these glandular bodies I
+pressed out all the liquor, and having collected
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>
+it, I found enough to last for four or five hours
+observations. I remarked that it deposited
+somewhat to the bottom, or at least began to
+thicken. I took one drop of this, which was
+thicker than the rest, and having put it on the
+microscope, perceived that the mucilaginous
+part of the seed was condensed, and formed a
+continued net-work. On the external border
+of this net-work, there was a torrent, or current,
+composed of globules, which moved with rapidity.
+These globules were lively, active,
+and appeared to be disengaged from their
+mucilaginous covering, and their tails. This
+stream perfectly resembled the course of the
+blood in small transparent veins; for they appeared
+not only to be animated by their own
+powers, but also to be impelled by a common
+force, and constrained to follow in a herd.
+From this experiment, and the <a href="#ex_XI"><span class="smcap">XI</span></a>th and <a href="#ex_XII"><span class="smcap">XII</span></a>th,
+I concluded, that when the fluid begins to
+coagulate and thicken, these active globules
+break and tear their mucilaginous coverings,
+and escape by that side where the liquor remains
+most fluid. These moving bodies had
+then neither threads nor tails; they were for
+the most part oval, and appeared to be flat at
+the bottom, for they had no rolling motion.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_XXX"></a>XXX. The horns of the matrix were externally
+soft; I opened them longitudinally,
+and only found a very small quantity of liquor,
+which, upon examination, appeared to contain
+the same as that pressed from the glandular substance
+of the testicle. These glandular bodies
+are placed so as easily to sprinkle this liquor on
+the horns of the matrix; and I am persuaded
+that, as long as the amorous season remains,
+there is a continual dropping of this liquor
+from the glandular substance into the horns of
+the matrix; that this dropping remains till
+the glandular substance has emptied the vesicles;
+it then becomes fluid by degrees, is effaced,
+and only leaves a little reddish cicatrice
+on the external part of the testicle.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_XXXI"></a>XXXI. I took this seminal liquor of the
+female, with the same quantity of that just
+emitted from the male, and mixed them together,
+and having examined this mixture with
+the microscope, I perceived nothing new, the
+liquor remaining the same, and the moving
+bodies were so similar, that it was impossible
+to distinguish those of the male from those of
+the female; I only thought their motion appeared
+a little slackened.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_XXXII"></a>XXXII. Having dissected a young bitch
+that had never been in heat, I only discovered
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
+a small protuberance on one of the testicles,
+which I supposed to be the origin of a glandular
+body. The surface of the testicles was
+smooth and even, and the lymphatic vessels
+could scarcely be seen externally, until the tunic,
+which covered the testicles, was separated;
+but these vesicles were not considerable, and
+contained but a small quantity of liquor, in
+which I could only perceive some little globules
+without any motion.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_XXXIII"></a>XXXIII. In another bitch, which was
+younger, and only three or four months old,
+there was no appearance of glandular bodies
+on the testicles; they were white, smooth, and
+covered with a cowl like the rest. There
+were some little vesicles which contained little
+or no liquor; and it was with great difficulty
+we could perceive any vesicles externally. I
+compared one of these testicles with that of a
+young dog of nearly the same age, and they
+appeared internally of a fleshy nature, and perfectly
+similar. I do not mean to contradict
+what some anatomists have said concerning the
+testicles of dogs, but only that the appearance
+of the internal substance of the female testicles
+is like that of the males, when the glandular
+substances are not yet grown.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_XXXIV"></a>XXXIV. The genital parts of a cow, which
+had been just killed, was sent to me, covered
+over with hot cloths, and put into a basket
+with a live rabbit, which likewise squatted on
+a cloth at the bottom, so that I received them
+almost as warm as when taken out of the body.
+I immediately inspected the testicles, and
+found them of the size of a hen's, or, at least,
+a pigeon's egg. One of these testicles had a
+glandular body, about the size of a pea, protuberating
+outwardly like a small nipple, but
+it was not pierced, nor had any external orifice:
+it was close and hard. I pressed it with my
+fingers, but no liquor issued from it. I observed,
+before this testicle was dissected, there
+were two other glandular substances at a distance
+from the other; but these were just begun
+to grow; their colour was a whitish
+yellow, whereas that which seemed to have
+pierced the membrane of the testicle was of a
+rose colour. I opened this last, and examined
+it with the greatest attention, but could not
+discover that it contained any liquor, I therefore
+judged that it was far distant from its
+maturity.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_XXXV"></a>XXXV. The other testicle had no glandular
+body which had pierced the common
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>
+membrane that covered the testicle, there were
+only two small ones, which began to form a
+little protuberance below this membrane. I
+opened both of them but no liquor issued
+therefrom: they were hard, whitish, and with
+a little yellow tint; each of them had four or
+five lymphatic vesicles, very easily distinguishable
+on their surface, and appearing
+transparent. I judged they contained a quantity
+of liquor, and having pierced them with a
+lancet, the liquor issued out to some inches
+distance. I collected a sufficient quantity of
+this liquor to observe it easily; I only saw
+some very minute immoveable globules; and
+although I continued my examination for two
+days, I neither discovered alteration, change,
+nor motion, therein.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_XXXVI"></a>XXXVI. Eight days after, two more genital
+parts were brought to me in the same
+mode as the last. I was assured that one was
+taken from a young cow that had never calved,
+and the other from one that had had several,
+but was not old. I first examined the testicles
+of the latter, and on one of them I found a
+glandular substance, as large and as red as a
+cherry, which appeared a little soft towards the
+nipple. I distinguished three small holes, in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>
+which a hair might be introduced. Having
+pressed this substance with my fingers a small
+quantify of liquor issued, which I placed on the
+table of a microscope, and had the satisfaction
+to see some moving globules there, but quite
+different from those which I had seen in other
+seminal liquors (<a href="#fig_11"><i>fig. 11.</i></a>). These globules
+were obscure and little; their progressive motion,
+although distinct, was, nevertheless, very
+slow. The liquor was not thick; the little
+globules had no appearance of threads, or tails,
+and they were not all in motion. This is all
+I was able to perceive in the liquor this glandular
+substance afforded me, for although I
+pressed it again, it only afforded a less quantity,
+mixed with blood. I again discovered it in
+the small moving globules, but they seemed to
+be at least four times smaller than the sanguinary
+globules.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_XXXVII"></a>XXXVII. This glandular body was situate
+at one of the extremities by the side of the
+horn of the matrix, and the liquor, which it
+prepares, must fall upon this horn; nevertheless,
+on opening this horn I found no material
+quantity of liquor. This glandular body penetrated
+very forward in the testicle, and occupied
+more than a third of its internal substance.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>
+I opened them longitudinally, and
+found a pretty large cavity, but entirely void
+of any liquor. At some distance from this
+glandular body there was a small one of the
+same kind, about the size of a lentil. There
+were also two small cicatrices, about the same
+size, which formed two small indentations, of a
+deep red colour: they were the remains of obliterated
+glandular bodies. Having afterwards
+examined the other testicle, I counted four
+cicatrices and three glandular bodies; the foremost
+of which had pierced the membrane,
+was of a flesh colour, and the size of a pea. It
+was solid, and without any orifice or liquor:
+the two others were smaller, harder, and of a
+deep orange colour. On the first testicle only
+two or three apparent lymphatic vesicles remained.
+I counted eight on the external part,
+and having examined the liquor of these vesicles
+I perceived only a transparent matter,
+without any moving bodies.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_XXXVIII"></a>XXXVIII. I then examined the testicles of
+the young cow which had not calved, which,
+notwithstanding, were something larger than
+the other, but it is true there were no cicatrices
+on either of them; the one was smooth
+and very white, and a number of lymphatic
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>
+vesicles were sprinkled about it, but there was
+not the least mark of a glandular body. On
+the other testicle I perceived the marks of two
+glandular substances, the one had just began
+to grow, and the other was the size of a pea;
+there was also a great number of lymphatic
+vesicles, which I pierced with a lancet, but the
+liquor did not contain any thing; having
+pierced the two small glandular bodies some
+blood alone issued thereout.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_XXXIX"></a>XXXIX. I divided each testicle of both
+cows into four parts, and, having put them
+into separate phials, I poured as much water
+on as would cover them, and after having
+closely corked them up, I suffered to infuse for
+six days; I then examined these infusions, and
+discovered an innumerable quantity of living
+moving bodies (<a href="#fig_12"><i>fig. 12.</i></a>); they were all, in
+these infusions, extremely small, moved with a
+surprising rapidity in all directions. I observed
+them for three days, and they always appeared
+to diminish, till at last, on the third
+day, they entirely disappeared.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_XL"></a>XL. The following day they brought to
+me the genital parts of three more cows. I
+immediately searched the testicles to find one
+where the glandular substance was in perfect
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span>
+maturity; but in two of them I only discovered
+some growing glandular substances on the testicles.
+I could not learn whether these cows
+had calved or not, but there was a great appearance
+they had all been in season, for there
+were a great number of cicatrices on all these
+testicles. In the third I found a testicle, on
+which was a glandular substance, as thick and
+as red as a cherry; it was inflamed, and seemed
+to be in full maturity. Its extremity was a
+nipple, with a small hole; I pressed it a little
+between my fingers, and a quantity of liquor
+issued out. I found in this liquor moving globules,
+exactly like those in the liquor pressed
+from the glandular body of the other cow, I
+have before spoken of in experiment <a href="#ex_XXXVI"><span class="smcap">XXXVI</span></a>.
+They appeared to be more numerous, their
+progressive motions were not so slow, and their
+size larger. Having observed them for some
+time I perceived some to lengthen and change
+their form. I then introduced a very fine instrument
+into the little hole of the glandular
+substance, and having opened it I found the
+internal cavity replete with liquor; this liquor
+offered me the same phenomena, and the same
+moving globules, as I before observed in experiment
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>
+<a href="#ex_XXXVI"><span class="smcap">XXXVI</span></a>. with either filaments, threads,
+or tails attached to them. The liquor of the
+vesicle presented me with nothing more than
+nearly a transparent matter, which did not contain
+one moving thing.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_XLI"></a>XLI. At different times they brought me
+the genitals of several other cows. In some I
+found the testicles loaded with an almost mature
+glandular substance; in others they were
+of different growths, and I remarked nothing
+new, excepting that in the two testicles of two
+different cows I perceived the glandular substance
+in a decayed state; the base of one was
+as broad as the circumference of a cherry; the
+extremity of the nipple was soft, wrinkled, and
+shrivelled; the two small holes were very perceptible,
+from whence the liquor had flowed.
+With some difficulty I introduced a small
+hair, but there was no liquor in the canal, nor
+in the internal cavity, which was still to be
+seen. The flaccidity of these glandular substances
+begins, therefore, at the most external
+part, or extremity of the nipple. They diminish
+at first in height, and afterwards in
+breadth, as I observed in another testicle, where
+this glandular substance had diminished more
+than three fourths.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_XLII"></a>XLII. As the testicles of doe rabbits, as
+well as the glandular bodies formed there, are
+very small, I could observe nothing very
+exactly with respect to their seminal liquor.
+I only discovered, that the testicles of doe
+rabbits are different, and that none of those I
+saw resembled what De Graaf represents in
+his engravings; for the glandular substances
+did not enclose the lymphatic vesicles; and
+I never saw a pointed end, as he has depicted
+them.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_XLIII"></a>XLIII. I found on the testicles of some
+cows a kind of bladders, replete with transparent
+liquor. I remarked they were of different
+sizes, the largest about that of a pea;
+they were fastened to the external membrane
+of the testicle by a strong membraneous pedicle,
+as was also another, still smaller; and a
+third, nearly of the same size as the second,
+appeared to be only a lymphatic vesicle, much
+more apparent than the rest. I imagined these
+bladders, which the anatomists have called
+<i>hydatides</i>, might possibly be of the same nature
+as the lymphatic vesicles of the testicles,
+for having examined the liquor they contained
+I found it to be perfectly similar; it was a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>
+transparent and homogeneous liquor, which
+did not contain one moving substance.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_XLIV"></a>XLIV. At the same time I made observations
+on the liquor in an oyster; on the water
+in which pepper had been boiled; on the water
+wherein pepper had been only infused; and on
+the water wherein I had put some vegetable
+seed; the bottles which contained these waters
+were firmly closed, and in two days I perceived
+in the oyster liquor a great quantity of oval
+and globular substances, which seemed to swim
+like fish in a pond, and had all the appearance
+of being animals; however they had no limbs
+nor tails, but were very large, transparent, and
+visible. I perceived them change their forms,
+and become smaller for seven or eight days
+successively; and at length I and Mr. Needham
+observed animals similar to those in an infusion
+of jelly of roast veal, which had been also very
+exactly corked; so that I am persuaded they
+are not real animals, at least according to the
+received acceptation of the words, as we shall
+hereafter explain.</p>
+
+<p>The infusion of the seed presented an innumerable
+multitude of moving globules which
+appeared animated like those of the seminal
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
+liquors, and in the infusions of the flesh of animals:
+these were also large, and in violent
+motion during the first days, but they diminished
+by degrees, and disappeared only from
+their minuteness.</p>
+
+<p>I perceived the same thing, but later, in the
+liquor wherein pepper had been boiled, and
+the like, though still later, in that which had
+not boiled; from hence I supposed that what
+is called fermentation may possibly be only the
+effect of the motion of these organical parts of
+animals and vegetables; and in order to see
+what difference there was between this kind
+of fermentation and that of minerals, I placed
+a little powdered stone on the microscope, and
+sprinkled thereon a drop of aquafortis, which
+however produced a different phenomena, consisting
+of great balls, which ascended to the
+surface, and almost instantaneously obscured
+the focus of the microscope: this was a dissolution
+of the grosser parts, which being completed
+it became motionless, and had not the
+smallest resemblance to the other infusions I
+had observed.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_XLV"></a>XLV. I examined the seminal liquor in the
+roes of different fish; such as carp, tench, barbel,
+&amp;c. which I took out while they were living,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>
+and having observed three different liquors
+with great attention, I perceived a great quantity
+of obscure globules, all in motion. I took
+several more of these fish alive, and with my
+fingers gently compressed that part of the belly
+where this liquor is emitted; and in that which
+I obtained, I perceived an infinity of moving
+globules therein, very black and very small.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ex_XLVI"></a>XLVI. Before I finish this chapter I shall
+relate the experiments of Mr. Needham on the
+seed of a kind of cuttle fish, called calmar.
+This able naturalist having sought for spermatic
+animals in the milts of many different fish,
+found them in the roe of a calmar, apparent to
+the naked eye. During the summer he dissected
+calmars at Lisbon, but found no appearance
+of any roe, nor any reservoir which appeared
+to be destined for the reception of the
+seminal liquor; and it was in the middle of
+December that he began to discern the first
+traces of a new vessel replete with a milky juice.
+This reservoir increased, and the seed which it
+contained was diffused very abundantly. By
+examining this liquor with the microscope, he
+perceived only small opaque globules, which
+floated in a kind of serous matter, without the
+least appearance of life. But some time after,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
+in the milt of another calmar, he found these
+organic parts completely formed; they seemed
+like spiral springs shut up in a kind of transparent
+case. They appeared as perfect at first as
+they did at last, excepting that by degrees they
+contracted and formed a kind of screw. The
+lid of the case was a species of valve that opened
+outwardly, and by which all the contents might
+issue; it contained another valve, a barrel, and
+a spongy substance; therefore the whole machine
+consisted in an external, transparent, and
+cartilaginous case, whose upper extremity is
+terminated by a round head, formed by the case
+itself, and which performs the office of a valve.
+In this external case is contained a transparent
+tube, which encloses the spring, piston, or valve,
+barrel, or spongy substance. The screw occupies
+the upper part of the tube and case, the
+piston and barrel are placed in the middle, and
+the spongy substance occupies the lower part.
+These machines pump up the lacteal liquor,
+of which the spongy substance is full; and
+before the animal spawns, the whole milt is
+no more than a composition of these organic
+parts, which have absolutely pumped up the
+lacteal liquor. As soon as these little machines
+are taken from the body of the animal, and deposited
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span>
+either in water, or held in the air, they
+begin to act; the spring ascends, followed by
+the piston, the barrel, and the spongy substance
+which contains the liquor; and as soon as the
+spring and the tube which contain it begin to
+quit the case, the spring folds up; and all that
+remains within begins to move, till the spring,
+the sucker, &amp;c. are entirely come out: as soon as
+that is done, the remainder immediately follow,
+and the lacteal liquor, which has been pumped
+out, and which was contained in the spongy
+substance flows out by the barrel.</p>
+
+<p>As this observation is very singular, and incontestibly
+proves that the moving bodies found
+in the milt of the calmar are not animals, but
+simple machines, a kind of pumps, I have
+deemed it necessary to give Mr. Needham's
+own words.<a name="FNanchor_17" id="FNanchor_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17" class="fnanchor">[Q]</a></p>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_17" id="Footnote_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17"><span class="label">[Q]</span></a> See New Discoveries made with the microscope by Mr.
+Needham, chap. vi. Leyden, 1747.</p></div>
+
+<p>"When the small machines, he says, are arrived
+to their perfect maturity, many of them
+act the moment they are in the open air; nevertheless
+most of them may be commodiously
+placed, so as to be seen with a microscope, before
+their action begins; and even to make
+them act, the upper extremity of the external
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>
+case must be moistened with a drop of water
+which then begins to expand, while the two
+small ligaments which issue from the case twist
+and turn in different manners: at the same time,
+the screw ascends slowly, the volutes, which are
+at its upper end, approach and act against the
+top of the case: those at the bottom also advance,
+and seem to be continually followed by
+others which come from the piston. I say, they
+seem to be followed, because I do not think
+they are so effectually, but only a deception
+produced by the nature and motion of the
+screw. The piston and barrel also follow the
+same direction, extend lengthways, and at the
+same time move towards the top of the case,
+which is perceived by the vacuum at the bottom.
+As soon as the screw, with the tube in
+which it is enclosed, begins to appear externally
+from the case, it folds, because it is retained
+by its two ligaments: nevertheless, all
+the internal contents continue to move gently
+and gradually, until the screw, piston, and
+bladder, are entirely come out. When that
+is done, the rest follow directly after. The
+piston separates from the barrel, and the apparent
+ligament, which is below the latter, swells
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
+and acquires a diameter equal to that of the
+spongy substance which follows it. This,
+although much larger than when in the case,
+becomes still five times longer than before.
+The tube which incloses it all is straightened in
+its middle, and forms two kinds of knots, about
+a third of its length distant from each extremity:
+the semen then flows through, and is composed
+of small opaque globules, which float in a serous
+matter, without shewing any signs of life, and
+which are precisely such as I have said to have
+seen them when they were diffused in the reservoir
+of the milt. In the figure, the part between
+the two knots seems to be broken: when it is examined
+attentively, we find that what causes it to
+appear as such, is, that the spongy substance
+with in the tube is broken in nearly equal pieces,
+which the following phenomena will clearly
+prove. Sometimes it happens, that the screw
+and the tube break by the piston, which remains
+in the barrel; then the tube closes in a moment,
+and takes a conical figure, by contracting, as
+much as it is possible, above the end of the screw,
+which demonstrates its great elasticity in that
+part: and the manner in which it accommodates
+itself with the figure of the substance it incloses,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>
+when it receives the least change, proves, that
+it is equal in every other respect."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Needham from this conceives that we
+might imagine the actions of all this machine
+were owing to the spring of the screw, but he
+proves, by many experiments, that the screw,
+on the contrary, only obeys a power which
+resides in the spongy part. As soon as the
+screw is separated from the rest, it ceases its
+action, and loses all its activity. The author
+afterwards makes this reflection on this singular
+machine:</p>
+
+<p>"If, says he, I had seen the animalcule
+pretended to be in the semen of living animals,
+perhaps I might be in a condition to determine
+whether they are really living creatures, or
+simple machines prodigiously minute, and
+which are in miniature, what the vessels of the
+calmar are in the great."</p>
+
+<p>By this, and some other analogies, Mr.
+Needham concludes, there is a great appearance
+that the spermatic worms of other animals
+are only organized bodies and machines, like
+to those of the calmar, whose actions are
+made at different times; "for, says he, let us
+suppose, that in the prodigious number of spermatic
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>
+worms seen on the table of a microscope,
+there are some thousands which act at the same
+time, that will be sufficient to shew us, they
+are all alive. Let us also conceive, adds he,
+that the motion of these spermatic worms remains,
+like that of the machines of the calmar,
+about half a minute; then the succession of
+action of these small machines, will remain
+a long time, and the pretended animals will
+appear to decrease successively. Besides why
+should the calmar alone have machines in its
+seed, whereas every other animal has spermatic
+worms, and real animals? Analogy is here of
+such great weight, that it does not appear possible
+to refuse it." Mr. Needham likewise very
+justly remarks, that even the observations of
+Leeuwenhoek, seems to indicate that the spermatic
+worms have a great resemblance with
+the organized bodies in the seed of the calmar.
+"I have, says Leeuwenhoek, speaking of the
+cod, taken those real substances for hollow and
+extended animalcule, because they were four
+times as large as the living animalcule." And
+in another part, "I have remarked, he says,
+speaking of the seed of a dog, that the animalcules
+often change their form, especially when
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>
+the liquor in which they float evaporates.
+The progressive motion does not extend above
+the diameter of a hair."<a name="FNanchor_18" id="FNanchor_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18" class="fnanchor">[R]</a></p>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_18" id="Footnote_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18"><span class="label">[R]</span></a> See Leeuwenh. Arch. Nat. page 306, 309, 310.</p></div>
+
+<p>After considering all these circumstances
+Mr. Needham conjectures, that the supposed
+spermatic animals might possibly be only natural
+machines, substances much more simply
+organized than the bodies of animals. I have
+seen with the microscope, these machines in
+the calmar, and the description he gives of
+them, is very faithful and exact. His observations
+then shew us, that the seminal liquor is
+composed of parts which seek to be organized;
+that it, in fact, produces organized substances,
+but that they are not as yet, either animals or
+organized substances, like the individual which
+produced them. We might suppose, that these
+substances are only instruments which serve to
+perfect the seminal liquor, and strongly impel
+it; and that it is by their brisk and internal
+action, that it most intimately penetrates the
+seminal liquor of the female.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="caption2"><a name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII.</a></p>
+
+<p class="caption2">COMPARISON OF MY OBSERVATIONS WITH THOSE
+OF LEEUWENHOEK.</p>
+
+
+<p>Although I made the preceding experiments
+with all the circumspection
+possible; and although I repeated them a number
+of times, I am persuaded that many things
+escaped my notice; I have only related what I
+saw, and what all the world may see, with a
+little art and much practice. In order to be
+free from prejudices, I endeavoured to forget
+what other naturalists asserted to have seen,
+conceiving that by so doing, I should be more
+certain of only seeing in fact what really appeared;
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span>
+and it was not till after I had digested
+my observations, that I compared them with
+those of Leeuwenhoek, &amp;c. I by no means
+pretend to have greater abilities in microscopical
+observations than that great naturalist, who
+passed more than sixty years in making various
+experiments.</p>
+
+<p>Notwithstanding the authority his observations
+may justly claim, it is surely permitted
+to examine and compare others with them.
+Truth can only be gained by such examinations,
+and errors discovered, particularly as
+we do it without any partiality, and in the sole
+view of establishing something fixed and certain
+on the nature of those moving bodies seen
+in the seminal liquors.</p>
+
+<p>In November 1677, Leeuwenhoek, who had
+already communicated to the Royal Society
+of London many microscopical observations
+on the optic nerve, the blood, the juice of
+the plants, the texture of trees, rain-water,
+&amp;c. addressed to Lord Brouncker, President
+of the Society, in the following words:
+"Postquam Exc.<a name="FNanchor_19" id="FNanchor_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19" class="fnanchor">[S]</a> &amp;c. Dominus Professor
+Cranen me visitatione sua sępius honorarat,
+litteris rogavis, Domino Ham concrato suo,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>
+quasdam observationum mearum, videndas darem.
+Hic dominus Ham me secundo invisens,
+secum in laguncula, vitrea semen viri, gonorrhęa
+laborantis, sponte destillatum, attulit,
+dicens, se post paucissimas temporis minutias
+(cum materia ilia jam in tantum esset resoluta
+ut fistulę vitreę immitti posset) animalcula
+viva in eo observasse, quę caudam &amp; ultra 24
+horas non viventia judicabat; idem referebat
+se animalcula observasse mortua post sumptam
+ab ęgroto therebintinam. Materiam prędicatam
+fistulę vitreę immissam, pręsente Domino
+Ham, observavi, quasdamque in ea creaturas
+viventes, at post decursum 2 aut 3 horarum
+eamdem solus materiam observans, mortuas
+vidi.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_19" id="Footnote_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19"><span class="label">[S]</span></a> See Phil. Trans. No. 141, page 1041.</p></div>
+
+<p>"Eamdem materiam (semen virile) non
+ęgroti alicujus, non diuturna conservatione
+corruptam, vel post aliquot momenta fluidiorem
+factam, sed sani viri statim post ejectionem,
+ne interlabentibus quidem sex arterię
+pulsibus, sępiuscule observavi, tantamque in
+ea viventium animalculorum multitudinem
+vidi, ut interdum plura quam 1000 in magnitudine
+arenę sese moverent; non in toto semine,
+sed in materia fluida crassiori adhęrente, ingentem
+illam animalculorum multitudinem
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>
+observavi; in crassiori vero seminis materia
+quasi sine motu jacebant, quod inde provenire
+mihi imaginabar, quod materia illa crassa ex
+tam variis cohęreat partibus, ut animalcula
+in ea se movere nequirent; minora globulis
+sanguini ruborem adferentibus hęc animalcula
+erant, ut judicem, millena millia arenam grandiorem
+magnitudine non ęquatura. Corpora
+corum rotunda, anteriora obtusa, posteriora
+ferme in aculeum desinentia habebant; cauda
+tenui longitudine corpus quinquies sexiesve
+excedente, &amp; pellucida crassitiem vero ad 25
+partem corporis habente prędita erant, adeo
+ut ea quoad figuram cum cyclaminis minoribus,
+longam caudam habentibus, optime, comparare
+queam; motu caudę serpentino, aut ut
+anguillę in aqua natantis progrediebantur;
+in materia vero aliquantulum crassiori caudam
+octies deciesve quidem evibrabant antequam
+latitudinem capilli procedebant. Interdum
+mihi imaginabar me internoscere posse adhuc
+varias in corpore horum animalculorum partes,
+quia vero continuo eas videre nequibam, de iis
+tacebo. His animalculis minora adhuc animalcula,
+quibus non nisi globuli figuram attribuere
+possum, permissa erant.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Memini me ante tres aut quatuor annos,
+rogatu Domini Oldenburg, B. M. semen virile
+observasse, &amp; prędicta animalia pro globulis
+habuisse; sed quia fastidiebam ab ulteriori inquisitione,
+&amp; magis quidem a descriptione,
+tunc temporis eam omisi. Jam quoad partes
+ipsas, ex quibus crassam seminis materiam,
+quoad majorem sui partem consistere sępius
+cum admiratione observavi, ea sunt tam varia
+ac multa vasa, imo in tanta multitudine hęc
+vasa vidi, ut credam me in unica seminis gutta
+plura observasse quam anatomico per integrum
+diem subjectum aliquod secanti occurrant.
+Quibus visis, firmiter credebam nulla in corpore
+humano jam formato esse vasa, quę in semine
+virili bene constituto non reperiantur. Cum
+materia hęc per momenta quędam aėri fuisset
+exposita, prędicta vasorum multitudo in aquosam
+magnis oleaginosis globulis permistam
+materiam mutabatur, &amp;c."</p>
+
+<p>The Secretary of the Royal Society, in answer
+to this letter, says, that it would be proper
+to make the like experiments on the seed
+of other animals, as dogs, horses, &amp;c. not
+only to form a better judgment on the first
+discovery, but to know the differences which
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span>
+might be found in the number, and the figure
+of those animalcules. And with relation to
+the vessels of the thickest part of the seminal
+liquors, he greatly doubts they were only filaments
+without any organization, "quę tibi
+videbatur vasorum congeries, fortassis seminis
+sunt quędam filamenta, haud organice constructa,
+sed dum permearunt vasa generationi
+inservientia in istiusmodi figuram elongata.
+Non dissimili modo ac sępius notatus sum salivam
+crassiorem ex glandularum faucium
+foraminibus editam quasi e convolutis fibrilis
+constantem."<a name="FNanchor_20" id="FNanchor_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_20" class="fnanchor">[T]</a></p>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_20" id="Footnote_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20"><span class="label">[T]</span></a> See the Secretary's answer to Leeuwenhoek's Letter in
+the Phil. Trans. No. 141, page 1043.</p></div>
+
+<p>Leeuwenhoek answered him on the 18th of
+March, 1678, in the following words: "Si
+quando canes coeunt marem a f&#339;mina statim
+seponas materia quędam tenuis &amp; aquosa
+(lympha scilicet spermatica) e pene solet paulatim
+exstillare; hanc materiam numerosissimis
+animalculis repletam aliquoties vidi, eorum
+magnitudine quę in semine virili conspiciuntur,
+quibus particulę globulares aliquot quinquagies
+majores permiscebantur.</p>
+
+<p>"Quod ad vasorem in crassiori seminis virilis
+portione spectabilium observationem attinet,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
+denuo non semel iteratam, saltem mihimetipsi
+comprobasse videor; meque omnino
+persuasum habeo, cuniculi, canis, felis, arterias
+venasve fuisse a peritissimo anatomico
+haud unquam magis perspicue observatas,
+quam mihi rasa in semine virili, ope perspicilli,
+in confectum venere.</p>
+
+<p>"Cum mihi prędicta vasa primum innotuere,
+statim etiam pituitam, tum &amp; salivam
+perspicillo applicavi; verum his minime existentia
+animalia frustra quęsivi.</p>
+
+<p>"A cuniculorum coitu lymphę spermaticę
+guttulam, unam et alteram, e femella exstillantem,
+examini subjeci, ubi animalia prędictorum
+similia, sed longe pauciora, comparuere.
+Globuli item quam plurimi, plerique
+magnitudine animalium, iisdem permisti
+sunt.</p>
+
+<p>"Horum animalium aliquot etiam delineationes
+transmisi, figura <i>a</i> (<a href="#fig_a"><i>plate 3.</i></a>) exprimit
+corum aliquot vivum (in semine cuniculi arbitror)
+eaque forma qua videbatur, dum aspicientem
+me versus tendit. A B C, capitulum
+cum trunco indicant; C D, ejusdem caudam,
+quam pariter ut suam anguilla inter natandum
+vibrat. Horum millena millia, quantum conjectare
+est, arenulę majoris molem vix superant,
+(<a href="#fig_b"><i>fig. b, c, d,</i></a>) sunt ejusdem generis animalia,
+sed jam mortua.</p>
+
+<div class="fig_center" style="width: 620px;">
+<span class="caption3"><i>PLATE. III.</i></span>
+<a name="fig_a"></a><a name="fig_b"></a><a name="fig_c"></a>
+<a name="fig_d"></a><a name="fig_e"></a><a name="fig_f"></a>
+<a name="fig_g"></a><a name="fig_h"></a>
+<table summary="Plate III">
+<tr>
+ <td><img src="images/plate_iii_a-h.png" width="495" height="383" alt="" /></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a name="fig_i"></a><img src="images/plate_iii_i.png" width="493" height="422" alt="" /></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"(<a href="#fig_e"><i>Fig. e.</i></a>) Delineatur vivum animalculum,
+quemadmodum in semine canino sese aliquoties
+mihi attentius intuenti exhibuit. E F G,
+caput cum trunco indigitant, G H ejusdem
+caudam, (<a href="#fig_f"><i>fig. f, g, h,</i></a>) alia sunt in semine canino
+quę motu &amp; vita privantur, qualium
+etiam vivorum numerum adeo ingentem vidi,
+ut judicarem portionem lymphę spermaticę
+arenulę mediocri respondentem, eorum ut
+minimum decena millia continere."</p>
+
+<p>By another letter written to the Royal Society,
+the 31st of May, 1678, Leeuwenhoek
+adds, "Seminis canini tantillum microscopio
+applicatum iterum contemplatus sum, in eoque
+antea descripta animalia numerosissime conspexi.
+Aqua pluvialis pari quantitate adjecta,
+iisdem confestim mortem accersit. Ejusdem
+seminis canini portiuncula in vitreo tubulo
+uncię partem duodecimalem crasso servata,
+sex &amp; triginta horarum spatio contenta animalia
+vita destitua pleraque, reliqua moribunda
+videbantur.</p>
+
+<p>"Quo de vasorum in semine genitali existentia
+magis constaret, delineationem eorum
+aliqualem mitto, ut in figura ABCDE, (<a href="#fig_i"><i>fig. i.</i></a>)<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span>
+quibus literis circumscriptum spatium arenulam
+mediocrem vix superat."</p>
+
+<p>I have copied these first remarks of Leeuwenhoek
+from the Philosophical Transactions,
+because, in matters of this kind, observations
+made without any systematical view are those
+which are the most faithfully described, and
+even this able naturalist no sooner formed a
+system on spermatic animals, than he began to
+vary in essential points.</p>
+
+<p>It is evident by the above dales, that Hartsoeker
+is not the first who published, if he was
+the first who discovered spermatic animals.
+In the Journal de Sēavans, in the year 1774,
+there is a letter from Mr. Huguens, on the subject
+of a microscope, made by one small ball
+of glass, with which he asserts he perceived
+animals in the water, wherein pepper had been
+infused for two or three days, as Leeuwenhoek
+before had observed with the like microscopes,
+but whose balls were not so minute. "There
+are also other seeds, he continues, which engender
+such animals, as coriander seeds, &amp;c.
+and I have seen the same thing in the pith of
+the birch tree, after having kept it for four or
+five days; and some have observed them in
+the water where nutmegs and cinnamon have
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>
+been soaked. These animals may be said to
+engender from some corruption or fermentation:
+but there are others which must have a
+different origin; as those in the seed of animals,
+which seem in such great numbers, as to be
+almost composed of them; they are all transparent,
+have a quick motion, and their figures
+are like the tadpole."</p>
+
+<p>Huguens does not mention the author of this
+discovery; but in the Journal of the 29th of
+August in the same year, there is an extract of a
+letter of M. Hartsoeker, in which he gives the
+method of forming these glass balls by means
+of the flame of a lamp; and the author of the
+Journal says, "By this method he has discovered
+that little animals are engendered in urine
+which has been kept for some days, and have
+the figure of little eels: he found some in the
+seed of a cock, which appeared of the same form,
+but quite different from those found in the seed
+of other animals, which resemble tadpoles, or
+young frogs, before their legs are formed."
+The author seems to attribute the invention to
+Hartsoeker; but if we reflect on the uncertain
+manner in which it is there represented, and on
+the particular manner in which Leeuwenhoek
+speaks in his letter, written and published above
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span>
+a year before, we must allow him to be the
+first who made this observation; but between
+them a contest took place as to the discovery
+which has never been decided. Be this as it
+will, Leeuwenhoek was undoubtedly the first
+inventor of the microscope, whose focuses are
+balls of glass formed by the flame of a lamp.
+But to return to his observations.</p>
+
+<p>I shall first remark, that what he says of
+the number and motion of these pretended
+animals is true; but the figure of the body
+is not always the same as he describes it:
+sometimes the part which precedes the tail
+is round and at others long; often flat, and
+frequently broader than it is long, &amp;c. and
+with respect to the tail, it is often much
+larger and shorter than he asserts. The motion
+of vibrations which he gives to the tail,
+and by means of which he pretends that the
+animalcules advance progressively in this fluid,
+has never appeared to me as he has described
+it. I have seen these moving substances make
+eight or ten oscillations from the right to the
+left, or vice versa, without advancing the
+breadth of a hair; and I have even seen many
+more which could not advance at all; because
+this tail, instead of being of any assistance to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>
+them was, on the contrary, a thread attached
+either in the filaments or mucilaginous parts of
+the liquor, and rather retained the moving substance
+like as a thread fastened to the point retains
+the ball of a pendulum; and when this
+tail had any motion, it only resembled a thread
+which forms a curve at the end of an oscillation.
+I have seen these threads, or tails, fastened to the
+filaments which Leeuwenhoek stiles vessels; I
+have seen them separate after many reiterated
+efforts of the moving bodies; I have seen them
+at first lengthen, then diminish, and at last totally
+disappear. I therefore think these tails
+should be considered as accidental parts, and
+not as essential to the bodies of these pretended
+animals. But what is most remarkable, Leeuwenhoek
+precisely says, in his letter to Lord
+Brouncker, that, besides these animals that had
+tails, there were also smaller animals in this liquor,
+which had no other form than that of a
+globule. "His animalculis (caudatis scilicet)
+minora adhuc animalcula, quibus non nisi
+globuli figuram attribuere possum, permista
+erant." This is the truth; but after Leeuwenhoek
+had advanced that these animals were the
+only efficient principle of generation, and that
+they were transformed into human figures, he
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>
+has only regarded those as animals which had
+tails; and as it was consistent for animals that
+were transformed into human figures, to have
+a constant form, he never afterwards mentions
+those smaller animalcules without tails; and I
+was greatly surprised, on comparing the copy of
+this letter with that he published twenty years
+after, in his 3d volume, where, instead of the
+above words, the following are found: "Animalculis
+hisce permistę jacebant alię minutiores
+particulę, quibus non aliam quam globulorum
+seu sphęricam figuram assignare queo;"
+which is quite different. A particle of matter to
+which he attributes no motion, is very different
+from an animalcule: and it is astonishing that
+Leeuwenhoek, in copying his own works, has
+altered this essential article. What he adds
+immediately after likewise merits attention: he
+says, that by the desire of Mr. Oldenburg he
+had examined this liquor three or four years
+before, when he took these animalcules for globules;
+that is, there are times when these pretended
+animalcules are no more than globules,
+without any remarkable motion, and others
+when they move with great activity; sometimes
+they have tails, and at others they have none.
+Speaking in general of spermatic animals he
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>
+says, "Ex hisce meis observationibus cogitare
+c&#339;pi, quamvis antehac de animalculis in seminibus
+masculinis agens, scripserim, me in illis
+caudas non detexisse, fieri tamen posse ut illa
+animalcula ęque caudis fuerint instructa ac
+nunc comperi de animalculis in gallorum gallinaceorum
+semine masculino;" another proof
+that he has often seen spermatic animals of all
+kinds without tails.</p>
+
+<p>In the second place we must remark, that the
+filaments which are seen in the seminal liquor
+before it is liquefied were discovered by Leeuwenhoek,
+and that in his first observations, before
+he had made any hypothesis on spermatic
+animals, he considered these filaments as veins,
+nerves, and arteries; and firmly believed all the
+parts and vessels of the human body might
+clearly be seen in the seminal liquor. This opinion
+he persisted in, in defiance of the representations
+which Oldenburg made to him on
+this subject from the Royal Society: but as soon
+as he thought of transforming these pretended
+spermatic animals into men, he no longer mentioned
+these vessels; and instead of looking on
+them as nerves, arteries, and veins, of the human
+body already formed in the seed; he did
+not even attribute to them the functions they
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span>
+really possess, the producing of these moving
+bodies: and he says, vol. I. p. 7, "Quid fiet
+de omnibus illis particulis seu corpusculis pręter
+illa animalcula semini virili hominum inhęrentibus?
+Olim &amp; priusquam hęc scriberem,
+in ea sententia fui, prędictas strias vel vasa ex
+testiculis principium secum ducere, &amp;c." And
+in another part he says, that if he had formerly
+written any thing on the subject of these vessels
+found in the seed, we must pay no attention
+to it.</p>
+
+<div class="fig_center" style="width: 672px;">
+<a name="Plate_IV"></a>
+<table summary="Plate IV">
+<tr>
+ <td><div class="fig_center" style="width: 538px;">
+<img src="images/plate_iv_top2.png" width="538" height="564" alt="" />
+</div></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><div class="fig_center" style="width: 505px;">
+<img src="images/plate_iv_bot2.png" width="505" height="252" alt="" />
+</div></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p>We shall observe in the third place, that if
+we compare the figures <i>a, b, c, d</i>, (<a href="#fig_a"><span class="smcap">PLATE III.</span></a>)
+copied from the Philosophical Transactions,
+with those which Leeuwenhoek had engraved
+many years after, (<a href="#Plate_IV"><span class="smcap">PLATE IV.</span></a>) we shall find
+considerable difference, especially in the figures
+of the dead animals, of a rabbit and in those of
+a dog, (which plate we have also copied for the
+satisfaction of our readers) from all which we
+may conclude, that Leeuwenhoek has not always
+observed objects entirely alive: that the
+moving bodies, which he looked upon as animals,
+appeared to him under different forms;
+and that he has varied in his assertions, with a
+view of making the species of men and animals
+perfectly consistent; he has not only varied in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a><br /><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a><br /><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span>
+the basis of these experiments, but even in the
+manner of making them, for he expressly says,
+that he always diluted the liquor with water, in
+order to separate, and to give more motion to
+these animalcules: nevertheless, in his letter to
+Lord Brouncker, he says, that having mingled
+an equal quantity of rain water with the seminal
+liquor of a dog, in which he had before perceived
+an infinity of living animalcules, yet the
+mixing of this water killed them. The first experiment
+of Leeuwenhoek's therefore was made,
+like mine, without any mixture; and it even
+seems, that he was not of opinion to mix any
+water with the liquor till a long time after; because
+he thought he had discovered, by his first
+essay, that water caused the death of the animalculę;
+which however is not the fact. I think
+that the mixture of the water only dissolves the
+filaments very suddenly; for I have seen but very
+few filaments in all the experiments I have made
+after mixing the water with the seminal liquor.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as Leeuwenhoek was persuaded that
+spermatic animals were transformed into men,
+and other animals, he imagined he saw two sorts
+in the seminal liquor of every animal, the one
+male, and the other female; and this difference,
+according to him, served not only for the generation
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>
+of themselves, but for the production
+of males and females, which was very difficult
+to conceive by a simple transformation. He
+speaks of the male and female animalcule, in his
+letter printed in the Philosophical Transactions,
+No. 145, and in many parts of his works,<a name="FNanchor_21" id="FNanchor_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_21" class="fnanchor">[U]</a> but
+he does not describe the difference of these male
+and female animalcules, and which in fact never
+existed but in his own imagination.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_21" id="Footnote_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21"><span class="label">[U]</span></a> See vol I. page 163, and vol. III. page 101, of his works.</p></div>
+
+<p>The famous Boerhaave having asked Leeuwenhoek,
+if he had not observed in spermatic
+animals different degrees of growth and size?
+Leeuwenhoek answered, that having dissected
+a rabbit, he observed in the semen an infinite
+number of living animals. "Incredibilem, says
+he, viventium animalculorum, numerum conspexerunt,
+cum hęc animalcula scypho imposita
+vitreo &amp; illic emortua, in rariores ordines
+disparassent, &amp; per continuos aliquot dies sępius
+visu examinassem, quędam ad justam
+magnitudinem nondum excrevisse adverti. Ad
+hęc quasdam observavi particulas perexiles &amp;
+oblongas, alias aliis majores, &amp;, quantum oculis
+apparebat, cauda destitutas; quas quidem particulas
+non nisi animalcula esse credidi, quę ad
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span>
+justam magnitudinem non excrevissent."<a name="FNanchor_22" id="FNanchor_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22" class="fnanchor">[V]</a>
+Here then are animalcules of different sizes,
+some with tails and others without, which much
+better agrees with my experiments, than with
+Leeuwenhoek's own system. We differ only
+in one particular; he says, that those without
+tails were young animalculę, which were not
+arrived at their full growth; while I, on the
+contrary, have seen these pretended animals
+quit the filaments with tails or threads, and
+afterwards lose them by degrees.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_22" id="Footnote_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22"><span class="label">[V]</span></a> See vol. IV. pages 280 and 281.</p></div>
+
+<p>In the same letter to Boerhaave, he says, in
+the semen of a ram, he perceived animalcules
+following each other in swarms like a flock of
+sheep. "A tribus circiter annis testes arietis,
+adhuc calentes, ad ędes meas deferri curaveram,
+cum igitur materiam ex epididymibus
+eductam, ope microscopii contemplarer, non
+sine ingenti voluptate advertebam animalcula
+omnia, quotquot innatabant semini masculino,
+eundem natando cursum tenere, ita nimirum
+ut quo itinere priora prinatarent eodem posteriora
+subsequerentur, adeo ut hisce animalculis
+quasis sit ingenitum, quod oves factitare vidimus,
+scilicet ut precedentium vestigiis grex
+universus incedat." This observation, which
+Leeuwenhoek made in 1713, and which he
+looks upon as singular and novel, proves to
+me, that he had never examined the seminal
+liquors of animals with attention, at least sufficient
+to give very exact descriptions of them.
+Leeuwenhoek was sixty-one years old in 1713,
+had made microscopical observations for more
+than forty-five years, had published the discovery
+of spermatic animals for about thirty-six
+years, and then, for the first time, saw in
+the seminal liquor of a ram, what is seen in all
+seminal liquors, and what I have described
+in Experiment <a href="#ex_IX"><span class="smcap">IX</span></a> in the seed of a man;
+Experiment <a href="#ex_XII"><span class="smcap">XII</span></a> in the seed of a dog; and in
+Experiment <a href="#ex_XXIX"><span class="smcap">XXIX</span></a> in that of a bitch. It is
+not necessary to suppose the spermatic animals
+of the ram are endowed with instinct, to
+explain the floating of these animals, in flocks
+like sheep, since those of a man, dog, or bitch,
+does the same; and which motion depends
+solely on particular circumstances, whose principle
+is, that all the fluid matter of the seed
+is on one side, while the thick matter is on
+the other; for then all the bodies in motion
+will be disengaged from the mucilage, and
+follow the same road into the most fluid part
+of the liquor.</p>
+
+<p>In another letter, written the same year, to
+Boerhaave, he relates some further observations
+he made on rams, and says, that he has seen, in
+the <i>vasa deferentia</i>, flocks of animals which
+float all on one side, and others which go in a
+contrary direction; and he adds, "Neque illud
+in unica epididymum parte, sed &amp; in aliis quas
+pręcideram partibus, observavi. Ad hęc, in
+quadam parastatarum resecta portione complura
+vidi animalcula, quę necdum in justam
+magnitudinem adoleverant, nam et corpuscula
+illis exiliora &amp; caudę triplo breviores erant
+quam adultis. Ad hęc, caudas non habebant
+desinentes in mucronem, quales tamen adultis
+esse passim comperio. Pręterea in quandam parastatarum
+portionem incidi, animalculis quantum
+discernere potui, destitutam, tantum illi
+quędam perexiguę inerant particulę, partim
+longiores, partim breviores, sed altera sui extremitate
+crassiunculę; istas particulas in animalcula
+transituras esse non dubitabam." It
+is easy to see, by this passage, that Leeuwenhoek
+had seen, in this seminal liquor, what I
+found in all; that is to say, moving bodies of
+different sizes, figures, and motions; and which
+agrees much better with the idea of organic particles
+in motion than of that with real animals.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It appears, therefore, that Leeuwenhoek's
+observations are not contrary to mine, although
+he has drawn very different conclusions from
+them. I am persuaded that if any person
+would take the trouble of making the like experiments
+they would not have any difficulty
+in discovering from whence these differences
+proceed, and would find that I have advanced
+nothing which is not conformable to truth;
+and to enable the reader to decide thereon, I
+shall subjoin a few remarks.</p>
+
+<p>The filaments I have spoken of are not always
+to be perceived in the seminal liquor of a
+man. To discover them it must be examined
+the moment it is taken from the body, and
+even then it will sometimes happen that there
+is not one to be seen. Sometimes the seminal
+liquor presents, especially when it is very thick,
+only large globules, which may be even distinguished
+with a common lens. By inspecting
+them with the microscope they appear like
+young oranges; they are very opaque, and a
+single one often fills up the whole table of the
+microscope. The first time I saw these globules
+I thought they were some foreign matters
+fallen into the liquor, but having examined
+different drops I discovered that the whole was
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span>
+composed of these thick globules. I selected
+one of the roundest, and whose size was such
+that, its centre being in the middle of the table
+of the microscope, I could at the same time
+observe the whole circumference; at first it was
+absolutely opaque; a short time afterwards
+I perceived a bright luminous ring to form on
+its surface, which remained about half an hour,
+and then approached by degrees towards the
+centre, which became clear, and of different
+colours, while the remainder of the globule
+continued opaque. This light, which brightened
+in the centre of the globule, resembled
+those seen in the great air bubbles. The globule
+then began to get a little flat, and acquire
+a small degree of transparency. Having examined
+it more than three hours I perceived no
+more alteration, nor any appearance of motion,
+either internally or externally. I then
+imagined, that by mixing this liquor with
+water, these globules might be changed; in
+fact they did change, but they presented only a
+transparent and homogeneous liquor, wherein
+was nothing remarkable. I suffered the seminal
+liquor to liquefy of itself, and examined
+it at the end of six, twelve, and twenty-four
+hours, but saw nothing more than a fluid; without
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
+the smallest resemblance of life or motion.
+I only relate this observation to shew that there
+are times when the common phenomena are
+not to be seen in the seminal liquor.</p>
+
+<p>At times all the moving bodies appear to
+have tails, especially in the semen of a man
+and a dog; the motion is then the least brisk,
+and performed with difficulty. If this liquor
+is suffered to dry, the tails or threads are deprived
+of motion the first; the anterior extremity
+continues to vibrate for some time, and
+then all motion entirely ceases. These substances
+may be preserved in this state of dryness
+for a long time: if a small drop of water is
+mixed therewith, their figure changes, they
+are reduced into many globules, which sometimes
+appear to be in motion, as well by their
+approximation to each other, as by the trepidation
+and twirling round their centres.</p>
+
+<p>These moving bodies in the seminal liquor
+of a man, dog, or bitch, so nearly resemble
+each other, as to admit of mistaking one for
+the other, especially if they are examined the
+moment the liquor is drawn from the animal.
+Those of the rabbit appear smaller and brisker;
+but these differences proceed more from the
+different states in which the liquor is at the time
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span>
+of observation, than from the nature of the
+liquor itself, which ought to be different in
+different kinds of animals; for example, in
+that of a man I have seen streaks of thick filaments,
+(<a href="#fig_3"><i>fig. 3.</i></a>) and have perceived the moving
+bodies separate themselves from these filaments
+from whence they appeared to proceed;
+but I have never seen any thing like it in the
+semen of a dog; where, instead of filaments, or
+separated streaks, it is commonly a mucilage
+whose texture is more compact, and in which
+we with difficulty discern any filamentary
+parts; yet this mucilage gives birth to moving
+bodies like those in the semen of men.</p>
+
+<p>The motions of these bodies remain a longer
+time in the liquor of a dog, than in that of a
+man; from which it is more easy to be certain
+of the alteration of form above mentioned.
+The moment the liquor issues from the body
+of the animal we perceive the animalcules to
+have tails; in twelve, twenty-four, or thirty-six
+hours after, we shall find they have lost those
+tails, and are then no more than ovals in motion,
+often much brisker than at first.</p>
+
+<p>The moving bodies are always a little below
+the surface of the liquor. On the surface
+some large transparent air bubbles, which have
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
+no motion, generally appear, though sometimes
+these bubbles stir and seem to have a
+progressive motion, but which is nothing more
+than the agitation of the air. Below the moving
+substances we often see others much smaller,
+and which only appear like globules, having
+no tails, but the greatest number of which
+are oftentimes in motion. I have also generally
+remarked, that in the infinite number of
+globules, in all those liquors, those which are
+very small, are commonly black, or darker
+than the rest; and that those which are extremely
+minute and transparent, have but little
+or no motion; they appear also to weigh specifically
+heavier, for they are always the deepest
+in the liquor.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="caption2"><a name="CHAPTER_XIII" id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII.</a></p>
+
+<p class="caption2">REFLECTIONS ON THE PRECEDING EXPERIMENTS.</p>
+
+
+<p>By the experiments we have just described, I
+was assured that females, as well as males,
+have a seminal liquor which contains moving
+substances; that these substances were not real
+animals, but only living organic particles; and
+that those particles exist, not only in the seminal
+liquors of the two sexes, but even in the flesh
+of animals, and in the germs of vegetables.
+To discover whether all the parts of animals,
+and all the germs of vegetables, contained
+living organic particles, I caused infusions of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
+the flesh of different animals to be made, and
+of more than twenty kinds of seeds of different
+plants; and after they had infused four or
+five days, in phials closely stopt up, I had the
+satisfaction to see moving organic parts in
+them all; some appeared sooner, and others
+later; some preserved their motion for months
+together, while others were soon deprived of
+it; some directly produced large moving
+globules, that had the appearance of real
+animals, which changed their figures, separated,
+and became successively smaller: others
+produced only small globules, whose motions
+were very brisk; others produced filaments
+which lengthened and seemed to vegetate,
+swelled, and afterwards thousands of moving
+globules issued therefrom; but it is useless to
+detail my observations on the infusion of
+plants, since Mr. Needham has published so
+excellent a treatise on the subject. I read
+the preceding treatise to that able naturalist,
+and often reasoned with him on the subject,
+particularly on the probability that the germs
+of vegetables contained similar moving bodies
+to those in the seed of male and female animals.
+He thought those views sufficiently founded to
+deserve to be pursued; and therefore began
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span>
+to make experiments on all parts of vegetables;
+and I must own that the ideas I gave him on
+this subject have reaped greater profit under
+his hands than they would have done from me.
+I could quote many examples, but shall confine
+myself to one, because I indicated the circumstance
+I am going to relate.</p>
+
+<p>To determine whether the moving substances
+seen in the infusions of flesh were true
+animals, or only, as I supposed, moving organic
+particles, Mr. Needham imagined that he had
+only to examine some roasted meat, because
+if they were animals the fire must destroy
+them; and if not animals, they might still be
+found there as well as when the meat was raw;
+having therefore taken the jelly of veal, and
+other roasted meat, he infused them for several
+days in water, closely corked up in phials,
+and upon examination he found in every one
+of them a great quantity of moving substances.
+He shewed me some of these infusions, and
+among the rest that of the jelly of veal, in
+which there were moving substances, perfectly
+like those in the seminal liquor of a man, a
+dog, and a bitch, when they have no threads,
+or tails; and although we perceived them to
+change their figures, their motions so perfectly
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>
+resembled those of an animal which swims, that
+whoever saw them, without being acquainted
+with what has been already mentioned, might
+certainly have taken them for real animals. I
+shall only add, that Mr. Needham assured
+himself, by a multiplicity of experiments, that
+all parts of vegetables contain moving organic
+particles, which confirms what I have said,
+and extends my theory on the composition of
+organized beings, and their reproduction.</p>
+
+<p>All animals, both male and female, and all
+vegetables whatsoever, it is therefore evident
+are composed of living organic parts. These
+organic parts are in the greatest abundance in
+the seminal liquor of animals, and in seeds of
+vegetables. It is from the union of these organic
+parts returned from all parts of the animal
+or vegetable body, that reproduction is
+performed, and is always like the animal or
+vegetable in which it operates; because the
+union of these organic parts cannot be made
+but by the means of an internal mould, in
+which the form of an animal or vegetable is
+produced. It is in this also the essence of the
+unity and continuity of the species consists,
+and will so continue while the great Creator
+permits their existence.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But before I draw general conclusions from
+the system I am establishing, I must endeavour
+to remove some objections which might be
+made, and mention some other circumstances
+which will serve to place this matter in a better
+light.</p>
+
+<p>It will be asked, why I deny those moving
+substances in the seminal liquors to be animals,
+since they have constantly been regarded as
+such by Leeuwenhoek, and every other naturalist,
+who has examined them? I may also be
+told, that living organic particles are not perfectly
+intelligible, if they are to be looked upon
+as animalculę; and to suppose an animal is
+composed of a number of small animals, is
+nearly the same as saying that an organized
+being is composed of living organic particles.
+I shall therefore endeavour to answer these objections
+in a satisfactory manner.</p>
+
+<p>It is certain that almost all naturalists agree
+in looking on the moving substances in seminal
+liquors as real animals; but it is no less certain,
+from my own observations, and those of
+Mr. Needham, on the seed of the calmar, that
+these moving substances are more simple and
+less organized beings than animals.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The word <i>animal</i>, in the acceptation we
+commonly receive it, represents a general idea
+formed of particular ideas drawn from particular
+animals. All general ideas include many
+different ones, which approach, or are more or
+less distant from each other, and consequently
+no general idea can either be exact or precise.
+The general idea which we form of an animal
+may be taken principally from the particular
+idea of a dog, a horse, and other beasts, which
+appear to us to act and move according to the
+impulse of their will, and which are besides
+composed of flesh and blood, seek after their
+food, have sexes, and the faculty of reproduction.
+The general idea, therefore, expressed
+by the word <i>animal</i>, must comprehend a number
+of particular ideas, not one of which constitutes
+the essence of the general idea, for there
+are animals which appear to have no reason,
+will, progressive motion, flesh nor blood, and
+which only appear to be a congealed substance:
+there are some which cannot seek their food,
+but only receive it from the element they live
+in: there are some which have no sensation,
+not even that of feeling, at least in any sensible
+degree: there are some have no sexes, or are
+both in one; there only belongs, therefore, to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>
+the animal a general idea of what is common
+also to the vegetable, that is, the faculty of reproduction.</p>
+
+<p>The general idea then is formed from the
+whole taken together, which whole being composed
+of different parts, there is consequently
+between these parts degrees and links. An insect,
+in this sense, is something less of an animal
+than a dog; an oyster still less than an insect;
+a sea-nettle, or a fresh-water polypus,
+still less than an oyster; and as nature acts by
+insensible links, we may find beings which are
+still less animated than a sea-nettle, or a polypus.
+Our general ideas are only artificial methods
+to collect a quantity of objects in the
+same point of view; and they have, like the
+artificial methods we shall speak of, the defect
+of never being able to comprehend the whole.
+They are likewise opposite to the walk of nature,
+which is uniform, insensible, and always
+particular, insomuch that by our endeavouring
+to comprehend too great a number of particular
+ideas in one single word, we have no
+longer a clear idea of what that word conveys;
+because, the word being received, we imagine
+that it is a line drawn between the productions
+of nature; that all above this line is <i>animal</i>,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>
+and all below it <i>vegetable</i>; another word, as
+general as the first, and which is used as a line
+of separation between organized bodies and inanimate
+matter. But as we have already said,
+these lines of separation do not exist in nature;
+there are beings which are neither animals,
+vegetables, nor minerals, and which we in vain
+might attempt to arrange with either. For
+example, when Mr. Trembly first observed the
+polypus, he employed a considerable time before
+he could determine whether it was an animal
+or a plant; and possibly from this reason
+that it is perhaps neither one nor the other,
+and all that can be said is, that it approaches
+nearest to an animal; and as we suppose every
+living thing must be either an animal or a plant,
+we do not credit the existence of an organized
+being, that cannot be referred to one of those
+general names; whereas there must, and in fact
+are, a great number of organized beings which
+are neither the one nor the other. The moving
+substances perceived in seminal liquors, in infusions
+of the flesh of animals, in seed, and
+other parts of plants, are all of this kind. We
+cannot call these animals, nor can we say they
+are vegetables, and certainly we can still less
+assert they are minerals.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>We can therefore affirm, without fear of advancing
+too much, that the grand division of
+nature's productions into <i>Animals</i>, <i>Vegetables</i>,
+and <i>Minerals</i>, do not contain every material
+being; since there are some that exist which
+cannot be classed in this division. We have already
+observed, that nature passes by insensible
+links from the animal to the vegetable, but from
+the vegetable to the mineral the passage is quick,
+and the distance considerable; from whence the
+law of nature's passing by imperceptible degrees
+appears untrue. This made me suppose
+that by examining nature closely we shall discover
+intermediate organized beings, which
+without having the power of reproduction, like
+animals and vegetables, would nevertheless have
+a kind of life and motion; other beings which,
+without being either vegetables or animals,
+might possibly enter into the composition of
+both, and likewise other beings which would
+be only the assemblage of the organic molecules
+I have spoken of in the preceding chapters.</p>
+
+<p>In the first class of these kind of beings
+eggs must be placed; those of hens, and other
+birds, are fastened to a common pedicle, and
+draw their nourishment and growth from the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span>
+body of the animal, but when fastened to the
+ovary, they are not then real eggs, but only
+yellow globules which separate from the ovary
+as soon as they have attained a certain growth.
+Their internal organization is such that they
+derive nourishment from the lymph, the matrix
+of the hen, and by which they form the
+white membranes, and at last the shell. The
+egg therefore has a kind of life and organization,
+a growth, expansion, and a form which
+it assumes by its own powers. It does not live
+like an animal, nor vegetate like a plant, nor
+is possessed of the power of reproduction; nevertheless
+it grows, acts externally, and is organized.
+Must we not then look upon it as a
+being of a separate class, and which ought not
+to be ranked either with animal or mineral?
+for if it is pretended that the egg is only an
+animal production, destined for the nutriment
+of the chicken, and should be looked upon as
+a part of the hen; I answer, that the eggs,
+whether impregnated or not, will be always
+organized after the same mode: that impregnation
+only changes an almost invisible
+part; and that it attains its perfection and
+growth, as well externally as internally, whether
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span>
+it contains the chicken or not, and that
+consequently it ought to be considered as a separate
+being.</p>
+
+<p>What I have said will appear more clear, if
+we consider the formation and growth of the
+eggs of fish; when the female deposits them in
+the water they are only the outlines of eggs,
+which being separated from the body of the
+animal, attract and appropriate to themselves
+the particles which agree the best for their
+nourishment, and grow thus by intussusception.
+In the same manner as the hen's egg
+acquires the white and membranes in the matrix,
+wherein it floats, so the eggs of fish acquire
+their membranes and white in the water;
+and whether the male impregnates them,
+by emitting on these the liquor of its roe, or
+whether they remain unimpregnated, they do
+not the less attain their entire perfection. It
+appears to me, therefore, that the eggs should
+be considered as organized bodies, which being
+neither animals nor vegetables, are a genus
+apart.</p>
+
+<p>A second class of beings, of the same kind,
+are the organized bodies found in the semen
+of all animals, and which, like those in the
+milt of a calmar, are rather natural machines
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>
+than animals. These are properly the first
+assemblages which result from the organic
+molecules we have so much spoken of, and
+they are, perhaps, the parts which constitute
+the organized bodies of animals. They are
+found in the semen of all animals, because the
+semen is only the residue of the organic molecules
+that the animal takes in with its aliment,
+and which, as we have already observed, are
+those parts most analogous to the animal itself,
+and most organic; it is those particles which
+compose the matter of the semen, and consequently
+we must not be astonished to find organized
+bodies therein.</p>
+
+<p>To be perfectly convinced that these organized
+bodies are not real animals, we need
+only reflect on the preceding experiments.
+The moving bodies in the seminal liquor have
+been taken for animals, because they have a
+progressive motion, and are thought to have
+a tail; but if we consider, on one hand, the
+nature of this progressive motion, which
+finishes in a very short time without ever renewing
+its motion; and on the other, the
+nature of these tails, which are only threads
+which the moving bodies draw after them, we
+shall begin to hesitate; for an animal goes
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span>
+sometimes slow, sometimes fast, and sometimes
+remains in a state of rest; these moving bodies,
+on the contrary, always continue the same
+motion, and I have never seen them stop and
+renew their movement again. I ask, whether
+this kind of continued motion, without any
+rest, is common to animals, and if that ought
+not to make us doubt these moving bodies
+being real animals? An animal of any kind
+must also have a constant form and distinct
+limbs; but these moving bodies vary, and
+change their forms every moment, have no
+distinct limbs, and their tails appear as a part
+which does not belong to the individual. Can
+we then imagine these bodies to be real animals?
+In seminal liquors filaments are seen
+which lengthen and appear to vegetate; after
+which they swell and produce moving bodies.
+These filaments may be kinds of vegetables,
+but the moving bodies which spring from them
+cannot be animals, for a vegetable has never
+yet been seen to produce an animal. These
+moving bodies are found in all vegetable and
+animal substances; they are not produced by
+the modes of generation, they have no uniformity
+of species, and therefore can neither
+be animals nor vegetables. They are to be
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span>
+met with in the flesh of animals, and in the substance
+of vegetables, but are most numerous in
+their seeds; is it not therefore natural to regard
+them as living organic particles which compose
+the animal or vegetable; as particles which
+having motion and a kind of life, ought, by
+their union, to produce moving and living
+beings, and so form animals and vegetables?</p>
+
+<p>But in order to leave this matter as little in
+doubt as possible, let us examine other substances.
+Can it be said, the active machines
+which Mr. Needham perceived in the milt of
+the calmar were animals? Can it be thought
+that eggs, which are active machines of another
+kind, are also animals? If we turn our eyes to
+the representation of almost all the moving bodies
+Leeuwenhoek saw in different matters,
+shall we not be convinced, even at the first inspection,
+that those bodies are not animals, since
+not one of them has any limbs, but are all either
+globular or oval? If we afterwards examine
+what this celebrated naturalist says, when he
+describes the motion of these pretended animals,
+we can no longer doubt of his being in an error
+when he considered them as such; and we shall
+be still more and more confirmed that they are
+only moving organic particles by the following
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span>
+examples: Leeuwenhoek gives<a name="FNanchor_23" id="FNanchor_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_23" class="fnanchor">[W]</a> the figure of
+the moving bodies which he observed in the
+liquor of a male frog. This figure only represents
+a slender body, long, and pointed at one
+of its extremities; and of this he says, "Uno
+tempore caput (thus he calls the thickest extremity
+of this moving body) crassius mihi
+apparebat alio; plerumque agnoscebam animalculum
+haud ulterius quam a capite ad
+medium corpus, ob caudę tenuitatem, &amp; cum
+idem animalculum paulo vehementius moveretur
+(quod tamen tarde fiebat) quasi volumine
+quodam circa caput ferebatur. Corpus fere
+carebat motu; cauda tamen in tres quatuorve
+flexus volvebatur." This then is the change
+of form which I mentioned to have seen, the
+mucilage from which the moving bodies use
+all their efforts to be disengaged, the slowness
+of their motion before they are disengaged;
+and the animal, according to Leeuwenhoek,
+one part of which is in motion, and the other
+dead: for he afterwards says, "Movebant
+posteriorem solum partem, quę ultima, morti
+vicinia esse judicabam." All this does not
+agree with an animal, but with what I have
+spoken of; excepting that I never saw the tail
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>
+move but by the agitation of the body. He afterwards
+says, speaking of the seminal liquor
+of a cod, "Non est putandum omnia animalcula
+in semine aselli contenta uno eodemque
+tempore vivere, sed illa potius tantum vivere
+quę exitui seu partui viciniora sunt, quę &amp;
+copiosiori humido innatant prę reliquis vita
+carentibus, adhuc in crassa materia, quam humor
+eorum efficit, jacentibus."</p>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_23" id="Footnote_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23"><span class="label">[W]</span></a> Vol. I. p. 51.</p></div>
+
+<p>If these are animals, why have they not all
+life? why are they in the most fluid part of the
+liquor alive, while those in the thickest are
+not so? Leeawenhoek did not perceive that
+the thick matter, the origin of which he attributes
+to the humour of the animalculę,
+is nothing but a mucilaginous matter which
+produces them. By diluting this mucilage
+with water, he would have given life to the
+whole of them. Even this mucilage is oftentimes
+only a mass of those bodies which are
+set in motion on being separated; and consequently
+this thick matter, instead of being a
+humour, produced by the animalcules, is only
+the substance of the animals themselves, or rather,
+as we have already observed, the matter
+from which they originate. Speaking of the
+seed of a cock, Leeuwenhoek says, in his letter
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>
+to Grew, "Contemplando materiam (seminalem)
+animadverti ibidem tantam abundantiam
+viventium animalium, ut ea stuperem;
+forma seu externa figura sua nostrates anguillas
+fluviatiles referebant, vehementissima agitatione
+movebantur; quibus tamen substrati videbantur
+multi &amp; admodum exiles globuli, item multę
+plan-ovales figurę, quibus etiam vita posset
+attribui, &amp; quidem propter earundem commotiones;
+sed existimabam omnes hasce commotiones
+&amp; agitationes pro venire ab animalcules,
+sicque etiam res se habebat; attamen
+ego non opinione solum, sed etiam ad veritatem
+mihi persuadeo has particulas planam &amp;
+ovalem figuram habentes, esse quędam animalcula
+inter se ordine suo disposita &amp; mixta
+vitaque adhuc carentia." Here we see in the
+same seminal liquor animalcules of different
+forms; and I am convinced, by my own experiments,
+that if Leeuwenhoek had closely observed
+these oval substances, he would have discovered
+that they moved by their own powers,
+and that consequently they were as much alive
+as the rest. This change perfectly coincides
+with what I have said, that they are organic
+particles which take different forms, and not
+constant species of animals; for in the present
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span>
+case, if the bodies, which have the figure of
+an eel, are true spermatic animalcules, each,
+destined to become a cock, which supposes a
+very perfect organization, and a very constant
+form, what will those be which have an oval
+figure, and what end do they answer? He says
+indeed afterwards, that these ovals maybe conceived
+to be the same animals, by supposing
+their bodies to be twisted in a spiral form; but
+then how shall we conceive that an animal,
+whose body is constrained, can move without
+being extended? I maintain, therefore, that
+these oval substances are no other than the
+organic particles separated from their threads,
+and that the eels were the separated parts
+which dragged those threads after them, as I
+have many times perceived in other seminal
+liquors.</p>
+
+<p>Leeuwenhoek, who imagined all these moving
+bodies were animals, and established a system
+thereon; who also pretended, that spermatic
+animals must become men and animals, now
+suspected they were only natural machines, or
+organic particles in motion; for he does not
+doubt these spermatic animals contained the
+great animal in miniature, he says, "Progeneratio
+animalis ex animalculo in seminibus
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span>
+masculinis omni exceptione major est; nam
+etiamsi in animalculo ex semine masculo unde
+ortum est, figuram animalis conspicere nequeamus,
+attamen satis superque certi esse possumus
+figuram animalis ex qua animal ortum est, in
+animalculo quod in semine masculo reperitur,
+conclusam jacere sive esse; &amp; quanquam mihi
+sępius conspectis animalculis in semine masculo
+animalis, imaginatus fuerim me posse
+dicere, en ibi caput, en ibi humeros, en ibi
+femora; attamen eum ne minima quidem certitudine
+de iis judicium ferre potuerim, hujusque
+certi quid statuere supersedeo, donec
+tale animal, cujus semina mascula tam magna
+erunt, ut in iis figuram creaturę ex qua
+provenit, agnoscere queam, invenire secunda
+nobis concedat fortuna." This fortunate
+chance, which Leeuwenhoek desires, presented
+itself to Mr. Needham. Every part of the
+spermatic animals of the calmar are easy to
+be seen without a microscope; but they are
+not young calmars, as Leeuwenhoek thinks,
+nor even animated, although they are in motion,
+but only machines which must be regarded
+as the first produce of the union of organic
+particles.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Although Leeuwenhoek had not such an
+opportunity of undeceiving himself, he nevertheless
+had another phenomena which ought
+to have had that effect; for example, he had
+remarked that the spermatic animals of a dog
+often change their figures, especially when the
+liquor was on the point of evaporating; that
+these pretended animals had a hole in the head
+when they were dead, and that this hole did
+not appear when they were alive; he had seen
+that the part which he looked upon as the
+head was full and plump when it was alive,
+and flaccid and flat when dead. All this ought
+to have led him to doubt whether these moving
+bodies were real animals; and consider it as
+agreeing better with a machine, which empties
+itself like that of the calmar, than with a
+moving animal.</p>
+
+<p>I have said that these moving bodies, these
+organic particles, do not move like animals,
+nor have an interval of rest. Leeuwenhoek has
+observed the same: "Quotiescunque, says he,
+animalcula in semine masculo animalium fucrim
+contemplatus, attamen illa se unquam ad
+quietem contulisse, me nunquam vidisse, mihi
+dicendum est, si modo sat fluidę superesset materię
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>
+in qua sese commode movere poterant;
+et eadem in continuo manent motu, &amp; tempore
+quo ipsis moriendum appropinquante,
+motus magis magisque deficit, usquedum nullus
+prorsus motus in illis agnoscendus sit."
+It appears difficult to conceive that animals
+can exist, from the moment of their birth till
+that of their death, in a continual rapid motion
+without the least interval of rest; and I
+cannot possibly imagine how these animals in
+the semen of a dog, which Leeuwenhoek saw
+the seventh day in as rapid motion as they
+were when they were first taken from the body
+of the animal, preserved a motion during that
+time so exceedingly swift, that no animal has
+sufficient power to move in for an hour; especially
+if we consider the resistance which proceeds
+from the density and the tenacity of the
+liquor. This kind of continued motion, on the
+contrary, agrees with the organic particles,
+which, like artificial machines, produce their
+effects in a continual operation, and which stop
+when that effect is over.</p>
+
+<p>Among the great number of Leeuwenhoek's
+experiments, he, without doubt, often perceived
+spermatic animals without tails; and
+he endeavours to explain this phenomena
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span>
+by a supposition; for example, he says, speaking
+of the semen of a cod, "Ubi vero ad lactum
+accederem observationem, in iis partibus
+quas animalcula esse censebam neque vitam
+neque caudam dignoscere potui; cujus rei rationem
+esse existimabam, quod quamdiu animalcula
+natando loca sua perfecte mutare non
+possunt tam diu etiam cauda concinne circa
+corpus maneat ordinata, quodque ideo singula
+animalcula rotundum repręsentent corpusculorum."</p>
+
+<p>It would have been better to have said, as it
+in fact is, that the spermatic animals of these
+fish have tails at certain times and none at
+others, than to suppose their tails twisted so
+exactly round their bodies as to give them
+the shape of a globule. But this must not lead
+us to think that Leeuwenhoek only attended
+to the moving bodies which he saw with
+tails, but rather that he did not describe the
+others, because, although they were in motion,
+he did not regard them as animals; and this
+is the cause that all the spermatic animals he
+has depicted resemble each other, and drawn
+with tails, since he only took them for real
+animals in that state; and that when he saw
+them under other forms, he thought them imperfect,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span>
+or rather that they were dead. On
+the whole it appears, by my experiments, that
+far from displaying their tails the more as they
+are in a more perfect condition of swimming,
+as Leeuwenhoek says, they, on the contrary,
+lose their tails in a gradual manner, till at last
+these tails, which are no more than foreign bodies
+of the animalcules, and which they drag
+after them, entirely disappear.</p>
+
+<p>In another part Leeuwenhoek, speaking of the
+spermatic animals of man, says, "Aliquando
+etiam animadverti inter animalcula particulas
+quasdam minores &amp; subrotundas; cum vero se
+ea aliquoties eo modo oculis meis exhibuerint,
+ut mihi imaginarer eas exiguis instructas esse
+caudis, cogitare c&#339;pi annon hę forte particulę
+forent animalcula recens nata; certum enim
+mihi est ea etiam animalcula per generationem
+provenire, vel ex mole minuscula ad adultam
+procedere quantitatem: &amp; quis sit annoa ea
+animalcula, ubi moriuntur, aliorum animalculorum
+nutritioni atque augmini inserviant?"
+By this passage it appears that Leeuwenhoek
+had seen animals without tails in the seminal
+liquor of a man, and that he is obliged to suppose
+them to be just born, and not adult; but
+I have observed quite the contrary; for the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span>
+moving bodies are never larger than when they
+separate from the filaments, and begin to move.
+When they are entirely disengaged from the
+mucilage they become smaller, and continue
+decreasing as long as they remain in motion.
+With respect to the generation of these animals,
+which Leeuwenhoek speaks of as certain, I am
+persuaded no sign of generation has ever been
+discovered; all he says is advanced on mere suppositions,
+which it is easy to prove by his own
+observations; for example, he says that the milt
+of certain fish, as the cod, fills by degrees with
+seminal liquor, which after the fish has emitted,
+the milt dries up, leaving only a membrane destitute
+of any liquor. "Eo tempore, says he,
+quo ascellus major lactes suos emisit, rugę illę,
+seu tortiles lactium partes, usque adeo contrahuntur,
+ut nihil pręter pelliculas seu membranę
+esse videantur." How then does he understand
+that this dry membrane, in which there is no
+longer either seminal liquor or animalcules, can
+reproduce animals of the same kind the succeeding
+year? if there was a regular generation in
+these animals, there could not be this interruption,
+which in most fishes lasts for a whole year.
+To draw himself out of this difficulty, he says,
+"Necessario statuendum erit, ut ascellus major
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>
+semen suum emiserit, in lactibus etiamnum
+multum materię seminalis gignendis animalculis
+aptę remansisse, ex qua materia plura
+oportet provenire animalcula seminalia quam
+anno proxime elapso emissa fuerant." This
+supposition, that there remains something in the
+seminal liquor in the milts to produce spermatic
+animals for the succeeding year, is absolutely
+contrary to observations, for the milt is in this
+interval only a thin and absolutely dry membrane.
+But what reply can be made to a still
+further opposition to this point, there being fish
+like the calmar, the seminal liquor of which is
+not only renewed every year, but even the reservoir
+which contains it? Can it be said, that
+there remains a seminal matter in the milt for
+the production of the animals for the succeeding
+year, when even the milt does not remain? it is
+therefore very certain that these pretended spermatic
+animals are not multiplied, like other animals,
+by the mode of generation; which alone
+is sufficient to make us presume, that those particles
+which move in the seminal liquors are
+not real animals. Thus Leeuwenhoek, who
+in the passage above quoted says, it is certain
+that spermatic animals multiply and propagate
+by generation, nevertheless owns, in another
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>
+part, that the manner in which these animals
+are produced is very obscure, and that he leaves
+to others the task of clearing up this matter.
+"Persuadebam mihi," says he, speaking of the
+spermatic animals of the dormouse, "hęcce
+animalcula ovibus prognasci, quia diversa in orbem
+jacentia &amp; in semet convoluta videbam;
+sed unde, quęso, primam illorum originem derivabimus?
+in animo nostro concipiemus horum
+animalculorum semen jam procreatum esse in
+ipsa generatione, hocque semen tam diu in testiculis
+hominum hęrere, usquedum ad annum
+ętatis decimum-quartum vel decimum-quintum
+aut sextum pervenerint, eademque animalcula
+tum demum vita donari vel in justam
+staturam excrevisse, illoque temporis articulo
+generandi maturitatem adesse! sed hęc lampada
+aliis trado." I do not think it necessary
+to make any remarks on what Leeuwenhoek
+says on this subject: he saw spermatic animals
+without tails, and round, in the seed of a dormouse;
+"in semet convoluta," says he, because
+he supposes that they should have tails, and instead
+of being certain, as he before had been,
+that the animals propagate by generation, he
+here seems convinced of the contrary. But when
+he had observed the generation of pucerons,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span>
+and was assured<a name="FNanchor_24" id="FNanchor_24"></a><a href="#Footnote_24" class="fnanchor">[X]</a> that they engendered without
+copulation, he caught the idea to explain the
+generation of spermatic animals. "Quemadmodum,
+says he, animalcula hęc quę pediculorum
+antea nomine designavimus (the pucerons)
+dum adhuc in utero materno latent, jam prędita
+sunt materia seminali ex qua ejusdem generis
+proditura sunt animalcula, pari ratione cogitare
+licet animalculę in seminibus masculinis ex
+animalium testiculis non migrate seu ejici quin
+post se relinquant minuta animalcula aut saltem
+materiam seminalem ex qua iterum alia ejusdem
+generis animalcula proventura sunt idque
+absque coitu; eadem ratione qua supradicta animalcula
+generari observavimus." This supposition
+gives no more satisfaction than the preceding:
+for we do not understand by this comparison
+of the generation of these animalcules
+with that of a puceron, why they are not found
+in the seminal liquor of a man, before he has
+attained the age of fourteen or fifteen years;
+nor do we know from whence they proceed, nor
+how they are renewed every year in fish, &amp;c.
+and it appears, that whatever efforts Leeuwenhoek
+made to establish the generation of spermatic
+animals on some probability, it still remained
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span>
+an entire obscurity, and would, perhaps,
+perpetually have remained so, if the
+preceding experiments had not evinced that
+they are not animals, but moving organic particles
+contained in the nutriment the animal
+receives, and which are found in great numbers
+in the seminal liquor, which is the most
+pure, and in the most organic extracts drawn
+from this nutriment.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_24" id="Footnote_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24"><span class="label">[X]</span></a> See vol. II. page 499, and vol. III. page 271.</p></div>
+
+<p>Leeuwenhoek acknowledges that he had not
+always found animalcules in the seminal liquor
+of males; in that of the cock, for example,
+which he had often examined, he saw spermatic
+animals in the form of eels but once, and
+some years after he could not discover any under
+that form, but observed some with large
+heads and tails, which his designer could not
+perceive. He says also, that one season he could
+not find living animals in the seminal liquor
+of the cod. All these disappointments proceeded
+from his desire of finding tails to these
+animals; and although he perceived little bodies
+in motion, he did not consider them as animals,
+because they were without tails, notwithstanding
+it is under that form they are generally
+seen, either in seminal liquors, or infusions
+of animal or vegetable substances. He says, in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span>
+the same place, that he was never able to make
+his designer perceive the spermatic animalcules
+of a cod, which he had so often seen himself.&mdash;"Non
+solum, says he, ob eximiam eorum
+exilitatem, sed etiam quod eorum corpora
+adeo essent fragilia, ut corpuscula passim dirumperentur;
+unde factum fuit ut nonnisi rare,
+nec sine attentissima observatione, animadverterem
+particulas planas atque ovorum in morem
+longas, in quibus ex parte caudas dignoscere
+licebat; particulas has oviformes existimavi
+animalcula esse dirupta, quod particulę
+hę diruptę quadruplo fere viderentur majores
+corporibus animalculorum vivorum." When
+an animal of any kind ceases to live, it does not
+then suddenly alter its form, and from being
+long, like a thread, becomes round like a ball;
+neither does it become four times larger after
+its death than it was before. Nothing that
+Leeuwenhoek says here agrees with the nature
+of animals; but, on the contrary, the whole
+corresponds with a kind of machine, which,
+like those of a calmar, empty themselves after
+having performed their functions. But let us
+pursue this observation; he says, he has seen
+the spermatic animals of the cod in different
+forms, "multa apparebant animalcula sphęram
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
+pellucidam representantia;" he has also
+seen them of different sizes, "hęc animalcula
+minori videbantur mole, quam ubi eadem antehac
+in tubo vitreo rotundo examinaveram."</p>
+
+<p>There needs nothing more to shew that
+there are no constant and uniform species of
+these animalcules; and that consequently they
+are not animals, but only organic particles in
+motion, which, by their different combinations,
+take different forms and sizes. These
+organic moving particles are found in great
+quantities in the extract and residue of our
+nutriment. The matter which adheres to the
+teeth, and which in healthy people has the
+same smell as the seminal liquor, is only a residue
+of the food, and a great number of these
+pretended animals are also found there, some
+of which have tails, and resemble those in the
+seminal liquor. Mr. Baker had four different
+kinds of them engraved, and which
+were all of a cylindrical or oval make, or
+globules with and without tails. I am persuaded,
+after having strictly examined them,
+that not any of them are real animals, but are
+like those in the seed, only living organical
+parts of the nutriment which present themselves
+under different forms, Leeuwenhoek,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>
+who did not know how to account for these
+pretended animals in the matter which adhered
+to the teeth, supposed them to proceed from
+certain food they were previously in, as cheese,
+&amp;c. but we find them among the teeth of those
+who do not eat cheese, as well as in those that
+do; besides, they have not the least resemblance
+to mites, nor the other animalcules seen
+in rotten cheese. In another place he says,
+these animals of the teeth may proceed from
+the cistern water that is drank, because he observed
+animals like them in dew and rain water,
+especially in that which stagnates upon
+lead and tiles; but with which we can prove
+there is not the least resemblance.</p>
+
+<p>Most seminal liquors dilute of themselves,
+and liquefy when exposed to the air or a certain
+degree of cold; but they thicken when a
+moderate degree of heat is communicated to
+them. I have exposed some of these liquors
+to a very intense cold, as water on the point of
+freezing, but it did no injury to these supposed
+animals; they continued to move with the
+same swiftness, and as long as those which had
+not been so exposed, but those which had suffered
+but a little warmth soon ceased to move,
+because the liquor thickened. If the moving
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>
+bodies were animals, they were of a complexion
+and temperament quite different from all others,
+to whom a gentle and moderate heat strengthens
+their powers and motions, which the cold stops
+and destroys.</p>
+
+<p>Notwithstanding it may be thought I have
+dwelt too long upon this subject, I cannot conclude
+it without making one remark, from
+which some useful conclusions may be drawn.
+These pretended spermatic animals, which are
+only living organic particles of the nutriment,
+not only exist in the seminal liquors of the
+two sexes, and in the residue of the nutriment
+which adheres to the teeth, but also in the
+chyle and excrements. Leeuwenhoek having
+met with them in the excrements of frogs, and
+other animals, which he dissected, was at
+first very much surprised, and notable to conceive
+from whence these animals proceeded,
+so entirely like those he had observed in the
+seminal liquors, accuses himself of having, in
+dissecting the animal, opened the seminal vessels,
+and that the seed had by that means been
+mixed with the excrements. But having afterwards
+found them in the excrements of other
+animals, and even in his own, he no longer
+knew to what to attribute them. Leeuwenhoek,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span>
+it is worthy remark, never met with them in his
+own excrements, but when they were liquid.
+Every time he was disordered and the stomach
+did not perform its functions, and was relaxed,
+he discovered these animalcules; but when the
+concoction of the food was well performed,
+and the excrement was hard, there was not a
+single one, although it was diluted with water.
+This seems perfectly to agree with all we have
+before advanced: for when the stomach and
+intestines perform their functions, the excrements
+are only the grosser parts of the nutriment;
+and all that is really nutritive and
+organic passes into the vessels which serve to
+nourish the animal; whereas if the stomach
+and intestines are not in a condition to comminute
+the food, then it passes with the inanimate
+parts, and we find the living organic
+molecules in the excrements; from whence it
+may be concluded, that those which are often
+lax must have less seminal liquor, and be less
+proper for generation, than those of a different
+habit of body.</p>
+
+<p>In all I have said, I constantly supposed the
+female furnished a seminal liquor, which was
+as necessary to generation as that of the male.
+I have endeavoured to establish in <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/45602/45602-h/45602-h.htm#Page_255">Chap. I.</a> that
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span>
+every organized body must contain living organic
+particles, and I have endeavoured to
+prove Chap. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/45602/45602-h/45602-h.htm#Page_272">II.</a> and <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/45602/45602-h/45602-h.htm#Page_298">III.</a> that nutrition and reproduction
+operates by the same cause; that
+nutrition is made by the intimate penetration
+of these organic particles through each part of
+the body, and that reproduction operates by
+the superfluity of these same organic particles
+collected together from all parts of the body
+and deposited in proper reservoirs. I have explained
+in Chap. <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/45602/45602-h/45602-h.htm#Page_311">IV</a>. how this theory must be
+understood in the generation of man and animals
+which have sexes. Females then being organized
+bodies like males, they must also have
+some reservoirs for the superfluity of organic
+particles returned from every part of their bodies.
+This superfluity cannot come there
+through any other form than that of a liquor,
+since it is an extract of all parts of the body;
+and this liquor is that to which I have given
+the name of the female semen.</p>
+
+<p>This liquor is not, as Aristotle pretends, an
+infecund matter of itself, which enters neither
+as matter nor form into the business of generation,
+but as essentially prolific as that of the
+male, containing characteristic parts of the feminine
+sex, which the female alone can produce,
+the same as the male contains particles necessary
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>
+to form the masculine organs; and each of
+them contains every other organic particle that
+can be looked on as common to both sexes;
+which causes that, by their mixture, the daughter
+may resemble her father, and the son his mother.
+This semen Hippocrates says, is composed
+of two liquors; the one strong, for the
+production of males; and the other weak, for
+the production of females. But this supposition
+is too extended; I do not see how it is to be conceived
+that a liquor, which is the extract of
+every part of the female body, should contain
+particles for the formation of the male organs.</p>
+
+<p>This liquor must enter by some way into the
+matrix of animals which bear and nourish their
+f&#339;tus within the body, and in others, as oviparous
+animals, it must be absorbed by the eggs,
+which may be looked upon as portable matrixes.
+Each of these matrixes contains a
+small drop of this prolific liquor of the female,
+in the part that is called the <i>cicatrice</i>. When
+there has been no communication with the
+male, this prolific drop collects under the form
+of a small mole, or mass, as Malpighius observes;
+but when impregnated by that of the
+male; it produces a f&#339;tus which receives its
+nutriment from the juices of the egg.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Eggs, instead of being parts generally found
+in every female, are therefore only instruments
+made use of by Nature to serve as the matrix
+in females which are deprived of that organ.
+Instead also of being active and essential to the
+first fecundation, they only serve as passive and
+accidental parts for the nutrition of the f&#339;tus
+already formed by the mixture of the liquor of
+the two sexes in a particular part of this matrix.
+Instead also of being existing bodies, inclosed,
+<i>ad infinitum</i>, one within the other, eggs, on the
+contrary, are bodies formed from the superfluity
+of a more gross and less organic part of
+the food, than that which produces the seminal
+and prolific liquor; and are in oviparous females
+something equivalent, not only to the matrix,
+but even to the menstrua in the viviparous.</p>
+
+<p>We should be perfectly convinced, that eggs
+are only destined by Nature to serve as a matrix
+in animals who have not that viscera, by
+those females producing eggs independant of
+the male. In the same manner as the matrix
+exists in viviparous animals, as a part appertaining
+to the female sex, hens, which have no
+matrix, have eggs in their room, which are
+successively produced of themselves, and necessarily
+exist in the female independently of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span>
+any communication with the male. To pretend
+that the f&#339;tus is pre-existing in the eggs,
+and that these eggs are contained, <i>ad infinitum</i>,
+within each other, is nearly the same as to pretend
+that the f&#339;tus, is pre-existing in the matrix,
+and that the matrix of the first female inclosed
+all that ever were or will be produced.</p>
+
+<p>Anatomists have taken the word <i>egg</i> in several
+acceptations and meanings. When Harvey
+took for his motto, <i>Omnia ex ovo</i>, he understood
+by the word egg, as applied to viviparous
+animals, the membrane which includes the f&#339;tus
+and all its appendages: he thought, he perceived
+this egg, or membrane, form immediately
+after the copulation of the male and the
+female. But this egg does not proceed from the
+ovium of the female; and he has even maintained,
+that he did not remark the least alteration
+in this testicle, &amp;c. We perceive there is
+here nothing like what is commonly understood
+by the word egg unless the figure of the bag may
+be supposed to have some resemblance thereto.
+Harvey, who dissected so many viviparous females,
+did not, he says, ever perceive any alteration
+in the ovaria; he looked on them even as
+small glands, perfectly useless to general ion,<a name="FNanchor_25" id="FNanchor_25"></a><a href="#Footnote_25" class="fnanchor">[Y]</a> although
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span>
+they undergo very remarkable changes
+and alterations in them, since we may perceive
+in cows the glandular bodies grow from the size
+of a millet seed to that of a cherry. This great
+anatomist was led into this error by the smallness
+of the glandular bodies in the species of deer,
+to which he principally paid his attention. C.
+Peyerus, who also made many experiments on
+them, says, "Exigui quidem sunt damarum
+testiculi, sed post coitum f&#339;cundum, in alterutro
+eorum, papilla, sive tuberculum fibrosum,
+semper succrescit; scrofis autem pręgnantibus
+tanta accidit testiculorum mutatio,
+ut mediocrem quoque attentionem fugere nequeat."<a name="FNanchor_26" id="FNanchor_26"></a><a href="#Footnote_26" class="fnanchor">[Z]</a>
+This author imagines, with some
+reason, that the minuteness of the testicles of
+does, is the cause of Harvey's not having remarked
+the alterations; but he is wrong in advancing
+that the alterations he had remarked,
+and which had escaped Harvey's notice, did
+not happen till after impregnation.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_25" id="Footnote_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor_25"><span class="label">[Y]</span></a> See Harvey Exercit. 64 and 65.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_26" id="Footnote_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor_26"><span class="label">[Z]</span></a> Vide Conradi Peyeri Merycologia.</p></div>
+
+<p>It appears that Harvey was deceived in many
+other essential points; he asserts, that the seed
+of the male does not enter into the matrix of the
+female, and even that it cannot; yet Verheyen
+found a great quantity of the male seed in the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span>
+matrix of a cow, which he dissected six hours
+after copulation.<a name="FNanchor_27" id="FNanchor_27"></a><a href="#Footnote_27" class="fnanchor">[AA]</a> The celebrated Ruysch
+asserts, that having dissected a woman who had
+been caught in the act of adultery, and was assassinated,
+he found, not only in the cavity of
+the matrix, but also in the trunks, a quantity of
+the seminal liquor of the male,<a name="FNanchor_28" id="FNanchor_28"></a><a href="#Footnote_28" class="fnanchor">[AB]</a> Valisnieri affirms,
+that Fallopius and other anatomists had
+also discovered male seed in the matrix of many
+women. After the positive testimony of these
+great anatomists, there can remain no doubt but
+Harvey was deceived in this important point;
+especially when to these are added that of Leeuwenhoek,
+who found the male seed in the matrix
+of a great number of females of different species.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_27" id="Footnote_27"></a><a href="#FNanchor_27"><span class="label">[AA]</span></a> See Verheyen Sup. Anat. Tra. v. cap. iii.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_28" id="Footnote_28"></a><a href="#FNanchor_28"><span class="label">[AB]</span></a> See Ruysch, Thes. Anat. p. 90, tab. <span class="smcap">VI</span>, fig. I.</p></div>
+
+<p>Harvey makes another error in speaking of an
+abortion in the second month, where the mass
+was as large as a pigeon's egg, but without any
+f&#339;tus regularly formed; whereas, it is maintained
+by Ruysch, and many other anatomists,
+that the f&#339;tus is perceptible, even to the naked
+eye, in the first month. The History of the
+Academy mentions a f&#339;tus, that was completely
+formed in twenty-one days after impregnation.
+If to these authorities we add that of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span>
+Malpighius, who perceived the chicken in the
+cicatrice, immediately after the egg was laid
+by the hen, we cannot doubt, but that the
+f&#339;tus is formed immediately after copulation;
+consequently, we must not pay any credit to
+what Harvey says on the parts increasing one
+after the other by juxta-position, since they are
+all existent from the first, and gradually expand
+until the whole is complete.</p>
+
+<p>De Graaf took the acceptation of the word
+egg in a quite different light to Harvey: he insists
+that the testicles of women were true ovaries,
+and contain eggs like those of oviparous,
+animals, only that they are much smaller, do
+not quit the body, and are never detached till
+after impregnation, when they descend from the
+ovary into the horns of the matrix. The experiments
+of De Graaf have contributed most to
+establish the existence of these pretended eggs,
+which yet is not at all founded; for this famous
+anatomist is deceived, first, by mistaking the
+vesicles of the ovarium for eggs, whereas they
+are inseparable from it, form parts of its substance,
+and are filled with a kind of lymph.
+Secondly, he is also deceived when he considers
+the glandular bodies to be the covering of those
+eggs, or vesicles; for it is certain, by Malpighius's,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span>
+Valisnieri's, and my own observations,
+that the glandular bodies neither surround nor
+contain one of those vesicles. Thirdly, he is
+deceived still more when he supposes the glandular
+body is never formed till after fecundation;
+as they are invariably found in every female
+who has attained the age of puberty. Fourthly,
+he is no less deceived when he believes that the
+globules which he saw in the matrix, and which
+contained the f&#339;tuses, ware the same vesicles,
+or eggs, which had fallen from the ovariam,
+and which, he remarks, were become ten times
+smaller than they were in the ovary. This remark
+alone, one would imagine, Should have
+made him perceive his error. Fifthly, he is
+wrong in saying that the glandular bodies are
+only the coverings of the fecundated eggs, and
+that the number of coverings, or empty follicles,
+always answer to the number of f&#339;tuses.
+This assertion is entirely contrary to truth:
+for on the testicles of all females we find a
+greater number of glandular bodies, or cicatrices,
+than there are productions of f&#339;tuses,
+and they are also found in those which have
+never brought forth. To this we may add,
+that neither he, Verheyen, nor any other person,
+have ever seen these eggs, much less these
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span>
+pretended coverings, on which they have, notwithstanding,
+established their system.</p>
+
+<p>Malpighius, who perceived the growth of
+the glandular bodies in the female testicles,
+was deceived when he thought he had seen
+the egg in their cavities, since they contain
+only liquor; nor indeed has anything like an
+egg ever been discovered.</p>
+
+<p>Valisnieri, who was not deceived in facts,
+has yet drawn false conclusions in asserting
+that, although neither himself, nor any anatomist
+in whom he could confide, ever found
+the egg in the cavity of the glandular body,
+yet it must there exist.</p>
+
+<p>Let us, therefore, examine what may be
+fairly called the real discoveries of these naturalists.
+Graaf was the first who perceived
+there were alterations in the female testicles;
+and he had reason to affirm, they were parts
+essential and necessary to generation. Malpighius
+demonstrated that these alterations
+were occasioned by the glandular bodies which
+grew to perfect maturity, afterwards they become
+flaccid, obliterated, and left only a slight
+cicatrice remaining. Valisnieri has placed
+this discovery in a very clear light; he has
+shewn that these glandular bodies are found
+in the testicles of every female; that they
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>
+are augmented considerably in the season of
+love, that they increase at the expence of the
+lymphatic vesicles of the testicles, and that at
+the time of their maturity they were hollow
+and filled with liquor. This, then, is all that
+can be reduced to truth on the subject of the
+pretended ovaries and eggs of viviparous animals.
+What must we conclude therefrom?
+Two things appear very evident: the one, that
+there does not exist any eggs in the female testicles;
+the other, that there exists a liquor in
+the vesicles of the testicle, and in the cavity of
+the glandular bodies. We have demonstrated
+by the preceding experiments, that this last
+liquor is the true seed of the female, since it
+contains, like that of the male, spermatic animals,
+or rather organic moving particles.</p>
+
+<p>We must, therefore, now be assured, that
+females have, as well as males, a seminal liquor.
+After all that has been advanced, we
+cannot doubt but the seminal liquor is the superfluity
+of the organic nutriment, which is
+sent back from all parts of the body into the
+testicles and seminal vesicles of the males, and
+into the testicles and glandular bodies of females.
+This liquor, which issues by the nipple
+of the glandular bodies, continually sprinkles
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span>
+the horns of the matrix, and may easily procure
+admission either by the suction of the
+membrane of these horns, or by the little opening
+which is at the upper extremity, and thus
+enter into the matrix; but in the supposition
+of these pretended eggs, which were ten or
+twenty times larger than the opening of the
+horns of the matrix, we cannot comprehend
+how they could enter therein.</p>
+
+<p>The liquor emitted by females, when they
+are excited, and which, according to de Graaf,
+issues from the neck of the matrix, and the
+orifice of the urethra, may be a superabundant
+portion of the seminal liquor which continually
+distills from the glandular bodies on the trunks
+of the matrix. But, possibly, this liquor may
+be a secretion of another kind, and perfectly
+useless in generation. To decide this question
+observations with a microscope are requisite;
+but <i>all</i> experiments are not permitted even to
+philosophers. I can only say, that I am inclined
+to believe that the same spermatic animals
+would be met with in this liquor as in that
+of the glandular bodies. I can quote an Italian
+doctor on this subject, who made this observation
+with attention, and which is thus related
+by Valisnieri: "Aggiugne il lodato fig. Bono
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span>
+d'avergli anco veduti (animali spermatici) in
+questa linfa o siero, diro cosi voluttuoso, che
+nel tempore dell'amorosa zuffa scappa dalle
+femine libidinose, senza che si potesse sospettare
+che fossero di que' del maschio, &amp;c." If
+this circumstance is true, as I do not doubt, it
+is certain, that this liquor is the same as that
+found in the glandular bodies, and that, consequently,
+it is the true seminal liquor: and although
+anatomists have not discovered the
+communication between the vacuities of de
+Graaf and the testicles, that does not prevent
+it being once in the matrix, from issuing out
+by the vacuities about the exterior orifice of
+the urethra.</p>
+
+<p>From hence we must conclude that the most
+abandoned women will be the least fruitful,
+because they emit that liquor which ought to
+remain in the matrix for the formation of the
+f&#339;tus. Thus we see why common prostitutes
+seldom have children, and why women in hot
+countries, where they have stronger desires
+than in the cold, are much less fertile; but we
+shall have occasion to speak of this hereafter.</p>
+
+<p>It is natural to think that the seminal liquor
+of the male or female would not be fertile but
+when it contains moving bodies; nevertheless
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span>
+that is still a question, and I should be led to
+think, as there are different states of this liquor,
+that in which these organic particles are seen in
+motion is not absolutely necessary for the purpose
+of generation. The Italian physician,
+above quoted, never perceived spermatic animals
+in his semen till he had attained a middle
+age, although he was father of several children
+before, and continued to have them afterwards.</p>
+
+<p>These spermatic bodies, which move, may
+be looked upon as the first assemblages of the
+organic molecules which proceed from every
+part of the body; when a quantity of them
+collect they may be perceived with the microscope;
+but if they collect only in small quantity
+the body which they form will be too minute
+to be perceived, and in this case we shall
+not be able to distinguish any in the seminal
+liquor. A very long continuance of observations
+would be necessary to determine what can
+be the cause of all the differences remarked in
+the states of this liquor.</p>
+
+<p>I can assert, from having often tried it, that
+by infusing the seminal liquors in water closely
+corked, at the end of three or four days an infinite
+multitude of moving bodies will be found,
+although the seminal liquors had no motion on
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>
+being first taken from the body of the animal.
+Flesh, blood, chyle, urine, nay all animal or vegetable
+substances, contain organic particles,
+which move at the end of some days in an infusion
+of water; they appear to act and move
+nearly in the same manner, and though produced
+from different bodies are perfectly similar,
+without any of them having a power peculiar
+to themselves. If these bodies must absolutely
+be termed animals, it must be allowed
+they are so imperfect that they ought to be
+looked upon as the outlines of them, or rather
+as bodies simply composed of particles the
+most essential to the existence of an animal; for
+natural machines, such as those found in the
+roe of a calmar, although they put themselves
+in action at certain times, are certainly not
+animals, although they are organized, acting,
+and, as I may say, living beings.</p>
+
+<p>If it is once allowed, that the productions of
+Nature follow in an uniform order, and advance
+by imperceptible degrees and links, we
+shall have no difficulty in conceiving there are
+organic bodies existing, which belong neither
+to animals, vegetables, nor minerals.</p>
+
+<p>It is certain, however, that all animals and
+vegetables contain an infinity of organic living
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>
+molecules. These molecules successively take
+different forms, and different degrees of motion
+and activity, according to different circumstances
+They are in a much greater number
+in the seminal liquor of both sexes, and in the
+germs of plants, than in other parts of the animal
+or vegetable. There exists, then, a living
+substance in animals and vegetables, common
+to both, and which substance is necessary to
+their nutrition. An animal procures nutriment
+from an animal or vegetable substance,
+and the vegetable can likewise be nourished
+from an animal or vegetable in a decomposed
+state. This nutritive substance, common to
+both, is always living, always active, and produces
+an animal or vegetable, as it finds an
+internal mould or an analogous matrix, as we
+have explained in the first chapters; but when
+this active substance collects in great abundance,
+in those parts where it can unite, it forms
+in the animal body other living creatures, such
+as the tape-worm, ascarides, and worms, which
+are sometimes found in the veins, in the sinus
+of the brain, in the liver, &amp;c. These kinds of
+animals do not owe their existence to the animals
+of the same species, and we may, therefore,
+suppose, they are produced by this organic
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span>
+matter when it is extravasated, or is too
+abundant for the lacteal vessels to absorb.
+We shall hereafter have occasion to examine
+more largely the nature of those worms, and
+many other animals which are formed in a similar
+manner.</p>
+
+<p>When this organic matter, which may be
+looked on as an universal seed, is collected in
+any great quantity, as in the seminal liquors,
+and in the mucilaginous parts of the infusion of
+plants, its first effect is to vegetate, or rather
+to produce vegetating beings. These zoophytes
+swell, extend, ramify, and produce
+globules, ovals, and other small bodies, of different
+figures, which have all a kind of animal
+life, a progressive motion, which is often very
+swift, and sometimes very slow. These globules
+themselves decompose, change their
+figures, and become smaller; and in proportion
+as they diminish in size the rapidity of
+their motion augments.</p>
+
+<p>I have sometimes thought that the venom of
+the viper, and other active poisons, even that
+of the bite of a mad dog, might possibly be
+this active matter too rarefied; but I have not
+as yet had time to make the experiments which
+I had projected on this matter, as well as on
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span>
+drugs used in medicine; all that I can at present
+ascertain is, that all infusions of the most
+active drugs swarm with moving bodies, which
+form therein in much less time than in other
+substances.</p>
+
+<p>Almost all microscopic animals are of the
+same nature as the organized bodies which
+move in the seminal liquor, in the infusions of
+vegetables and the flesh of animals; the eel-like
+bodies in flour, vinegar, and water, in which
+lead has been soaked, are beings of the same
+nature as the first, and have a like origin.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+<p class="caption2"><a name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX.</a></p>
+
+<p class="caption2">VARIETIES IN THE GENERATION OF ANIMALS.</p>
+
+
+<p>The matter which serves for the nutrition
+and reproduction of animals and vegetables
+is therefore the same; it is a productive
+and universal substance, composed of organic
+molecules, and whose union produces organized
+bodies. Nature always works on the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span>
+same fund, which is inexhaustible, but the
+means she employs to stamp its value are different,
+and these differences, or general agreements,
+deserve attention, because it is from
+thence we must derive our reasons to account
+for exceptions and particular varieties.</p>
+
+<p>In general large animals are less productive
+than small. The whale, elephant, rhinoceros,
+camel, horse, the human species, &amp;c. only produce
+one, and very seldom two, at a birth;
+whereas small animals, as rats, herrings, insects,
+&amp;c. produce a great number at a time.
+Does not this difference proceed from there
+being more food required to support a large
+body than to nourish a small one, and from
+hence the former has less superfluous organic
+particles, which would convert into semen,
+than the latter? It is certain that small animals
+eat more in proportion than large ones;
+but it is likewise probable that the prodigious
+multiplication of the small animals, as bees,
+flies, and other insects, may be attributed to
+their being endowed with very fine and slender
+limbs and organs, by which they are in a condition
+to chuse what is most substantial and
+organic in the vegetable or animal matters
+from whence they derive their nutriment. A
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span>
+bee, who lives on the purest parts of flowers,
+certainly receives more organic particles in
+proportion than a horse who feeds on the
+grosser parts of vegetables, hay, &amp;c. The
+horse produces but one at one time, whereas
+the bee will bring forth three thousand.</p>
+
+<p>Oviparous animals are in general smaller
+than the viviparous, and produce also more at
+a birth. The duration of the f&#339;tus in the matrix
+of viviparous animals likewise opposes
+their increase, nor can there be any new generation
+take place during gestation, or while
+they are suckling their young; whereas oviparous
+animals produce at the same time both
+matrix and f&#339;tuses, which they cast out of
+the body, and are therefore almost always in
+a state of reproduction; and it is well known
+that by preventing a hen from setting, and
+largely feeding, the number of her eggs will
+be considerably increased. If hens cease to
+lay when they sit, it is because they have ceased
+to feed; and it is the fear lest their eggs should
+not produce which causes them not to quit
+their nests but once a day, and that for a very
+short time, during which they take a little nutriment,
+but not one-tenth part of what they
+take at other times.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Animals which produce but a small number
+at a time, acquire the chief part of their
+growth before they are fit for engendering,
+whereas those which multiply numerously
+generate before they have received half their
+growth. The human species, the horse, the
+ass, the goat, and the ram, are not able to engender
+until they have obtained nearly the
+whole of their growth. It is the same with
+pigeons and other birds, who lay but a few
+eggs; but those which produce in great numbers,
+as poultry, fish, &amp;c. engender much
+sooner. A cock is capable of engendering at
+the age of three months, when he has not attained
+a third part of his growth; a fish, which
+at the end of twenty years will weigh thirty
+pounds, engenders in the first or second year,
+when perhaps it does not weigh half a pound.
+But exact observations on the growth and duration
+of the life of fish are still wanting: their
+age may be nearly known by examining the
+annual layers of their scales; but we are not
+certain how far that may extend. I have seen
+carp in the Comte de Maurepas' canals, at his
+castle at Pont Chartrain, which were said to
+be 150 years old, and they appeared as brisk
+and lively as the common carp. I will not
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span>
+say, with Leeuwenhoek, that fish are immortal,
+or at least can never die with age; all must perish
+in time, that is; all which have a beginning,
+a birth, must arrive to an end, or death;
+but fish, living in an uniform element, and
+being sheltered from the vicissitudes and all
+the injuries of the air, must live a longer time
+in the same state than other animals, especially
+if these vicissitudes of the air be, as a great philosopher
+asserts, the principal causes of the
+destruction of living beings. But what must
+contribute to the long duration of their life is,
+that their bones are softer than those of other
+animals, and do not harden with age. The
+bones of fish lengthen, and grow thick without
+taking any more solidity; whereas the bones
+of other animals continually increase in hardness
+and density, until at length, being absolutely
+full, the motion of their fluid ceases,
+and death ensues. In their bones the repletion
+or obstruction, which is the cause of natural
+death, is formed by such slow and insensible
+degrees, that fish must require much time to
+arrive at what we call old age.</p>
+
+<p>All quadrupeds covered with hair are viviparous;
+all those covered with scales oviparous.
+May we not then believe than in oviparous
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span>
+quadrupeds, a much less waste is made by
+transpiration, than the cloathing of scales retains;
+whereas in animals covered with hair
+this transpiration is more free and abundant?
+and is it not partly by this superabundance of
+nutriment, which cannot be carried off by
+transpiration, that those animals multiply so
+abundantly, and are enabled to go so long
+without food? All birds and all insects that fly
+are oviparous, excepting some kinds of flies
+which bring forth their young alive. These
+flies have no wings at their birth, but they
+shoot out and grow by degrees, and which they
+cannot use before they are of full growth.
+Scaly fish are likewise oviparous; as are all
+reptiles which have no legs, such as snakes and
+different kinds of serpents; they change their
+skins, which are composed of small scales. The
+viper is only a slight exception to the general
+rule, for it is not truly viviparous, as it produces
+eggs, from which the young are hatched;
+it is certain this is performed in the body
+of the mother, who instead of casting those
+eggs, like other oviparous animals, she retains
+and hatches them in her own body. The salamander,
+in which eggs and young ones are
+found at the same time, as observed by M. de
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span>
+Maupertuis, is an exception of the same kind
+in oviparous quadrupeds.</p>
+
+<p>Most animals are perpetuated by copulation;
+yet many birds seem only strongly to
+compress the females; indeed the ostrich,
+Crane, and some few others, are so well supplied
+as to leave intromission no ways equivocal.
+Male fish approach the female in the
+spawning time; they seem even to rub their
+bellies against each other, for the male often
+turns upon its back to meet the belly of the
+female; but the necessary part for copulation
+does not exist in them; and the male fish approaches
+the female only to emit the liquor
+in their milts on the eggs, which the female
+then deposits; and it seems rather to be attracted
+by the eggs than the female; for when
+she ceases throwing out the eggs, he instantly
+forsakes her, and with eagerness pursues the
+eggs, which the stream carries away, or that
+the wind disperses. Male fish may be seen to
+pass and repass every spot where eggs are deposited
+several times. It is certainly not for
+the love he bears the female that all these motions
+are made, because it is not to be presumed
+he always knows her; often being seen to
+emit his liquor on all eggs that he comes near,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span>
+and that often before he has met with the female
+to which they belonged.</p>
+
+<p>There are therefore animals, distinguished
+by sexes, which have proper parts for copulation,
+and some which are deficient in them;
+others, as snails, have both, and the two sexes
+in the same individual; others, as vine-fretters,
+have no sex, and engender in themselves separately;
+although they couple together when
+they please, we cannot determine whether that
+is a conjunction of sexes; if it is so, we must
+suppose that Nature has included in this small
+individual more faculties for generation than
+in any other kind of animal, and that it not
+only has the power of reproducing distinctly,
+but also the means of multiplying by the communication
+of another individual.</p>
+
+<p>But whatever difference takes place in generation,
+Nature, by a new production, prepares
+the body for it, and which, whether
+manifested outwardly, or concealed internally,
+always precedes generation. The ovaries of
+oviparous animals, and the testicles of female
+viviparous animals, before the season of impregnation,
+experience a considerable change.
+Oviparous animals produce eggs, which at
+first are attached to the ovaries, by degrees
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>
+they increase in size, until they fall into the
+canal of the matrix, where they acquire their
+white membranes, and shell. This production
+has marks of the fecundity of the female, and
+without which generation cannot be performed:
+so in viviparous females there are always
+one or more glandular bodies on the testicles,
+which by degrees grow under the membrane
+that surrounds them; these glandular bodies
+enlarge and pierce, or rather impel and lift up
+the membrane of the testicle; when their maturity
+is complete, a small slit or several small
+holes appear at their extremities, by which the
+seminal liquor escapes, and falls into the matrix:
+these glandular bodies are new productions
+that precede generation, and without
+which there would not be any.</p>
+
+<p>In males there is also a similar change
+which always precedes their capacity for
+generating. In oviparous animals a great
+quantity of liquor fills a considerable reservoir,
+and which reservoir itself is sometimes
+formed every year; as in the calmar and
+some other fish. The testicles of birds swell
+surprisingly just preceding their amorous
+season. In viviparous males the testicles
+also swell considerably in those who have
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span>
+seasons, and in general there is a swelling and
+an extension of the genital members in all species,
+which, although it be external, must be
+regarded as a new production necessarily preceding
+generation.</p>
+
+<p>In the body of every animal, male or female,
+new productions are formed which precede generation;
+and when there is no real production
+there is always a swelling, and considerable extension
+in some of the parts. There are species
+in which this new production is not only
+manifest, but even the whole body seems to be
+renewed before generation can be performed;
+as is the case with insects whose various metamorphoses
+seem to be only for the purpose of
+generating; for the growth of the animal is
+completed before it is transformed. It ceases
+from taking nutriment, has no organs for generation,
+no means of converting the nutritive
+particles, of which they abound, into eggs or
+seminal liquor, and therefore this superfluity
+unites and moulds itself at first into a form
+something like that of the original. The caterpillar
+becomes a butterfly, because, for these
+reasons, it is unable to produce small organized
+beings like itself; the organic particles, always
+active, take another form, by uniting,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>
+whose figure answers in part, and even in essential
+constitution, to that of the caterpillar,
+but in which the organs of generation are developed,
+and may receive and transmit the organic
+particles of the nutriment which forms
+the eggs, and the individuals of the species.
+The individuals which proceed from the butterfly
+ought not to be butterflies, because the
+nutriment, from whence the organic particles
+proceed, was taken while in the form of caterpillars;
+the produce therefore must be similar,
+and not butterflies, which is only an occasional
+production of the superabundant nutriment;
+a method adapted by Nature to accomplish
+the purposes of generation in these species,
+as by the glandular bodies and milts in other
+animals.</p>
+
+<p>When the superabundant quantity of organic
+nutriment is not great, as in man and most
+large animals, generation is not made till the
+growth of the animal is nearly complete, and
+then it is confined to the production of a small
+number of individuals. When these particles
+are more abundant, as in many kinds of birds,
+and in oviparous fishes, generation is completed
+before the animal has received its full
+growth, and their production of individuals
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span>
+is very numerous. When the quantity of particles
+is still greater, as in insects, it first forms
+a large organic body, which, though retaining
+the essential constitution of its original,
+differs in many parts, as the butterfly from
+the caterpillar, but shortly produces an astonishing
+number of young, similar in form to
+the animal which selected the nutriment.
+When the superabundance is greater still, and
+when at the same time the animal has the necessary
+organs for generation, as the vine-fretter,
+it immediately produces a generation
+in every individual, and afterwards a transformation,
+like other insects. The vine-fretter
+becomes a fly, but cannot produce any thing,
+because it is only the remainder of the organized
+particles which had not been made use of
+in the production of the young.</p>
+
+<p>Almost every animal except man has stated
+times for generation. Spring is marked out
+for birds. Carp, and many kinds of fish, spawn
+in June and August. Barbel, and other kinds,
+in spring. Cats have three seasons, in January,
+May, and September. Roebucks, in
+December. Wolves and Foxes, in January.
+Horses, in summer. Stags, in September and
+October; and almost all insects generate in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span>
+autumn: these last seem to be totally exhausted
+by generation, and die a short time after.
+Other animals, though not exhausted, become
+extremely lean and very weak, and require a
+considerable time to repair the loss which is
+made of the organic substance. Others are
+exhausted still less, and are soon restored to
+an engendering state; while man is scarcely in
+the least affected; his loss is speedily repaired,
+and therefore may be said to be at all times
+in a state for propagation; all which depends
+solely on the particular construction of the
+animal organs. The grand limits Nature has
+placed in the mode of existence are equally
+conspicuous in the manner of receiving and
+digesting the food, in the manner of retaining
+it in, or excluding it from, the body, and in the
+means by which the organic molecules, necessary
+for reproduction, are extracted. In a
+word, we shall find throughout all nature, that
+all what can be, is.</p>
+
+<p>The same difference exists in the time of
+female gestation; some, as mares, carry their
+young eleven or twelve months; others, as
+women, cows, &amp;c. nine months; others, as
+foxes, wolves, &amp;c. five months; bitches, nine
+weeks; cats, six weeks; rabbits, thirty-one
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span>
+days. Most birds come out of the egg at the
+end of twenty-one days; though some, as canary
+birds, hatch in thirteen or fourteen days.
+The variety is as great here as in every thing
+else relative to animals. The largest animals
+which produce only few, are those which go
+the longest with young; this still more confirms
+what we have already said, that the quantity
+of organic food is in proportion less in
+large than in small animals; for it is from the
+superfluity of the mother's food that the f&#339;tus
+derives what is necessary to the growth and
+expansion of its parts, and since this expansion
+demands much more time in large than in
+small animals, it is a proof that the quantity of
+matter which contributes is not so abundant
+in the first as in the last.</p>
+
+<p>There is, therefore, an infinite variety in animals,
+with respect to the time and manner of
+gestation, engendering, and bringing forth;
+and this variety is found even in the causes of
+generation; for although the general principle
+of production is this organic matter common
+to all that lives or vegetates, the manner in
+which the union is made, must have infinite
+combinations, which must all proceed from
+the source of new productions. My experiments
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span>
+clearly demonstrate, that there are no
+pre-existing germs, and at the same time prove
+that the generation of animals and vegetables
+is not equivocal; there are, perhaps, as many
+beings, either living or vegetating, which are
+produced by the fortuitous assemblage of organic
+molecules, as by a constant and successive
+generation. It is to those productions we should
+apply the axiom of the ancients, "Corruptio
+unius, generatio alterius." The corruption and
+composition of animals and vegetables produce
+an infinite number of organized bodies;
+some, as those of the calmar, form only kinds
+of machines, which, although very simple, are
+exceedingly active; others, as the spermatic
+animalcules, seem by their motion, to imitate
+animals; others imitate vegetables by their
+manner of growing or extending; there are
+others, as those of blighted corn, which may be
+made to live and die alternately, and as often
+as we please; there are still others, even in
+great quantities, which are at first kinds of vegetables,
+afterwards become species of animals,
+then return again to vegetables, and so
+on alternately. There is a great appearance,
+that the more we shall observe this race of organized
+beings, the more we shall discover
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span>
+varieties, always so much the more singular as
+they are the more remote from our sight, and
+from the varieties of other animals that have
+already become known to us.</p>
+
+<p>For example, spurred barley, which is produced
+by an alteration or decomposition of the
+organic substance of the grain, is composed of
+an infinity of little organized bodies, like to eels.
+By infusing the grain for ten or twelve hours in
+water, we find them to have a remarkable
+twirling, and a slight progressive motion; when
+almost dry, they cease to move, but by adding
+fresh water their motion returns. The same
+effects may be produced for months, or even
+years; insomuch that we can make these little
+machines act as often and as long as we please
+without destroying them, or their losing any
+of their power or activity. Their threads
+will sometimes open, like the filaments of semen,
+and produce moving globules; we may
+therefore suppose them to be of the same nature,
+only more fixed and solid.</p>
+
+<p>Eels, in paste made with flour, have no
+other origin than the union of the organic
+particles of the most essential parts of the
+grain: the first which appear are certainly
+not produced by many others; yet, although
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span>
+they have not been engendered, they engender
+others. By cutting them with the point of a
+lancet, we may perceive small eels come from
+their bodies in great numbers; the body of the
+animal appears to be only a sheath or bag
+which contains a multitude of other little
+animals, which perhaps are themselves only
+sheaths of the same kind, in which the organic
+matter assimilates, and takes the form
+of eels.</p>
+
+<p>There requires a great number of observations
+to be made to establish classes and races
+between such singular beings, which are at present
+so little known; there are some which
+may be regarded as real zoophytes, which vegetate,
+and at the same time appear to twirl
+and move like animals. There are some
+that at first appear to be animals, which afterwards
+join and form kinds of vegetables.
+A little attention to the decomposition of a
+grain of wheat infused in water will elucidate
+all I have asserted. I could add more
+examples, but I have related these only to
+point out the varieties there are in generation.
+There are certainly organized beings which
+we regard as animals, but which are not engendered
+by others of the same kind; there
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span>
+are some which are only a kind of machines,
+whose action is limited to a certain effect, and
+which can act but once in such a certain time,
+as those in the calmar; and there are others, as
+we have just remarked, which we can cause to
+act as long and as often as we please. There
+are vegetating beings which produce animated
+bodies, as the filaments of the human seed,
+from whence the active globules spring, and
+which move by their own powers. In the corruption,
+fermentation, or rather the decomposition
+of animal and vegetable substances, there
+are organized bodies which are real animals,
+and can propagate their like, although they
+have not been so produced. The limits of
+these varieties are perhaps still greater than
+we can imagine. We may extend our ideas,
+and exert every effort to reduce the effects of
+Nature to certain points, and class her productions
+to certain classes, yet an infinite number
+of links will always escape us.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p class="caption2"><a name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X.</a></p>
+
+<p class="caption2">OF THE FORMATION OF THE F&#338;TUS.</p>
+
+
+<p>It appears to be clearly ascertained by the
+experiments of Verheyen, who in one of
+them found the seed of a bull in the matrix of
+a cow; and by those of Ruysch, Fallopius,
+Leeuwenhoek, and many others, who perceived
+the male semen in the uterus of women, and
+numberless other animals, that the seminal liquor
+of the male enters by some means into the
+matrix of the female. It is probable, that in
+the time of copulation the orifice of the matrix
+opens to receive the seminal liquor, but if that
+is not the case, the active and prolific substance
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span>
+of this liquor, may penetrate the membranes
+of the matrix; for the seminal liquor
+being, as we have proved, almost all composed
+of organic molecules, which are in great
+motion, and extremely minute, they may pass
+across the coat of the closest membranes, and
+penetrate those of the matrix with the greatest
+facility.</p>
+
+<p>What proves that the active part of this liquor
+may not only pass through the pores of
+the matrix, but even penetrate its substance,
+is the sudden change that immediately takes
+place after conception. The menses are suppressed,
+the matrix becomes softer, swells, and
+appears inflamed. All these alterations can
+only happen by the action of an external cause;
+by the penetration of some part of the seminal
+liquor into the substance even of the matrix.
+This penetration not only operates on the external
+surface of the matrix, but on all the
+other parts of which this viscera is composed,
+like that penetration by which nutrition and
+expansion is produced.</p>
+
+<p>We shall be easily persuaded that it is so,
+when we consider that the matrix, during the
+time of gestation, not only augments in bulk
+but also in quantity of matter, and that it has
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span>
+a kind of life or vegetation, which is continually
+increasing till the time of delivery; for if
+the matrix was only a pouch, a destined receptacle
+to receive the seed and contain the f&#339;tus,
+it would extend and grow thin in proportion
+as the f&#339;tus increased in size; but in reality
+the matrix not only extends in proportion
+as the f&#339;tus grows larger, but receives at the
+same time a thickness and solidity. This
+augmentation is a real growth, like the expansion
+of the body in young animals, which can
+only be produced by the intimate penetration
+of the organic molecules analogous to the substance
+of the parts: and as this expansion of
+the matrix never happens but after impregnation,
+we cannot doubt its being produced by
+the liquor of the male, especially as the expansion
+takes place before the f&#339;tus has sufficient
+bulk to dilate it.</p>
+
+<p>It seems certain, by my experiments, that
+the female has a seminal liquor which commences
+to be formed in the testicles, and is
+completed in the glandular bodies: this liquor
+distills through the small holes, at the extremities
+of these bodies; and may, like that of
+the male, enter into the matrix in two different
+manners, either by these holes at the extremities,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span>
+or through the membraneous coat of the
+matrix.</p>
+
+<p>These seminal liquors are both extracts from
+all parts of the body, and in the mixture of
+them there is every thing necessary to form a
+certain number of males and females; and the
+more the animal abounds with this liquor, and
+the more that abounds with organic molecules,
+the greater is their number of young; as we
+have already remarked is the case with the
+small animals, and diminishes in the large.</p>
+
+<p>But to pursue our subject with greater attention,
+we shall first examine the particular
+formation of the human f&#339;tus, and afterwards
+return to the other animals. In the human species,
+as well as in large animals, the seminal
+liquors of the male and female do not contain
+a great abundance of organic molecules, and
+therefore seldom produce more than one at a
+time: the f&#339;tus is a male, if the number of
+the organic molecules of the male predominates
+in the mixture, and a female if the contrary;
+and it resembles the father or the mother
+as they happen to abound in the mixture
+of the two liquors.</p>
+
+<p>I conceive, therefore, that the seminal liquor
+of both are two matters equally active
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span>
+and necessary for generation; and this I think
+is sufficiently proved by my experiments, since
+I have seen the same moving bodies in the one
+as the other. I perceived that the liquor of the
+male enters into the matrix, where it meets
+with that of the female: that they have a perfect
+analogy, and are both not only composed
+of similar parts by their form, but also in their
+motions and actions; as we have remarked in
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/45602/45602-h/45602-h.htm#Page_311"><span class="smcap">Chap. VI.</span></a></p>
+
+<p>By the mixture of these two liquors I conceive
+the activity of the organic molecules of
+each is stopped, and that the actions of one
+counterbalance that of the other, insomuch that
+each particle ceasing to move, remains in the
+place most analogous to itself, and that they
+will naturally take the same position, and will
+dispose themselves in the same order they held
+in the animal body; those that came from the
+head will arrange themselves in the head of the
+f&#339;tus, those of the back the same, and so of
+every other part; consequently they will form
+a small organized being, in every thing like the
+animal from which they are extracted.</p>
+
+<p>It must be observed that this mixture of organic
+molecules of the two sexes contains similar
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span>
+and different particles; the similar ones
+are those which have been extracted from every
+part common to both sexes. The different
+particles are those which have been extracted
+from the parts whereby the sexes are distinguished;
+thus there is, in this mixture, double
+the number of organic molecules to form the
+head, or the heart, or such other parts common
+to both, whereas there are only what are requisite
+to form the parts of the sex. Now the similar
+particles may act upon each other without
+being disordered, and collect together as if
+they had been extracted from the same body;
+but the dissimilar parts cannot act on each other,
+nor unite together, because they have not any
+relation; hence these particles will preserve
+their nature without mixture, and will fix of
+themselves the first, without the need of being
+penetrated by the others. Thus the molecules
+proceeding from the sexual parts will be the
+first fixed, and all the rest which are common
+to both, will afterwards fix indiscriminately,
+whether they are those of the male or female,
+and form an organized being which, in its
+sexual parts, will perfectly resemble its father,
+if it is a male, and its mother if a female; but
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span>
+which may resemble one another, or both, in
+all the other parts of the body.</p>
+
+<p>It seems to me that if this was well understood,
+we shall in a great measure be enabled
+to answer the objections made to the sentiments
+pf Aristotle, and which might also be
+advanced against this system. The question
+is, Why each individual, male and female,
+does not produce of itself an animal of its own
+sex? It must be acknowledged this question
+seems to carry weight with it; but having reflected
+a long time on this subject I think I
+have found an answer, and which I shall endeavour
+to explain.</p>
+
+<p>It is certainly evident, from what we have
+said in the preceding chapters, and the experiments
+we have described, that reproduction is
+effected by the union of organic molecules returned
+from each part of the body of the animal,
+or vegetable, into one or many common reservoirs;
+and that they are the same molecules
+which serve for nutriment and expansion of the
+body. This appears to me to have been so
+clearly proved, that I apprehend no scruple can
+remain as to the foundation of the theory; but
+I admit there may be some reason to ask, Why
+each animal and vegetable does not produce its
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span>
+own likeness, since each individual returns
+from every part of its body, and collects in a
+common reservoir, all the organic molecules
+necessary for the formation of a small organized
+being? Why then is not this organized
+being formed? and why, in almost every animal,
+is a mixture of the liquors of the two sexes
+required to produce an animal? If I content
+myself with answering, that in almost all vegetables,
+and all kinds of animals which multiply
+by cutting, that it appears the design of
+Nature that each individual should increase its
+own species, and that we must regard as an exception
+to this rule, the use which is made of
+the sexes in other kind of animals; it may be
+said, that the exception is more universal than
+the rule itself. This difficulty will be very little
+weakened, if we were to say, that each individual
+perhaps would produce its like, if it had
+proper organs, and contained the necessary
+matter towards the nutriment of the embryo;
+because females have both this matter, and organs,
+and yet do not produce either male or
+female f&#339;tus without the intervention of the
+male; which intervention of sexes in all animals
+is essential and absolutely necessary.</p>
+
+<p>Although the testicles and seminal vesicles of
+a man, contain all the necessary molecules to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span>
+form a male, yet the local establishment and
+arrangement of these molecules cannot be made,
+because the effect of an union is prevented by
+the continual circulation of the seed both by
+absorption, and the action of the new organic
+molecules which constantly come into this reservoir
+from all parts of the body. The same
+circumstances taking place with the organic
+molecules of the female, is an evident reason
+why neither can produce of themselves, because
+when the seminal liquors of the male and female
+are mixed, they have more analogy to each
+other, than with the parts of the body of the
+female where the mixture is performed. By
+admitting of this explication, it may be asked,
+Why the common mode of generation in animals
+does not agree with it; for, upon that
+supposition, each individual would produce
+like snails, and impregnate each other, and each
+individual receiving the organic molecules the
+other furnished, the union would be made of
+itself, and by the sole power of the affinity of
+these molecules among themselves? I own, if
+it was by this cause alone the organic molecules
+could unite it would be natural to conclude,
+that the shortest mode to perform the reproduction
+of animals, would be to give to one
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span>
+individual both sexes. But it is quite contrary
+to the general rule pursued by Nature, as this
+manner of generation is confined to snails, and
+a small number of other animals. This answer
+cannot be said to fully satisfy the question, as
+it merely supposes the male does not produce,
+as it cannot receive any thing from the female,
+and that having besides no proper viscera to
+contain and nourish the f&#339;tus.</p>
+
+<p>We may also suppose that the activity of
+the organic molecules, in the semen of one individual,
+has need of being counterbalanced by
+the activity or force of those of another individual,
+in order to fix and bring them into a kind
+of equilibrium, a state of rest highly necessary
+to the formation of the animal; and that this
+activity in the organic molecules can only be
+counterbalanced by there being a contrary action
+in those which come from the male, and
+those proceeding from the female; so that, in
+this sense, all living or vegetating beings
+must have two sexes, conjointly and separately,
+to produce their resemblances. But this
+answer is too general to be entirely clear; nevertheless,
+if we pay attention to all the phenomena,
+we shall find some explanation resulting
+therefrom. The mixture of those two liquors
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span>
+produces not only a male or female f&#339;tus, but
+also other organized bodies, which have a kind
+of growth or expansion. The placenta, membranes,
+&amp;c. are produced at the same time as
+the f&#339;tus. There are, therefore, in the seminal
+liquor of the male or female, or in the mixture
+of both, not only organic molecules necessary
+for the production of the f&#339;tus, but also those
+which form the placenta and membranes. We
+know not from whence these molecules come,
+since there is no part of the body, either of the
+male or female, from which they could be sent
+back. From hence it seems it must be admitted,
+that the molecules of the seminal liquors of
+each, being alike active, form organized bodies
+every time they can fix, by acting mutually one
+on the other: that the particles employed to
+form a male, will be those of the masculine sex,
+which will fix the first, and form the sexual
+parts; and that those common to both sexes
+will then fix indifferently to form the rest of
+the body, and that the placenta and membranes
+are then formed from the superabundant particles,
+which have not been used to form the
+f&#339;tus; if, as we suppose, the f&#339;tus is a male,
+then there remains to form the placenta, and
+membranes, all the organic particles peculiar
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span>
+to the feminine sex which have not been employed;
+and also all those of both which
+shall not have entered the composition of the
+f&#339;tus, and which cannot be less than one half.
+So likewise, if the f&#339;tus is a female, the same
+abundance will be left for the formation of the
+placenta, and membranes, and the whole effects
+be the same, excepting it will have the
+superfluity of the male, instead of that of the
+female.</p>
+
+<p>But, it may be said, that in that case the
+placenta and membranes ought to become
+another f&#339;tus, which would be a female, if the
+first was a male; and a male if the first was a
+female; for the first having consumed the organic
+molecules of the sexual parts of only one
+individual, and half those common to both,
+there remains all the molecules of the sexual
+parts of the other individual, and the other half
+of those common to both. To this I answer,
+that the first union of the organic molecules
+prevents a second, at least, under a similar
+form; that the f&#339;tus, being the first formed,
+exercises an external power, which disorders the
+arrangement of the other organic molecules,
+prevents the formation of a second f&#339;tus, and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span>
+throws them into a state from which the form
+of the placenta and membranes result.</p>
+
+<p>We are assured by the experiments and observations
+we have made, that every living
+being contains a great quantity of living and
+active molecules. The life of the animal or vegetable
+appears to be only the result of all the
+young lives (if that expression is permitted
+me) of each of these active molecules, whose life
+is primitive, and appears impossible to be destroyed.
+We have found these living molecules
+in every living or vegetating being, and
+are assured, that they are alike necessary for
+nutrition, and consequently, for the reproduction
+of animals or vegetables. It is not, then,
+difficult to conceive, that a certain number of
+those molecules united should compose a living
+being. Each of these particles possessing animation,
+an assemblage of them must be endowed
+with life, and thus these living organic
+molecules, being common to all living beings,
+they necessarily form any particular animal or
+vegetable, according as they are arranged.
+Now, this arrangement absolutely depends
+on the form of the individuals which furnish
+those molecules. If they are furnished by an
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span>
+animal, they will arrange under the form of
+an individual like to it, exactly as they were
+arranged when they served for the expansion
+of the animal itself; but must we not then
+suppose that this arrangement cannot be made
+either in animals or vegetables, but by the
+means of a kind of base, round which the
+molecules might unite to form the f&#339;tus?
+Now, it is plain, this basis is furnished by particles
+peculiar to the different sexes, as I shall
+explain.</p>
+
+<p>While the molecules of either sex remain
+by themselves, their action produces no effect,
+because they are without any opposition from
+any different kind of particles; but, when these
+molecules are mixed, then there are dissimilar
+parts, and those serve for the base and point
+of rest to the other molecules, and fix their
+activity.</p>
+
+<p>In this supposition that the organic molecules,
+which, in the mixture of the seminal
+liquors of the two individuals, represent the
+sexual parts of the male, can alone serve for a
+base to the organic molecules proceeding from
+every part of the female, and those peculiar
+to the female sex as a base to them which are
+extracted from the male, we might conclude,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span>
+that the sexual part of the male infant is formed
+of the organic molecules of the father, and
+from those of the mother, for the rest of the
+body: and that, on the contrary, the female
+partakes of its mother only in sex, and takes
+the rest of its body from its father. Boys,
+therefore, ought, excepting the parts of the
+sex, to have a greater resemblance to their
+mother than to their father, and girls more
+to the father than to the mother; but this
+consequence is not, perhaps, conformable to
+experience.</p>
+
+<p>By considering, under this point of view,
+generation by sexes, we should conclude it to
+be the most general mode of reproduction, as
+it is in fact. Beings, whose organization is
+the most complete, as animals, whose bodies
+compose a whole, which can neither be separated
+nor divided, and whose powers are con-centered
+to one single point, can only reproduce
+by this mode; because they contain only
+particles which resemble each other, and whose
+union can only be made by different particles,
+furnished by another individual. Those
+where organization is less perfect, as that of
+vegetables, whose bodies may be divided and
+separated without being destroyed, can be reproduced
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span>
+by other modes. First, because they
+contain dissimilar particles; secondly, because
+their forms not being so determinate and fixed
+as that of animals, the particles may supply
+the functions of each other, and change according
+to circumstances; as we see roots become
+branches, and shoot out leaves when
+exposed to the air, which causes that the vegetable
+particles obtain a local establishment,
+become fixed, and are enabled to multiply, by
+various modes.</p>
+
+<p>It will be the same with animals, whose organization
+is less perfect, as the fresh water polypus,
+and others, which can reproduce by division
+of their parts. These organized beings
+are not so much a single animal, as a number
+united under one common covering, as trees
+are composed of a multiplicity of young trees,
+(see Chap, <span class="smcap">II.</span>) Pucerons, which engender
+singly, also contain dissimilar particles, since,
+after producing their young they change into
+flies which do not produce at all. Snails communicate
+mutually these dissimilar particles,
+and afterwards they both produce. Thus, in
+all known matters of generation, we see that
+the requisite union of organic particles, can
+only be made by the mixture of different particles,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span>
+which serve as a basis capable of fixing
+their motions.</p>
+
+<p>If to the idea of the word <i>sex</i>, we give all the
+extent here supposed, we shall say, that sexes
+are found throughout all nature; for then sex
+will mean only the parts which furnish the
+organic particles, different from the common
+particles, and which must serve as a fixed point
+for their union. But, enough of reasoning on
+a question that can be at once resolved, by saying,
+that God having created sexes, it necessarily
+follows that animals should reproduce by
+their connection. In fact, we are not made,
+as I have formerly said, to give a reason for
+every <i>why</i>. We are not in a state of explaining
+<i>why</i> Nature, almost throughout her works,
+makes use of sexes for the reproduction of
+animals, or why sexes exist; we ought, therefore,
+to content ourselves with reasoning on
+what is, on things as they are, since we cannot
+go beyond, by forming suppositions which
+will remove us from the sphere we ought to
+contain ourselves in, and to which the small
+extent of our knowledge is limited.</p>
+
+<p>Quitting, therefore, all doubtful conjectures,
+I shall rest on facts and observations. I find,
+that the reproduction of beings is formed in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span>
+many different manners; but, at the same
+time, I clearly perceive, that it is by the union
+of the organic particles sent back from every
+part of the individual, that the reproduction
+of vegetables and animals are effected. I am
+certain of the existence of these organic and
+active molecules in the seminal liquors of male
+and female animals and seed of vegetables;
+and cannot doubt but every species of reproduction
+is accomplished by the union of these
+organic molecules. Nor can I doubt, that in
+the generation of animals, and particularly in
+that of man, that the male and female particles
+mix in the formation of the f&#339;tus, since we see
+infants which resemble both father and mother;
+and what confirms this conclusion is, that
+those parts, common to both sexes, mix promiscuously;
+whereas those never mix which
+represent the sexual parts. For we every day
+see children with eyes like the father, and the
+forehead and mouth like the mother; but we
+never find a like mixture of the sexual parts;
+it never happens that they have the testicles
+of the father, and the vagina of the mother,
+for even the fact of hermaphrodites is very
+doubtful.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>In the parts of generation of the two sexes
+in the human species, there is so much resemblance,
+and so singular a conformity, that we
+might be inclined to think those which appear
+so different externally, are at bottom the same
+organs, only more or less developed; this was
+the opinion of the ancients, and M. Daubenton's
+ideas on this subject appear to me very
+ingenious.</p>
+
+<p>The formation of the f&#339;tus is, then, made
+by the union of the organic particles contained
+in the mixture of the seminal liquor of both
+sexes; this union produces the local establishment
+of the particles, which determines them
+to arrange themselves as they were in the individuals
+which furnished them; insomuch, that
+the molecules, which proceed from the head,
+cannot, by virtue of these laws, place themselves
+in the legs, or any other part of the
+f&#339;tus. All these molecules must be in motion
+when they unite, and in a motion which must
+cause them to tend to a kind of centre, about
+which the union is made. This centre, or
+fixed point, which is necessary to the union
+of the molecules, and which, by its re-action
+and inertia, fixes the activity, and destroys
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span>
+the motion, is, probably, the first assemblage
+of the molecules which proceed from the sexual
+parts of the other individual; they must arrange
+under the form of an organized body
+which will not be another f&#339;tus, for the reasons
+we have before given.<a name="FNanchor_29" id="FNanchor_29"></a><a href="#Footnote_29" class="fnanchor">[AC]</a></p>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_29" id="Footnote_29"></a><a href="#FNanchor_29"><span class="label">[AC]</span></a> In this, as in some other places, our author has gone
+into a diffuse repetition which we have considered unnecessary
+and therefore avoid.</p></div>
+
+<p>On the whole, I conceive there are organic
+particles of the sexual parts, which serve as a
+fixed point, or a centre of union, around which
+all the other parts that form the embryo collect.
+I speak of it only as probable; but as they are
+the only particles which differ, I have thought
+it more natural to imagine, that it is around
+these different particles the union is formed
+than those which are common to both sexes.</p>
+
+<p>We have before observed, that those who
+have imagined the heart was the first formed,
+are deceived: those who say it is the blood, are
+no less so. All is formed at the same time. If
+we only consult observation, the chicken is seen
+in the egg before it has been sat upon; we perceive
+the spine of the back and the head, and,
+at the same time, the appendages which form
+the placenta. I have opened a great number of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span>
+eggs, before and after incubation; and I am
+convinced, by my sight, that the chicken exists
+entirely in the middle of the cicatrice, the moment
+it comes from the body of the hen. The
+heat, communicated to it by incubation, only
+expands the parts by setting the liquors in motion;
+but it is not possible to determine which
+parts of the f&#339;tus are fixed in the instant of
+formation.</p>
+
+<p>I have always said, that the organic molecules
+were fixed, and that their uniting was
+caused only by their loss of motion. This appears
+to me certain: for, if we separately examine
+the seminal liquor of the male and female,
+we shall see an infinity of small bodies in great
+motion, but being mixed, their motion is instantly
+suspended, and heat is necessary to renew
+their activity; for the chicken which exists
+in the centre of the cicatrice is without any
+motion before incubation; and even twenty-four
+hours after, when it begins to become perceptible
+with a microscope, there is not the least
+appearance of motion then, nor even the day
+following. During the first day it is only a
+small white mucilaginous mass, which is of a
+consistence on the second, and insensibly increases,
+but whose motion is very slow, and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span>
+does not at all resemble that of the organic particles
+which move rapidly in the seminal liquor.
+Besides, I have reason to say, that this motion
+of the organic molecules is absolutely destroyed;
+for if we keep an egg without exposing it
+to a degree of heat necessary to expand the
+chicken, the embryo, although formed entirely,
+will remain without any motion; and the organic
+molecules of which it is composed, will
+remain fixed without being able to give motion
+and life to the embryo which has been formed
+by their union. Thus, after the motion of the
+organic molecules has been destroyed, after the
+union of these molecules, necessary to form an
+animal body, there is still an external agent
+required to animate and give it life and motion;
+and this agent is heat, which, by rarefying the
+liquors, obliges them to circulate and put also
+every organ in action, which afterwards do no
+more than develope and grow, provided that
+this external heat continues to assist them in
+their functions.</p>
+
+<p>Before the action of this external heat, not
+the least appearance of blood is to be seen; and
+it is not till twenty-four hours after, that I have
+perceived any change in the colour of the vessels.
+The blood first appears in the placenta,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span>
+which communicates with the body of the chicken:
+but this blood seems to lose its colour as it approaches
+the body of the animal; for the chicken
+is entirely white, and we with difficulty discover
+in the first, second, and third days after incubation,
+a few small sanguinary points which
+are close to the body of the animal, but which
+seem not to make part of it, although it is these
+sanguinary points which afterwards form the
+heart. Thus, the formation of the blood is a
+change occasioned in the liquors by the motion
+heat communicates to them, and this
+blood is formed even out of the body of the
+animal, the whole substance of which is then
+only a kind of mucilage, or thick jelly.</p>
+
+<p>The f&#339;tus, as well as the placenta, derives
+the necessary nutriment for expansion, by a
+kind of absorption, and they assimilate the organic
+parts of the liquor in which they float:
+for the placenta cannot be said to nourish the
+animal, no more than the animal nourishes the
+placenta; since, if the one nourished the other,
+the first would soon appear to diminish, while
+the other increased, whereas both increase together,
+I have indeed observed in eggs, that
+the placenta at first increases much more in
+proportion than the f&#339;tus, and therefore it may
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span>
+nourish the animal, or rather convey the nutriment
+to it, by intussusception.</p>
+
+<p>What we have just said concerning the
+chicken, is easily applied to the human f&#339;tus,
+which is formed by the union of the organic
+molecules of the two sexes. The membranes,
+and placenta, are formed from the superabundance
+of the particles which have entered into
+the composition of the embryo: which is then
+inclosed in a double membrane, where there is
+also a quantity of liquor, which is, perhaps, at
+first, but a portion of the semen of the father
+and the mother; and as the f&#339;tus does not quit
+the matrix, it enjoys, from the instant even of
+its formation, an external heat necessary for its
+expansion; this heat communicates a motion
+to liquors, and sets the organs in play, and
+blood is formed in the placenta, and in the
+body of the embryo, by the motion occasioned
+by this heat. It may be even said, that the
+formation of the blood of the infant is as independent
+of the mother, as that which passes
+into the egg, is of the hen which hatches it,
+or of the oven which heats it.</p>
+
+<p>It is certain, that the f&#339;tus, placenta, and
+membranes, grow by intussusception: for, in
+the earliest days of conception, the pouch, which
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span>
+contains the whole product of generation, is
+not adherent to the matrix. De Graaf, in his
+experiments on doe rabbits, made these globules,
+wherein the whole business of generation
+lies, move about in the matrix. Thus, in the
+first stages, they increase and grow by drawing
+nutriment from the liquors which bathe the
+matrix, to which they are afterwards attached
+by a mucilage, in which small vessels are formed
+with time, as we shall hereafter explain.</p>
+
+<p>But, not to quit the subject, let us return to
+the immediate formation of the f&#339;tus, on which
+there are many remarks to be made, both as to
+its situation, and the different circumstances
+which may prevent or stop its formation.</p>
+
+<p>In the human species, the seed of the male
+enters into the matrix, the cavity of which is
+considerable; and when it meets with a sufficient
+quantity of female semen, a mixture of the
+organic particles succeed, and the formation of
+the f&#339;tus ensues: the whole, perhaps, is done
+instantaneously, especially if the liquors are
+both in an active and flourishing state. The
+place where the f&#339;tus is formed, is the cavity
+of the matrix, because the seed of the male can
+enter there more easily than into the trunks;
+and as this viscera has but one small orifice,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span>
+which is always shut, excepting when the ardour
+of love causes it to open, the materials of
+generation remain there with safety, and scarcely
+ever reissue but by rare and unfrequent circumstances:
+but as the liquor of the male
+sprinkles the vagina, before it penetrates the
+matrix, by the activity of the organic molecules
+which compose it, it may go farther into the
+trunks, and, perhaps, into the ovarium. As
+the liquor of the female has already its perfection
+in the glandular bodies of the testicles,
+from which it flows and moistens the trunks
+and other parts before it descends into the matrix,
+and as it may issue out of the vacuities left
+around the neck of the matrix, it is not impossible,
+that the mixture of the two liquors may
+be made in all these different places. It is,
+therefore, probable that f&#339;tuses are often formed
+in the vagina, but which fall out as soon as
+they are formed, because there is nothing to
+retain them. It may also sometimes happen,
+that f&#339;tuses are formed in the trunks; but this
+case is very rare, and cannot happen but when
+the seminal liquor of the male enters the matrix
+in great plenty.</p>
+
+<p>The collection of anatomical observations
+makes mention of f&#339;tuses not only being found
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span>
+in the trunks, but also in the testicles. In the
+History of the Old Academy of Sciences, (vol.
+II. page 91.) we meet with an observation on
+this subject. M. Theroude, a surgeon at Paris,
+shewed the academy an unformed mass, which
+he found in the right testicle of a girl of eighteen
+years of age. In it were two open slits, furnished
+with hair like two eye-lids, above which
+was a kind of forehead, with a black line instead
+of eyebrows; immediately over that were
+many hairs matted together in two separate
+lines, one of which was seven, and the other
+three inches long; under the great angle of the
+eye, two of the grinding teeth appeared to shoot,
+hard, thick, and white; they had their prongs,
+and a third tooth thicker than the rest above
+them. There appeared likewise other teeth at
+different distances from each other: two between
+these, of the canine nature, issued from
+an opening where the ear is placed. In the same
+volume, page 144, it is related, that M. Mery
+found, in the testicle of a woman who had conceived,
+a bone of the upper jaw, with many
+teeth therein, so perfect that some appeared to
+be of more than ten years growth. We find, in
+the <i>Journal de Medicine</i>, for January 1683,
+published by the Abbé de la Roque, the history
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span>
+of a lady who died with the ninth child,
+which was formed in or near one of the testicles,
+which is not very clearly explained. The f&#339;tus
+was about an inch in size, completely formed,
+and the sex easily to be distinguished. We also
+find, in the Philosophical Transactions, some
+observations on the testicles of women, wherein
+teeth, hair, and bones, have been found. If all
+these circumstances are true, we must suppose,
+that the seminal liquor of the male sometimes
+ascends, although very seldom, to the testicles
+of the female. Yet, notwithstanding all this, I
+have some difficulty to believe it; first, because
+the circumstances, which appear to prove it,
+are extremely rare: secondly, because a perfect
+f&#339;tus has never been seen in the testicles but
+by M. Littre, who seems to relate it in a very
+suspicious manner: thirdly, because it is not
+impossible, that the seminal liquor of the female
+alone may produce organized masses, as moles,
+hair, bones, flesh, and, in short, because if we
+give credit to anatomists, f&#339;tuses may be
+formed in the testicles of men, as well as in
+those of women: for we find, in the History of
+the Royal Academy, vol. <span class="smcap">II.</span> p. 298, an observation
+of a surgeon, who says, he discovered
+in the scrotum of a man, the figure of a child
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span>
+inclosed in his membranes: and that the head,
+feet, eyes, bones, and cartilages, were distinguishable.
+If all these observations were equally
+true, we must necessarily adopt one of these
+two hypotheses, either that the seminal liquor,
+of each sex, cannot produce any thing without
+being mixed with that of the other sex, or that
+either of them can produce irregular masses of
+itself. By keeping to the first, we should be
+obliged to admit, to explain in all the circumstances
+we have related, that the liquor of the
+male sometimes ascends to the testicle, and, by
+mixing with the seminal liquor of the female,
+forms organized bodies; and so may also the
+female fluid, by being plentiful in the vagina,
+penetrate, during the time of copulation, into
+the scrotum of the male, nearly as the venereal
+virus often reaches that part; and that in this
+case, an organized body may be found in the
+scrotum, by the mixture of the male and female
+fluids; or, if we admit the other hypothesis,
+which appears to be the most probable,
+and suppose, that the seminal liquor of each
+individual may produce organized masses,
+then we may be able to say, that all these bony,
+fleshy, and hairy productions, sometimes
+found in the testicles of females, and in the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span>
+scrotum of males, may derive their origin from
+the liquor of the individual in which they are
+found. But enough of observations upon facts,
+which appear to be as uncertain as inexplicable,
+for I am much inclined to believe, that, in
+certain circumstances, the seminal liquor of
+each individual may produce something alone
+and of itself, and that young girls might form
+moles without any communication with the
+male, as hens form eggs without having received
+the cock. I might support this opinion
+with observations which appear to me as credible
+as those I have quoted. M. de la Saone,
+physician and anatomist of the Academy of
+Sciences, published a memoir on this subject,
+in which he asserts, that religious nuns, though
+strictly cloistered, had formed moles. Why
+should that be impossible, since hens form
+eggs without communication with the cock?
+and in the cicatrice of these eggs we perceive a
+mole, with appendages, instead of a chicken?
+The analogy appears to me to have sufficient
+power for us, at least to doubt, or suspend our
+determination. Be this as it will, it is certain
+that the mixture of the two liquors are required
+to form a f&#339;tus , and that this mixture
+cannot come to any effect but when it is in the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span>
+matrix, where the anatomists have sometimes
+found f&#339;tuses; and it is natural to imagine,
+that those which have been found out of the
+matrix, and in the cavity of the abdomen,
+have escaped by the extremity of the trunks,
+or by some accidental opening, and that they
+never fall from the testicles into the abdomen,
+because it is almost an impossibility that the
+seminal liquor of the male can ascend so high.
+Leeuwenhoek has computed the motion of
+these pretended spermatic animals to be four
+or five inches in forty minutes, which would
+be more than sufficient for the animalcules
+to traverse from the vagina into the matrix,
+from the matrix into the trunks, and from
+the trunks into the testicles, in an hour or
+two, provided all the liquor had that motion.
+But how is this to be conceived, that the organic
+molecules, whose motion ceases as soon
+as the liquid fails, can arrive as far as the testicles,
+unless brought there by the liquor in
+which they swim? This progressive motion
+cannot be given by the organic molecules to
+the liquor which it contains, therefore, whatever
+activity these molecules may be supposed
+to have, we cannot see how they can arrive at
+the testicles, and form a f&#339;tus there, unless the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span>
+liquor itself was pumped up and attracted thither,
+a supposition not only gratuitous but
+even against all human probability.</p>
+
+<p>The doubts which this supposition gives rise
+to, confirm the opinion that the male fluid penetrates
+the matrix, and enters therein by the
+orifice, or across the membraneous coat of the
+viscera. The female fluid may also enter
+into the matrix, either by the opening at the
+upper extremity of the trunks, or across the
+skin even of the trunks and matrix. M. de
+Weirbrech, an able anatomist of Petersburg,
+confirms this opinion:&mdash;&mdash;"Res omni attentione
+dignissima (says he) oblata mihi est in
+utero feminę alicujus a me dissectę; erat
+uterus ea magnitudine qua esse solet in virginibus,
+tubęque ambę apertę quidem ad ingressum
+uteri, ita ut ex hoc in illas cum specillo
+facile possem transire ac flatum injicere,
+sed in turbarum extremo nulla dabatur apertura,
+nullus aditus; fimbriarum enim ne vestigium
+quidem aderat, sed loco illarum bulbus
+aliquis pyriformis materia subalbida fluida
+turgens, in cujus medio fibra plana nervea,
+cicatriculę ęmula, apparebat, quę sub ligamentuli
+specie usque ad ovarii involucra
+protendebatur.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Dices, eadem a Regnero de Graaf jam
+olim notata. Equidem non negaverim illustrem
+hunc prosectorem in libro suo de organis mulieribus
+non modo similem tubam delineasse,
+Tabula <span class="smcap">XIX</span>, fig. 3, sed &amp; monuisse, 'tubas
+quamvis secundum ordinariam naturę dispositionem
+in extremitate sua notabilem semper
+coarctationem habeant, pręter naturam tamen
+aliquando claudi;' verum enimvero cum non
+meminerit auctor an id in utraque tuba ita
+deprehenderit; an in virgine; an status iste
+pręternaturalis sterilitatem inducat: an vero
+conceptio nihilominus fieri possit; an a principio
+vitę talis structura suam originem ducat;
+sive an tractu tempora ita degenerare tubę
+possint; facile perspicimus multa nobis relicta
+esse problemata quę, utcumque soluta, multum
+negotii facessant in exemplo nostro. Erat
+enim hęc femina maritata, viginti quatuor
+annos nata, quę filium pepererat quem vidi
+ipse, octo jam annos natum. Dic igitur tubas
+ab incunabulis clausas sterilitatem inducere:
+quare hęc nostra femina peperit? Dic concepisse
+tubis clausis; quomodo ovulum ingredi
+tubam potuit? Dic coaluisse tubas post partum:
+quomodo id nosti? Quomodo adeo
+evanescere in utroque latere fimbrię possunt,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span>
+tanquam nunquam adfuissent? Si quidem ex
+ovario ad tubas alia daretur via, pręter illarum
+orificium, unico gressu omnes superarentur
+difficultates; sed fictiones intellectum quidem
+adjuvant, rei veritatem non demonstrant; pręstat
+igitur ignorationem fateri, quam speculationibus
+indulgere<a name="FNanchor_30" id="FNanchor_30"></a><a href="#Footnote_30" class="fnanchor">[AD]</a>." The difficulties which
+occurred to this able author are insurmountable
+in the egg system, but which disappear in our
+explanation. This observation seems only to
+prove what we have observed, that the seminal
+liquor of both male and female may penetrate
+the coat of the matrix, and enter across the
+pores of the membranes; to be assured of it,
+it is only necessary to pay attention to the alteration
+that the seminal liquor of the male
+causes to the viscera, and to the kind of vegetation
+or expansion that it causes there. Besides,
+the liquor which issues by the vacuities
+of De Graaf, being of the same nature as the
+liquor of the glandular bodies, it is very evident
+that this liquor comes from the testicles,
+and yet there is no vessel through which it can
+pass; consequently we must conclude, that it
+penetrates the spongy coat of all these parts,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span>
+and that it not only enters the matrix, but
+even can issue out when these parts are in
+irritation.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_30" id="Footnote_30"></a><a href="#FNanchor_30"><span class="label">[AD]</span></a> Vide Comment. Acad. Petropol, vol IV. page 261
+and 262.</p></div>
+
+<p>But even should we refuse this idea of penetration,
+we cannot deny that the liquor of the
+female, which flows from the glandular bodies
+of the testicles, may enter by the opening at the
+extremity of the trunk, as that of the male does
+by the orifice of the viscera; and that consequently
+these two liquors may mix of themselves
+in this cavity, and form there the f&#339;tus in the
+manner we have explained.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+<p class="caption2"><a name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI.</a></p>
+
+<p class="caption2">OF THE EXPANSION, GROWTH, AND DELIVERY OF
+THE F&#338;TUS, &amp;C.</p>
+
+
+<p>In the expansion of the f&#339;tus, two different
+degrees of growth make different kinds of
+expansion. The first, which succeeds immediately
+after the formation of the f&#339;tus, is
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span>
+not proportionable in all the parts of which it
+is composed. The more distant it is from the
+formation, the more in proportion are its parts,
+and it is only after it has quitted the womb of
+its mother that the growth of the parts is
+made in nearly an equal manner. It must
+not be imagined that the figure of the f&#339;tus,
+at the moment of formation, is absolutely like
+that of an adult. It is certain that the embryo
+contains every part which, must compose a
+man, but they differ in their successive expansion.</p>
+
+<p>In an organized body, as that of an animal,
+we may suppose some parts are more essential
+than others, and though some may be useless
+or superfluous, there are some on which the
+rest seem to depend for their expansion and
+disposition. We must consider some as fundamental
+parts, without which the animal cannot
+exist, and which are more accessory and external,
+and appear to derive their origin from
+the first, and which seem to be formed as
+much for the ornament, symmetry, and external
+perfection of the animal, as for the necessity
+of its existence, and the exercise of the
+essential functions of life. These two kinds
+of different parts expand successively, and are
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span>
+almost equally apparent when the f&#339;tus quits
+the womb; but there are others which Nature
+seems to keep in reserve, as the teeth, which
+do not appear for some time, and also the
+glandular bodies in the testicles of females, the
+beards of males, &amp;c. which do not shew themselves
+till the age of puberty.</p>
+
+<p>In order to discover the fundamental and
+essential parts of an animal body, we must pay
+attention to the number, situation, and nature
+of the whole; those which are simple, those
+whose position is invariable, and those without
+which the animal cannot exist, will be the
+essential parts; those, on the contrary, which
+are double, or in a greater number, those whose
+size and position vary, and those which may be
+retrenched from the animal without destroying
+or even doing it an injury, may be looked
+upon as less necessary, and more accessory, to
+the animal machine. Aristotle has said that
+the only parts essential to animals were those
+with which they take their nutriment, and
+throw out the superfluous parts of it from the
+body. From the mouth to the arms are simple
+parts, which no other can supply. The head
+and spine of the back are also simple parts,
+whose position is invariable. The spine of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span>
+back serves for a foundation to the fabric of
+the body; and it is from the marrow which it
+contains that the motion and action of most
+of the members and organs proceed; it is also
+this part which appears one of the first in the
+embryo. Now these simple parts which appear
+the first are all essential to the existence and
+form of the animal. There are many more
+double than simple parts in the body of an animal,
+and seem to be produced on each side of
+the simple parts by a kind of vegetation; for
+these double parts are similar in form, and different
+in position. The left hand exactly resembles
+the right, because it is composed of the
+same number of parts; nevertheless, if it was
+placed in the situation of the right, we could
+not make use of it for the same purposes, and
+should have reason to regard it as a very different
+member. It is the same with respect to
+the other double parts; they are similar as to
+form, and different as to the position which is
+connected to the body of the animal; and by
+supposing a line to divide the body into two
+equal parts, the position of all the similar parts
+would refer to this line as a centre.</p>
+
+<p>The spinal marrow, and the vertebrę which
+contains it, appear to be the real axis, to which
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span>
+we must refer all the double parts of the animal,
+for they seem to derive their origin, and
+to be only symmetrical branches issuing from
+this trunk or common base, for we see the ribs
+shoot out on each side of the vertebrę in the
+young chicken as the young branches shoot
+out from the principal branch of a tree. In
+all embryos the middle of the head and vertebrę
+appear to be the first formed; afterwards
+we see on the two sides of a vesicle which
+forms the middle of the head two other vesicles
+which appear to proceed from the first. These
+two vesicles contain the eyes and the other
+double parts of the head; so likewise we perceive
+little tubercles shoot out in equal numbers
+from each side of the vertebrę, which extend
+by degrees and form the ribs, and other
+double parts of the trunk. On the side of this
+trunk already formed, as the conclusion, the
+legs and arms appear. This first expansion is
+very different from that which is made afterwards;
+it is the production of parts which appear
+for the first time; that which succeeds is
+only a growth of all the parts already created.</p>
+
+<p>This symmetrical order of all the double
+parts found in every animal, the regularity of
+their position, the equality of their extension
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span>
+and growth, and the perfect resemblance between
+them, seem to indicate that they derive
+their origin from the simple parts; that there
+must reside in these simple parts a power which
+acts equally on each side, or, which answers
+the same meaning, they are the fixed points
+against which the power that produces the expansion
+of the double parts is exercised. That
+the power which acts on the right is equalled
+by that of the left side, and consequently they
+are counterbalanced by this re-action.</p>
+
+<p>From hence we may infer, that if there is
+any defect or excess in the matter which is to
+serve for the formation of the double parts, as
+the powers which impel them on each side are
+equal, the defect or excess must be formed
+the same both on the right and left; for example,
+if, from a defect of matter, a man has
+but two fingers instead of five on the right
+hand, he will have but two on the left hand; or
+if, by an excess of matter, he has six fingers
+on one hand, he will have six on the other; or
+if the matter be vitiated, and causes an alteration
+in the right part, it will be the same on
+the left. This fact is very often seen. Most
+monsters are made with symmetry; the disarrangement
+of the parts of monsters appears
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span>
+to be made with order: Nature, therefore, even
+in her errors, mistakes as little as possible.</p>
+
+<p>This harmony of position in the double parts
+of animals is found also in vegetables; branches
+shoot out from buds on every side; the veins
+in the leaves are equally disposed as to the principal
+vein; and although symmetrical order
+appears to be less exact in vegetables than in
+animals, it is only because it is more varied,
+and its limits are more extended, and less precise;
+but we may nevertheless easily discover
+this order, and distinguish the simple and essential
+parts from those which are double, and
+the latter we must regard as having taken their
+origin from the former. We shall more fully
+discuss this point, as far as relates to vegetables,
+when we come to treat of them.</p>
+
+<p>It is not possible to determine under What
+form the double parts exist before expansion,
+nor in what manner they are folded, nor what
+figure results from their position by connection
+with the simple parts. The body of the
+animal, in the instant of formation, certainly
+contains every part which is to compose it;
+but the relative position of these parts must be
+very different then from what it becomes afterwards.
+It is the same with vegetables, for if
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span>
+we observe the expansion of a young leaf, we
+shall perceive that it is folded on both sides the
+principal vein, and that its figure does not resemble
+at that time what it afterwards assumes.</p>
+
+<p>When we amuse ourselves by folding paper
+to form crowns, boats, &amp;c. the different folds
+of the paper seem to have no resemblance to the
+form which must result by the unfolding; we
+only see that these folds are always made in an
+uniform order, and exactly the same on one side
+as that we have made on t he other; but it
+would be a problem beyond known geometry,
+to determine the figures which may result from
+all the unfoldings of a certain given number of
+folds. All what immediately relates to the
+position, is beyond our mathematical sciences.
+This art, which Leibnitz calls <i>Analysis Situs</i>,
+is not yet found out; though the art, which
+would shew us the connections that result from
+the position of things, would perhaps be more
+useful than that which has only bulk for its
+object, for we have often more need to know
+the form than the matter.</p>
+
+<p>In the unfolding of Nature's productions,
+not only the folded parts take new positions,
+but they acquire, at the same time, extent and
+solidity. Since we cannot therefore determine
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span>
+the result of the simple unfolding of a
+folded form, in which, as in a piece of folded
+paper, there is but one change of position between
+the parts, without any augmentation or
+diminution of the bulk or mass of the matter,
+how is it possible for us to judge of the complex
+unfolding of the body of an animal, in which
+not only the relative position of the parts, but
+also their mass of matter, undergoes considerable
+changes? We cannot, therefore, reason upon
+this subject, but by drawing some inductions
+from the examination of the things at the different
+periods of their unfolding, and by assisting
+ourselves with the observations that we
+have had the opportunity to make.</p>
+
+<p>It is true we see the chick in the egg before
+incubation; it floats in a transparent liquor,
+contained in a small purse, formed by a very
+fine membrane in the centre of the cicatrice;
+but this chick is then only a particle of inanimate
+matter, in which we cannot discern any
+organization, nor any determined figure. We
+judge by the external form that one of the extremities
+is the head, and the rest to be the
+spine of the back. It appears that this is the
+first product of fecundation resulting from the
+mixture of the seed of the male and female;
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</a></span>
+nevertheless, before asserting this as a fact,
+there are many things should be considered.
+When the hen has cohabited with the cock for
+a few days, and afterwards separated from him,
+the eggs she produces for a month after separation
+are as fertile as those she produced during
+the time of cohabitation with the male, and
+unfold at the same time; they only require
+twenty-one days sitting, and the embryo of the
+one will be as forward and as completely formed
+as that of the other. From hence we might
+think, that this form, under which the chick
+at first appears to us in the egg, does not immediately
+proceed from a mixture of the two
+liquors, but that it existed in other forms during
+the time the egg remained in the body of the
+mother; for the embryo in the form we see it
+before incubation, requires only heat to unfold
+and bring it forth. Now, if it had this form
+twenty days, or a month before, when the egg
+was first fecundated, why was it not hatched
+by the internal heat of the hen? and why is not
+the chicken perfectly formed in those eggs
+which are fecundated twenty-one days before
+the hen lays them?</p>
+
+<p>This difficulty is not so great as it appears;
+for we must conceive, that in the time of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</a></span>
+cock's cohabitation with the hen, each egg
+receives in its cicatrice, wherein the female
+liquor is contained, a small portion of the semen
+of the male. The egg attached to the ovary
+is in oviparous females, what the glandular
+substance is in the testicles of viviparous females.
+The cicatrice of the egg corresponds
+with the glandular bodies in which the seminal
+liquor of the female resides; that of the male
+penetrates and mixes there with it; from this
+mixture, the formation of the embryo instantly
+results. The first egg which the hen lays after
+coition is fecundated, and capable of producing
+a chicken; those which she lays afterwards
+were fecundated at the same instant;
+but as there is still wanting essential parts to
+this egg, the production of which is independent
+of the seed of the male, as the white,
+membranes, and shell, the young embryo contained
+in the cicatrice cannot unfold in this
+imperfect egg, although assisted by the internal
+heat of the mother. It remains, therefore, in
+the cicatrice in the state in which it was formed,
+until the egg has acquired all the parts necessary
+to the growth and nourishment of the
+chicken: and it is not till the egg has attained
+its perfection that the embryo begins to unfold:
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span>
+this unfolding is performed by the external heat
+of incubation; but it is certain, if the egg could
+be confined within the body of the hen for
+21 days after it was completely formed, the
+chicken would be produced, unless the internal
+heat of the hen should prove too powerful, for
+the degrees of heat necessary to hatch chickens
+are not very extended, and the least defect or
+excess is equally prejudicial to their unfolding.
+The last eggs the hen lays, containing the same
+as the first, proves nothing more than that the
+egg must acquire entire perfection before the
+embryo can unfold itself; and for want of the
+heat necessary to this unfolding, eggs may be
+kept a considerable time before incubation,
+without preventing the produce of the chickens
+they contain.</p>
+
+<p>It appears, therefore, that the state of the
+embryo, when the egg is laid by the hen, is the
+first state which succeeds fecundation; that the
+form under which we see it is the first form
+resulting from the intimate mixture, and form
+the penetration of the two seminal liquors;
+and consequently by following, as Malpighius
+has done, this unfolding from hour to hour, we
+discover all that is possible to be known, unless
+we could see the two liquors mix before our
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</a></span>
+eyes, and how the first arrangement of the particles
+are made, which produces the first form
+of the embryo.</p>
+
+<p>If we reflect on this fecundation (which is
+made at the same time) of these eggs, which
+are laid successively, and along time after each
+other, we shall find new arguments against
+the existence of eggs in viviparous animals;
+for if the females of viviparous animals, or if
+women contained eggs, like hens, why are
+there not many fecund at the same time? why
+are not some of them produced in nine months,
+and others at distant periods? and when women
+have two or three children, why do they
+all come into the world at one time? If
+these f&#339;tuses were produced by the means of
+eggs, would not they come successively, according
+as the eggs come to perfection, after
+the time of impregnation? And would not
+super-f&#339;tation be as frequent as they now are
+scarce, or as natural as they appear to be accidental?</p>
+
+<p>We cannot follow the unfolding of the
+f&#339;tus in the matrix as we pursue that of the
+chick in the egg; the opportunities of observing
+it are few, and we can only know what
+anatomists, surgeons, and midwives have
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</a></span>
+written thereon. It is by collecting all their
+particular observations, and by comparing
+their remarks and their descriptions, that we
+have made the following abridged history of
+the human f&#339;tus.</p>
+
+<p>There is a great appearance that, immediately
+after the mixture of the two seminal
+liquors, the whole materials of generation exist
+in the matrix under the form of a globe; since
+we know, by anatomists, that three or four
+days after conception there is a small oval ball
+in the matrix, this ball is formed by an extremely
+fine membrane, which incloses a limpid
+liquor like the white of an egg. We can
+then perceive some small united fibres in this
+liquor, which are the first outlines of the f&#339;tus.
+A net-work of fine fibres collects on the surface
+of the ball, which extends from one of the extremities
+to the middle. These are the first
+vestiges of the placenta.</p>
+
+<p>Seven days after conception we may distinguish,
+by the naked eye, the first lineaments of
+the f&#339;tus, as yet unformed; being only a mass
+of transparent jelly, which has acquired some
+small degree of solidity; the head and trunk are
+easily discernible, because this mass is of an
+oblong form, and the trunk is more delicate
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</a></span>
+and somewhat longer. Some small fibres, in
+form of a plume of feathers, spring from the
+body of the f&#339;tus, and which turn towards
+the membrane in which it is included; these
+fibres are to form the umbilical cord.</p>
+
+<p>Fifteen days after conception, the head, and
+the most apparent features of the face, are distinguishable;
+the nose resembles a small prominent
+and perpendicular thread affixed to a
+line, which indicates the division of the lips.
+Two small black points are in the places of
+the eyes, and two little holes in those of the
+ears; the body of the f&#339;tus has also received
+some growth. On each side of the upper and
+inferior parts of the trunk, little protuberances
+appear, which are the first outlines of the arms
+and legs.</p>
+
+<p>Eight days after, that is in three weeks, the
+body of the f&#339;tus has only increased about a
+line; but the arms and legs, the hands and feet,
+are apparent; the growth of the arms is more
+quick than that of the legs, and the fingers
+separate sooner than the toes. At this time
+internal organization begins to be discernible;
+the bones appear like small threads as fine as
+hairs; the ribs are disposed regularly from the
+two sides of the back bone; and as well as the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</a></span>
+arms, legs, fingers, and toes, are represented
+by very small threads.</p>
+
+<p>At a month the f&#339;tus is more than an inch
+long; it naturally takes a curved posture, in the
+middle of the liquor which surrounds it, and
+the membranes which contain the whole are
+increased in extent and thickness; the mass is
+oval, and it is then about an inch and an half
+in its greatest, and an inch and a quarter the
+smallest diameter. The human figure is no
+longer equivocal, every part of the face is
+already discernible; the body is fashioned, the
+thighs and belly are seen, the limbs formed,
+the toes and fingers divided, the skin thin and
+transparent, the viscera marked by fibres, the
+vessels as fine as threads, and the membranes
+extremely delicate, the bones are as yet soft,
+and have only taken solidity in some few parts;
+the vessels which compose the umbilical cord,
+are as yet in a straight line by the side of each
+other; now the placenta only occupies a third
+of the whole mass; whereas in the beginning
+it occupied the half. It appears, therefore, that
+its growth, in superficial extent, has not been
+so great as that of the f&#339;tus, and the rest
+of the mass; but it has increased much more
+in solidity; its thickness has become greater
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</a></span>
+in proportion than the membranes of the f&#339;tus,
+both of which are now easily distinguished.</p>
+
+<p>According to Hippocrates, the male f&#339;tus
+is developed sooner than the female. He says
+all parts of the body in the first are apparent
+in thirty, whereas the latter are not so till the
+expiration of forty-two days.</p>
+
+<p>In six weeks the f&#339;tus is nearly two inches
+long; the human figure begins to be more perfect;
+the head is only larger in proportion than
+the other parts of the body; the motion of the
+heart is perceived about this time. It has been
+seen to beat in a f&#339;tus of sixty days, a long
+while after it had been taken out of the womb
+of its mother.</p>
+
+<p>In two months the f&#339;tus is more than two
+inches long; the ossification is discernible as
+far as the middle of the arm, thigh, and leg,
+and in the point of the lower jaw, which is
+then very forward before the upper. These,
+however, are only ossified points; but by the
+effect of a more ready expansion, the clavicles
+are wholly ossified. The umbilical cord is
+formed, and the vessels which compose it, begin
+to twist nearly like threads which compose a
+rope: but this cord is still very short in comparison
+of what it becomes hereafter.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>In three months the f&#339;tus is nearly three
+inches long, and weighs about three ounces.
+Hippocrates says, that it is at this time the
+motion of the male f&#339;tus begins to be felt by
+its mother; but that those of the female are
+not felt till after the fourth; there are women
+who affirm they have felt the motions of the
+child at the beginning of the second month.
+It is very difficult to be certain on this subject,
+the sensations excited by the first motions of
+the f&#339;tus depending, perhaps more on the sensibility
+of the mother than the strength of the
+child.</p>
+
+<p>Four months after conception the length of
+the f&#339;tus is six or seven inches; every part of
+its body is so greatly augmented as to be perfectly
+distinguished from each other; even the
+nails appear on the fingers and toes. The
+testicles of the males are shut up in the belly
+above the kidneys; the stomach is filled with
+somewhat of a thick humour, like that which
+incloses the amnios. We find a milky fluid
+in the little vessels, and in the large ones a
+black liquid matter. There is a little bile in
+the gall, and some urine in the bladder. As
+the f&#339;tus floats freely in the liquid which surrounds
+it, there is always a space between the
+body and membranes in which it is contained.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</a></span>
+These coverings grow at first more than the
+f&#339;tus; but after a certain time it is quite the
+contrary. Before the end of the third month
+the head is bent forward, the chin rests on the
+breast, the knees are lifted up, the legs bent
+backwards upon the thighs (sometimes the
+knees are so high as almost to touch the jaws),
+the arms are generally folded across the breast,
+and one of the hands, and often both touch the
+face. The f&#339;tus afterwards takes different
+situations, as it acquires strength. Experienced
+midwives have pretended to be certain
+that it changes much oftener than is
+commonly thought, and which they prove
+by several observations; first, the umbilical
+cord is often found twisted round the body and
+limbs of the child, in a manner which necessarily
+supposes, that the f&#339;tus has moved in
+many directions, and taken different positions;
+secondly, a mother feels the motions of the
+f&#339;tus sometimes on one side of the womb and
+sometimes on another; and it often strikes
+against many different places, which must be
+occasioned by different positions, and supposes
+that it takes different situations; thirdly, as it
+floats in a liquid which surrounds it on all
+sides, it can very easily turn and extend itself by
+its own strength; and it must also take different
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</a></span>
+situations according to the various attitudes
+of the mother; for example, when she
+lies down, the f&#339;tus must be in another situation
+to what it was when she stood upright.</p>
+
+<p>Most anatomists have said, that the f&#339;tus is
+constrained to bend its body, because it is too
+confined in its covering; but this opinion does
+not appear well founded, for in the first five or
+six months there is more space than is required
+for the f&#339;tus to extend, and yet during that
+time it is bent and folded. We also see the
+chicken is in a curved posture in the liquor of
+the amnios, although this membrane and its
+liquor are sufficient to contain a body five or
+six times as large as the f&#339;tus. Thus we may
+conclude that this curved form of the f&#339;tus is
+natural, and not the effect of force. I am
+somewhat of Harvey's opinion, who says, it
+takes this attitude because it is the most favourable
+to rest and sleep; and as the f&#339;tus
+sleeps almost continually, it naturally takes the
+most advantageous situation. "Certe (says
+this famous anatomist) animalia omnia, dum
+quiescunt &amp; dormiunt, membra sua ut plurimum
+adducunt &amp; complicant, figuramque
+ovalem ac conglobatam quęrunt: ita pariter
+embryones qui ętatem suam maxime somno
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</a></span>
+transigunt, membra sua positione ea qua plasmantur
+(tanquam naturalissima ac maxime indolenti
+quietique aptissima) componunt<a name="FNanchor_31" id="FNanchor_31"></a><a href="#Footnote_31" class="fnanchor">[AE]</a>."</p>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_31" id="Footnote_31"></a><a href="#FNanchor_31"><span class="label">[AE]</span></a> Harvey on Generation, page 257.</p></div>
+
+<p>The matrix, as we have already said, takes
+a very ready growth after conception, and it
+continues also to increase in proportion with
+the f&#339;tus; but the f&#339;tus at length outgrows
+the matrix, and then, especially when it approaches
+maturity, it may be too much confined,
+and agitate the matrix by reiterated motions
+and violent efforts. The mother sensibly
+feels the impression of these painful sensations,
+and which are called periodic pains after the
+labour commences. The more power the
+f&#339;tus exerts to dilate the matrix the greater it
+finds the resistance, from the natural compression
+of the parts. From thence all the effect
+falls on the orifice, which has been increasing
+by degrees during the latter months of pregnancy.
+The head of the f&#339;tus, forcibly inclining
+against the sides of the orifice, dilates
+it, by a continual pressure, till the moment of
+delivery, when it opens sufficiently for the
+child to escape from the womb.</p>
+
+<p>What makes it probable that the labour-pains
+proceed only from the dilatation of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</a></span>
+orifice of the matrix is, that this dilatation is
+the only means to discover whether the pains
+felt are in fact the pains of labour, for women
+often feel very sensible pains, which are not
+those that immediately precede delivery. To
+distinguish the false from true pains, it has been
+recommended for the midwife to touch the
+orifice of the matrix, as if the pains be true
+the dilatation will always increase, and if they
+are false pains, that is to say, pains which proceed
+from some other cause than that of the
+approaching delivery, the orifice will contract
+rather than dilate, or at least will not continue
+to dilate. From hence we have sufficient
+foundation to imagine, that these pains proceed
+from a forced dilatation of the orifice. The
+only thing which embarrasses on this occasion
+is that alternative of rest and sufferings the
+mother endures. This circumstance of the
+effect does not perfectly agree with the cause
+which we have just indicated; for the dilatation
+of an orifice, which is made by degrees, should
+produce a constant and continued pain, without
+any intervals of ease. But possibly the whole
+may be attributed to the separation of the
+placenta, which we know is fastened to the
+matrix by a number of papillę, which penetrate
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</a></span>
+into the vacuities or cavities of this viscera;
+therefore may it not be supposed that
+they do not separate from their cavities all at
+the same time; that each separation causes those
+acute pains, and the intervals between are those
+of ease and rest? The effect in this case perfectly
+answers the cause, and we can support
+this conjecture by another observation.&mdash;Immediately
+before delivery there issues a whitish
+and viscous liquor, like that which flows from
+the nipples of the placenta when drawn out of
+their places, which makes it probable that this
+liquor, which then issues from the matrix, is
+produced by the separation of some of the papillę
+of the placenta.</p>
+
+<p>It often happens that the f&#339;tus quits the
+matrix without bursting the membranes, and
+consequently without the contained liquor
+flowing out. This kind of delivery appears
+to be most natural, and resembles that of most
+animals; nevertheless, the human f&#339;tus commonly
+pierces its membranes by the resistance
+it meets with at the orifice of the matrix. It
+also sometimes brings away part of the amnios,
+and even the chorion, upon its head like a cap.
+When these membranes are pierced or torn,
+the liquors, called the <i>waters</i>, which they contain
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</a></span>
+flow out, and the sides of the orifice of the
+matrix, and the vagina, being thus moistened,
+give way more easily to the passage of the child.
+After the flowing of this liquor there remains
+sufficient room in the matrix for the midwife
+to return the child, if the position is unfavourable.
+When the f&#339;tus is come out the
+delivery is not entirely completed, the placenta
+and membranes remain in the matrix, and the
+new-born infant adheres to them by the umbilical
+cord; the hand of the midwife, or the
+weight of the body of the infant alone, draws
+them out by means of this cord. Those organs
+which were necessary to the life of the f&#339;tus
+become useless, and even noxious to the new-born
+infant. They are instantly separated
+from the body of the child, by tying the umbilical
+cord about an inch distance from the
+navel, and by cutting it about an inch from the
+ligature. The remainder of this cord dries
+away, and separates of itself from the navel,
+about the sixth or seventh day.</p>
+
+<p>On examining the f&#339;tus previous to its
+birth we may form some idea of its natural
+functions. It has organs, which are necessary
+to it while in the womb of its mother, but
+which become useless. For the better understanding
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</a></span>
+the mechanism of these functions, we
+must explain a little more particularly the
+nature of those necessary parts, the umbilical
+cord, the membranes, the liquor which they
+contain and the placenta. The umbilical
+cord, which is attached to the body of the
+f&#339;tus at the navel, is composed of two arteries
+and one vein; these prolong the circulation
+of the blood, but the vein is larger
+than the arteries. At the extremity of the
+cord each of these vessels divide into an infinity
+of ramifications, which extend between two
+membranes. They separate at equal distances
+from the common trunk; so that these ramifications
+are round and flat, and are called,
+when thus collected, the <i>placenta</i>. The external
+surface, which is applied against the
+matrix, is convex; the internal concave. The
+blood of the f&#339;tus circulates in the cord, and
+in the placenta. The arteries of the cord
+spring from two large arteries of the f&#339;tus,
+and carry the blood through the arterial ramifications
+of the placenta; from thence it passes
+into the venous branches which carry it into
+the umbilical vessels; these communicate with
+a vein of the f&#339;tus, in which vessels it is received.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The concave surface of the placenta is
+clothed by the chorion; the convex is also
+covered by a kind of soft membrane, easily
+torn, which seems to be a continuation of the
+chorion, and the f&#339;tus is included under the
+double coat of the chorion and the amnios.
+The form is globular, because the intervals
+between the membranes and the f&#339;tus are
+filled with a transparent liquor. This liquor
+is contained by the amnios, which is the internal
+membrane, it is thin and transparent;
+it folds round the umbilical cord at its insertion
+into the placenta, and covers it the
+whole length to the navel of the f&#339;tus. The
+chorion is the external membrane; it is thick
+and spongy, sprinkled with sanguinary vessels,
+and composed of many coats, the exterior
+of which covers the convex surface of the
+placenta. It follows the inequalities, and
+covers the papillę, which spring from the
+placenta, and are received in the cavities found
+at the bottom of the matrix, called <i>lacunę</i>.
+The f&#339;tus adheres to the matrix by these insertions.</p>
+
+<p>Some anatomists have thought that the human
+form had, like those of certain quadrupeds;
+a membrane called <i>allantois</i>, destined
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</a></span>
+to receive the urine; and they have pretended
+to have found it between the chorion and the
+amnios, or in the middle of the placenta at the
+root of the umbilical cord, under the form
+of a very large bladder, in which the urine
+entered by a long pipe that composed part of
+the chord, and which opened on one side into
+the bladder, and on the other in this allantois
+membrane, being similar to the urachus in
+other animals. They owned, however, that it
+was not near so large in the human f&#339;tus as
+in quadrupeds, but that it was divided into
+many tubes, so minute, that they could
+scarcely be perceived, and that the urine
+passed into their cavities.</p>
+
+<p>The experience and observations of most
+anatomists are contrary to this supposed discovery.
+They admit there is a kind of ligament
+which adheres by one end to the external surface
+of the bottom of the bladder, and extends
+to the navel; but it becomes so delicate, on
+entering into the cord, as to be nearly reduced
+to nothing: in common this ligament is not
+hollow, and we can see no orifice at the bottom
+of the bladder.</p>
+
+<p>The f&#339;tus has no communication with the
+open air, and the experiments made upon the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</a></span>
+lungs prove they have never respired; for they
+sink to the bottom when put in water: whereas
+those of infants who have breathed always float
+on the top; the f&#339;tus then does not respire
+in the womb, consequently it cannot form
+any sound by its voice; and therefore what
+has been related of the groaning and crying
+of children before their birth may be considered
+as fables. After the flowing of the
+waters it may happen, that the air has found
+an entrance into the cavity of the matrix, and
+then the infant may begin to respire before it
+is brought forth. In this case it may be able
+to cry, as the chicken cries before the shell of
+the egg is broken, which it can do from
+there being air in the cavity which is between
+the external membrane and the shell. This
+air is found in all eggs, and is produced by the
+internal fermentation of matters contained in
+them<a name="FNanchor_32" id="FNanchor_32"></a><a href="#Footnote_32" class="fnanchor">[AF]</a>.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_32" id="Footnote_32"></a><a href="#FNanchor_32"><span class="label">[AF]</span></a> See La Statique des Vegetaux, Chap. vi.</p></div>
+
+<p>The lungs of the f&#339;tus being without any
+motion, have no more blood enter into them
+than is requisite to nourish and make them
+grow; and there is another road opened for the
+course of its circulation. The blood in the
+right auricle of the heart, instead of passing
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</a></span>
+into the pulmonary artery, and returning, after
+having ran through the lungs into the left
+auricle by the pulmonary vein, passes immediately
+into the left by an opening, called the
+<i>foramen ovale</i>, which is in the partition of the
+heart between the two auricles. It enters afterwards
+into the aorta, which distributes it by
+its ramifications, at going out of which the
+venous branches receive it, and bring it back
+to the heart by uniting all in the <i>vena cava</i>,
+which terminates at the right auricle of the
+heart. The blood which this auricle contains,
+instead of passing entirely by the foramen ovale,
+may escape in part into the pulmonary and the
+aorta by an arterial canal, which goes immediately
+from the one to the other. It is by these
+roads that the blood of the f&#339;tus circulates
+without entering into the lungs, as it enters
+into those of children, adults, and every animal
+which breathes.</p>
+
+<p>It has been thought that the blood of the
+mother passes into the body of the f&#339;tus, by
+means of the placenta and umbilical cord. It
+was supposed that the sanguinary vessels of the
+matrix opened into the vacuities, and those
+of the placenta into the nipples, and that they
+joined one to the other; but experience is
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</a></span>
+quite contrary to this opinion; for if the arteries
+of the umbilical cord is injected the liquor
+returns by the veins, and not any part
+of it escapes externally. Besides, the nipples
+may be drawn from the vacuities where they
+are lodged, without any blood issuing either
+from the matrix or placenta: a milky liquor
+only issues from both, and which, we have already
+observed, serves the f&#339;tus for nutriment.
+This liquor possibly enters into the veins of
+the placenta, as the chyle enters into the subclavian
+vein; and perhaps the placenta in a
+great measure performs the office of the lungs
+in bringing the blood to maturity. It is certain
+that the blood appears much sooner in the
+placenta than in the f&#339;tus, and I have often
+observed in eggs that have been under the hen
+for a day or two, that the blood appeared at
+first in the membranes, and that their sanguinary
+vessels are very large and numerous, while
+the whole body of the chicken, excepting the
+point where these blood-vessels terminate, is
+only a white and almost transparent matter, in
+which there is not the smallest sign of a sanguinary
+vessel.</p>
+
+<p>It has been imagined, that the liquor
+of the amnios is a nutriment the f&#339;tus receives
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[290]</a></span>
+by its mouth. Some naturalists pretend
+to have observed this liquor in the stomach, and
+to have seen some f&#339;tuses to which
+the umbilical cord was entirely wanting, and
+others who had but a very small portion, which
+did not at, all adhere to the placenta; but in this
+case might not the liquor have entered into the
+body of the f&#339;tus by the small portion of the
+umbilical cord, or by the umbilical vessel itself?
+Besides, to these observations we may oppose
+others. Some f&#339;tuses have been found whose
+lips were not separated, and others without any
+opening in the &#339;sophagus. To conciliate
+these circumstances, some anatomists have
+thought that the aliments passed into the f&#339;tus
+partly by the umbilical cord, and partly by the
+mouth: none of these opinions appear to have
+any foundation. It is not the question to examine
+the growth of the f&#339;tus alone, and to
+seek from whence and by what it draws its
+nutriment, but how the growth of the whole
+is made; for the placenta, liquor, and membrane
+increase in size as well as in the f&#339;tus;
+and consequently the instruments and canals
+employed to receive or carry this nutriment
+to the f&#339;tus, have a kind of life themselves.
+The expansion of the placenta and membranes
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</a></span>
+is as difficult to conceive as that of the f&#339;tus;
+and we might say, with equal propriety, that
+the f&#339;tus nourishes the placenta, as that the
+placenta nourishes the f&#339;tus. The whole mass
+is floating in the matrix, and without any adherence
+at the commencement of this growth:
+therefore the nourishment can be only made
+by an absorption of the milky matter contained
+in the matrix. The placenta appears first to
+draw this nutriment, to convert this milk
+into blood, and to carry it to the f&#339;tus by
+veins. The liquor of the amnios appears to
+be only this milky liquor depurated, the quantity
+of which increases by a like absorption,
+proportionate to the increase of the membranes,
+and the f&#339;tus probably absorbs the liquor,
+which appears to be the necessary nutriment
+for its expansion. For we must observe, that
+for the first two or three months the f&#339;tus
+contains very little blood; it is as white as
+ivory, and appears to be composed of lymph
+which has taken some solidity; and as the
+skin is transparent, and all the parts very soft,
+we may easily conceive that the liquor in
+which the f&#339;tus swims may penetrate them,
+and thus furnish the necessary matter for its
+nutrition and expansion. It may be supposed
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[292]</a></span>
+that the f&#339;tus in the latter stages takes its nutriment
+by the mouth, since in the stomach we
+find a liquor similar to that in the amnios, urine
+in the bladder, and excrements in the intestines;
+and as we find neither urine nor <i>meconium</i>
+in the amnios, there is reason to conclude that
+the f&#339;tus does not void its excrements, especially
+as some are born without having the
+anus pierced, although they had a great quantity
+of <i>meconium</i> in the intestines.</p>
+
+<p>Although the f&#339;tus does not immediately
+adhere to the matrix, but is only attached to
+it by small external nipples, though it has no
+communication with the blood of its mother,
+but is as independant of her who bears it, in
+many respects, as the egg is of the hen that
+hatches it, yet it has been pretended, that all
+which affects the mother affects the f&#339;tus; that
+the impressions of the one act on the brain of
+the other; and to this imaginary influence resemblances,
+monsters, and especially marks on
+the skin of some children, have been attributed.
+I have examined many of these marks, and they
+all appear to me to have been caused by a
+derangement in the texture of the skin. Every
+mark must have a figure which will resemble
+something or other; but I am certain the resemblances
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[293]</a></span>
+so formed depend rather on the
+imagination of those who see them than on that
+of the mother. On this subject the marvellous
+has been carried as far as it could go. It
+has not been only said that the f&#339;tus carried
+real representations of the longings of its
+mother, but that, by a singular sympathy, the
+marks, which represent strawberries, cherries,
+&amp;c. change their colour, and become deeper
+in the season of those fruits. With a little
+more consideration, and less prejudice, this
+colour may be seen to change much oftener,
+and that it must happen every time the motion
+of the blood is accelerated, whether by the heat
+of summer or from any other cause. These
+marks are either yellow, red, or black, because
+the blood gives these tints to the skin when it
+enters in too great quantities into the vessels.
+If these marks have the longings of the mother
+for their cause, why have they not the
+forms and colours as varied as the objects of
+her desires? What a curious assemblage of
+figures would be seen if all the whimsical desires
+of the mother were written on the skin of
+the child?</p>
+
+<p>As our sensations have no resemblance to the
+objects which cause them, it is impossible that
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[294]</a></span>
+desire, fear, horror, or any passion, or internal
+emotion, can produce real representations of
+those objects; and the child being in this respect
+as independant of the mother as the egg
+is of the hen, I should as soon believe that a
+hen, which saw the neck of a cock twisted,
+would hatch chickens with wry necks, as that,
+by the power of imagination, a woman, who
+happened to see a man broke upon the wheel,
+would bring forth a child with its limbs broken
+in the same manner.</p>
+
+<p>But even supposing this circumstance attested,
+I should still support the opinion, that
+the imagination of the mother had not been
+the cause, for what is the effect of horror? an
+internal motion, a convulsion in the body of
+the mother, which might shake, compress, and
+agitate the womb. What can result from this
+commotion? nothing similar to the cause, for
+if this commotion was very violent the f&#339;tus
+might be killed, wounded, or deformed in some
+of its parts; but how is it to be conceived that
+this commotion can produce any thing resembling
+the fancy of the mother in the f&#339;tus,
+unless we believe, with Harvey, that the matrix
+has the faculty of conceiving ideas, and
+realizing them on the f&#339;tus?</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[295]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But, it may be urged, if it was not affected
+by the imagination of the mother, why did the
+child come into the world with broken limbs?
+However rash it may appear to explain a matter
+which is extraordinary and uncertain, and
+of which we have no right to exact a solution,
+yet this question appears to me answerable in
+a satisfactory manner. Circumstances of the
+most rare and extraordinary kind happen as
+necessarily as those which are frequent and
+common. In the infinite combinations which
+matter can take, the most extraordinary arrangements
+must sometimes happen; hence we might
+venture to wager, that in a million, or a thousand
+millions of children, there will be one
+born with two heads, four legs, or with broken
+limbs; it may, therefore, naturally happen,
+without the concurrence of the mother's imagination,
+that a child should be born with
+broken limbs. This may have happened more
+than once, and the mother, while pregnant,
+might have been present at the breaking on the
+wheel, and therefore the defect of the child's
+formation has been attributed to what she had
+seen, and to her impressed imagination. But,
+independant of this general answer, we may
+give a more direct explanation. The f&#339;tus,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[296]</a></span>
+as we have said, has nothing in common with
+the mother; its functions, organs, blood, &amp;c.
+are all particular, and belong to itself; the only
+thing which it derives from its mother is the
+liquor, or nutritive lymph, which filtrates from
+the matrix. If this lymph is bad, or envenomed
+with the venereal virus, the child will
+be alike disordered; and it may be imagined,
+that all the diseases which proceed from vitiated
+humours may be communicated from the mother
+to the child. We know that the small-pox
+is communicative, and we have but too
+many examples of children who are, directly
+after their birth, the victims of the debauches
+of their parents. The venereal virus attacks
+the most solid parts of the bones, and it appears
+to act with more force towards the middle of
+the bone, where ossification commences; I
+conceive, therefore, that the child here spoken
+of has been attacked by the venereal disorder
+while in its mother's womb, and from that
+cause it came into the world with its bones
+broken through the middle.</p>
+
+<p>Rickets may also produce the same effect.
+There is a skeleton of a rickety child in the
+French king's cabinet, whose arms and legs
+have callosities in the middle of their bones.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[297]</a></span>
+By the inspection of this skeleton, it appeared
+evident that the bones had been broken during
+the time it was in the womb, and that afterwards
+the bones re-united, and formed these
+callosities.</p>
+
+<p>But enough of a subject which credulity
+alone has rendered marvellous. Prejudice,
+especially that sort which is founded on the
+marvellous, will always triumph over reason,
+and we should have but little philosophy if we
+were astonished at it. We must not therefore
+ever expect to be able to persuade women, that
+the marks on their children have no connection
+with their unsatisfied longings. Yet might it
+not be asked them, before the birth of the
+child, of what particular longings they had
+been disappointed, and consequently what will
+be the marks their children will bear? I have
+often asked this question, and have only made
+persons angry without having ever convinced
+them.</p>
+
+<p>The time that a woman goes with child is
+generally about nine months; but it is however
+sometimes longer and sometimes shorter. Many
+children are born at seven or eight months, and
+some not till after the ninth; but in general
+the deliveries which precede the term of nine
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[298]</a></span>
+months are more frequent than the others.
+The common time of a natural delivery extends
+to twenty days, that is, from eight
+months fourteen days to nine months and four
+hours.</p>
+
+<p>Many children are born before the 260th
+day, and although these deliveries precede the
+general term, they are not abortions, because
+these children mostly live. It is commonly
+thought that children born at eight months
+cannot live, or at least that many more of them
+die than those born at seven months. This
+opinion appears to be a paradox; and by consulting
+experience I think we shall find it an
+error. The child brought forth at eight months
+is more formed, and consequently more vigorous,
+and likely to live than that which is born
+at the seventh. Nevertheless this opinion is
+pretty generally received, and founded on the
+authority of Aristotle.</p>
+
+<p>The beginning of the seventh month is the
+earliest term for delivery; if the f&#339;tus is
+brought forth sooner it dies, and is termed an
+abortion. There are, however, great limits
+for the time of human delivery, since they extend
+from the seventh to the tenth, and perhaps
+to the eleventh month.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[299]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Women who have had many children assert,
+that girls remain longer in the womb than boys.
+If this is really the case, we must not be surprized
+at female children being born at ten
+months. When children come before nine
+months they are not so well proportioned as
+those who are not brought into the world till
+ten months, the bodies of the latter are sensibly
+larger and better formed; their hair is longer,
+the growth of the teeth, although still hid under
+the gums, is more advanced; the voice is
+clearer, and the tone more deep.</p>
+
+<p>There is much uncertainty on the occasional
+causes of delivery, and we do not perfectly
+know what obliges the infant to quit the womb.
+Some imagine, that the f&#339;tus having acquired
+a certain size, the matrix is too confined for its
+longer stay, and that the constraint felt by the
+f&#339;tus, obliges it to use every effort to quit its
+prison; others say, and it is nearly to the same
+purport, that the weight of the f&#339;tus becomes
+so great, that the matrix is forced to open to free
+itself from the burthen. These reasons do not
+appear satisfactory; for the matrix must always
+have capacity and strength to contain and sustain
+the weight of a f&#339;tus of nine months, since
+it often contains two, and it is certain that the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[300]</a></span>
+weight and size of the twins of eight months are
+more considerable than the weight and size of
+a single child of nine. Besides, it often happens
+that a child born at nine months is smaller
+than the f&#339;tus of eight months, although
+it continues in the womb.</p>
+
+<p>Galen pretends, that the child remains in the
+matrix till it is able to receive its food by the
+mouth, and that it only forces its escape from
+the need of nutriment. Others have said, that
+the f&#339;tus always receives its nourishment by
+the mouth from the liquor of the amnios; but
+which becomes at length so contaminated, by
+the transpiration and urine of the f&#339;tus, that
+it becomes disgustful, and obliges the f&#339;tus to
+use every exertion to quit its confinement.
+These reasons do not appear better than the
+first; for it would from thence follow, that the
+weakest and smallest f&#339;tuses would remain
+longer in the womb than the strongest and
+largest, which never happens; besides, it is not
+food that the f&#339;tus seeks immediately after it is
+born, for it can stay some time without it; on
+the contrary, it seems most desirous to disembarrass
+itself from the nutriment it took when in
+the womb of its mother, and to return the meconium.
+Other anatomists have supposed that
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[301]</a></span>
+the excrement accumulated in the bowels of
+the f&#339;tus, gives it great pain, and causes it to
+make such efforts, that the matrix is at length
+obliged to give way, and to open a passage for
+its escape. I acknowledge I am not better satisfied
+with this explanation than the rest;
+because, why cannot the f&#339;tus void its excrements
+in the amnios, if it was pressed so to do?
+Now this never happens; it appears, on the
+contrary, that this necessity of voiding the meconium
+is not felt till after the birth, when the
+motion of the diaphragm, occasioned by that of
+the lungs, compresses the intestines and causes
+this evacuation; for the meconium has never
+been found in the amnios of a f&#339;tus of ten
+months who had not respired, whereas a f&#339;tus
+of six or seven months voids this meconium a
+short time after respiration.</p>
+
+<p>Other anatomists, and among them Fabricius
+de Aquapendente, have supposed the f&#339;tus
+quitted the matrix through the need of procuring
+refreshment by means of respiration.
+This cause appears to me still more remote than
+all the rest, because the f&#339;tus can have no idea
+of respiration without having respired.</p>
+
+<p>After having weighed all these explanations,
+I suppose the f&#339;tus's quitting the matrix depends
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[302]</a></span>
+on a quite different cause. The flowing
+of the menstrua is periodical, and at determined
+intervals; and although conception suppresses
+its appearance, it does not destroy the cause;
+for notwithstanding the blood does not appear
+at the accustomed times, yet a kind of revolution
+takes place, like that which is made before
+conception. Thus it is, there are many women
+whose menstrua are not suppressed in the
+first two or three months. I imagine, therefore,
+that when a woman has conceived, the
+periodical revolution is made as regular as before;
+but as the matrix is swelled, the excretory
+canals cannot give issue to the blood, at least
+unless it arrives there with such force, and in
+such quantities, as to open a passage in spite of
+the resistance, that is opposed to it. In this case
+blood will appear, and if it flows in a great
+quantity abortion will ensue, and the matrix
+take the form it had before. But if the blood
+only forces one part of these canals, the business
+of generation will not be destroyed, although
+the blood appears, because the greatest part of
+the matrix still remains in the state which is
+necessary for that purpose.</p>
+
+<p>When no blood appears, as is generally the
+case, the first periodical revolution is remarkable
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[303]</a></span>
+and felt by the same pains and symptoms.
+From the first suppression of the menses, therefore,
+a violent action on the matrix is made,
+and provided the action is augmented, it destroys
+the product of generation. It may from
+thence be concluded, that every conception
+which is made just before the useful return of
+the menses seldom succeeds, and that the action
+of that blood easily destroys the weak roots of
+a germ so tender and so delicate. The conceptions,
+on the contrary, which are made just
+after the periodical evacuations succeed the
+best, because the produce of the conception
+has more time to grow, strengthen, and resist
+the action of the blood, by the time the next
+revolution happens.</p>
+
+<p>The f&#339;tus having undergone this first trial,
+and having resisted it, receives more strength
+and growth, and is more in a condition to contend
+against the succeeding revolutions. Miscarriages
+may and do happen in all the periodical
+revolutions; but they are less frequent
+in the fourth and fifth months, than either at the
+beginning or near the end. We have assigned
+the reasons why they are more frequent at the
+beginning; it therefore only remains to explain
+why they are also more frequent towards the
+end.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[304]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The f&#339;tus generally comes into the world
+during the tenth revolution. When it is born
+at the eighth or ninth it lives, and these deliveries
+are not looked upon as miscarriages,
+because the child, although not so perfectly
+formed, is still sufficiently so for the purpose
+of life. It has been pretended, that examples
+have been seen of children born at the seventh
+and even at the sixth revolution, that is, at
+five or six months, which have lived. There
+is, therefore, no difference between a birth and
+a miscarriage but what is relative to the living
+powers of the infant. In general the number
+of miscarriages in the first, second, and third
+months are very considerable for the reasons we
+have given ; and the number of deliveries of
+the seventh and eighth months are also very
+great, in comparison with the miscarriages of
+the fourth, fifth, and sixth months, because in
+this middle period the product of generation has
+received more solidity and strength, and having
+resisted the action of the four first periodical
+revolutions, a more violent force than the
+preceding is required to destroy it. The same
+reason subsists, with additional force, for the
+fifth and sixth months. But the f&#339;tus, which
+till then is weak, and can act only by its own
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[305]</a></span>
+feeble strength, begins to get strong, and move
+with vigour; and at the eighth revolution the
+f&#339;tus, uniting its efforts with those of the matrix,
+facilitates its exclusion, and it may come
+into the world in the seventh month, and be
+capable of living, especially if it happens, as is
+sometimes the case, to have more than ordinary
+strength for that period. But if it comes into
+the world only through the weakness of the
+matrix, which could not resist the action of the
+blood in this eighth revolution, the delivery
+would be regarded as a miscarriage, and the
+child would not live. But these cases are very
+rare, for if the f&#339;tus has resisted the seven first
+revolutions, only particular accidents can prevent
+it from resisting the eighth. The f&#339;tus,
+which has acquired this same degree of strength
+and vigour only a little later, will come into the
+world at the ninth revolution; and those which
+require nine months to obtain this same strength,
+will come at the tenth revolution, which is the
+most common and general term; but when the
+f&#339;tus has not acquired in nine months this degree
+of perfection, it may remain in the womb
+till the eleventh, and even till the twelfth revolution;
+that is, till the tenth or eleventh
+month, as we have many examples.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[306]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>This opinion, that it is the menstrua which
+is the occasional cause of delivery at different
+times, may be confirmed by many other reasons.
+The females of every animal which
+have no menses, bring forth at nearly the same
+terms, and there is but a very slight variation
+in the duration of their gestation. We may,
+therefore, suppose that this variation, which is
+so great in women, comes from the action of
+the menstrual blood, which is constantly exerted
+at every periodic return.</p>
+
+<p>We have observed, that the placenta adheres
+to the papillę, or the matrix, only by nipples;
+that there is no blood either in these nipples or
+in the vacuities they are niched into, and that
+when they are separated (which is easily done)
+a milky liquor only issues from them. Now,
+how happens it that delivery is always accompanied
+with a considerable hęmorrhage, at first
+of pure blood, and afterwards mixed with a
+watery liquor? This blood does not proceed
+from the separation of the placenta, as the
+nipples are drawn out without any effusion of
+blood. Delivery, which entirely consists, of
+this separation, should not, therefore, produce
+any blood. Is it not then more accordant
+with reason to suppose, that it is the action of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[307]</a></span>
+the blood which causes delivery, and that it is
+this menstrual blood which forces the vessels
+as soon as the matrix is emptied, and which
+begins to flow immediately after delivery as it
+did before conception?</p>
+
+<p>It is known, that in the first months of pregnancy
+that which contains the seed of generation
+is not adherent to the matrix. By the
+experiments of De Graaf it has been seen, that
+by blowing on the little ball we can make it
+move. The adhesion to the matrix is never
+very strong, and at first the placenta with difficulty
+adheres to the internal membrane of
+the viscera, and those parts are only contiguous,
+or joined by a mucilaginous matter, which has
+scarcely any adhesion. Why then does it occur,
+that in miscarriages of the first and second
+month this ball never escapes without a great
+effusion of blood? It is certainly not caused
+by the passage of the ball quitting the matrix,
+since it does not adhere to it; but it is, on the
+contrary, by the action of this blood that the
+ball is driven out. Must we not then conclude
+this blood to be menstrual, which by
+forcing the canals, through which it had
+been accustomed to pass before impregnation,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[308]</a></span>
+destroys the product of conception by retaking
+its common road?</p>
+
+<p>It appears, therefore, that the periodical revolution
+of the menstrual blood has great influence
+on delivery, and that it is the cause
+why the times of delivery in women vary so
+much more than in every other female who is
+not subject to the periodical evacuation, and
+which always bring forth at the same times.
+It also appears that this revolution, occasioned
+by the action of the menstrual blood, is not the
+sole cause of birth, but that the action of the
+f&#339;tus itself contributes towards it, since there
+are instances of a child escaping from the
+womb after the death of the mother, which necessarily
+supposes an action proper and particular
+in itself.</p>
+
+<p>The space of time which cows, sheep, and
+other animals go with young is always the
+same, and their deliveries are not attended with
+an hęmorrhage. May we not then conclude,
+that the blood voided by women after delivery
+is the menstrual blood, and that the human
+f&#339;tus being born at such different terms, can
+only be by the actions of this blood on the
+matrix during every periodical revolution? It
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[309]</a></span>
+is natural to imagine, that if the females of viviparous
+animals had menses like women, their
+deliveries would be followed with an effusion
+of blood, and happen at different terms. The
+f&#339;tuses of animals come into the world clothed
+with their membranes (and it seldom happens
+that the membranes are broken), and the
+waters flow before the delivery; whereas it is
+very rare a child is brought forth with its membranes
+entire. This seems to prove that the
+human f&#339;tus makes more efforts than other
+animals to quit its prison; or that the matrix
+of a woman does not so naturally incline to the
+passage of the child, for it is the f&#339;tus which
+tears its membranes, by the efforts it makes
+against the resistance it meets with at the orifice
+of the viscera.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<p class="caption2"><a name="RECAPITULATION" id="RECAPITULATION">RECAPITULATION.</a></p>
+
+
+<p>All animals procure nutriment from vegetables,
+or other animals which feed upon
+vegetables; there is, therefore, one common
+matter to both, which serves for the nutrition
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[310]</a></span>
+and expansion bf every thing which lives or
+vegetates. This matter cannot perform them
+but by assimilating itself to each part of the
+animal or vegetable, and by intimately penetrating
+the texture and form of these parts,
+which I have called the <i>internal mould</i>. When
+this nutritive matter is more abundant than is
+necessary to nourish and expand the animal or
+vegetable, it is sent back from every part of the
+body, and deposited in one or more reservoirs,
+in the form of a liquor; this liquor contains
+all the molecules analogous to all parts of the
+body; and consequently all that is necessary for
+the reproduction of a young being, perfectly
+resembling the first. Commonly this nutritive
+matter does not become superabundant, in most
+kinds of animals, till they have acquired the
+greatest part of their growth; and it is for this
+reason that animals are not in a state of engendering
+before that time.</p>
+
+<p>When this nutritive and productive matter,
+which is universally spread abroad, has passed
+through the internal mould of an animal or
+vegetable, and has found a proper matrix, it
+produces an animal or vegetable, of the same
+kind; but when it does not meet with a proper
+matrix, it produces organized beings different
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[311]</a></span>
+from animals and vegetables, as the moving
+and vegetating bodies seen in the seminal liquor
+of animals, in the infusion of the germ
+of plants, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>This productive matter is composed of organic
+particles, always active, the motion and
+action of which are fixed by the inanimate parts
+of matter in general, and particularly by oily
+and saline bodies, but as soon as they are disengaged
+from this foreign matter, they retake
+their action, and produce different kinds of
+vegetations and other animated, beings.</p>
+
+<p>By the microscope, the effects of this productive
+matter may be perceived in the seminal
+liquors of animals of both sexes. The seed
+of the female viviparous animals is filtered
+through the glandular bodies which grow upon
+their testicles, and these glandular bodies contain
+a large quantity of seminal fluid in their
+internal cavities. Oviparous females have, as
+well as the viviparous, a seminal liquor, which
+is still more active than the viviparous. The
+seed of the female is in general like that of the
+male, when, they are both in a natural state:
+they decompose after the same manner, contain
+similar organic bodies, and they alike
+offer the same phenomena.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[312]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>All animal or vegetable substances include
+a great quantity of this organic and productive
+matter. To perceive it, we need only separate
+the inanimate parts in which the active particles
+of this matter are engaged. And this
+is done by infusing animal or vegetable substances
+in water. The salts will dissolve, the
+oils separate, and the organic particles will
+be seen by their putting themselves in motion.
+They are in greater abundance in the seminal
+liquors than in any other parts, or rather,
+they are less entangled by the inanimate parts.
+In the beginning of this infusion, when the
+flesh is but slightly dissolved, the organic matter
+is seen under the form of moving bodies,
+which are almost as large as those of the seminal
+liquors: but, in proportion as the decomposition
+augments, these organnic particles diminish
+in size and increase in motion; and
+when the flesh is entirely decomposed, or corrupted,
+these same particles are exceedingly
+minute, and their motion exceedingly rapid. It
+is then that their matter may become a poison,
+like that of the tooth of a viper, wherein Mr.
+Mead perceived an infinite number of small
+pointed bodies, which he took for salts, although
+they are only these same organic particles in a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[313]</a></span>
+state of great activity. The pus which issues
+from wounds abounds with little insects, and
+it may take such a degree of corruption as to
+become one of the most subtle poisons; for
+every time this active matter is exalted to a
+certain point, which may be known by the
+rapidity and minuteness of the moving bodies
+it contains, it will become a species of poison.
+It is the same with the poison of vegetables.
+The same matter which serves to feed us when
+in its natural state, will destroy us when corrupted.
+Spurred barley, for instance, throws
+the limbs of men and animals into a gangrene
+who feed on it. It is also evident by comparing
+the matter which adheres to our teeth,
+which is the residue of our food, with that
+from the teeth of a viper or mad dog, which is
+only the same matter too much exalted, and
+corrupted to the last degree.</p>
+
+<p>When this organic and productive matter is
+found collected in a great quantity in some part
+of an animal, where it is obliged to remain, it
+forms living beings which have been ever regarded
+as animals; the tęnia, ascarides, all the
+worms found in the veins, liver, in wounds, in
+corrupted flesh, and pus, have no other origin;
+the eels in paste, vinegar, and all the pretended
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[314]</a></span>
+microscopical animals are only different forms
+which this active matter takes of itself, according
+to circumstances, and which invariably
+tends to organization.</p>
+
+<p>In all animal and vegetable substances, decomposed
+by infusion, this productive matter
+manifests itself immediately under the form of
+vegetation. Filaments are seen to form, which
+grow and extend like plants. Afterwards these
+extremities and knots swell and burst, to give
+passage to a multitude of bodies in motion,
+which appear to be animals; so that it seems as
+if all nature began by a motion of vegetation.
+It is seen by microscopical objects, and likewise
+by the expansion or unfolding of the animal
+embryo; for the f&#339;tus at first has only a
+species of vegetable motion.</p>
+
+<p>Sound food does not furnish any of these
+moving molecules for a considerable time.
+Several days infusion in water is required for
+fresh meat, grain, kernels, &amp;c. before they
+offer to our sight any moving bodies; but the
+more matters are corrupted, decomposed, or
+exalted, the more suddenly these moving bodies
+manifest themselves; they are all free from other
+matters in seminal liquors; but a few hours
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[315]</a></span>
+infusion is required to see them in pus, spurred
+barley, honey, drugs, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>There exists therefore, an organic matter,
+universally diffused in all animal and vegetable
+substances, which alike serves for their nutrition,
+their growth, and their reproduction.
+Nutrition is performed by the intimate penetration
+of this matter in all parts of the animal
+or vegetable body. Expansion or growth is
+only a kind of more extended nutrition, which
+is made and performed as long as the parts have
+sufficient ductility to swell and extend; and
+reproduction is made by the same matter when
+it superabounds in the body of the animal or
+vegetable; each part of the body sends back, to
+the appropriate reservoirs, the organic particles
+which exceed what are sufficient for their nourishment.
+These particles are absolutely analogous
+to each part from which they are sent
+back, because they were destined to nourish those
+parts from hence, when all the particles sent
+back from, collect together, they must form
+a body similar to the first, since each particle is
+like that part from which it was detached; thus
+it is that reproduction is effected in all kinds of
+trees, plants, polypuses, pucerons, &amp;c. where
+one individual can produce its like; and it is
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[316]</a></span>
+also the first mode which Nature uses for the
+reproduction of animals which have need of the
+communication of different sexes; for the seminal
+liquors of both sexes contain all the necessary
+molecules for reproduction; but something
+more is required for its effectual completion,
+which is the mixture of these two liquors
+in some places suitable to the expansion of the
+f&#339;tus which must result therefrom, which place
+is the matrix of the female.</p>
+
+<p>There are, therefore, no pre-existing germs,
+no germs contained one in the other, <i>ad infinitum</i>;
+but there is an organic matter perpetually
+active, and always ready to form, assimilate, and
+produce beings similar to those which receive
+it. Animals and vegetables, therefore, can
+never be extinct; so long as there subsist individuals
+the species will ever be new; they
+are the same at present as they were three thousand
+years ago, and will perpetually exist, by
+the powers they are endowed with, unless annihilated
+by the will of the Almighty Creator.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[317]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="caption2"><a name="HISTORY_OF_MAN" id="HISTORY_OF_MAN">HISTORY OF MAN.</a></p>
+
+
+<p class="caption2"><a name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I.</a></p>
+
+<p class="caption2">OF THE NATURE OF MAN.</p>
+
+
+<p>Though so much interested in acquiring
+a thorough knowledge of ourselves, yet I
+do not know if man is not less acquainted with
+the human, than with any other existence.
+Provided by nature with organs, calculated
+solely for our preservation, we only employ
+them to receive foreign impressions. Intent
+on multiplying the functions of our senses,
+and on enlarging the external bounds of our
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[318]</a></span>
+being, we rarely make use of that internal
+sense which reduces us to our true dimensions,
+and abstracts us from every other part of the
+creation. It is, however, by a cultivation of
+this sense alone that we can form a proper
+judgment of ourselves. But how shall we
+give it its full activity and extent? How shall
+the soul, in which it resides, be disengaged
+from all the illusions of the mind? We have
+lost the habit of employing this sense; it has
+remained inactive amidst the tumult of our
+corporeal sensations, and dried up by the heat
+of our passions; the heart, the mind, the senses,
+have all co-operated against it.</p>
+
+<p>Unalterable in its substance, and invulnerable
+by its essence, it still, however, continues
+the same. Its splendor has been overcast, but
+its power has not been diminished: it may be
+less luminous, but its guidance is not the less
+certain. Let us then collect those rays, of
+which we are not yet deprived, and its obscurity
+will decrease; and though the road may not
+in every part be equally filled with light, we
+yet shall have a torch that will prevent us from
+going astray.</p>
+
+<p>The first and most difficult step which
+leads to the knowledge of ourselves, is a distinct
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[319]</a></span>
+conception of the two substances that
+constitute our being. To say simply, that the
+one is unextended, immaterial, and immortal,
+and that the other is extended, material, and
+mortal, is only to deny to the one, what we affirm
+the other possesses. What knowledge is
+to be acquired from this mode of negation?
+Such negative expressions can exhibit no positive
+ideas: but to say that we are certain of the
+existence of the former, and that of the latter
+is less evident; that the substance of the one is
+simple, indivisible, and has no form, since it
+only manifests itself by a single modification,
+which is thought; that the other is a less substance
+than a subject, capable of receiving different
+forms, which bear a relation to our
+senses, but are all as uncertain and variable as
+the organs themselves; that is to say something;
+it is to ascribe to each such distinct and positive
+properties as may lead us to an elemental knowledge
+of both, and to a comparison between
+them.</p>
+
+<p>From the smallest reflection on the origin of
+our knowledge, it is easy to perceive that it is
+by comparison alone we acquire it. What is
+absolutely incomparable, is utterly incomprehensible;
+of this God is the only example; he
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[320]</a></span>
+exceeds all comprehension, because he is above
+all comparison. But whatever is capable of
+being compared, contemplated, and considered
+relatively, in different lights, may always come
+within the sphere of our understanding. The
+more subjects of comparison we have for examining
+any object, the more methods there
+are for obtaining a knowledge of it, and with
+greater facility.</p>
+
+<p>The existence of the soul is fully demonstrated.
+To be and to think are with us identically
+the same. This truth is more than intuitive;
+it is independent of our senses, of our
+imagination, of our memory, and of all our
+other relative faculties. The existence of our
+bodies, and of external objects, is however held
+in uncertainty by every unprejudiced reasoner;
+for what is that extension of length, breadth,
+and thickness, which we call our body, and
+which seems to be so much our own, but as it
+relates to our senses? What are even the material
+organs of those senses, but so many conformities
+with the objects that affect them?
+And with regard to our internal sense, has it
+any thing similar or in common with these
+external organs? Have the sensations excited
+by light or sound any resemblance to that
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[321]</a></span>
+tenuous matter, which seems to diffuse light, or
+to that tremulous undulation, which sound produces
+in the air? The effects are certainly produced
+by the necessary conformity there is between
+the eyes and ears, and those matters
+which act upon them. Is not that a sufficient
+proof, that the nature of the soul is different
+from that of matter?</p>
+
+<p>It is then a certain truth, that the internal sensation
+is altogether different from its cause; as
+also, if external objects exist, they are in themselves
+very different from what we conceive
+them. As sensation therefore bears no resemblance
+to the thing by which it is excited; does
+it not follow, that the causes of our sensations,
+necessarily differ from our ideas of
+them? The extension which we perceive by
+our eyes, the impenetrability, of which we receive
+an idea by the touch in all those qualities,
+whose various combinations constitute matter,
+are of a doubtful existence; since our internal
+sensations of extension, impenetrability, &amp;c.
+are neither extended nor impenetrable, and have
+not even the smallest affinity with those qualities.</p>
+
+<p>The mind being often affected with sensations,
+during sleep, very different from those
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[322]</a></span>
+which it has experienced by the presence of the
+same objects, does it not lead to a belief, that
+the presence of objects is not necessary to the
+existence of our sensations; and that, of consequence,
+our mind and body may exist independent
+of those objects? During sleep, and after
+death, for example, our body has the same existence
+as before; yet the mind no longer perceives
+this existence, and the body with regard
+to us, has ceased to be. The question is therefore,
+whether a thing which can exist, and afterwards
+be no more, and which affects us in a
+manner altogether different from what it is, or
+what it has been, may yet be a reality of indubitable
+existence.</p>
+
+<p>That something exists without us, we may
+believe, though not with a positive assurance;
+whereas of the real existence of every thing
+within us, we have a certainty. That of our
+soul, therefore, is incontestable, and that of our
+body seems doubtful; because the mind has one
+mode of perception when we are awake, and
+another when we are asleep; after death, it
+will perceive by a method still more different,
+and the objects of its sensations, or matter in
+general, may then cease to exist with respect to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[323]</a></span>
+it, as well as our bodies with which we have no
+further connection.</p>
+
+<p>But let us admit this existence of matter; and
+that it even exists as it appears to our senses,
+yet by comparing the mind with any material
+object, we shall find differences so great, and
+qualities so opposite that every doubt will vanish
+of the latter being of a nature totally different,
+and infinitely superior.</p>
+
+<p>The mind has but one form, which is simple,
+general, and uniform. Thought is this form;
+has nothing in it of division, extension, impenetrability,
+nor any other quality of matter; of
+consequence, therefore, our mind, the subject
+of this form, is indivisible, and immaterial.
+Our bodies on the contrary, and all other objects
+have many forms, each of which is compounded,
+divisible, variable, and perishable;
+and has a relation to the different organs,
+through which we perceive them. Our bodies,
+and matter in general, therefore, have neither
+permanent, real, nor general properties, by
+which we can attain a certain knowledge of
+them. A blind man has no idea of those objects,
+which sight represents to us; a leper, whose skin
+has lost the sense of feeling, is denied all the
+ideas which arise from the touch; and a deaf
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[324]</a></span>
+man has no knowledge of sounds. Let these
+three modes of sensation be successively destroyed,
+yet the mind will exist, its external
+functions will subsist, and thought will still manifest
+it within the man so deprived. But
+divest matter of all its qualities; strip it of colour,
+of solidity, and of every other property
+which has any relation to our senses, and the
+consequence will be its annihilation. Our
+mind, then, is unperishable, but matter may,
+and will perish.</p>
+
+<p>It is the same with all the other faculties of
+our soul when compared with the most essential
+properties of matter. As the mind wills
+and commands, so the body obeys in every
+thing within its power. The mind forms, at
+pleasure, an intimate union with any object;
+neither distance, magnitude, nor figure, can
+obstruct this union, when the mind wills it, it
+is effected in an instant. The body can form
+no union; whatever touches it too closely injures
+it; it requires a long time in order to approach
+another body; it every where meets
+with resistance, and obstacles, and from the smallest
+shock its motion ceases. Is will then nothing
+more than a corporeal movement; and is contemplation
+but a simple contact? How could
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[325]</a></span>
+this contact take place upon a remote object
+or abstracted subjects? How could this movement
+be accomplished in an indivisible instant?
+Is it possible to have a conception of motion
+without having a conception of space and time?
+Will, therefore, if it be a motion, is not a material
+one; and if the union of the mind with
+its object be a contact, it is effected at a distance:
+and is not this contact a penetration?
+qualities which are absolutely opposite to those
+of matter, and which of consequence can only
+belong to the immaterial being.</p>
+
+<p>But I fear I have already dwelt too long on
+a subject which, by many, may be considered
+as foreign to our purpose; and it might be
+asked, "Ought Metaphysical Considerations
+on the Soul to find a place in a System of Natural
+History?" Were I conscious of abilities
+equal to the discussion of a topic so exalted,
+this reflection, I must own, would have little
+weight with me; and I have contracted my
+remarks only because I was afraid I should
+not be able to comprehend a subject so enlarged
+and so important in its full extent.
+Why retrench from the Natural History of
+Man the history of his noblest part? Why
+thus preposterously debase him; by considering
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[326]</a></span>
+him merely as an animal, while he is of a nature
+so different, and so superior, to that of the
+brutes, that those must be immersed in ignorance
+like the brutes themselves who ever
+thought of confounding them.</p>
+
+<p>Man, as to the material part of his existence,
+certainly bears a resemblance to other
+animals, and in comprehending the circle of
+natural beings there is a necessity for placing
+him in the class of animals. Nature, however,
+has neither classes nor species; it contains
+only individuals. These species and classes
+are nothing but ideas which we have ourselves
+formed and established, and though we place
+man in one of such classes we do not change
+his being; we do not derogate from his dignity;
+we do not alter his condition. In a word, we
+only place him at the head of those who bear a
+similitude to him in the material part of his
+being.</p>
+
+<p>In comparing man with the animal we find
+in both an organized body, senses, flesh, blood,
+motion, and a multitude of other resemblances.
+But these resemblances are all external, and
+not sufficient to justify a decision, that the human
+and the animal natures are similar. In
+order to form a proper judgment of the nature
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[327]</a></span>
+of each we ought to have as distinct a knowledge
+of the internal qualities of an animal as
+we have of our own. As the knowledge of
+what passes within animals is impossible to be
+attained, and as we know not of what order
+and kind its sensations may be, in relation to
+those of man, we can only judge from a comparison
+of the effects which result from the natural
+operations of both.</p>
+
+<p>Let us, then, take a view of these effects;
+and, while we admit of all the particular resemblances,
+limit our investigation to the most
+general distinctions. It will be allowed, that
+the most stupid man is able to manage the most
+acute animal; he governs it, and renders if
+subservient to his purposes; and this, not so
+much on account of his strength or skill as by
+the superiority of his nature, and from his
+being possessed of reason, which enables him
+to form a rational system of action and method,
+by which he compels the animals to obey him.
+The strongest and most acute animals do not
+give law to the inferior, nor hold them in servitude.
+The stronger, it is true, devour the
+weaker, but this action implies no more than an
+urgent necessity, or a rage of appetite; qualities
+very different from that which produces a series
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[328]</a></span>
+of actions, all tending to the same end. Did
+animals enjoy this faculty, should we not see
+some of them assume dominion over others,
+and oblige them to furnish their food, to watch
+over them, and to attend them when sick or
+wounded? Now, throughout the creation of
+animals, there is no vestige of such subordination,
+no appearance that one of them knows,
+or is sensible of, the superiority of his own nature
+over that of others. It follows, then, that
+they must all be considered as of one nature,
+and that the nature of man is not only highly
+superior to that of the brute, but also entirely
+different from it.</p>
+
+<p>Man, by outward signs, indicates what passes
+within him; he communicates his sentiments
+by speech, which is a sign common to the
+whole human species. The savage and the
+civilized man have the same powers of utterance;
+both speak naturally, and so as to be
+understood. No other animal is endowed with
+this expression of thought; nor is that defect
+owing, as some have imagined, to the want of
+proper organs. Anatomists have found the
+tongue of an ape to be as perfect as that of a
+man. The ape, therefore, if he had thought,
+would have speech, and if its thoughts had
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[329]</a></span>
+aught analogous to ours, this speech would
+have an analogy to ours also. Supposing its
+thoughts were peculiar to its species, it still
+would hold discourse with those of its kind, a
+circumstance of which we should have heard
+had it been endowed with the powers of speech.
+So far then is the ape from having any thought
+like ours, that it has not even any order of
+thoughts of its own. As they express nothing
+by combined and settled signs, they of consequence
+are void of thought, or at most have it
+in a very small degree.</p>
+
+<p>That it is from no organical defect animals
+are denied the gift of speech is plain, as several
+species of them may be taught to pronounce
+words, and even repeat sentences of some
+length. Perhaps many others might be found
+capable of articulating particular sounds<a name="FNanchor_33" id="FNanchor_33"></a><a href="#Footnote_33" class="fnanchor">[AG]</a>; but
+to make them conceive the ideas which such
+sounds denote is an impracticable task. They
+seem to repeat and articulate merely as an
+echo, or an artificial machine. It is not in
+the mechanical powers, or the material organs,
+but in the intellectual faculties, that they are
+deficient.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_33" id="Footnote_33"></a><a href="#FNanchor_33"><span class="label">[AG]</span></a> Leibnitz mentions a dog which had been taught to pronounce
+several German and French words.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[330]</a></span></p></div>
+
+<p>As all language supposes a chain of thought,
+it is on that account that brute animals have no
+speech, for even allowing something in them
+which resembles our first apprehensions, our
+most gross and mechanical sensations, they still
+will be found incapable of forming that association
+of ideas which can alone produce reflection;
+and in this consists the essence of thought.
+To this inability of connecting and separating
+ideas it is that they are destitute of thought and
+speech, as also that they neither can invent nor
+improve any thing. Were they endowed with
+the power of reflection, even in the most subordinate
+degree, they would be capable of making
+some kind of proficiency, and acquire more
+industry; the modern beaver would build with
+more art and solidity than the ancient; and the
+bee would daily be adding new improvements
+to its cell; for if we suppose this cell as perfect
+already as it can be, we ascribe to the insect an
+intelligence superior to our own; by which it
+could discern at once the last degree of perfection
+to which its work might be carried, while
+we ourselves are for ever in the dark as to this
+degree, and stand in need of much reflection,
+time, and practice, in order to perfect even one
+of our most trivial arts.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[331]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Whence can arise the uniformity that is in
+all the works of animals? Why does each
+species invariably perform the same actions in
+the same manner? And why does not one
+individual perform them better or worse than
+another? Can there be a stronger proof that
+their operations are merely the effects of mechanism
+and materiality? If they possessed the
+smallest spark of that light which is inherent
+in mankind, their works would display variety
+at least, if not perfection, and one individual
+would, in its performance, make some little
+difference from what another had done. But
+this is far from being the case. One plan of
+action is common to the whole species, and
+whoever would attribute a mind or soul to animals,
+must of necessity allow but one to each
+species, of which each individual would be an
+equal partaker, and as thereby it would be divisible,
+it would consequently be material, and
+of a nature widely different from ours.</p>
+
+<p>Why, on the other hand, are the productions
+and performances of men so various, and so
+diversified? Why is a servile imitation more
+troublesome to us than an original design? It
+is because our souls are our own, and independent
+of any other, and because we have nothing
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[332]</a></span>
+in common with our species but the matter
+which forms our body, and in which our
+resemblance to brute animals is confined.</p>
+
+<p>Were internal sensations dependent on corporeal
+organs, should we not see as remarkable
+difference in the works of animals of the same
+species as in those of men? Would not those
+which were the most happily organized, build
+their nests and contrive their cells in a manner
+more solid, elegant, and commodious? And
+if any individual possessed a superior genius,
+would it not take an opportunity to manifest
+that superiority in its actions? But nothing of
+this kind has ever happened, and therefore the
+corporeal organs, however perfect or imperfect,
+have no influence on the nature of the internal
+sensations. Hence we may conclude,
+that animals have no sensations of this kind;
+that such sensations have no connection with
+matter, no dependence in their nature on the
+texture of corporeal organs, and that of consequence
+there must be a substance in man different
+from matter, which is the subject and
+the cause that produces and receives those sensations.</p>
+
+<p>But these proofs of the immateriality of the
+human mind may be carried still farther. In
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[333]</a></span>
+all the works of nature there are imperceptible
+gradations maintained. This truth, which in
+no other instance admits of exception, is here
+expressly contradicted. Between the faculties
+of man and those of the most perfect animal
+the distance is infinite; an evident proof that
+man is of a different nature from the brute
+species, and that of himself he forms a distinct
+class, between which and that of animals there
+is an immense chasm. If man belonged to the
+class of animals, there would be a certain number
+of beings in nature less perfect than man,
+and more perfect than beast, in order to complete
+the gradation from a man to the monkey.
+But this is not the case; the transition is
+immediate from the thinking being to the material
+being; from intellectual faculties to mechanical
+powers; from order and design to
+blind motion; from reflection and choice to
+sensual appetite.</p>
+
+<p>Enough has been here advanced to demonstrate
+the excellence of our nature, and of the
+immense distance which the bounty of the Creator
+has placed between man and the brute.
+The former is a rational being, the latter a being
+devoid of reason. And as there is no medium
+between the positive and the negative,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[334]</a></span>
+between the rational and irrational being, it is
+evident that man is of a nature entirely different
+from that of the animal; that all the resemblance
+he bears to it is merely external;
+and that to judge of him by this resemblance,
+is wilfully to shut our eyes against that light,
+by which we ought to distinguish truth from
+falsehood.</p>
+
+<p>Having thus considered man as to his internal
+properties, and proved the immateriality of his
+soul; we shall now proceed to examine his
+external part, and give the history of his body.
+We have already traced him from his formation
+to his birth, and after taking a view of the different
+ages of his life, we shall conduct him to
+that period when he must be separated from
+his body, and then resign him to the common
+mass of matter to which he belongs.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+<p class="caption2"><a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II.</a></p>
+
+<p class="caption2">OF INFANCY.</p>
+
+
+<p>Nothing can give us a more striking idea
+of imbecility, than the condition in which
+an infant appears on its first entrance into the
+world. Incapable of making use of its organs,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[335]</a></span>
+or senses, the infant is in want of every assistance.
+It is an image of pain and misery; it is
+more helpless than the young of any other animal;
+it seems as if every moment would finish
+its doubtful existence; it can neither move nor
+support itself; hardly has it strength enough to
+exist or announce, by its cries, the sufferings it
+experiences; as if nature chose to apprise it,
+that it was born to suffer, and that it has obtained
+a place among the human species to partake
+of its infirmities and sorrows.</p>
+
+<p>Let us not disdain to consider that state
+through which we have all passed; let us view
+human kind in the cradle; let us enquire by
+what degrees this delicate machine, this new-born
+and hardly existing body, acquires motion,
+consistency, and strength.</p>
+
+<p>The infant at its birth comes from one element
+into another. On emerging from its
+watery residence in the womb, it becomes exposed
+to the air, and instantly experiences the
+impressions of that active fluid. The air acts
+upon the olfactory nerves and upon the organs
+of respiration, and thereby produces a shock, a
+kind of sneezing which expands the chest, and
+allows the air a passage into the lungs; the vesicles
+of which it dilates, and the air remaining
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[336]</a></span>
+for some time becomes warm and rarified to a
+certain degree; after which this spring of the
+fibres thus dilated re-acts upon this light fluid,
+and expels it from the lungs. Instead of undertaking
+to explain the causes of the alternate motion
+of respiration, we shall confine ourselves to
+an elucidation of its effects. This function is
+essential to the existence of man and of several
+species of animals. It is by respiration that life
+is preserved; and when it is once begun, it never
+ceases till death. Yet there is reason to believe
+that the foramen ovale is not closed immediately
+after the birth; and of consequence a
+part of the blood may continue to pass through
+that aperture. All the blood cannot, therefore,
+at first have a communication with the lungs;
+and it is probable a new-born child might sustain
+a privation of air for a considerable time
+without losing its existence. Or at least the
+possibility of this, I once seemingly confirmed
+fey an experiment upon some young dogs. I
+put a pregnant bitch, of the large greyhound
+species, just as she was about to litter, into a
+tub filled with warm water, where after fastening
+her in such a manner that the lower parts
+were covered with some water, she brought
+forth three puppies, which were accordingly
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[337]</a></span>
+received into a liquid as warm as they had left.
+After washing them in this water, I removed
+the puppies, without giving them time to breathe,
+into a smaller tub filled with warm milk; I
+chose milk in order that they might receive
+nourishment if they required it. In this milk
+they were kept immersed above half an hour:
+and when taken out they were all found
+alive. They began to breathe, and to discharge
+some moisture by the mouth. Having allowed
+them to respire for half an hour, I again put
+them into warm milk, and left them a second
+half-hour; at the expiration of which two of
+them were taken out vigorous and seemingly
+no wise incommoded, but the third appeared
+rather in a languishing state; this I caused to
+be carried to the mother, which by this time
+had produced, in the natural way, six other puppies;
+and though it had been brought forth in
+water and had lived in milk one half hour before,
+and another after it had breathed, it yet
+received so little injury from the experiment,
+that it presently recovered and was as strong
+and lively as the rest of the litter. After allowing
+the other two about an hour to breathe, I
+put them once more into the warm milk, in
+which they remained another half hour. Whether
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[338]</a></span>
+they swallowed any of this liquor or not
+is uncertain; but on being taken out they appeared
+nearly as vigorous as ever. After being
+carried to the mother, however, one died the
+same day; but whether by any accident, or by
+what it had suffered while immersed in the liquid,
+and deprived of air, I could not determine.
+The other lived, as well as the first,
+and both throve equally with those which had
+not gone through the same trials. This experiment
+I never carried farther; but I saw enough
+to convince me that respiration is less necessary
+to a new-born, than to a grown animal;
+and that it might be possible, with proper precautions,
+to keep the foramen ovale from being
+closed, and thus produce excellent divers, and
+different kinds of amphibious animals, which
+might live equally in air or in water.</p>
+
+<p>The air, on its first admission into the lungs,
+generally meets with some obstacle, occasioned
+by a liquid collected in the wind-pipe. This
+obstacle is more or less great, in proportion as
+the liquid is more or less viscous. At its birth,
+however, the infant raises its head, which before
+reclined on its breast, and by this movement
+the canal of the wind-pipe is lengthened, the
+air obtains a place, and forces the liquid into
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[339]</a></span>
+the lungs: and by dilating the bronchia, it
+distributes over their coats the mucous substance
+which opposes its passage. The superfluity
+of this moisture is presently dried up by
+the renewal of the air; or, if the infant is incommoded
+by it, it coughs, and at length relieves
+itself by expectoration, which, as it has
+not yet the strength to spit, is seen to flow from
+the mouth.</p>
+
+<p>As we remember nothing of what happened
+to us at this period, it is impossible to determine
+what feelings the impression of air produces
+in a new-born infant. Its cries, however,
+the instant it first draws breath, are pretty certain
+signs of the pain it feels from the action of
+the air. Till the moment of its birth, the infant
+is accustomed to the mild warmth of a
+tranquil liquid; and we may suppose, that the
+action of a fluid, whose temperature is unequal,
+gives too violent a shock to the delicate fibres
+of its body. By warmth and by cold it seems
+to be equally affected; in every situation it
+complains, and pain appears to be its first, its
+only sensation.</p>
+
+<p>For some days after they are brought into the
+world, most animals have their eye-lids closed.
+Infants open them the moment of their birth,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[340]</a></span>
+but they are fixed and dull; they want that
+lustre which they afterwards acquire; and when
+they move, it is rather an accidental roll than
+an act of vision. The pupil of the eye is seen
+to dilate, or contract, in proportion to the quantity
+of light it receives, yet is incapable of distinguishing
+objects, because the organs of vision
+are still imperfect; the tunica cornea, or
+horny tunicle is wrinkled, and perhaps the
+retina is also too soft to receive the images
+of external objects, and admit the sense of
+seeing.</p>
+
+<p>The same remark is equally applicable to the
+other senses; they have not acquired that consistency
+which is necessary to their operations;
+and even when they have, a long time must
+elapse before the sensations of the infant can
+be just and complete. The senses are so many
+instruments which we must learn to employ.
+Of these sight, which seems to be the noblest
+and the most admirable, is also the most uncertain
+and delusive; and were its effects not every
+moment corrected by the testimony of touching
+we should constantly be misled and draw
+false conclusions. This sense of touching is the
+measure and criterion of all the others; it alone
+is essential to the animal's existence; and is
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[341]</a></span>
+alone diffused universally over its body. Yet,
+even this sense, in an infant just born, is imperfect;
+by its cries, indeed, it gives indication
+of pain; but it has no expression to denote
+pleasure. It is forty days before it begins to
+smile; about the same time also it begins to
+weep; its former expressions of pain being
+unaccompanied with tears. On the countenance
+of a new born infant there appears no
+vestige of the passions, the features of the face
+not having acquired that consistence and form
+which are necessary for expressing the sentiments
+of the soul. All the other parts of its body are
+alike feeble and delicate; its motions are unsteady
+and uncertain; it is unable to stand upright;
+its legs and thighs are still bent, from
+the habit it contracted in the womb; it has
+not strength enough to stretch forth its arms or
+to grasp any thing with its hands; and, if
+abandoned, it would remain on its back, without
+being able to turn itself.</p>
+
+<p>From all which it appears, that the pain felt
+by infants soon after their birth, and which they
+express by crying, is a sensation merely corporeal,
+similar to that of other animals, who
+also cry the minute they are brought forth; as
+also, that the mental sensations do not begin to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">[342]</a></span>
+manifest themselves till forty days have elapsed;
+smiling and weeping being produced by two
+internal sensations, which both depend on the
+action of the mind. The former is the effect
+of an agreeable emotion, which can only arise
+from the sight, or resemblance of an object
+known, beloved, and desired; the latter is that
+of a disagreeable impression, compounded of
+sympathy, and anxious concern for ourselves;
+both imply a certain degree of knowledge, as
+well as an ability to compare, and to reflect.
+Smiles and tears, therefore, are signs peculiar
+to the human species, for expressing mental
+pleasure or pain; while cries, and the other
+signs of bodily pain and pleasure, are common
+to man, and to the greatest part of the animal
+creation.</p>
+
+<p>But let us return to the material organs and
+affections of the body. The size of an infant
+born at the full time, is usually about twenty-one
+inches; this is not without exception, some
+falling short of and others exceeding this measurement.
+In children of twenty-one inches,
+the breast, measured by the length of the sternum,
+is nearly three inches; and in those of
+fourteen, only two inches. At nine months,
+the f&#339;tus generally weighs from twelve to fourteen
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">[343]</a></span>
+pounds. The head is large in proportion
+to the rest of the body; but this disproportion
+gradually wears off as the size of the child increases.
+Its skin is very soft, and from its
+transparency, by which the blood beneath appears,
+it is also of a reddish cast. It is even
+pretended, that those children whose skins are
+the most red when born, will afterwards be the
+fairest, and the most beautiful.</p>
+
+<p>The form of the body and the members
+of a new born infant, are by no means perfect:
+all the parts are too round, and even when the
+child is in good health, they seem swelled. At
+the end of three days, there generally appears
+a kind of jaundice; and at this time there is
+generally milk in the breasts of the infants,
+which is squeezed out with the fingers. The
+superfluous juices, and the swelling of the different
+parts diminish by degrees, as the child
+increases in growth.</p>
+
+<p>In some children just born, the brain-pan
+may be observed to palpitate; and in all, the
+action of the sinuses, or arteries of the brain,
+may be felt at this place. Over this aperture
+is formed a kind of scurf, which is sometimes
+very thick, and must be rubbed with brushes
+in proportion as it begins to dry. This matter
+seems to have some analogy with that of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[344]</a></span>
+horns of some animals, which also derive their
+origin from an aperture of the skull, and from
+the substance of the brain. We shall hereafter
+take an opportunity to shew, that the extremities
+of the nerves become solid by being
+exposed to the air, and that it is this nervous
+substance produces claws, nails, horns, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>The fluid contained in the amnios leaves a
+viscous, whitish matter upon the infant, which
+is sometimes so adhesive, that it must be diluted
+with some mild liquid before it can be
+removed. In this country we never wash the
+infant but in warm water; yet there are whole
+nations, who inhabit climates much more
+severe than ours, that plunge their children
+into cold water the minute they are born,
+without their suffering the least injury. The
+Laplanders are even said to leave their infants
+in snow, till by the cold their respiration is nearly
+stopped, and then plunge them into a bath of
+warm water. They are treated thus roughly
+thrice every day during the first year, and
+afterwards as often every week, do they undergo
+an immersion in cold water. The people
+of the North are persuaded that the practice
+of cold bathing renders men more healthy
+and robust; and it is for this reason they
+enure their progeny to it from their birth.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">[345]</a></span>
+The truth is, we are ignorant with the extent
+of what our body is capable of suffering, acquiring,
+or losing by the power of habit. The
+Indians in the isthmus of America, for example,
+receive no injury from plunging into
+cold water when in a sweat; and as the most
+speedy remedy for intoxication, the women
+throw their husbands into the river when they
+are drunk; the minute after delivery, mothers
+scruple not to bathe in cold water with their
+infants, and yet dangerous as we should consider
+this practice, these women are rarely
+known to die in child-bearing.</p>
+
+<p>A few minutes after birth the infant discharges
+urine, and this generally when it feels
+the heat of the fire: and sometimes also the
+meconium or excrement which have been collected
+in the intestines during its residence in
+the matrix. This last evacuation is not always
+performed so soon, but if it does not happen in
+the course of the first day, the child is often affected
+with a pain in the bowels; in which case
+methods are taken to facilitate the discharge.
+The meconium is black, and when the infant
+is effectually eased of it, the subsequent stools
+are of a whitish cast. This change generally
+happens on the second or third day, and then
+the excrement becomes more f&#339;tid than the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[346]</a></span>
+meconium; a proof that the bile and other
+bitter humours of the body begin to intermix
+with it. This fact tends to support our former
+remark, that the f&#339;tus did not receive any
+food by its mouth, but received all its nourishment
+by absorption.</p>
+
+<p>The infant is allowed time to throw off the
+slime and meconium, which are in its bowels
+and intestines, before it is allowed to suck. As
+these substances might sour the milk, and produce
+bad effects, it is first made to swallow a
+little wine and sugar, in order to fortify the stomach,
+and to procure such evacuations as may
+be necessary to prepare it for receiving and digesting
+its food; nor ought it to receive the
+breast till 10 or 12 hours after the birth.</p>
+
+<p>Hardly has the infant left the womb of its
+mother, and enjoyed the liberty of extending
+its limbs, when it is again put into a more cruel
+confinement. The head of the helpless infant
+is fixed to one position; its arms and legs put
+in strict bondage, and it is laced with bandages
+so strait as not to be able to move a single
+joint. Well is it when the compression is not
+so great as to obstruct the respiration, or that
+the midwife has taken the precaution to lay it
+upon its side, that the natural moisture may
+emit of itself from the mouth, since it is
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[347]</a></span>
+denied the power of turning its head in order
+to facilitate this emission. Do not then those
+nations act more wisely than we who cover or
+clothe their children without shackling them
+in swathing-bands? the Siamese, the Japanese,
+the Indians, the Negroes, the Savages of Canada,
+of Virginia, or Brazil, and almost all
+the inhabitants of South America, lay their
+infants naked upon a suspended bed of cotton
+or put them into their cradles lined with fur.
+Those practices are certainly liable to less inconveniences
+than ours. In swaddling a child,
+it is impossible but the restraint must give it uneasiness;
+and the efforts it makes to disentangle
+itself have a greater tendency to injure the
+form of the body, than any position it might
+assume was it left at full liberty. Swathing-bands
+may be compared to stays, which young
+girls are made to wear in order to preserve their
+shapes, but which nevertheless occasion more
+diseases and deformities than they are supposed
+to prevent.</p>
+
+<p>If the efforts which children make for liberty,
+when confined in the swaddling-clothes, are
+hurtful, the inaction in which they are held by
+it, is perhaps still more so. Want of exercise
+naturally retards the growth of their limbs,
+and diminishes the strength of their bodies;
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">[348]</a></span>
+and of consequence such children as enjoy the
+liberty of moving at pleasure, must be the most
+vigorous. It was for this reason that the ancient
+Peruvians gave their infants the full freedom
+of their arms in a swathing-bag; afterwards,
+as their children grew, they put them
+up to the middle in a hole dug in the earth, and
+lined with linen; by this method they had their
+arms free, and could move their heads and bend
+their bodies, without falling or hurting themselves.
+So soon as they were able to step, they
+were presented with the breast, at a little distance,
+as an incentive for them to walk. The
+children of Negroes are often exposed to much
+greater fatigues, in order to come at the nipple,
+they cling round one of their mother's haunches
+with their legs, and support themselves without
+any assistance from her; seizing the breast they
+continue to suck in perfect safety, notwithstanding
+she is all the while in motion, or at
+work. These children begin to walk, or rather
+creep on their knees and hands, in the second
+month; and this exercise qualities them
+for running afterwards in this manner, almost
+as nimble as they do upon their feet.</p>
+
+
+<p class="caption3"><i>END OF THE THIRD VOLUME.</i></p>
+
+
+<p class="center larger">T. Gillet, Printer, Wild Court.</p>
+
+
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class="trans_notes">
+<p class="caption2"><a name="Transcriber_Note" id="Transcriber_Note">Transcriber's Note</a></p>
+
+<p>All paragraphs split by illustrations were rejoined.</p>
+
+<p>All obvious typographical errors were corrected.</p>
+
+<p>In the <a href="#ToC">Table of
+Contents</a>, <a href="#CHAPTER_VI">Chapter VI</a>'s starting page was corrected to
+<a href="#Page_81"> 81</a>.</p>
+
+<p>On page <a href="#Page_203">page 203</a>,
+the word sospetare was changed to sospettare.</p>
+
+<p><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">Chapter XI</a> (p. 260) was mislabeled
+as "IX" and was corrected.</p>
+
+<p>Likewise, <a href="#Page_334">Chapter II</a> (page 334) was mislabeled "III" and
+was corrected.</p>
+
+<p>Otherwise, all text is as presented in the printed version.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="pg" />
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BUFFON'S NATURAL HISTORY, VOLUME III (OF 10)***</p>
+<p>******* This file should be named 45639-h.txt or 45639-h.zip *******</p>
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Buffon's Natural History, Volume III (of 10),
+by Georges Louis Leclerc, Comte de Buffon, Translated by James Smith Barr
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Buffon's Natural History, Volume III (of 10)
+ Containing a Theory of the Earth, a General History of Man, of the Brute Creation, and of Vegetables, Minerals, &c. &c.
+
+
+Author: Georges Louis Leclerc, Comte de Buffon
+
+
+
+Release Date: May 12, 2014 [eBook #45639]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BUFFON'S NATURAL HISTORY, VOLUME
+III (OF 10)***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Chris Curnow, Tom Cosmas, and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made
+available by Internet Archive (https://archive.org)
+
+
+
+Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
+ file which includes the original illustrations.
+ See 45639-h.htm or 45639-h.zip:
+ (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/45639/45639-h/45639-h.htm)
+ or
+ (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/45639/45639-h.zip)
+
+
+ Images of the original pages are available through
+ Internet Archive. See
+ https://archive.org/details/buffonsnaturalhi03buff
+
+
+Transcriber's note:
+
+ Text enclosed by underscores is in italics (_italics_).
+
+
+
+
+
+ _Barr's Buffon._
+
+ Buffon's Natural History,
+
+ CONTAINING
+
+ A THEORY OF THE EARTH,
+ A GENERAL
+ _HISTORY OF MAN_,
+ OF THE BRUTE CREATION, AND OF
+ VEGETABLES, MINERALS,
+ _&c._ _&c._
+
+ FROM THE FRENCH.
+
+ WITH NOTES BY THE TRANSLATOR.
+
+ IN TEN VOLUMES.
+
+ VOL. III.
+
+ London:
+ PRINTED FOR THE PROPRIETOR,
+ AND SOLD BY H. D. SYMONDS, PATERNOSTER-ROW.
+
+ 1807.
+
+ T. Gillet, Printer, Wild-Court.
+
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS
+
+ OF
+
+ THE THIRD VOLUME.
+
+
+ _Page_
+
+ History of Animals 1
+
+ Chap. VI. _Experiments on the Method of Generation_ 81
+
+ Chap. VII. _Comparison of my Observations with those
+ of Leeuwenhoek_ 134
+
+ Chap. VIII. _Reflections on the preceding Experiments_ 159
+
+ Chap. IX. _Varieties on the Generation of Animals_ 208
+
+ Chap. X. _On the Formation of the Foetus_ 226
+
+ Chap. XI. _On the Expansion, Growth, and Delivery of
+ the Foetus_ 260
+
+ _Recapitulation_ 309
+
+
+ History of Man.
+
+ Chap. I. _Of the Nature of Man_ 317
+
+ Chap. II. _Of Infancy_ 334
+
+
+
+_Directions for placing the Plates._
+
+
+ Page 88, Fig. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6.
+ 106, Fig. 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12.
+ 140, Plate III.
+ 148, Plate IV.
+
+
+
+
+BUFFON'S
+
+NATURAL HISTORY.
+
+
+
+
+_HISTORY OF ANIMALS._
+
+
+Aristotle admits, with Plato, of final and efficient causes. These
+efficient causes are sensitive and vegetative souls, that give form to
+matter which, of itself, is only a capacity of receiving forms; and
+as in generation the female gives the most abundant matter, and it
+being against his system of final causes to admit that what one could
+effect should be performed by many, he concludes, that the female
+alone contains the necessary matter to generation; and, as another of
+his principles was, that matter itself is unformed, and that form is
+a distinct being from matter, he affirmed that the male furnished the
+form, and, consequently, nothing belonging to matter.
+
+Descartes, on the contrary, who admitted but a few mechanical
+principles in his philosophy, endeavoured to explain the formation
+of the foetus by them, and thought it in his power to comprehend,
+and make others understand, how an organized and living being could
+be made by the laws of motion alone. His admitted principles differed
+from those used by Aristotle; but both, instead of examining the thing
+itself, without prepossession and prejudice, have only considered it
+in the point of view relative to their systems of philosophy, which
+could not be attended with a successful application to the nature of
+generation, because it depends, as we have shewn, on quite different
+principles. Descartes differs still more from Aristotle, by admitting
+of the mixture of the seminal liquor of the two sexes; he thinks both
+furnish something material for generation, and that the fermentation
+occasioned by the mixture of these two seminal liquors causes the
+formation of the foetus.
+
+Hippocrates, who lived under Perdicas, a considerable time before
+Aristotle, established an opinion, which was adopted by Galen, and a
+great number of physicians who followed him; his opinion was, that the
+male and female had each a prolific fluid, and supposed, besides, that
+there were two seminal fluids in each sex, the one strong and active,
+the other weak and inactive.[A] That a mixture of the two strongest
+fluids produce a male child, and of the two weakest a female; so
+that, according to him, they each contain a male and a female seed.
+He supports this hypothesis by the following circumstance; that many
+women, who produce only girls by their first husbands, have produced
+boys by a second; and that men, who have had only girls by their first
+wives, have had boys by others. It appears to me, that if even this
+circumstance could be well established, it would not be necessary
+to give to the male and female two kinds of seminal liquor for an
+explanation; because it may easily be conceived, that women, who have
+brought forth only girls by their first husbands, and produced boys
+with other men, were only those who furnished more particles proper
+for generation with their first husband than with the second; or that
+the second husband furnished more particles proper for generation
+with the second wife than with the first; for when, in the instant of
+conception, the organic molecules of the male are more abundant than
+those of the female, the result will be a male, and when those of
+the female abounds a female will be produced; nor is it in the least
+surprising that a man should have a disadvantage in this respect with
+some women, while he will have a superiority over others.
+
+[A] See Hippocrates, lib. de Genitura, page 129, & lib. de diaeta, page
+198, Lugd. Bat. 1665, vol. I.
+
+This great physician supposes, that the seed of the male is a secretion
+of the strongest and most essential parts of all that is humid in the
+human body; and he thus explains how this secretion is made: "Venae
+& nervi, he says, ab omni corpore in pudendum vergunt, quibus dum
+aliquantulum teruntur & calescunt ac implentur, velut pruritus incidit,
+ex hoc toti corpori voluptas ac caliditas accidit; quum vero pudendum
+teritur & homo movetur, humidum in corpore calescit ac diffunditur,
+& a motu conquassatur ac spumescit, quemadmodum alii humores omnes
+conquassati spumescunt.
+
+"Sic autem in homine ab humido spumescente id quod robustissimum est ac
+pinguissimum secernitur, & ad medullam spinalem venit; tendunt enim in
+hanc ex omni corpore viae, & diffundunt ex cerebro in lumbus ac in totum
+corpus & in medullum; & ex ipsa medull proacedunt viae, ut & ad ipsum
+humidum perferatur & ex ipsa secedat; postquam autem ad hanc medullam
+genitura pervenerit, procedit ad renes, hac enim via tendit per venas,
+& si renes fuerint exulcerati, aliquando etiam sanguis defertur: a
+renibus autem transit per medois testes in pudendum, proce dit autem
+non qua urina, erum alia ipsi via est illi contigua, &c."[B]
+
+[B] See Faesius's Translation, vol. I. page 129.
+
+Anatomists will no doubt discover that Hippocrates is not correct
+in tracing the road of the seminal liquor; but that does not affect
+his opinion, that the semen comes from every part of the body, and
+particularly the head, because, he says, those whose veins have been
+cut which lie near the ears only bring forth a weak, and very often an
+unfertile semen. The female has also a seminal fluid, which she emits,
+sometimes within the matrix, and sometimes without, when the internal
+orifice is more open than it should. The semen of the male enters into
+the matrix, where it mixes with that of the female; and as each has
+two kinds of fluid, the one strong and the other weak, if both furnish
+their strong, a male will be the result, and if their weak, a female;
+and if in the mixture there are more particles of the male liquor than
+the female, then the infant will have a greater resemblance to the
+father than to the mother, and so on the contrary. It might here be
+asked Hippocrates what would happen when the one furnished its weak
+semen and the other its strong? I cannot conceive what answer he could
+make, and that alone is sufficient to cause his opinion of two seeds in
+each sex to be rejected.
+
+In this manner then, according to him, the formation of the foetus is
+made: the seminal fluids first mix in the matrix, where they gradually
+thicken by the heat of the body of the mother; the mixture receives and
+attracts the spirit of the heat, and when too warm part of the heat
+flies out, and the respiration of the mother sends a colder spirit in;
+thus alternatively a cold and a hot spirit enter the mixture, which
+give life, and cause a pellicle to grow on the surface, which takes a
+round form, because the spirits, acting as a centre, extend it equally
+on all sides. "I have seen, says this great man, a foetus of six days
+old; it was a ball of liquor surrounded with a pellicle; the liquor
+was reddish, and the pellicle was spread over with vessels, some red
+and others white, in the midst of which was a small eminence, which I
+thought to be the umbilical vessels, by which the foetus receives
+nourishment and the spirit of respiration from the mother. By degrees
+another pellicle is formed, which surrounds the first; the menstrual
+blood, being suppressed, abundantly supplies it with nutriment, and
+which coagulates by degrees, and becomes flesh; this flesh articulates
+itself in proportion as it grows, and receives its form from the
+spirit; each part proceeds to take its proper place; the solid
+particles go to their respective situations and the fluid to theirs:
+each matter seeks for that which is most like itself, and the foetus
+is at length entirely formed by these causes and these means."
+
+This system is less obscure and more reasonable than that of Aristotle,
+because Hippocrates endeavours to explain every matter by particular
+reasons: he borrows from the philosophy of his times but one single
+principle, which is, that heat and cold produce spirits, and that those
+spirits have the power of ordering and arranging matter. He has viewed
+generation more like a physician than a philosopher, while Aristotle
+has explained it more like a metaphysician than a naturalist; which
+makes the defects of Hippocrates's system particular and less apparent,
+while those of Aristotle's are general and evident.
+
+These two great men have each had their followers; almost all the
+scholastic philosophers, by adopting Aristotle's philosophy, received
+his system of generation, while almost every physician followed
+the opinion of Hippocrates; and seventeen or eighteen centuries
+passed without any thing new being said on the subject. At last, at
+the restoration of literature, some anatomists turned their eyes
+on generation, and Fabricius Aquapendente was the first who made
+experiments and observations on the impregnation and growth of the eggs
+of a fowl. The following is the substance of his observations.
+
+He distinguished two parts in the matrix of a hen, the one superior
+and the other inferior. The superior he calls the Ovarium, which is
+properly no other than a cluster of small yellow eggs of a round form,
+varying in size from the bigness of a mustard-seed to that of a large
+nut or medlar. These small eggs are fastened together by one common
+pellicle, and form a body which nearly resembles a bunch of grapes.
+The smallest of these eggs are white, and they take another colour in
+proportion as they increase.
+
+Having examined these eggs immediately after the communication of the
+cock, he did not perceive any remarkable difference, nor any of the
+male semen in any one of these eggs; he therefore supposed that every
+egg, and the ovarium itself, became fruitful by a subtle spirit, which
+came from the semen of the male; and he says, that in order to secure
+this fecundating spirit, nature has placed at the external orifice of
+the vagina of birds a kind of net-work or membrane, which permits, like
+a valve, the entrance of this seminal spirit, but at the same time
+prevents it from re-issuing or evaporating.
+
+When the egg is loosened from the common pellicle, it descends by
+degrees through a winding passage into the internal part of the matrix.
+This passage is filled with a liquor nearly similar to the white of
+an egg; it is also in this part that the eggs begin to be surrounded
+with this white liquor, with the membrane which occasions it, the two
+ligaments (_chalazae_) which passes over the white, and connects it
+with the yolk and shell, which are formed in a very short time before
+they are laid. These ligaments, according to Fabricius, is the part of
+the egg fecundated by the seminal spirit of the male; and it is here
+where the foetus first begins to form. The egg is not only the true
+matrix, that is to say, the place of the formation of the chick, but
+it is from the egg all generation depends. The egg produces it as the
+agent: it supplies both the matter and the organs; the ligaments are
+the substance of formation; the white and the yolk are the nutriment,
+and the seminal spirit of the male is the efficient cause. This
+spirit communicates to the ligaments at first an alterative faculty,
+afterwards a formative, and lastly the power of augmentation, &c.
+
+These observations of Fabricius have not given us a very clear
+explication of generation. Nearly at the same time as this anatomist
+was employed in these researches, towards the middle of the sixteenth
+century, the famous Aldrovandus[C] also made observations on eggs; but
+as Harvey judiciously observes, he followed Aristotle much closer than
+experiment. The descriptions he gives of the chicken in the egg are
+not exact. Volcher Coiter, one of his scholars, succeeded much better
+in his enquiries; and Parisanus, a physician of Venice, having also
+laboured on this subject, they have each given a description of the
+chicken in the egg, which Harvey prefers to any other.
+
+[C] See his Ornithology.
+
+This famous anatomist, to whom we are indebted for the discovery of the
+circulation of the blood, has composed a very extensive treatise on
+generation; he lived towards the middle of the last century, and was
+physician to Charles I. of England. As he was obliged to follow this
+unfortunate prince in his misfortunes, he lost what he had written on
+the generation of insects among other papers, and he composed what he
+has left us on the generation of birds and quadrupeds from his memory.
+I shall concisely relate his observations, his experiments, and his
+system.
+
+Harvey asserts that man and every animal proceed from an egg; that the
+first produce of conception in viviparous animals is a kind of an egg,
+and that the only difference between viviparous and oviparous is, that
+the foetus of the first take their origin, acquire their growth, and
+arrive at their entire expansion in the matrix; whereas the foetus of
+oviparous animals begins to exist in the body of the mother, where they
+are merely as eggs, and it is only after they have quitted the body of
+the mother that they really become foetuses; and we must remark, says
+he, that in oviparous animals, some hold their eggs within themselves
+till they are perfect, as birds, serpents and oviparous quadrupeds;
+others lay their eggs before they are perfect, as fish, crustaceous,
+and testaceous animals. The eggs which these animals deposit are only
+the rudiments of real eggs, they afterwards acquire bulk and membranes,
+and attract nourishment from the matter which surrounds them. It is the
+same, adds he, with insects, for example, and caterpillars, which only
+seem imperfect eggs, which seek their nutriment, and at the end of a
+certain time arrive to the state of chrysalis, which is a perfect egg.
+There is another difference in oviparous animals: for fowls and other
+birds have eggs of different sizes, whereas fish, frogs, &c. lay them
+before they are perfect, have them all of the same size; he indeed
+observes, that in pigeons, who only lay two eggs, all the small eggs
+which remain in the ovarium are of the same size, and it is only the
+foremost two which are bigger than the rest. It is the same, he says,
+in cartilaginous fish, as in the thornback, who have only two eggs
+which increase and come to maturity, while those which remain in the
+ovarium are, like those in fowls, of different sizes.
+
+He afterwards makes us an anatomical exposition of the parts necessary
+to generation, and observes, that in all birds the situation of the
+anus and vulra are contrary to the situation of those parts in other
+animals; the anus being placed before and the vulra behind;[D] and
+with respect to the cock, and all small birds, that they generate by
+external friction, having in fact no intermission nor real copulation;
+with male ducks, geese, and ostriches, it is evidently otherwise.
+
+[D] Most of these articles are taken from Aristotle.
+
+Hens produce eggs without the cock, but in a very small number, and
+these eggs, although perfect, are unfruitful: he does not agree with
+the opinion of country people, that two or three days cohabitation
+with the cock is sufficient to impregnate all the eggs a hen will lay
+within the year, but admits that he separated a hen from a cock for the
+space of twenty days, and that all the eggs she laid during that space
+were fecundated. While the egg is fastened to the ovarium, it derives
+its nutriment from the vessel of the common pellicle. But as soon as
+it is loosened from it, it derives the white liquor which fills the
+passages in which it descends, and the whole, even to the shell, is
+formed by this mode.
+
+The two ligaments (_chalazae_) which Aquapendente looks on as the shoot
+produced by the seed of the male, are found in the infecund eggs
+which the hen produces without the communication with the cock, as
+in those which are impregnated: and Harvey very judiciously remarks,
+that those parts do not proceed from the male, and are not those which
+are fecundated; the fecundated part of an egg is a very small white
+circle which is on the membrane that covers the yolk, and forms there
+a small spot, like a cicatrice, about the size of a lentil. Harvey
+also remarks, that this little cicatrice is found in every fecund or
+infecund egg, and that those who think it is produced by the seed of
+the male are deceived. It is of the same size and form in fresh eggs,
+as in those which have been kept a long time; but when we would hatch
+them, and when the egg receives a sufficient degree of heat, either by
+the hen, or artificially, we presently see this small spot increase and
+dilate nearly like the sight of the eye. This is the first change, and
+is visible at the end of a few hours incubation.
+
+When the egg has undergone a proper warmth for twenty-four hours,
+the yolk, which was before in the centre of the shell, approaches
+nearer to the cavity at the broad end; this cavity is increased by the
+evaporation of the watery part of the white, and the grosser part sinks
+to the small end. The cicatrice, or speck, on the membrane of the yolk,
+rises with it to the broad end, and seems to adhere to the membrane
+there: this speck is then about the bigness of a small pea, in the
+middle of it a white speck is discernible, and many circles, of which
+this point seems to form the centre.
+
+At the end of the second day these circles are larger and more
+visible; the streak also appears divided by these circles into two,
+and sometimes three parts of different colours; a small protuberance
+also appears on the external part, and nearly resembles a small eye,
+in the pupil of which there is a point, or little cataract; between
+these circles a clear liquor is contained by a very delicate membrane,
+and the speck now appears more to be placed in the white than on the
+membrane of the yolk. On the third day the transparent liquor is
+considerably increased, as is also the small membrane which surrounds
+it. The fourth day, a small streak of purple-coloured blood is observed
+at the circumference of the speck or ball, at a little distance from
+the centre of which a point may be seen of a blood colour, and which
+beats like a heart. It appears like a small spark at each diastole, and
+disappears at each systole; from this animated speck issue two small
+blood vessels, which these small vessels throw out as branches into
+this liquor, all of which come from the same point, nearly in like
+manner as the roots of a tree shoot from the trunk.
+
+Towards the end of the fourth day, or at the beginning of the fifth,
+the animated speck is so much increased as to appear like a small
+bladder filled with blood, and by its contractions and dilations
+is alternatively filled and emptied. In the same day this vessel
+very distinctly appears to divide into two parts, each of which
+alternatively impel and dilute the blood in the same manner. Around
+the shortest sanguinary vessel which we have spoken of a kind of cloud
+is seen, which, although transparent, renders the sight of this vessel
+more obscure; this cloud constantly grows thicker and more attached
+to the root of the blood vessel, and appears like a small globe: this
+small globe lengthens and divides into three parts, one of which is
+globular, and larger than the other two; the head and eyes now begin to
+appear, and at the end of the fifth day, the place for the vertebra is
+seen in the remainder part of this globe.
+
+The sixth day the head is seen more clearly, the outlines of the eyes
+now appear, the wings and thighs lengthen, and the liver, lungs, and
+beak, are distinctly observed; the foetus now begins to move and
+extend its head, although it has as yet only the internal viscera; for
+the thorax, abdomen, and all the external coverings of the fore part,
+of the body are wanting. At the end of this day, or at the beginning
+of the seventh, the toes appear, the chick opens and moves its beak,
+and the anterior parts of the body begin to cover the viscera; on the
+seventh day the chicken is entirely formed, and from this time until
+it comes out of the egg, nothing happens but only an expansion of those
+parts it acquired within these first seven days: at the fourteenth or
+fifteenth day the feathers appear, and at the twenty-first it breaks
+the shell with its beak, and procures its enlargement.
+
+These observations of Harvey appear to have been made with the greatest
+exactness; nevertheless we shall point out how imperfect they are,
+and that he has fallen himself into the error he reproaches others
+with, making experiments to support his favourite hypothesis, that
+the heart was the animated speck which first appeared; but before we
+proceed on this matter, it is but just to give an account of his other
+observations, and of his system.
+
+It is well known that Harvey made many experiments on hinds and does.
+They receive the male towards the middle of September: a few days after
+copulation the horns of the matrix become thicker, and at the same time
+more lax. In each of the cavities five carunculas appear. Towards the
+26th or 28th of the above month the matrix thickens still more, and the
+five carunculas are swelled nearly to the shape and size of a nurse's
+nipple; by opening them, an infinity of small white specks are found.
+Harvey pretends to have remarked, that there was neither then, nor
+immediately after copulation, any alteration or change in the ovarium,
+and that he has never been able to find a single drop of the seed of
+the male in the matrix, although he has made many researches for that
+purpose.
+
+Towards the end of October, or beginning of November, when the
+females separate from the males, the thickness of the horns begins
+to diminish, the internal surfaces of their cavities are swelled,
+and appear fastened together; the carunculas remain, and the whole,
+which resembles the substance of the brain, is so soft that it cannot
+be touched. Towards the 13th or 14th of November, Harvey says, that
+he perceived filaments, like the threads of a spider's web, which
+traversed the cavities of the horns and the matrix itself: these
+filaments shoot out from the superior angle of the matrix, and by
+their multiplication form a kind of membrane, or empty tunic; a day
+or two after this tunic is filled with a white, aqueous and glutinous
+matter, which adheres to the matrix by a kind of mucilage; and in the
+third month this tunic, or pouch, contains an embryo about the breadth
+of two fingers long, and another internal pouch, called the amnios,
+containing a transparent crystalline liquor, in which the foetus
+swims. The foetus at first was but an animated speck, like that in
+the egg of a fowl. All the rest is performed in the same manner as that
+related of the chick; the only difference is in the eyes, which appears
+much sooner in the fowl than in the deer. The animated speck appears
+about the 19th or 20th of November, a day or two after which the oblong
+body, which contains the foetus, is seen; in six or seven days more
+it is so much formed that the sex and limbs may be distinguished; but
+the heart and viscera are yet uncovered, and it is two days more before
+the thorax and the abdomen cover them, which is the last work and
+completion of the edifice.
+
+From these observations upon hens and deer, Harvey concludes, that
+all female animals have eggs, that in these eggs a separation of a
+transparent crystalline liquor contained in the amnios is made, and
+that another external pouch, the chorion, contains the whole liquors of
+the egg; that the first thing which appears in the crystalline liquor
+is the sanguinary and animated spirit; in a word, that the formation of
+viviparous animals is made after the same manner as oviparous; and he
+explains the generation of both as follows.
+
+Generation is the work of the matrix, in which no seed of the male
+ever enters; the matrix conceives by a kind of contagion, which the
+male liquor communicates to it, nearly as the magnet communicates
+its magnetic virtue to steel. This male contagion not only acts upon
+the matrix but over all the female body, which is wholly fecundated,
+although the matrix only has the faculty of conception, as the brain
+has the sole faculty of conceiving ideas. The ideas conceived by the
+brain, are like the images of the objects transmitted by the senses;
+and the foetus, which may be considered as the idea of the matrix, is
+like that which produces it. This is the reason that a child has a
+resemblance to its father, &c.
+
+I shall not follow this anatomist any farther; what I have mentioned
+is sufficient to judge of his system; but we have some remarks to make
+on his observations. He has given them in a manner most likely to
+impose; seems to have often repeated his experiments, and to have taken
+every necessary precaution to avoid deception; from which it might
+be imagined he had seen all he writes upon, and observed them with
+the greatest accuracy. Nevertheless, I perceive both uncertainty and
+obscurity in his descriptions; his observations are related chiefly on
+memory; and although he often says the contrary, Aristotle appears to
+have been his guide more than experience; for he has only seen in eggs
+what Aristotle has before mentioned; and that most of his observations
+which may be deemed essential had been made before him, we shall be
+perfectly convinced if we pay a little attention to what follows:
+
+Aristotle knew that the ligaments (Chalazae) were of no service to the
+generation of the chicken. "Quae ad principium lutei grandines haerent,
+nil conferunt ad generationem, ut quidam suspicantur."[E] Parisanus,
+Volcher, Coiter, Aquapendente, and others, remarked the cicatrice as
+well as Harvey: Aquapendente supposed it of no use; but Parisanus
+pretended that it was formed by the male semen, or at least that the
+white speck in the middle of the cicatrice was the seed of the male
+which would produce the chicken. "Est-que, says he, illud galli semen
+alba & tenuissima tunica abductum, quod substat duabus communibus
+toti ovo membranis, &c." Therefore the only discovery which properly
+belongs to Harvey is, his having observed that this cicatrice is found
+in infecund as well as fecundated eggs; for others had observed, like
+him, the dilation of the circles, and the growth of the white speck;
+and it appears that Parisanus had seen it much better; this is all
+which he remarks in the two first days of incubation; and what he says
+of the third day, is only a repetition of Aristotle's words. [F]"Per id
+tempus ascendit jam vetellus ad superiorem partem ovi acutiorem, ubi
+& principium ovi est & foetus excluditur; corque ipsum apparet, in
+albumine sanguinei puncti, quod punctum salit & movet sese instar quasi
+animatum; ab eo meatus venarum specie duo, sanguinei pleni, flexuosi,
+qui, crescente foetu, feruntur in utramque tunicam ambientem, ac
+membrana sanguineas fibras habens eo tempore albumen continet sub
+meatibus illis venarum similibus; ac paulo post discernitur corpus
+pufillum initio, ommino & candidum, capite conspicuo, atque in eo
+oculis maxime turgidis qui diu sic permanent, sero enim parvi fiunt ac
+considunt. In parte autem corporis inferiore, nullum extat membrum per
+initia, quod respondeat superioribus. Meatus autum illi qui a corde
+prodeunt, alter ad circumdantem, membranam tendit, alter ad luteum,
+officio umbilici."
+
+[E] Hist. Anim. lib. vi. cap. 2.
+
+[F] Hist. Anim. lib. vi. cap. 4.
+
+Harvey attacks Aristotle for saying that the yolk ascends towards the
+small end of the egg, and concludes, that he had not seen any thing
+himself, but had apparently received his information from some good
+observer of Nature. Harvey was wrong in thus reproaching Aristotle, and
+in asserting that the yolk always ascends towards the broad end of the
+egg, for that depends on the position of the egg during the time of
+incubation, for the yolk always ascends to the uppermost part, as being
+lighter than the white, whether it be to the broad or the small end.
+William Langley, a physician at Dordrecht, who made observations on the
+hatching of eggs, in 1655, twenty years before Harvey, was the first
+who made this remark.[G]
+
+[G] See Wm. Langley Observ. edae a justo Schradero, Amst. 1674.
+
+But to return to the passage we have quoted. By that we see that the
+crystalline liquor, the animated speck, the two circles, the two
+blood vessels, &c. are described by Aristotle precisely as Harvey
+had seen them. This anatomist also pretends that the animated speck
+is the heart, that this heart is formed the first, and that the
+viscera and other parts are joined afterwards. All this has been
+spoken of by Aristotle, and seen by Harvey, and nevertheless it is
+not conformable to truth. To be assured of this we need only repeat
+the same experiments on eggs, or only read with attention those of
+Malpighius,[H] which were made about 40 years after those of Harvey.
+
+[H] Malpighii pullus in ovo.
+
+This excellent observer of Nature examined, with attention, the
+cicatrice, which is the essential part of the egg; he found it was
+large in all impregnated eggs, and small in those which were not
+impregnated; and he discovered in eggs which had never been sat upon,
+that the white speck, spoken of by Harvey as the first which becomes
+animated, is a small pouch or ball, which swims in a liquor inclosed
+by the first circle, and in the middle of this ball he observed the
+embryo. The membrane of this small pouch, which is the amnios, being
+very thin and transparent, permitted him easily to see the foetus
+it surrounded. Malpighius, with reason, concludes, from this first
+observation, that the foetus exists in the egg before incubation, and
+that its first outlines are then very strong. It is not necessary to
+point out how opposite this experiment is to the opinion of Harvey,
+for he saw nothing of a form for the two first days of incubation, and
+it was the third day before the sign of the foetus appears, which is
+the animated speck: whereas according to Malpighius, the outlines of
+the foetus exist in the egg before incubation has commenced.
+
+After being assured of this important matter, Malpighius examined, with
+like attention, the cicatrice of unimpregnated eggs, which, as we have
+observed, is smaller than those which have been impregnated; it has
+often irregular circumscriptions, and sometimes differs in different
+eggs. Near its centre, instead of the ball that encloses the foetus,
+there is a globular mole, which does not contain any thing organized,
+and which being opened does not present any thing formed or arranged,
+but only some appendages filled with a thick but transparent fluid; and
+this unshapen mass is surrounded with many concentric circles.
+
+After six hours incubation the cicatrice is considerably dilated,
+and the ball formed by the amnios is easily discovered; this ball is
+filled with a liquor, in the middle of which the head of the chicken
+and back-bone are distinctly seen. In about six hours more the little
+animal is seen more distinctly; in another six hours the head is
+grown larger, and the spine lengthened; and at the end of twenty-four
+hours the neck begins to lengthen, the vertebrae of the back appears
+of a white colour, and the head to turn to one side. The vertebrae are
+disposed on each side of the spine, like small globules; and almost
+at the same time the small wings begin to shoot, and the head, neck,
+and breast are lengthened. After thirty hours nothing new appears,
+but every part of the little animal is considerably increased,
+especially the _amnios_. Around this membrane the umbilical vessels
+are seen of a darkish colour. At the end of thirty-eight hours, the
+chicken being grown much larger, its head is large, and in which
+are distinguished three vessels surrounded with membranes, which
+also cover the back bone, through which the vertebrae are still seen.
+In forty hours, continues Malpighius, it was wonderful to see the
+chicken alive, floating in the liquor; the back bone was increased,
+the head was turned on one side, the vesicles of the brain were less
+apparent, the first outlines of the eyes appeared, the heart beat, and
+the circulation of the blood was begun. Malpighius then gives the
+description of the vessels and course of the blood, and reasonably
+supposes that, though the heart does not beat before thirty-eight or
+forty hours incubation, it still existed before that time, like the
+other parts of the chicken; but on examining the heart in a dark room,
+he discovered not the least glimpse of light to proceed from it, as
+Harvey insinuates.
+
+At the end of two days the chicken is seen floating in the liquor of
+the amnios; in which the head, composed of vesicles, is turned on one
+side; the back bone and vertebrae are lengthened; the heart, which then
+hung out of the breast, beat three times; for the fluid it contains
+is impelled into the ventricles of the heart, from thence into the
+arteries, and afterwards into the umbilical vessels. He remarks, that
+having separated the chick from the white of the egg, the motion of
+the heart still continued for a whole day. After two days and fourteen
+hours, or sixty-two hours of incubation, the chicken, although grown
+stronger, remained with its head bent downwards in the liquor,
+contained by the amnios; the veins and arteries were seen among the
+vessels of the brain; the lineaments of the eyes, and the spinal
+marrow, also appear extending the length of the vertebrae.
+
+At the end of the third day the head of the chicken appeared crooked;
+besides the eyes five vessels were seen in the head filled with a
+liquid matter; the first outlines of the wings and thighs were to be
+distinguished, and the body began to gather flesh; the pupil of the
+eye, and also the crystalline and vitreous humour were discernible. At
+the fourth day the vesicles of the brain were nearer each other; the
+eminences of the vertebrae were more prominent, the wings and thighs
+assumed a greater solidity as they increased in length; the whole body,
+covered with a jelly-like flesh, was now surrounded within the body by
+a thin membrane, and the umbilical vessels that unite the animal to
+the yolk, appeared to come from the abdomen. On the fifth and sixth
+days the vesicles of the brain began to be covered; the spinal marrow,
+divided into two parts, began to take solidity and stretch along the
+trunk; the wings and thighs lengthened; the feet began to spread; the
+belly was closed up and tumid; the liver was distinctly seen, and
+appeared of a dusky white; the ventricles of the heart were discerned
+to beat very distinctly; the body of the chicken was covered with a
+skin, and the traces of the feathers were visible; the seventh day
+the head appeared very large, the brain was entirely covered with its
+membranes; the beak began to appear betwixt the eyes, and the wings,
+the thighs, and the legs had acquired their perfect figure.
+
+I shall not follow Malpighius any farther, as the remainder relates
+only to the expansion of the parts till the twenty-first day, when the
+chicken breaks the shell with its beak; though before that time it is
+heard to chirrup in its imprisonment. The heart is the last part which
+receives its proper form, for it is eleven days before the arteries
+are seen to join, and the ventricles become perfectly conformable and
+united.
+
+We are now in a condition to judge of the value of Harvey's experiments
+and observations. There is great appearance this anatomist did not
+make use of a microscope, which in fact was not brought to perfection
+in his days, or he would not have asserted there was no difference
+between the cicatrice of an impregnated and an unimpregnated egg; he
+would not have said the seed of the male produced no alteration in
+the egg, especially in the cicatrice; he would not have affirmed that
+nothing was perceptible till the third day, that the animated speck was
+the first that appeared, and into which the white speck was changed.
+He would have seen that the white speck was a ball which contained the
+whole apparatus of generation, and that every part of the foetus are
+there from the moment the hen has connection with the cock. He would
+also have learnt, that without this connection it contains only an
+unshapen mass, which could never become animated, because in fact it is
+not organized like an animal, and because it is only when this mass,
+which we must look upon as an assemblage of the organic particles of
+the female semen, is penetrated by the organic particles of the male
+semen, that there results from it an animal, which is formed at the
+moment, but whose motion is imperceptible till the end of forty hours
+after: he would not have asserted that the heart is first formed, and
+that the other parts are joined to it by a juxta-position, since it
+is evident from Malpighius's observations, that the outlines of every
+part are all immediately formed, but only appear in proportion as they
+dilate; on the whole, if he had seen what Malpighius saw, he would not
+have affirmed that no impression of the male seed remained in the eggs,
+and that it was only by contagion that they are fecundated, &c.
+
+It is also just to remark, that what Harvey has said on the parts of
+the generation of a cock is not exact; he asserts that the cock has no
+genital member, and that there is no intromission; nevertheless it is
+certain that this animal, instead of one has two, and that they both
+act at the same time, and which action is a very strong compression, if
+not a true copulation;[I] and it is by this double organ that the cock
+emits the seminal liquor into the matrix of the hen.
+
+[I] See Reyn. Graaf, page 242.
+
+Let us now compare the experiments made by Harvey on hinds with those
+of De Graaf on doe rabbits; we shall find that although De Graaf
+supposes, with Harvey, that all animals proceed from eggs, yet there is
+a great difference in the mode which these two anatomists have observed
+in the first steps of formation, or rather expansion, of the foetuses
+of viviparous animals.
+
+After having exerted every effort to establish, by reasons drawn from
+comparative anatomy, that the testicles of viviparous females are real
+ovaries, De Graaf explains how the eggs are loosened from the ovaries
+and fall into the horns of the matrix; he then relates what he observed
+in a rabbit, which he dissected half an hour after copulation. The
+horns of the matrix, he says, were more red than before, but no other
+change in the rest of the parts: there was also no appearance of any
+male seed, neither in the vagina, matrix, nor horns of the matrix.
+
+Having dissected another six hours after copulation he observed the
+follicules, or coats, which he supposes contained the eggs in the
+ovary, ware become red, but found no male seed either in the ovaria or
+elsewhere. He dissected another twenty-four hours after copulation,
+and remarked in one ovarium three, and in the other five follicules
+that were changed, the transparency being become dark and red. In one
+dissected twenty-seven hours after copulation he perceived the horns
+of the womb had become more red and strictly embraced the ovaries. In
+another, that he opened forty hours after copulation, he found in one
+of the ovaries seven, follicules, and in the other three that were
+changed. Fifty-two hours after copulation he examined another and
+found one follicle changed in one of the ovaries and four in another,
+and having opened these follicules he found a glandular liquor, in the
+middle of which there was a small cavity, where he did not perceive
+any liquor, which made him suppose that the transparent liquor,
+commonly contained in the follicules, and which, he says, is enclosed
+in its own membranes, might have been separated by a kind of rupture:
+he searched after this matter in the passages, and in the horns of
+the matrix themselves, but he found none; he only perceived that the
+internal membrane of the horns of the matrix was very much swelled. In
+another, dissected three days after copulation, he observed that the
+superior extremity of the passage, which communicates with the horns
+of the matrix, strictly embraced the ovaries; and having separated it
+he perceived three follicules, longer and harder than usual. After
+searching with the greatest attention the passages above-mentioned he
+found in the right passage one egg, and in the right horn of the matrix
+two more, not bigger than a grain of mustard-seed: those little eggs
+were each closed in double membranes, and the inner one was filled
+with a very limpid liquor. Having examined the other ovarium he found
+four follicules that were changed, three of which were white and had a
+little liquor within them; but the fourth was of a darker colour, and
+contained no liquor, which made him judge that from this the egg had
+been separated. Pursuing his enquiries he found an egg in the superior
+extremity of the other horn, and exactly like those he had discovered
+in the right one. He says that the eggs which are separated from the
+ovary are ten times smaller than those which are fastened to it; and
+he thinks that this difference is occasioned from the eggs containing,
+when they are in the ovaries, another matter, and that is the glandular
+liquor he remarked in the molecules.
+
+Four days after copulation he opened another, and found in one of the
+ovaries four, and in the other three follicules, emptied of their eggs;
+and in the horns corresponding to these he found an equal number of
+eggs. These eggs were larger than the first that he found three days
+after copulation, and were about the size of a small bird-shot; he also
+remarked that the internal membrane in these eggs was separated from
+the external, and appeared like a second egg in the first. In another,
+dissected five days after copulation, he found five empty follicules
+in the ovaries, and as many eggs in the matrix, to which they adhered.
+These eggs were about the size of duck-shot, and the internal membrane
+was more apparent than in the one he had observed before. In one which
+he opened six days after copulation there were six empty follicules
+in one ovaria, and only five eggs in the corresponding horn, and they
+appeared in one mass; in the other ovaria were four empty follicules
+and but one egg; these eggs were as big as swan-shot. He opened another
+on the seventh day after copulation, and found seven empty follicules;
+he also perceived several internal tumours in the matrix, from whence
+he took eggs the size of a pistol-bullet. Its membrane was more
+distinct than before, but contained only a very clear liquor. In one,
+eight days after copulation, he found in the matrix tumours, or cells,
+which contained the eggs, but they were very adherent, for he could not
+loosen them. In another, nine days after copulation, the cells, which
+contained the eggs, were greatly increased, and he saw that the liquor
+inclosed by the internal membrane had now got a light cloud floating
+upon it. He opened another ten days after copulation and the cloud was
+thicker, and formed an oblong body, like a little worm. At last, on the
+twelfth day after copulation, the figure of the embryo was distinctly
+to be perceived, which two days before only presented the figure of an
+oblong body; it was even so apparent that the different members might
+be distinguished. In the region of the breast he perceived two red and
+two white specks, and in the abdomen a mucilaginous substance, somewhat
+reddish. Fourteen days after copulation the head of the embryo was
+become large and transparent, the eyes prominent, the mouth open, the
+rudiments of the ears appeared; the back-bone, of a whitish colour,
+was bent towards the breast, and small blood-vessels came from each
+side, whose ramifications ran along the back as far as the feet; the
+two red specks, being considerably increased, appeared to be no other
+than the ventricles of the heart; by the sides of these red specks
+were two white ones, which were the rudiments of the lungs. In the
+abdomen the outlines of the liver were seen of a reddish colour, and a
+little intricate mass, like a ravelled thread, which was the stomach
+and intestines. After this the process was no more than a growth and
+expansion of every part till the thirty-first day, when the female
+rabbit brings forth her young.
+
+From these experiments De Graaf concludes, that all viviparous
+females have eggs; that these eggs are contained in the testicles,
+called ovaries; that they cannot disengage themselves till they are
+impregnated, because, he says, the glandular substance, by means of
+which the eggs quit their follicules, is not produced till after an
+impregnation. He also insists, that those who suppose they have seen
+eggs in only two or three days increased in size, must have been
+mistaken, for these eggs remain a longer time in the ovary, although
+fecundated, and instead of immediately increasing, they rather diminish
+until they are descended from the ovaries into the matrix.
+
+By comparing these observations with those of Harvey, we shall easily
+perceive that the principal circumstances have escaped the latter;
+and although there are many errors in the reasoning and experiments
+of De Graaf, nevertheless this anatomist, as well as Malpighius, has
+made better observations than Harvey. They agree in the principal
+points, and are both contrary to Harvey; the latter had never seen
+the alterations which happen to the ovary; he did not see the small
+globules in the matrix which contain the apparatus of generation, and
+which De Graaf calls _eggs_. He had not even a supposition that the
+foetus existed in this egg; and though his experiments gave us nearly
+an exact account of what occurs during the growth of the foetus,
+they give us no information either of the moment of fecundation or of
+the first development. Schrader, a Dutch physician, who held Harvey
+in great veneration, owns that we must not put too great a reliance
+in that anatomist in many things, and especially on what he says of
+the fecundative moment, for the chicken in fact is in the egg before
+incubation, and that Joseph de Aromatarius was the first who observed
+it.[J] Although Harvey pretended that every animal proceeds from an
+egg, he did not imagine that the testicles of females contained these
+eggs, and has only repeated what Aristotle has said on this subject.
+The first who speaks of having discovered eggs in female ovaries is
+Steno, who says, in dissecting a female sea-dog he saw eggs in the
+testicles, although that animal is viviparous; and he adds, that the
+testicles of women are analogous to the ovaries of oviparous animals,
+whether the eggs fall in any manner into the matrix, or whether there
+only falls the matter they contain. Although Steno is the first who
+discovered these pretended eggs, De Graaf claims the merit to himself,
+and Swammerdam has disputed it with him, insisting that Van Horn had
+perceived these eggs before De Graaf. It is true this last writer
+stands charged with asserting many things experience has found to be
+false. He pretended that a judgment might be formed of the number of
+foetuses contained in the matrix by the number of cicatrices, or
+empty follicules, in the ovary, which is not true, as we may see by the
+observations of Verrheyen,[K] and by those of M. Mery,[L] and by some
+of De Graaf's own observations, where he found fewer eggs in the matrix
+than cicatrices in the ovaries. Besides, we shall make it appear that
+what he says concerning the separation of the eggs, and the manner in
+which they descend into the matrix, is not exact; that no eggs exist in
+the female testicles; that what is seen in the matrix is not an egg;
+and that nothing can be worse founded than the systems endeavoured to
+be established on the observations of this famous anatomist.
+
+[J] See Observ. Justi Schraderi, Amst. 1674.
+
+[K] Vol. I. chap. iii. Brussels edit. 1710.
+
+[L] Hist. of the Academ. 1704.
+
+This pretended discovery of eggs in the testicles of females attracted
+the attention of most anatomists; they, however, only met with small
+bladders in the testicles of female viviparous animals, these they did
+not hesitate to look on as real eggs: they therefore gave the name
+of _ovaries_ to the testicles, and called the vesicles eggs, They
+also said, with De Graaf, that there are eggs of different sizes in
+the ovarium; that the largest in the ovarium of women was not above
+the size of a small pea; that they were very small in the young,
+but increased with age and intercourse with men; that twenty might
+be counted in each ovarium; that these eggs are fecundated in the
+ovarium by the spirited part of the seminal liquor of the male; that
+afterwards they loosen and fall into the matrix, where the foetus is
+formed, from the internal substance of the egg and the placenta of the
+external matter; that the glandular substance, which does not exist
+in the ovarium till after a fruitful copulation, serves to compress
+the egg, and make it quit the ovarium, &c. But Malpighius having
+examined things more minutely, detected many of their errors before
+they were even received; yet most physicians adopted the sentiments
+of De Graaf, without any attention to the observations of Malpighius;
+which, notwithstanding, are very important, and to which his scholar
+Valisnieri has given a great deal of weight.
+
+Malpighius and Valisnieri, of all naturalists, speak with the greatest
+foundation on the subject of generation. We shall therefore give an
+account of their experiments and remarks, to which we cannot pay too
+much attention.
+
+Malpighius having examined a great number of the testicles of cows
+and other female animals, affirms that he found vesicles of different
+sizes in the testicles of all of them, whether young or adults; these
+vesicles are inclosed by a thick membrane, in the inner parts of which
+there are blood-vessels, filled with a kind of lymph, or liquor, which
+hardens by the heat of the fire like the white of an egg.
+
+In time a firm yellow body grows which adheres to the testicles. It
+is prominent and increases to the size of a cherry, occupying the
+greatest part of the ovarium. The body is composed of many little
+angular tubes, and its position is irregular; it is covered with a
+coat, or membrane, spread over with nerves and blood-vessels. The
+appearance and form of this yellow body are not always the same, but
+vary according to time. When not above the size of a millet seed,
+it is nearly globular, and if divided appears composed of a kind of
+variegated net-work. Very often an external covering is observed,
+composed of the same substance as the yellow body, around the vesicles
+of the ovarium.
+
+When the yellow body is become nearly of the size of a pea, it is the
+shape of a pear, in which is a small cavity filled with liquor; as is
+also the case when grown to the size of a cherry. In some of these
+yellow substances, when increased to their full maturity, Malpighius
+says, a small egg, with its appendages, not bigger than a millet
+seed, may be seen near the centre; when they have cast out their eggs
+they are empty, resemble a cavernous passage, and the cavities which
+inclose them are about the size of peas. He thinks this yellow and
+glandular substance nature produces to preserve the egg, and assist
+it in leaving the testicles, and perhaps to contribute towards the
+generation of the egg itself; consequently, he says, the vesicles,
+which are always observed in the ovary, and which are of different
+sizes, are not real eggs that may be fecundated, but only serve for the
+production of the yellow body where the egg is to be formed. On the
+whole, although these yellow substances are not found at all times in
+all testicles, we nevertheless always find the first traces of them,
+and Malpighius having seen the marks of them in young heifers, cows
+that were with calf, and in pregnant women, he reasonably concludes
+that this yellow and glandular substance is not, as De Graaf has
+supposed, the effect of fecundation, but what produces the infecund
+eggs, which leave the ovary without any communication with the male, as
+well as to those which leave it after communication. When the latter
+falls into the tubes of the matrix, all the rest is performed as De
+Graaf has described.
+
+These observations of Malpighius shew that the testicles of females
+are not real ovaries, as most anatomists believe; that the vesicles
+they contain are not eggs; that these vesicles never fall into the
+matrix; and that the testicles, like those of the male, are kinds
+of reservoirs, containing a liquor which must be looked upon as an
+imperfect seed of the female, that is perfected in the yellow glandular
+body which fills the internal cavity, and is shed when the glandular
+substance has acquired its full maturity. But before we decide on this
+important point, we must relate the observations of Valisnieri; and we
+shall perceive that, though Malpighius and Valisnieri have made good
+observations, they have not carried them far enough, nor drawn those
+consequences from them which their observations might naturally have
+produced, because they were both prejudiced for the system of eggs, and
+of the foetus pre-existing therein.
+
+Valisnieri began his experiments in 1692, on the testicles of a sow,
+whose testicles are not composed like those of a cow, sheep, mare,
+bitch, female ass, she goat, nor most other viviparous females, for
+they resemble a small bunch of grapes, whose seeds are round and
+prominent outwardly. Between these seeds there are smaller, which have
+not arrived to maturity. These seeds do not appear to be surrounded
+with one common membrane; they are, he says, similar to those yellow
+substances which Malpighius observed in cows; they are round, of a
+reddish colour, their surface sprinkled over with sanguinary vessels
+like the eggs of viviparous animals, and together form a mass larger
+than the ovary; we may, with a little address, and by dividing the
+membrane, separate these grains one by one, and draw them from the
+ovary, where they each leave an impression.
+
+These glandular substances are not of the same colour in every sow, in
+some they are red, in others more clear; and they are of all sizes,
+from the most minute point to that of a grape. On opening them we find
+a triangular cavity filled with a limpid liquor, which coagulates
+by the fire, and becomes white like that contained in the vesicles.
+Valisnieri hoped to meet with the egg in one of those cavities, but
+although he sought for it with the utmost assiduity in the glandular
+substance of the ovaries of four different sows, and afterwards in
+those of other animals, yet he could never discover the egg which
+Malpighius asserts to have met with once or twice.
+
+Below these glandular substances the vesicles of the ovary were
+seen, and which were in a greater or lesser number as the glandular
+substances are thicker or smaller, for in proportion as the glandular
+substances increase, the vesicles diminish. Some of these vesicles were
+the size of a lentil, and others as small as a millet-seed. In crude
+testicles twenty, thirty, or thirty-five vesicles might be counted,
+but when boiled a greater number are seen; and they are so strongly
+connected by fibres and membraneous vessels, that it is impossible to
+separate them without a rupture.
+
+Having examined the testicles of a sow which never had littered, he
+found there, as in the rest, glandular bodies, and their triangular
+cavities filled with lymph, but never met with the egg either in the
+one or the other. The vesicles of this sow which had never littered
+were greater in number than in those which had littered or conceived.
+In the testicles of another sow which had conceived, and whose young
+were much expanded, he found two large glandular substances, that
+were empty, and others smaller, in their common state. Having also
+dissected many others when with young, he found that the number of
+glandular substances was always greater than that of the foetus,
+which confirms our observations on De Graaf's experiments, and proves
+they are not exact; what he terms the follicules of the ovary being
+only the glandular substances, whose number always exceed that of the
+foetus. In the ovaries of a sow but a few months old, the testicles
+were large, and sprinkled with vesicles pretty well tumefied: between
+these vesicles there were four rising glandular substances in one of
+the testicles, and more in the other.
+
+After having finished his experiments on sows, Valisnieri repeated
+those of Malpighius on the testicles of cows, and found that all he had
+said was conformable to truth; only Valisnieri owns that he has never
+been able to find the egg which Malpighius thought he had seen once or
+twice in the internal cavity of glandular bodies. Valisnieri proceeded
+in his experiments upon a variety of other animals to discover this
+egg, but in vain; nevertheless his prejudice for that system induced
+him, contrary to his experience, to admit the existence of eggs, which
+neither he nor any other man ever did or ever will see. It is scarcely
+possible to make a greater number of experiments, or better than he has
+done. He observes, as something particular to a ewe, that there are
+never more glandular substances in the testicles than foetuses in
+the matrix. In young ewes, which have never been with the male, there
+is but one glandular substance in each testicle, which when worn away,
+another is found; and if a ewe has only one foetus in her matrix,
+there is but one glandular substance in the testicles; if there are
+two foetuses there will be two glandular substances. This substance
+occupies the greatest part of the testicles; after it disappears
+another is formed for the purpose of another generation.
+
+In the testicles of a she-ass he perceived vesicles the size of small
+cherries, which evidently prove they are not eggs, since, being of that
+size, they could not enter into the horns of the matrix, which are too
+narrow in this animal for their reception.
+
+The testicles of a female dog, wolf, or fox, have a kind of cowl, or
+covering, which is produced by the expansion of the membrane that
+surrounds the horns of the matrix. In a bitch, whose heat was just
+began, and had not been brought to a dog, Valisnieri found this cowl,
+which is not adherent to the testicle, internally bathed with a
+liquor like whey: he discovered also two glandular substances in the
+right testicle, which run almost its whole length. These glandular
+substances had each a small nipple, with a little orifice, from which
+of itself issued a clear liquor like whey, and when pressed, a greater
+quantity came out, which made him imagine, that this liquor was the
+same as that found within the cowl: he blew into this orifice, by the
+means of a small pipe, and immediately the glandular body was puffed
+up; and having introduced a bristle, he easily penetrated to the end of
+it: he opened this glandular substance the same way as the bristle was
+entered, and found within a cavity which communicated with the orifice,
+and which also contained a good deal of liquor. Valisnieri was also
+in hopes to discover the egg, but, notwithstanding all his endeavours
+and strict attention, he never could perceive it. He remarked, that
+the extremity of these nipples, from which this liquor flowed, was
+contracted by a sphincter, which served to shut up, or open the orifice
+of the nipple: he found also in the left testicle two glandular bodies
+with the like cavities, nipples, orifices, and liquor distilling from
+them. Still not being able to find the egg, neither in this liquor,
+nor in the cavity which contained it, he boiled two of these glandular
+substances, hoping that by this means he might discover the object he
+was in pursuit of, but it was all in vain.
+
+Having opened another bitch, eight or nine days after she had been with
+the male, he found no difference in the testicles; there were three
+glandular substances like the preceding ones, and, like them, distilled
+a liquor from the nipples. Here he also persevered in his fruitless
+researches after the egg. By the help of a microscope, he perceived the
+glandular substances were a kind of vascular net-work, formed by an
+infinite number of small globular vesicles which served to filtre the
+liquor that issues through the end of the nipple.
+
+After this he opened another bitch whose heat was off, and having
+introduced air between the testicle and its covering, he found it
+dilated like a bladder by means of inflation; having raised this cowl,
+he found three glandular substances on the testicle, but they had no
+apparent nipple, nor orifice, nor did any liquor distil from them.
+
+In another bitch that had pupped two months, and had five puppies, he
+found five glandular substances, which were become very small, and
+began to obliterate, without leaving any cicatrices: there still
+remained a small cavity in the middle, but it was dry and empty.
+
+Not content with these, and many more experiments, Valisnieri, who
+would not give up his researches after the pretended egg, called
+together the most expert anatomists of his country, among whom was M.
+Morgagni, and having opened a young bitch at the time of her first
+heat, and had been with a male three days before, they examined
+the vesicles of the testicles, the glandular substances with their
+nipples, orifice, and liquor which flowed from them, and in their
+internal cavities, but not an egg was to be found. After this he made
+experiments on female goats, foxes, cats, and a great number of mice,
+&c. He always found vesicles in the testicles of all those animals,
+and often the glandular substances, and the liquor they contained, but
+never any egg.
+
+At length, desirous of examining the testicles of a woman, he had an
+opportunity of opening a farmer's wife, a young woman that was killed
+by a fall from a tree. She had been married several years, but although
+of a good habit of body, yet she had never borne a child. He sought if
+the cause of her sterility was not discoverable in the testicles; and
+he found the vesicles all replete with a blackish and corrupted matter.
+
+In the testicles of a girl of eighteen, who had been brought up in a
+convent, and, according to all appearances, was a virgin, he found
+the right testicle somewhat larger than the left: its shape was oval,
+and its surface a little unequal. This inequality was produced by the
+protuberance of five or six vesicles of this testicle which advanced
+forwards; one of which was more prominent than any of the rest. Having
+opened this vesicle, a spirit of lymph issued out: around it there
+was a glandular substance in form of a crescent of a yellowish colour
+rather bordering on the red. He cut the remainder part of the testicle
+transversely, and found many vesicles filled with a limpid liquor, and
+remarked that the corresponding trunk to this testicle was very red and
+a little longer than the other, as he had frequently observed in female
+animals, when in their amorous season.
+
+The left testicle was as round as the right, it was whiter, and its
+surface more smooth; for although there were some vesicles a little
+prominent, yet there were not any in form of a nipple; they were all
+alike, without any glandular substance, and the corresponding trunk
+was neither inflamed nor red.
+
+In a little girl of five years old, he found the testicles with the
+vesicles, blood vessels, fibres and nerves complete.
+
+In the testicles of a woman sixty years of age, he found some vesicles,
+and the vestiges of a glandular substance, which were as so many thick
+points of matter of a dark brownish colour.
+
+From all these observations Valisnieri concludes, that the business
+of generation is carried on in the female testicles, which he looked
+upon as ovaries, although he never found any eggs in them, but on the
+contrary, evidently saw that the vesicles were not eggs. He also says,
+that it is not necessary for the seed of the male to enter into the
+matrix to impregnate the egg: he supposes that the egg comes from the
+nipple of the glandular substance, after impregnation in the ovarium;
+that from thence it falls into the trunk, and descends by degrees, till
+at last it fastens to the matrix. He adds, he is persuaded that the
+egg is concealed in the glandular substance, and that all the business
+of generation is performed in the cavity, although neither he nor any
+other anatomist, have ever seen or been able to find it.
+
+According to Valisnieri the spirit of the male seed ascends to the
+ovarium, forces its way into the egg, and gives motion to the foetus
+that pre-exists therein. In the ovarium of the first woman were eggs,
+which not only inclosed in miniature every child she brought forth,
+but of the whole human race. That if we cannot conceive this infinite
+chain of individuals contained in one, it is the fault of our minds,
+the weakness of which is every day perceptible; but it is, upon that
+account, no less true, that every animal which has been, is, and will
+be, were created all at one time, and inclosed in the first females.
+The resemblance of children to parents only proceeds, continues he,
+from the imagination of the mother, the power of which is so great on
+the foetus that it can produce on it spots, marks, disproportions,
+and extraordinary births, as well as perfect resemblances.
+
+This system of the eggs, which is unreasonable, and without foundation,
+would, nevertheless, have obtained the unanimous suffrages of all
+physicians, if, when it was first endeavoured to be established,
+another system had not been formed on the discovery of spermatic
+animals.
+
+This discovery, for which we are indebted to Leeuwenhoeck and
+Hartsoeker, has been confirmed by Andri, Valisnieri, Bourguet, and
+many other observers of Nature. I shall relate what has been said
+concerning the spermatic animals which are found in the seminal liquor
+of all males: they are in such vast numbers that the semen seems to be
+entirely composed of them; and Leeuwenhoeck pretends to have seen many
+millions of them in a drop smaller than the smallest grain of sand.
+Although we do not meet with any in female animals they abound in all
+males, both in the semen emitted naturally and that in the testicles,
+as well as in the seminal vesicles. If the semen of a man is exposed
+to a moderate heat it thickens, and the motions of all the animalcules
+immediately cease, but if allowed to cool it becomes thinner, and the
+animals preserve their motion till the liquor thickens as it dries
+away. The thinner the liquor becomes the more the animalcule increase,
+and if water is added it will appear like a substance of small animals.
+When the motion of these animalcule is nearly finished, whether from
+heat, or any other cause, they seem to assemble closer together, and
+have a whirling motion in the centre of a small drop which may have
+been taken out for observation, and appear all to perish at one and the
+same time, whereas in the larger portion of the liquor they are easily
+seen to perish successively.
+
+The animalculae, say they, have different figures in different animals;
+nevertheless they are all long, slender, without any appearance of
+limbs, and move with rapidity. The fluid which contains them, as we
+have already observed, is heavier than blood. The semen of a bull
+afforded Verrheyen, by a chemical process, first phlegm, afterwards a
+considerable quantity of foetid oil, but little volatile salt, and
+much more earth than he could have thought.[M] This author appears
+surprised that in rectifying the distilled liquor he could not draw any
+spirit from it, and being persuaded it contained a great quantity, he
+attributed the evaporation to its great subtility: but may it not be
+more reasonably imagined that it contains very little or no spirits,
+as neither its consistency nor smell announce any ardent spirit, and
+which is only plentifully found in fermented liquors? besides, with
+respect to volatile spirits, the horns, bones, and other solid parts
+of animals, afford more than all the liquor of the animal body. What
+anatomists have called animal spirits, _aura seminalis_, may possibly
+not exist; and it is certainly not these spirits which agitate the
+particles seen moving in the seminal liquors; but we will here relate
+the principal observations that have been made on this subject.
+
+[M] See Veerheyen, sup. anat. tom. ii. page 69.
+
+Leeuwenhoeck observed, in the semen of a cock, animals which resemble
+the figure of an eel, but so exceedingly minute, that he pretends fifty
+thousand would not equal in size a grain of sand; and in that of a
+rat many millions would be required to make the thickness of a hair,
+&c. This observer imagined that the whole substance of the semen was
+only a mass of these animalcules. He perceived these animalculae in
+the semen of men, quadrupeds, birds, fishes, insects, &c. In that of
+grasshoppers they were long and slender. They are attached, he says, by
+their extremities, and the inferior of which he calls the tail, had a
+quick motion, like that of the tail of a serpent, when the upper part
+is motionless. He further adds, that in the semen of young animals the
+animalculae are motionless, but as the age for reproduction comes on
+they move about with great vivacity.
+
+In the semen of a male frog he observed animalculae, at first they
+were imperfect and motionless, but some time afterwards he found them
+living: they were so very small, he says, that ten thousand would
+scarcely equal the size of a single egg of the female. It was only
+those in the seminal liquor of the frog which had life and motion.
+
+In the semen of a man, and that of a dog, he pretends to have seen two
+kinds, which he looked upon as males and females. Having inclosed the
+seed of a dog in a vial, he says, that numbers of the animalculae died
+the first day; the second and third there died still more, and very
+few remained alive the fourth. But having repeated this experiment
+on the semen of the same dog, he found, at the end of seven days,
+live animalculae, some of which swam with as much swiftness as in
+fresh-extracted semen; and having opened a bitch which had been three
+times with the same dog, he could not perceive by the naked eye any
+seminal liquor of the male in either of the horns of the matrix; but
+by help of a microscope he discovered the spermatic animals of the
+dog in both horns of the matrix, and great numbers of them in that
+part of the matrix adjoining to the vagina, which, says he, evidently
+proves that the male semen enters the matrix, or at least that the
+spermatic animals of the dog had got there by their own motion, which
+is sufficient to carry them four or five inches in half an hour. In the
+matrix of a doe rabbit, which had just received the buck, he likewise
+observed an infinite number of spermatic animals; he says, that their
+bodies are round, with long tails, and that they often change their
+forms, especially when the humid matter in which they swim evaporates
+and dries.
+
+Leeuwenhoeck's experiments have been frequently repeated and found
+conformable to truth. There have been some inclined to exceed him in
+these discoveries. Dr. Dalenpatius having observed the seminal liquor
+of a man, not only pretended to have discovered animals like tadpoles,
+whose bodies appeared nearly the size of a grain of wheat, and their
+tails four or five times longer than their bodies, and which moved
+with great agility, but, what is still more marvellous, he observed
+one of these animals quit its covering; upon which it was no longer an
+animalcule, but had become a human body, the two legs of which, he
+affirms, were very discernible, as were the arms, breast, and head.[N]
+But by the figures which this author has given of this pretended
+embryo, it is evident his assertion is false. He might suppose he
+saw what he relates, but he was mistaken; for the embryo, such as he
+describes, was more formed on quitting this covering, and the state
+of a spermatic worm, than it would have been at the end of a month or
+five weeks in the matrix of its mother; therefore this observation of
+Dalenpatius, instead of having been confirmed by other observations,
+has been rejected by every naturalist, the most exact and accurate of
+which have only discovered, in the seminal liquor of man, round and
+oblong bodies, which seemed to have long tails, but without any kind of
+members.
+
+[N] See Nouvelles de la Republique des Lettres, Ann. 1699, page 552.
+
+It might be said that Plato had spoken of these spermatic animals
+which become human forms; for he says, "Vulva quoque matrix que in
+foeminis eadem ratione animal avidem generandi, quando procul a
+foetu per aetatis florem, aut ultra diutius detinetur, aegre fert
+moram ac plurimum indignatur, passimque per corpus oberrans, meatus
+spiritus intercludit, respirare non finit, extremis vexat angustiis,
+morbis denique omnibus premit, quosque atrorumque Cupido amorque quasi
+ex arboribus foetum fructumve producunt, ipsum deinde decerpunt, &
+in matricem velut agrem inspargunt; hinc animalia primum talia, ut nec
+propter parvitatem videantur, necdum appareant formata, concipiunt: mox
+quae conflaverant, explicant, ingentia, intus enutriunt, demum educunt
+in lucem, animaliumque generationem perficiunt." Hippocrates, in his
+treatise _De Diaeta_, seems also to insinuate, that the seed of animals
+is replete with animalcules. Democritus speaks of certain worms which
+take the human figure, and Aristotle says, that the first men came out
+of the earth in the form of worms; but neither the authority of Plato,
+Hippocrates, Democritus, Aristotle, nor the observation of Dalenpatius,
+can make us receive the idea that these spermatic worms are small human
+bodies, concealed under a covering; for it is evidently contrary to
+experience and observation.
+
+Valisnieri and Bourguet, whom we have quoted, discovered small worms
+in the seed of a rabbit, one of whose extremities was thicker than
+the other; they were very lively and active, struck the liquor with
+their tails, and twisted and turned themselves like snakes. At last
+(says Valisnieri) I clearly perceived them to be real animals, "e gli
+riconobbi, e gli giudicai senza dubitamento alcuno per veri, verissimi
+arciverissimi vermi[O]." This author, who was prejudiced with the
+system of eggs, has, nevertheless, admitted of spermatic worms, and
+taken them for real animals.
+
+[O] Opere dell. Cav. Valisnieri, vol. II. page 105.
+
+M. Andry having made observations on these spermatic worms of a man,
+pretends that they are only found in the age proper for generation;
+that in the younger years, and in old age, they do not exist: that in
+those affected with venereal disorders there are very few, and those
+are languishing, and for the most part dead: that in impotent persons
+we do not see any alive; that these worms in the semen of men have
+larger heads than in that of other animals, which agrees, he says, with
+the figure of the foetus and the child; and he adds, those people who
+too frequently enjoy female amours, have generally but few or none of
+these animalcules in their semen.
+
+Leeuwenhoeck, Andry, and many others, strenuously opposed the
+egg system; they had discovered in the semen of all males living
+animalcules; they proved that these animalcules could not be regarded
+merely as dwelling in this liquor, since their bulk was greater than
+that of the liquor itself; and that nothing like them was found
+either in the blood, or in the other animal liquors. They asserted,
+that females furnished nothing similar, nothing alive; and it was
+therefore evident that the fecundity attributed to them belonged,
+on the contrary, to males alone: and that the discovery of these
+spermatic animals in the semen tended more to the explanation of
+generation than all that had been before supposed; since, in fact,
+what was most difficult to conceive in generation, was the production
+of the living part, all the rest being only accessary operations,
+and therefore no doubt could remain but these little animals were
+destined to become men, or perfect animals of their kind. When it was
+opposed to the partizans of this system, that it did not seem natural
+to suppose that so many millions of animalcules, every one of which
+might become a human being, should be employed for a purpose of which
+one alone was to reap the advantage; when it was asked them, why this
+useless profusion of the shoots of human beings? they answered, that
+it was only consonant with the common munificence of nature: that
+out of many millions of seeds which plants and trees produce, but a
+very few succeed, and therefore we must not be surprised at the same
+circumstance in spermatic animals. When the infinite minuteness of the
+spermatic worm, compared to man, was objected to them, they answered,
+by the example of the seed of trees; and they added, with some
+foundation, metaphysical reasonings, by which they proved that great
+and small being only relations, the transition from small to great, or
+from great to small, was executed by nature with still more facility
+than we can conceive.
+
+Besides, continue they, have we not very frequent examples of
+transformation in insects? do we not see small aquatic worms become
+winged animals, by only throwing off their coats, which were their
+apparent and external forms? and may not spermatic animals, by a
+similar transformation, become perfect animals? All therefore, they
+conclude, concurs to favour this system of generation, and confuting
+that founded on eggs; and if there are eggs in viviparous females,
+the same as in the oviparous, these eggs will only be the necessary
+matter for the growth of the spermatic worm, which enters into the
+egg by the pedicle that adheres to the ovarium, and where it meets
+with food ready prepared for it. All the worms which find not this
+passage through the pedicle into the egg will perish, and that one
+which alone has traced its way will arrive at its transformation. The
+difficulty of meeting with the passage in the pedicle of the egg, can
+only be compensated by the infinite number of spermatic worms. It is a
+million to one that any particular spermatic worm will meet with the
+pedicle of the egg, and therefore what at first appears a profusion is
+highly necessary. When one has entered, no other can introduce itself,
+because, say they, the first worm entirely shuts up the passage, or
+there is a valve at the entrance of the pedicle, which is free when
+the egg is not absolutely full; but when the worm has filled the egg,
+the valve can no longer open although impelled by another worm. This
+valve is very well imagined, because, if the first worm should chance
+to return, it opposes its egress, and obliges it to remain and undergo
+the transformation. The spermatic worm then becomes the foetus, the
+substance of the egg its food, the membranes, its covering, and when
+the nutriment in the egg is nearly exhausted, the foetus adheres to
+the internal skin of the matrix, and thus derives nourishment from the
+parent's blood, till by its weight, and augmentation of its strength,
+it breaks through its imprisonment, and comes perfect into the world.
+
+By this system it was not the first woman who inclosed all mankind, but
+the first man who contained all posterity in his body. The pre-existing
+germs are no longer embryos without light, inclosed in the eggs, and
+contained one in another, ad infinitum; but they are small animals, the
+little homunculae organized and actually living, included in each other
+in endless succession, and to which nothing is wanting for them to
+become perfect animals, and human beings, but expansion, assisted by a
+transformation similar to that which winged insects undergo.
+
+As our present physicians are divided on these two systems of spermatic
+worms and eggs, and as all those who have lately written on generation
+have adopted one or the other of these opinions, it seems necessary to
+examine them with care, and to shew that they are not only sufficient
+to explain the phenomena of generation, but are also founded on
+suppositions void of all probability.
+
+Both suppose an infinite progression; which, as we have said, is not so
+much a reasonable supposition as an illusion of the mind. A spermatic
+worm is more than a thousand million times smaller than a man; if,
+therefore, we suppose the body of a man as an unit, the size of the
+spermatic worm can only be expressed by the fraction 1/1000000000; and
+as man is with respect to the spermatic worm of the first generation,
+what this worm is to that of the second generation, the size of the
+last spermatic worm cannot be expressed but by a number composed of
+nineteen cyphers; and so likewise the size of the spermatic worm of the
+third generation will require 28 cyphers; that of the fourth generation
+37; the fifth 46, and the sixth 55 cyphers. To form an idea of the
+minuteness represented by this fraction, let us take the dimensions
+of the sphere of the universe from Sol to Saturn, and supposing the
+sun a million times larger than the earth, and about a thousand
+solar diameters distant from Saturn, we shall perceive that only 45
+cyphers are required to express the number of cubic lines contained
+in this sphere; and, by reducing each cubic line into a thousand
+millions of atoms, 54 cyphers are only required to express that
+number; consequently a human being will be greater, with relation to a
+spermatic worm of the sixth generation, than the sphere of the universe
+is with relation to the smallest atom which is possible to be perceived
+by the assistance of a microscope. What would it be if we were to carry
+it to ten generations? The minuteness would be so great as to leave us
+no mode of expressing it. The probability of this opinion, therefore,
+evidently disappears in proportion as the object diminishes. This
+calculation may be applied to eggs as well as spermatic worms, and the
+want of probability is general to both; it will, no doubt, be said,
+that matter being divisible, _ad infinitum_, there is no impossibility
+in this diminution of size; and although it is not probable, yet we
+must regard this division of matter as possible, since we can always,
+by thought, divide an atom into a number of parts. But I answer, that
+the same illusion is made use of on this infinite divisibility as
+on every other geometrical and arithmetical infinity; they are only
+abstractions of the mind, and have no existence in nature. If we look
+on infinite divisibility of matter as an absolute infinity, it is easy
+to demonstrate that in that sense it does not exist; for, if once we
+suppose the smallest atom possible, by that supposition this atom will
+necessarily be indivisible, since if it were divisible it would no
+longer be the smallest atom possible, which would be contrary to the
+supposition. It therefore seems to me, that every hypothesis where a
+progress, _ad infinitum_, is admitted, ought to be rejected not only as
+false, but as void of all probability; and as the system of eggs and
+spermatic worms supposes this progress, they should not be admitted in
+philosophy.
+
+Another great difficulty against these two systems is, that in the egg
+system the first woman contained the male and female eggs: the male
+eggs contained only a generation of males; and that, on the contrary,
+the female eggs contained thousands of generations, both of males and
+females; insomuch that, at the same time, and in the same woman, there
+was always a certain number of eggs capable of developing themselves to
+infinity, and another number which would be unfolded but once. The same
+circumstance must occur in the other system, and therefore I ask if
+there is the smallest appearance of probability in these suppositions?
+
+A third difficulty arises against these two systems, which is, the
+resemblance that children bear, sometimes to the father and sometimes
+to the mother, and sometimes to both; and the evident marks of
+extraordinary difference in mules, &c. If from the spermatic worm of
+the father the foetus is produced, how can the child resemble the
+mother; and if the foetus is pre-existing in the egg of the mother,
+how can the child resemble its father? or if the spermatic worm of a
+horse, or the egg of a she-ass contains the foetus, how can the mule
+participate in the nature and figure of both the horse and the ass?
+
+These general difficulties, which are invincible, are not the only
+ones that can be made against these systems; there are particular ones
+which are no less potent. To begin with the system of spermatic worms,
+may it not be asked of those who admit of it, how they think this
+transformation is made? and object to them, that insects have not, nor
+cannot have any relation with what they suppose. For the worm which is
+to become a fly, or the caterpillar which is to become a butterfly,
+passes through a middle state, and when it ceases to be a chrysalis,
+it is completely formed and has acquired its full size, and is then in
+a condition of engendering; whereas in the pretended transformation
+of the spermatic worm into man, it cannot be said to be in a state of
+chrysalis, and even if we should suppose one during the first days of
+conception, why does not the production of this chrysalis, instead of
+an unformed embryo, suppose an adult and perfect being? We plainly see
+how analogy is here violated; and that far from confirming this idea of
+the transformation of the spermatic worm, it is instantly destroyed by
+examination.
+
+Besides, the worm which is transformed into a fly proceeds from an egg;
+the egg is the produce of the copulation of the male and female, and
+includes the foetus, which must afterwards enter into a chrysalis,
+before it arrives at its state of perfection, as a fly; in which form
+alone it has an engendering power; whereas the spermatic worm has no
+faculty of generation, nor proceeds from an egg. Even should we allow
+the semen to contain eggs, from whence issue spermatic worms, the same
+difficulty will still remain, for these supposed eggs have not the
+copulation of the two sexes for their principle of existence, as in
+insects; consequently the partizans of that opinion cannot pretend
+any similarity, nor derive any advantage from the transformation of
+insects; which rather destroys the basis of their explanation.
+
+When the innumerable multitude of spermatic worms are opposed to those
+physicians who are prejudiced by this system, they answer, as before
+observed, by the examples of plants and trees. But this comparison
+is not entirely just, because all the spermatic worms excepting one
+perish by absolute necessity, which is not the case with the seeds of
+a tree or plant, for those which do not become vegetables, serve as
+food for other organized bodies, and for the expansion and reproduction
+of animals; whereas we do not see any use for the spermatic worms, or
+any end to which we can refer their prodigious superfluity. On the
+whole, I only make this remark in reply to what is, or may be said on
+this matter; for I own, that no arguments drawn from final causes will
+either establish or destroy a physical system.
+
+Another objection made against this opinion is, there being, to all
+appearance, an equal number of separate worms in the seed of all kinds
+of animals, for, say they, it is natural to imagine, that in those
+kinds where foetuses are most abundant, as in fishes, insects, &c.
+the number of spermatic worms should be more numerous than in those
+where generation is least abundant, as in man, quadrupeds, birds, &c.
+for if they are the immediate cause of production, why is there no
+proportion between their number and that of the foetus? Besides,
+there is no proportionable difference in the size of most kinds of
+spermatic worms, those of large animals being as small as those of the
+least. Those of a rat, and those of a man, are nearly the same, and
+when there is any difference it is no ways relative to the size of
+the individual. The Calmar, which is a very small fish, has spermatic
+worms above one hundred thousand times larger than those of a man or a
+dog. Another proof these worms are not the immediate and only cause of
+generation.
+
+The particular difficulties that may be raised against this egg system
+are no less considerable. If the foetus exists in the egg before the
+communication of the male with the female, why do we not perceive the
+foetus as well in those eggs produced before as after copulation?
+We have before recounted the observations of Malpighius, who says
+he always found the foetus in those eggs produced by hens that had
+received the cock, and only a mass or mole in the cicatrice of those
+who had not; it is therefore very clear that the foetus does not
+exist in the egg till after impregnation.
+
+Another difficulty against this system is, that not only the foetus
+is not seen in eggs before the junction of the sexes, but even the
+existence of eggs in viviparous animals is by no means proved. Those
+physicians who pretend that the spermatic worm is the foetus
+enveloped in a covering, are at least assured of spermatic worms; but
+those who affirm that the foetus is pre-existing in the egg, have no
+proof of the existence of the egg itself; on the contrary, there is a
+probability, almost equivalent to a certainty, that these eggs do not
+exist.
+
+Although the partizans of the egg system do not agree what must be
+looked on as the true egg in the female testicle, nevertheless they all
+think that impregnation is made in the testicle called the _ovarium_,
+without paying any attention that if it was so most foetuses would be
+found in the abdomen instead of the matrix, for the superior extremity
+of the trunk being separated from the ovarium, the pretended eggs must
+often fall into the abdomen. Now, it is certain that this case is
+extremely rare, and, I believe, never happened, unless occasioned by
+some accident.
+
+The general difficulties and objections against these two systems
+have been noticed by the author of _Venus Physique_, whose treatise,
+although very short, has more philosophical ideas than there are in
+many folio volumes on generation. As this book is very public, and
+the accuracy with which it is written will not permit any extract, I
+shall only observe, this author is the first who has returned into the
+road of truth, from which we were farther strayed than ever, since the
+supposition of the egg system, and the discovery of spermatic animals.
+Nothing therefore remains farther to be said, and I shall conclude with
+relating a few particular experiments, some of which have appeared
+favourable, and others contrary, to these systems.
+
+In the History of the Academy of Sciences of Paris, 1701, some
+objections are proposed by M. Mery against the egg system. This able
+anatomist supports, with reason, that the vesicles found in the female
+testicles are not eggs, but are so adherent to the internal substance
+of the testicle that they cannot be naturally separated therefrom;
+that if they could separate themselves from this substance it would
+be impossible for them to get out, because the common membrane, which
+surrounds all the testicle, is a web of too firm a texture to admit of
+a conception; that a vesicle, or round soft egg, could open a passage
+in it; and as the greatest number of physicians and anatomists were
+prejudiced in favour of the egg system, and, from the experiments of De
+Graaf, believed that the number of cicatrices in the testicles marked
+the number of foetuses, M. Mery mentions the testicles of a woman,
+where there was such a quantity of these cicatrices, that, agreeable to
+this system, would have supposed a fecundity almost beyond imagination.
+These difficulties excited other partizans of the egg system to make
+new researches. M. Duverney examined and dissected the testicles of
+cows and sheep: he pretended that the vesicles were eggs, because there
+were some less adherent to the testicles than others, and insisted it
+was natural to believe, that when they came to perfect maturity they
+were separated altogether, especially as by inflating the internal
+cavity of the testicle the air passed between these vesicles and the
+adjoining parts. M. Mery only answers that this not a sufficient proof,
+since these vesicles have never been seen separate from the testicles.
+M. Duverney remarked the glandular bodies on the testicles, but he did
+not look on them as an essential and necessary part towards generation,
+but merely as accidental exuberances, like gall-nuts, on the oak.
+M. Littre, whose prejudice for the egg system was still greater,
+pretended, not only that the vesicles were eggs, but even asserted
+he had discovered in one of them a well-formed foetus, of which he
+distinguished the head and trunk very perfectly, and even gave the
+dimensions. But besides this wonder being only seen by that gentleman,
+and no other naturalist, it is sufficient to read his Memoire[P] to
+perceive how doubtful was the fact. By his own words we find the matrix
+was schirrhous, that the testicle was corrupted, and that the vesicle,
+or egg, which contained this imaginary foetus was smaller than the
+other vesicles, or eggs, which did not contain any thing, &c.
+
+[P] Anno 1701, page 3.
+
+A famous experiment, in favour of the egg system, is supplied by De
+Nuck; he opened a bitch three days after copulation; he drew out one of
+the horns of the matrix, and made a ligature in the middle, so that the
+upper part of the passage could have no communication with the lower;
+after which he replaced this horn, and closed up the wound, with which
+the bitch seemed but little incommoded. At the end of twenty-one days
+he opened it again, and found two foetuses in the upper part, that
+is between the testicles and the ligature; but in the lower part there
+was no foetus. In the other horn of the matrix, which had not been
+tied by a ligature, he found three foetuses, which were regularly
+disposed, which proves, he says, that the foetus does not proceed
+from the seed of the male, but exists in the female egg. Supposing this
+experiment, which has only been made once, was always followed with the
+same effect, we should not then be right in concluding that fecundation
+is made in the ovary, and that eggs are detached therefrom which
+contain the foetus completely formed. It would only prove that the
+foetus may be formed in the upper parts of the horns of the matrix as
+well as in the lower; and it seems very natural to imagine that the
+ligature, compressing the middle of the horns of the matrix, impelled
+the seminal liquors, which are in the lower parts, to issue out, and
+thus destroy the business of generation in them.
+
+Thus we have gone through the opinions of anatomists and physicians
+on the subject of generation; and it now only remains for me to
+recount what I have been enabled to draw from my own researches
+and experiments, and it will then be seen whether my system is not
+infinitely more agreeable to Nature than any of those I have given an
+account of.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+EXPERIMENTS ON THE METHOD OF GENERATION.
+
+
+I often reflected on the above system, and was every day more and more
+convinced that my theory was infinitely the most probable. I then began
+to suppose that, by a microscope, I might be able to attain a discovery
+of the living organic particles, from which I thought every animal
+and vegetable drew their origin. My first supposition was, that the
+spermatic animalcules seen in the seed of every male, might possibly be
+these organic particles; on which I reasoned as follows:
+
+If every animal and vegetable contain a quantity of living organic
+particles, these particles would be found in their seed, and in a
+greater quantity than in any other substance, because the seed is an
+extract of what is most analogous to the individual, and the most
+organic; and the animalcule we see in the seed of males are, perhaps,
+only these same living organic molecules, or at least the first union,
+or assemblage of them. But if this is so, the seed of the female must
+also contain similar living organic molecules, and, consequently, we
+ought to find moving bodies there as well as in the male: and since the
+living organic particles are common both to animals and vegetables,
+we should also find them in the seeds of plants, in the nectarium,
+and in the stamina, which are the most essential parts of vegetables,
+and which contain the organic molecules necessary for reproduction. I
+then seriously thought of examining the seminal liquors of both sexes,
+and the germs of plants, with a microscope. I thought, likewise, that
+the reservoirs of the female seed might possibly be the cavities of
+the glandular bodies, in which Valisnieri and others had uselessly
+sought for the egg; and at length determined to undertake a course of
+observations and experiments. I first communicated my ideas to Mr.
+Needham, a gentleman well known for his microscopical observations,
+and read to him the first part of this work; he seemed to approve of
+these ideas, and did me the favour to lend me his microscope which
+was infinitely superior to my own. At the same time I communicated my
+system and project of experiments to Messrs. Daubenton, Gueneau, and
+Dalibard, all of whom encouraged me to persevere in my determination,
+and from whom, in the course of making those experiments, I received
+much assistance, particularly from Mr. Daubenton.
+
+Persons not experienced in the use of the microscope will not be
+displeased that I here insert some remarks which will be useful to
+them, if they repeat the following experiments, or make new ones.
+We should give the preference to double microscopes, in which we
+see objects perpendicularly, from their having a plain or concave
+mirror, which shews the objects clear; the concave mirror is the
+most preferable when the observations are made with the strongest
+lens. Leeuwenhoek, who undoubtedly has been the greatest and most
+indefatigable of all microscopical observators, is said to have
+only made use of simple microscopes, with which he viewed objects
+horizontally. If this is true, it is necessary to remark, that most of
+the plates given by Leeuwenhoek of microscopical objects, especially
+spermatic animals, represents them much thicker and longer than he
+really saw them, which renders the microscopes we speak of preferable
+to the horizontal, as they are more stable; the motion of the hand,
+with which the microscope is held, producing a little trembling, which
+causes the object to appear wavering, and never presents the same part
+for any time. Besides, there is always a motion in the liquors caused
+by the agitation of the external air, at least, if we do not put the
+liquor between two plates of glass, or even fine talc, which diminishes
+somewhat of its transparency, and greatly lengthens the experiment; but
+the horizontal microscope, whose tables are vertical, has the still
+greater inconvenience, that the most ponderous parts of the drop of
+liquor fall to the bottom; consequently there are three motions, that
+of the trembling of the hand, the agitation of the fluid by the action
+of the air, and also that of the parts of the liquor falling to the
+bottom: from the combination of which, certain small globules, which
+we see in these liquors, may appear to move by their own motion and
+powers, while they only obey the compounded power of those three causes.
+
+When we put a drop of liquor on the table of the double microscope,
+although horizontally placed, and in the most advantageous situation,
+we still see one common motion in the liquor, which forces all what it
+contains to one side. We must wait till the fluid is in an equilibrium
+and at rest, before we make our observations; for it often occurs,
+that this motion of the fluid hurries away many globules, and forms
+a kind of whirling motion, which returns one of these globules in
+a very different direction to the others. The eye is then fixed on
+the globules, and seeing one take a different course from the rest,
+supposes it an animal, or at least a body, which moves of itself,
+whereas its motion is only owing to that of the fluid; and as the
+liquor is apt to dry and thicken in the circumference of the drop,
+endeavours must be made to fix the lens on the centre of it. The drop
+should also be as large as possible, and contain as much liquor as will
+permit a sufficient transparency, to see perfectly what it contains.
+
+Before we begin to make observations, we should have a perfect
+knowledge of our microscope. There is no glass whatsoever but in which
+there are some spots, bubbles, threads, and other defects, which
+should be nicely inspected, in order that such appearances should not
+be represented as real and unknown objects: we must also endeavour
+to learn what effect the imperceptible dust has which adheres to the
+glasses of the microscope; a perfect knowledge of which may be acquired
+by observing the microscope several times.
+
+To make proper observations, the sight, or focus, of the microscope
+must not precisely fall on the surface of the liquor, but a little
+above it; as not so much reliance should be placed on what passes upon
+the surface, as what is seen in the body of the liquor. There are often
+bubbles on the surface which have irregular motions produced by the
+contact of the air.
+
+We can see much better with the light of two short candles, than in the
+brightest day, provided this light is not agitated, which is avoided by
+putting a small shade on the table, inclosing the three sides of the
+lights and the microscope.
+
+It will often appear as though dark and opaque bodies become
+transparent, and even take different colours, or form concentrical and
+coloured rings, or a kind of rainbow on the surface; and other matters,
+which are seen at first sight transparent and clouded, become black and
+obscure; these changes are not real, but only depend on the obliquity
+the sight falls on the body with, and the height of the plain in which
+they are found.
+
+When there are bodies in a liquor which seem to move with great
+swiftness, especially when they are on the surface, they form a
+furrowed motion in the liquor, which appears to follow the moving body,
+and which we might be inclined to mistake for a tail. This appearance
+deceived me at first, but I clearly perceived my error, when these
+little bodies met others which stopped them; for there was no longer
+any appearance of tails. These are the remarks which occurred during
+my experiments, and which I submit to those who would make use of the
+microscope for the observation of liquors.
+
+[Illustration: _PLATE I._]
+
+
+EXPERIMENTS.
+
+I. I took from the seminal vessels of a man, who died a violent death,
+and whose body was still warm, all the liquor therein contained, and
+put it into a small bottle; of this I put a drop on the table of the
+microscope, without the addition of water or any other liquor. The
+first thing which presented, was a vapour which steamed from the liquor
+towards the lens, and obscured it. These vapours being dissipated, I
+perceived large filaments, (_fig. 1._) which in some places seemed to
+extend into different branches, and in others to intermingle together.
+These filaments clearly appeared to be internally agitated by an
+undulating motion, and looked like hollow tubes which contained some
+moving substance. I distinctly saw two of these filaments (_fig. 2._)
+were joined together, and had a vibration nearly like that of two
+extended strings, which are tied at the two extremities, and pulled
+asunder in the middle. These filaments were composed of globules which
+touched each other, and resembled beads. I afterwards saw filaments
+which swelled in certain parts, and I observed, that on the side so
+swelled small globules came out, which had a distinct motion like that
+of a pendulum; these small bodies were fastened to the filaments by
+a small thread, (_fig. 3._) which lengthened gradually as the little
+body moved; and at last I saw these little bodies entirely separated
+from the large filament, carrying after them the small thread which
+connected them. As this liquor was very thick, and the filaments too
+near each other, I dilated another drop with rain water, in which
+I was assured there were no animals. I then saw the filaments much
+separated, and very distinctly perceived the motion of these little
+bodies, which was now more free, and they swam much quicker; and if
+I had not seen them separate from the filaments, and carry along
+with them their thread, I should have taken the moving body in this
+second observation for an animal, and the thread for its tail. I then
+attentively observed one of these filaments, that was much thicker than
+these small bodies, and I had the satisfaction of seeing two of those
+bodies which separated with difficulty, drag along with them a long and
+small thread, which obstructed their motion.
+
+This seminal liquor was at first very thick, but by degrees it became
+more fluid; in less than an hour it was almost transparent; and in
+proportion as this fluidity increased, the phenomena changed, as I
+shall relate.
+
+II. When the seminal liquor attained more fluidity, the filaments were
+no longer to be seen, but the little bodies appeared in great numbers;
+they have for the most part a motion like that of a pendulum, and they
+draw after them a long thread, which it may clearly be perceived they
+want to get rid of; their motion forwards is very slow, vibrating to
+the right and left. The motion of a boat fastened in the midst of a
+rapid stream to one fixed point, pretty well represents the motion
+of these bodies, excepting that the boat remains in the same place,
+whereas they advance by degrees; but they do not always keep the
+same parts in the same direction; but at each vibration they take a
+considerable rolling motion; so that, besides their horizontal motion,
+they have one of a vertical balance, which proves that these bodies
+are of a globular figure, or, at least, that their lowest part is not
+sufficiently extended to maintain them in the same position.
+
+III. At the end of two or three hours, when the liquor was more fluid,
+we saw a greater quantity of these moving bodies. They seemed to be
+more free; the threads were shorter; their progressive motion was more
+direct, and their horizontal motion was greatly diminished; for the
+longer the threads are, the greater is the angle of their vibration;
+and in proportion as these threads diminish in length, the vibratory
+motion lessens, and the progressive motion increases. The vertical
+balance still subsisted, and was always plainly perceptible.
+
+IV. In five or six hours the liquor attained its utmost fluidity. Most
+of these moving substances were entirely disengaged from their threads;
+they were of an oval figure, (_fig. 4._) and moved progressively
+with great swiftness, and by their various motions had a stronger
+resemblance than ever to real animals. Those who had their threads
+still adhering, were not so brisk as the others; and among these that
+had not threads, some seemed to change their shape and size, some were
+round, some oval, and others thicker at their extremities than in the
+middle; the balancing and rolling motion was still observable.
+
+V. At the end of twelve hours a kind of gelatinous matter was settled
+at the bottom of the bottle: it was of an ash-colour, and of a
+tolerable consistency; the liquor that swam above was almost as clear
+as water, with a kind of bluish tint, resembling water in which a
+little soap had been dissolved; nevertheless it still preserved its
+viscidity. The moving bodies had then a great activity, were loosened
+from their threads, and moved in all directions. I saw some of them
+change their form, and from oval become round; and others separate,
+and from one oval form two. As they became smaller, their activity
+increased.
+
+VI. In twenty-four hours the liquor had deposited a greater quantity of
+gelatinous matter. I diluted it with water, but it did not readily mix,
+and required a considerable time to dissolve. It then appeared composed
+of an infinite number of opaque tubes that formed a kind of net-work,
+in which no regular disposition nor the least motion could be seen:
+in the clear liquor some few small bodies were still moving. The next
+morning there were also a very few; but after that time I saw no more
+in this liquor than in the globules, without any appearance of motion.
+
+These experiments were repeated several times with the most possible
+exactness; and I am persuaded that those threads above mentioned are
+not tails, nor do they make any part of the individual body; for these
+threads have no proportion with the rest of the body; they are of
+different sizes, although the moving bodies are always nearly of the
+same, at the same time. The globule appears embarrassed in its motion,
+as its tail is longer or shorter; sometimes it cannot advance, but move
+only from right to left, or from left to right, when the tail is very
+long; and it is clearly seen that they use great efforts to get rid of
+them.
+
+VII. Having taken the seminal liquor from another man but just dead,
+and still warm, I put a drop of it on the table of the microscope, and
+it immediately liquified; it had at first a condensed appearance, and
+seemed to form a compact web, composed of long and thick filaments,
+which grew from the thickest part of the liquor. These filaments
+separated in proportion as the liquor became more fluid, and at
+length they divided into globules, which at first seemed not to have
+sufficient power to set themselves in motion, but this power increased
+as they separated from the filament, from which they made many efforts
+to disengage themselves. Each of them in this struggle drew out tails
+from the filaments of different sizes, some of which were so thin
+and so long as to have no proportion with the bodies, which were all
+so much the more embarrassed as these threads or tails increased in
+length. The angle of their vibratory motion was also much greater as
+those filaments were longer: and their progressive motion so much the
+more remarkable as these tails were shorter.
+
+VIII. Having continued these observations for fourteen hours, I
+perceived that these threads, or tails, were continually lessening, and
+became so fine, that at last their extremities were no longer visible,
+and at length the whole entirely disappeared. At this time the globules
+absolutely ceased their horizontal vibrations; their progressive motion
+was direct, although they had always the vertical balancing motion,
+like the rolling of a ship. When disencumbered of these threads, the
+bodies were oval, transparent, and perfectly like those pretended
+animals seen in the liquor of an oyster on the seventh day, and still
+more to those found in the jelly of roast veal at the end of the fourth
+day.
+
+IX. Between the tenth and eleventh hour the liquor became extremely
+fluid, and all the globules appeared to proceed in ranks from one and
+the same side; (_fig. 5._) they passed over the table of the microscope
+in less than four seconds; they were ranged seven or eight in front,
+and moved on successively, as troops march in files. I observed this
+singular instance for more than five minutes; and as their course
+did not finish, I was desirous of finding the source: and, having
+gently moved my glass, I perceived that all these moving globules came
+from a kind of mucilage, (_fig. 6._) where the filamentary net-work
+continually produced them more abundant and much quicker than the
+filaments had ten hours before. There was still a remarkable difference
+between these moving bodies produced in the thick liquor, and those
+produced when the liquor became more fluid; these last had no thread
+behind them, their motion was quicker, and they went in flocks like
+sheep. I observed the mucilage from whence they issued for some time,
+and perceived it diminished, and was successively converted into
+moving globules, till the diminution of more than half the bulk; after
+which, the liquor being too dry, this mucilage became obscure in its
+middle, and all the environs were divided by the small threads which
+appeared to be formed from the bodies of these moving globules which
+were destroyed as it dried up, not in one single mass, but in long
+threads, regularly disposed, with quadrangular intervals, forming a
+net-work, very like to a cobweb, on which the moisture hung in an
+infinite number of globules.
+
+X. I perceived by the first experiment, that these little moving
+bodies change their form, and I thought they in general diminished,
+but of that I was not certain. In this last observation, at the
+twelfth and thirteenth hour I observed it more distinctly; at the same
+time remarking that though diminished considerably in size, yet they
+increased in specific gravity; especially when their motion was nearly
+finished, which generally happened all at once and they sunk to the
+bottom, forming a sediment of an ash-colour, plainly perceptible to the
+naked eye, and which appeared through the microscope to be composed of
+globules adherent to on another, sometimes by threads, and at others
+in knots, but always in a regular manner.
+
+XI. Having procured the seed of a dog, emitted naturally, I observed
+that this liquor was clear, and had but little tenacity. I put it in
+a phial, and having examined it with a microscope, without diluting
+it with water, I perceived moving bodies entirely like those I had
+observed in the human semen; they had threads, or tails, perfectly
+the same; they were also nearly of the same size; in a word, they
+resembled, as perfectly as possible, those I saw in the human liquor,
+liquified during two or three hours. I then sought for the filaments
+which I had seen in the human liquor, but it was useless; I perceived
+only some long threads entirely like those which served as tails to
+the globules. These threads were not attached to any globules, nor had
+they any motion. Those globules which were in motion, and had tails,
+appeared to me to move quicker than those in the human semen: they had
+scarcely any horizontal vibrations, but a rolling motion. They were not
+in a great number; and, although their progressive motion was stronger,
+they took more time to cross the microscope than those I had before
+remarked. I observed this liquor for three hours, but perceived no
+change: after which I examined it at another time for four hours, and
+remarked, that the number of moving bodies diminished by degrees; the
+fourth day there was still some, though they were very few, and often
+I only found one or two in a drop of liquor. The second day most of
+them were deprived of their tails; the third day very few retained
+them, yet, at the last day, there still remained some which had them;
+the liquor had then deposited a whitish sediment, which appeared to be
+composed of immoveable globules, and many threads, that seemed to be
+tails separated from the globules. There were also some attached to the
+globules, which appeared to be the dead bodies of these little animals,
+but whose forms were different from those that moved, for they appeared
+larger than the moving globules, or the rest, which remained without
+motion at the bottom of the liquor, and appeared to have a fissure or
+opening.
+
+XII. Another time, having taken the seminal liquor of the same dog, I
+again perceived the fore-mentioned phenomena; and I saw, besides, in
+one of the drops of this liquor, a mucilaginous part, which produced
+moving globules, as in the ninth experiment, (_fig. 6._) and these
+globules formed a current, and went in ranks like troops. This mucilage
+appeared to me animated with an internal inflated motion, which
+produced small bloated appearances in different parts, and from whence
+issued these bloated forms, or moving globules, with a nearly-equal
+swiftness, and in the same direction. The bodies of these globules were
+not different from the rest, excepting they had no tails. I observed
+that many of them changed their shape, and lengthened considerably,
+till they became little cylinders, after which the two extremities of
+the cylinders were bloated, and divided into two globules, both moving
+and following the same direction as that before they were united.
+
+XIII. The phial, which contained this liquor, having been broke by
+accident, I, a third time, took the liquor of the same dog, but whether
+the animal was wearied by too reiterated emissions, or by other
+causes, the seminal liquor contained none of the above bodies, but was
+transparent and viscous, like the serum of blood; I examined it then,
+and at one, two, three, and even twenty-four hours afterwards, but it
+presented nothing new: there was not a single moving body to be seen,
+nor any mucilage; in a word, nothing that I had seen before.
+
+XIV. I then opened a dog, and separated the testicles and the adherent
+vessels, but I perceived no seminal vesicles, and apparently the seed
+in those animals passes directly from the testicles into the urethra.
+I found but a small quantity of liquor in the testicles, although the
+dog was adult and vigorous. In the small quantity I could collect I
+could not discover any bodies that were in motion. I only perceived a
+great quantity of very small globules, most of which were motionless,
+and some of the smallest had some trifling approximating motion, which
+I could not follow, because the drops I gathered were so exceedingly
+minute that they dried in two or three minutes after they were placed
+in the microscope.
+
+XV. Having cut the testicles of this dog into two parts, I infused
+it in water, and closely sealed up the vessel. Three days after I
+examined this infusion, which I made with the design of discovering
+whether the flesh did not contain moving bodies, and I saw a great
+quantity of moving bodies of a globular and oval form, like those I
+had seen in the seminal liquor of the dog, excepting they had not any
+threads. They moved in all manner of directions with great swiftness. I
+observed these bodies, which appeared animated for some time, and saw
+many change their form; I perceived some to lengthen, and others to
+contract, while some swelled at both extremities: there were numbers
+that were smaller and thicker than the rest; but they were all in
+motion, and were about the size and figure of those I have described in
+the fourth experiment.
+
+XVI. The next morning the number of these globules were increased,
+but they appeared smaller; their motion was more rapid and irregular;
+they had also another appearance with respect to their form and manner
+of moving, which seemed confused; the next and several days after,
+till the fifteenth day, there were moving bodies in the water, whose
+size gradually diminished till they were no Longer visible. The last,
+which I perceived with great difficulty, was on the nineteenth and
+twentieth days, and they moved with greater rapidity than ever. Upon
+the water a kind of pellicle was formed, which appeared to be composed
+of the coverings of those moving bodies, small threads, scales, &c. but
+entirely motionless; this pellicle, and the moving bodies could not
+come into the liquor by means of external air, since the bottle had
+been kept carefully sealed.
+
+XVII. I then successively opened ten rabbits, on different days, to
+examine their seminal liquors; the first had not a drop, either in the
+testicles or seminal vessels. In the second I was no more successful,
+although I was assured he was the father of a very numerous progeny.
+I succeeded no better in the third. I then imagined that the presence
+of the female might be requisite; I therefore put males and females
+into cages so contrived that it was impossible for them to copulate. At
+first these endeavours did not succeed; for, on opening two, not a drop
+of seminal liquor was to be found; however, in the sixth that I opened,
+a large white rabbit, I found, in the seminal vesicles, as much liquor
+as could be contained in a teaspoon; this matter resembled calves'
+jelly, was nearly transparent, and of a citron colour. Having examined
+it with the microscope, I perceived it to resolve, by slow degrees,
+into filaments and thick globules, many of which appeared fastened to
+each other; but I did not remark any distinct motion in them, only
+as the matter liquefied, it formed a kind of current by which these
+filaments and globules seemed to be drawn all to one side. I expected
+to find this matter take a greater degree of fluidity, but that did not
+happen, for, after it was a little liquefied, it dried, and I could
+perceive nothing further than what is above mentioned. When this matter
+was mixed with water, the latter did not appear to have power to dilute
+it.
+
+XVIII. Having opened another rabbit, I only found a very small quantity
+of seminal matter, which was of a colour and consistency entirely
+different from the former; it was scarcely tinctured of a yellow hue,
+and was much more fluid. As there was but very little, I feared it
+would dry too hastily, and therefore mixed it with water: from the
+first observation, I did not perceive the filaments I had seen in the
+other, but I discovered three globules, all in a trembling and restless
+motion; they had also a progressive motion, but it was very slow; some
+moved round the others, and most appeared to turn upon their centres. I
+could not pursue this observation because the liquor so soon got dry.
+
+XIX. I opened another of these rabbits, but could not discover any of
+this matter; in the seminal vessels of another, I found almost as much
+congealed liquor as in XVIIth Experiment: I examined it in the same
+manner as the rest, but it afforded me no greater discovery. I infused
+the whole I had collected, in almost double the quantity of water, and
+after briskly shaking them together, I suffered them to settle for ten
+minutes; after which, on inspecting this infusion, I saw the same large
+globules as before; there were but few and those very distant from each
+other. They had approximating motions with respect to each other, but
+they were so slow, as to be scarcely discernable; two or three hours
+after, these globules seemed to be diminished, their motion was become
+more distinct, and they appeared to turn upon their centres. Although
+this trembling motion was more than their progressive, nevertheless
+they were clearly seen to change their situation irregularly with
+respect to each other. Six or seven hours after the globules were
+become still less, and their action was increased: they appeared to me
+to be in much greater numbers, and all their motions distinct. The next
+morning, there was a prodigious multitude of globules in motion, which
+were at least three times smaller than those that at first appeared.
+I observed these globules for eight days, and observed that many of
+them seemed to join together, after which their motion ceased; this
+union, however, appeared to me only superficial and accidental. Some
+were larger than others; most were round and spherical, and some of
+them were oval. The largest were most transparent, and the smallest
+were almost black. This difference did not proceed from the light, for
+in whatever situation these small globules were in, they were always of
+the same appearance; the motions of the small were much more rapid than
+the large ones, and what I remarked most clearly and most generally
+in all, was their diminution of size, so that at the eighth day they
+were so exceedingly small as to be hardly perceptible, and at last
+absolutely disappeared.
+
+XX. At length having obtained, with no small difficulty, the seminal
+liquor of another rabbit, as it would have been conveyed to the female,
+I remarked it to be more fluid than that which had been taken from
+the seminal vesicles, and the phenomena which it offered were also
+very indifferent; for in this liquor there were moving globules and
+filaments without motion; and also a kind of globules with threads or
+tails, resembling those of a dog or a man, but only appearing smaller
+and brisker (_fig. 7._) They passed over the microscope in an instant,
+their tails appeared shorter than those of other spermatic animals,
+and I own I am not certain whether some of those tails were not false
+appearances, produced by the furrows which these moving globules formed
+in the liquor, as they moved with too great a rapidity to admit of my
+clearly observing them; besides, the liquor, though sufficiently fluid
+at first, very speedily dried away.
+
+XXI. After this I resolved to examine the seminal liquor of a ram; I
+applied to a butcher, who supplied me with the necessary parts of at
+least twelve or thirteen, directly after they were killed, but I could
+not find liquor sufficient for any experiment, either in the epididymis
+or seminal vesicles. In the little drops I was able to collect, I only
+perceived globules which had no motion. As I made these experiments in
+March, I supposed by repeating them in October, the season of female
+attachments, I should discover more seminal liquor in these vessels.
+I cut many of these testicles in two longitudinally, and collected a
+small quantity of liquor, but found nothing more in them.
+
+[Illustration: _PLATE. II._]
+
+XXII. I took three of these testicles, of three different rams, cut
+each of them into four parts, and put them into separate bottles, with
+as much water as was sufficient for them. Securing these bottles from
+the admission of air I suffered the infusion to remain for four days,
+after which I examined the liquor of each by the microscope, and found
+them all replete with an infinity of moving bodies, most part of which
+were oval, and the rest globular; they were pretty thick, and resembled
+those described in the VIIIth experiment; their motion was neither
+brisk, uncertain, nor very rapid, but equal, uniform, and in all
+directions. These moving bodies were nearly of the same size in each
+liquor, but differed one bottle with the other. They had no tails, nor
+were there any filaments or threads in this liquor; during the fifteen
+or sixteen days they were retained, they often changed their form, and
+seemed successively to throw off their external coverings; they also
+became every day smaller, and on the sixteenth day, they were no longer
+perceptible.
+
+XXIII. In the month of October I opened a ram, and found a great
+quantity of seminal liquor in the epididymis; having examined it with
+the microscope, I perceived an innumerable multitude of moving bodies,
+so numerous, that all the liquor seemed to be entirely composed of
+them; as it was too thick, I diluted it with water, but I was surprised
+to see the motion of these bodies suddenly stop, though I perceived
+them very distinctly; having many times repeated the same observation,
+I perceived that the water which diluted the seminal liquors of a man,
+a dog, &c. seemed to coagulate that of a ram.
+
+XXIV. I then opened another ram, and in order to prevent the seminal
+liquor from coagulating, I permitted the parts of generation to remain
+in the body of the animal, and covered it over with warm clothes. By
+these precautions I observed the seminal liquor in its fluid state;
+it was replete with an infinity of oblong moving bodies, (_fig. 8._)
+traversing in various directions; but as soon as the liquor grew cold,
+the motion of all these bodies immediately ceased. I diluted the
+liquor with warm water, when the motion of the small bodies remained
+for three or four minutes. The quantity of these moving bodies was so
+great in this liquor, that although diluted, they nearly touched each
+other. They were all of the same size and form, but none of them had
+tails. Their motion was not very quick, and when it stopped by the
+coagulation of the liquor, they did not change their form.
+
+XXV. As I was persuaded, not only by my own theory, but also by the
+observations of all those who had made experiments before me, that the
+female, as well as the male, has a seminal and prolific liquor; and,
+as I had no doubt, but the reservoir of this liquor was the glandular
+body of the testicle, where prejudiced anatomists attempted to find the
+egg, I purchased several dogs and bitches, and some male and female
+rabbits, which I kept separate from each other; and in order to have a
+comparative object with the liquor of the female, I again observed the
+seminal liquor of a dog, and discovered there the same moving bodies as
+described in the XIth experiment.
+
+XXVI. While I was thus occupied, a bitch was dissected which had been
+four or five days in heat, and had not received the dog. The testicles
+were readily found, and on one of them I discovered a red, glandular,
+prominent body, about the size of a pea, which perfectly resembled
+a little nipple; on the outside was a visible orifice formed by two
+lips; one of which jutted out more than the other. Having introduced a
+small instrument into this orifice, a liquor dropped from it, which we
+carefully caught to examine with the microscope. The surgeon replaced
+the testicles in the body of the animal, which was yet alive, in order
+to keep them warm. I then examined this liquor with a microscope, and,
+at the first glance, had the satisfaction to see moving bodies with
+tails, exactly like those I just before saw in the seminal liquor
+of the dog. (_fig. 9._) Messrs. Needham and Daubenton, who observed
+them with me, were so surprized at this resemblance, that they could
+scarcely believe but that these spermatic animals were the same,
+and thought I had forgotten to change the table of the microscope,
+or that the instrument with which we had gathered the liquor of the
+female, might before have been used for the dog. Mr. Needham then
+took different instruments, and having obtained some fresh liquor,
+he examined it first, and saw there the same kind of animals, and
+was convinced, not only of the existence of spermatic animals in the
+seminal liquor of the female, but likewise of their resemblance to
+those of the semen of the male. We repeated it ten times at least, in
+different drops of the same liquor, without perceiving the smallest
+variation in the phenomena.
+
+XXVII. Having afterwards examined the other testicle, I found a
+glandular body in its growing state; it had not any external orifice,
+was much smaller, and not so red as the first. Having opened it, I
+found no liquor; but only a small fold in the internal part, which I
+judged to be the origin of the cavity that was to contain the liquor.
+This second vesicle had some very small lymphatic vesicles externally.
+I pierced one of them with a lancet, and a clear and limpid liquor
+flowed out, which I examined with the microscope; it contained nothing
+similar to that of the glandular body; it was a clear matter, composed
+of small globules, which were motionless. Having often repeated this
+observation, I was assured, that this liquor in the vesicles was only
+a kind of lymph, which contains nothing animated, or similar to that
+seen in the female seed, which is formed and perfected in the glandular
+bodies.
+
+XXVIII. Fifteen days after I opened another bitch that had been in
+heat seven or eight days, but had not received the dog. I found the
+testicles contiguous to the extremities of the horns of the matrix;
+these horns were very long, their external tunic surrounded the
+testicles, and they appeared covered with that membrane like a cowl.
+In each testicle I found a glandular body in its full maturity. The
+first was half open, and there was a passage which penetrated into the
+testicle, and which was replete with seminal liquor; the second was
+somewhat more large and prominent, and the orifice, or canal, which
+contained the liquor was below the nipple. I took these two liquors,
+and having compared them, found them perfectly alike. The seminal
+liquor of the female is at least as liquid as that of the male. Having
+afterwards examined the two liquors with the microscope, I perceived
+the like moving bodies, (_fig. 10._) and the same phenomena, as in the
+seminal liquor of the other. I saw besides many globules which moved
+very briskly, and endeavoured to disengage themselves from the mucilage
+that surrounded them: there was a great quantity of them as in the seed
+of the female.
+
+XXIX. From these glandular bodies I pressed out all the liquor, and
+having collected it, I found enough to last for four or five hours
+observations. I remarked that it deposited somewhat to the bottom, or
+at least began to thicken. I took one drop of this, which was thicker
+than the rest, and having put it on the microscope, perceived that the
+mucilaginous part of the seed was condensed, and formed a continued
+net-work. On the external border of this net-work, there was a torrent,
+or current, composed of globules, which moved with rapidity. These
+globules were lively, active, and appeared to be disengaged from their
+mucilaginous covering, and their tails. This stream perfectly resembled
+the course of the blood in small transparent veins; for they appeared
+not only to be animated by their own powers, but also to be impelled
+by a common force, and constrained to follow in a herd. From this
+experiment, and the XIth and XIIth, I concluded, that when the fluid
+begins to coagulate and thicken, these active globules break and tear
+their mucilaginous coverings, and escape by that side where the liquor
+remains most fluid. These moving bodies had then neither threads nor
+tails; they were for the most part oval, and appeared to be flat at the
+bottom, for they had no rolling motion.
+
+XXX. The horns of the matrix were externally soft; I opened them
+longitudinally, and only found a very small quantity of liquor, which,
+upon examination, appeared to contain the same as that pressed from the
+glandular substance of the testicle. These glandular bodies are placed
+so as easily to sprinkle this liquor on the horns of the matrix; and
+I am persuaded that, as long as the amorous season remains, there is
+a continual dropping of this liquor from the glandular substance into
+the horns of the matrix; that this dropping remains till the glandular
+substance has emptied the vesicles; it then becomes fluid by degrees,
+is effaced, and only leaves a little reddish cicatrice on the external
+part of the testicle.
+
+XXXI. I took this seminal liquor of the female, with the same quantity
+of that just emitted from the male, and mixed them together, and having
+examined this mixture with the microscope, I perceived nothing new, the
+liquor remaining the same, and the moving bodies were so similar, that
+it was impossible to distinguish those of the male from those of the
+female; I only thought their motion appeared a little slackened.
+
+XXXII. Having dissected a young bitch that had never been in heat, I
+only discovered a small protuberance on one of the testicles, which
+I supposed to be the origin of a glandular body. The surface of the
+testicles was smooth and even, and the lymphatic vessels could scarcely
+be seen externally, until the tunic, which covered the testicles, was
+separated; but these vesicles were not considerable, and contained but
+a small quantity of liquor, in which I could only perceive some little
+globules without any motion.
+
+XXXIII. In another bitch, which was younger, and only three or four
+months old, there was no appearance of glandular bodies on the
+testicles; they were white, smooth, and covered with a cowl like the
+rest. There were some little vesicles which contained little or no
+liquor; and it was with great difficulty we could perceive any vesicles
+externally. I compared one of these testicles with that of a young
+dog of nearly the same age, and they appeared internally of a fleshy
+nature, and perfectly similar. I do not mean to contradict what some
+anatomists have said concerning the testicles of dogs, but only that
+the appearance of the internal substance of the female testicles is
+like that of the males, when the glandular substances are not yet
+grown.
+
+XXXIV. The genital parts of a cow, which had been just killed, was
+sent to me, covered over with hot cloths, and put into a basket with
+a live rabbit, which likewise squatted on a cloth at the bottom, so
+that I received them almost as warm as when taken out of the body. I
+immediately inspected the testicles, and found them of the size of
+a hen's, or, at least, a pigeon's egg. One of these testicles had a
+glandular body, about the size of a pea, protuberating outwardly like a
+small nipple, but it was not pierced, nor had any external orifice: it
+was close and hard. I pressed it with my fingers, but no liquor issued
+from it. I observed, before this testicle was dissected, there were
+two other glandular substances at a distance from the other; but these
+were just begun to grow; their colour was a whitish yellow, whereas
+that which seemed to have pierced the membrane of the testicle was of
+a rose colour. I opened this last, and examined it with the greatest
+attention, but could not discover that it contained any liquor, I
+therefore judged that it was far distant from its maturity.
+
+XXXV. The other testicle had no glandular body which had pierced the
+common membrane that covered the testicle, there were only two small
+ones, which began to form a little protuberance below this membrane.
+I opened both of them but no liquor issued therefrom: they were hard,
+whitish, and with a little yellow tint; each of them had four or five
+lymphatic vesicles, very easily distinguishable on their surface, and
+appearing transparent. I judged they contained a quantity of liquor,
+and having pierced them with a lancet, the liquor issued out to some
+inches distance. I collected a sufficient quantity of this liquor to
+observe it easily; I only saw some very minute immoveable globules; and
+although I continued my examination for two days, I neither discovered
+alteration, change, nor motion, therein.
+
+XXXVI. Eight days after, two more genital parts were brought to me
+in the same mode as the last. I was assured that one was taken from
+a young cow that had never calved, and the other from one that had
+had several, but was not old. I first examined the testicles of the
+latter, and on one of them I found a glandular substance, as large and
+as red as a cherry, which appeared a little soft towards the nipple. I
+distinguished three small holes, in which a hair might be introduced.
+Having pressed this substance with my fingers a small quantify of
+liquor issued, which I placed on the table of a microscope, and had the
+satisfaction to see some moving globules there, but quite different
+from those which I had seen in other seminal liquors (_fig. 11._).
+These globules were obscure and little; their progressive motion,
+although distinct, was, nevertheless, very slow. The liquor was not
+thick; the little globules had no appearance of threads, or tails, and
+they were not all in motion. This is all I was able to perceive in the
+liquor this glandular substance afforded me, for although I pressed
+it again, it only afforded a less quantity, mixed with blood. I again
+discovered it in the small moving globules, but they seemed to be at
+least four times smaller than the sanguinary globules.
+
+XXXVII. This glandular body was situate at one of the extremities by
+the side of the horn of the matrix, and the liquor, which it prepares,
+must fall upon this horn; nevertheless, on opening this horn I found
+no material quantity of liquor. This glandular body penetrated very
+forward in the testicle, and occupied more than a third of its internal
+substance. I opened them longitudinally, and found a pretty large
+cavity, but entirely void of any liquor. At some distance from this
+glandular body there was a small one of the same kind, about the size
+of a lentil. There were also two small cicatrices, about the same size,
+which formed two small indentations, of a deep red colour: they were
+the remains of obliterated glandular bodies. Having afterwards examined
+the other testicle, I counted four cicatrices and three glandular
+bodies; the foremost of which had pierced the membrane, was of a flesh
+colour, and the size of a pea. It was solid, and without any orifice
+or liquor: the two others were smaller, harder, and of a deep orange
+colour. On the first testicle only two or three apparent lymphatic
+vesicles remained. I counted eight on the external part, and having
+examined the liquor of these vesicles I perceived only a transparent
+matter, without any moving bodies.
+
+XXXVIII. I then examined the testicles of the young cow which had not
+calved, which, notwithstanding, were something larger than the other,
+but it is true there were no cicatrices on either of them; the one
+was smooth and very white, and a number of lymphatic vesicles were
+sprinkled about it, but there was not the least mark of a glandular
+body. On the other testicle I perceived the marks of two glandular
+substances, the one had just began to grow, and the other was the size
+of a pea; there was also a great number of lymphatic vesicles, which I
+pierced with a lancet, but the liquor did not contain any thing; having
+pierced the two small glandular bodies some blood alone issued thereout.
+
+XXXIX. I divided each testicle of both cows into four parts, and,
+having put them into separate phials, I poured as much water on as
+would cover them, and after having closely corked them up, I suffered
+to infuse for six days; I then examined these infusions, and discovered
+an innumerable quantity of living moving bodies (_fig. 12._); they
+were all, in these infusions, extremely small, moved with a surprising
+rapidity in all directions. I observed them for three days, and they
+always appeared to diminish, till at last, on the third day, they
+entirely disappeared.
+
+XL. The following day they brought to me the genital parts of three
+more cows. I immediately searched the testicles to find one where the
+glandular substance was in perfect maturity; but in two of them I
+only discovered some growing glandular substances on the testicles.
+I could not learn whether these cows had calved or not, but there
+was a great appearance they had all been in season, for there were
+a great number of cicatrices on all these testicles. In the third I
+found a testicle, on which was a glandular substance, as thick and as
+red as a cherry; it was inflamed, and seemed to be in full maturity.
+Its extremity was a nipple, with a small hole; I pressed it a little
+between my fingers, and a quantity of liquor issued out. I found in
+this liquor moving globules, exactly like those in the liquor pressed
+from the glandular body of the other cow, I have before spoken of in
+experiment XXXVI. They appeared to be more numerous, their progressive
+motions were not so slow, and their size larger. Having observed them
+for some time I perceived some to lengthen and change their form. I
+then introduced a very fine instrument into the little hole of the
+glandular substance, and having opened it I found the internal cavity
+replete with liquor; this liquor offered me the same phenomena, and the
+same moving globules, as I before observed in experiment XXXVI. with
+either filaments, threads, or tails attached to them. The liquor of
+the vesicle presented me with nothing more than nearly a transparent
+matter, which did not contain one moving thing.
+
+XLI. At different times they brought me the genitals of several other
+cows. In some I found the testicles loaded with an almost mature
+glandular substance; in others they were of different growths, and
+I remarked nothing new, excepting that in the two testicles of two
+different cows I perceived the glandular substance in a decayed state;
+the base of one was as broad as the circumference of a cherry; the
+extremity of the nipple was soft, wrinkled, and shrivelled; the two
+small holes were very perceptible, from whence the liquor had flowed.
+With some difficulty I introduced a small hair, but there was no liquor
+in the canal, nor in the internal cavity, which was still to be seen.
+The flaccidity of these glandular substances begins, therefore, at
+the most external part, or extremity of the nipple. They diminish at
+first in height, and afterwards in breadth, as I observed in another
+testicle, where this glandular substance had diminished more than three
+fourths.
+
+XLII. As the testicles of doe rabbits, as well as the glandular bodies
+formed there, are very small, I could observe nothing very exactly
+with respect to their seminal liquor. I only discovered, that the
+testicles of doe rabbits are different, and that none of those I saw
+resembled what De Graaf represents in his engravings; for the glandular
+substances did not enclose the lymphatic vesicles; and I never saw a
+pointed end, as he has depicted them.
+
+XLIII. I found on the testicles of some cows a kind of bladders,
+replete with transparent liquor. I remarked they were of different
+sizes, the largest about that of a pea; they were fastened to the
+external membrane of the testicle by a strong membraneous pedicle,
+as was also another, still smaller; and a third, nearly of the same
+size as the second, appeared to be only a lymphatic vesicle, much
+more apparent than the rest. I imagined these bladders, which the
+anatomists have called _hydatides_, might possibly be of the same
+nature as the lymphatic vesicles of the testicles, for having examined
+the liquor they contained I found it to be perfectly similar; it was a
+transparent and homogeneous liquor, which did not contain one moving
+substance.
+
+XLIV. At the same time I made observations on the liquor in an oyster;
+on the water in which pepper had been boiled; on the water wherein
+pepper had been only infused; and on the water wherein I had put some
+vegetable seed; the bottles which contained these waters were firmly
+closed, and in two days I perceived in the oyster liquor a great
+quantity of oval and globular substances, which seemed to swim like
+fish in a pond, and had all the appearance of being animals; however
+they had no limbs nor tails, but were very large, transparent, and
+visible. I perceived them change their forms, and become smaller for
+seven or eight days successively; and at length I and Mr. Needham
+observed animals similar to those in an infusion of jelly of roast
+veal, which had been also very exactly corked; so that I am persuaded
+they are not real animals, at least according to the received
+acceptation of the words, as we shall hereafter explain.
+
+The infusion of the seed presented an innumerable multitude of moving
+globules which appeared animated like those of the seminal liquors,
+and in the infusions of the flesh of animals: these were also large,
+and in violent motion during the first days, but they diminished by
+degrees, and disappeared only from their minuteness.
+
+I perceived the same thing, but later, in the liquor wherein pepper
+had been boiled, and the like, though still later, in that which had
+not boiled; from hence I supposed that what is called fermentation may
+possibly be only the effect of the motion of these organical parts
+of animals and vegetables; and in order to see what difference there
+was between this kind of fermentation and that of minerals, I placed
+a little powdered stone on the microscope, and sprinkled thereon a
+drop of aquafortis, which however produced a different phenomena,
+consisting of great balls, which ascended to the surface, and almost
+instantaneously obscured the focus of the microscope: this was a
+dissolution of the grosser parts, which being completed it became
+motionless, and had not the smallest resemblance to the other infusions
+I had observed.
+
+XLV. I examined the seminal liquor in the roes of different fish; such
+as carp, tench, barbel, &c. which I took out while they were living,
+and having observed three different liquors with great attention, I
+perceived a great quantity of obscure globules, all in motion. I took
+several more of these fish alive, and with my fingers gently compressed
+that part of the belly where this liquor is emitted; and in that which
+I obtained, I perceived an infinity of moving globules therein, very
+black and very small.
+
+XLVI. Before I finish this chapter I shall relate the experiments of
+Mr. Needham on the seed of a kind of cuttle fish, called calmar. This
+able naturalist having sought for spermatic animals in the milts of
+many different fish, found them in the roe of a calmar, apparent to
+the naked eye. During the summer he dissected calmars at Lisbon, but
+found no appearance of any roe, nor any reservoir which appeared to be
+destined for the reception of the seminal liquor; and it was in the
+middle of December that he began to discern the first traces of a new
+vessel replete with a milky juice. This reservoir increased, and the
+seed which it contained was diffused very abundantly. By examining this
+liquor with the microscope, he perceived only small opaque globules,
+which floated in a kind of serous matter, without the least appearance
+of life. But some time after, in the milt of another calmar, he found
+these organic parts completely formed; they seemed like spiral springs
+shut up in a kind of transparent case. They appeared as perfect at
+first as they did at last, excepting that by degrees they contracted
+and formed a kind of screw. The lid of the case was a species of
+valve that opened outwardly, and by which all the contents might
+issue; it contained another valve, a barrel, and a spongy substance;
+therefore the whole machine consisted in an external, transparent, and
+cartilaginous case, whose upper extremity is terminated by a round
+head, formed by the case itself, and which performs the office of a
+valve. In this external case is contained a transparent tube, which
+encloses the spring, piston, or valve, barrel, or spongy substance.
+The screw occupies the upper part of the tube and case, the piston and
+barrel are placed in the middle, and the spongy substance occupies
+the lower part. These machines pump up the lacteal liquor, of which
+the spongy substance is full; and before the animal spawns, the whole
+milt is no more than a composition of these organic parts, which have
+absolutely pumped up the lacteal liquor. As soon as these little
+machines are taken from the body of the animal, and deposited either
+in water, or held in the air, they begin to act; the spring ascends,
+followed by the piston, the barrel, and the spongy substance which
+contains the liquor; and as soon as the spring and the tube which
+contain it begin to quit the case, the spring folds up; and all that
+remains within begins to move, till the spring, the sucker, &c. are
+entirely come out: as soon as that is done, the remainder immediately
+follow, and the lacteal liquor, which has been pumped out, and which
+was contained in the spongy substance flows out by the barrel.
+
+As this observation is very singular, and incontestibly proves that
+the moving bodies found in the milt of the calmar are not animals, but
+simple machines, a kind of pumps, I have deemed it necessary to give
+Mr. Needham's own words.[Q]
+
+[Q] See New Discoveries made with the microscope by Mr. Needham, chap.
+vi. Leyden, 1747.
+
+"When the small machines, he says, are arrived to their perfect
+maturity, many of them act the moment they are in the open air;
+nevertheless most of them may be commodiously placed, so as to be
+seen with a microscope, before their action begins; and even to make
+them act, the upper extremity of the external case must be moistened
+with a drop of water which then begins to expand, while the two small
+ligaments which issue from the case twist and turn in different
+manners: at the same time, the screw ascends slowly, the volutes, which
+are at its upper end, approach and act against the top of the case:
+those at the bottom also advance, and seem to be continually followed
+by others which come from the piston. I say, they seem to be followed,
+because I do not think they are so effectually, but only a deception
+produced by the nature and motion of the screw. The piston and barrel
+also follow the same direction, extend lengthways, and at the same time
+move towards the top of the case, which is perceived by the vacuum
+at the bottom. As soon as the screw, with the tube in which it is
+enclosed, begins to appear externally from the case, it folds, because
+it is retained by its two ligaments: nevertheless, all the internal
+contents continue to move gently and gradually, until the screw,
+piston, and bladder, are entirely come out. When that is done, the rest
+follow directly after. The piston separates from the barrel, and the
+apparent ligament, which is below the latter, swells and acquires a
+diameter equal to that of the spongy substance which follows it. This,
+although much larger than when in the case, becomes still five times
+longer than before. The tube which incloses it all is straightened in
+its middle, and forms two kinds of knots, about a third of its length
+distant from each extremity: the semen then flows through, and is
+composed of small opaque globules, which float in a serous matter,
+without shewing any signs of life, and which are precisely such as I
+have said to have seen them when they were diffused in the reservoir
+of the milt. In the figure, the part between the two knots seems to
+be broken: when it is examined attentively, we find that what causes
+it to appear as such, is, that the spongy substance with in the tube
+is broken in nearly equal pieces, which the following phenomena will
+clearly prove. Sometimes it happens, that the screw and the tube break
+by the piston, which remains in the barrel; then the tube closes in
+a moment, and takes a conical figure, by contracting, as much as it
+is possible, above the end of the screw, which demonstrates its great
+elasticity in that part: and the manner in which it accommodates itself
+with the figure of the substance it incloses, when it receives the
+least change, proves, that it is equal in every other respect."
+
+Mr. Needham from this conceives that we might imagine the actions
+of all this machine were owing to the spring of the screw, but he
+proves, by many experiments, that the screw, on the contrary, only
+obeys a power which resides in the spongy part. As soon as the screw
+is separated from the rest, it ceases its action, and loses all its
+activity. The author afterwards makes this reflection on this singular
+machine:
+
+"If, says he, I had seen the animalcule pretended to be in the semen of
+living animals, perhaps I might be in a condition to determine whether
+they are really living creatures, or simple machines prodigiously
+minute, and which are in miniature, what the vessels of the calmar are
+in the great."
+
+By this, and some other analogies, Mr. Needham concludes, there is a
+great appearance that the spermatic worms of other animals are only
+organized bodies and machines, like to those of the calmar, whose
+actions are made at different times; "for, says he, let us suppose,
+that in the prodigious number of spermatic worms seen on the table
+of a microscope, there are some thousands which act at the same time,
+that will be sufficient to shew us, they are all alive. Let us also
+conceive, adds he, that the motion of these spermatic worms remains,
+like that of the machines of the calmar, about half a minute; then the
+succession of action of these small machines, will remain a long time,
+and the pretended animals will appear to decrease successively. Besides
+why should the calmar alone have machines in its seed, whereas every
+other animal has spermatic worms, and real animals? Analogy is here
+of such great weight, that it does not appear possible to refuse it."
+Mr. Needham likewise very justly remarks, that even the observations
+of Leeuwenhoek, seems to indicate that the spermatic worms have a
+great resemblance with the organized bodies in the seed of the calmar.
+"I have, says Leeuwenhoek, speaking of the cod, taken those real
+substances for hollow and extended animalcule, because they were four
+times as large as the living animalcule." And in another part, "I have
+remarked, he says, speaking of the seed of a dog, that the animalcules
+often change their form, especially when the liquor in which they
+float evaporates. The progressive motion does not extend above the
+diameter of a hair."[R]
+
+[R] See Leeuwenh. Arch. Nat. page 306, 309, 310.
+
+After considering all these circumstances Mr. Needham conjectures,
+that the supposed spermatic animals might possibly be only natural
+machines, substances much more simply organized than the bodies of
+animals. I have seen with the microscope, these machines in the calmar,
+and the description he gives of them, is very faithful and exact. His
+observations then shew us, that the seminal liquor is composed of
+parts which seek to be organized; that it, in fact, produces organized
+substances, but that they are not as yet, either animals or organized
+substances, like the individual which produced them. We might suppose,
+that these substances are only instruments which serve to perfect the
+seminal liquor, and strongly impel it; and that it is by their brisk
+and internal action, that it most intimately penetrates the seminal
+liquor of the female.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+COMPARISON OF MY OBSERVATIONS WITH THOSE OF LEEUWENHOEK.
+
+
+Although I made the preceding experiments with all the circumspection
+possible; and although I repeated them a number of times, I am
+persuaded that many things escaped my notice; I have only related what
+I saw, and what all the world may see, with a little art and much
+practice. In order to be free from prejudices, I endeavoured to forget
+what other naturalists asserted to have seen, conceiving that by so
+doing, I should be more certain of only seeing in fact what really
+appeared; and it was not till after I had digested my observations,
+that I compared them with those of Leeuwenhoek, &c. I by no means
+pretend to have greater abilities in microscopical observations than
+that great naturalist, who passed more than sixty years in making
+various experiments.
+
+Notwithstanding the authority his observations may justly claim, it
+is surely permitted to examine and compare others with them. Truth
+can only be gained by such examinations, and errors discovered,
+particularly as we do it without any partiality, and in the sole view
+of establishing something fixed and certain on the nature of those
+moving bodies seen in the seminal liquors.
+
+In November 1677, Leeuwenhoek, who had already communicated to the
+Royal Society of London many microscopical observations on the optic
+nerve, the blood, the juice of the plants, the texture of trees,
+rain-water, &c. addressed to Lord Brouncker, President of the Society,
+in the following words: "Postquam Exc.[S] &c. Dominus Professor
+Cranen me visitatione sua saepius honorarat, litteris rogavis, Domino
+Ham concrato suo, quasdam observationum mearum, videndas darem. Hic
+dominus Ham me secundo invisens, secum in laguncula, vitrea semen
+viri, gonorrhaea laborantis, sponte destillatum, attulit, dicens, se
+post paucissimas temporis minutias (cum materia ilia jam in tantum
+esset resoluta ut fistulae vitreae immitti posset) animalcula viva in
+eo observasse, quae caudam & ultra 24 horas non viventia judicabat;
+idem referebat se animalcula observasse mortua post sumptam ab aegroto
+therebintinam. Materiam praedicatam fistulae vitreae immissam, praesente
+Domino Ham, observavi, quasdamque in ea creaturas viventes, at post
+decursum 2 aut 3 horarum eamdem solus materiam observans, mortuas vidi.
+
+[S] See Phil. Trans. No. 141, page 1041.
+
+"Eamdem materiam (semen virile) non aegroti alicujus, non diuturna
+conservatione corruptam, vel post aliquot momenta fluidiorem factam,
+sed sani viri statim post ejectionem, ne interlabentibus quidem sex
+arteriae pulsibus, saepiuscule observavi, tantamque in ea viventium
+animalculorum multitudinem vidi, ut interdum plura quam 1000 in
+magnitudine arenae sese moverent; non in toto semine, sed in materia
+fluida crassiori adhaerente, ingentem illam animalculorum multitudinem
+observavi; in crassiori vero seminis materia quasi sine motu jacebant,
+quod inde provenire mihi imaginabar, quod materia illa crassa ex tam
+variis cohaereat partibus, ut animalcula in ea se movere nequirent;
+minora globulis sanguini ruborem adferentibus haec animalcula erant, ut
+judicem, millena millia arenam grandiorem magnitudine non aequatura.
+Corpora corum rotunda, anteriora obtusa, posteriora ferme in aculeum
+desinentia habebant; cauda tenui longitudine corpus quinquies sexiesve
+excedente, & pellucida crassitiem vero ad 25 partem corporis habente
+praedita erant, adeo ut ea quoad figuram cum cyclaminis minoribus,
+longam caudam habentibus, optime, comparare queam; motu caudae
+serpentino, aut ut anguillae in aqua natantis progrediebantur; in
+materia vero aliquantulum crassiori caudam octies deciesve quidem
+evibrabant antequam latitudinem capilli procedebant. Interdum mihi
+imaginabar me internoscere posse adhuc varias in corpore horum
+animalculorum partes, quia vero continuo eas videre nequibam, de iis
+tacebo. His animalculis minora adhuc animalcula, quibus non nisi
+globuli figuram attribuere possum, permissa erant.
+
+"Memini me ante tres aut quatuor annos, rogatu Domini Oldenburg, B. M.
+semen virile observasse, & praedicta animalia pro globulis habuisse;
+sed quia fastidiebam ab ulteriori inquisitione, & magis quidem a
+descriptione, tunc temporis eam omisi. Jam quoad partes ipsas, ex
+quibus crassam seminis materiam, quoad majorem sui partem consistere
+saepius cum admiratione observavi, ea sunt tam varia ac multa vasa, imo
+in tanta multitudine haec vasa vidi, ut credam me in unica seminis gutta
+plura observasse quam anatomico per integrum diem subjectum aliquod
+secanti occurrant. Quibus visis, firmiter credebam nulla in corpore
+humano jam formato esse vasa, quae in semine virili bene constituto non
+reperiantur. Cum materia haec per momenta quaedam aeri fuisset exposita,
+praedicta vasorum multitudo in aquosam magnis oleaginosis globulis
+permistam materiam mutabatur, &c."
+
+The Secretary of the Royal Society, in answer to this letter, says,
+that it would be proper to make the like experiments on the seed of
+other animals, as dogs, horses, &c. not only to form a better judgment
+on the first discovery, but to know the differences which might be
+found in the number, and the figure of those animalcules. And with
+relation to the vessels of the thickest part of the seminal liquors,
+he greatly doubts they were only filaments without any organization,
+"quae tibi videbatur vasorum congeries, fortassis seminis sunt
+quaedam filamenta, haud organice constructa, sed dum permearunt vasa
+generationi inservientia in istiusmodi figuram elongata. Non dissimili
+modo ac saepius notatus sum salivam crassiorem ex glandularum faucium
+foraminibus editam quasi e convolutis fibrilis constantem."[T]
+
+[T] See the Secretary's answer to Leeuwenhoek's Letter in the Phil.
+Trans. No. 141, page 1043.
+
+Leeuwenhoek answered him on the 18th of March, 1678, in the following
+words: "Si quando canes coeunt marem a foemina statim seponas materia
+quaedam tenuis & aquosa (lympha scilicet spermatica) e pene solet
+paulatim exstillare; hanc materiam numerosissimis animalculis repletam
+aliquoties vidi, eorum magnitudine quae in semine virili conspiciuntur,
+quibus particulae globulares aliquot quinquagies majores permiscebantur.
+
+"Quod ad vasorem in crassiori seminis virilis portione spectabilium
+observationem attinet, denuo non semel iteratam, saltem mihimetipsi
+comprobasse videor; meque omnino persuasum habeo, cuniculi, canis,
+felis, arterias venasve fuisse a peritissimo anatomico haud unquam
+magis perspicue observatas, quam mihi rasa in semine virili, ope
+perspicilli, in confectum venere.
+
+"Cum mihi praedicta vasa primum innotuere, statim etiam pituitam, tum
+& salivam perspicillo applicavi; verum his minime existentia animalia
+frustra quaesivi.
+
+"A cuniculorum coitu lymphae spermaticae guttulam, unam et alteram,
+e femella exstillantem, examini subjeci, ubi animalia praedictorum
+similia, sed longe pauciora, comparuere. Globuli item quam plurimi,
+plerique magnitudine animalium, iisdem permisti sunt.
+
+"Horum animalium aliquot etiam delineationes transmisi, figura _a_
+(_plate 3._) exprimit corum aliquot vivum (in semine cuniculi arbitror)
+eaque forma qua videbatur, dum aspicientem me versus tendit. A B C,
+capitulum cum trunco indicant; C D, ejusdem caudam, quam pariter ut
+suam anguilla inter natandum vibrat. Horum millena millia, quantum
+conjectare est, arenulae majoris molem vix superant, (_fig. b, c, d,_)
+sunt ejusdem generis animalia, sed jam mortua.
+
+[Illustration: _PLATE. III._]
+
+"(_Fig. e._) Delineatur vivum animalculum, quemadmodum in semine canino
+sese aliquoties mihi attentius intuenti exhibuit. E F G, caput cum
+trunco indigitant, G H ejusdem caudam, (_fig. f, g, h,_) alia sunt in
+semine canino quae motu & vita privantur, qualium etiam vivorum numerum
+adeo ingentem vidi, ut judicarem portionem lymphae spermaticae arenulae
+mediocri respondentem, eorum ut minimum decena millia continere."
+
+By another letter written to the Royal Society, the 31st of May,
+1678, Leeuwenhoek adds, "Seminis canini tantillum microscopio
+applicatum iterum contemplatus sum, in eoque antea descripta animalia
+numerosissime conspexi. Aqua pluvialis pari quantitate adjecta, iisdem
+confestim mortem accersit. Ejusdem seminis canini portiuncula in vitreo
+tubulo unciae partem duodecimalem crasso servata, sex & triginta horarum
+spatio contenta animalia vita destitua pleraque, reliqua moribunda
+videbantur.
+
+"Quo de vasorum in semine genitali existentia magis constaret,
+delineationem eorum aliqualem mitto, ut in figura ABCDE, (_fig. i._)
+quibus literis circumscriptum spatium arenulam mediocrem vix superat."
+
+I have copied these first remarks of Leeuwenhoek from the Philosophical
+Transactions, because, in matters of this kind, observations made
+without any systematical view are those which are the most faithfully
+described, and even this able naturalist no sooner formed a system on
+spermatic animals, than he began to vary in essential points.
+
+It is evident by the above dales, that Hartsoeker is not the first who
+published, if he was the first who discovered spermatic animals. In
+the Journal de Scavans, in the year 1774, there is a letter from Mr.
+Huguens, on the subject of a microscope, made by one small ball of
+glass, with which he asserts he perceived animals in the water, wherein
+pepper had been infused for two or three days, as Leeuwenhoek before
+had observed with the like microscopes, but whose balls were not so
+minute. "There are also other seeds, he continues, which engender such
+animals, as coriander seeds, &c. and I have seen the same thing in the
+pith of the birch tree, after having kept it for four or five days; and
+some have observed them in the water where nutmegs and cinnamon have
+been soaked. These animals may be said to engender from some corruption
+or fermentation: but there are others which must have a different
+origin; as those in the seed of animals, which seem in such great
+numbers, as to be almost composed of them; they are all transparent,
+have a quick motion, and their figures are like the tadpole."
+
+Huguens does not mention the author of this discovery; but in the
+Journal of the 29th of August in the same year, there is an extract
+of a letter of M. Hartsoeker, in which he gives the method of forming
+these glass balls by means of the flame of a lamp; and the author of
+the Journal says, "By this method he has discovered that little animals
+are engendered in urine which has been kept for some days, and have
+the figure of little eels: he found some in the seed of a cock, which
+appeared of the same form, but quite different from those found in the
+seed of other animals, which resemble tadpoles, or young frogs, before
+their legs are formed." The author seems to attribute the invention to
+Hartsoeker; but if we reflect on the uncertain manner in which it is
+there represented, and on the particular manner in which Leeuwenhoek
+speaks in his letter, written and published above a year before, we
+must allow him to be the first who made this observation; but between
+them a contest took place as to the discovery which has never been
+decided. Be this as it will, Leeuwenhoek was undoubtedly the first
+inventor of the microscope, whose focuses are balls of glass formed by
+the flame of a lamp. But to return to his observations.
+
+I shall first remark, that what he says of the number and motion of
+these pretended animals is true; but the figure of the body is not
+always the same as he describes it: sometimes the part which precedes
+the tail is round and at others long; often flat, and frequently
+broader than it is long, &c. and with respect to the tail, it is often
+much larger and shorter than he asserts. The motion of vibrations
+which he gives to the tail, and by means of which he pretends that the
+animalcules advance progressively in this fluid, has never appeared
+to me as he has described it. I have seen these moving substances
+make eight or ten oscillations from the right to the left, or vice
+versa, without advancing the breadth of a hair; and I have even seen
+many more which could not advance at all; because this tail, instead
+of being of any assistance to them was, on the contrary, a thread
+attached either in the filaments or mucilaginous parts of the liquor,
+and rather retained the moving substance like as a thread fastened to
+the point retains the ball of a pendulum; and when this tail had any
+motion, it only resembled a thread which forms a curve at the end of
+an oscillation. I have seen these threads, or tails, fastened to the
+filaments which Leeuwenhoek stiles vessels; I have seen them separate
+after many reiterated efforts of the moving bodies; I have seen them
+at first lengthen, then diminish, and at last totally disappear. I
+therefore think these tails should be considered as accidental parts,
+and not as essential to the bodies of these pretended animals. But
+what is most remarkable, Leeuwenhoek precisely says, in his letter
+to Lord Brouncker, that, besides these animals that had tails, there
+were also smaller animals in this liquor, which had no other form than
+that of a globule. "His animalculis (caudatis scilicet) minora adhuc
+animalcula, quibus non nisi globuli figuram attribuere possum, permista
+erant." This is the truth; but after Leeuwenhoek had advanced that
+these animals were the only efficient principle of generation, and that
+they were transformed into human figures, he has only regarded those
+as animals which had tails; and as it was consistent for animals that
+were transformed into human figures, to have a constant form, he never
+afterwards mentions those smaller animalcules without tails; and I
+was greatly surprised, on comparing the copy of this letter with that
+he published twenty years after, in his 3d volume, where, instead of
+the above words, the following are found: "Animalculis hisce permistae
+jacebant aliae minutiores particulae, quibus non aliam quam globulorum
+seu sphaericam figuram assignare queo;" which is quite different. A
+particle of matter to which he attributes no motion, is very different
+from an animalcule: and it is astonishing that Leeuwenhoek, in
+copying his own works, has altered this essential article. What he
+adds immediately after likewise merits attention: he says, that by
+the desire of Mr. Oldenburg he had examined this liquor three or four
+years before, when he took these animalcules for globules; that is,
+there are times when these pretended animalcules are no more than
+globules, without any remarkable motion, and others when they move with
+great activity; sometimes they have tails, and at others they have
+none. Speaking in general of spermatic animals he says, "Ex hisce
+meis observationibus cogitare coepi, quamvis antehac de animalculis
+in seminibus masculinis agens, scripserim, me in illis caudas non
+detexisse, fieri tamen posse ut illa animalcula aeque caudis fuerint
+instructa ac nunc comperi de animalculis in gallorum gallinaceorum
+semine masculino;" another proof that he has often seen spermatic
+animals of all kinds without tails.
+
+In the second place we must remark, that the filaments which are
+seen in the seminal liquor before it is liquefied were discovered by
+Leeuwenhoek, and that in his first observations, before he had made
+any hypothesis on spermatic animals, he considered these filaments as
+veins, nerves, and arteries; and firmly believed all the parts and
+vessels of the human body might clearly be seen in the seminal liquor.
+This opinion he persisted in, in defiance of the representations
+which Oldenburg made to him on this subject from the Royal Society:
+but as soon as he thought of transforming these pretended spermatic
+animals into men, he no longer mentioned these vessels; and instead
+of looking on them as nerves, arteries, and veins, of the human body
+already formed in the seed; he did not even attribute to them the
+functions they really possess, the producing of these moving bodies:
+and he says, vol. I. p. 7, "Quid fiet de omnibus illis particulis seu
+corpusculis praeter illa animalcula semini virili hominum inhaerentibus?
+Olim & priusquam haec scriberem, in ea sententia fui, praedictas strias
+vel vasa ex testiculis principium secum ducere, &c." And in another
+part he says, that if he had formerly written any thing on the subject
+of these vessels found in the seed, we must pay no attention to it.
+
+[Illustration: _PLATE. IV._]
+
+We shall observe in the third place, that if we compare the figures
+_a, b, c, d_, (PLATE III.) copied from the Philosophical Transactions,
+with those which Leeuwenhoek had engraved many years after, (PLATE IV.)
+we shall find considerable difference, especially in the figures of
+the dead animals, of a rabbit and in those of a dog, (which plate we
+have also copied for the satisfaction of our readers) from all which
+we may conclude, that Leeuwenhoek has not always observed objects
+entirely alive: that the moving bodies, which he looked upon as
+animals, appeared to him under different forms; and that he has varied
+in his assertions, with a view of making the species of men and animals
+perfectly consistent; he has not only varied in the basis of these
+experiments, but even in the manner of making them, for he expressly
+says, that he always diluted the liquor with water, in order to
+separate, and to give more motion to these animalcules: nevertheless,
+in his letter to Lord Brouncker, he says, that having mingled an equal
+quantity of rain water with the seminal liquor of a dog, in which he
+had before perceived an infinity of living animalcules, yet the mixing
+of this water killed them. The first experiment of Leeuwenhoek's
+therefore was made, like mine, without any mixture; and it even seems,
+that he was not of opinion to mix any water with the liquor till a
+long time after; because he thought he had discovered, by his first
+essay, that water caused the death of the animalculae; which however is
+not the fact. I think that the mixture of the water only dissolves the
+filaments very suddenly; for I have seen but very few filaments in all
+the experiments I have made after mixing the water with the seminal
+liquor.
+
+As soon as Leeuwenhoek was persuaded that spermatic animals were
+transformed into men, and other animals, he imagined he saw two sorts
+in the seminal liquor of every animal, the one male, and the other
+female; and this difference, according to him, served not only for the
+generation of themselves, but for the production of males and females,
+which was very difficult to conceive by a simple transformation. He
+speaks of the male and female animalcule, in his letter printed in the
+Philosophical Transactions, No. 145, and in many parts of his works,[U]
+but he does not describe the difference of these male and female
+animalcules, and which in fact never existed but in his own imagination.
+
+[U] See vol I. page 163, and vol. III. page 101, of his works.
+
+The famous Boerhaave having asked Leeuwenhoek, if he had not observed
+in spermatic animals different degrees of growth and size? Leeuwenhoek
+answered, that having dissected a rabbit, he observed in the semen an
+infinite number of living animals. "Incredibilem, says he, viventium
+animalculorum, numerum conspexerunt, cum haec animalcula scypho
+imposita vitreo & illic emortua, in rariores ordines disparassent, &
+per continuos aliquot dies saepius visu examinassem, quaedam ad justam
+magnitudinem nondum excrevisse adverti. Ad haec quasdam observavi
+particulas perexiles & oblongas, alias aliis majores, &, quantum oculis
+apparebat, cauda destitutas; quas quidem particulas non nisi animalcula
+esse credidi, quae ad justam magnitudinem non excrevissent."[V]
+Here then are animalcules of different sizes, some with tails and
+others without, which much better agrees with my experiments, than
+with Leeuwenhoek's own system. We differ only in one particular; he
+says, that those without tails were young animalculae, which were not
+arrived at their full growth; while I, on the contrary, have seen
+these pretended animals quit the filaments with tails or threads, and
+afterwards lose them by degrees.
+
+[V] See vol. IV. pages 280 and 281.
+
+In the same letter to Boerhaave, he says, in the semen of a ram, he
+perceived animalcules following each other in swarms like a flock of
+sheep. "A tribus circiter annis testes arietis, adhuc calentes, ad aedes
+meas deferri curaveram, cum igitur materiam ex epididymibus eductam,
+ope microscopii contemplarer, non sine ingenti voluptate advertebam
+animalcula omnia, quotquot innatabant semini masculino, eundem
+natando cursum tenere, ita nimirum ut quo itinere priora prinatarent
+eodem posteriora subsequerentur, adeo ut hisce animalculis quasis
+sit ingenitum, quod oves factitare vidimus, scilicet ut precedentium
+vestigiis grex universus incedat." This observation, which Leeuwenhoek
+made in 1713, and which he looks upon as singular and novel, proves
+to me, that he had never examined the seminal liquors of animals with
+attention, at least sufficient to give very exact descriptions of them.
+Leeuwenhoek was sixty-one years old in 1713, had made microscopical
+observations for more than forty-five years, had published the
+discovery of spermatic animals for about thirty-six years, and then,
+for the first time, saw in the seminal liquor of a ram, what is seen in
+all seminal liquors, and what I have described in Experiment IX. in the
+seed of a man; Experiment XII. in the seed of a dog; and in Experiment
+XXIX. in that of a bitch. It is not necessary to suppose the spermatic
+animals of the ram are endowed with instinct, to explain the floating
+of these animals, in flocks like sheep, since those of a man, dog, or
+bitch, does the same; and which motion depends solely on particular
+circumstances, whose principle is, that all the fluid matter of the
+seed is on one side, while the thick matter is on the other; for then
+all the bodies in motion will be disengaged from the mucilage, and
+follow the same road into the most fluid part of the liquor.
+
+In another letter, written the same year, to Boerhaave, he relates some
+further observations he made on rams, and says, that he has seen, in
+the _vasa deferentia_, flocks of animals which float all on one side,
+and others which go in a contrary direction; and he adds, "Neque illud
+in unica epididymum parte, sed & in aliis quas praecideram partibus,
+observavi. Ad haec, in quadam parastatarum resecta portione complura
+vidi animalcula, quae necdum in justam magnitudinem adoleverant, nam
+et corpuscula illis exiliora & caudae triplo breviores erant quam
+adultis. Ad haec, caudas non habebant desinentes in mucronem, quales
+tamen adultis esse passim comperio. Praeterea in quandam parastatarum
+portionem incidi, animalculis quantum discernere potui, destitutam,
+tantum illi quaedam perexiguae inerant particulae, partim longiores,
+partim breviores, sed altera sui extremitate crassiunculae; istas
+particulas in animalcula transituras esse non dubitabam." It is easy
+to see, by this passage, that Leeuwenhoek had seen, in this seminal
+liquor, what I found in all; that is to say, moving bodies of different
+sizes, figures, and motions; and which agrees much better with the idea
+of organic particles in motion than of that with real animals.
+
+It appears, therefore, that Leeuwenhoek's observations are not contrary
+to mine, although he has drawn very different conclusions from them. I
+am persuaded that if any person would take the trouble of making the
+like experiments they would not have any difficulty in discovering from
+whence these differences proceed, and would find that I have advanced
+nothing which is not conformable to truth; and to enable the reader to
+decide thereon, I shall subjoin a few remarks.
+
+The filaments I have spoken of are not always to be perceived in the
+seminal liquor of a man. To discover them it must be examined the
+moment it is taken from the body, and even then it will sometimes
+happen that there is not one to be seen. Sometimes the seminal liquor
+presents, especially when it is very thick, only large globules, which
+may be even distinguished with a common lens. By inspecting them with
+the microscope they appear like young oranges; they are very opaque,
+and a single one often fills up the whole table of the microscope.
+The first time I saw these globules I thought they were some foreign
+matters fallen into the liquor, but having examined different drops
+I discovered that the whole was composed of these thick globules. I
+selected one of the roundest, and whose size was such that, its centre
+being in the middle of the table of the microscope, I could at the
+same time observe the whole circumference; at first it was absolutely
+opaque; a short time afterwards I perceived a bright luminous ring
+to form on its surface, which remained about half an hour, and then
+approached by degrees towards the centre, which became clear, and of
+different colours, while the remainder of the globule continued opaque.
+This light, which brightened in the centre of the globule, resembled
+those seen in the great air bubbles. The globule then began to get
+a little flat, and acquire a small degree of transparency. Having
+examined it more than three hours I perceived no more alteration,
+nor any appearance of motion, either internally or externally. I
+then imagined, that by mixing this liquor with water, these globules
+might be changed; in fact they did change, but they presented only a
+transparent and homogeneous liquor, wherein was nothing remarkable. I
+suffered the seminal liquor to liquefy of itself, and examined it at
+the end of six, twelve, and twenty-four hours, but saw nothing more
+than a fluid; without the smallest resemblance of life or motion. I
+only relate this observation to shew that there are times when the
+common phenomena are not to be seen in the seminal liquor.
+
+At times all the moving bodies appear to have tails, especially in
+the semen of a man and a dog; the motion is then the least brisk, and
+performed with difficulty. If this liquor is suffered to dry, the tails
+or threads are deprived of motion the first; the anterior extremity
+continues to vibrate for some time, and then all motion entirely
+ceases. These substances may be preserved in this state of dryness for
+a long time: if a small drop of water is mixed therewith, their figure
+changes, they are reduced into many globules, which sometimes appear to
+be in motion, as well by their approximation to each other, as by the
+trepidation and twirling round their centres.
+
+These moving bodies in the seminal liquor of a man, dog, or bitch, so
+nearly resemble each other, as to admit of mistaking one for the other,
+especially if they are examined the moment the liquor is drawn from
+the animal. Those of the rabbit appear smaller and brisker; but these
+differences proceed more from the different states in which the liquor
+is at the time of observation, than from the nature of the liquor
+itself, which ought to be different in different kinds of animals;
+for example, in that of a man I have seen streaks of thick filaments,
+(_fig. 3._) and have perceived the moving bodies separate themselves
+from these filaments from whence they appeared to proceed; but I have
+never seen any thing like it in the semen of a dog; where, instead
+of filaments, or separated streaks, it is commonly a mucilage whose
+texture is more compact, and in which we with difficulty discern any
+filamentary parts; yet this mucilage gives birth to moving bodies like
+those in the semen of men.
+
+The motions of these bodies remain a longer time in the liquor of a
+dog, than in that of a man; from which it is more easy to be certain of
+the alteration of form above mentioned. The moment the liquor issues
+from the body of the animal we perceive the animalcules to have tails;
+in twelve, twenty-four, or thirty-six hours after, we shall find they
+have lost those tails, and are then no more than ovals in motion, often
+much brisker than at first.
+
+The moving bodies are always a little below the surface of the liquor.
+On the surface some large transparent air bubbles, which have no
+motion, generally appear, though sometimes these bubbles stir and
+seem to have a progressive motion, but which is nothing more than the
+agitation of the air. Below the moving substances we often see others
+much smaller, and which only appear like globules, having no tails,
+but the greatest number of which are oftentimes in motion. I have
+also generally remarked, that in the infinite number of globules, in
+all those liquors, those which are very small, are commonly black, or
+darker than the rest; and that those which are extremely minute and
+transparent, have but little or no motion; they appear also to weigh
+specifically heavier, for they are always the deepest in the liquor.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+REFLECTIONS ON THE PRECEDING EXPERIMENTS.
+
+
+By the experiments we have just described, I was assured that females,
+as well as males, have a seminal liquor which contains moving
+substances; that these substances were not real animals, but only
+living organic particles; and that those particles exist, not only in
+the seminal liquors of the two sexes, but even in the flesh of animals,
+and in the germs of vegetables. To discover whether all the parts of
+animals, and all the germs of vegetables, contained living organic
+particles, I caused infusions of the flesh of different animals to
+be made, and of more than twenty kinds of seeds of different plants;
+and after they had infused four or five days, in phials closely stopt
+up, I had the satisfaction to see moving organic parts in them all;
+some appeared sooner, and others later; some preserved their motion
+for months together, while others were soon deprived of it; some
+directly produced large moving globules, that had the appearance of
+real animals, which changed their figures, separated, and became
+successively smaller: others produced only small globules, whose
+motions were very brisk; others produced filaments which lengthened
+and seemed to vegetate, swelled, and afterwards thousands of moving
+globules issued therefrom; but it is useless to detail my observations
+on the infusion of plants, since Mr. Needham has published so excellent
+a treatise on the subject. I read the preceding treatise to that able
+naturalist, and often reasoned with him on the subject, particularly
+on the probability that the germs of vegetables contained similar
+moving bodies to those in the seed of male and female animals. He
+thought those views sufficiently founded to deserve to be pursued; and
+therefore began to make experiments on all parts of vegetables; and I
+must own that the ideas I gave him on this subject have reaped greater
+profit under his hands than they would have done from me. I could quote
+many examples, but shall confine myself to one, because I indicated the
+circumstance I am going to relate.
+
+To determine whether the moving substances seen in the infusions
+of flesh were true animals, or only, as I supposed, moving organic
+particles, Mr. Needham imagined that he had only to examine some
+roasted meat, because if they were animals the fire must destroy
+them; and if not animals, they might still be found there as well as
+when the meat was raw; having therefore taken the jelly of veal, and
+other roasted meat, he infused them for several days in water, closely
+corked up in phials, and upon examination he found in every one of
+them a great quantity of moving substances. He shewed me some of these
+infusions, and among the rest that of the jelly of veal, in which there
+were moving substances, perfectly like those in the seminal liquor of
+a man, a dog, and a bitch, when they have no threads, or tails; and
+although we perceived them to change their figures, their motions so
+perfectly resembled those of an animal which swims, that whoever saw
+them, without being acquainted with what has been already mentioned,
+might certainly have taken them for real animals. I shall only add,
+that Mr. Needham assured himself, by a multiplicity of experiments,
+that all parts of vegetables contain moving organic particles, which
+confirms what I have said, and extends my theory on the composition of
+organized beings, and their reproduction.
+
+All animals, both male and female, and all vegetables whatsoever, it is
+therefore evident are composed of living organic parts. These organic
+parts are in the greatest abundance in the seminal liquor of animals,
+and in seeds of vegetables. It is from the union of these organic
+parts returned from all parts of the animal or vegetable body, that
+reproduction is performed, and is always like the animal or vegetable
+in which it operates; because the union of these organic parts cannot
+be made but by the means of an internal mould, in which the form of
+an animal or vegetable is produced. It is in this also the essence of
+the unity and continuity of the species consists, and will so continue
+while the great Creator permits their existence.
+
+But before I draw general conclusions from the system I am
+establishing, I must endeavour to remove some objections which might be
+made, and mention some other circumstances which will serve to place
+this matter in a better light.
+
+It will be asked, why I deny those moving substances in the seminal
+liquors to be animals, since they have constantly been regarded as
+such by Leeuwenhoek, and every other naturalist, who has examined
+them? I may also be told, that living organic particles are not
+perfectly intelligible, if they are to be looked upon as animalculae;
+and to suppose an animal is composed of a number of small animals,
+is nearly the same as saying that an organized being is composed of
+living organic particles. I shall therefore endeavour to answer these
+objections in a satisfactory manner.
+
+It is certain that almost all naturalists agree in looking on the
+moving substances in seminal liquors as real animals; but it is no less
+certain, from my own observations, and those of Mr. Needham, on the
+seed of the calmar, that these moving substances are more simple and
+less organized beings than animals.
+
+The word _animal_, in the acceptation we commonly receive it,
+represents a general idea formed of particular ideas drawn from
+particular animals. All general ideas include many different ones,
+which approach, or are more or less distant from each other, and
+consequently no general idea can either be exact or precise. The
+general idea which we form of an animal may be taken principally from
+the particular idea of a dog, a horse, and other beasts, which appear
+to us to act and move according to the impulse of their will, and which
+are besides composed of flesh and blood, seek after their food, have
+sexes, and the faculty of reproduction. The general idea, therefore,
+expressed by the word _animal_, must comprehend a number of particular
+ideas, not one of which constitutes the essence of the general idea,
+for there are animals which appear to have no reason, will, progressive
+motion, flesh nor blood, and which only appear to be a congealed
+substance: there are some which cannot seek their food, but only
+receive it from the element they live in: there are some which have no
+sensation, not even that of feeling, at least in any sensible degree:
+there are some have no sexes, or are both in one; there only belongs,
+therefore, to the animal a general idea of what is common also to the
+vegetable, that is, the faculty of reproduction.
+
+The general idea then is formed from the whole taken together, which
+whole being composed of different parts, there is consequently between
+these parts degrees and links. An insect, in this sense, is something
+less of an animal than a dog; an oyster still less than an insect; a
+sea-nettle, or a fresh-water polypus, still less than an oyster; and
+as nature acts by insensible links, we may find beings which are still
+less animated than a sea-nettle, or a polypus. Our general ideas are
+only artificial methods to collect a quantity of objects in the same
+point of view; and they have, like the artificial methods we shall
+speak of, the defect of never being able to comprehend the whole.
+They are likewise opposite to the walk of nature, which is uniform,
+insensible, and always particular, insomuch that by our endeavouring to
+comprehend too great a number of particular ideas in one single word,
+we have no longer a clear idea of what that word conveys; because, the
+word being received, we imagine that it is a line drawn between the
+productions of nature; that all above this line is _animal_, and all
+below it _vegetable_; another word, as general as the first, and which
+is used as a line of separation between organized bodies and inanimate
+matter. But as we have already said, these lines of separation do
+not exist in nature; there are beings which are neither animals,
+vegetables, nor minerals, and which we in vain might attempt to arrange
+with either. For example, when Mr. Trembly first observed the polypus,
+he employed a considerable time before he could determine whether it
+was an animal or a plant; and possibly from this reason that it is
+perhaps neither one nor the other, and all that can be said is, that it
+approaches nearest to an animal; and as we suppose every living thing
+must be either an animal or a plant, we do not credit the existence of
+an organized being, that cannot be referred to one of those general
+names; whereas there must, and in fact are, a great number of organized
+beings which are neither the one nor the other. The moving substances
+perceived in seminal liquors, in infusions of the flesh of animals, in
+seed, and other parts of plants, are all of this kind. We cannot call
+these animals, nor can we say they are vegetables, and certainly we can
+still less assert they are minerals.
+
+We can therefore affirm, without fear of advancing too much, that the
+grand division of nature's productions into _Animals_, _Vegetables_,
+and _Minerals_, do not contain every material being; since there are
+some that exist which cannot be classed in this division. We have
+already observed, that nature passes by insensible links from the
+animal to the vegetable, but from the vegetable to the mineral the
+passage is quick, and the distance considerable; from whence the law of
+nature's passing by imperceptible degrees appears untrue. This made me
+suppose that by examining nature closely we shall discover intermediate
+organized beings, which without having the power of reproduction, like
+animals and vegetables, would nevertheless have a kind of life and
+motion; other beings which, without being either vegetables or animals,
+might possibly enter into the composition of both, and likewise other
+beings which would be only the assemblage of the organic molecules I
+have spoken of in the preceding chapters.
+
+In the first class of these kind of beings eggs must be placed; those
+of hens, and other birds, are fastened to a common pedicle, and draw
+their nourishment and growth from the body of the animal, but when
+fastened to the ovary, they are not then real eggs, but only yellow
+globules which separate from the ovary as soon as they have attained a
+certain growth. Their internal organization is such that they derive
+nourishment from the lymph, the matrix of the hen, and by which they
+form the white membranes, and at last the shell. The egg therefore has
+a kind of life and organization, a growth, expansion, and a form which
+it assumes by its own powers. It does not live like an animal, nor
+vegetate like a plant, nor is possessed of the power of reproduction;
+nevertheless it grows, acts externally, and is organized. Must we not
+then look upon it as a being of a separate class, and which ought not
+to be ranked either with animal or mineral? for if it is pretended that
+the egg is only an animal production, destined for the nutriment of
+the chicken, and should be looked upon as a part of the hen; I answer,
+that the eggs, whether impregnated or not, will be always organized
+after the same mode: that impregnation only changes an almost invisible
+part; and that it attains its perfection and growth, as well externally
+as internally, whether it contains the chicken or not, and that
+consequently it ought to be considered as a separate being.
+
+What I have said will appear more clear, if we consider the formation
+and growth of the eggs of fish; when the female deposits them in the
+water they are only the outlines of eggs, which being separated from
+the body of the animal, attract and appropriate to themselves the
+particles which agree the best for their nourishment, and grow thus
+by intussusception. In the same manner as the hen's egg acquires the
+white and membranes in the matrix, wherein it floats, so the eggs of
+fish acquire their membranes and white in the water; and whether the
+male impregnates them, by emitting on these the liquor of its roe, or
+whether they remain unimpregnated, they do not the less attain their
+entire perfection. It appears to me, therefore, that the eggs should
+be considered as organized bodies, which being neither animals nor
+vegetables, are a genus apart.
+
+A second class of beings, of the same kind, are the organized bodies
+found in the semen of all animals, and which, like those in the milt of
+a calmar, are rather natural machines than animals. These are properly
+the first assemblages which result from the organic molecules we have
+so much spoken of, and they are, perhaps, the parts which constitute
+the organized bodies of animals. They are found in the semen of all
+animals, because the semen is only the residue of the organic molecules
+that the animal takes in with its aliment, and which, as we have
+already observed, are those parts most analogous to the animal itself,
+and most organic; it is those particles which compose the matter of the
+semen, and consequently we must not be astonished to find organized
+bodies therein.
+
+To be perfectly convinced that these organized bodies are not real
+animals, we need only reflect on the preceding experiments. The moving
+bodies in the seminal liquor have been taken for animals, because they
+have a progressive motion, and are thought to have a tail; but if we
+consider, on one hand, the nature of this progressive motion, which
+finishes in a very short time without ever renewing its motion; and
+on the other, the nature of these tails, which are only threads which
+the moving bodies draw after them, we shall begin to hesitate; for an
+animal goes sometimes slow, sometimes fast, and sometimes remains in
+a state of rest; these moving bodies, on the contrary, always continue
+the same motion, and I have never seen them stop and renew their
+movement again. I ask, whether this kind of continued motion, without
+any rest, is common to animals, and if that ought not to make us doubt
+these moving bodies being real animals? An animal of any kind must also
+have a constant form and distinct limbs; but these moving bodies vary,
+and change their forms every moment, have no distinct limbs, and their
+tails appear as a part which does not belong to the individual. Can
+we then imagine these bodies to be real animals? In seminal liquors
+filaments are seen which lengthen and appear to vegetate; after which
+they swell and produce moving bodies. These filaments may be kinds
+of vegetables, but the moving bodies which spring from them cannot
+be animals, for a vegetable has never yet been seen to produce an
+animal. These moving bodies are found in all vegetable and animal
+substances; they are not produced by the modes of generation, they
+have no uniformity of species, and therefore can neither be animals
+nor vegetables. They are to be met with in the flesh of animals, and
+in the substance of vegetables, but are most numerous in their seeds;
+is it not therefore natural to regard them as living organic particles
+which compose the animal or vegetable; as particles which having motion
+and a kind of life, ought, by their union, to produce moving and living
+beings, and so form animals and vegetables?
+
+But in order to leave this matter as little in doubt as possible,
+let us examine other substances. Can it be said, the active machines
+which Mr. Needham perceived in the milt of the calmar were animals?
+Can it be thought that eggs, which are active machines of another
+kind, are also animals? If we turn our eyes to the representation of
+almost all the moving bodies Leeuwenhoek saw in different matters,
+shall we not be convinced, even at the first inspection, that those
+bodies are not animals, since not one of them has any limbs, but
+are all either globular or oval? If we afterwards examine what this
+celebrated naturalist says, when he describes the motion of these
+pretended animals, we can no longer doubt of his being in an error
+when he considered them as such; and we shall be still more and more
+confirmed that they are only moving organic particles by the following
+examples: Leeuwenhoek gives[W] the figure of the moving bodies which he
+observed in the liquor of a male frog. This figure only represents a
+slender body, long, and pointed at one of its extremities; and of this
+he says, "Uno tempore caput (thus he calls the thickest extremity of
+this moving body) crassius mihi apparebat alio; plerumque agnoscebam
+animalculum haud ulterius quam a capite ad medium corpus, ob caudae
+tenuitatem, & cum idem animalculum paulo vehementius moveretur (quod
+tamen tarde fiebat) quasi volumine quodam circa caput ferebatur. Corpus
+fere carebat motu; cauda tamen in tres quatuorve flexus volvebatur."
+This then is the change of form which I mentioned to have seen, the
+mucilage from which the moving bodies use all their efforts to be
+disengaged, the slowness of their motion before they are disengaged;
+and the animal, according to Leeuwenhoek, one part of which is
+in motion, and the other dead: for he afterwards says, "Movebant
+posteriorem solum partem, quae ultima, morti vicinia esse judicabam."
+All this does not agree with an animal, but with what I have spoken
+of; excepting that I never saw the tail move but by the agitation
+of the body. He afterwards says, speaking of the seminal liquor of a
+cod, "Non est putandum omnia animalcula in semine aselli contenta uno
+eodemque tempore vivere, sed illa potius tantum vivere quae exitui seu
+partui viciniora sunt, quae & copiosiori humido innatant prae reliquis
+vita carentibus, adhuc in crassa materia, quam humor eorum efficit,
+jacentibus."
+
+[W] Vol. I. p. 51.
+
+If these are animals, why have they not all life? why are they in the
+most fluid part of the liquor alive, while those in the thickest are
+not so? Leeawenhoek did not perceive that the thick matter, the origin
+of which he attributes to the humour of the animalculae, is nothing but
+a mucilaginous matter which produces them. By diluting this mucilage
+with water, he would have given life to the whole of them. Even this
+mucilage is oftentimes only a mass of those bodies which are set
+in motion on being separated; and consequently this thick matter,
+instead of being a humour, produced by the animalcules, is only the
+substance of the animals themselves, or rather, as we have already
+observed, the matter from which they originate. Speaking of the seed
+of a cock, Leeuwenhoek says, in his letter to Grew, "Contemplando
+materiam (seminalem) animadverti ibidem tantam abundantiam viventium
+animalium, ut ea stuperem; forma seu externa figura sua nostrates
+anguillas fluviatiles referebant, vehementissima agitatione movebantur;
+quibus tamen substrati videbantur multi & admodum exiles globuli, item
+multae plan-ovales figurae, quibus etiam vita posset attribui, & quidem
+propter earundem commotiones; sed existimabam omnes hasce commotiones
+& agitationes pro venire ab animalcules, sicque etiam res se habebat;
+attamen ego non opinione solum, sed etiam ad veritatem mihi persuadeo
+has particulas planam & ovalem figuram habentes, esse quaedam animalcula
+inter se ordine suo disposita & mixta vitaque adhuc carentia." Here
+we see in the same seminal liquor animalcules of different forms;
+and I am convinced, by my own experiments, that if Leeuwenhoek had
+closely observed these oval substances, he would have discovered that
+they moved by their own powers, and that consequently they were as
+much alive as the rest. This change perfectly coincides with what
+I have said, that they are organic particles which take different
+forms, and not constant species of animals; for in the present case,
+if the bodies, which have the figure of an eel, are true spermatic
+animalcules, each, destined to become a cock, which supposes a very
+perfect organization, and a very constant form, what will those be
+which have an oval figure, and what end do they answer? He says indeed
+afterwards, that these ovals maybe conceived to be the same animals,
+by supposing their bodies to be twisted in a spiral form; but then
+how shall we conceive that an animal, whose body is constrained, can
+move without being extended? I maintain, therefore, that these oval
+substances are no other than the organic particles separated from their
+threads, and that the eels were the separated parts which dragged those
+threads after them, as I have many times perceived in other seminal
+liquors.
+
+Leeuwenhoek, who imagined all these moving bodies were animals, and
+established a system thereon; who also pretended, that spermatic
+animals must become men and animals, now suspected they were only
+natural machines, or organic particles in motion; for he does not doubt
+these spermatic animals contained the great animal in miniature, he
+says, "Progeneratio animalis ex animalculo in seminibus masculinis
+omni exceptione major est; nam etiamsi in animalculo ex semine masculo
+unde ortum est, figuram animalis conspicere nequeamus, attamen satis
+superque certi esse possumus figuram animalis ex qua animal ortum est,
+in animalculo quod in semine masculo reperitur, conclusam jacere sive
+esse; & quanquam mihi saepius conspectis animalculis in semine masculo
+animalis, imaginatus fuerim me posse dicere, en ibi caput, en ibi
+humeros, en ibi femora; attamen eum ne minima quidem certitudine de iis
+judicium ferre potuerim, hujusque certi quid statuere supersedeo, donec
+tale animal, cujus semina mascula tam magna erunt, ut in iis figuram
+creaturae ex qua provenit, agnoscere queam, invenire secunda nobis
+concedat fortuna." This fortunate chance, which Leeuwenhoek desires,
+presented itself to Mr. Needham. Every part of the spermatic animals of
+the calmar are easy to be seen without a microscope; but they are not
+young calmars, as Leeuwenhoek thinks, nor even animated, although they
+are in motion, but only machines which must be regarded as the first
+produce of the union of organic particles.
+
+Although Leeuwenhoek had not such an opportunity of undeceiving
+himself, he nevertheless had another phenomena which ought to have had
+that effect; for example, he had remarked that the spermatic animals of
+a dog often change their figures, especially when the liquor was on the
+point of evaporating; that these pretended animals had a hole in the
+head when they were dead, and that this hole did not appear when they
+were alive; he had seen that the part which he looked upon as the head
+was full and plump when it was alive, and flaccid and flat when dead.
+All this ought to have led him to doubt whether these moving bodies
+were real animals; and consider it as agreeing better with a machine,
+which empties itself like that of the calmar, than with a moving animal.
+
+I have said that these moving bodies, these organic particles, do
+not move like animals, nor have an interval of rest. Leeuwenhoek has
+observed the same: "Quotiescunque, says he, animalcula in semine
+masculo animalium fucrim contemplatus, attamen illa se unquam ad
+quietem contulisse, me nunquam vidisse, mihi dicendum est, si modo
+sat fluidae superesset materiae in qua sese commode movere poterant;
+et eadem in continuo manent motu, & tempore quo ipsis moriendum
+appropinquante, motus magis magisque deficit, usquedum nullus prorsus
+motus in illis agnoscendus sit." It appears difficult to conceive that
+animals can exist, from the moment of their birth till that of their
+death, in a continual rapid motion without the least interval of rest;
+and I cannot possibly imagine how these animals in the semen of a dog,
+which Leeuwenhoek saw the seventh day in as rapid motion as they were
+when they were first taken from the body of the animal, preserved
+a motion during that time so exceedingly swift, that no animal has
+sufficient power to move in for an hour; especially if we consider the
+resistance which proceeds from the density and the tenacity of the
+liquor. This kind of continued motion, on the contrary, agrees with
+the organic particles, which, like artificial machines, produce their
+effects in a continual operation, and which stop when that effect is
+over.
+
+Among the great number of Leeuwenhoek's experiments, he, without
+doubt, often perceived spermatic animals without tails; and he
+endeavours to explain this phenomena by a supposition; for example,
+he says, speaking of the semen of a cod, "Ubi vero ad lactum accederem
+observationem, in iis partibus quas animalcula esse censebam neque
+vitam neque caudam dignoscere potui; cujus rei rationem esse
+existimabam, quod quamdiu animalcula natando loca sua perfecte mutare
+non possunt tam diu etiam cauda concinne circa corpus maneat ordinata,
+quodque ideo singula animalcula rotundum repraesentent corpusculorum."
+
+It would have been better to have said, as it in fact is, that the
+spermatic animals of these fish have tails at certain times and none
+at others, than to suppose their tails twisted so exactly round their
+bodies as to give them the shape of a globule. But this must not lead
+us to think that Leeuwenhoek only attended to the moving bodies which
+he saw with tails, but rather that he did not describe the others,
+because, although they were in motion, he did not regard them as
+animals; and this is the cause that all the spermatic animals he has
+depicted resemble each other, and drawn with tails, since he only
+took them for real animals in that state; and that when he saw them
+under other forms, he thought them imperfect, or rather that they
+were dead. On the whole it appears, by my experiments, that far from
+displaying their tails the more as they are in a more perfect condition
+of swimming, as Leeuwenhoek says, they, on the contrary, lose their
+tails in a gradual manner, till at last these tails, which are no more
+than foreign bodies of the animalcules, and which they drag after them,
+entirely disappear.
+
+In another part Leeuwenhoek, speaking of the spermatic animals of man,
+says, "Aliquando etiam animadverti inter animalcula particulas quasdam
+minores & subrotundas; cum vero se ea aliquoties eo modo oculis meis
+exhibuerint, ut mihi imaginarer eas exiguis instructas esse caudis,
+cogitare coepi annon hae forte particulae forent animalcula recens
+nata; certum enim mihi est ea etiam animalcula per generationem
+provenire, vel ex mole minuscula ad adultam procedere quantitatem: &
+quis sit annoa ea animalcula, ubi moriuntur, aliorum animalculorum
+nutritioni atque augmini inserviant?" By this passage it appears that
+Leeuwenhoek had seen animals without tails in the seminal liquor of
+a man, and that he is obliged to suppose them to be just born, and
+not adult; but I have observed quite the contrary; for the moving
+bodies are never larger than when they separate from the filaments,
+and begin to move. When they are entirely disengaged from the mucilage
+they become smaller, and continue decreasing as long as they remain
+in motion. With respect to the generation of these animals, which
+Leeuwenhoek speaks of as certain, I am persuaded no sign of generation
+has ever been discovered; all he says is advanced on mere suppositions,
+which it is easy to prove by his own observations; for example, he
+says that the milt of certain fish, as the cod, fills by degrees with
+seminal liquor, which after the fish has emitted, the milt dries up,
+leaving only a membrane destitute of any liquor. "Eo tempore, says
+he, quo ascellus major lactes suos emisit, rugae illae, seu tortiles
+lactium partes, usque adeo contrahuntur, ut nihil praeter pelliculas
+seu membranae esse videantur." How then does he understand that this
+dry membrane, in which there is no longer either seminal liquor or
+animalcules, can reproduce animals of the same kind the succeeding
+year? if there was a regular generation in these animals, there could
+not be this interruption, which in most fishes lasts for a whole year.
+To draw himself out of this difficulty, he says, "Necessario statuendum
+erit, ut ascellus major semen suum emiserit, in lactibus etiamnum
+multum materiae seminalis gignendis animalculis aptae remansisse, ex qua
+materia plura oportet provenire animalcula seminalia quam anno proxime
+elapso emissa fuerant." This supposition, that there remains something
+in the seminal liquor in the milts to produce spermatic animals for
+the succeeding year, is absolutely contrary to observations, for the
+milt is in this interval only a thin and absolutely dry membrane. But
+what reply can be made to a still further opposition to this point,
+there being fish like the calmar, the seminal liquor of which is not
+only renewed every year, but even the reservoir which contains it? Can
+it be said, that there remains a seminal matter in the milt for the
+production of the animals for the succeeding year, when even the milt
+does not remain? it is therefore very certain that these pretended
+spermatic animals are not multiplied, like other animals, by the mode
+of generation; which alone is sufficient to make us presume, that those
+particles which move in the seminal liquors are not real animals. Thus
+Leeuwenhoek, who in the passage above quoted says, it is certain that
+spermatic animals multiply and propagate by generation, nevertheless
+owns, in another part, that the manner in which these animals are
+produced is very obscure, and that he leaves to others the task of
+clearing up this matter. "Persuadebam mihi," says he, speaking of the
+spermatic animals of the dormouse, "haecce animalcula ovibus prognasci,
+quia diversa in orbem jacentia & in semet convoluta videbam; sed unde,
+quaeso, primam illorum originem derivabimus? in animo nostro concipiemus
+horum animalculorum semen jam procreatum esse in ipsa generatione,
+hocque semen tam diu in testiculis hominum haerere, usquedum ad annum
+aetatis decimum-quartum vel decimum-quintum aut sextum pervenerint,
+eademque animalcula tum demum vita donari vel in justam staturam
+excrevisse, illoque temporis articulo generandi maturitatem adesse!
+sed haec lampada aliis trado." I do not think it necessary to make any
+remarks on what Leeuwenhoek says on this subject: he saw spermatic
+animals without tails, and round, in the seed of a dormouse; "in semet
+convoluta," says he, because he supposes that they should have tails,
+and instead of being certain, as he before had been, that the animals
+propagate by generation, he here seems convinced of the contrary. But
+when he had observed the generation of pucerons, and was assured[X]
+that they engendered without copulation, he caught the idea to explain
+the generation of spermatic animals. "Quemadmodum, says he, animalcula
+haec quae pediculorum antea nomine designavimus (the pucerons) dum adhuc
+in utero materno latent, jam praedita sunt materia seminali ex qua
+ejusdem generis proditura sunt animalcula, pari ratione cogitare licet
+animalculae in seminibus masculinis ex animalium testiculis non migrate
+seu ejici quin post se relinquant minuta animalcula aut saltem materiam
+seminalem ex qua iterum alia ejusdem generis animalcula proventura
+sunt idque absque coitu; eadem ratione qua supradicta animalcula
+generari observavimus." This supposition gives no more satisfaction
+than the preceding: for we do not understand by this comparison of
+the generation of these animalcules with that of a puceron, why they
+are not found in the seminal liquor of a man, before he has attained
+the age of fourteen or fifteen years; nor do we know from whence
+they proceed, nor how they are renewed every year in fish, &c. and
+it appears, that whatever efforts Leeuwenhoek made to establish the
+generation of spermatic animals on some probability, it still remained
+an entire obscurity, and would, perhaps, perpetually have remained so,
+if the preceding experiments had not evinced that they are not animals,
+but moving organic particles contained in the nutriment the animal
+receives, and which are found in great numbers in the seminal liquor,
+which is the most pure, and in the most organic extracts drawn from
+this nutriment.
+
+[X] See vol. II. page 499, and vol. III. page 271.
+
+Leeuwenhoek acknowledges that he had not always found animalcules
+in the seminal liquor of males; in that of the cock, for example,
+which he had often examined, he saw spermatic animals in the form
+of eels but once, and some years after he could not discover any
+under that form, but observed some with large heads and tails, which
+his designer could not perceive. He says also, that one season he
+could not find living animals in the seminal liquor of the cod. All
+these disappointments proceeded from his desire of finding tails to
+these animals; and although he perceived little bodies in motion, he
+did not consider them as animals, because they were without tails,
+notwithstanding it is under that form they are generally seen, either
+in seminal liquors, or infusions of animal or vegetable substances. He
+says, in the same place, that he was never able to make his designer
+perceive the spermatic animalcules of a cod, which he had so often
+seen himself.--"Non solum, says he, ob eximiam eorum exilitatem, sed
+etiam quod eorum corpora adeo essent fragilia, ut corpuscula passim
+dirumperentur; unde factum fuit ut nonnisi rare, nec sine attentissima
+observatione, animadverterem particulas planas atque ovorum in morem
+longas, in quibus ex parte caudas dignoscere licebat; particulas
+has oviformes existimavi animalcula esse dirupta, quod particulae hae
+diruptae quadruplo fere viderentur majores corporibus animalculorum
+vivorum." When an animal of any kind ceases to live, it does not then
+suddenly alter its form, and from being long, like a thread, becomes
+round like a ball; neither does it become four times larger after
+its death than it was before. Nothing that Leeuwenhoek says here
+agrees with the nature of animals; but, on the contrary, the whole
+corresponds with a kind of machine, which, like those of a calmar,
+empty themselves after having performed their functions. But let us
+pursue this observation; he says, he has seen the spermatic animals
+of the cod in different forms, "multa apparebant animalcula sphaeram
+pellucidam representantia;" he has also seen them of different sizes,
+"haec animalcula minori videbantur mole, quam ubi eadem antehac in tubo
+vitreo rotundo examinaveram."
+
+There needs nothing more to shew that there are no constant and
+uniform species of these animalcules; and that consequently they are
+not animals, but only organic particles in motion, which, by their
+different combinations, take different forms and sizes. These organic
+moving particles are found in great quantities in the extract and
+residue of our nutriment. The matter which adheres to the teeth, and
+which in healthy people has the same smell as the seminal liquor, is
+only a residue of the food, and a great number of these pretended
+animals are also found there, some of which have tails, and resemble
+those in the seminal liquor. Mr. Baker had four different kinds of
+them engraved, and which were all of a cylindrical or oval make, or
+globules with and without tails. I am persuaded, after having strictly
+examined them, that not any of them are real animals, but are like
+those in the seed, only living organical parts of the nutriment which
+present themselves under different forms, Leeuwenhoek, who did not
+know how to account for these pretended animals in the matter which
+adhered to the teeth, supposed them to proceed from certain food they
+were previously in, as cheese, &c. but we find them among the teeth of
+those who do not eat cheese, as well as in those that do; besides, they
+have not the least resemblance to mites, nor the other animalcules seen
+in rotten cheese. In another place he says, these animals of the teeth
+may proceed from the cistern water that is drank, because he observed
+animals like them in dew and rain water, especially in that which
+stagnates upon lead and tiles; but with which we can prove there is not
+the least resemblance.
+
+Most seminal liquors dilute of themselves, and liquefy when exposed to
+the air or a certain degree of cold; but they thicken when a moderate
+degree of heat is communicated to them. I have exposed some of these
+liquors to a very intense cold, as water on the point of freezing, but
+it did no injury to these supposed animals; they continued to move with
+the same swiftness, and as long as those which had not been so exposed,
+but those which had suffered but a little warmth soon ceased to move,
+because the liquor thickened. If the moving bodies were animals,
+they were of a complexion and temperament quite different from all
+others, to whom a gentle and moderate heat strengthens their powers and
+motions, which the cold stops and destroys.
+
+Notwithstanding it may be thought I have dwelt too long upon this
+subject, I cannot conclude it without making one remark, from which
+some useful conclusions may be drawn. These pretended spermatic
+animals, which are only living organic particles of the nutriment, not
+only exist in the seminal liquors of the two sexes, and in the residue
+of the nutriment which adheres to the teeth, but also in the chyle
+and excrements. Leeuwenhoek having met with them in the excrements
+of frogs, and other animals, which he dissected, was at first very
+much surprised, and notable to conceive from whence these animals
+proceeded, so entirely like those he had observed in the seminal
+liquors, accuses himself of having, in dissecting the animal, opened
+the seminal vessels, and that the seed had by that means been mixed
+with the excrements. But having afterwards found them in the excrements
+of other animals, and even in his own, he no longer knew to what to
+attribute them. Leeuwenhoek, it is worthy remark, never met with
+them in his own excrements, but when they were liquid. Every time he
+was disordered and the stomach did not perform its functions, and was
+relaxed, he discovered these animalcules; but when the concoction of
+the food was well performed, and the excrement was hard, there was not
+a single one, although it was diluted with water. This seems perfectly
+to agree with all we have before advanced: for when the stomach and
+intestines perform their functions, the excrements are only the grosser
+parts of the nutriment; and all that is really nutritive and organic
+passes into the vessels which serve to nourish the animal; whereas if
+the stomach and intestines are not in a condition to comminute the
+food, then it passes with the inanimate parts, and we find the living
+organic molecules in the excrements; from whence it may be concluded,
+that those which are often lax must have less seminal liquor, and be
+less proper for generation, than those of a different habit of body.
+
+In all I have said, I constantly supposed the female furnished a
+seminal liquor, which was as necessary to generation as that of the
+male. I have endeavoured to establish in Chap. I. that every organized
+body must contain living organic particles, and I have endeavoured to
+prove Chap. II. and III. that nutrition and reproduction operates by
+the same cause; that nutrition is made by the intimate penetration
+of these organic particles through each part of the body, and that
+reproduction operates by the superfluity of these same organic
+particles collected together from all parts of the body and deposited
+in proper reservoirs. I have explained in Chap. IV. how this theory
+must be understood in the generation of man and animals which have
+sexes. Females then being organized bodies like males, they must also
+have some reservoirs for the superfluity of organic particles returned
+from every part of their bodies. This superfluity cannot come there
+through any other form than that of a liquor, since it is an extract of
+all parts of the body; and this liquor is that to which I have given
+the name of the female semen.
+
+This liquor is not, as Aristotle pretends, an infecund matter of
+itself, which enters neither as matter nor form into the business
+of generation, but as essentially prolific as that of the male,
+containing characteristic parts of the feminine sex, which the female
+alone can produce, the same as the male contains particles necessary
+to form the masculine organs; and each of them contains every other
+organic particle that can be looked on as common to both sexes; which
+causes that, by their mixture, the daughter may resemble her father,
+and the son his mother. This semen Hippocrates says, is composed of
+two liquors; the one strong, for the production of males; and the
+other weak, for the production of females. But this supposition is
+too extended; I do not see how it is to be conceived that a liquor,
+which is the extract of every part of the female body, should contain
+particles for the formation of the male organs.
+
+This liquor must enter by some way into the matrix of animals which
+bear and nourish their foetus within the body, and in others, as
+oviparous animals, it must be absorbed by the eggs, which may be looked
+upon as portable matrixes. Each of these matrixes contains a small
+drop of this prolific liquor of the female, in the part that is called
+the _cicatrice_. When there has been no communication with the male,
+this prolific drop collects under the form of a small mole, or mass,
+as Malpighius observes; but when impregnated by that of the male; it
+produces a foetus which receives its nutriment from the juices of the
+egg.
+
+Eggs, instead of being parts generally found in every female, are
+therefore only instruments made use of by Nature to serve as the matrix
+in females which are deprived of that organ. Instead also of being
+active and essential to the first fecundation, they only serve as
+passive and accidental parts for the nutrition of the foetus already
+formed by the mixture of the liquor of the two sexes in a particular
+part of this matrix. Instead also of being existing bodies, inclosed,
+_ad infinitum_, one within the other, eggs, on the contrary, are bodies
+formed from the superfluity of a more gross and less organic part of
+the food, than that which produces the seminal and prolific liquor; and
+are in oviparous females something equivalent, not only to the matrix,
+but even to the menstrua in the viviparous.
+
+We should be perfectly convinced, that eggs are only destined by Nature
+to serve as a matrix in animals who have not that viscera, by those
+females producing eggs independant of the male. In the same manner as
+the matrix exists in viviparous animals, as a part appertaining to the
+female sex, hens, which have no matrix, have eggs in their room, which
+are successively produced of themselves, and necessarily exist in the
+female independently of any communication with the male. To pretend
+that the foetus is pre-existing in the eggs, and that these eggs are
+contained, _ad infinitum_, within each other, is nearly the same as
+to pretend that the foetus, is pre-existing in the matrix, and that
+the matrix of the first female inclosed all that ever were or will be
+produced.
+
+Anatomists have taken the word _egg_ in several acceptations and
+meanings. When Harvey took for his motto, _Omnia ex ovo_, he understood
+by the word egg, as applied to viviparous animals, the membrane which
+includes the foetus and all its appendages: he thought, he perceived
+this egg, or membrane, form immediately after the copulation of the
+male and the female. But this egg does not proceed from the ovium
+of the female; and he has even maintained, that he did not remark
+the least alteration in this testicle, &c. We perceive there is here
+nothing like what is commonly understood by the word egg unless the
+figure of the bag may be supposed to have some resemblance thereto.
+Harvey, who dissected so many viviparous females, did not, he says,
+ever perceive any alteration in the ovaria; he looked on them even
+as small glands, perfectly useless to general ion,[Y] although they
+undergo very remarkable changes and alterations in them, since we
+may perceive in cows the glandular bodies grow from the size of a
+millet seed to that of a cherry. This great anatomist was led into
+this error by the smallness of the glandular bodies in the species
+of deer, to which he principally paid his attention. C. Peyerus, who
+also made many experiments on them, says, "Exigui quidem sunt damarum
+testiculi, sed post coitum foecundum, in alterutro eorum, papilla,
+sive tuberculum fibrosum, semper succrescit; scrofis autem praegnantibus
+tanta accidit testiculorum mutatio, ut mediocrem quoque attentionem
+fugere nequeat."[Z] This author imagines, with some reason, that the
+minuteness of the testicles of does, is the cause of Harvey's not
+having remarked the alterations; but he is wrong in advancing that the
+alterations he had remarked, and which had escaped Harvey's notice, did
+not happen till after impregnation.
+
+[Y] See Harvey Exercit. 64 and 65.
+
+[Z] Vide Conradi Peyeri Merycologia.
+
+It appears that Harvey was deceived in many other essential points;
+he asserts, that the seed of the male does not enter into the matrix
+of the female, and even that it cannot; yet Verheyen found a great
+quantity of the male seed in the matrix of a cow, which he dissected
+six hours after copulation.[AA] The celebrated Ruysch asserts, that
+having dissected a woman who had been caught in the act of adultery,
+and was assassinated, he found, not only in the cavity of the matrix,
+but also in the trunks, a quantity of the seminal liquor of the
+male,[AB] Valisnieri affirms, that Fallopius and other anatomists
+had also discovered male seed in the matrix of many women. After the
+positive testimony of these great anatomists, there can remain no doubt
+but Harvey was deceived in this important point; especially when to
+these are added that of Leeuwenhoek, who found the male seed in the
+matrix of a great number of females of different species.
+
+[AA] See Verheyen Sup. Anat. Tra. v. cap. iii.
+
+[AB] See Ruysch, Thes. Anat. p. 90, tab. VI, fig. I.
+
+Harvey makes another error in speaking of an abortion in the second
+month, where the mass was as large as a pigeon's egg, but without any
+foetus regularly formed; whereas, it is maintained by Ruysch, and
+many other anatomists, that the foetus is perceptible, even to the
+naked eye, in the first month. The History of the Academy mentions
+a foetus, that was completely formed in twenty-one days after
+impregnation. If to these authorities we add that of Malpighius,
+who perceived the chicken in the cicatrice, immediately after the
+egg was laid by the hen, we cannot doubt, but that the foetus is
+formed immediately after copulation; consequently, we must not pay any
+credit to what Harvey says on the parts increasing one after the other
+by juxta-position, since they are all existent from the first, and
+gradually expand until the whole is complete.
+
+De Graaf took the acceptation of the word egg in a quite different
+light to Harvey: he insists that the testicles of women were true
+ovaries, and contain eggs like those of oviparous, animals, only that
+they are much smaller, do not quit the body, and are never detached
+till after impregnation, when they descend from the ovary into the
+horns of the matrix. The experiments of De Graaf have contributed most
+to establish the existence of these pretended eggs, which yet is not at
+all founded; for this famous anatomist is deceived, first, by mistaking
+the vesicles of the ovarium for eggs, whereas they are inseparable from
+it, form parts of its substance, and are filled with a kind of lymph.
+Secondly, he is also deceived when he considers the glandular bodies
+to be the covering of those eggs, or vesicles; for it is certain,
+by Malpighius's, Valisnieri's, and my own observations, that the
+glandular bodies neither surround nor contain one of those vesicles.
+Thirdly, he is deceived still more when he supposes the glandular body
+is never formed till after fecundation; as they are invariably found in
+every female who has attained the age of puberty. Fourthly, he is no
+less deceived when he believes that the globules which he saw in the
+matrix, and which contained the foetuses, ware the same vesicles,
+or eggs, which had fallen from the ovariam, and which, he remarks,
+were become ten times smaller than they were in the ovary. This remark
+alone, one would imagine, Should have made him perceive his error.
+Fifthly, he is wrong in saying that the glandular bodies are only the
+coverings of the fecundated eggs, and that the number of coverings,
+or empty follicles, always answer to the number of foetuses. This
+assertion is entirely contrary to truth: for on the testicles of all
+females we find a greater number of glandular bodies, or cicatrices,
+than there are productions of foetuses, and they are also found in
+those which have never brought forth. To this we may add, that neither
+he, Verheyen, nor any other person, have ever seen these eggs, much
+less these pretended coverings, on which they have, notwithstanding,
+established their system.
+
+Malpighius, who perceived the growth of the glandular bodies in the
+female testicles, was deceived when he thought he had seen the egg in
+their cavities, since they contain only liquor; nor indeed has anything
+like an egg ever been discovered.
+
+Valisnieri, who was not deceived in facts, has yet drawn false
+conclusions in asserting that, although neither himself, nor any
+anatomist in whom he could confide, ever found the egg in the cavity of
+the glandular body, yet it must there exist.
+
+Let us, therefore, examine what may be fairly called the real
+discoveries of these naturalists. Graaf was the first who perceived
+there were alterations in the female testicles; and he had reason
+to affirm, they were parts essential and necessary to generation.
+Malpighius demonstrated that these alterations were occasioned by the
+glandular bodies which grew to perfect maturity, afterwards they become
+flaccid, obliterated, and left only a slight cicatrice remaining.
+Valisnieri has placed this discovery in a very clear light; he has
+shewn that these glandular bodies are found in the testicles of every
+female; that they are augmented considerably in the season of love,
+that they increase at the expence of the lymphatic vesicles of the
+testicles, and that at the time of their maturity they were hollow and
+filled with liquor. This, then, is all that can be reduced to truth on
+the subject of the pretended ovaries and eggs of viviparous animals.
+What must we conclude therefrom? Two things appear very evident: the
+one, that there does not exist any eggs in the female testicles; the
+other, that there exists a liquor in the vesicles of the testicle, and
+in the cavity of the glandular bodies. We have demonstrated by the
+preceding experiments, that this last liquor is the true seed of the
+female, since it contains, like that of the male, spermatic animals, or
+rather organic moving particles.
+
+We must, therefore, now be assured, that females have, as well as
+males, a seminal liquor. After all that has been advanced, we cannot
+doubt but the seminal liquor is the superfluity of the organic
+nutriment, which is sent back from all parts of the body into the
+testicles and seminal vesicles of the males, and into the testicles
+and glandular bodies of females. This liquor, which issues by the
+nipple of the glandular bodies, continually sprinkles the horns of the
+matrix, and may easily procure admission either by the suction of the
+membrane of these horns, or by the little opening which is at the upper
+extremity, and thus enter into the matrix; but in the supposition of
+these pretended eggs, which were ten or twenty times larger than the
+opening of the horns of the matrix, we cannot comprehend how they could
+enter therein.
+
+The liquor emitted by females, when they are excited, and which,
+according to de Graaf, issues from the neck of the matrix, and the
+orifice of the urethra, may be a superabundant portion of the seminal
+liquor which continually distills from the glandular bodies on the
+trunks of the matrix. But, possibly, this liquor may be a secretion
+of another kind, and perfectly useless in generation. To decide this
+question observations with a microscope are requisite; but _all_
+experiments are not permitted even to philosophers. I can only say,
+that I am inclined to believe that the same spermatic animals would
+be met with in this liquor as in that of the glandular bodies. I can
+quote an Italian doctor on this subject, who made this observation with
+attention, and which is thus related by Valisnieri: "Aggiugne il lodato
+fig. Bono d'avergli anco veduti (animali spermatici) in questa linfa o
+siero, diro cosi voluttuoso, che nel tempore dell'amorosa zuffa scappa
+dalle femine libidinose, senza che si potesse sospettare che fossero
+di que' del maschio, &c." If this circumstance is true, as I do not
+doubt, it is certain, that this liquor is the same as that found in
+the glandular bodies, and that, consequently, it is the true seminal
+liquor: and although anatomists have not discovered the communication
+between the vacuities of de Graaf and the testicles, that does not
+prevent it being once in the matrix, from issuing out by the vacuities
+about the exterior orifice of the urethra.
+
+From hence we must conclude that the most abandoned women will be the
+least fruitful, because they emit that liquor which ought to remain in
+the matrix for the formation of the foetus. Thus we see why common
+prostitutes seldom have children, and why women in hot countries, where
+they have stronger desires than in the cold, are much less fertile; but
+we shall have occasion to speak of this hereafter.
+
+It is natural to think that the seminal liquor of the male or female
+would not be fertile but when it contains moving bodies; nevertheless
+that is still a question, and I should be led to think, as there are
+different states of this liquor, that in which these organic particles
+are seen in motion is not absolutely necessary for the purpose of
+generation. The Italian physician, above quoted, never perceived
+spermatic animals in his semen till he had attained a middle age,
+although he was father of several children before, and continued to
+have them afterwards.
+
+These spermatic bodies, which move, may be looked upon as the first
+assemblages of the organic molecules which proceed from every part of
+the body; when a quantity of them collect they may be perceived with
+the microscope; but if they collect only in small quantity the body
+which they form will be too minute to be perceived, and in this case we
+shall not be able to distinguish any in the seminal liquor. A very long
+continuance of observations would be necessary to determine what can be
+the cause of all the differences remarked in the states of this liquor.
+
+I can assert, from having often tried it, that by infusing the seminal
+liquors in water closely corked, at the end of three or four days
+an infinite multitude of moving bodies will be found, although the
+seminal liquors had no motion on being first taken from the body of
+the animal. Flesh, blood, chyle, urine, nay all animal or vegetable
+substances, contain organic particles, which move at the end of some
+days in an infusion of water; they appear to act and move nearly in the
+same manner, and though produced from different bodies are perfectly
+similar, without any of them having a power peculiar to themselves.
+If these bodies must absolutely be termed animals, it must be allowed
+they are so imperfect that they ought to be looked upon as the outlines
+of them, or rather as bodies simply composed of particles the most
+essential to the existence of an animal; for natural machines, such as
+those found in the roe of a calmar, although they put themselves in
+action at certain times, are certainly not animals, although they are
+organized, acting, and, as I may say, living beings.
+
+If it is once allowed, that the productions of Nature follow in an
+uniform order, and advance by imperceptible degrees and links, we shall
+have no difficulty in conceiving there are organic bodies existing,
+which belong neither to animals, vegetables, nor minerals.
+
+It is certain, however, that all animals and vegetables contain an
+infinity of organic living molecules. These molecules successively
+take different forms, and different degrees of motion and activity,
+according to different circumstances They are in a much greater number
+in the seminal liquor of both sexes, and in the germs of plants, than
+in other parts of the animal or vegetable. There exists, then, a
+living substance in animals and vegetables, common to both, and which
+substance is necessary to their nutrition. An animal procures nutriment
+from an animal or vegetable substance, and the vegetable can likewise
+be nourished from an animal or vegetable in a decomposed state. This
+nutritive substance, common to both, is always living, always active,
+and produces an animal or vegetable, as it finds an internal mould or
+an analogous matrix, as we have explained in the first chapters; but
+when this active substance collects in great abundance, in those parts
+where it can unite, it forms in the animal body other living creatures,
+such as the tape-worm, ascarides, and worms, which are sometimes found
+in the veins, in the sinus of the brain, in the liver, &c. These kinds
+of animals do not owe their existence to the animals of the same
+species, and we may, therefore, suppose, they are produced by this
+organic matter when it is extravasated, or is too abundant for the
+lacteal vessels to absorb. We shall hereafter have occasion to examine
+more largely the nature of those worms, and many other animals which
+are formed in a similar manner.
+
+When this organic matter, which may be looked on as an universal seed,
+is collected in any great quantity, as in the seminal liquors, and in
+the mucilaginous parts of the infusion of plants, its first effect is
+to vegetate, or rather to produce vegetating beings. These zoophytes
+swell, extend, ramify, and produce globules, ovals, and other small
+bodies, of different figures, which have all a kind of animal life, a
+progressive motion, which is often very swift, and sometimes very slow.
+These globules themselves decompose, change their figures, and become
+smaller; and in proportion as they diminish in size the rapidity of
+their motion augments.
+
+I have sometimes thought that the venom of the viper, and other active
+poisons, even that of the bite of a mad dog, might possibly be this
+active matter too rarefied; but I have not as yet had time to make the
+experiments which I had projected on this matter, as well as on drugs
+used in medicine; all that I can at present ascertain is, that all
+infusions of the most active drugs swarm with moving bodies, which form
+therein in much less time than in other substances.
+
+Almost all microscopic animals are of the same nature as the organized
+bodies which move in the seminal liquor, in the infusions of vegetables
+and the flesh of animals; the eel-like bodies in flour, vinegar, and
+water, in which lead has been soaked, are beings of the same nature as
+the first, and have a like origin.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+VARIETIES IN THE GENERATION OF ANIMALS.
+
+
+The matter which serves for the nutrition and reproduction of animals
+and vegetables is therefore the same; it is a productive and universal
+substance, composed of organic molecules, and whose union produces
+organized bodies. Nature always works on the same fund, which is
+inexhaustible, but the means she employs to stamp its value are
+different, and these differences, or general agreements, deserve
+attention, because it is from thence we must derive our reasons to
+account for exceptions and particular varieties.
+
+In general large animals are less productive than small. The whale,
+elephant, rhinoceros, camel, horse, the human species, &c. only
+produce one, and very seldom two, at a birth; whereas small animals,
+as rats, herrings, insects, &c. produce a great number at a time. Does
+not this difference proceed from there being more food required to
+support a large body than to nourish a small one, and from hence the
+former has less superfluous organic particles, which would convert
+into semen, than the latter? It is certain that small animals eat more
+in proportion than large ones; but it is likewise probable that the
+prodigious multiplication of the small animals, as bees, flies, and
+other insects, may be attributed to their being endowed with very fine
+and slender limbs and organs, by which they are in a condition to chuse
+what is most substantial and organic in the vegetable or animal matters
+from whence they derive their nutriment. A bee, who lives on the
+purest parts of flowers, certainly receives more organic particles in
+proportion than a horse who feeds on the grosser parts of vegetables,
+hay, &c. The horse produces but one at one time, whereas the bee will
+bring forth three thousand.
+
+Oviparous animals are in general smaller than the viviparous, and
+produce also more at a birth. The duration of the foetus in the
+matrix of viviparous animals likewise opposes their increase, nor can
+there be any new generation take place during gestation, or while they
+are suckling their young; whereas oviparous animals produce at the same
+time both matrix and foetuses, which they cast out of the body, and
+are therefore almost always in a state of reproduction; and it is well
+known that by preventing a hen from setting, and largely feeding, the
+number of her eggs will be considerably increased. If hens cease to
+lay when they sit, it is because they have ceased to feed; and it is
+the fear lest their eggs should not produce which causes them not to
+quit their nests but once a day, and that for a very short time, during
+which they take a little nutriment, but not one-tenth part of what they
+take at other times.
+
+Animals which produce but a small number at a time, acquire the chief
+part of their growth before they are fit for engendering, whereas those
+which multiply numerously generate before they have received half their
+growth. The human species, the horse, the ass, the goat, and the ram,
+are not able to engender until they have obtained nearly the whole of
+their growth. It is the same with pigeons and other birds, who lay but
+a few eggs; but those which produce in great numbers, as poultry, fish,
+&c. engender much sooner. A cock is capable of engendering at the age
+of three months, when he has not attained a third part of his growth;
+a fish, which at the end of twenty years will weigh thirty pounds,
+engenders in the first or second year, when perhaps it does not weigh
+half a pound. But exact observations on the growth and duration of
+the life of fish are still wanting: their age may be nearly known by
+examining the annual layers of their scales; but we are not certain how
+far that may extend. I have seen carp in the Comte de Maurepas' canals,
+at his castle at Pont Chartrain, which were said to be 150 years old,
+and they appeared as brisk and lively as the common carp. I will not
+say, with Leeuwenhoek, that fish are immortal, or at least can never
+die with age; all must perish in time, that is; all which have a
+beginning, a birth, must arrive to an end, or death; but fish, living
+in an uniform element, and being sheltered from the vicissitudes and
+all the injuries of the air, must live a longer time in the same state
+than other animals, especially if these vicissitudes of the air be, as
+a great philosopher asserts, the principal causes of the destruction of
+living beings. But what must contribute to the long duration of their
+life is, that their bones are softer than those of other animals, and
+do not harden with age. The bones of fish lengthen, and grow thick
+without taking any more solidity; whereas the bones of other animals
+continually increase in hardness and density, until at length, being
+absolutely full, the motion of their fluid ceases, and death ensues. In
+their bones the repletion or obstruction, which is the cause of natural
+death, is formed by such slow and insensible degrees, that fish must
+require much time to arrive at what we call old age.
+
+All quadrupeds covered with hair are viviparous; all those covered
+with scales oviparous. May we not then believe than in oviparous
+quadrupeds, a much less waste is made by transpiration, than the
+cloathing of scales retains; whereas in animals covered with hair
+this transpiration is more free and abundant? and is it not partly
+by this superabundance of nutriment, which cannot be carried off by
+transpiration, that those animals multiply so abundantly, and are
+enabled to go so long without food? All birds and all insects that fly
+are oviparous, excepting some kinds of flies which bring forth their
+young alive. These flies have no wings at their birth, but they shoot
+out and grow by degrees, and which they cannot use before they are of
+full growth. Scaly fish are likewise oviparous; as are all reptiles
+which have no legs, such as snakes and different kinds of serpents;
+they change their skins, which are composed of small scales. The viper
+is only a slight exception to the general rule, for it is not truly
+viviparous, as it produces eggs, from which the young are hatched; it
+is certain this is performed in the body of the mother, who instead
+of casting those eggs, like other oviparous animals, she retains and
+hatches them in her own body. The salamander, in which eggs and young
+ones are found at the same time, as observed by M. de Maupertuis, is
+an exception of the same kind in oviparous quadrupeds.
+
+Most animals are perpetuated by copulation; yet many birds seem only
+strongly to compress the females; indeed the ostrich, Crane, and
+some few others, are so well supplied as to leave intromission no
+ways equivocal. Male fish approach the female in the spawning time;
+they seem even to rub their bellies against each other, for the male
+often turns upon its back to meet the belly of the female; but the
+necessary part for copulation does not exist in them; and the male
+fish approaches the female only to emit the liquor in their milts on
+the eggs, which the female then deposits; and it seems rather to be
+attracted by the eggs than the female; for when she ceases throwing out
+the eggs, he instantly forsakes her, and with eagerness pursues the
+eggs, which the stream carries away, or that the wind disperses. Male
+fish may be seen to pass and repass every spot where eggs are deposited
+several times. It is certainly not for the love he bears the female
+that all these motions are made, because it is not to be presumed he
+always knows her; often being seen to emit his liquor on all eggs that
+he comes near, and that often before he has met with the female to
+which they belonged.
+
+There are therefore animals, distinguished by sexes, which have proper
+parts for copulation, and some which are deficient in them; others, as
+snails, have both, and the two sexes in the same individual; others,
+as vine-fretters, have no sex, and engender in themselves separately;
+although they couple together when they please, we cannot determine
+whether that is a conjunction of sexes; if it is so, we must suppose
+that Nature has included in this small individual more faculties for
+generation than in any other kind of animal, and that it not only has
+the power of reproducing distinctly, but also the means of multiplying
+by the communication of another individual.
+
+But whatever difference takes place in generation, Nature, by a new
+production, prepares the body for it, and which, whether manifested
+outwardly, or concealed internally, always precedes generation. The
+ovaries of oviparous animals, and the testicles of female viviparous
+animals, before the season of impregnation, experience a considerable
+change. Oviparous animals produce eggs, which at first are attached to
+the ovaries, by degrees they increase in size, until they fall into
+the canal of the matrix, where they acquire their white membranes, and
+shell. This production has marks of the fecundity of the female, and
+without which generation cannot be performed: so in viviparous females
+there are always one or more glandular bodies on the testicles, which
+by degrees grow under the membrane that surrounds them; these glandular
+bodies enlarge and pierce, or rather impel and lift up the membrane of
+the testicle; when their maturity is complete, a small slit or several
+small holes appear at their extremities, by which the seminal liquor
+escapes, and falls into the matrix: these glandular bodies are new
+productions that precede generation, and without which there would not
+be any.
+
+In males there is also a similar change which always precedes their
+capacity for generating. In oviparous animals a great quantity of
+liquor fills a considerable reservoir, and which reservoir itself is
+sometimes formed every year; as in the calmar and some other fish. The
+testicles of birds swell surprisingly just preceding their amorous
+season. In viviparous males the testicles also swell considerably in
+those who have seasons, and in general there is a swelling and an
+extension of the genital members in all species, which, although it be
+external, must be regarded as a new production necessarily preceding
+generation.
+
+In the body of every animal, male or female, new productions are formed
+which precede generation; and when there is no real production there
+is always a swelling, and considerable extension in some of the parts.
+There are species in which this new production is not only manifest,
+but even the whole body seems to be renewed before generation can be
+performed; as is the case with insects whose various metamorphoses
+seem to be only for the purpose of generating; for the growth of the
+animal is completed before it is transformed. It ceases from taking
+nutriment, has no organs for generation, no means of converting the
+nutritive particles, of which they abound, into eggs or seminal liquor,
+and therefore this superfluity unites and moulds itself at first into
+a form something like that of the original. The caterpillar becomes
+a butterfly, because, for these reasons, it is unable to produce
+small organized beings like itself; the organic particles, always
+active, take another form, by uniting, whose figure answers in part,
+and even in essential constitution, to that of the caterpillar, but
+in which the organs of generation are developed, and may receive
+and transmit the organic particles of the nutriment which forms the
+eggs, and the individuals of the species. The individuals which
+proceed from the butterfly ought not to be butterflies, because the
+nutriment, from whence the organic particles proceed, was taken while
+in the form of caterpillars; the produce therefore must be similar,
+and not butterflies, which is only an occasional production of the
+superabundant nutriment; a method adapted by Nature to accomplish the
+purposes of generation in these species, as by the glandular bodies and
+milts in other animals.
+
+When the superabundant quantity of organic nutriment is not great,
+as in man and most large animals, generation is not made till the
+growth of the animal is nearly complete, and then it is confined to
+the production of a small number of individuals. When these particles
+are more abundant, as in many kinds of birds, and in oviparous fishes,
+generation is completed before the animal has received its full
+growth, and their production of individuals is very numerous. When
+the quantity of particles is still greater, as in insects, it first
+forms a large organic body, which, though retaining the essential
+constitution of its original, differs in many parts, as the butterfly
+from the caterpillar, but shortly produces an astonishing number of
+young, similar in form to the animal which selected the nutriment. When
+the superabundance is greater still, and when at the same time the
+animal has the necessary organs for generation, as the vine-fretter, it
+immediately produces a generation in every individual, and afterwards
+a transformation, like other insects. The vine-fretter becomes a fly,
+but cannot produce any thing, because it is only the remainder of the
+organized particles which had not been made use of in the production of
+the young.
+
+Almost every animal except man has stated times for generation. Spring
+is marked out for birds. Carp, and many kinds of fish, spawn in June
+and August. Barbel, and other kinds, in spring. Cats have three
+seasons, in January, May, and September. Roebucks, in December. Wolves
+and Foxes, in January. Horses, in summer. Stags, in September and
+October; and almost all insects generate in autumn: these last seem to
+be totally exhausted by generation, and die a short time after. Other
+animals, though not exhausted, become extremely lean and very weak,
+and require a considerable time to repair the loss which is made of
+the organic substance. Others are exhausted still less, and are soon
+restored to an engendering state; while man is scarcely in the least
+affected; his loss is speedily repaired, and therefore may be said to
+be at all times in a state for propagation; all which depends solely
+on the particular construction of the animal organs. The grand limits
+Nature has placed in the mode of existence are equally conspicuous
+in the manner of receiving and digesting the food, in the manner of
+retaining it in, or excluding it from, the body, and in the means by
+which the organic molecules, necessary for reproduction, are extracted.
+In a word, we shall find throughout all nature, that all what can be,
+is.
+
+The same difference exists in the time of female gestation; some, as
+mares, carry their young eleven or twelve months; others, as women,
+cows, &c. nine months; others, as foxes, wolves, &c. five months;
+bitches, nine weeks; cats, six weeks; rabbits, thirty-one days. Most
+birds come out of the egg at the end of twenty-one days; though some,
+as canary birds, hatch in thirteen or fourteen days. The variety is
+as great here as in every thing else relative to animals. The largest
+animals which produce only few, are those which go the longest with
+young; this still more confirms what we have already said, that the
+quantity of organic food is in proportion less in large than in small
+animals; for it is from the superfluity of the mother's food that the
+foetus derives what is necessary to the growth and expansion of its
+parts, and since this expansion demands much more time in large than
+in small animals, it is a proof that the quantity of matter which
+contributes is not so abundant in the first as in the last.
+
+There is, therefore, an infinite variety in animals, with respect to
+the time and manner of gestation, engendering, and bringing forth; and
+this variety is found even in the causes of generation; for although
+the general principle of production is this organic matter common to
+all that lives or vegetates, the manner in which the union is made,
+must have infinite combinations, which must all proceed from the source
+of new productions. My experiments clearly demonstrate, that there are
+no pre-existing germs, and at the same time prove that the generation
+of animals and vegetables is not equivocal; there are, perhaps, as
+many beings, either living or vegetating, which are produced by the
+fortuitous assemblage of organic molecules, as by a constant and
+successive generation. It is to those productions we should apply
+the axiom of the ancients, "Corruptio unius, generatio alterius."
+The corruption and composition of animals and vegetables produce an
+infinite number of organized bodies; some, as those of the calmar, form
+only kinds of machines, which, although very simple, are exceedingly
+active; others, as the spermatic animalcules, seem by their motion, to
+imitate animals; others imitate vegetables by their manner of growing
+or extending; there are others, as those of blighted corn, which may
+be made to live and die alternately, and as often as we please; there
+are still others, even in great quantities, which are at first kinds of
+vegetables, afterwards become species of animals, then return again to
+vegetables, and so on alternately. There is a great appearance, that
+the more we shall observe this race of organized beings, the more we
+shall discover varieties, always so much the more singular as they are
+the more remote from our sight, and from the varieties of other animals
+that have already become known to us.
+
+For example, spurred barley, which is produced by an alteration or
+decomposition of the organic substance of the grain, is composed of
+an infinity of little organized bodies, like to eels. By infusing
+the grain for ten or twelve hours in water, we find them to have a
+remarkable twirling, and a slight progressive motion; when almost dry,
+they cease to move, but by adding fresh water their motion returns.
+The same effects may be produced for months, or even years; insomuch
+that we can make these little machines act as often and as long as we
+please without destroying them, or their losing any of their power or
+activity. Their threads will sometimes open, like the filaments of
+semen, and produce moving globules; we may therefore suppose them to be
+of the same nature, only more fixed and solid.
+
+Eels, in paste made with flour, have no other origin than the union of
+the organic particles of the most essential parts of the grain: the
+first which appear are certainly not produced by many others; yet,
+although they have not been engendered, they engender others. By
+cutting them with the point of a lancet, we may perceive small eels
+come from their bodies in great numbers; the body of the animal appears
+to be only a sheath or bag which contains a multitude of other little
+animals, which perhaps are themselves only sheaths of the same kind, in
+which the organic matter assimilates, and takes the form of eels.
+
+There requires a great number of observations to be made to establish
+classes and races between such singular beings, which are at present so
+little known; there are some which may be regarded as real zoophytes,
+which vegetate, and at the same time appear to twirl and move like
+animals. There are some that at first appear to be animals, which
+afterwards join and form kinds of vegetables. A little attention to the
+decomposition of a grain of wheat infused in water will elucidate all I
+have asserted. I could add more examples, but I have related these only
+to point out the varieties there are in generation. There are certainly
+organized beings which we regard as animals, but which are not
+engendered by others of the same kind; there are some which are only
+a kind of machines, whose action is limited to a certain effect, and
+which can act but once in such a certain time, as those in the calmar;
+and there are others, as we have just remarked, which we can cause to
+act as long and as often as we please. There are vegetating beings
+which produce animated bodies, as the filaments of the human seed,
+from whence the active globules spring, and which move by their own
+powers. In the corruption, fermentation, or rather the decomposition
+of animal and vegetable substances, there are organized bodies which
+are real animals, and can propagate their like, although they have
+not been so produced. The limits of these varieties are perhaps still
+greater than we can imagine. We may extend our ideas, and exert every
+effort to reduce the effects of Nature to certain points, and class her
+productions to certain classes, yet an infinite number of links will
+always escape us.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+OF THE FORMATION OF THE FOETUS.
+
+
+It appears to be clearly ascertained by the experiments of Verheyen,
+who in one of them found the seed of a bull in the matrix of a cow;
+and by those of Ruysch, Fallopius, Leeuwenhoek, and many others, who
+perceived the male semen in the uterus of women, and numberless other
+animals, that the seminal liquor of the male enters by some means
+into the matrix of the female. It is probable, that in the time of
+copulation the orifice of the matrix opens to receive the seminal
+liquor, but if that is not the case, the active and prolific substance
+of this liquor, may penetrate the membranes of the matrix; for the
+seminal liquor being, as we have proved, almost all composed of organic
+molecules, which are in great motion, and extremely minute, they may
+pass across the coat of the closest membranes, and penetrate those of
+the matrix with the greatest facility.
+
+What proves that the active part of this liquor may not only pass
+through the pores of the matrix, but even penetrate its substance, is
+the sudden change that immediately takes place after conception. The
+menses are suppressed, the matrix becomes softer, swells, and appears
+inflamed. All these alterations can only happen by the action of an
+external cause; by the penetration of some part of the seminal liquor
+into the substance even of the matrix. This penetration not only
+operates on the external surface of the matrix, but on all the other
+parts of which this viscera is composed, like that penetration by which
+nutrition and expansion is produced.
+
+We shall be easily persuaded that it is so, when we consider that
+the matrix, during the time of gestation, not only augments in bulk
+but also in quantity of matter, and that it has a kind of life or
+vegetation, which is continually increasing till the time of delivery;
+for if the matrix was only a pouch, a destined receptacle to receive
+the seed and contain the foetus, it would extend and grow thin in
+proportion as the foetus increased in size; but in reality the matrix
+not only extends in proportion as the foetus grows larger, but
+receives at the same time a thickness and solidity. This augmentation
+is a real growth, like the expansion of the body in young animals,
+which can only be produced by the intimate penetration of the organic
+molecules analogous to the substance of the parts: and as this
+expansion of the matrix never happens but after impregnation, we cannot
+doubt its being produced by the liquor of the male, especially as the
+expansion takes place before the foetus has sufficient bulk to dilate
+it.
+
+It seems certain, by my experiments, that the female has a seminal
+liquor which commences to be formed in the testicles, and is completed
+in the glandular bodies: this liquor distills through the small holes,
+at the extremities of these bodies; and may, like that of the male,
+enter into the matrix in two different manners, either by these holes
+at the extremities, or through the membraneous coat of the matrix.
+
+These seminal liquors are both extracts from all parts of the body, and
+in the mixture of them there is every thing necessary to form a certain
+number of males and females; and the more the animal abounds with this
+liquor, and the more that abounds with organic molecules, the greater
+is their number of young; as we have already remarked is the case with
+the small animals, and diminishes in the large.
+
+But to pursue our subject with greater attention, we shall first
+examine the particular formation of the human foetus, and afterwards
+return to the other animals. In the human species, as well as in large
+animals, the seminal liquors of the male and female do not contain a
+great abundance of organic molecules, and therefore seldom produce
+more than one at a time: the foetus is a male, if the number of the
+organic molecules of the male predominates in the mixture, and a female
+if the contrary; and it resembles the father or the mother as they
+happen to abound in the mixture of the two liquors.
+
+I conceive, therefore, that the seminal liquor of both are two matters
+equally active and necessary for generation; and this I think is
+sufficiently proved by my experiments, since I have seen the same
+moving bodies in the one as the other. I perceived that the liquor
+of the male enters into the matrix, where it meets with that of the
+female: that they have a perfect analogy, and are both not only
+composed of similar parts by their form, but also in their motions and
+actions; as we have remarked in Chap. VI.
+
+By the mixture of these two liquors I conceive the activity of the
+organic molecules of each is stopped, and that the actions of one
+counterbalance that of the other, insomuch that each particle ceasing
+to move, remains in the place most analogous to itself, and that they
+will naturally take the same position, and will dispose themselves in
+the same order they held in the animal body; those that came from the
+head will arrange themselves in the head of the foetus, those of the
+back the same, and so of every other part; consequently they will form
+a small organized being, in every thing like the animal from which they
+are extracted.
+
+It must be observed that this mixture of organic molecules of the two
+sexes contains similar and different particles; the similar ones
+are those which have been extracted from every part common to both
+sexes. The different particles are those which have been extracted
+from the parts whereby the sexes are distinguished; thus there is,
+in this mixture, double the number of organic molecules to form the
+head, or the heart, or such other parts common to both, whereas there
+are only what are requisite to form the parts of the sex. Now the
+similar particles may act upon each other without being disordered,
+and collect together as if they had been extracted from the same body;
+but the dissimilar parts cannot act on each other, nor unite together,
+because they have not any relation; hence these particles will preserve
+their nature without mixture, and will fix of themselves the first,
+without the need of being penetrated by the others. Thus the molecules
+proceeding from the sexual parts will be the first fixed, and all the
+rest which are common to both, will afterwards fix indiscriminately,
+whether they are those of the male or female, and form an organized
+being which, in its sexual parts, will perfectly resemble its father,
+if it is a male, and its mother if a female; but which may resemble
+one another, or both, in all the other parts of the body.
+
+It seems to me that if this was well understood, we shall in a great
+measure be enabled to answer the objections made to the sentiments pf
+Aristotle, and which might also be advanced against this system. The
+question is, Why each individual, male and female, does not produce of
+itself an animal of its own sex? It must be acknowledged this question
+seems to carry weight with it; but having reflected a long time on this
+subject I think I have found an answer, and which I shall endeavour to
+explain.
+
+It is certainly evident, from what we have said in the preceding
+chapters, and the experiments we have described, that reproduction is
+effected by the union of organic molecules returned from each part
+of the body of the animal, or vegetable, into one or many common
+reservoirs; and that they are the same molecules which serve for
+nutriment and expansion of the body. This appears to me to have been
+so clearly proved, that I apprehend no scruple can remain as to the
+foundation of the theory; but I admit there may be some reason to ask,
+Why each animal and vegetable does not produce its own likeness, since
+each individual returns from every part of its body, and collects
+in a common reservoir, all the organic molecules necessary for the
+formation of a small organized being? Why then is not this organized
+being formed? and why, in almost every animal, is a mixture of the
+liquors of the two sexes required to produce an animal? If I content
+myself with answering, that in almost all vegetables, and all kinds
+of animals which multiply by cutting, that it appears the design of
+Nature that each individual should increase its own species, and that
+we must regard as an exception to this rule, the use which is made of
+the sexes in other kind of animals; it may be said, that the exception
+is more universal than the rule itself. This difficulty will be very
+little weakened, if we were to say, that each individual perhaps would
+produce its like, if it had proper organs, and contained the necessary
+matter towards the nutriment of the embryo; because females have both
+this matter, and organs, and yet do not produce either male or female
+foetus without the intervention of the male; which intervention of
+sexes in all animals is essential and absolutely necessary.
+
+Although the testicles and seminal vesicles of a man, contain all the
+necessary molecules to form a male, yet the local establishment and
+arrangement of these molecules cannot be made, because the effect of
+an union is prevented by the continual circulation of the seed both
+by absorption, and the action of the new organic molecules which
+constantly come into this reservoir from all parts of the body. The
+same circumstances taking place with the organic molecules of the
+female, is an evident reason why neither can produce of themselves,
+because when the seminal liquors of the male and female are mixed,
+they have more analogy to each other, than with the parts of the
+body of the female where the mixture is performed. By admitting of
+this explication, it may be asked, Why the common mode of generation
+in animals does not agree with it; for, upon that supposition, each
+individual would produce like snails, and impregnate each other, and
+each individual receiving the organic molecules the other furnished,
+the union would be made of itself, and by the sole power of the
+affinity of these molecules among themselves? I own, if it was by this
+cause alone the organic molecules could unite it would be natural
+to conclude, that the shortest mode to perform the reproduction of
+animals, would be to give to one individual both sexes. But it is
+quite contrary to the general rule pursued by Nature, as this manner of
+generation is confined to snails, and a small number of other animals.
+This answer cannot be said to fully satisfy the question, as it merely
+supposes the male does not produce, as it cannot receive any thing from
+the female, and that having besides no proper viscera to contain and
+nourish the foetus.
+
+We may also suppose that the activity of the organic molecules, in
+the semen of one individual, has need of being counterbalanced by the
+activity or force of those of another individual, in order to fix
+and bring them into a kind of equilibrium, a state of rest highly
+necessary to the formation of the animal; and that this activity in
+the organic molecules can only be counterbalanced by there being a
+contrary action in those which come from the male, and those proceeding
+from the female; so that, in this sense, all living or vegetating
+beings must have two sexes, conjointly and separately, to produce
+their resemblances. But this answer is too general to be entirely
+clear; nevertheless, if we pay attention to all the phenomena, we
+shall find some explanation resulting therefrom. The mixture of those
+two liquors produces not only a male or female foetus, but also
+other organized bodies, which have a kind of growth or expansion. The
+placenta, membranes, &c. are produced at the same time as the foetus.
+There are, therefore, in the seminal liquor of the male or female, or
+in the mixture of both, not only organic molecules necessary for the
+production of the foetus, but also those which form the placenta and
+membranes. We know not from whence these molecules come, since there
+is no part of the body, either of the male or female, from which they
+could be sent back. From hence it seems it must be admitted, that the
+molecules of the seminal liquors of each, being alike active, form
+organized bodies every time they can fix, by acting mutually one on the
+other: that the particles employed to form a male, will be those of the
+masculine sex, which will fix the first, and form the sexual parts; and
+that those common to both sexes will then fix indifferently to form the
+rest of the body, and that the placenta and membranes are then formed
+from the superabundant particles, which have not been used to form
+the foetus; if, as we suppose, the foetus is a male, then there
+remains to form the placenta, and membranes, all the organic particles
+peculiar to the feminine sex which have not been employed; and also
+all those of both which shall not have entered the composition of the
+foetus, and which cannot be less than one half. So likewise, if the
+foetus is a female, the same abundance will be left for the formation
+of the placenta, and membranes, and the whole effects be the same,
+excepting it will have the superfluity of the male, instead of that of
+the female.
+
+But, it may be said, that in that case the placenta and membranes
+ought to become another foetus, which would be a female, if the
+first was a male; and a male if the first was a female; for the first
+having consumed the organic molecules of the sexual parts of only
+one individual, and half those common to both, there remains all the
+molecules of the sexual parts of the other individual, and the other
+half of those common to both. To this I answer, that the first union
+of the organic molecules prevents a second, at least, under a similar
+form; that the foetus, being the first formed, exercises an external
+power, which disorders the arrangement of the other organic molecules,
+prevents the formation of a second foetus, and throws them into a
+state from which the form of the placenta and membranes result.
+
+We are assured by the experiments and observations we have made, that
+every living being contains a great quantity of living and active
+molecules. The life of the animal or vegetable appears to be only the
+result of all the young lives (if that expression is permitted me) of
+each of these active molecules, whose life is primitive, and appears
+impossible to be destroyed. We have found these living molecules in
+every living or vegetating being, and are assured, that they are alike
+necessary for nutrition, and consequently, for the reproduction of
+animals or vegetables. It is not, then, difficult to conceive, that a
+certain number of those molecules united should compose a living being.
+Each of these particles possessing animation, an assemblage of them
+must be endowed with life, and thus these living organic molecules,
+being common to all living beings, they necessarily form any particular
+animal or vegetable, according as they are arranged. Now, this
+arrangement absolutely depends on the form of the individuals which
+furnish those molecules. If they are furnished by an animal, they will
+arrange under the form of an individual like to it, exactly as they
+were arranged when they served for the expansion of the animal itself;
+but must we not then suppose that this arrangement cannot be made
+either in animals or vegetables, but by the means of a kind of base,
+round which the molecules might unite to form the foetus? Now, it is
+plain, this basis is furnished by particles peculiar to the different
+sexes, as I shall explain.
+
+While the molecules of either sex remain by themselves, their action
+produces no effect, because they are without any opposition from any
+different kind of particles; but, when these molecules are mixed, then
+there are dissimilar parts, and those serve for the base and point of
+rest to the other molecules, and fix their activity.
+
+In this supposition that the organic molecules, which, in the mixture
+of the seminal liquors of the two individuals, represent the sexual
+parts of the male, can alone serve for a base to the organic molecules
+proceeding from every part of the female, and those peculiar to the
+female sex as a base to them which are extracted from the male, we
+might conclude, that the sexual part of the male infant is formed of
+the organic molecules of the father, and from those of the mother, for
+the rest of the body: and that, on the contrary, the female partakes
+of its mother only in sex, and takes the rest of its body from its
+father. Boys, therefore, ought, excepting the parts of the sex, to have
+a greater resemblance to their mother than to their father, and girls
+more to the father than to the mother; but this consequence is not,
+perhaps, conformable to experience.
+
+By considering, under this point of view, generation by sexes, we
+should conclude it to be the most general mode of reproduction, as
+it is in fact. Beings, whose organization is the most complete, as
+animals, whose bodies compose a whole, which can neither be separated
+nor divided, and whose powers are con-centered to one single point, can
+only reproduce by this mode; because they contain only particles which
+resemble each other, and whose union can only be made by different
+particles, furnished by another individual. Those where organization is
+less perfect, as that of vegetables, whose bodies may be divided and
+separated without being destroyed, can be reproduced by other modes.
+First, because they contain dissimilar particles; secondly, because
+their forms not being so determinate and fixed as that of animals,
+the particles may supply the functions of each other, and change
+according to circumstances; as we see roots become branches, and shoot
+out leaves when exposed to the air, which causes that the vegetable
+particles obtain a local establishment, become fixed, and are enabled
+to multiply, by various modes.
+
+It will be the same with animals, whose organization is less perfect,
+as the fresh water polypus, and others, which can reproduce by division
+of their parts. These organized beings are not so much a single animal,
+as a number united under one common covering, as trees are composed of
+a multiplicity of young trees, (see Chap, II.) Pucerons, which engender
+singly, also contain dissimilar particles, since, after producing
+their young they change into flies which do not produce at all. Snails
+communicate mutually these dissimilar particles, and afterwards they
+both produce. Thus, in all known matters of generation, we see that the
+requisite union of organic particles, can only be made by the mixture
+of different particles, which serve as a basis capable of fixing their
+motions.
+
+If to the idea of the word _sex_, we give all the extent here supposed,
+we shall say, that sexes are found throughout all nature; for then
+sex will mean only the parts which furnish the organic particles,
+different from the common particles, and which must serve as a fixed
+point for their union. But, enough of reasoning on a question that
+can be at once resolved, by saying, that God having created sexes, it
+necessarily follows that animals should reproduce by their connection.
+In fact, we are not made, as I have formerly said, to give a reason
+for every _why_. We are not in a state of explaining _why_ Nature,
+almost throughout her works, makes use of sexes for the reproduction of
+animals, or why sexes exist; we ought, therefore, to content ourselves
+with reasoning on what is, on things as they are, since we cannot go
+beyond, by forming suppositions which will remove us from the sphere
+we ought to contain ourselves in, and to which the small extent of our
+knowledge is limited.
+
+Quitting, therefore, all doubtful conjectures, I shall rest on facts
+and observations. I find, that the reproduction of beings is formed in
+many different manners; but, at the same time, I clearly perceive, that
+it is by the union of the organic particles sent back from every part
+of the individual, that the reproduction of vegetables and animals are
+effected. I am certain of the existence of these organic and active
+molecules in the seminal liquors of male and female animals and seed
+of vegetables; and cannot doubt but every species of reproduction
+is accomplished by the union of these organic molecules. Nor can I
+doubt, that in the generation of animals, and particularly in that of
+man, that the male and female particles mix in the formation of the
+foetus, since we see infants which resemble both father and mother;
+and what confirms this conclusion is, that those parts, common to both
+sexes, mix promiscuously; whereas those never mix which represent the
+sexual parts. For we every day see children with eyes like the father,
+and the forehead and mouth like the mother; but we never find a like
+mixture of the sexual parts; it never happens that they have the
+testicles of the father, and the vagina of the mother, for even the
+fact of hermaphrodites is very doubtful.
+
+In the parts of generation of the two sexes in the human species,
+there is so much resemblance, and so singular a conformity, that we
+might be inclined to think those which appear so different externally,
+are at bottom the same organs, only more or less developed; this was
+the opinion of the ancients, and M. Daubenton's ideas on this subject
+appear to me very ingenious.
+
+The formation of the foetus is, then, made by the union of the
+organic particles contained in the mixture of the seminal liquor
+of both sexes; this union produces the local establishment of the
+particles, which determines them to arrange themselves as they were in
+the individuals which furnished them; insomuch, that the molecules,
+which proceed from the head, cannot, by virtue of these laws, place
+themselves in the legs, or any other part of the foetus. All these
+molecules must be in motion when they unite, and in a motion which must
+cause them to tend to a kind of centre, about which the union is made.
+This centre, or fixed point, which is necessary to the union of the
+molecules, and which, by its re-action and inertia, fixes the activity,
+and destroys the motion, is, probably, the first assemblage of the
+molecules which proceed from the sexual parts of the other individual;
+they must arrange under the form of an organized body which will not be
+another foetus, for the reasons we have before given.[AC]
+
+[AC] In this, as in some other places, our author has gone into a
+diffuse repetition which we have considered unnecessary and therefore
+avoid.
+
+On the whole, I conceive there are organic particles of the sexual
+parts, which serve as a fixed point, or a centre of union, around which
+all the other parts that form the embryo collect. I speak of it only
+as probable; but as they are the only particles which differ, I have
+thought it more natural to imagine, that it is around these different
+particles the union is formed than those which are common to both sexes.
+
+We have before observed, that those who have imagined the heart was the
+first formed, are deceived: those who say it is the blood, are no less
+so. All is formed at the same time. If we only consult observation, the
+chicken is seen in the egg before it has been sat upon; we perceive the
+spine of the back and the head, and, at the same time, the appendages
+which form the placenta. I have opened a great number of eggs, before
+and after incubation; and I am convinced, by my sight, that the chicken
+exists entirely in the middle of the cicatrice, the moment it comes
+from the body of the hen. The heat, communicated to it by incubation,
+only expands the parts by setting the liquors in motion; but it is not
+possible to determine which parts of the foetus are fixed in the
+instant of formation.
+
+I have always said, that the organic molecules were fixed, and that
+their uniting was caused only by their loss of motion. This appears
+to me certain: for, if we separately examine the seminal liquor of
+the male and female, we shall see an infinity of small bodies in
+great motion, but being mixed, their motion is instantly suspended,
+and heat is necessary to renew their activity; for the chicken which
+exists in the centre of the cicatrice is without any motion before
+incubation; and even twenty-four hours after, when it begins to become
+perceptible with a microscope, there is not the least appearance of
+motion then, nor even the day following. During the first day it is
+only a small white mucilaginous mass, which is of a consistence on
+the second, and insensibly increases, but whose motion is very slow,
+and does not at all resemble that of the organic particles which move
+rapidly in the seminal liquor. Besides, I have reason to say, that
+this motion of the organic molecules is absolutely destroyed; for if
+we keep an egg without exposing it to a degree of heat necessary to
+expand the chicken, the embryo, although formed entirely, will remain
+without any motion; and the organic molecules of which it is composed,
+will remain fixed without being able to give motion and life to the
+embryo which has been formed by their union. Thus, after the motion
+of the organic molecules has been destroyed, after the union of these
+molecules, necessary to form an animal body, there is still an external
+agent required to animate and give it life and motion; and this agent
+is heat, which, by rarefying the liquors, obliges them to circulate
+and put also every organ in action, which afterwards do no more than
+develope and grow, provided that this external heat continues to assist
+them in their functions.
+
+Before the action of this external heat, not the least appearance of
+blood is to be seen; and it is not till twenty-four hours after, that
+I have perceived any change in the colour of the vessels. The blood
+first appears in the placenta, which communicates with the body of
+the chicken: but this blood seems to lose its colour as it approaches
+the body of the animal; for the chicken is entirely white, and we
+with difficulty discover in the first, second, and third days after
+incubation, a few small sanguinary points which are close to the body
+of the animal, but which seem not to make part of it, although it is
+these sanguinary points which afterwards form the heart. Thus, the
+formation of the blood is a change occasioned in the liquors by the
+motion heat communicates to them, and this blood is formed even out of
+the body of the animal, the whole substance of which is then only a
+kind of mucilage, or thick jelly.
+
+The foetus, as well as the placenta, derives the necessary nutriment
+for expansion, by a kind of absorption, and they assimilate the organic
+parts of the liquor in which they float: for the placenta cannot be
+said to nourish the animal, no more than the animal nourishes the
+placenta; since, if the one nourished the other, the first would soon
+appear to diminish, while the other increased, whereas both increase
+together, I have indeed observed in eggs, that the placenta at first
+increases much more in proportion than the foetus, and therefore
+it may nourish the animal, or rather convey the nutriment to it, by
+intussusception.
+
+What we have just said concerning the chicken, is easily applied
+to the human foetus, which is formed by the union of the organic
+molecules of the two sexes. The membranes, and placenta, are formed
+from the superabundance of the particles which have entered into the
+composition of the embryo: which is then inclosed in a double membrane,
+where there is also a quantity of liquor, which is, perhaps, at first,
+but a portion of the semen of the father and the mother; and as the
+foetus does not quit the matrix, it enjoys, from the instant even
+of its formation, an external heat necessary for its expansion; this
+heat communicates a motion to liquors, and sets the organs in play, and
+blood is formed in the placenta, and in the body of the embryo, by the
+motion occasioned by this heat. It may be even said, that the formation
+of the blood of the infant is as independent of the mother, as that
+which passes into the egg, is of the hen which hatches it, or of the
+oven which heats it.
+
+It is certain, that the foetus, placenta, and membranes, grow by
+intussusception: for, in the earliest days of conception, the pouch,
+which contains the whole product of generation, is not adherent to
+the matrix. De Graaf, in his experiments on doe rabbits, made these
+globules, wherein the whole business of generation lies, move about
+in the matrix. Thus, in the first stages, they increase and grow by
+drawing nutriment from the liquors which bathe the matrix, to which
+they are afterwards attached by a mucilage, in which small vessels are
+formed with time, as we shall hereafter explain.
+
+But, not to quit the subject, let us return to the immediate formation
+of the foetus, on which there are many remarks to be made, both as
+to its situation, and the different circumstances which may prevent or
+stop its formation.
+
+In the human species, the seed of the male enters into the matrix, the
+cavity of which is considerable; and when it meets with a sufficient
+quantity of female semen, a mixture of the organic particles succeed,
+and the formation of the foetus ensues: the whole, perhaps, is done
+instantaneously, especially if the liquors are both in an active and
+flourishing state. The place where the foetus is formed, is the
+cavity of the matrix, because the seed of the male can enter there
+more easily than into the trunks; and as this viscera has but one
+small orifice, which is always shut, excepting when the ardour of
+love causes it to open, the materials of generation remain there
+with safety, and scarcely ever reissue but by rare and unfrequent
+circumstances: but as the liquor of the male sprinkles the vagina,
+before it penetrates the matrix, by the activity of the organic
+molecules which compose it, it may go farther into the trunks, and,
+perhaps, into the ovarium. As the liquor of the female has already its
+perfection in the glandular bodies of the testicles, from which it
+flows and moistens the trunks and other parts before it descends into
+the matrix, and as it may issue out of the vacuities left around the
+neck of the matrix, it is not impossible, that the mixture of the two
+liquors may be made in all these different places. It is, therefore,
+probable that foetuses are often formed in the vagina, but which fall
+out as soon as they are formed, because there is nothing to retain
+them. It may also sometimes happen, that foetuses are formed in the
+trunks; but this case is very rare, and cannot happen but when the
+seminal liquor of the male enters the matrix in great plenty.
+
+The collection of anatomical observations makes mention of foetuses
+not only being found in the trunks, but also in the testicles. In
+the History of the Old Academy of Sciences, (vol. II. page 91.) we
+meet with an observation on this subject. M. Theroude, a surgeon at
+Paris, shewed the academy an unformed mass, which he found in the
+right testicle of a girl of eighteen years of age. In it were two
+open slits, furnished with hair like two eye-lids, above which was a
+kind of forehead, with a black line instead of eyebrows; immediately
+over that were many hairs matted together in two separate lines, one
+of which was seven, and the other three inches long; under the great
+angle of the eye, two of the grinding teeth appeared to shoot, hard,
+thick, and white; they had their prongs, and a third tooth thicker than
+the rest above them. There appeared likewise other teeth at different
+distances from each other: two between these, of the canine nature,
+issued from an opening where the ear is placed. In the same volume,
+page 144, it is related, that M. Mery found, in the testicle of a woman
+who had conceived, a bone of the upper jaw, with many teeth therein,
+so perfect that some appeared to be of more than ten years growth. We
+find, in the _Journal de Medicine_, for January 1683, published by the
+Abbe de la Roque, the history of a lady who died with the ninth child,
+which was formed in or near one of the testicles, which is not very
+clearly explained. The foetus was about an inch in size, completely
+formed, and the sex easily to be distinguished. We also find, in the
+Philosophical Transactions, some observations on the testicles of
+women, wherein teeth, hair, and bones, have been found. If all these
+circumstances are true, we must suppose, that the seminal liquor of
+the male sometimes ascends, although very seldom, to the testicles of
+the female. Yet, notwithstanding all this, I have some difficulty to
+believe it; first, because the circumstances, which appear to prove
+it, are extremely rare: secondly, because a perfect foetus has never
+been seen in the testicles but by M. Littre, who seems to relate it in
+a very suspicious manner: thirdly, because it is not impossible, that
+the seminal liquor of the female alone may produce organized masses,
+as moles, hair, bones, flesh, and, in short, because if we give credit
+to anatomists, foetuses may be formed in the testicles of men, as
+well as in those of women: for we find, in the History of the Royal
+Academy, vol. II. p. 298, an observation of a surgeon, who says, he
+discovered in the scrotum of a man, the figure of a child inclosed in
+his membranes: and that the head, feet, eyes, bones, and cartilages,
+were distinguishable. If all these observations were equally true, we
+must necessarily adopt one of these two hypotheses, either that the
+seminal liquor, of each sex, cannot produce any thing without being
+mixed with that of the other sex, or that either of them can produce
+irregular masses of itself. By keeping to the first, we should be
+obliged to admit, to explain in all the circumstances we have related,
+that the liquor of the male sometimes ascends to the testicle, and,
+by mixing with the seminal liquor of the female, forms organized
+bodies; and so may also the female fluid, by being plentiful in the
+vagina, penetrate, during the time of copulation, into the scrotum of
+the male, nearly as the venereal virus often reaches that part; and
+that in this case, an organized body may be found in the scrotum, by
+the mixture of the male and female fluids; or, if we admit the other
+hypothesis, which appears to be the most probable, and suppose, that
+the seminal liquor of each individual may produce organized masses,
+then we may be able to say, that all these bony, fleshy, and hairy
+productions, sometimes found in the testicles of females, and in
+the scrotum of males, may derive their origin from the liquor of
+the individual in which they are found. But enough of observations
+upon facts, which appear to be as uncertain as inexplicable, for I am
+much inclined to believe, that, in certain circumstances, the seminal
+liquor of each individual may produce something alone and of itself,
+and that young girls might form moles without any communication with
+the male, as hens form eggs without having received the cock. I might
+support this opinion with observations which appear to me as credible
+as those I have quoted. M. de la Saone, physician and anatomist of the
+Academy of Sciences, published a memoir on this subject, in which he
+asserts, that religious nuns, though strictly cloistered, had formed
+moles. Why should that be impossible, since hens form eggs without
+communication with the cock? and in the cicatrice of these eggs we
+perceive a mole, with appendages, instead of a chicken? The analogy
+appears to me to have sufficient power for us, at least to doubt, or
+suspend our determination. Be this as it will, it is certain that the
+mixture of the two liquors are required to form a foetus, and that
+this mixture cannot come to any effect but when it is in the matrix,
+where the anatomists have sometimes found foetuses; and it is natural
+to imagine, that those which have been found out of the matrix, and
+in the cavity of the abdomen, have escaped by the extremity of the
+trunks, or by some accidental opening, and that they never fall from
+the testicles into the abdomen, because it is almost an impossibility
+that the seminal liquor of the male can ascend so high. Leeuwenhoek has
+computed the motion of these pretended spermatic animals to be four or
+five inches in forty minutes, which would be more than sufficient for
+the animalcules to traverse from the vagina into the matrix, from the
+matrix into the trunks, and from the trunks into the testicles, in an
+hour or two, provided all the liquor had that motion. But how is this
+to he conceived, that the organic molecules, whose motion ceases as
+soon as the liquid fails, can arrive as far as the testicles, unless
+brought there by the liquor in which they swim? This progressive
+motion cannot be given by the organic molecules to the liquor which it
+contains, therefore, whatever activity these molecules may be supposed
+to have, we cannot see how they can arrive at the testicles, and form a
+foetus there, unless the liquor itself was pumped up and attracted
+thither, a supposition not only gratuitous but even against all human
+probability.
+
+The doubts which this supposition gives rise to, confirm the opinion
+that the male fluid penetrates the matrix, and enters therein by the
+orifice, or across the membraneous coat of the viscera. The female
+fluid may also enter into the matrix, either by the opening at the
+upper extremity of the trunks, or across the skin even of the trunks
+and matrix. M. de Weirbrech, an able anatomist of Petersburg, confirms
+this opinion:----"Res omni attentione dignissima (says he) oblata mihi
+est in utero feminae alicujus a me dissectae; erat uterus ea magnitudine
+qua esse solet in virginibus, tubaeque ambae apertae quidem ad ingressum
+uteri, ita ut ex hoc in illas cum specillo facile possem transire
+ac flatum injicere, sed in turbarum extremo nulla dabatur apertura,
+nullus aditus; fimbriarum enim ne vestigium quidem aderat, sed loco
+illarum bulbus aliquis pyriformis materia subalbida fluida turgens, in
+cujus medio fibra plana nervea, cicatriculae aemula, apparebat, quae sub
+ligamentuli specie usque ad ovarii involucra protendebatur.
+
+"Dices, eadem a Regnero de Graaf jam olim notata. Equidem non negaverim
+illustrem hunc prosectorem in libro suo de organis mulieribus non modo
+similem tubam delineasse, Tabula XIX, fig. 3, sed & monuisse, 'tubas
+quamvis secundum ordinariam naturae dispositionem in extremitate sua
+notabilem semper coarctationem habeant, praeter naturam tamen aliquando
+claudi;' verum enimvero cum non meminerit auctor an id in utraque
+tuba ita deprehenderit; an in virgine; an status iste praeternaturalis
+sterilitatem inducat: an vero conceptio nihilominus fieri possit;
+an a principio vitae talis structura suam originem ducat; sive an
+tractu tempora ita degenerare tubae possint; facile perspicimus multa
+nobis relicta esse problemata quae, utcumque soluta, multum negotii
+facessant in exemplo nostro. Erat enim haec femina maritata, viginti
+quatuor annos nata, quae filium pepererat quem vidi ipse, octo jam
+annos natum. Dic igitur tubas ab incunabulis clausas sterilitatem
+inducere: quare haec nostra femina peperit? Dic concepisse tubis
+clausis; quomodo ovulum ingredi tubam potuit? Dic coaluisse tubas post
+partum: quomodo id nosti? Quomodo adeo evanescere in utroque latere
+fimbriae possunt, tanquam nunquam adfuissent? Si quidem ex ovario ad
+tubas alia daretur via, praeter illarum orificium, unico gressu omnes
+superarentur difficultates; sed fictiones intellectum quidem adjuvant,
+rei veritatem non demonstrant; praestat igitur ignorationem fateri,
+quam speculationibus indulgere[AD]." The difficulties which occurred
+to this able author are insurmountable in the egg system, but which
+disappear in our explanation. This observation seems only to prove what
+we have observed, that the seminal liquor of both male and female may
+penetrate the coat of the matrix, and enter across the pores of the
+membranes; to be assured of it, it is only necessary to pay attention
+to the alteration that the seminal liquor of the male causes to the
+viscera, and to the kind of vegetation or expansion that it causes
+there. Besides, the liquor which issues by the vacuities of De Graaf,
+being of the same nature as the liquor of the glandular bodies, it is
+very evident that this liquor comes from the testicles, and yet there
+is no vessel through which it can pass; consequently we must conclude,
+that it penetrates the spongy coat of all these parts, and that it not
+only enters the matrix, but even can issue out when these parts are in
+irritation.
+
+[AD] Vide Comment. Acad. Petropol, vol IV. page 261 and 262.
+
+But even should we refuse this idea of penetration, we cannot deny
+that the liquor of the female, which flows from the glandular bodies
+of the testicles, may enter by the opening at the extremity of the
+trunk, as that of the male does by the orifice of the viscera; and that
+consequently these two liquors may mix of themselves in this cavity,
+and form there the foetus in the manner we have explained.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+OF THE EXPANSION, GROWTH, AND DELIVERY OF THE FOETUS, &C.
+
+
+In the expansion of the foetus, two different degrees of growth make
+different kinds of expansion. The first, which succeeds immediately
+after the formation of the foetus, is not proportionable in all
+the parts of which it is composed. The more distant it is from the
+formation, the more in proportion are its parts, and it is only after
+it has quitted the womb of its mother that the growth of the parts is
+made in nearly an equal manner. It must not be imagined that the figure
+of the foetus, at the moment of formation, is absolutely like that of
+an adult. It is certain that the embryo contains every part which, must
+compose a man, but they differ in their successive expansion.
+
+In an organized body, as that of an animal, we may suppose some parts
+are more essential than others, and though some may be useless or
+superfluous, there are some on which the rest seem to depend for their
+expansion and disposition. We must consider some as fundamental parts,
+without which the animal cannot exist, and which are more accessory and
+external, and appear to derive their origin from the first, and which
+seem to be formed as much for the ornament, symmetry, and external
+perfection of the animal, as for the necessity of its existence, and
+the exercise of the essential functions of life. These two kinds of
+different parts expand successively, and are almost equally apparent
+when the foetus quits the womb; but there are others which Nature
+seems to keep in reserve, as the teeth, which do not appear for some
+time, and also the glandular bodies in the testicles of females, the
+beards of males, &c. which do not shew themselves till the age of
+puberty.
+
+In order to discover the fundamental and essential parts of an animal
+body, we must pay attention to the number, situation, and nature of
+the whole; those which are simple, those whose position is invariable,
+and those without which the animal cannot exist, will be the essential
+parts; those, on the contrary, which are double, or in a greater
+number, those whose size and position vary, and those which may be
+retrenched from the animal without destroying or even doing it an
+injury, may be looked upon as less necessary, and more accessory, to
+the animal machine. Aristotle has said that the only parts essential to
+animals were those with which they take their nutriment, and throw out
+the superfluous parts of it from the body. From the mouth to the arms
+are simple parts, which no other can supply. The head and spine of the
+back are also simple parts, whose position is invariable. The spine of
+the back serves for a foundation to the fabric of the body; and it is
+from the marrow which it contains that the motion and action of most
+of the members and organs proceed; it is also this part which appears
+one of the first in the embryo. Now these simple parts which appear
+the first are all essential to the existence and form of the animal.
+There are many more double than simple parts in the body of an animal,
+and seem to be produced on each side of the simple parts by a kind of
+vegetation; for these double parts are similar in form, and different
+in position. The left hand exactly resembles the right, because it is
+composed of the same number of parts; nevertheless, if it was placed
+in the situation of the right, we could not make use of it for the
+same purposes, and should have reason to regard it as a very different
+member. It is the same with respect to the other double parts; they are
+similar as to form, and different as to the position which is connected
+to the body of the animal; and by supposing a line to divide the body
+into two equal parts, the position of all the similar parts would refer
+to this line as a centre.
+
+The spinal marrow, and the vertebrae which contains it, appear to be the
+real axis, to which we must refer all the double parts of the animal,
+for they seem to derive their origin, and to be only symmetrical
+branches issuing from this trunk or common base, for we see the ribs
+shoot out on each side of the vertebrae in the young chicken as the
+young branches shoot out from the principal branch of a tree. In all
+embryos the middle of the head and vertebrae appear to be the first
+formed; afterwards we see on the two sides of a vesicle which forms the
+middle of the head two other vesicles which appear to proceed from the
+first. These two vesicles contain the eyes and the other double parts
+of the head; so likewise we perceive little tubercles shoot out in
+equal numbers from each side of the vertebrae, which extend by degrees
+and form the ribs, and other double parts of the trunk. On the side
+of this trunk already formed, as the conclusion, the legs and arms
+appear. This first expansion is very different from that which is made
+afterwards; it is the production of parts which appear for the first
+time; that which succeeds is only a growth of all the parts already
+created.
+
+This symmetrical order of all the double parts found in every animal,
+the regularity of their position, the equality of their extension and
+growth, and the perfect resemblance between them, seem to indicate that
+they derive their origin from the simple parts; that there must reside
+in these simple parts a power which acts equally on each side, or,
+which answers the same meaning, they are the fixed points against which
+the power that produces the expansion of the double parts is exercised.
+That the power which acts on the right is equalled by that of the left
+side, and consequently they are counterbalanced by this re-action.
+
+From hence we may infer, that if there is any defect or excess in the
+matter which is to serve for the formation of the double parts, as the
+powers which impel them on each side are equal, the defect or excess
+must be formed the same both on the right and left; for example, if,
+from a defect of matter, a man has but two fingers instead of five on
+the right hand, he will have but two on the left hand; or if, by an
+excess of matter, he has six fingers on one hand, he will have six on
+the other; or if the matter be vitiated, and causes an alteration in
+the right part, it will be the same on the left. This fact is very
+often seen. Most monsters are made with symmetry; the disarrangement
+of the parts of monsters appears to be made with order: Nature,
+therefore, even in her errors, mistakes as little as possible.
+
+This harmony of position in the double parts of animals is found also
+in vegetables; branches shoot out from buds on every side; the veins in
+the leaves are equally disposed as to the principal vein; and although
+symmetrical order appears to be less exact in vegetables than in
+animals, it is only because it is more varied, and its limits are more
+extended, and less precise; but we may nevertheless easily discover
+this order, and distinguish the simple and essential parts from those
+which are double, and the latter we must regard as having taken their
+origin from the former. We shall more fully discuss this point, as far
+as relates to vegetables, when we come to treat of them.
+
+It is not possible to determine under What form the double parts exist
+before expansion, nor in what manner they are folded, nor what figure
+results from their position by connection with the simple parts. The
+body of the animal, in the instant of formation, certainly contains
+every part which is to compose it; but the relative position of these
+parts must be very different then from what it becomes afterwards.
+It is the same with vegetables, for if we observe the expansion of
+a young leaf, we shall perceive that it is folded on both sides the
+principal vein, and that its figure does not resemble at that time what
+it afterwards assumes.
+
+When we amuse ourselves by folding paper to form crowns, boats, &c.
+the different folds of the paper seem to have no resemblance to the
+form which must result by the unfolding; we only see that these folds
+are always made in an uniform order, and exactly the same on one side
+as that we have made on t he other; but it would be a problem beyond
+known geometry, to determine the figures which may result from all the
+unfoldings of a certain given number of folds. All what immediately
+relates to the position, is beyond our mathematical sciences. This art,
+which Leibnitz calls _Analysis Situs_, is not yet found out; though the
+art, which would shew us the connections that result from the position
+of things, would perhaps be more useful than that which has only bulk
+for its object, for we have often more need to know the form than the
+matter.
+
+In the unfolding of Nature's productions, not only the folded parts
+take new positions, but they acquire, at the same time, extent and
+solidity. Since we cannot therefore determine the result of the simple
+unfolding of a folded form, in which, as in a piece of folded paper,
+there is but one change of position between the parts, without any
+augmentation or diminution of the bulk or mass of the matter, how is
+it possible for us to judge of the complex unfolding of the body of
+an animal, in which not only the relative position of the parts, but
+also their mass of matter, undergoes considerable changes? We cannot,
+therefore, reason upon this subject, but by drawing some inductions
+from the examination of the things at the different periods of their
+unfolding, and by assisting ourselves with the observations that we
+have had the opportunity to make.
+
+It is true we see the chick in the egg before incubation; it floats
+in a transparent liquor, contained in a small purse, formed by a very
+fine membrane in the centre of the cicatrice; but this chick is then
+only a particle of inanimate matter, in which we cannot discern any
+organization, nor any determined figure. We judge by the external form
+that one of the extremities is the head, and the rest to be the spine
+of the back. It appears that this is the first product of fecundation
+resulting from the mixture of the seed of the male and female;
+nevertheless, before asserting this as a fact, there are many things
+should be considered. When the hen has cohabited with the cock for a
+few days, and afterwards separated from him, the eggs she produces for
+a month after separation are as fertile as those she produced during
+the time of cohabitation with the male, and unfold at the same time;
+they only require twenty-one days sitting, and the embryo of the one
+will be as forward and as completely formed as that of the other. From
+hence we might think, that this form, under which the chick at first
+appears to us in the egg, does not immediately proceed from a mixture
+of the two liquors, but that it existed in other forms during the time
+the egg remained in the body of the mother; for the embryo in the form
+we see it before incubation, requires only heat to unfold and bring it
+forth. Now, if it had this form twenty days, or a month before, when
+the egg was first fecundated, why was it not hatched by the internal
+heat of the hen? and why is not the chicken perfectly formed in those
+eggs which are fecundated twenty-one days before the hen lays them?
+
+This difficulty is not so great as it appears; for we must conceive,
+that in the time of the cock's cohabitation with the hen, each egg
+receives in its cicatrice, wherein the female liquor is contained,
+a small portion of the semen of the male. The egg attached to the
+ovary is in oviparous females, what the glandular substance is in the
+testicles of viviparous females. The cicatrice of the egg corresponds
+with the glandular bodies in which the seminal liquor of the female
+resides; that of the male penetrates and mixes there with it; from
+this mixture, the formation of the embryo instantly results. The first
+egg which the hen lays after coition is fecundated, and capable of
+producing a chicken; those which she lays afterwards were fecundated at
+the same instant; but as there is still wanting essential parts to this
+egg, the production of which is independent of the seed of the male,
+as the white, membranes, and shell, the young embryo contained in the
+cicatrice cannot unfold in this imperfect egg, although assisted by the
+internal heat of the mother. It remains, therefore, in the cicatrice
+in the state in which it was formed, until the egg has acquired all
+the parts necessary to the growth and nourishment of the chicken: and
+it is not till the egg has attained its perfection that the embryo
+begins to unfold: this unfolding is performed by the external heat of
+incubation; but it is certain, if the egg could be confined within the
+body of the hen for 21 days after it was completely formed, the chicken
+would be produced, unless the internal heat of the hen should prove too
+powerful, for the degrees of heat necessary to hatch chickens are not
+very extended, and the least defect or excess is equally prejudicial
+to their unfolding. The last eggs the hen lays, containing the same as
+the first, proves nothing more than that the egg must acquire entire
+perfection before the embryo can unfold itself; and for want of the
+heat necessary to this unfolding, eggs may be kept a considerable time
+before incubation, without preventing the produce of the chickens they
+contain.
+
+It appears, therefore, that the state of the embryo, when the egg is
+laid by the hen, is the first state which succeeds fecundation; that
+the form under which we see it is the first form resulting from the
+intimate mixture, and form the penetration of the two seminal liquors;
+and consequently by following, as Malpighius has done, this unfolding
+from hour to hour, we discover all that is possible to be known, unless
+we could see the two liquors mix before our eyes, and how the first
+arrangement of the particles are made, which produces the first form of
+the embryo.
+
+If we reflect on this fecundation (which is made at the same time) of
+these eggs, which are laid successively, and along time after each
+other, we shall find new arguments against the existence of eggs in
+viviparous animals; for if the females of viviparous animals, or if
+women contained eggs, like hens, why are there not many fecund at
+the same time? why are not some of them produced in nine months,
+and others at distant periods? and when women have two or three
+children, why do they all come into the world at one time? If these
+foetuses were produced by the means of eggs, would not they come
+successively, according as the eggs come to perfection, after the time
+of impregnation? And would not super-foetation be as frequent as they
+now are scarce, or as natural as they appear to be accidental?
+
+We cannot follow the unfolding of the foetus in the matrix as we
+pursue that of the chick in the egg; the opportunities of observing it
+are few, and we can only know what anatomists, surgeons, and midwives
+have written thereon. It is by collecting all their particular
+observations, and by comparing their remarks and their descriptions,
+that we have made the following abridged history of the human foetus.
+
+There is a great appearance that, immediately after the mixture of
+the two seminal liquors, the whole materials of generation exist in
+the matrix under the form of a globe; since we know, by anatomists,
+that three or four days after conception there is a small oval ball in
+the matrix, this ball is formed by an extremely fine membrane, which
+incloses a limpid liquor like the white of an egg. We can then perceive
+some small united fibres in this liquor, which are the first outlines
+of the foetus. A net-work of fine fibres collects on the surface of
+the ball, which extends from one of the extremities to the middle.
+These are the first vestiges of the placenta.
+
+Seven days after conception we may distinguish, by the naked eye, the
+first lineaments of the foetus, as yet unformed; being only a mass of
+transparent jelly, which has acquired some small degree of solidity;
+the head and trunk are easily discernible, because this mass is of an
+oblong form, and the trunk is more delicate and somewhat longer. Some
+small fibres, in form of a plume of feathers, spring from the body
+of the foetus, and which turn towards the membrane in which it is
+included; these fibres are to form the umbilical cord.
+
+Fifteen days after conception, the head, and the most apparent
+features of the face, are distinguishable; the nose resembles a small
+prominent and perpendicular thread affixed to a line, which indicates
+the division of the lips. Two small black points are in the places of
+the eyes, and two little holes in those of the ears; the body of the
+foetus has also received some growth. On each side of the upper and
+inferior parts of the trunk, little protuberances appear, which are the
+first outlines of the arms and legs.
+
+Eight days after, that is in three weeks, the body of the foetus
+has only increased about a line; but the arms and legs, the hands and
+feet, are apparent; the growth of the arms is more quick than that
+of the legs, and the fingers separate sooner than the toes. At this
+time internal organization begins to be discernible; the bones appear
+like small threads as fine as hairs; the ribs are disposed regularly
+from the two sides of the back bone; and as well as the arms, legs,
+fingers, and toes, are represented by very small threads.
+
+At a month the foetus is more than an inch long; it naturally takes
+a curved posture, in the middle of the liquor which surrounds it, and
+the membranes which contain the whole are increased in extent and
+thickness; the mass is oval, and it is then about an inch and an half
+in its greatest, and an inch and a quarter the smallest diameter.
+The human figure is no longer equivocal, every part of the face is
+already discernible; the body is fashioned, the thighs and belly are
+seen, the limbs formed, the toes and fingers divided, the skin thin
+and transparent, the viscera marked by fibres, the vessels as fine
+as threads, and the membranes extremely delicate, the bones are as
+yet soft, and have only taken solidity in some few parts; the vessels
+which compose the umbilical cord, are as yet in a straight line by
+the side of each other; now the placenta only occupies a third of the
+whole mass; whereas in the beginning it occupied the half. It appears,
+therefore, that its growth, in superficial extent, has not been so
+great as that of the foetus, and the rest of the mass; but it has
+increased much more in solidity; its thickness has become greater in
+proportion than the membranes of the foetus, both of which are now
+easily distinguished.
+
+According to Hippocrates, the male foetus is developed sooner than
+the female. He says all parts of the body in the first are apparent in
+thirty, whereas the latter are not so till the expiration of forty-two
+days.
+
+In six weeks the foetus is nearly two inches long; the human figure
+begins to be more perfect; the head is only larger in proportion than
+the other parts of the body; the motion of the heart is perceived about
+this time. It has been seen to beat in a foetus of sixty days, a long
+while after it had been taken out of the womb of its mother.
+
+In two months the foetus is more than two inches long; the
+ossification is discernible as far as the middle of the arm, thigh,
+and leg, and in the point of the lower jaw, which is then very forward
+before the upper. These, however, are only ossified points; but by the
+effect of a more ready expansion, the clavicles are wholly ossified.
+The umbilical cord is formed, and the vessels which compose it, begin
+to twist nearly like threads which compose a rope: but this cord is
+still very short in comparison of what it becomes hereafter.
+
+In three months the foetus is nearly three inches long, and weighs
+about three ounces. Hippocrates says, that it is at this time the
+motion of the male foetus begins to be felt by its mother; but that
+those of the female are not felt till after the fourth; there are women
+who affirm they have felt the motions of the child at the beginning of
+the second month. It is very difficult to be certain on this subject,
+the sensations excited by the first motions of the foetus depending,
+perhaps more on the sensibility of the mother than the strength of the
+child.
+
+Four months after conception the length of the foetus is six or
+seven inches; every part of its body is so greatly augmented as to
+be perfectly distinguished from each other; even the nails appear on
+the fingers and toes. The testicles of the males are shut up in the
+belly above the kidneys; the stomach is filled with somewhat of a
+thick humour, like that which incloses the amnios. We find a milky
+fluid in the little vessels, and in the large ones a black liquid
+matter. There is a little bile in the gall, and some urine in the
+bladder. As the foetus floats freely in the liquid which surrounds
+it, there is always a space between the body and membranes in which it
+is contained. These coverings grow at first more than the foetus;
+but after a certain time it is quite the contrary. Before the end
+of the third month the head is bent forward, the chin rests on the
+breast, the knees are lifted up, the legs bent backwards upon the
+thighs (sometimes the knees are so high as almost to touch the jaws),
+the arms are generally folded across the breast, and one of the
+hands, and often both touch the face. The foetus afterwards takes
+different situations, as it acquires strength. Experienced midwives
+have pretended to be certain that it changes much oftener than is
+commonly thought, and which they prove by several observations; first,
+the umbilical cord is often found twisted round the body and limbs of
+the child, in a manner which necessarily supposes, that the foetus
+has moved in many directions, and taken different positions; secondly,
+a mother feels the motions of the foetus sometimes on one side of
+the womb and sometimes on another; and it often strikes against many
+different places, which must be occasioned by different positions, and
+supposes that it takes different situations; thirdly, as it floats in
+a liquid which surrounds it on all sides, it can very easily turn and
+extend itself by its own strength; and it must also take different
+situations according to the various attitudes of the mother; for
+example, when she lies down, the foetus must be in another situation
+to what it was when she stood upright.
+
+Most anatomists have said, that the foetus is constrained to bend
+its body, because it is too confined in its covering; but this opinion
+does not appear well founded, for in the first five or six months there
+is more space than is required for the foetus to extend, and yet
+during that time it is bent and folded. We also see the chicken is in
+a curved posture in the liquor of the amnios, although this membrane
+and its liquor are sufficient to contain a body five or six times as
+large as the foetus. Thus we may conclude that this curved form of
+the foetus is natural, and not the effect of force. I am somewhat of
+Harvey's opinion, who says, it takes this attitude because it is the
+most favourable to rest and sleep; and as the foetus sleeps almost
+continually, it naturally takes the most advantageous situation. "Certe
+(says this famous anatomist) animalia omnia, dum quiescunt & dormiunt,
+membra sua ut plurimum adducunt & complicant, figuramque ovalem ac
+conglobatam quaerunt: ita pariter embryones qui aetatem suam maxime
+somno transigunt, membra sua positione ea qua plasmantur (tanquam
+naturalissima ac maxime indolenti quietique aptissima) componunt[AE]."
+
+[AE] Harvey on Generation, page 257.
+
+The matrix, as we have already said, takes a very ready growth after
+conception, and it continues also to increase in proportion with the
+foetus; but the foetus at length outgrows the matrix, and then,
+especially when it approaches maturity, it may be too much confined,
+and agitate the matrix by reiterated motions and violent efforts. The
+mother sensibly feels the impression of these painful sensations,
+and which are called periodic pains after the labour commences. The
+more power the foetus exerts to dilate the matrix the greater it
+finds the resistance, from the natural compression of the parts. From
+thence all the effect falls on the orifice, which has been increasing
+by degrees during the latter months of pregnancy. The head of the
+foetus, forcibly inclining against the sides of the orifice, dilates
+it, by a continual pressure, till the moment of delivery, when it opens
+sufficiently for the child to escape from the womb.
+
+What makes it probable that the labour-pains proceed only from the
+dilatation of the orifice of the matrix is, that this dilatation is
+the only means to discover whether the pains felt are in fact the
+pains of labour, for women often feel very sensible pains, which
+are not those that immediately precede delivery. To distinguish
+the false from true pains, it has been recommended for the midwife
+to touch the orifice of the matrix, as if the pains be true the
+dilatation will always increase, and if they are false pains, that
+is to say, pains which proceed from some other cause than that of
+the approaching delivery, the orifice will contract rather than
+dilate, or at least will not continue to dilate. From hence we have
+sufficient foundation to imagine, that these pains proceed from a
+forced dilatation of the orifice. The only thing which embarrasses on
+this occasion is that alternative of rest and sufferings the mother
+endures. This circumstance of the effect does not perfectly agree
+with the cause which we have just indicated; for the dilatation of
+an orifice, which is made by degrees, should produce a constant and
+continued pain, without any intervals of ease. But possibly the whole
+may be attributed to the separation of the placenta, which we know
+is fastened to the matrix by a number of papillae, which penetrate
+into the vacuities or cavities of this viscera; therefore may it not
+be supposed that they do not separate from their cavities all at the
+same time; that each separation causes those acute pains, and the
+intervals between are those of ease and rest? The effect in this
+case perfectly answers the cause, and we can support this conjecture
+by another observation.--Immediately before delivery there issues a
+whitish and viscous liquor, like that which flows from the nipples of
+the placenta when drawn out of their places, which makes it probable
+that this liquor, which then issues from the matrix, is produced by the
+separation of some of the papillae of the placenta.
+
+It often happens that the foetus quits the matrix without bursting
+the membranes, and consequently without the contained liquor flowing
+out. This kind of delivery appears to be most natural, and resembles
+that of most animals; nevertheless, the human foetus commonly pierces
+its membranes by the resistance it meets with at the orifice of the
+matrix. It also sometimes brings away part of the amnios, and even the
+chorion, upon its head like a cap. When these membranes are pierced or
+torn, the liquors, called the _waters_, which they contain flow out,
+and the sides of the orifice of the matrix, and the vagina, being thus
+moistened, give way more easily to the passage of the child. After the
+flowing of this liquor there remains sufficient room in the matrix for
+the midwife to return the child, if the position is unfavourable. When
+the foetus is come out the delivery is not entirely completed, the
+placenta and membranes remain in the matrix, and the new-born infant
+adheres to them by the umbilical cord; the hand of the midwife, or the
+weight of the body of the infant alone, draws them out by means of this
+cord. Those organs which were necessary to the life of the foetus
+become useless, and even noxious to the new-born infant. They are
+instantly separated from the body of the child, by tying the umbilical
+cord about an inch distance from the navel, and by cutting it about
+an inch from the ligature. The remainder of this cord dries away, and
+separates of itself from the navel, about the sixth or seventh day.
+
+On examining the foetus previous to its birth we may form some idea
+of its natural functions. It has organs, which are necessary to it
+while in the womb of its mother, but which become useless. For the
+better understanding the mechanism of these functions, we must explain
+a little more particularly the nature of those necessary parts, the
+umbilical cord, the membranes, the liquor which they contain and the
+placenta. The umbilical cord, which is attached to the body of the
+foetus at the navel, is composed of two arteries and one vein; these
+prolong the circulation of the blood, but the vein is larger than the
+arteries. At the extremity of the cord each of these vessels divide
+into an infinity of ramifications, which extend between two membranes.
+They separate at equal distances from the common trunk; so that these
+ramifications are round and flat, and are called, when thus collected,
+the _placenta_. The external surface, which is applied against the
+matrix, is convex; the internal concave. The blood of the foetus
+circulates in the cord, and in the placenta. The arteries of the cord
+spring from two large arteries of the foetus, and carry the blood
+through the arterial ramifications of the placenta; from thence it
+passes into the venous branches which carry it into the umbilical
+vessels; these communicate with a vein of the foetus, in which
+vessels it is received.
+
+The concave surface of the placenta is clothed by the chorion; the
+convex is also covered by a kind of soft membrane, easily torn, which
+seems to be a continuation of the chorion, and the foetus is included
+under the double coat of the chorion and the amnios. The form is
+globular, because the intervals between the membranes and the foetus
+are filled with a transparent liquor. This liquor is contained by the
+amnios, which is the internal membrane, it is thin and transparent; it
+folds round the umbilical cord at its insertion into the placenta, and
+covers it the whole length to the navel of the foetus. The chorion
+is the external membrane; it is thick and spongy, sprinkled with
+sanguinary vessels, and composed of many coats, the exterior of which
+covers the convex surface of the placenta. It follows the inequalities,
+and covers the papillae, which spring from the placenta, and are
+received in the cavities found at the bottom of the matrix, called
+_lacunae_. The foetus adheres to the matrix by these insertions.
+
+Some anatomists have thought that the human form had, like those of
+certain quadrupeds; a membrane called _allantois_, destined to receive
+the urine; and they have pretended to have found it between the chorion
+and the amnios, or in the middle of the placenta at the root of the
+umbilical cord, under the form of a very large bladder, in which the
+urine entered by a long pipe that composed part of the chord, and which
+opened on one side into the bladder, and on the other in this allantois
+membrane, being similar to the urachus in other animals. They owned,
+however, that it was not near so large in the human foetus as in
+quadrupeds, but that it was divided into many tubes, so minute, that
+they could scarcely be perceived, and that the urine passed into their
+cavities.
+
+The experience and observations of most anatomists are contrary to
+this supposed discovery. They admit there is a kind of ligament which
+adheres by one end to the external surface of the bottom of the
+bladder, and extends to the navel; but it becomes so delicate, on
+entering into the cord, as to be nearly reduced to nothing: in common
+this ligament is not hollow, and we can see no orifice at the bottom of
+the bladder.
+
+The foetus has no communication with the open air, and the
+experiments made upon the lungs prove they have never respired; for
+they sink to the bottom when put in water: whereas those of infants
+who have breathed always float on the top; the foetus then does not
+respire in the womb, consequently it cannot form any sound by its
+voice; and therefore what has been related of the groaning and crying
+of children before their birth may be considered as fables. After the
+flowing of the waters it may happen, that the air has found an entrance
+into the cavity of the matrix, and then the infant may begin to respire
+before it is brought forth. In this case it may be able to cry, as
+the chicken cries before the shell of the egg is broken, which it can
+do from there being air in the cavity which is between the external
+membrane and the shell. This air is found in all eggs, and is produced
+by the internal fermentation of matters contained in them[AF].
+
+[AF] See La Statique des Vegetaux, Chap. vi.
+
+The lungs of the foetus being without any motion, have no more blood
+enter into them than is requisite to nourish and make them grow; and
+there is another road opened for the course of its circulation. The
+blood in the right auricle of the heart, instead of passing into the
+pulmonary artery, and returning, after having ran through the lungs
+into the left auricle by the pulmonary vein, passes immediately into
+the left by an opening, called the _foramen ovale_, which is in the
+partition of the heart between the two auricles. It enters afterwards
+into the aorta, which distributes it by its ramifications, at going
+out of which the venous branches receive it, and bring it back to the
+heart by uniting all in the _vena cava_, which terminates at the right
+auricle of the heart. The blood which this auricle contains, instead
+of passing entirely by the foramen ovale, may escape in part into the
+pulmonary and the aorta by an arterial canal, which goes immediately
+from the one to the other. It is by these roads that the blood of the
+foetus circulates without entering into the lungs, as it enters into
+those of children, adults, and every animal which breathes.
+
+It has been thought that the blood of the mother passes into the body
+of the foetus, by means of the placenta and umbilical cord. It
+was supposed that the sanguinary vessels of the matrix opened into
+the vacuities, and those of the placenta into the nipples, and that
+they joined one to the other; but experience is quite contrary to
+this opinion; for if the arteries of the umbilical cord is injected
+the liquor returns by the veins, and not any part of it escapes
+externally. Besides, the nipples may be drawn from the vacuities
+where they are lodged, without any blood issuing either from the
+matrix or placenta: a milky liquor only issues from both, and which,
+we have already observed, serves the foetus for nutriment. This
+liquor possibly enters into the veins of the placenta, as the chyle
+enters into the subclavian vein; and perhaps the placenta in a great
+measure performs the office of the lungs in bringing the blood to
+maturity. It is certain that the blood appears much sooner in the
+placenta than in the foetus, and I have often observed in eggs that
+have been under the hen for a day or two, that the blood appeared at
+first in the membranes, and that their sanguinary vessels are very
+large and numerous, while the whole body of the chicken, excepting
+the point where these blood-vessels terminate, is only a white and
+almost transparent matter, in which there is not the smallest sign of a
+sanguinary vessel.
+
+It has been imagined, that the liquor of the amnios is a nutriment
+the foetus receives by its mouth. Some naturalists pretend to have
+observed this liquor in the stomach, and to have seen some foetuses
+to which the umbilical cord was entirely wanting, and others who had
+but a very small portion, which did not at, all adhere to the placenta;
+but in this case might not the liquor have entered into the body of
+the foetus by the small portion of the umbilical cord, or by the
+umbilical vessel itself? Besides, to these observations we may oppose
+others. Some foetuses have been found whose lips were not separated,
+and others without any opening in the oesophagus. To conciliate
+these circumstances, some anatomists have thought that the aliments
+passed into the foetus partly by the umbilical cord, and partly by
+the mouth: none of these opinions appear to have any foundation. It
+is not the question to examine the growth of the foetus alone, and
+to seek from whence and by what it draws its nutriment, but how the
+growth of the whole is made; for the placenta, liquor, and membrane
+increase in size as well as in the foetus; and consequently the
+instruments and canals employed to receive or carry this nutriment to
+the foetus, have a kind of life themselves. The expansion of the
+placenta and membranes is as difficult to conceive as that of the
+foetus; and we might say, with equal propriety, that the foetus
+nourishes the placenta, as that the placenta nourishes the foetus.
+The whole mass is floating in the matrix, and without any adherence at
+the commencement of this growth: therefore the nourishment can be only
+made by an absorption of the milky matter contained in the matrix. The
+placenta appears first to draw this nutriment, to convert this milk
+into blood, and to carry it to the foetus by veins. The liquor of the
+amnios appears to be only this milky liquor depurated, the quantity of
+which increases by a like absorption, proportionate to the increase
+of the membranes, and the foetus probably absorbs the liquor, which
+appears to be the necessary nutriment for its expansion. For we must
+observe, that for the first two or three months the foetus contains
+very little blood; it is as white as ivory, and appears to be composed
+of lymph which has taken some solidity; and as the skin is transparent,
+and all the parts very soft, we may easily conceive that the liquor
+in which the foetus swims may penetrate them, and thus furnish the
+necessary matter for its nutrition and expansion. It may be supposed
+that the foetus in the latter stages takes its nutriment by the
+mouth, since in the stomach we find a liquor similar to that in the
+amnios, urine in the bladder, and excrements in the intestines; and as
+we find neither urine nor _meconium_ in the amnios, there is reason to
+conclude that the foetus does not void its excrements, especially
+as some are born without having the anus pierced, although they had a
+great quantity of _meconium_ in the intestines.
+
+Although the foetus does not immediately adhere to the matrix, but
+is only attached to it by small external nipples, though it has no
+communication with the blood of its mother, but is as independant of
+her who bears it, in many respects, as the egg is of the hen that
+hatches it, yet it has been pretended, that all which affects the
+mother affects the foetus; that the impressions of the one act on
+the brain of the other; and to this imaginary influence resemblances,
+monsters, and especially marks on the skin of some children, have been
+attributed. I have examined many of these marks, and they all appear
+to me to have been caused by a derangement in the texture of the
+skin. Every mark must have a figure which will resemble something or
+other; but I am certain the resemblances so formed depend rather on
+the imagination of those who see them than on that of the mother. On
+this subject the marvellous has been carried as far as it could go. It
+has not been only said that the foetus carried real representations
+of the longings of its mother, but that, by a singular sympathy, the
+marks, which represent strawberries, cherries, &c. change their colour,
+and become deeper in the season of those fruits. With a little more
+consideration, and less prejudice, this colour may be seen to change
+much oftener, and that it must happen every time the motion of the
+blood is accelerated, whether by the heat of summer or from any other
+cause. These marks are either yellow, red, or black, because the blood
+gives these tints to the skin when it enters in too great quantities
+into the vessels. If these marks have the longings of the mother for
+their cause, why have they not the forms and colours as varied as the
+objects of her desires? What a curious assemblage of figures would be
+seen if all the whimsical desires of the mother were written on the
+skin of the child?
+
+As our sensations have no resemblance to the objects which cause
+them, it is impossible that desire, fear, horror, or any passion, or
+internal emotion, can produce real representations of those objects;
+and the child being in this respect as independant of the mother as the
+egg is of the hen, I should as soon believe that a hen, which saw the
+neck of a cock twisted, would hatch chickens with wry necks, as that,
+by the power of imagination, a woman, who happened to see a man broke
+upon the wheel, would bring forth a child with its limbs broken in the
+same manner.
+
+But even supposing this circumstance attested, I should still support
+the opinion, that the imagination of the mother had not been the cause,
+for what is the effect of horror? an internal motion, a convulsion
+in the body of the mother, which might shake, compress, and agitate
+the womb. What can result from this commotion? nothing similar to the
+cause, for if this commotion was very violent the foetus might be
+killed, wounded, or deformed in some of its parts; but how is it to
+be conceived that this commotion can produce any thing resembling the
+fancy of the mother in the foetus, unless we believe, with Harvey,
+that the matrix has the faculty of conceiving ideas, and realizing them
+on the foetus?
+
+But, it may be urged, if it was not affected by the imagination of
+the mother, why did the child come into the world with broken limbs?
+However rash it may appear to explain a matter which is extraordinary
+and uncertain, and of which we have no right to exact a solution,
+yet this question appears to me answerable in a satisfactory manner.
+Circumstances of the most rare and extraordinary kind happen as
+necessarily as those which are frequent and common. In the infinite
+combinations which matter can take, the most extraordinary arrangements
+must sometimes happen; hence we might venture to wager, that in a
+million, or a thousand millions of children, there will be one born
+with two heads, four legs, or with broken limbs; it may, therefore,
+naturally happen, without the concurrence of the mother's imagination,
+that a child should be born with broken limbs. This may have happened
+more than once, and the mother, while pregnant, might have been
+present at the breaking on the wheel, and therefore the defect of the
+child's formation has been attributed to what she had seen, and to
+her impressed imagination. But, independant of this general answer,
+we may give a more direct explanation. The foetus, as we have
+said, has nothing in common with the mother; its functions, organs,
+blood, &c. are all particular, and belong to itself; the only thing
+which it derives from its mother is the liquor, or nutritive lymph,
+which filtrates from the matrix. If this lymph is bad, or envenomed
+with the venereal virus, the child will be alike disordered; and it
+may be imagined, that all the diseases which proceed from vitiated
+humours may be communicated from the mother to the child. We know that
+the small-pox is communicative, and we have but too many examples
+of children who are, directly after their birth, the victims of the
+debauches of their parents. The venereal virus attacks the most solid
+parts of the bones, and it appears to act with more force towards
+the middle of the bone, where ossification commences; I conceive,
+therefore, that the child here spoken of has been attacked by the
+venereal disorder while in its mother's womb, and from that cause it
+came into the world with its bones broken through the middle.
+
+Rickets may also produce the same effect. There is a skeleton of a
+rickety child in the French king's cabinet, whose arms and legs have
+callosities in the middle of their bones. By the inspection of this
+skeleton, it appeared evident that the bones had been broken during the
+time it was in the womb, and that afterwards the bones re-united, and
+formed these callosities.
+
+But enough of a subject which credulity alone has rendered marvellous.
+Prejudice, especially that sort which is founded on the marvellous,
+will always triumph over reason, and we should have but little
+philosophy if we were astonished at it. We must not therefore ever
+expect to be able to persuade women, that the marks on their children
+have no connection with their unsatisfied longings. Yet might it not be
+asked them, before the birth of the child, of what particular longings
+they had been disappointed, and consequently what will be the marks
+their children will bear? I have often asked this question, and have
+only made persons angry without having ever convinced them.
+
+The time that a woman goes with child is generally about nine months;
+but it is however sometimes longer and sometimes shorter. Many children
+are born at seven or eight months, and some not till after the ninth;
+but in general the deliveries which precede the term of nine months
+are more frequent than the others. The common time of a natural
+delivery extends to twenty days, that is, from eight months fourteen
+days to nine months and four hours.
+
+Many children are born before the 260th day, and although these
+deliveries precede the general term, they are not abortions, because
+these children mostly live. It is commonly thought that children born
+at eight months cannot live, or at least that many more of them die
+than those born at seven months. This opinion appears to be a paradox;
+and by consulting experience I think we shall find it an error. The
+child brought forth at eight months is more formed, and consequently
+more vigorous, and likely to live than that which is born at the
+seventh. Nevertheless this opinion is pretty generally received, and
+founded on the authority of Aristotle.
+
+The beginning of the seventh month is the earliest term for delivery;
+if the foetus is brought forth sooner it dies, and is termed an
+abortion. There are, however, great limits for the time of human
+delivery, since they extend from the seventh to the tenth, and perhaps
+to the eleventh month.
+
+Women who have had many children assert, that girls remain longer
+in the womb than boys. If this is really the case, we must not be
+surprized at female children being born at ten months. When children
+come before nine months they are not so well proportioned as those
+who are not brought into the world till ten months, the bodies of the
+latter are sensibly larger and better formed; their hair is longer,
+the growth of the teeth, although still hid under the gums, is more
+advanced; the voice is clearer, and the tone more deep.
+
+There is much uncertainty on the occasional causes of delivery, and we
+do not perfectly know what obliges the infant to quit the womb. Some
+imagine, that the foetus having acquired a certain size, the matrix
+is too confined for its longer stay, and that the constraint felt
+by the foetus, obliges it to use every effort to quit its prison;
+others say, and it is nearly to the same purport, that the weight of
+the foetus becomes so great, that the matrix is forced to open to
+free itself from the burthen. These reasons do not appear satisfactory;
+for the matrix must always have capacity and strength to contain
+and sustain the weight of a foetus of nine months, since it often
+contains two, and it is certain that the weight and size of the twins
+of eight months are more considerable than the weight and size of a
+single child of nine. Besides, it often happens that a child born at
+nine months is smaller than the foetus of eight months, although it
+continues in the womb.
+
+Galen pretends, that the child remains in the matrix till it is able
+to receive its food by the mouth, and that it only forces its escape
+from the need of nutriment. Others have said, that the foetus always
+receives its nourishment by the mouth from the liquor of the amnios;
+but which becomes at length so contaminated, by the transpiration and
+urine of the foetus, that it becomes disgustful, and obliges the
+foetus to use every exertion to quit its confinement. These reasons
+do not appear better than the first; for it would from thence follow,
+that the weakest and smallest foetuses would remain longer in the
+womb than the strongest and largest, which never happens; besides,
+it is not food that the foetus seeks immediately after it is born,
+for it can stay some time without it; on the contrary, it seems most
+desirous to disembarrass itself from the nutriment it took when in the
+womb of its mother, and to return the meconium. Other anatomists have
+supposed that the excrement accumulated in the bowels of the foetus,
+gives it great pain, and causes it to make such efforts, that the
+matrix is at length obliged to give way, and to open a passage for its
+escape. I acknowledge I am not better satisfied with this explanation
+than the rest; because, why cannot the foetus void its excrements
+in the amnios, if it was pressed so to do? Now this never happens; it
+appears, on the contrary, that this necessity of voiding the meconium
+is not felt till after the birth, when the motion of the diaphragm,
+occasioned by that of the lungs, compresses the intestines and causes
+this evacuation; for the meconium has never been found in the amnios of
+a foetus of ten months who had not respired, whereas a foetus of
+six or seven months voids this meconium a short time after respiration.
+
+Other anatomists, and among them Fabricius de Aquapendente, have
+supposed the foetus quitted the matrix through the need of procuring
+refreshment by means of respiration. This cause appears to me still
+more remote than all the rest, because the foetus can have no idea of
+respiration without having respired.
+
+After having weighed all these explanations, I suppose the foetus's
+quitting the matrix depends on a quite different cause. The flowing of
+the menstrua is periodical, and at determined intervals; and although
+conception suppresses its appearance, it does not destroy the cause;
+for notwithstanding the blood does not appear at the accustomed times,
+yet a kind of revolution takes place, like that which is made before
+conception. Thus it is, there are many women whose menstrua are not
+suppressed in the first two or three months. I imagine, therefore,
+that when a woman has conceived, the periodical revolution is made as
+regular as before; but as the matrix is swelled, the excretory canals
+cannot give issue to the blood, at least unless it arrives there with
+such force, and in such quantities, as to open a passage in spite of
+the resistance, that is opposed to it. In this case blood will appear,
+and if it flows in a great quantity abortion will ensue, and the matrix
+take the form it had before. But if the blood only forces one part
+of these canals, the business of generation will not be destroyed,
+although the blood appears, because the greatest part of the matrix
+still remains in the state which is necessary for that purpose.
+
+When no blood appears, as is generally the case, the first periodical
+revolution is remarkable and felt by the same pains and symptoms. From
+the first suppression of the menses, therefore, a violent action on
+the matrix is made, and provided the action is augmented, it destroys
+the product of generation. It may from thence be concluded, that every
+conception which is made just before the useful return of the menses
+seldom succeeds, and that the action of that blood easily destroys the
+weak roots of a germ so tender and so delicate. The conceptions, on the
+contrary, which are made just after the periodical evacuations succeed
+the best, because the produce of the conception has more time to grow,
+strengthen, and resist the action of the blood, by the time the next
+revolution happens.
+
+The foetus having undergone this first trial, and having resisted
+it, receives more strength and growth, and is more in a condition to
+contend against the succeeding revolutions. Miscarriages may and do
+happen in all the periodical revolutions; but they are less frequent
+in the fourth and fifth months, than either at the beginning or near
+the end. We have assigned the reasons why they are more frequent at the
+beginning; it therefore only remains to explain why they are also more
+frequent towards the end.
+
+The foetus generally comes into the world during the tenth
+revolution. When it is born at the eighth or ninth it lives, and these
+deliveries are not looked upon as miscarriages, because the child,
+although not so perfectly formed, is still sufficiently so for the
+purpose of life. It has been pretended, that examples have been seen
+of children born at the seventh and even at the sixth revolution, that
+is, at five or six months, which have lived. There is, therefore, no
+difference between a birth and a miscarriage but what is relative to
+the living powers of the infant. In general the number of miscarriages
+in the first, second, and third months are very considerable for the
+reasons we have given ; and the number of deliveries of the seventh and
+eighth months are also very great, in comparison with the miscarriages
+of the fourth, fifth, and sixth months, because in this middle period
+the product of generation has received more solidity and strength, and
+having resisted the action of the four first periodical revolutions, a
+more violent force than the preceding is required to destroy it. The
+same reason subsists, with additional force, for the fifth and sixth
+months. But the foetus, which till then is weak, and can act only by
+its own feeble strength, begins to get strong, and move with vigour;
+and at the eighth revolution the foetus, uniting its efforts with
+those of the matrix, facilitates its exclusion, and it may come into
+the world in the seventh month, and be capable of living, especially
+if it happens, as is sometimes the case, to have more than ordinary
+strength for that period. But if it comes into the world only through
+the weakness of the matrix, which could not resist the action of the
+blood in this eighth revolution, the delivery would be regarded as a
+miscarriage, and the child would not live. But these cases are very
+rare, for if the foetus has resisted the seven first revolutions,
+only particular accidents can prevent it from resisting the eighth. The
+foetus, which has acquired this same degree of strength and vigour
+only a little later, will come into the world at the ninth revolution;
+and those which require nine months to obtain this same strength, will
+come at the tenth revolution, which is the most common and general
+term; but when the foetus has not acquired in nine months this degree
+of perfection, it may remain in the womb till the eleventh, and even
+till the twelfth revolution; that is, till the tenth or eleventh month,
+as we have many examples.
+
+This opinion, that it is the menstrua which is the occasional cause of
+delivery at different times, may be confirmed by many other reasons.
+The females of every animal which have no menses, bring forth at
+nearly the same terms, and there is but a very slight variation in
+the duration of their gestation. We may, therefore, suppose that this
+variation, which is so great in women, comes from the action of the
+menstrual blood, which is constantly exerted at every periodic return.
+
+We have observed, that the placenta adheres to the papillae, or the
+matrix, only by nipples; that there is no blood either in these
+nipples or in the vacuities they are niched into, and that when they
+are separated (which is easily done) a milky liquor only issues from
+them. Now, how happens it that delivery is always accompanied with a
+considerable haemorrhage, at first of pure blood, and afterwards mixed
+with a watery liquor? This blood does not proceed from the separation
+of the placenta, as the nipples are drawn out without any effusion of
+blood. Delivery, which entirely consists, of this separation, should
+not, therefore, produce any blood. Is it not then more accordant with
+reason to suppose, that it is the action of the blood which causes
+delivery, and that it is this menstrual blood which forces the vessels
+as soon as the matrix is emptied, and which begins to flow immediately
+after delivery as it did before conception?
+
+It is known, that in the first months of pregnancy that which
+contains the seed of generation is not adherent to the matrix. By
+the experiments of De Graaf it has been seen, that by blowing on the
+little ball we can make it move. The adhesion to the matrix is never
+very strong, and at first the placenta with difficulty adheres to the
+internal membrane of the viscera, and those parts are only contiguous,
+or joined by a mucilaginous matter, which has scarcely any adhesion.
+Why then does it occur, that in miscarriages of the first and second
+month this ball never escapes without a great effusion of blood? It is
+certainly not caused by the passage of the ball quitting the matrix,
+since it does not adhere to it; but it is, on the contrary, by the
+action of this blood that the ball is driven out. Must we not then
+conclude this blood to be menstrual, which by forcing the canals,
+through which it had been accustomed to pass before impregnation,
+destroys the product of conception by retaking its common road?
+
+It appears, therefore, that the periodical revolution of the menstrual
+blood has great influence on delivery, and that it is the cause why the
+times of delivery in women vary so much more than in every other female
+who is not subject to the periodical evacuation, and which always
+bring forth at the same times. It also appears that this revolution,
+occasioned by the action of the menstrual blood, is not the sole cause
+of birth, but that the action of the foetus itself contributes
+towards it, since there are instances of a child escaping from the womb
+after the death of the mother, which necessarily supposes an action
+proper and particular in itself.
+
+The space of time which cows, sheep, and other animals go with young
+is always the same, and their deliveries are not attended with an
+haemorrhage. May we not then conclude, that the blood voided by women
+after delivery is the menstrual blood, and that the human foetus
+being born at such different terms, can only be by the actions of this
+blood on the matrix during every periodical revolution? It is natural
+to imagine, that if the females of viviparous animals had menses like
+women, their deliveries would be followed with an effusion of blood,
+and happen at different terms. The foetuses of animals come into the
+world clothed with their membranes (and it seldom happens that the
+membranes are broken), and the waters flow before the delivery; whereas
+it is very rare a child is brought forth with its membranes entire.
+This seems to prove that the human foetus makes more efforts than
+other animals to quit its prison; or that the matrix of a woman does
+not so naturally incline to the passage of the child, for it is the
+foetus which tears its membranes, by the efforts it makes against the
+resistance it meets with at the orifice of the viscera.
+
+
+RECAPITULATION.
+
+All animals procure nutriment from vegetables, or other animals which
+feed upon vegetables; there is, therefore, one common matter to both,
+which serves for the nutrition and expansion bf every thing which
+lives or vegetates. This matter cannot perform them but by assimilating
+itself to each part of the animal or vegetable, and by intimately
+penetrating the texture and form of these parts, which I have called
+the _internal mould_. When this nutritive matter is more abundant than
+is necessary to nourish and expand the animal or vegetable, it is
+sent back from every part of the body, and deposited in one or more
+reservoirs, in the form of a liquor; this liquor contains all the
+molecules analogous to all parts of the body; and consequently all
+that is necessary for the reproduction of a young being, perfectly
+resembling the first. Commonly this nutritive matter does not become
+superabundant, in most kinds of animals, till they have acquired the
+greatest part of their growth; and it is for this reason that animals
+are not in a state of engendering before that time.
+
+When this nutritive and productive matter, which is universally
+spread abroad, has passed through the internal mould of an animal or
+vegetable, and has found a proper matrix, it produces an animal or
+vegetable, of the same kind; but when it does not meet with a proper
+matrix, it produces organized beings different from animals and
+vegetables, as the moving and vegetating bodies seen in the seminal
+liquor of animals, in the infusion of the germ of plants, &c.
+
+This productive matter is composed of organic particles, always active,
+the motion and action of which are fixed by the inanimate parts of
+matter in general, and particularly by oily and saline bodies, but as
+soon as they are disengaged from this foreign matter, they retake their
+action, and produce different kinds of vegetations and other animated,
+beings.
+
+By the microscope, the effects of this productive matter may be
+perceived in the seminal liquors of animals of both sexes. The seed of
+the female viviparous animals is filtered through the glandular bodies
+which grow upon their testicles, and these glandular bodies contain a
+large quantity of seminal fluid in their internal cavities. Oviparous
+females have, as well as the viviparous, a seminal liquor, which is
+still more active than the viviparous. The seed of the female is in
+general like that of the male, when, they are both in a natural state:
+they decompose after the same manner, contain similar organic bodies,
+and they alike offer the same phenomena.
+
+All animal or vegetable substances include a great quantity of this
+organic and productive matter. To perceive it, we need only separate
+the inanimate parts in which the active particles of this matter are
+engaged. And this is done by infusing animal or vegetable substances
+in water. The salts will dissolve, the oils separate, and the organic
+particles will be seen by their putting themselves in motion. They are
+in greater abundance in the seminal liquors than in any other parts,
+or rather, they are less entangled by the inanimate parts. In the
+beginning of this infusion, when the flesh is but slightly dissolved,
+the organic matter is seen under the form of moving bodies, which are
+almost as large as those of the seminal liquors: but, in proportion as
+the decomposition augments, these organnic particles diminish in size
+and increase in motion; and when the flesh is entirely decomposed,
+or corrupted, these same particles are exceedingly minute, and their
+motion exceedingly rapid. It is then that their matter may become a
+poison, like that of the tooth of a viper, wherein Mr. Mead perceived
+an infinite number of small pointed bodies, which he took for salts,
+although they are only these same organic particles in a state of
+great activity. The pus which issues from wounds abounds with little
+insects, and it may take such a degree of corruption as to become
+one of the most subtle poisons; for every time this active matter is
+exalted to a certain point, which may be known by the rapidity and
+minuteness of the moving bodies it contains, it will become a species
+of poison. It is the same with the poison of vegetables. The same
+matter which serves to feed us when in its natural state, will destroy
+us when corrupted. Spurred barley, for instance, throws the limbs of
+men and animals into a gangrene who feed on it. It is also evident by
+comparing the matter which adheres to our teeth, which is the residue
+of our food, with that from the teeth of a viper or mad dog, which is
+only the same matter too much exalted, and corrupted to the last degree.
+
+When this organic and productive matter is found collected in a great
+quantity in some part of an animal, where it is obliged to remain,
+it forms living beings which have been ever regarded as animals;
+the taenia, ascarides, all the worms found in the veins, liver, in
+wounds, in corrupted flesh, and pus, have no other origin; the eels in
+paste, vinegar, and all the pretended microscopical animals are only
+different forms which this active matter takes of itself, according to
+circumstances, and which invariably tends to organization.
+
+In all animal and vegetable substances, decomposed by infusion, this
+productive matter manifests itself immediately under the form of
+vegetation. Filaments are seen to form, which grow and extend like
+plants. Afterwards these extremities and knots swell and burst, to give
+passage to a multitude of bodies in motion, which appear to be animals;
+so that it seems as if all nature began by a motion of vegetation. It
+is seen by microscopical objects, and likewise by the expansion or
+unfolding of the animal embryo; for the foetus at first has only a
+species of vegetable motion.
+
+Sound food does not furnish any of these moving molecules for a
+considerable time. Several days infusion in water is required for fresh
+meat, grain, kernels, &c. before they offer to our sight any moving
+bodies; but the more matters are corrupted, decomposed, or exalted, the
+more suddenly these moving bodies manifest themselves; they are all
+free from other matters in seminal liquors; but a few hours infusion
+is required to see them in pus, spurred barley, honey, drugs, &c.
+
+There exists therefore, an organic matter, universally diffused in
+all animal and vegetable substances, which alike serves for their
+nutrition, their growth, and their reproduction. Nutrition is performed
+by the intimate penetration of this matter in all parts of the animal
+or vegetable body. Expansion or growth is only a kind of more extended
+nutrition, which is made and performed as long as the parts have
+sufficient ductility to swell and extend; and reproduction is made
+by the same matter when it superabounds in the body of the animal
+or vegetable; each part of the body sends back, to the appropriate
+reservoirs, the organic particles which exceed what are sufficient
+for their nourishment. These particles are absolutely analogous to
+each part from which they are sent back, because they were destined
+to nourish those parts from hence, when all the particles sent back
+from, collect together, they must form a body similar to the first,
+since each particle is like that part from which it was detached; thus
+it is that reproduction is effected in all kinds of trees, plants,
+polypuses, pucerons, &c. where one individual can produce its like; and
+it is also the first mode which Nature uses for the reproduction of
+animals which have need of the communication of different sexes; for
+the seminal liquors of both sexes contain all the necessary molecules
+for reproduction; but something more is required for its effectual
+completion, which is the mixture of these two liquors in some places
+suitable to the expansion of the foetus which must result therefrom,
+which place is the matrix of the female.
+
+There are, therefore, no pre-existing germs, no germs contained one in
+the other, _ad infinitum_; but there is an organic matter perpetually
+active, and always ready to form, assimilate, and produce beings
+similar to those which receive it. Animals and vegetables, therefore,
+can never be extinct; so long as there subsist individuals the species
+will ever be new; they are the same at present as they were three
+thousand years ago, and will perpetually exist, by the powers they are
+endowed with, unless annihilated by the will of the Almighty Creator.
+
+
+
+
+HISTORY OF MAN.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+OF THE NATURE OF MAN.
+
+
+Though so much interested in acquiring a thorough knowledge of
+ourselves, yet I do not know if man is not less acquainted with the
+human, than with any other existence. Provided by nature with organs,
+calculated solely for our preservation, we only employ them to receive
+foreign impressions. Intent on multiplying the functions of our senses,
+and on enlarging the external bounds of our being, we rarely make use
+of that internal sense which reduces us to our true dimensions, and
+abstracts us from every other part of the creation. It is, however, by
+a cultivation of this sense alone that we can form a proper judgment
+of ourselves. But how shall we give it its full activity and extent?
+How shall the soul, in which it resides, be disengaged from all the
+illusions of the mind? We have lost the habit of employing this sense;
+it has remained inactive amidst the tumult of our corporeal sensations,
+and dried up by the heat of our passions; the heart, the mind, the
+senses, have all co-operated against it.
+
+Unalterable in its substance, and invulnerable by its essence, it
+still, however, continues the same. Its splendor has been overcast,
+but its power has not been diminished: it may be less luminous, but
+its guidance is not the less certain. Let us then collect those rays,
+of which we are not yet deprived, and its obscurity will decrease; and
+though the road may not in every part be equally filled with light, we
+yet shall have a torch that will prevent us from going astray.
+
+The first and most difficult step which leads to the knowledge of
+ourselves, is a distinct conception of the two substances that
+constitute our being. To say simply, that the one is unextended,
+immaterial, and immortal, and that the other is extended, material, and
+mortal, is only to deny to the one, what we affirm the other possesses.
+What knowledge is to be acquired from this mode of negation? Such
+negative expressions can exhibit no positive ideas: but to say that we
+are certain of the existence of the former, and that of the latter is
+less evident; that the substance of the one is simple, indivisible, and
+has no form, since it only manifests itself by a single modification,
+which is thought; that the other is a less substance than a subject,
+capable of receiving different forms, which bear a relation to our
+senses, but are all as uncertain and variable as the organs themselves;
+that is to say something; it is to ascribe to each such distinct and
+positive properties as may lead us to an elemental knowledge of both,
+and to a comparison between them.
+
+From the smallest reflection on the origin of our knowledge, it is
+easy to perceive that it is by comparison alone we acquire it. What
+is absolutely incomparable, is utterly incomprehensible; of this
+God is the only example; he exceeds all comprehension, because he
+is above all comparison. But whatever is capable of being compared,
+contemplated, and considered relatively, in different lights, may
+always come within the sphere of our understanding. The more subjects
+of comparison we have for examining any object, the more methods there
+are for obtaining a knowledge of it, and with greater facility.
+
+The existence of the soul is fully demonstrated. To be and to think are
+with us identically the same. This truth is more than intuitive; it is
+independent of our senses, of our imagination, of our memory, and of
+all our other relative faculties. The existence of our bodies, and of
+external objects, is however held in uncertainty by every unprejudiced
+reasoner; for what is that extension of length, breadth, and thickness,
+which we call our body, and which seems to be so much our own, but as
+it relates to our senses? What are even the material organs of those
+senses, but so many conformities with the objects that affect them?
+And with regard to our internal sense, has it any thing similar or
+in common with these external organs? Have the sensations excited by
+light or sound any resemblance to that tenuous matter, which seems to
+diffuse light, or to that tremulous undulation, which sound produces in
+the air? The effects are certainly produced by the necessary conformity
+there is between the eyes and ears, and those matters which act upon
+them. Is not that a sufficient proof, that the nature of the soul is
+different from that of matter?
+
+It is then a certain truth, that the internal sensation is altogether
+different from its cause; as also, if external objects exist, they are
+in themselves very different from what we conceive them. As sensation
+therefore bears no resemblance to the thing by which it is excited;
+does it not follow, that the causes of our sensations, necessarily
+differ from our ideas of them? The extension which we perceive by our
+eyes, the impenetrability, of which we receive an idea by the touch in
+all those qualities, whose various combinations constitute matter, are
+of a doubtful existence; since our internal sensations of extension,
+impenetrability, &c. are neither extended nor impenetrable, and have
+not even the smallest affinity with those qualities.
+
+The mind being often affected with sensations, during sleep, very
+different from those which it has experienced by the presence of
+the same objects, does it not lead to a belief, that the presence
+of objects is not necessary to the existence of our sensations; and
+that, of consequence, our mind and body may exist independent of
+those objects? During sleep, and after death, for example, our body
+has the same existence as before; yet the mind no longer perceives
+this existence, and the body with regard to us, has ceased to be. The
+question is therefore, whether a thing which can exist, and afterwards
+be no more, and which affects us in a manner altogether different from
+what it is, or what it has been, may yet be a reality of indubitable
+existence.
+
+That something exists without us, we may believe, though not with a
+positive assurance; whereas of the real existence of every thing within
+us, we have a certainty. That of our soul, therefore, is incontestable,
+and that of our body seems doubtful; because the mind has one mode of
+perception when we are awake, and another when we are asleep; after
+death, it will perceive by a method still more different, and the
+objects of its sensations, or matter in general, may then cease to
+exist with respect to it, as well as our bodies with which we have no
+further connection.
+
+But let us admit this existence of matter; and that it even exists as
+it appears to our senses, yet by comparing the mind with any material
+object, we shall find differences so great, and qualities so opposite
+that every doubt will vanish of the latter being of a nature totally
+different, and infinitely superior.
+
+The mind has but one form, which is simple, general, and uniform.
+Thought is this form; has nothing in it of division, extension,
+impenetrability, nor any other quality of matter; of consequence,
+therefore, our mind, the subject of this form, is indivisible, and
+immaterial. Our bodies on the contrary, and all other objects have
+many forms, each of which is compounded, divisible, variable, and
+perishable; and has a relation to the different organs, through which
+we perceive them. Our bodies, and matter in general, therefore, have
+neither permanent, real, nor general properties, by which we can
+attain a certain knowledge of them. A blind man has no idea of those
+objects, which sight represents to us; a leper, whose skin has lost
+the sense of feeling, is denied all the ideas which arise from the
+touch; and a deaf man has no knowledge of sounds. Let these three
+modes of sensation be successively destroyed, yet the mind will exist,
+its external functions will subsist, and thought will still manifest
+it within the man so deprived. But divest matter of all its qualities;
+strip it of colour, of solidity, and of every other property which
+has any relation to our senses, and the consequence will be its
+annihilation. Our mind, then, is unperishable, but matter may, and will
+perish.
+
+It is the same with all the other faculties of our soul when compared
+with the most essential properties of matter. As the mind wills and
+commands, so the body obeys in every thing within its power. The
+mind forms, at pleasure, an intimate union with any object; neither
+distance, magnitude, nor figure, can obstruct this union, when the mind
+wills it, it is effected in an instant. The body can form no union;
+whatever touches it too closely injures it; it requires a long time in
+order to approach another body; it every where meets with resistance,
+and obstacles, and from the smallest shock its motion ceases. Is will
+then nothing more than a corporeal movement; and is contemplation but a
+simple contact? How could this contact take place upon a remote object
+or abstracted subjects? How could this movement be accomplished in an
+indivisible instant? Is it possible to have a conception of motion
+without having a conception of space and time? Will, therefore, if it
+be a motion, is not a material one; and if the union of the mind with
+its object be a contact, it is effected at a distance: and is not this
+contact a penetration? qualities which are absolutely opposite to those
+of matter, and which of consequence can only belong to the immaterial
+being.
+
+But I fear I have already dwelt too long on a subject which, by many,
+may be considered as foreign to our purpose; and it might be asked,
+"Ought Metaphysical Considerations on the Soul to find a place in a
+System of Natural History?" Were I conscious of abilities equal to
+the discussion of a topic so exalted, this reflection, I must own,
+would have little weight with me; and I have contracted my remarks
+only because I was afraid I should not be able to comprehend a subject
+so enlarged and so important in its full extent. Why retrench from
+the Natural History of Man the history of his noblest part? Why thus
+preposterously debase him; by considering him merely as an animal,
+while he is of a nature so different, and so superior, to that of
+the brutes, that those must be immersed in ignorance like the brutes
+themselves who ever thought of confounding them.
+
+Man, as to the material part of his existence, certainly bears a
+resemblance to other animals, and in comprehending the circle of
+natural beings there is a necessity for placing him in the class of
+animals. Nature, however, has neither classes nor species; it contains
+only individuals. These species and classes are nothing but ideas which
+we have ourselves formed and established, and though we place man in
+one of such classes we do not change his being; we do not derogate from
+his dignity; we do not alter his condition. In a word, we only place
+him at the head of those who bear a similitude to him in the material
+part of his being.
+
+In comparing man with the animal we find in both an organized body,
+senses, flesh, blood, motion, and a multitude of other resemblances.
+But these resemblances are all external, and not sufficient to justify
+a decision, that the human and the animal natures are similar. In
+order to form a proper judgment of the nature of each we ought to
+have as distinct a knowledge of the internal qualities of an animal
+as we have of our own. As the knowledge of what passes within animals
+is impossible to be attained, and as we know not of what order and
+kind its sensations may be, in relation to those of man, we can only
+judge from a comparison of the effects which result from the natural
+operations of both.
+
+Let us, then, take a view of these effects; and, while we admit of
+all the particular resemblances, limit our investigation to the most
+general distinctions. It will be allowed, that the most stupid man is
+able to manage the most acute animal; he governs it, and renders if
+subservient to his purposes; and this, not so much on account of his
+strength or skill as by the superiority of his nature, and from his
+being possessed of reason, which enables him to form a rational system
+of action and method, by which he compels the animals to obey him.
+The strongest and most acute animals do not give law to the inferior,
+nor hold them in servitude. The stronger, it is true, devour the
+weaker, but this action implies no more than an urgent necessity, or
+a rage of appetite; qualities very different from that which produces
+a series of actions, all tending to the same end. Did animals enjoy
+this faculty, should we not see some of them assume dominion over
+others, and oblige them to furnish their food, to watch over them, and
+to attend them when sick or wounded? Now, throughout the creation of
+animals, there is no vestige of such subordination, no appearance that
+one of them knows, or is sensible of, the superiority of his own nature
+over that of others. It follows, then, that they must all be considered
+as of one nature, and that the nature of man is not only highly
+superior to that of the brute, but also entirely different from it.
+
+Man, by outward signs, indicates what passes within him; he
+communicates his sentiments by speech, which is a sign common to the
+whole human species. The savage and the civilized man have the same
+powers of utterance; both speak naturally, and so as to be understood.
+No other animal is endowed with this expression of thought; nor is that
+defect owing, as some have imagined, to the want of proper organs.
+Anatomists have found the tongue of an ape to be as perfect as that
+of a man. The ape, therefore, if he had thought, would have speech,
+and if its thoughts had aught analogous to ours, this speech would
+have an analogy to ours also. Supposing its thoughts were peculiar to
+its species, it still would hold discourse with those of its kind, a
+circumstance of which we should have heard had it been endowed with the
+powers of speech. So far then is the ape from having any thought like
+ours, that it has not even any order of thoughts of its own. As they
+express nothing by combined and settled signs, they of consequence are
+void of thought, or at most have it in a very small degree.
+
+That it is from no organical defect animals are denied the gift of
+speech is plain, as several species of them may be taught to pronounce
+words, and even repeat sentences of some length. Perhaps many others
+might be found capable of articulating particular sounds[AG]; but
+to make them conceive the ideas which such sounds denote is an
+impracticable task. They seem to repeat and articulate merely as an
+echo, or an artificial machine. It is not in the mechanical powers, or
+the material organs, but in the intellectual faculties, that they are
+deficient.
+
+[AG] Leibnitz mentions a dog which had been taught to pronounce several
+German and French words.
+
+As all language supposes a chain of thought, it is on that account
+that brute animals have no speech, for even allowing something in
+them which resembles our first apprehensions, our most gross and
+mechanical sensations, they still will be found incapable of forming
+that association of ideas which can alone produce reflection; and in
+this consists the essence of thought. To this inability of connecting
+and separating ideas it is that they are destitute of thought and
+speech, as also that they neither can invent nor improve any thing.
+Were they endowed with the power of reflection, even in the most
+subordinate degree, they would be capable of making some kind of
+proficiency, and acquire more industry; the modern beaver would build
+with more art and solidity than the ancient; and the bee would daily
+be adding new improvements to its cell; for if we suppose this cell as
+perfect already as it can be, we ascribe to the insect an intelligence
+superior to our own; by which it could discern at once the last degree
+of perfection to which its work might be carried, while we ourselves
+are for ever in the dark as to this degree, and stand in need of much
+reflection, time, and practice, in order to perfect even one of our
+most trivial arts.
+
+Whence can arise the uniformity that is in all the works of animals?
+Why does each species invariably perform the same actions in the same
+manner? And why does not one individual perform them better or worse
+than another? Can there be a stronger proof that their operations are
+merely the effects of mechanism and materiality? If they possessed
+the smallest spark of that light which is inherent in mankind, their
+works would display variety at least, if not perfection, and one
+individual would, in its performance, make some little difference from
+what another had done. But this is far from being the case. One plan
+of action is common to the whole species, and whoever would attribute
+a mind or soul to animals, must of necessity allow but one to each
+species, of which each individual would be an equal partaker, and as
+thereby it would be divisible, it would consequently be material, and
+of a nature widely different from ours.
+
+Why, on the other hand, are the productions and performances of men
+so various, and so diversified? Why is a servile imitation more
+troublesome to us than an original design? It is because our souls are
+our own, and independent of any other, and because we have nothing in
+common with our species but the matter which forms our body, and in
+which our resemblance to brute animals is confined.
+
+Were internal sensations dependent on corporeal organs, should we
+not see as remarkable difference in the works of animals of the same
+species as in those of men? Would not those which were the most happily
+organized, build their nests and contrive their cells in a manner
+more solid, elegant, and commodious? And if any individual possessed
+a superior genius, would it not take an opportunity to manifest that
+superiority in its actions? But nothing of this kind has ever happened,
+and therefore the corporeal organs, however perfect or imperfect,
+have no influence on the nature of the internal sensations. Hence we
+may conclude, that animals have no sensations of this kind; that such
+sensations have no connection with matter, no dependence in their
+nature on the texture of corporeal organs, and that of consequence
+there must be a substance in man different from matter, which is the
+subject and the cause that produces and receives those sensations.
+
+But these proofs of the immateriality of the human mind may be carried
+still farther. In all the works of nature there are imperceptible
+gradations maintained. This truth, which in no other instance admits
+of exception, is here expressly contradicted. Between the faculties of
+man and those of the most perfect animal the distance is infinite; an
+evident proof that man is of a different nature from the brute species,
+and that of himself he forms a distinct class, between which and that
+of animals there is an immense chasm. If man belonged to the class
+of animals, there would be a certain number of beings in nature less
+perfect than man, and more perfect than beast, in order to complete
+the gradation from a man to the monkey. But this is not the case; the
+transition is immediate from the thinking being to the material being;
+from intellectual faculties to mechanical powers; from order and design
+to blind motion; from reflection and choice to sensual appetite.
+
+Enough has been here advanced to demonstrate the excellence of our
+nature, and of the immense distance which the bounty of the Creator has
+placed between man and the brute. The former is a rational being, the
+latter a being devoid of reason. And as there is no medium between the
+positive and the negative, between the rational and irrational being,
+it is evident that man is of a nature entirely different from that of
+the animal; that all the resemblance he bears to it is merely external;
+and that to judge of him by this resemblance, is wilfully to shut our
+eyes against that light, by which we ought to distinguish truth from
+falsehood.
+
+Having thus considered man as to his internal properties, and proved
+the immateriality of his soul; we shall now proceed to examine his
+external part, and give the history of his body. We have already traced
+him from his formation to his birth, and after taking a view of the
+different ages of his life, we shall conduct him to that period when he
+must be separated from his body, and then resign him to the common mass
+of matter to which he belongs.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+OF INFANCY.
+
+
+Nothing can give us a more striking idea of imbecility, than the
+condition in which an infant appears on its first entrance into the
+world. Incapable of making use of its organs, or senses, the infant is
+in want of every assistance. It is an image of pain and misery; it is
+more helpless than the young of any other animal; it seems as if every
+moment would finish its doubtful existence; it can neither move nor
+support itself; hardly has it strength enough to exist or announce, by
+its cries, the sufferings it experiences; as if nature chose to apprise
+it, that it was born to suffer, and that it has obtained a place among
+the human species to partake of its infirmities and sorrows.
+
+Let us not disdain to consider that state through which we have all
+passed; let us view human kind in the cradle; let us enquire by what
+degrees this delicate machine, this new-born and hardly existing body,
+acquires motion, consistency, and strength.
+
+The infant at its birth comes from one element into another. On
+emerging from its watery residence in the womb, it becomes exposed
+to the air, and instantly experiences the impressions of that active
+fluid. The air acts upon the olfactory nerves and upon the organs of
+respiration, and thereby produces a shock, a kind of sneezing which
+expands the chest, and allows the air a passage into the lungs; the
+vesicles of which it dilates, and the air remaining for some time
+becomes warm and rarified to a certain degree; after which this spring
+of the fibres thus dilated re-acts upon this light fluid, and expels
+it from the lungs. Instead of undertaking to explain the causes of
+the alternate motion of respiration, we shall confine ourselves to an
+elucidation of its effects. This function is essential to the existence
+of man and of several species of animals. It is by respiration that
+life is preserved; and when it is once begun, it never ceases till
+death. Yet there is reason to believe that the foramen ovale is not
+closed immediately after the birth; and of consequence a part of
+the blood may continue to pass through that aperture. All the blood
+cannot, therefore, at first have a communication with the lungs; and
+it is probable a new-born child might sustain a privation of air for
+a considerable time without losing its existence. Or at least the
+possibility of this, I once seemingly confirmed fey an experiment
+upon some young dogs. I put a pregnant bitch, of the large greyhound
+species, just as she was about to litter, into a tub filled with warm
+water, where after fastening her in such a manner that the lower parts
+were covered with some water, she brought forth three puppies, which
+were accordingly received into a liquid as warm as they had left.
+After washing them in this water, I removed the puppies, without giving
+them time to breathe, into a smaller tub filled with warm milk; I chose
+milk in order that they might receive nourishment if they required
+it. In this milk they were kept immersed above half an hour: and when
+taken out they were all found alive. They began to breathe, and to
+discharge some moisture by the mouth. Having allowed them to respire
+for half an hour, I again put them into warm milk, and left them a
+second half-hour; at the expiration of which two of them were taken
+out vigorous and seemingly no wise incommoded, but the third appeared
+rather in a languishing state; this I caused to be carried to the
+mother, which by this time had produced, in the natural way, six other
+puppies; and though it had been brought forth in water and had lived
+in milk one half hour before, and another after it had breathed, it
+yet received so little injury from the experiment, that it presently
+recovered and was as strong and lively as the rest of the litter. After
+allowing the other two about an hour to breathe, I put them once more
+into the warm milk, in which they remained another half hour. Whether
+they swallowed any of this liquor or not is uncertain; but on being
+taken out they appeared nearly as vigorous as ever. After being carried
+to the mother, however, one died the same day; but whether by any
+accident, or by what it had suffered while immersed in the liquid, and
+deprived of air, I could not determine. The other lived, as well as the
+first, and both throve equally with those which had not gone through
+the same trials. This experiment I never carried farther; but I saw
+enough to convince me that respiration is less necessary to a new-born,
+than to a grown animal; and that it might be possible, with proper
+precautions, to keep the foramen ovale from being closed, and thus
+produce excellent divers, and different kinds of amphibious animals,
+which might live equally in air or in water.
+
+The air, on its first admission into the lungs, generally meets with
+some obstacle, occasioned by a liquid collected in the wind-pipe. This
+obstacle is more or less great, in proportion as the liquid is more
+or less viscous. At its birth, however, the infant raises its head,
+which before reclined on its breast, and by this movement the canal of
+the wind-pipe is lengthened, the air obtains a place, and forces the
+liquid into the lungs: and by dilating the bronchia, it distributes
+over their coats the mucous substance which opposes its passage. The
+superfluity of this moisture is presently dried up by the renewal of
+the air; or, if the infant is incommoded by it, it coughs, and at
+length relieves itself by expectoration, which, as it has not yet the
+strength to spit, is seen to flow from the mouth.
+
+As we remember nothing of what happened to us at this period, it is
+impossible to determine what feelings the impression of air produces
+in a new-born infant. Its cries, however, the instant it first draws
+breath, are pretty certain signs of the pain it feels from the action
+of the air. Till the moment of its birth, the infant is accustomed to
+the mild warmth of a tranquil liquid; and we may suppose, that the
+action of a fluid, whose temperature is unequal, gives too violent a
+shock to the delicate fibres of its body. By warmth and by cold it
+seems to be equally affected; in every situation it complains, and pain
+appears to be its first, its only sensation.
+
+For some days after they are brought into the world, most animals
+have their eye-lids closed. Infants open them the moment of their
+birth, but they are fixed and dull; they want that lustre which they
+afterwards acquire; and when they move, it is rather an accidental
+roll than an act of vision. The pupil of the eye is seen to dilate, or
+contract, in proportion to the quantity of light it receives, yet is
+incapable of distinguishing objects, because the organs of vision are
+still imperfect; the tunica cornea, or horny tunicle is wrinkled, and
+perhaps the retina is also too soft to receive the images of external
+objects, and admit the sense of seeing.
+
+The same remark is equally applicable to the other senses; they have
+not acquired that consistency which is necessary to their operations;
+and even when they have, a long time must elapse before the sensations
+of the infant can be just and complete. The senses are so many
+instruments which we must learn to employ. Of these sight, which seems
+to be the noblest and the most admirable, is also the most uncertain
+and delusive; and were its effects not every moment corrected by the
+testimony of touching we should constantly be misled and draw false
+conclusions. This sense of touching is the measure and criterion of
+all the others; it alone is essential to the animal's existence; and
+is alone diffused universally over its body. Yet, even this sense,
+in an infant just born, is imperfect; by its cries, indeed, it gives
+indication of pain; but it has no expression to denote pleasure. It
+is forty days before it begins to smile; about the same time also it
+begins to weep; its former expressions of pain being unaccompanied with
+tears. On the countenance of a new born infant there appears no vestige
+of the passions, the features of the face not having acquired that
+consistence and form which are necessary for expressing the sentiments
+of the soul. All the other parts of its body are alike feeble and
+delicate; its motions are unsteady and uncertain; it is unable to
+stand upright; its legs and thighs are still bent, from the habit it
+contracted in the womb; it has not strength enough to stretch forth its
+arms or to grasp any thing with its hands; and, if abandoned, it would
+remain on its back, without being able to turn itself.
+
+From all which it appears, that the pain felt by infants soon after
+their birth, and which they express by crying, is a sensation merely
+corporeal, similar to that of other animals, who also cry the minute
+they are brought forth; as also, that the mental sensations do not
+begin to manifest themselves till forty days have elapsed; smiling
+and weeping being produced by two internal sensations, which both
+depend on the action of the mind. The former is the effect of an
+agreeable emotion, which can only arise from the sight, or resemblance
+of an object known, beloved, and desired; the latter is that of a
+disagreeable impression, compounded of sympathy, and anxious concern
+for ourselves; both imply a certain degree of knowledge, as well as an
+ability to compare, and to reflect. Smiles and tears, therefore, are
+signs peculiar to the human species, for expressing mental pleasure or
+pain; while cries, and the other signs of bodily pain and pleasure, are
+common to man, and to the greatest part of the animal creation.
+
+But let us return to the material organs and affections of the
+body. The size of an infant born at the full time, is usually about
+twenty-one inches; this is not without exception, some falling short
+of and others exceeding this measurement. In children of twenty-one
+inches, the breast, measured by the length of the sternum, is nearly
+three inches; and in those of fourteen, only two inches. At nine
+months, the foetus generally weighs from twelve to fourteen pounds.
+The head is large in proportion to the rest of the body; but this
+disproportion gradually wears off as the size of the child increases.
+Its skin is very soft, and from its transparency, by which the blood
+beneath appears, it is also of a reddish cast. It is even pretended,
+that those children whose skins are the most red when born, will
+afterwards be the fairest, and the most beautiful.
+
+The form of the body and the members of a new born infant, are by no
+means perfect: all the parts are too round, and even when the child
+is in good health, they seem swelled. At the end of three days,
+there generally appears a kind of jaundice; and at this time there
+is generally milk in the breasts of the infants, which is squeezed
+out with the fingers. The superfluous juices, and the swelling of the
+different parts diminish by degrees, as the child increases in growth.
+
+In some children just born, the brain-pan may be observed to palpitate;
+and in all, the action of the sinuses, or arteries of the brain, may be
+felt at this place. Over this aperture is formed a kind of scurf, which
+is sometimes very thick, and must be rubbed with brushes in proportion
+as it begins to dry. This matter seems to have some analogy with that
+of the horns of some animals, which also derive their origin from an
+aperture of the skull, and from the substance of the brain. We shall
+hereafter take an opportunity to shew, that the extremities of the
+nerves become solid by being exposed to the air, and that it is this
+nervous substance produces claws, nails, horns, &c.
+
+The fluid contained in the amnios leaves a viscous, whitish matter upon
+the infant, which is sometimes so adhesive, that it must be diluted
+with some mild liquid before it can be removed. In this country we
+never wash the infant but in warm water; yet there are whole nations,
+who inhabit climates much more severe than ours, that plunge their
+children into cold water the minute they are born, without their
+suffering the least injury. The Laplanders are even said to leave their
+infants in snow, till by the cold their respiration is nearly stopped,
+and then plunge them into a bath of warm water. They are treated thus
+roughly thrice every day during the first year, and afterwards as often
+every week, do they undergo an immersion in cold water. The people of
+the North are persuaded that the practice of cold bathing renders men
+more healthy and robust; and it is for this reason they enure their
+progeny to it from their birth. The truth is, we are ignorant with
+the extent of what our body is capable of suffering, acquiring, or
+losing by the power of habit. The Indians in the isthmus of America,
+for example, receive no injury from plunging into cold water when in
+a sweat; and as the most speedy remedy for intoxication, the women
+throw their husbands into the river when they are drunk; the minute
+after delivery, mothers scruple not to bathe in cold water with their
+infants, and yet dangerous as we should consider this practice, these
+women are rarely known to die in child-bearing.
+
+A few minutes after birth the infant discharges urine, and this
+generally when it feels the heat of the fire: and sometimes also the
+meconium or excrement which have been collected in the intestines
+during its residence in the matrix. This last evacuation is not always
+performed so soon, but if it does not happen in the course of the first
+day, the child is often affected with a pain in the bowels; in which
+case methods are taken to facilitate the discharge. The meconium is
+black, and when the infant is effectually eased of it, the subsequent
+stools are of a whitish cast. This change generally happens on the
+second or third day, and then the excrement becomes more foetid than
+the meconium; a proof that the bile and other bitter humours of the
+body begin to intermix with it. This fact tends to support our former
+remark, that the foetus did not receive any food by its mouth, but
+received all its nourishment by absorption.
+
+The infant is allowed time to throw off the slime and meconium, which
+are in its bowels and intestines, before it is allowed to suck. As
+these substances might sour the milk, and produce bad effects, it is
+first made to swallow a little wine and sugar, in order to fortify the
+stomach, and to procure such evacuations as may be necessary to prepare
+it for receiving and digesting its food; nor ought it to receive the
+breast till 10 or 12 hours after the birth.
+
+Hardly has the infant left the womb of its mother, and enjoyed the
+liberty of extending its limbs, when it is again put into a more cruel
+confinement. The head of the helpless infant is fixed to one position;
+its arms and legs put in strict bondage, and it is laced with bandages
+so strait as not to be able to move a single joint. Well is it when the
+compression is not so great as to obstruct the respiration, or that
+the midwife has taken the precaution to lay it upon its side, that the
+natural moisture may emit of itself from the mouth, since it is denied
+the power of turning its head in order to facilitate this emission.
+Do not then those nations act more wisely than we who cover or clothe
+their children without shackling them in swathing-bands? the Siamese,
+the Japanese, the Indians, the Negroes, the Savages of Canada, of
+Virginia, or Brazil, and almost all the inhabitants of South America,
+lay their infants naked upon a suspended bed of cotton or put them into
+their cradles lined with fur. Those practices are certainly liable to
+less inconveniences than ours. In swaddling a child, it is impossible
+but the restraint must give it uneasiness; and the efforts it makes to
+disentangle itself have a greater tendency to injure the form of the
+body, than any position it might assume was it left at full liberty.
+Swathing-bands may be compared to stays, which young girls are made to
+wear in order to preserve their shapes, but which nevertheless occasion
+more diseases and deformities than they are supposed to prevent.
+
+If the efforts which children make for liberty, when confined in the
+swaddling-clothes, are hurtful, the inaction in which they are held by
+it, is perhaps still more so. Want of exercise naturally retards the
+growth of their limbs, and diminishes the strength of their bodies;
+and of consequence such children as enjoy the liberty of moving at
+pleasure, must be the most vigorous. It was for this reason that the
+ancient Peruvians gave their infants the full freedom of their arms in
+a swathing-bag; afterwards, as their children grew, they put them up to
+the middle in a hole dug in the earth, and lined with linen; by this
+method they had their arms free, and could move their heads and bend
+their bodies, without falling or hurting themselves. So soon as they
+were able to step, they were presented with the breast, at a little
+distance, as an incentive for them to walk. The children of Negroes are
+often exposed to much greater fatigues, in order to come at the nipple,
+they cling round one of their mother's haunches with their legs, and
+support themselves without any assistance from her; seizing the breast
+they continue to suck in perfect safety, notwithstanding she is all the
+while in motion, or at work. These children begin to walk, or rather
+creep on their knees and hands, in the second month; and this exercise
+qualities them for running afterwards in this manner, almost as nimble
+as they do upon their feet.
+
+
+_END OF THE THIRD VOLUME._
+
+
+T. Gillet, Printer, Wild Court.
+
+
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's note:
+
+All paragraphs split by illustrations were rejoined.
+
+All obvious typographical errors were corrected.
+
+In the Table of Contents, Chapter VI's starting page was corrected
+to 81.
+
+On page 203, the word sospetare was changed to sospettare.
+
+Chapter XI (p. 260) was mislabeled as "IX" and was corrected.
+
+Likewise, Chapter II (page 334) was mislabeled "III" and
+was corrected.
+
+Otherwise, all text is as presented in the printed version.
+
+
+
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