<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE TEI.2 PUBLIC "-//TEI P4//DTD Main Document Type//EN"
"http://infomotions.com/sandbox/great-books/etc/dtd/tei2.dtd"
[
<!ENTITY % TEI.XML     'INCLUDE' >
<!ENTITY % TEI.prose   'INCLUDE' >
<!ENTITY % TEI.linking 'INCLUDE' >
<!ENTITY % TEI.figures 'INCLUDE' >
<!ATTLIST xptr   url CDATA #IMPLIED >
<!ATTLIST xref   url CDATA #IMPLIED >
<!ATTLIST figure url CDATA #IMPLIED >
]>
<TEI.2>
  <teiHeader>
    <fileDesc>
      <titleStmt>
        <title>On The Motion Of The Heart And Blood In Animals</title>
        <author>
          <name>Harvey</name>
        </author>
        <respStmt>
          <resp>converted into TEI-conformant markup by</resp>
          <name>Eric Lease Morgan</name>
        </respStmt>
      </titleStmt>
      <publicationStmt>
        <publisher>Infomotions, Inc.</publisher>
        <address>
          <addrLine>eric_morgan@infomotions.com</addrLine>
        </address>
        <idno>harvey-on-4652</idno>
      </publicationStmt>
      <sourceDesc>
        <bibl>
          <xptr url='http://infomotions.com/sandbox/great-books/reserve/1628harvey-blood.txt' />
        </bibl>
      </sourceDesc>
    </fileDesc>
    <revisionDesc>
      <change>
        <date>TODAY</date>
        <respStmt>
          <name>Eric Lease Morgan</name>
        </respStmt>
        <item>initial TEI framework generated</item>
      </change>
    </revisionDesc>
  </teiHeader>
  <text>
    <front>
      <titlePage>
        <docTitle>
          <titlePart>On The Motion Of The Heart And Blood In Animals</titlePart>
        </docTitle>
        <byline>by
        <docAuthor>Harvey</docAuthor></byline>
      </titlePage>
    </front>
    <body>
      <p> On The Motion Of The Heart And Blood In Animals by William Harvey (1578-1657) 
 1628

     Letter To The King And Dedication

     To The Most Illustrious And Indomitable Prince Charles King Of Great
     Britain, France, And Ireland Defender Of The Faith

     Most Illustrious Prince!

     The heart of animals is the foundation of their life, the sovereign
     of everything within them, the sun of their microcosm, that upon
     which all growth depends, from which all power proceeds. The King,
     in like manner, is the foundation of his kingdom, the sun of the
     world around him, the heart of the republic, the fountain whence all
     power, all grace doth flow. What I have here written of the motions
     of the heart I am the more emboldened to present to your Majesty,
     according to the custom of the present age, because almost all
     things human are done after human examples, and many things in a
     King are after the pattern of the heart. The knowledge of his heart,
     therefore, will not be useless to a Prince, as embracing a kind of
     Divine example of his functions, - and it has still been usual with
     men to compare small things with great. Here, at all events, best of
     Princes, placed as you are on the pinnacle of human affairs, you may
     at once contemplate the prime mover in the body of man, and the
     emblem of your own sovereign power. Accept therefore, with your
     wonted clemency, I most humbly beseech you, illustrious Prince,
     this, my new Treatise on the Heart; you, who are yourself the new
     light of this age, and indeed its very heart; a Prince abounding in
     virtue and in grace, and to whom we gladly refer all the blessings
     which England enjoys, all the pleasure we have in our lives.

     Your Majesty&apos;s most devoted servant, William Harvey.

     London, 1628.

     Dedication To His Very Dear Friend, Doctor Argent, The Excellent And
     Accomplished President Of The Royal College Of Physicians, And To
     Other Learned Physicians, His Most Esteemed Colleagues.

     I have already and repeatedly presented you, my learned friends,
     with my new views of the motion and function of the heart, in my
     anatomical lectures; but having now for more than nine years
     confirmed these views by multiplied demonstrations in your presence,
     illustrated them by arguments, and freed them from the objections of
     the most learned and skilfull anatomists, I at length yield to the
     requests, I might say entreaties, of many, and here present them for
     general consideration in this treatise.

     Were not the work indeed presented through you, my learned friends,
     I should scarce hope that it could come out scatheless and complete;
     for you have in general been the faithful witnesses of almost all
     the instances from which I have either collected the truth or
     confuted error. You have seen my dissections, and at my
     demonstrations of all that I maintain to be objects of sense, you
     have been accustomed to stand by and bear me out with your
     testimony. And as this book alone declares the blood to course and
     revolve by a new route, very different from the ancient and beaten
     pathway trodden for so many ages, and illustrated by such a host of
     learned and distinguished men, I was greatly afraid lest I might be
     charged with presumption did I lay my work before the public at
     home, or send it beyond seas for impression, unless I had first
     proposed the subject to you, had confirmed its conclusions by ocular
     demonstrations in your presence, had replied to your doubts and
     objections, and secured the assent and support of our distinguished
     President. For I was most intimately persuaded, that if I could make
     good my proposition before you and our College, illustrious by its
     numerous body of learned individuals, I had less to fear from
     others. I even ventured to hope that I should have the comfort of
     finding all that you had granted me in your sheer love of truth,
     conceded by others who were philosophers like yourselves. True
     philosophers, who are only eager for truth and knowledge, never
     regard themselves as already so thoroughly informed, but that they
     welcome further information from whomsoever and from wheresoever it
     may come; nor are they so narrow-minded as to imagine any of the
     arts or sciences transmitted to us by the ancients, in such a state
     of forwardness or completeness, that nothing is left for the
     ingenuity and industry of others. On the contrary, very many
     maintain that all we know is still infinitely less than all that
     still remains unknown; nor do philosophers pin their faith to
     others&apos; precepts in such wise that they lose their liberty, and
     cease to give credence to the conclusions of their proper senses.
     Neither do they swear such fealty to their mistress Antiquity, that
     they openly, and in sight of all, deny and desert their friend
     Truth. But even as they see that the credulous and vain are disposed
     at the first blush to accept and believe everything that is proposed
     to them, so do they observe that the dull and unintellectual are
     indisposed to see what lies before their eyes, and even deny the
     light of the noonday sun. They teach us in our course of philosophy
     to sedulously avoid the fables of the poets and the fancies of the
     vulgar, as the false conclusions of the sceptics. And then the
     studious and good and true, never suffer their minds to be warped by
     the passions of hatred and envy, which unfit men duly to weigh the
     arguments that are advanced in behalf of truth, or to appreciate the
     proposition that is even fairly demonstrated. Neither do they think
     it unworthy of them to change their opinion if truth and undoubted
     demonstration require them to do so. They do not esteem it
     discreditable to desert error, though sanctioned by the highest
     antiquity, for they know full well that to err, to be deceived, is
     human; that many things are discovered by accident and that many may
     be learned indifferently from any quarter, by an old man from a
     youth, by a person of understanding from one of inferior capacity.

     My dear colleagues, I had no purpose to swell this treatise into a
     large volume by quoting the names and writings of anatomists, or to
     make a parade of the strength of my memory, the extent of my
     reading, and the amount of my pains; because I profess both to learn
     and to teach anatomy, not from books but from dissections; not from
     the positions of philosophers but from the fabric of nature; and
     then because I do not think it right or proper to strive to take
     from the ancients any honor that is their due, nor yet to dispute
     with the moderns, and enter into controversy with those who have
     excelled in anatomy and been my teachers. I would not charge with
     wilful falsehood any one who was sincerely anxious for truth, nor
     lay it to any one&apos;s door as a crime that he had fallen into error. I
     avow myself the partisan of truth alone; and I can indeed say that I
     have used all my endeavours, bestowed all my pains on an attempt to
     produce something that should be agreeable to the good, profitable
     to the learned, and useful to letters.

     Farewell, most worthy Doctors, And think kindly of your Anatomist,

     William Harvey.

     Prefatory Remarks

     As we are about to discuss the motion, action, and use of the heart
     and arteries, it is imperative on us first to state what has been
     thought of these things by others in their writings, and what has
     been held by the vulgar and by tradition, in order that what is true
     may be confirmed, and what is false set right by dissection,
     multiplied experience, and accurate observation.

     Almost all anatomists, physicians, and philosophers up to the
     present time have supposed, with Galen, that the object of the pulse
     was the same as that of respiration, and only differed in one
     particular, this being conceived to depend on the animal, the
     respiration on the vital faculty; the two, in all other respects,
     whether with reference to purpose or to motion, comporting
     themselves alike. Whence it is affirmed, as by Hieronymus Fabricius
     of Aquapendente, in his book on &quot;Respiration,&quot; which has lately
     appeared, that as the pulsation of the heart and arteries does not
     suffice for the ventilation and refrigeration of the blood,
     therefore were the lungs fashioned to surround the heart. From this
     it appears that whatever has hitherto been said upon the systole and
     diastole, or on the motion of the heart and arteries, has been said
     with especial reference to the lungs.

     But as the structure and movements of the heart differ from those of
     the lungs, and the motions of the arteries from those of the chest,
     so it seems likely that other ends and offices will thence arise,
     and that the pulsations and uses of the heart, likewise of the
     arteries, will differ in many respects from th the workshop of the
     spirits, and that the arteries contain and transmit them; denying,
     however, in opposition to the opinion of Columbus, that the lungs
     can either make or contain spirits. They then assert, with Galen,
     against Erasistratus, that it is the blood, not spirits, which is
     contained in the arteries.

     These opinions are seen to be so incongruous and mutually
     subversive, that every one of them is justly brought under
     suspicion. That it is blood and blood alone which is contained in
     the arteries is made manifest by the experiment of Galen, by
     arteriotomy, and by wounds; for from a single divided artery, as
     Galen himself affirms in more than one place, the whole of the blood
     may be withdrawn in the course of half an hour or less. The
     experiment of Galen alluded to is this: &quot;If you include a portion of
     an artery between two ligatures, and slit it open lengthwise you
     will find nothing but blood&quot;; and thus he proves that the arteries
     contain only blood. And we too may be permitted to proceed by a like
     train of reasoning: if we find the same blood in the arteries as in
     the veins, after having tied them in the same way, as I have myself
     repeatedly ascertained, both in the dead body and in living animals,
     we may fairly conclude that the arteries contain the same blood as
     the veins, and nothing but the same blood. Some, whilst they attempt
     to lessen the difficulty, affirm that the blood is spirituous and
     arterious, and virtually concede that the office of the arteries is
     to carry blood from the heart into the whole of the body, and that
     they are therefore filled with blood; for spirituous blood is not
     the less blood on that account. And no one denies the blood as such,
     even the portion of it which flows in the veins, is imbued with
     spirits. But if that portion of it which is contained in the
     arteries be richer in spirits, it is still to be believed that these
     spirits are inseparable from the blood, like those in the veins;
     that the blood and spirits constitute one body (like whey and butter
     in milk, or heat in hot water), with which the arteries are charged,
     and for the distribution of which from the heart they are provided.
     This body is nothing else than blood. But if this blood be said to
     be drawn from the heart into the arteries by the diastole of these
     vessels, it is then assumed that the arteries by their distens
     artery beating beyond the ligature.&quot; I have never performed this
     experiment of Galen&apos;s nor do I think that it could very well be
     performed in the living body, on account of the profuse flow of
     blood that would take place from the vessel that was operated on;
     neither would the tube effectually close the wound in the vessel
     without a ligature; and I cannot doubt but that the blood would be
     found to flow out between the tube and the vessel. Still Galen
     appears by this experiment to prove both that the pulsative property
     extends from the heart by the walls of the arteries, and that the
     arteries, whilst they dilate, are filled by that pulsific force,
     because they expand like bellows, and do not dilate as if they are
     filled like skins. But the contrary is obvious in arteriotomy and in
     wounds; for the blood spurting from the arteries escapes with force,
     now farther, now not so far, alternately, or in jets; and the jet
     always takes place with the diastole of the artery, never with the
     systole. By which it clearly appears that the artery s is dilated
     with the impulse of the blood; for of itself it would not throw the
     blood to such a distance and whilst it was dilating; it ought rather
     to draw air into its cavity through the wound, were those things
     true that are commonly stated concerning the uses of the arteries.
     Do not let the thickness of the arterial tunics impose upon us, and
     lead us to conclude that the pulsative property proceeds along them
     from the heart. For in several animals the arteries do not
     apparently differ from the veins; and in extreme parts of the body
     where the arteries are minutely subdivided, as in the brain, the
     hand, etc., no one could distinguish the arteries from the veins by
     the dissimilar characters of their coats: the tunics of both are
     identical. And then, in the aneurism proceeding from a wounded or
     eroded artery, the pulsation is precisely the same as in the other
     arteries, and yet it has no proper arterial covering. To this the
     learned Riolanus testifies along with me, in his Seventh Book.

     Nor let any one imagine that the uses of the pulse and the
     respiration are the same, because, under the influences of the same
     causes, such as running, anger, the warm bath, or any other heating
     thing, as Galen says, they become more frequent and forcible
     together. For not only is experience in opposition to this idea,
     though Galen endeavours to explain it away, when we see that with
     excessive repletion the pulse beats more forcibly, whilst the
     respiration is diminished in amount; but in young persons the pulse
     is quick, whilst respiration is slow. So it is also in alarm, and
     amidst care, and under anxiety of mind; sometimes, too, in fevers,
     the pulse is rapid, but the respiration is slower than usual.

     These and other objections of the same kind may be urged against the
     opinions mentioned. Nor are the views that are entertained of the
     offices and pulse of the heart, perhaps, less bound up with great
     and most inextricable difficulties. The heart, it is vulgarly said,
     is the fountain and workshop of the vital spirits, the centre from
     which life is dispensed to the several parts of the body. Yet it is
     denied that the right ventricle makes spirits, which is rather held
     to supply nourishment to the lungs. For these reasons it is
     maintained that fishes are without any right ventricle (and indeed
     every animal wants a right ventricle which is unfurnished with
     lungs), and that the right ventricle is present solely for the sake
     of the lungs.

     1. Why, I ask, when we see that the structure of both ventricles is
     almost identical, there being the same apparatus of fibres, and
     braces, and valves, and vessels, and auricles, and both in the same
     way in our dissections are found to be filled up with blood
     similarly black in colour, and coagulated-why, I say, should their
     uses be imagined to be different, when the action, motion, and pulse
     of both are the same? If the three tricuspid valves placed at the
     entrance into the right ventricle prove obstacles to the reflux of
     the blood into the vena cava, and if the three semilunar valves
     which are situated at the commencement of the pulmonary artery be
     there, that they may prevent the return of the blood into the
     ventricle; why, when we find similar structures in connexion with
     the left ventricle, should we deny that they are there for the same
     end, of preventing here the egress, there the regurgitation, of the
     blood?

     2. And, when we have these structures, in points of size, form, and
     situation, almost in every respect the same in the left as in the
     right ventricle, why should it be said that things are arranged in
     the former for the egress and regress of spirits, and in the latter
     or right ventricle, for the blood? The same arrangement cannot be
     held fitted to favour or impede the motion of the blood and of
     spirits indifferently.

     3. And when we observe that the passages and vessels are severally
     in relation to one another in point of size, viz., the pulmonary
     artery to the pulmonary veins; why should the one be destined to a
     private purpose, that of furnishing the lungs, the other to a public
     function?

     4. And as Realdus Columbus says, is it probable that such a quantity
     of blood should be required for the nutrition of the lungs; the
     vessel that leads to them, the vena arteriosa or pulmonary artery
     being of greater capacity than both the iliac veins?

     5. And I ask, as the lungs are so close at hand, and in continual
     motion, and the vessel that supplies them is of such dimensions,
     what is the use or meaning of this pulse of the right ventricle? and
     why was nature reduced to the necessity of adding another ventricle
     for the sole purpose of nourishing the lungs?

     When it is said that the left ventricle draws materials for the
     formation of spirits, air and blood, from the lungs and right
     sinuses of the heart, and in like manner sends spirituous blood into
     the aorta, drawing fuliginous vapours from there, and sending them
     by the pulmonary vein into the lungs, whence spirits are at the same
     time obtained for transmission into the aorta, I ask how, and by
     what means is the separation effected? And how comes it that spirits
     and fuliginous vapours can pass hither and thither without admixture
     or confusion? If the mitral cuspidate valves do not prevent the
     egress of fuliginous vapours to the lungs, how should they oppose
     the escape of air? And how should the semilunars hinder the regress
     of spirits from the aorta upon each supervening diastole of the
     heart? Above all, how can they say that the spirituous blood is sent
     from the pulmonary veins by the left ventricle into the lungs
     without any obstacle to its passage from the mitral valves, when
     they have previously asserted that the air entered by the same
     vessel from the lungs into the left ventricle, and have brought
     forward these same mitral valves as obstacles to its retrogression?
     Good God! how should the mitral valves prevent the regurgitation of
     air and not of blood?

     Moreover, when they appoint the pulmonary artery, a vessel of great
     size, with the coverings of an artery, to none but a kind of private
     and single purpose, that, namely, of nourishing the lungs, why
     should the pulmonary vein, which is scarcely so large, which has the
     coats of a vein, and is soft and lax, be presumed to be made for
     many - three or four different - uses? For they will have it that
     air passes through this vessel from the lungs into the left
     ventricle; that fuliginous vapours escape by it from the heart into
     the lungs; and that a portion of the spirituous blood is distributed
     to the lungs for their refreshment.

     If they will have it that fumes and air-fumes flowing from, air
     proceeding towards the heart - are transmitted by the same conduit,
     I reply, that nature is not wont to construct but one vessel, to
     contrive but one way for such contrary motions and purposes, nor is
     anything of the kind seen elsewhere.

     If fumes or fuliginous vapours and air permeate this vessel, as they
     do the pulmonary bronchia, wherefore do we find neither air nor
     fuliginous vapours when we divide the pulmonary vein? Why do we
     always find this vessel full of sluggish blood, never of air, whilst
     in the lungs we find abundance of air remaining?

     If any one will perform Galen&apos;s experiment of dividing the trachea
     of a living dog, forcibly distending the lungs with a pair of
     bellows, and then tying the trachea securely, he will find, when he
     has laid open the thorax, abundance of air in the lungs, even to
     their extreme investing tunic, but none in either the pulmonary
     veins or the left ventricle of the heart. But did the heart either
     attract air from the lungs, or did the lungs transmit any air to the
     heart, in the living dog, much more ought this to be the case in the
     experiment just referred to. Who, indeed, doubts that, did he
     inflate the lungs of a subject in the dissecting-room, he would
     instantly see the air making its way by this route, were there
     actually any such passage for it? But this office of the pulmonary
     veins, namely, the transference of air from the lungs to the heart,
     is held of such importance, that Hieronymus Fabricius of
     Aquapendente, contends that the lungs were made for the sake of this
     vessel, and that it constitutes the principal element in their
     structure.

     But I should like to be informed why, if the pulmonary vein were
     destined for the conveyance of air, it has the structure of a
     blood-vessel here. Nature had rather need of annular tubes, such as
     those of the bronchi in order that they might always remain open,
     and not be liable to collapse; and that they might continue entirely
     free from blood, lest the liquid should interfere with the passage
     of the air, as it so obviously does when the lungs labour from being
     either greatly oppressed or loaded in a less degree with phlegm, as
     they are when the breathing is performed with a sibilous or rattling
     noise.

     Still less is that opinion to be tolerated which, as a two-fold
     material, one aerial, one sanguineous, is required for the
     composition of vital spirits, supposes the blood to ooze through the
     septum of the heart from the right to the left ventricle by certain
     hidden porosities, and the air to be attracted from the lungs
     through the great vessel, the pulmonary vein; and which,
     consequently, will have it, that there are numerous porosities in
     the septum of the heart adapted for the transmission of the blood.
     But by Hercules! no such pores can be demonstrated, nor in fact do
     any such exist. For the septum of the heart is of a denser and more
     compact structure than any portion of the body, except the bones and
     sinews. But even supposing that there were foramina or pores in this
     situation, how could one of the ventricles extract anything from the
     other - the left, e.g., obtain blood from the right, when we see
     that both ventricles contract and dilate simultaneously? Why should
     we not rather believe that the right took spirits from the left,
     than that the left obtained blood from the right ventricle through
     these foramina? But it is certainly mysterious and incongruous that
     blood should be supposed to be most commodiously drawn through a set
     of obscure or invisible ducts, and air through perfectly open
     passages, at one and the same moment. And why, I ask, is recourse
     had to secret and invisible porosities, to uncertain and obscure
     channels, to explain the passage of the blood into the left
     ventricle, when there is so open a way through the pulmonary veins?
     I own it has always appeared extraordinary to me that they should
     have chosen to make, or rather to imagine, a way through the thick,
     hard, dense, and most compact septum of the heart, rather than take
     that by the open pulmonary vein, or even through the lax, soft and
     spongy substance of the lungs at large. Besides, if the blood could
     permeate the substance of the septum, or could be imbibed from the
     ventricles, what use were there for the coronary artery and vein,
     branches of which proceed to the septum itself, to supply it with
     nourishment? And what is especially worthy of notice is this: if in
     the foetus, where everything is more lax and soft, nature saw
     herself reduced to the necessity of bringing the blood from the
     right to the left side of the heart by the foramen ovale, from the
     vena cava through the pulmonary vein, how should it be likely that
     in the adult she should past it so commodiously, and without an
     effort through the septum of the ventricles which has now become
     denser by age?

     Andreas Laurentius,^1 resting on the authority of Galen^2 and the
     experience of Hollerius, asserts and proves that the serum and pus
     in empyema, absorbed from the cavities of the chest into the
     pulmonary vein may be expelled and got rid of with the urine and
     faeces through the left ventricle of the heart and arteries. He
     quotes the case of a certain person affected with melancholia, and
     who suffered from repeated fainting fits, who was relieved from the
     paroxysms on passing a quantity of turbid, fetid and acrid urine.
     But he died at last, worn out by disease; and when the body came to
     be opened after death, no fluid like that he had micturated was
     discovered either in the bladder or the kidneys; but in the left
     ventricle of the heart and cavity of thorax plenty of it was met
     with. And then Laurentius boasts that he had predicted the cause of
     the symptoms. For my own part, however, I cannot but wonder, since
     he had divined and predicted that heterogeneous matter could be
     discharged by the course he indicates, why he could not or would not
     perceive, asd inform us that, in the natural state of things, the
     blood might be commodiously transferred from the lungs to the left
     ventricle of the heart by the very same route.

     [Footnote 1: Lib. ix, cap. xi, quest. 12.]

     [Footnote 2: De Locis Affectis. lib. vi, cap. 7.]

     Since, therefore, from the foregoing considerations and many others
     to the same effect, it is plain that what has heretofore been said
     concerning the motion and function of the heart and arteries must
     appear obscure, inconsistent, or even impossible to him who
     carefully considers the entire subject, it would be proper to look
     more narrowly into the matter to contemplate the motion of the heart
     and arteries, not only in man, but in all animals that have hearts;
     and also, by frequent appeals to vivisection, and much ocular
     inspection, to investigate and discern the truth.

     Chapter I: The Author&apos;s Motives For Writing

     When I first gave my mind to vivisections, as a means of discovering
     the motions and uses of the heart, and sought to discover these from
     actual inspection, and not from the writings of others, I found the
     task so truly arduous, so full of difficulties, that I was almost
     tempted to think, with Fracastorius, that the motion of the heart
     was only to be comprehended by God. For I could neither rightly
     perceive at first when the systole and when the diastole took place,
     nor when and where dilatation and contraction occurred, by reason of
     the rapidity of the motion, which in many animals is accomplished in
     the twinkling of an eye, coming and going like a flash of lightning;
     so that the systole presented itself to me now from this point, now
     from that; the diastole the same; and then everything was reversed,
     the motions occurring, as it seemed, variously and confusedly
     together. My mind was therefore greatly unsettled nor did I know
     what I should myself conclude, nor what believe from others. I was
     not surprised that Andreas Laurentius should have written that the
     motion of the heart was as perplexing as the flux and reflux of
     Euripus had appeared to Aristotle.

     At length, by using greater and daily diligence and investigation,
     making frequent inspection of many and various animals, and
     collating numerous observations, I thought that I had attained to
     the truth, that I should extricate myself and escape from this
     labyrinth, and that I had discovered what I so much desired, both
     the motion and the use of the heart and arteries. From that time I
     have not hesitated to expose my views upon these subjects, not only
     in private to my friends, but also in public, in my anatomical
     lectures, after the manner of the Academy of old.

     These views as usual, pleased some more, others less; some chid and
     calumniated me, and laid it to me as a crime that I had dared to
     depart from the precepts and opinions of all anatomists; others
     desired further explanations of the novelties, which they said were
     both worthy of consideration, and might perchance be found of signal
     use. At length, yielding to the requests of my friends, that all
     might be made participators in my labors, and partly moved by the
     envy of others, who, receiving my views with uncandid minds and
     understanding them indifferently, have essayed to traduce me
     publicly, I have moved to commit these things to the press, in order
     that all may be enabled to form an opinion both of me and my
     labours. This step I take all the more willingly, seeing that
     Hieronymus Fabricius of Aquapendente, although he has accurately and
     learnedly delineated almost every one of the several parts of
     animals in a special work, has left the heart alone untouched.
     Finally, if any use or benefit to this department of the republic of
     letters should accrue from my labours, it will, perhaps, be allowed
     that I have not lived idly, and as the old man in the comedy says:

     For never yet hath any one attained To such perfection, but that
     time, and place, And use, have brought addition to his knowledge; Or
     made correction, or admonished him, That he was ignorant of much
     which he Had thought he knew; or led him to reject What he had once
     esteemed of highest price.

     So will it, perchance, be found with reference to the heart at this
     time; or others, at least, starting hence, with the way pointed out
     to them, advancing under the guidance of a happier genius, may make
     occasion to proceed more fortunately, and to inquire more
     accurately.

     Chapter II: On The Motions Of The Heart

     (As Seen In The Dissection Of Living Animals)

     In the first place, then, when the chest of a living animal is laid
     open and the capsule that immediately surrounds the heart is slit up
     or removed, the organ is seen now to move, now to be at rest; there
     is a time when it moves, and a time when it is motionless.

     These things are more obvious in the colder animals, such as toads,
     frogs, serpents, small fishes, crabs, shrimps, snails, and
     shellfish. They also become more distinct in warm-blooded animals,
     such as the dog and hog, if they be attentively noted when the heart
     begins to flag, to move more slowly, and, as it were, to die: the
     movements then become slower and rarer, the pauses longer, by which
     it is made much more easy to perceive and unravel what the motions
     really are, and how they are performed. In the pause, as in death,
     the heart is soft, flaccid, exhausted, lying, as it were, at rest.

     In the motion, and interval in which this is accomplished, three
     principal circumstances are to be noted:

     1. That the heart is erected, and rises upwards to a point, so that
     at this time it strikes against the breast and the pulse is felt
     externally.

     2. That it is everywhere contracted, but more especially towards the
     sides so that it looks narrower, relatively longer, more drawn
     together. The heart of an eel taken out of the body of the animal
     and placed upon the table or the hand, shows these particulars; but
     the same things are manifest in the hearts of all small fishes and
     of those colder animals where the organ is more conical or
     elongated.

     3. The heart being grasped in the hand, is felt to become harder
     during its action. Now this hardness proceeds from tension,
     precisely as when the forearm is grasped, its tendons are perceived
     to become tense and resilient when the fingers are moved.

     4. It may further be observed in fishes, and the colder blooded
     animals, such as frogs, serpents, etc., that the heart, when it
     moves, becomes of a paler color, when quiescent of a deeper
     blood-red color.

     From these particulars it appears evident to me that the motion of
     the heart consists in a certain universal tension-both contraction
     in the line of its fibres, and constriction in every sense. It
     becomes erect, hard, and of diminished size during its action; the
     motion is plainly of the same nature as that of the muscles when
     they contract in the line of their sinews and fibres; for the
     muscles, when in action, acquire vigor and tenseness, and from soft
     become hard, prominent, and thickened: and in the same manner the
     heart.

     We are therefore authorized to conclude that the heart, at the
     moment of its action, is at once constricted on all sides, rendered
     thicker in its parietes and smaller in its ventricles, and so made
     apt to project or expel its charge of blood. This, indeed, is made
     sufficiently manifest by the preceding fourth observation in which
     we have seen that the heart, by squeezing out the blood that it
     contains, becomes paler, and then when it sinks into repose and the
     ventricle is filled anew with blood, that the deeper crimson colour
     returns. But no one need remain in doubt of the fact, for if the
     ventricle be pierced the blood will be seen to be forcibly projected
     outwards upon each motion or pulsation when the heart is tense.

     These things, therefore, happen together or at the same instant: the
     tension of the heart, the pulse of its apex, which is felt
     externally by its striking against the chest, the thickening of its
     parietes, and the forcible expulsion of the blood it contains by the
     constriction of its ventricles.

     Hence the very opposite of the opinions commonly received appears to
     be true; inasmuch as it is generally believed that when the heart
     strikes the breast and the pulse is felt without, the heart is
     dilated in its ventricles and is filled with blood; but the contrary
     of this is the fact, and the heart, when it contracts (and the
     impulse of the apex is conveyed through the chest wall), is emptied.
     Whence the motion which is generally regarded as the diastole of the
     heart, is in truth its systole. And in like manner the intrinsic
     motion of the heart is not the diastole but the systole; neither is
     it in the diastole that the heart grows firm and tense, but in the
     systole, for then only, when tense, is it moved and made vigorous.

     Neither is it by any means to be allowed that the heart only moves
     in the lines of its straight fibres, although the great Vesalius
     giving this notion countenance, quotes a bundle of osiers bound in a
     pyramidal heap in illustration; meaning, that as the apex is
     approached to the base, so are the sides made to bulge out in the
     fashion of arches, the cavities to dilate, the ventricles to acquire
     the form of a cupping-glass and so to suck in the blood. But the
     true effect of every one of its fibres is to constringe the heart at
     the same time they render it tense; and this rather with the effect
     of thickening and amplifying the walls and substance of the organ
     than enlarging its ventricles. And, again, as the fibres run from
     the apex to the base, and draw the apex towards the base, they do
     not tend to make the walls of the heart bulge out in circles, but
     rather the contrary; inasmuch as every fibre that is circularly
     disposed, tends to become straight when it contracts; and is
     distended laterally and thickened, as in the case of muscular fibres
     in general, when they contract, that is, when they are shortened
     longitudinally, as we see them in the bellies of the muscles of the
     body at large. To all this let it be added, that not only are the
     ventricles contracted in virtue of the direction and condensation of
     their walls, but farther, that those fibres, or bands, styled nerves
     by Aristotle, which are so conspicuous in the ventricles of the
     larger animals, and contain all the straight fibres (the parietes of
     the heart containing only circular ones), when they contract
     simultaneously by an admirable adjustment all the internal surfaces
     are drawn together as if with cords, and so is the charge of blood
     expelled with force.

     Neither is it true, as vulgarly believed, that the heart by any
     dilatation or motion of its own, has the power of drawing the blood
     into the ventricles; for when it acts and becomes tense, the blood
     is expelled; when it relaxes and sinks together it receives the
     blood in the manner and wise which will by-and-by be explained.

     Chapter III: Of the Motions Of The Arteries

     (As Seen In The Dissection Of Living Animals)

     In connexion with the motions of the heart these things are further
     to be observed having reference to the motions and pulses of the
     arteries.

     1. At the moment the heart contracts, and when the breast is struck,
     when in short the organ is in its state of systole, the arteries are
     dilated, yield a pulse, and are in the state of diastole. In like
     manner, when the right ventricle contracts and propels its charge of
     blood, the pulmonary artery is distended at the same time with the
     other arteries of the body.

     2. When the left ventricle ceases to act, to contract, to pulsate,
     the pulse in the arteries also ceases; further, when this ventricle
     contracts languidly, the pulse in the arteries is scarcely
     perceptible. In like manner, the pulse in the right ventricle
     failing, the pulse in the pulmonary artery ceases also.

     3. Further, when an artery is divided or punctured, the blood is
     seen to be forcibly propelled from the wound the moment the left
     ventricle contracts; and, again, when the pulmonary artery is
     wounded, the blood will be seen spouting forth with violence at the
     instant when the right ventricle contracts.

     So also in fishes, if the vessel which leads from the heart to the
     gills be divided, at the moment when the heart becomes tense and
     contracted, at the same moment does the blood flow with force from
     the divided vessel.

     In the same way, when we see the blood in arteriotomy projected now
     to a greater, now to a less distance, and that the greater jet
     corresponds to the diastole of the artery and to the time when the
     heart contracts and strikes the ribs, and is in its state of
     systole, we understand that the blood is expelled by the same
     movement.

     From these facts it is manifest, in opposition to commonly received
     opinions, that the diastole of the arteries corresponds with the
     time of the heart&apos;s systole; and that the arteries are filled and
     distended by the blood forced into them by the contraction of the
     ventricles; the arteries, therefore, are distended, because they are
     filled like sacs or bladders, and are not filled because they expand
     like bellows. It is in virtue of one and the same cause, therefore,
     that all the arteries of the body pulsate, viz., the contraction of
     the left ventricle; in the same way as the pulmonary artery pulsates
     by the contraction of the right ventricle.

     Finally, that the pulses of the arteries are due to the impulses of
     the blood from the left ventricle, may be illustrated by blowing
     into a glove, when the whole of the fingers will be found to become
     distended at one and the same time, and in their tension to bear
     some resemblance to the pulse. For in the ratio of the tension is
     the pulse of the heart, fuller, stronger, and more frequent as that
     acts more vigorously, still preserving the rhythm and volume, and
     order of the heart&apos;s contractions. Nor is it to be expected that
     because of the motion of the blood, the time at which the
     contraction of the heart takes place, and that at which the pulse in
     an artery (especially a distant one) is felt, shall be otherwise
     than simultaneous: it is here the same as in blowing up a glove or
     bladder; for in a plenum (as in a drum, a long piece of timber,
     etc.) the stroke and the motion occur at both extremities at the
     same time. Aristotle,^1 too, has said, &quot;the blood of all animals
     palpitates within their veins (meaning the arteries), and by the
     pulse is sent everywhere simultaneously.&quot; And further,^2 &quot;thus do
     all the veins pulsate together and by successive strokes, because
     they all depend upon the heart; and, as it is always in motion, so
     are they likewise always moving together, but by successive
     movements.&quot; It is well to observe with Galen, in this place, that
     the old philosophers called the arteries veins.

     [Footnote 1: De Anim., iii, cap. 9.]

     [Footnote 2: De Respir., cap. 20.]

     I happened upon one occasion to have a particular case under my
     care, which plainly satisfied me of the truth: A certain person was
     affected with a large pulsating tumour on the right side of the
     neck, called an aneurism, just at that part where the artery
     descends into the axilla, produced by an erosion of the artery
     itself, and daily increasing in size; this tumour was visibly
     distended as it received the charge of blood brought to it by the
     artery, with each stroke of the heart; the connexion of parts was
     obvious when the body of the patient came to be opened after his
     death. The pulse in the corresponding arm was small, in consequence
     of the greater portion of the blood being diverted into the tumour
     and so intercepted.

     Whence it appears that whenever the motion of the blood through the
     arteries is impeded, whether it be by compression or infarction, or
     interception, there do the remote divisions of the arteries beat
     less forcibly, seeing that the pulse of the arteries is nothing more
     than the impulse or shock of the blood in these vessels.

     Chapter IV: Of The Motion Of The Heart And Its Auricles

     (As Seen In The Bodies Of Living Animals)

     Besides the motions already spoken of, we have still to consider
     those that appertain to the auricles.

     Caspar Bauhin and John Riolan,^1 most learned men and skillful
     anatomists, inform us that from their observations, that if we
     carefully watch the movements of the heart in the vivisection of an
     animal, we shall perceive four motions distinct in time and in
     place, two of which are proper to the auricles, two to the
     ventricles. With all deference to such authority I say that there
     are four motions distinct in point of place, but not of time; for
     the two auricles move together, and so also do the two ventricles,
     in such wise that though the places be four, the times are only two.
     And this occurs in the following manner:

     [Footnote 1: Bauhin, lib. ii, cap. 21. Riolan, lib. viii, cap. 1.]

     There are, as it were, two motions going on together: one of the
     auricles, another of the ventricles; these by no means taking place
     simultaneously, but the motion of the auricles preceding, that of
     the heart following; the motion appearing to begin from the auricles
     and to extend to the ventricles. When all things are becoming
     languid, and the heart is dying, as also in fishes and the colder
     blooded animals there is a short pause between these two motions, so
     that the heart aroused, as it were, appears to respond to the
     motion, now more quickly, now more tardily; and at length, when near
     to death, it ceases to respond by its proper motion, but seems, as
     it were, to nod the head, and is so slightly moved that it appears
     rather to give signs of motion to the pulsating auricles than
     actually to move. The heart, therefore, ceases to pulsate sooner
     than the auricles, so that the auricles have been said to outlive
     it, the left ventricle ceasing to pulsate first of all; then its
     auricle, next the right ventricle; and, finally, all the other parts
     being at rest and dead, as Galen long since observed, the right
     auricle still continues to beat; life, therefore, appears to linger
     longest in the right auricle. Whilst the heart is gradually dying,
     it is sometimes seen to reply, after two or three contractions of
     the auricles, roused as it were to action, and making a single
     pulsation, slowly, unwillingly, and with an effort.

     But this especially is to be noted, that after the heart has ceased
     to beat, the auricles however still contracting, a finger placed
     upon the ventricles perceives the several pulsations of the
     auricles, precisely in the same way and for the same reason, as we
     have said, that the pulses of the ventricles are felt in the
     arteries, to wit, the distension produced by the jet of blood. And
     if at this time, the auricles alone pulsating, the point of the
     heart be cut off with a pair of scissors, you will perceive the
     blood flowing out upon each contraction of the auricles. Whence it
     is manifest that the blood enters the ventricles, not by any
     attraction or dilatation of the heart, but by being thrown into them
     by the pulses of the auricles.

     And here I would observe, that whenever I speak of pulsations as
     occurring in the auricles or ventricles, I mean contractions: first
     the auricles contract, and then and subsequently the heart itself
     contracts. When the auricles contract they are seen to become
     whiter, especially where they contain but little blood; but they are
     filled as magazines or reservoirs of the blood, which is tending
     spontaneously and, by its motion in the veins, under pressure
     towards the centre; the whiteness indicated is most conspicuous
     towards the extremities or edges of the auricles at the time of
     their contractions.

     In fishes and frogs, and other animals which have hearts with but a
     single ventricle, and for an auricle have a kind of bladder much
     distended with blood, at the base of the organ, you may very plainly
     perceive this bladder contracting first, and the contraction of the
     heart or ventricle following afterwards.

     But I think it right to describe what I have observed of an opposite
     character: the heart of an eel, of several fishes, and even of some
     (of the higher) animals taken out of the body, pulsates without
     auricles; nay, if it be cut in pieces the several parts may still be
     seen contracting and relaxing; so that in these creatures the body
     of the heart may be seen pulsating and palpitating, after the
     cessation of all motion in the auricle. But is not this perchance
     peculiar to animals more tenacious of life, whose radical moisture
     is more glutinous, or fat and sluggish, and less readily soluble?
     The same faculty indeed appears in the flesh of eels, which even
     when skinned and embowelled, and cut into pieces, are still seen to
     move.

     Experimenting with a pigeon upon one occasion, after the heart had
     wholly ceased to pulsate, and the auricles too had become
     motionless, I kept my finger wetted with saliva and warm for a short
     time upon the heart, and observed that under the influence of this
     fomentation it recovered new strength and life, so that both
     ventricles and auricles pulsated, contracting and relaxing
     alternately, recalled as it were from death to life.

     Besides this, however, I have occasionally observed, after the heart
     and even its right auricle had ceased pulsating, - when it was in
     articulo mortis in short, - that an obscure motion, an undulation or
     palpitation, remained in the blood itself, which was contained in
     the right auricle, this being apparent so long as it was imbued with
     heat and spirit. And, indeed, a circumstance of the same kind is
     extremely manifest in the course of the generation of animals, as
     may be seen in the course of the first seven days of the incubation
     of the chick: A drop of blood makes its appearance which palpitates,
     as Aristotle had already observed; from this, when the growth is
     further advanced and the chick is fashioned, the auricles of the
     heart are formed, which pulsating henceforth give constant signs of
     life. When at length, and after the lapse of a few days, the outline
     of the body begins to be distinguished, then is the ventricular part
     of the heart also produced, but it continues for a time white and
     apparently bloodless, like the rest of the animal; neither does it
     pulsate or give signs of motion. I have seen a similar condition of
     the heart in the human foetus about the beginning of the third
     month, the heart then being whitish and bloodless, although its
     auricles contained a considerable quantity of purple blood. In the
     same way in the egg, when the chick was formed and had increased in
     size, the heart too increased and acquired ventrieles, which then
     began to receive and to transmit blood.

     And this leads me to remark that he who inquires very particularly
     into this matter will not conclude that the heart, as a whole, is
     the primum vivens, ultimum moriens, - the first part to live, the
     last to die, - but rather its auricles, or the part which
     corresponds to the auricles in serpents, fishes, etc., which both
     lives before the heart and dies after it.

     Nay, has not the blood itself or spirit an obscure palpitation
     inherent in it, which it has even appeared to me to retain after
     death? and it seems very questionable whether or not we are to say
     that life begins with the palpitation or beating of the heart. The
     seminal fluid of all animals - the prolific spirit, as Aristotle
     observed, leaves their body with a bound and like a living thing;
     and nature in death, as Aristotle^2 further remarks, retracing her
     steps, reverts to where she had set out, and returns at the end of
     her course to the goal whence she had started. As animal generation
     proceeds from that which is not animal, entity from non-entity, so,
     by a retrograde course, entity, by corruption, is resolved into
     non-entity, whence that in animals, which was last created, fails
     first and that which was first, fails last.

     [Footnote 2: De Motu Animal., cap. 8.]

     I have also observed that almost all animals have truly a heart, not
     the larger creatures only, and those that have red blood, but the
     smaller, and pale-blooded ones also, such as slugs, snails,
     scallops, shrimps, crabs, crayfish, and many others; nay, even in
     wasps, hornets, and flies, I have, with the aid of a magnifying
     glass, and at the upper part of what is called the tail, both seen
     the heart pulsating myself, and shown it to many others.

     But in the pale-blooded tribes the heart pulsates sluggishly and
     deliberately, contracting slowly as in animals that are moribund, a
     fact that may readily be seen in the snail, whose heart will be
     found at the bottom of that orifice in the right side of the body
     which is seen to be opened and shut in the course of respiration,
     and whence saliva is discharged, the incision being made in the
     upper aspect of the body, near the part which corresponds to the
     liver.

     This, however, is to be observed: that in winter and the colder
     season, exsanguine animals, such as the snail, show no pulsation;
     they seem rather to live after the manner of vegetables, or of those
     other productions which are therefore designated plant-animals.

     It is also to be noted that all animals which have a heart have also
     auricles, or something analogous to auricles; and further, that
     whenever the heart has a double ventricle, there are always two
     auricles present, but not otherwise. If you turn to the production
     of the chick in ovo, however, you will find at first no more a
     vesicle or auricle, or pulsating drop of blood; it is only by and
     by, when the development has made some progress, that the heart is
     fashioned; even so in certain animals not destined to attain to the
     highest perfection in their organization, such as bees, wasps,
     snails, shrimps, crayfish, etc., we only find a certain pulsating
     vesicle, like a sort of red or white palpitating point, as the
     beginning or principle of their life.

     We have a small shrimp in these countries, which is taken in the
     Thames and in the sea, the whole of whose body is transparent; this
     creature, placed in a little water, has frequently afforded myself
     and particular friends an opportunity of observing the motions of
     the heart with the greatest distinctness, the external parts of the
     body presenting no obstacle to our view, but the heart being
     perceived as though it had been seen through a window.

     I have also observed the first rudiments of the chick in the course
     of the fourth or fifth day of the incubation, in the guise of a
     little cloud, the shell having been removed and the egg immersed in
     clear tepid water. In the midst of the cloudlet in question there
     was a bloody point so small that it disappeared during the
     contraction and escaped the sight, but in the relaxation it
     reappeared again, red and like the point of a pin; so that betwixt
     the visible and invisible, betwixt being and not being, as it were,
     it gave by its pulses a kind of representation of the commencement
     of life.

     Chapter V: Of The Motion, Action And Office Of The Heart

     From these and other observations of a similar nature, I am
     persuaded it will be found that the motion of the heart is as
     follows:

     First of all, the auricle contracts, and in the course of its
     contraction forces the blood (which it contains in ample quantity as
     the head of the veins, the store-house and cistern of the blood)
     into the ventricle, which, being filled, the heart raises itself
     straightway, makes all its fibres tense, contracts the ventricles,
     and performs a beat, by which beat it immediately sends the blood
     supplied to it by the auricle into the arteries. The right ventricle
     sends its charge into the lungs by the vessel which is called vena
     arteriosa, but which in structure and function, and all other
     respects, is an artery. The left ventricle sends its charge into the
     aorta, and through this by the arteries to the body at large.

     These two motions, one of the ventricles, the other of the auricles,
     take place consecutively, but in such a manner that there is a kind
     of harmony or rhythm preserved between them, the two concurring in
     such wise that but one motion is apparent, especially in the warmer
     blooded animals, in which the movements in question are rapid. Nor
     is this for any other reason than it is in a piece of machinery, in
     which, though one wheel gives motion to another, yet all the wheels
     seem to move simultaneously; or in that mechanical contrivance which
     is adapted to firearms, where, the trigger being touched, down comes
     the flint, strikes against the steel, elicits a spark, which falling
     among the powder, ignites it, when the flame extends, enters the
     barrel, causes the explosion, propels the ball, and the mark is
     attained - all of which incidents, by reason of the celerity with
     which they happen, seem to take place in the twinkling of an eye. So
     also in deglutition: by the elevation of the root of the tongue, and
     the compression of the mouth, the food or drink is pushed into the
     fauces, when the larynx is closed by its muscles and by the
     epiglottis. The pharynx is then raised and opened by its muscles in
     the same way as a sac that is to be filled is lifted up and its
     mouth dilated. Upon the mouthful being received, it is forced
     downwards by the transverse muscles, and then carried farther by the
     longitudinal ones. Yet all these motions, though executed by
     different and distinct organs, are performed harmoniously, and in
     such order that they seem to constitute but a single motion and act,
     which we call deglutition.

     Even so does it come to pass with the motions and action of the
     heart, which constitute a kind of deglutition, a transfusion of the
     blood from the veins to the arteries. And if anyone, bearing these
     things in mind, will carefully watch the motions of the heart in the
     body of a living animal, he will perceive not only all the
     particulars I have mentioned, viz., the heart becoming erect, and
     making one continuous motion with its auricles; but farther, a
     certain obscure undulation and lateral inclination in the direction
     of the axis of the right ventricle, as if twisting itself slightly
     in performing its work. And indeed everyone may see, when a horse
     drinks, that the water is drawn in and transmitted to the stomach at
     each movement of the throat, which movement produces a sound and
     yields a pulse both to the ear and the touch; in the same way it is
     with each motion of the heart, when there is the delivery of a
     quantity of blood from the veins to the arteries a pulse takes
     place, and can be heard within the chest.

     The motion of the heart, then, is entirely of this description, and
     the one action of the heart is the transmission of the blood and its
     distribution, by means of the arteries, to the very extremities of
     the body; so that the pulse which we feel in the arteries is nothing
     more than the impulse of the blood derived from the heart.

     Whether or not the heart, besides propelling the blood, giving it
     motion locally, and distributing it to the body, adds anything else
     to it - heat, spirit, perfection, - must be inquired into by-and-by,
     and decided upon other grounds. So much may suffice at this time,
     when it is shown that by the action of the heart the blood is
     transfused through the ventricles from the veins to the arteries,
     and distributed by them to all parts of the body.

     The above, indeed, is admitted by all, both from the structure of
     the heart and the arrangement and action of its valves. But still
     they are like persons purblind or groping about in the dark, for
     they give utterance to various, contradictory, and incoherent
     sentiments, delivering many things upon conjecture, as we have
     already shown.

     The grand cause of doubt and error in this subject appears to me to
     have been the intimate connexion between the heart and the lungs.
     When men saw both the pulmonary artery and the pulmonary veins
     losing themselves in the lungs, of course it became a puzzle to them
     to know how or by what means the right ventricle should distribute
     the blood to the body, or the left draw it from the venae cavae.
     This fact is borne witness to by Galen, whose words, when writing
     against Erasistratus in regard to the origin and use of the veins
     and the coction of the blood, are the following.^1: &quot;You will
     reply,&quot; he says, &quot;that the effect is so; that the blood is prepared
     in the liver, and is thence transferred to the heart to receive its
     proper form and last perfection; a statement which does not appear
     devoid of reason; for no great and perfect work is ever accomplished
     at a single effort, or receives its final polish from one
     instrument. But if this be actually so, then show us another vessel
     which draws the absolutely perfect blood from the heart, and
     distributes it as the arteries do the spirits over the whole body.&quot;
     Here then is a reasonable opinion not allowed, because, forsooth,
     besides not seeing the true means of transit, he could not discover
     the vessel which should transmit the blood from the heart to the
     body at large!

     [Footnote 1: De Placitis Hippocratis et Platonis, vi.]

     But had anyone been there in behalf of Erasistratus, and of that
     opinion which we now espouse, and which Galen himself acknowledges
     in other respects consonant with reason, to have pointed to the
     aorta as the vessel which distributes the blood from the heart to
     the rest of the body, I wonder what would have been the answer of
     that most ingenious and learned man? Had he said that the artery
     transmits spirits and not blood, he would indeed sufficiently have
     answered Erasistratus, who imagined that the arteries contained
     nothing but spirits; but then he would have contradicted himself,
     and given a foul denial to that for which he had keenly contended in
     his writings against this very Erasistratus, to wit, that blood in
     substance is contained in the arteries, and not spirits; a fact
     which he demonstrated not only by many powerful arguments, but by
     experiments.

     But if the divine Galen will here allow, as in other places he does,
     &quot;that all the arteries of the body arise from the great artery, and
     that this takes its origin from the heart; that all these vessels
     naturally contain and carry blood; that the three semilunar valves
     situated at the orifice of the aorta prevent the return of the blood
     into the heart, and that nature never connected them with this, the
     most noble viscus of the body, unless for some important end&quot;; if, I
     say, this father of physicians concedes all these things, - and I
     quote his own words - I do not see how he can deny that the great
     artery is the very vessel to carry the blood, when it has attained
     its highest term of perfection, from the heart for distribution to
     all parts of the body. Or would he perchance still hesitate, like
     all who have come after him, even to the present hour, because he
     did not perceive the route by which the blood was transferred from
     the veins to the arteries, in consequence, as I have already said,
     of the intimate connexion between the heart and the lungs? And that
     this difficulty puzzled anatomists not a little, when in their
     dissections they found the pulmonary artery and left ventricle full
     of thick, black, and clotted blood, plainly appears, when they felt
     themselves compelled to affirm that the blood made its way from the
     right to the left ventricle by transuding through the septum of the
     heart. But this fancy I have already refuted. A new pathway for the
     blood must therefore be prepared and thrown open, and being once
     exposed, no further difficulty will, I believe, be experienced by
     anyone in admitting what I have already proposed in regard to the
     pulse of the heart and arteries, viz., the passage of the blood from
     the veins to the arteries, and its distribution to the whole of the
     body by means of these vessels.

     Chapter VI: Of The Course By Which The Blood Is Carried

     (From The Vena Cava Into The Arteries, Or From The Right Into The
     Left Ventricle Of The Heart)

     Since the intimate connexion of the heart with the lungs, which is
     apparent in the human subject, has been the probable cause of the
     errors that have been committed on this point, they plainly do amiss
     who, pretending to speak of the parts of animals generally, as
     anatomists for the most part do, confine their researches to the
     human body alone, and that when it is dead. They obviously do not
     act otherwise than he who, having studied the forms of a single
     commonwealth, should set about the composition of a general system
     of polity; or who, having taken cognizance of the nature of a single
     field, should imagine that he had mastered the science of
     agriculture; or who, upon the ground of one particular proposition,
     should proceed to draw general conclusions.

     Had anatomists only been as conversant with the dissection of the
     lower animals as they are with that of the human body, the matters
     that have hitherto kept them in a perplexity of doubt would, in my
     opinion, have met them freed from every kind of difficulty.

     And first, in fishes, in which the heart consists of but a single
     ventricle, being devoid of lungs, the thing is sufficiently
     manifest. Here the sac, which is situated at the base of the heart,
     and is the part analogous to the auricle in man, plainly forces the
     blood into the heart, and the heart, in its turn, conspicuously
     transmits it by a pipe or artery, or vessel analogous to an artery;
     these are facts which are confirmed by simple ocular inspection, as
     well as by a division of the vessel, when the blood is seen to be
     projected by each pulsation of the heart.

     The same thing is also not difficult of demonstration in those
     animals that have, as it were, no more than a single ventricle to
     the heart, such as toads, frogs, serpents, and lizards, which have
     lungs in a certain sense, as they have a voice. I have many
     observations by me on the admirable structure of the lungs of these
     animals, and matters appertaining, which, however, I cannot
     introduce in this place. Their anatomy plainly shows us that the
     blood is transferred in them from the veins to the arteries in the
     same manner as in higher animals, viz., by the action of the heart;
     the way, in fact, is patent, open, manifest; there is no difficulty,
     no room for doubt about it; for in them the matter stands precisely
     as it would in man were the septum of his heart perforated or
     removed, or one ventricle made out of two; and this being the case,
     I imagine that no one will doubt as to the way by which the blood
     may pass from the veins into the arteries.

     But as there are actually more animals which have no lungs than
     there are furnished with them, and in like manner a greater number
     which have only one ventricle than there are with two, it is open to
     us to conclude, judging from the mass or multitude of living
     creatures, that for the major part, and generally, there is an open
     way by which the blood is transmitted from the veins through the
     sinuses or cavities of the heart into the arteries.

     I have, however, cogitating with myself, seen further, that the same
     thing obtained most obviously in the embryos of those animals that
     have lungs; for in the foetus the four vessels belonging to the
     heart, viz., the vena cava, the pulmonary artery, the pulmonary
     vein, and the great artery or aorta, are all connected otherwise
     than in the adult, a fact sufficiently known to every anatomist. The
     first contact and union of the vena cava with the pulmonary veins,
     which occurs before the cava opens properly into the right ventricle
     of the heart, or gives off the coronary vein, a little above its
     escape from the liver, is by a lateral anastomosis; this is an ample
     foramen, of an oval form, communicating between the cava and the
     pulmonary vein, so that the blood is free to flow in the greatest
     abundance by that foramen from the vena cava into the pulmonary
     vein, and left auricle, and from thence into the left ventricle.
     Farther, in this foramen ovale, from that part which regards the
     pulmonary vein, there is a thin tough membrane, larger than the
     opening, extended like an operculum or cover; this membrane in the
     adult blocking up the foramen, and adhering on all sides, finally
     closes it up, and almost obliterates every trace of it. In the
     foetus, however, this membrane is so contrived that falling loosely
     upon itself, it permits a ready access to the lungs and heart,
     yielding a passage to the blood which is streaming from the cava,
     and hindering the tide at the same time from flowing back into that
     vein. All things, in short, permit us to believe that in the embryo
     the blood must constantly pass by this foramen from the vena cava
     into the pulmonary vein, and from thence into the left auricle of
     the heart; and having once entered there, it can never regurgitate.

     Another union is that by the pulmonary artery, and is effected when
     that vessel divides into two branches after its escape from the
     right ventricle of the heart. It is as if to the two trunks already
     mentioned a third were superadded, a kind of arterial canal, carried
     obliquely from the pulmonary artery, to perforate and terminate in
     the great artery or aorta. So that in the dissection of the embryo,
     as it were, two aortas, or two roots of the great artery, appear
     springing from the heart. This canal shrinks gradually after birth,
     and after a time becomes withered, and finally almost removed, like
     the umbilical vessels.

     The arterial canal contains no membrane or valve to direct or impede
     the flow of blood in this or in that direction: for at the root of
     the pulmonary artery, of which the arterial canal is the
     continuation in the foetus, there are three semilunar valves, which
     open from within outwards, and oppose no obstacle to the blood
     flowing in this direction or from the right ventricle into the
     pulmonary artery and aorta; but they prevent all regurgitation from
     the aorta or pulmonic vessels back upon the right ventricle; closing
     with perfect accuracy, they oppose an effectual obstacle to
     everything of the kind in the embryo. So that there is also reason
     to believe that when the heart contracts, the blood is regularly
     propelled by the canal or passage indicated from the right ventricle
     into the aorta.

     What is commonly said in regard to these two great communications,
     to wit, that they exist for the nutrition of the lungs, is both
     improbable and inconsistent; seeing that in the adult they are
     closed up, abolished, and consolidated, although the lungs, by
     reason of their heat and motion, must then be presumed to require a
     larger supply of nourishment. The same may be said in regard to the
     assertion that the heart in the embryo does not pulsate, that it
     neither acts nor moves, so that nature was forced to make these
     communications for the nutrition of the lungs. This is plainly
     false; for simple inspection of the incubated egg, and of embryos
     just taken out of the uterus, shows that the heart moves in them
     precisely as in adults, and that nature feels no such necessity. I
     have myself repeatedly seen these motions, and Aristotle is likewise
     witness of their reality. &quot;The pulse,&quot; he observes, &quot;inheres in the
     very constitution of the heart, and appears from the beginning as is
     learned both from the dissection of living animals and the formation
     of the chick in the egg.&quot;^1 But we further observe that the passages
     in question are not only pervious up to the period of birth in man,
     as well as in other animals, as anatomists in general have described
     them, but for several months subsequently, in some indeed for
     several years, not to say for the whole course of life; as, for
     example, in the goose, snipe, and various birds and many of the
     smaller animals. And this circumstance it was, perhaps, that imposed
     upon Botallus, who thought he had discovered a new passage for the
     blood from the vena cava into the left ventricle of the heart; and I
     own that when I met with the same arrangement in one of the larger
     members of the mouse family, in the adult state, I was myself at
     first led to something of a like conclusion.

     [Footnote 1: Lib. de Spiritu, cap. v.]

     From this it will be understood that in the human embryo, and in the
     embryos of animals in which the communications are not closed, the
     same thing happens, namely, that the heart by its motion propels the
     blood by obvious and open passages from the vena cava into the aorta
     through the cavities of both the ventricles, the right one receiving
     the blood from the auricle, and propelling it by the pulmonary
     artery and its continuation, named the ductus arteriosus, into the
     aorta; the left, in like manner, charged by the contraction of its
     auricle, which has received its supply through the foramen ovale
     from the vena cava, contracting, and projecting the blood through
     the root of the aorta into the trunk of that vessel.

     In embryos, consequently, whilst the lungs are yet in a state of
     inaction, performing no function, subject to no motion any more than
     if they had not been present, nature uses the two ventricles of the
     heart as if they formed but one, for the transmission of the blood.
     The condition of the embryos of those animals which have lungs,
     whilst these organs are yet in abeyance and not employed, is the
     same as that of those animals which have no lungs.

     So it clearly appears in the case of the foetus that the heart by
     its action transfers the blood from the vena cava into the aorta,
     and that by a route as obvious and open, as if in the adult the two
     ventricles were made to communicate by the removal of their septum.
     We therefore find that in the greater number of animals - in all,
     indeed, at a certain period of their existence - the channels for
     the transmission of the blood through the heart are conspicuous. Bur
     we have to inquire why in some creatures - those, namely, that have
     warm blood, and that have attained to the adult age, man among the
     number - we should not conclude that the same thing is accomplished
     through the substance of the lungs, which in the embryo, and at a
     time when the function of these organs is in abeyance, nature
     effects by the direct passage described, and which, indeed, she
     seems compelled to adopt through want of a passage by the lungs; or
     why it should be better (for nature always does that which is best)
     that she should close up the various open routes which she had
     formerly made use of in the embryo and foetus, and still uses in all
     other animals. Not only does she thereby open up no new apparent
     channels for the passages of the blood, but she even shuts up those
     which formerly existed.

     And now the discussion is brought to this point, that they who
     inquire into the ways by which the blood reaches the left ventricle
     of the heart and pulmonary veins from the vena cava, will pursue the
     wisest course if they seek by dissection to discover the causes why
     in the larger and more perfect animals of mature age nature has
     rather chosen to make the blood percolate the parenchyma of the
     lungs, than, as in other instances, chosen a direct and obvious
     course - for I assume that no other path or mode of transit can be
     entertained. It must be because the larger and more perfect animals
     are warmer, and when adult their heat greater-ignited, as I might
     say, and requiring to be damped or mitigated, that the blood is sent
     through the lungs, in order that it may be tempered by the air that
     is inspired, and prevented from boiling up, and so becoming
     extinguished, or something else of the sort. But to determine these
     matters, and explain them satisfactorily, were to enter on a
     speculation in regard to the office of the lungs and the ends for
     which they exist. Upon such a subject, as well as upon what pertains
     to respiration, to the necessity and use of the air, etc., as also
     to the variety and diversity of organs that exist in the bodies of
     animals in connexion with these matters, although I have made a vast
     number of observations, I shall not speak till I can more
     conveniently set them forth in a treatise apart, lest I should be
     held as wandering too wide of my present purpose, which is the use
     and motion of the heart, and be charged with speaking of things
     beside the question, and rather complicating and quitting than
     illustrating it. And now returning to my immediate subject, I go on
     with what yet remains for demonstration, viz., that in the more
     perfect and warmer adult animals, and man, the blood passes from the
     right ventricle of the heart by the pulmonary artery, into the
     lungs, and thence by the pulmonary veins into the left auricle, and
     from there into the left ventricle of the heart. And, first, I shall
     show that this may be so, and then I shall prove that it is so in
     fact.

     Chapter VII: The Blood Passes Through The Substance Of The Lungs

     (From The Right Ventricle Of The Heart Into The Pulmonary Veins And
     Left Ventricle)

     That this is possible, and that there is nothing to prevent it from
     being so, appears when we reflect on the way in which water
     permeating the earth produces springs and rivulets, or when we
     speculate on the means by which the sweat passes through the skin,
     or the urine through the substance of the kidneys. It is well known
     that persons who use the Spa waters or those of La Madonna, in the
     territories of Padua, or others of an acidulous or vitriolated
     nature, or who simply swallow drinks by the gallon, pass all off
     again within an hour or two by the bladder. Such a quantity of
     liquid must take some short time in the concoction: it must pass
     through the liver (it is allowed by all that the juices of the food
     we consume pass twice through this organ in the course of the day);
     it must flow through the veins, through the tissues of the kidneys,
     and through the ureters into the bladder.

     To those, therefore, whom I hear denying that the blood, aye, the
     whole mass of the blood, may pass through the substance of the
     lungs, even as the nutritive juices percolate the liver, asserting
     such a proposition to be impossible, and by no means to be
     entertained as credible, I reply, with the poet, that they are of
     that race of men who, when they will, assent full readily, and when
     they will not, by no manner of means; who, when their assent is
     wanted, fear, and when it is not, fear not to give it.

     The substance of the liver is extremely dense, so is that of the
     kidney; the lungs, however, are of a much looser texture, and if
     compared with the kidneys are absolutely spongy. In the liver there
     is no forcing, no impelling power in the lungs the blood is forced
     on by the pulse of the right ventricle, the necessary effect of
     whose impulse is the distension of the vessels and the pores of the
     lungs. And then the lungs, in respiration, are perpetually rising
     and falling: motions, the effect of which must needs be to open and
     shut the pores and vessels, precisely as in the case of a sponge,
     and of parts having a spongy structure, when they are alternately
     compressed and again are suffered to expand. The liver, on the
     contrary, remains at rest, and is never seen to be dilated or
     constricted. Lastly, if no one denies the possibility in man, oxen,
     and the larger animals generally, of the whole of the ingested
     juices passing through the liver, in order to reach the vena cava,
     for this reason, that if nourishment is to go on, these juices must
     needs get into the veins, and there is no other way but the one
     indicated, why should not the same arguments be held of avail for
     the passage of the blood in adults through the lungs? Why not
     maintain, with Columbus, that skilfull and learned anatomist, that
     it must be so from the capacity and structure of the pulmonary
     vessels, and from the fact of the pulmonary veins and ventricle
     corresponding with them, being always found to contain blood, which
     must needs have come from the veins, and by no other passage save
     through the lungs? Columbus, and we also, from what precedes, from
     dissections, and other arguments, conceive the thing to be clear.
     But as there are some who admit nothing unless upon authority, let
     them learn that the truth I am contending for can be confirmed from
     Galen&apos;s own words, namely, that not only may the blood be
     transmitted from the pulmonary artery into the pulmonary veins, then
     into the left ventricle of the heart, and from thence into the
     arteries of the body, but that this is effected by the ceaseless
     pulsation of the heart and the motion of the lungs in breathing.

     There are, as everyone knows, three sigmoid or semilunar valves
     situated at the orifice of the pulmonary artery, which effectually
     prevent the blood sent into the vessel from returning into the
     cavity of the heart. Now Galen, explaining the use of these valves,
     and the necessity for them, employs the following language:^1 &quot;There
     is everywhere a mutual anastomosis and inosculation of the arteries
     with the veins, and they severally transmit both blood and spirit,
     by certain invisible and undoubtedly very narrow passages. Now if
     the mouth of the pulmonary artery had stood in like manner
     continually open, and nature had found no contrivance for closing it
     when requisite, and opening it again, it would have been impossible
     that the blood could ever have passed by the invisible and delicate
     mouths, during the contractions of the thorax, into the arteries;
     for all things are not alike readily attracted or repelled; but that
     which is light is more readily drawn in, the instrument being
     dilated, and forced out again when it is contracted, than that which
     is heavy; and in like manner is anything drawn more rapidly along an
     ample conduit, and again driven forth, than it is through a narrow
     tube. But when the thorax is contracted the pulmonary veins, which
     are in the lungs, being driven inwardly, and powerfully compressed
     on every side, immediately force out some of the spirit they
     contain, and at the same time assume a certain portion of blood by
     those subtle mouths, a thing that could never come to pass were the
     blood at liberty to flow back into the heart through the great
     orifice of the pulmonary artery. But its return through this great
     opening being prevented, when it is compressed on every side, a
     certain portion of it distils into the pulmonary veins by the minute
     orifices mentioned.&quot; And shortly afterwards, in the next chapter, he
     says: &quot;The more the thorax contracts, the more it strives to force
     out the blood, the more exactly do these membranes (viz., the
     semilunar valves) close up the mouth of the vessel, and suffer
     nothing to regurgitate.&quot; The same fact he has also alluded to in a
     preceding part of the tenth chapter: &quot;Were there no valves, a
     threefold inconvenience would result, so that the blood would then
     perform this lengthened course in vain; it would flow inwards during
     the disastoles of the lungs and fill all their arteries; but in the
     systoles, in the manner of the tide, it would ever and anon, like
     the Euripus, flow backwards and forwards by the same way, with a
     reciprocating motion, which would nowise suit the blood. This,
     however, may seem a matter of little moment: but if it meantime
     appear that the function of respiration suffer, then I think it
     would be looked upon as no trifle, etc.&quot; Shortly afterwards he says:
     &quot;And then a third inconvenience, by no means to be thought lightly
     of, would follow, were the blood moved backwards during the
     expirations, had not our Maker instituted those supplementary
     membranes.&quot; In the eleventh chapter he concludes: &quot;That they (the
     valves) have all a common use, and that it is to prevent
     regurgitation or backward motion; each, however, having a proper
     function, the one set drawing matters from the heart, and preventing
     their return, the other drawing matters into the heart, and
     preventing their escape from it. For nature never intended to
     distress the heart with needless labour, neither to bring aught into
     the organ which it had been better to have kept away, nor to take
     from it again aught which it was requisite should be brought. Since,
     then, there are four orifices in all, two in either ventricle, one
     of these induces, the other educes.&quot; And again he says: &quot;Farther,
     since there is one vessel, which consists of a simple covering
     implanted in the heart, and another which is double, extending from
     it (Galen is here speaking of the right side of the heart, but I
     extend his observations to the left side also), a kind of reservoir
     had to be provided, to which both belonging, the blood should be
     drawn in by one, and sent out by the other.&quot;

     [Footnote 1: De Usu partium, lib. vi, cap. 10.]

     Galen adduces this argument for the transit of the blood by the
     right ventricle from the vena cava into the lungs; but we can use it
     with still greater propriety, merely changing the terms, for the
     passage of the blood from the veins through the heart into the
     arteries. From Galen, however, that great man, that father of
     physicians, it clearly appears that the blood passes through the
     lungs from the pulmonary artery into the minute branches of the
     pulmonary veins, urged to this both by the pulses of the heart and
     by the motions of the lungs and thorax; that the heart, moreover, is
     incessantly receiving and expelling the blood by and from its
     ventricles, as from a magazine or cistern, and for this end it is
     furnished with four sets of valves, two serving for the induction
     and two for the eduction of the blood, lest, like the Euripus, it
     should be incommodiously sent hither and thither, or flow back into
     the cavity which it should have quitted, or quit the part where its
     presence was required, and so the heart might be oppressed with
     labour in vain, and the office of the lungs be interfered with.^2
     Finally, our position that the blood is continually permeating from
     the right to the left ventricle, from the vena cava into the aorta,
     through the porosities of the lungs, plainly appears from this, that
     since the blood is incessantly sent from the right ventricle into
     the lungs by the pulmonary artery, and in like manner is incessantly
     drawn from the lungs into the left ventricle, as appears from what
     precedes and the position of the valves, it cannot do otherwise than
     pass through continuously. And then, as the blood is incessantly
     flowing into the right ventricle of the heart, and is continually
     passed out from the left, as appears in like manner, and as is
     obvious, both to sense and reason, it is impossible that the blood
     can do otherwise than pass continually from the vena cava into the
     aorta.

     [Footnote 2: See the Commentary of the learned Hofmann upon the
     Sixth Book of Galen, &quot;De Usu partium,&quot; a work which I first saw
     after I had written what precedes.]

     Dissection consequently shows distinctly what takes place in the
     majority of animals, and indeed in all, up to the period of their
     maturity; and that the same thing occurs in adults is equally
     certain, both from Galen&apos;s words, and what has already been said,
     only that in the former the transit is effected by open and obvious
     passages, in the latter by the hidden porosities of the lungs and
     the minute inosculations of vessels. It therefore appears that,
     although one ventricle of the heart, the left to wit, would suffice
     for the distribution of the blood over the body, and its eduction
     from the vena cava, as indeed is done in those creatures that have
     no lungs, nature, nevertheless, when she ordained that the same
     blood should also percolate the lungs, saw herself obliged to add
     the right ventricle, the pulse of which should force the blood from
     the vena cava through the lungs into the cavity of the left
     ventricle. In this way, it may be said, that the right ventricle is
     made for the sake of the lungs, and for the transmission of the
     blood through them, not for their nutrition; for it were
     unreasonable to suppose that the lungs should require so much more
     copious a supply of nutriment, and that of so much purer and more
     spirituous a nature as coming immediately from the ventricle of the
     heart, that either the brain, with its peculiarly pure substance, or
     the eyes, with their lustrous and truly admirable structure, or the
     flesh of the heart itself, which is more suitably nourished by the
     coronary artery.

     Chapter VIII: Of The Quantity Of Blood Passing Through The Heart

     (From The Veins To The Arteries; And Of The Circular Motion Of The
     Blood)

     Thus far I have spoken of the passage of the blood from the veins
     into the arteries, and of the manner in which it is transmitted and
     distributed by the action of the heart; points to which some, moved
     either by the authority of Galen or Columbus, or the reasonings of
     others, will give in their adhesion. But what remains to be said
     upon the quantity and source of the blood which thus passes is of a
     character so novel and unheard-of that I not only fear injury to
     myself from the envy of a few, but I tremble lest I have mankind at
     large for my enemies, so much doth wont and custom become a second
     nature. Doctrine once sown strikes deep its root, and respect for
     antiquity influences all men. Still the die is cast, and my trust is
     in my love of truth and the candour of cultivated minds. And sooth
     to say, when I surveyed my mass of evidence, whether derived from
     vivisections, and my various reflections on them, or from the study
     of the ventricles of the heart and the vessels that enter into and
     issue from them, the symmetry and size of these conduits, - for
     nature doing nothing in vain, would never have given them so large a
     relative size without a purpose, - or from observing the arrangement
     and intimate structure of the valves in particular, and of the other
     parts of the heart in general, with many things besides, I
     frequently and seriously bethought me, and long revolved in my mind,
     what might be the quantity of blood which was transmitted, in how
     short a time its passage might be effected, and the like. But not
     finding it possible that this could be supplied by the juices of the
     ingested aliment without the veins on the one hand becoming drained,
     and the arteries on the other getting ruptured through the excessive
     charge of blood, unless the blood should somehow find its way from
     the arteries into the veins, and so return to the right side of the
     heart, I began to think whether there might not be a Motion, As It
     Were, In A Circle. Now, this I afterwards found to be true; and I
     finally saw that the blood, forced by the action of the left
     ventricle into the arteries, was distributed to the body at large,
     and its several parts, in the same manner as it is sent through the
     lungs, impelled by the right ventricle into the pulmonary artery,
     and that it then passed through the veins and along the vena cava,
     and so round to the left ventricle in the manner already indicated.
     This motion we may be allowed to call circular, in the same way as
     Aristotle says that the air and the rain emulate the circular motion
     of the superior bodies; for the moist earth, warmed by the sun,
     evaporates; the vapours drawn upwards are condensed, and descending
     in the form of rain, moisten the earth again. By this arrangement
     are generations of living things produced; and in like manner are
     tempests and meteors engendered by the circular motion, and by the
     approach and recession of the sun.

     And similarly does it come to pass in the body, through the motion
     of the blood, that the various parts are nourished, cherished,
     quickened by the warmer, more perfect, vaporous, spirituous, and, as
     I may say, alimentive blood; which, on the other hand, owing to its
     contact with these parts, becomes cooled, coagulated, and so to
     speak effete. It then returns to its sovereign, the heart, as if to
     its source, or to the inmost home of the body, there to recover its
     state of excellence or perfection. Here it renews its fluidity,
     natural heat, and becomes powerful, fervid, a kind of treasury of
     life, and impregnated with spirits, it might be said with balsam.
     Thence it is again dispersed. All this depends on the motion and
     action of the heart.

     The heart, consequently, is the beginning of life; the sun of the
     microcosm, even as the sun in his turn might well be designated the
     heart of the world; for it is the heart by whose virtue and pulse
     the blood is moved, perfected, and made nutrient, and is preserved
     from corruption and coagulation; it is the household divinity which,
     discharging its function, nourishes, cherishes, quickens the whole
     body, and is indeed the foundation of life, the source of all
     action. But of these things we shall speak more opportunely when we
     come to speculate upon the final cause of this motion of the heart.

     As the blood-vessels, therefore, are the canals and agents that
     transport the blood, they are of two kinds, the cava and the aorta;
     and this not by reason of there being two sides of the body, as
     Aristotle has it, but because of the difference of office, not, as
     is commonly said, in consequence of any diversity of structure, for
     in many animals, as I have said, the vein does not differ from the
     artery in the thickness of its walls, but solely in virtue of their
     distinct functions and uses. A vein and an artery, both styled veins
     by the ancients, and that not without reason, as Galen has remarked,
     for the artery is the vessel which carries the blood from the heart
     to the body at large, the vein of the present day bringing it back
     from the general system to the heart; the former is the conduit
     from, the latter the channel to, the heart; the latter contains the
     cruder, effete blood, rendered unfit for nutrition; the former
     transmits the digested, perfect, peculiarly nutritive fluid.

     Chapter IX: That There Is A Circulation Of The Blood Is Confirmed

     (From The First Proposition)

     But lest anyone should say that we give them words only, and make
     mere specious assertions without any foundation, and desire to
     innovate without sufficient cause, three points present themselves
     for confirmation, which, being stated, I conceive that the truth I
     contend for will follow necessarily, and appear as a thing obvious
     to all. First, the blood is incessantly transmitted by the action of
     the heart from the vena cava to the arteries in such quantity that
     it cannot be supplied from the ingesta, and in such a manner that
     the whole must very quickly pass through the organ; second, the
     blood under the influence of the arterial pulse enters and is
     impelled in a continuous, equable, and incessant stream through
     every part and member of the body, in much larger quantity than were
     sufficient for nutrition, or than the whole mass of fluids could
     supply; third, the veins in like manner return this blood
     incessantly to the heart from parts and members of the body. These
     points proved, I conceive it will be manifest that the blood
     circulates, revolves, propelled and then returning, from the heart
     to the extremities, from the extremities to the heart, and thus that
     it performs a kind of circular motion.

     Let us assume, either arbitrarily or from experiment, the quantity
     of blood which the left ventricle of the heart will contain when
     distended, to be, say, two ounces, three ounces, or one ounce and a
     half - in the dead body I have found it to hold upwards of two
     ounces. Let us assume further how much less the heart will hold in
     the contracted than in the dilated state; and how much blood it will
     project into the aorta upon each contraction; and all the world
     allows that with the systole something is always projected, a
     necessary consequence demonstrated in the third chapter, and obvious
     from the structure of the valves; and let us suppose as approaching
     the truth that the fourth, or fifth, or sixth, or even but the
     eighth part of its charge is thrown into the artery at each
     contraction; this would give either half an ounce, or three drachms,
     or one drachm of blood as propelled by the heart at each pulse into
     the aorta; which quantity, by reason of the valves at the root of
     the vessel, can by no means return into the ventricle. Now, in the
     course of half an hour, the heart will have made more than one
     thousand beats, in some as many as two, three, and even four
     thousand. Multiplying the number of drachms propelled by the number
     of pulses, we shall have either one thousand half ounces, or one
     thousand times three drachms, or a like proportional quantity of
     blood, according to the amount which we assume as propelled with
     each stroke of the heart, sent from this organ into the artery - a
     larger quantity in every case than is contained in the whole body!
     In the same way, in the sheep or dog, say but a single scruple of
     blood passes with each stroke of the heart, in one half-hour we
     should have one thousand scruples, or about three pounds and a half,
     of blood injected into the aorta; but the body of neither animal
     contains above four pounds of blood, a fact which I have myself
     ascertained in the case of the sheep.

     Upon this supposition, therefore, assumed merely as a ground for
     reasoning, we see the whole mass of blood passing through the heart,
     from the veins to the arteries, and in like manner through the
     lungs.

     But let it be said that this does not take place in half an hour,
     but in an hour, or even in a day; any way, it is still manifest that
     more blood passes through the heart in consequence of its action,
     than can either be supplied by the whole of the ingesta, or than can
     be contained in the veins at the same moment.

     Nor can it be allowed that the heart in contracting sometimes
     propels and sometimes does not propel, or at most propels but very
     little, a mere nothing, or an imaginary something: all this, indeed,
     has already been refuted, and is, besides, contrary both to sense
     and reason. For if it be a necessary effect of the dilatation of the
     heart that its ventricles become filled with blood, it is equally so
     that, contracting, these cavities should expel their contents; and
     this not in any trifling measure. For neither are the conduits
     small, nor the contractions few in number, but frequent, and always
     in some certain proportion, whether it be a third or a sixth, or an
     eighth, to the total capacity of the ventricles, so that a like
     proportion of blood must be expelled, and a like proportion received
     with each stroke of the heart, the capacity of the ventricle
     contracted always bearing a certain relation to the capacity of the
     ventricle when dilated. And since, in dilating, the ventricles
     cannot be supposed to get filled with nothing, or with an imaginary
     something, so in contracting they never expel nothing or aught
     imaginary, but always a certain something, viz., blood, in
     proportion to the amount of the contraction. Whence it is to be
     concluded that if at one stroke the heart of man, the ox, or the
     sheep, ejects but a single drachm of blood and there are one
     thousand strokes in half an hour, in this interval there will have
     been ten pounds five ounces expelled; if with each stroke two
     drachms are expelled, the quantity would, of course, amount to
     twenty pounds and ten ounces; if half an ounce, the quantity would
     come to forty-one pounds and eight ounces; and were there one ounce,
     it would be as much as eighty-three pounds and four ounces; the
     whole of which, in the course of one-half hour, would have been
     transfused from the veins to the arteries. The actual quantity of
     blood expelled at each stroke of the heart, and the circumstances
     under which it is either greater or less than ordinary, I leave for
     particular determination afterwards, from numerous observations
     which I have made on the subject.

     Meantime this much I know, and would here proclaim to all, that the
     blood is transfused at one time in larger, at another in smaller,
     quantity; and that the circuit of the blood is accomplished now more
     rapidly, now more slowly, according to the temperament, age, etc.,
     of the individual, to external and internal circumstances, to
     naturals and non-naturals - sleep, rest, food, exercise, affections
     of the mind, and the like. But, supposing even the smallest quantity
     of blood to be passed through the heart and the lungs with each
     pulsation, a vastly greater amount would still be thrown into the
     arteries and whole body than could by any possibility be supplied by
     the food consumed. It could be furnished in no other way than by
     making a circuit and returning.

     This truth, indeed, presents itself obviously before us when we
     consider what happens in the dissection of living animals; the great
     artery need not be divided, but a very small branch only (as Galen
     even proves in regard to man), to have the whole of the blood in the
     body, as well that of the veins as of the arteries, drained away in
     the course of no long time - some half-hour or less. Butchers are
     well aware of the fact and can bear witness to it; for, cutting the
     throat of an ox and so dividing the vessels of the neck, in less
     than a quarter of an hour they have all the vessels bloodless - the
     whole mass of blood has escaped. The same thing also occasionally
     occurs with great rapidity in performing amputations and removing
     tumors in the human subject.

     Nor would this argument lose of its force, did any one say that in
     killing animals in the shambles, and performing amputations, the
     blood escaped in equal, if not perchance in larger quantity by the
     veins than by the arteries. The contrary of this statement, indeed,
     is certainly the truth; the veins, in fact, collapsing, and being
     without any propelling power, and further, because of the impediment
     of the valves, as I shall show immediately, pour out but very little
     blood; whilst the arteries spout it forth with force abundantly,
     impetuously, and as if it were propelled by a syringe. And then the
     experiment is easily tried of leaving the vein untouched and only
     dividing the artery in the neck of a sheep or dog, when it will be
     seen with what force, in what abundance, and how quickly, the whole
     blood in the body, of the veins as well as of the arteries, is
     emptied. But the arteries receive blood from the veins in no other
     way than by transmission through the heart, as we have already seen;
     so that if the aorta be tied at the base of the heart, and the
     carotid or any other artery be opened, no one will now be surprised
     to find it empty, and the veins only replete with blood.

     And now the cause is manifest, why in our dissections we usually
     find so large a quantity of blood in the veins, so little in the
     arteries; why there is much in the right ventricle, little in the
     left, which probably led the ancients to believe that the arteries
     (as their name implies) contained nothing but spirits during the
     life of an animal. The true cause of the difference is perhaps this,
     that as there is no passage to the arteries, save through the lungs
     and heart, when an animal has ceased to breathe and the lungs to
     move, the blood in the pulmonary artery is prevented from passing
     into the pulmonary veins, and from thence into the left ventricle of
     the heart; just as we have already seen the same transit prevented
     in the embryo, by the want of movement in the lungs and the
     alternate opening and shutting of their hidden and invisible
     porosities and apertures. But the heart not ceasing to act at the
     same precise moment as the lungs, but surviving them and continuing
     to pulsate for a time, the left ventricle and arteries go on
     distributing their blood to the body at large and sending it into
     the veins; receiving none from the lungs, however, they are soon
     exhausted, and left, as it were, empty. But even this fact confirms
     our views, in no trifling manner, seeing that it can be ascribed to
     no other than the cause we have just assumed.

     Moreover, it appears from this that the more frequently or forcibly
     the arteries pulsate, the more speedily will the body be exhausted
     of its blood during hemorrhage. Hence, also, it happens, that in
     fainting fits and in states of alarm, when the heart beats more
     languidly and less forcibly, hemorrhages are diminished and
     arrested.

     Still further, it is from this, that after death, when the heart has
     ceased to beat, it is impossible, by dividing either the jugular or
     femoral veins and arteries, by any effort, to force out more than
     one-half of the whole mass of the blood. Neither could the butcher
     ever bleed the carcass effectually did he neglect to cut the throat
     of the ox which he has knocked on the head and stunned, before the
     heart had ceased beating.

     Finally, we are now in a condition to suspect wherefore it is that
     no one has yet said anything to the purpose upon the anastomosis of
     the veins and arteries, either as to where or how it is effected, or
     for what purpose. I now enter upon the investigation of the subject.

     Chapter X: The First Position

     (Of The Quantity Of Blood Passing From The Veins To The Arteries.
     And That There Is A Circuit Of The Blood, Freed From Objections, And
     Farther Confirmed By Experiment)

     So far our first position is confirmed, whether the thing be
     referred to calculation or to experiment and dissection, viz., that
     the blood is incessantly poured into the arteries in larger
     quantities than it can be supplied by the food; so that the whole
     passing over in a short space of time, it is matter of necessity
     that the blood perform a circuit, that it return to whence it set
     out.

     But if anyone shall here object that a large quantity may pass
     through and yet no necessity be found for a circulation, that all
     may come from the meat and drink consumed, and quote as an
     illustration the abundant supply of milk in the mammae-for a cow
     will give three, four, and even seven gallons and more in a day, and
     a woman two or three pints whilst nursing a child or twins, which
     must manifestly be derived from the food consumed; it may be
     answered that the heart by computation does as much and more in the
     course of an hour or two.

     And if not yet convinced, he shall still insist that when an artery
     is divided, a preternatural route is, as it were, opened, and that
     so the blood escapes in torrents, but that the same thing does not
     happen in the healthy and uninjured body when no outlet is made; and
     that in arteries filled, or in their natural state, so large a
     quantity of blood cannot pass in so short a space of time as to make
     any return necessary-to all this it may be answered that, from the
     calculation already made, and the reasons assigned, it appears that
     by so much as the heart in its dilated state contains, in addition
     to its contents in the state of constriction, so much in a general
     way must it emit upon each pulsation, and in such quantity must the
     blood pass, the body being entire and naturally constituted.

     But in serpents, and several fishes, by tying the veins some way
     below the heart you will perceive a space between the ligature and
     the heart speedily to become empty; so that, unless you would deny
     the evidence of your senses, you must needs admit the return of the
     blood to the heart. The same thing will also plainly appear when we
     come to discuss our second position.

     Let us here conclude with a single example, confirming all that has
     been said, and from which everyone may obtain conviction through the
     testimony of his own eyes.

     If a live snake be laid open, the heart will be seen pulsating
     quietly, distinctly, for more than an hour, moving like a worm,
     contracting in its longitudinal dimensions, (for it is of an oblong
     shape), and propelling its contents. It becomes of a paler colour in
     the systole, of a deeper tint in the diastole; and almost all things
     else are seen by which I have already said that the truth I contend
     for is established, only that here everything takes place more
     slowly, and is more distinct. This point in particular may be
     observed more clearly than the noonday sun: the vena cava enters the
     heart at its lower part, the artery quits it at the superior part;
     the vein being now seized either with forceps or between the finger
     and the thumb, and the course of the blood for some space below the
     heart interrupted, you will perceive the part that intervenes
     between the fingers and the heart almost immediately to become
     empty, the blood being exhausted by the action of the heart; at the
     same time the heart will become of a much paler colour, even in its
     state of dilatation, than it was before; it is also smaller than at
     first, from wanting blood: and then it begins to beat more slowly,
     so that it seems at length as if it were about to die. But the
     impediment to the flow of blood being removed, instantly the colour
     and the size of the heart are restored.

     If, on the contrary, the artery instead of the vein be compressed or
     tied, you will observe the part between the obstacle and the heart,
     and the heart itself, to become inordinately distended, to assume a
     deep purple or even livid colour, and at length to be so much
     oppressed with blood that you will believe it about to be choked;
     but the obstacle removed, all things immediately return to their
     natural state and colour, size, and impulse.

     Here then we have evidence of two kinds of death: extinction from
     deficiency, and suffocation from excess. Examples of both have now
     been set before you, and you have had opportunity of viewing the
     truth contended for with your own eyes in the heart.

     Chapter XI: The Second Position Is Demonstrated

     That this may the more clearly appear to everyone, I have here to
     cite certain experiments, from which it seems obvious that the blood
     enters a limb by the arteries, and returns from it by the veins;
     that the arteries are the vessels carrying the blood from the heart,
     and the veins the returning channels of the blood to the heart; that
     in the limbs and extreme parts of the body the blood passes either
     immediately by anastomosis from the arteries into the veins, or
     mediately by the porosities of the flesh, or in both ways, as has
     already been said in speaking of the passage of the blood through
     the lungs whence it appears manifest that in the circuit the blood
     moves from that place to this place, and from the point to this one;
     from the centre to the extremities, to wit; and from the extreme
     parts back to the centre. Finally, upon grounds of calculation, with
     the same elements as before, it will be obvious that the quantity
     can neither be accounted for by the ingesta, nor yet be held
     necessary to nutrition.

     The same thing will also appear in regard to ligatures, and
     wherefore they are said to draw; though this is neither from the
     heat, nor the pain, nor the vacuum they occasion, nor indeed from
     any other cause yet thought of; it will also explain the uses and
     advantages to be derived from ligatures in medicine, the principle
     upon which they either suppress or occasion hemorrhage; how they
     induce sloughing and more extensive mortification in extremities;
     and how they act in the castration of animals and the removal of
     warts and fleshy tumours. But it has come to pass, from no one
     having duly weighed and understood the cause and rationale of these
     various effects, that though almost all, upon the faith of the old
     writers, recommend ligatures in the treatment of disease, yet very
     few comprehend their proper employment, or derive any real
     assistance from them in effecting cures.

     Ligatures are either very tight or of medium tightness. A ligature I
     designate as tight or perfect when it so constricts an extremity
     that no vessel can be felt pulsating beyond it. Such a ligature we
     use in amputations to control the flow of blood; and such also are
     employed in the castration of animals and the ablation of tumours.
     In the latter instances, all afflux of nutriment and heat being
     prevented by the ligature, we see the testes and large fleshy
     tumours dwindle, die, and finally fall off.

     Ligatures of medium tightness I regard as those which compress a
     limb firmly all round, but short of pain, and in such a way as still
     suffers a certain degree of pulsation to be felt in the artery
     beyond them. Such a ligature is in use in blood-letting, an
     operation in which the fillet applied above the elbow is not drawn
     so tight but that the arteries at the wrist may still be felt
     beating under the finger.

     Now let anyone make an experiment upon the arm of a man, either
     using such a fillet as is employed in blood-letting, or grasping the
     limb lightly with his hand, the best subject for it being one who is
     lean, and who has large veins, and the best time after exercise,
     when the body is warm, the pulse is full, and the blood carried in
     larger quantity to the extremities, for all then is more
     conspicuous; under such circumstances let a ligature be thrown about
     the extremity, and drawn as tightly as can be borne, it will first
     be perceived that beyond the ligature, neither in the wrist nor
     anywhere else, do the arteries pulsate, at the same time that
     immediately above the ligature the artery begins to rise higher at
     each diastole, to throb more violently, and to swell in its vicinity
     with a kind of tide, as if it strove to break through and overcome
     the obstacle to its current; the artery here, in short, appears as
     if it were preternaturally full. The hand under such circumstances
     retains its natural colour and appearance; in the course of time it
     begins to fall somewhat in temperature, indeed, but nothing is drawn
     into it.

     After the bandage has been kept on for some short time in this way,
     let it be slackened a little, brought to that state or term of
     medium tightness which is used in bleeding, and it will be seen that
     the whole hand and arm will instantly become deeply coloured and
     distended, and the veins show themselves tumid and knotted; after
     ten or twelve pulses of the artery, the hand will be perceived
     excessively distended, injected, gorged with blood, drawn, as it is
     said, by this medium ligature, without pain, or heat, or any horror
     of a vacuum, or any other cause yet indicated.

     If the finger be applied over the artery as it is pulsating by the
     edge of the fillet, at the moment of slackening it, the blood will
     be felt to glide through, as it were, underneath the finger; and he,
     too, upon whose arm the experiment is made, when the ligature is
     slackened, is distinctly conscious of a sensation of warmth, and of
     something, viz., a stream of blood suddenly making its way along the
     course of the vessels and diffusing itself through the hand, which
     at the same time begins to feel hot, and becomes distended.

     As we had noted, in connexion with the tight ligature, that the
     artery above the bandage was distended and pulsated, not below it,
     so, in the case of the moderately tight bandage, on the contrary, do
     we find that the veins below, never above, the fillet, swell, and
     become dilated, whilst the arteries shrink; and such is the degree
     of distension of the veins here, that it is only very strong
     pressure that will force the blood beyond the fillet, and cause any
     of the veins in the upper part of the arm to rise.

     From these facts it is easy for every careful observer to learn that
     the blood enters an extremity by the arteries; for when they are
     effectually compressed nothing is drawn to the member; the hand
     preserves its colour; nothing flows into it, neither is it
     distended; but when the pressure is diminished, as it is with the
     bleeding fillet, it is manifest that the blood is instantly thrown
     in with force, for then the hand begins to swell; which is as much
     as to say, that when the arteries pulsate the blood is flowing
     through them, as it is when the moderately tight ligature is
     applied; but where they do not pulsate, as, when a tight ligature is
     used, they cease from transmitting anything, they are only distended
     above the part where the ligature is applied. The veins again being
     compressed, nothing can flow through them; the certain indication of
     which is, that below the ligature they are much more tumid than
     above it, and than they usually appear when there is no bandage upon
     the arm.

     It therefore plainly appears that the ligature prevents the return
     of the blood through the veins to the parts above it, and maintains
     those beneath it in a state of permanent distension. But the
     arteries, in spite of its pressure, and under the force and impulse
     of the heart, send on the blood from the internal parts of the body
     to the parts beyond the ligature. And herein consists the difference
     between the tight and the medium ligature, that the former not only
     prevents the passage of the blood in the veins, but in the arteries
     also; the latter, however, whilst it does not prevent the force of
     the pulse from extending beyond it, and so propelling the blood to
     the extremities of the body, compresses the veins, and greatly or
     altogether impedes the return of the blood through them.

     Seeing, therefore, that the moderately tight ligature renders the
     veins turgid and distended, and the whole hand full of blood, I ask,
     whence is this? Does the blood accumulate below the ligature coming
     through the veins, or through the arteries, or passing by certain
     hidden porosities? Through the veins it cannot come; still less can
     it come through invisible channels; it must needs, then, arrive by
     the arteries in conformity with all that has been already said. That
     it cannot flow in by the veins appears plainly enough from the fact
     that the blood cannot be forced towards the heart unless the
     ligature be removed; when this is done suddenly all the veins
     collapse, and disgorge themselves of their contents into the
     superior parts, the hand at the same time resumes its natural pale
     colour, the tumefaction and the stagnating blood having disappeared.

     Moreover, he whose arm or wrist has thus been bound for some little
     time with the medium bandage, so that it has not only got swollen
     and livid but cold, when the fillet is undone is aware of something
     cold making its way upwards along with the returning blood, and
     reaching the elbow or the axilla. And I have myself been inclined to
     think that this cold blood rising upwards to the heart was the cause
     of the fainting that often occurs after blood-letting: fainting
     frequently supervenes even in robust subjects, and mostly at the
     moment of undoing the fillet, as the vulgar say, from the turning of
     the blood.

     Farther, when we see the veins below the ligature instantly swell up
     and become gorged, when from extreme tightness it is somewhat
     relaxed, the arteries meantime continuing unaffected, this is an
     obvious indication that the blood passes from the arteries into the
     veins, and not from the veins into the arteries, and that there is
     either an anastomosis of the two orders of vessels, or porosities in
     the flesh and solid parts generally that are permeable to the blood.
     It is farther an indication that the veins have frequent
     communications with one another, because they all become turgid
     together, whilst under the medium ligature applied above the elbow;
     and if any single small vein be pricked with a lancet, they all
     speedily shrink, and disburthening themselves into this they subside
     almost simultaneously.

     These considerations will enable anyone to understand the nature of
     the attraction that is exerted by ligatures, and perchance of fluxes
     generally; how, for example, when the veins are compressed by a
     bandage of medium tightness applied above the elbow, the blood
     cannot escape, whilst it still continues to be driven in, by the
     forcing power of the heart, by which the parts are of necessity
     filled, gorged with blood. And how should it be otherwise? Heat and
     pain and a vacuum draw, indeed; but in such wise only that parts are
     filled, not preternaturally distended or gorged, and not so suddenly
     and violently overwhelmed with the charge of blood forced in upon
     them, that the flesh is lacerated and the vessels ruptured. Nothing
     of the kind as an effect of heat, or pain, or the vacuum force, is
     either credible or demonstrable.

     Besides, the ligature is competent to occasion the afflux in
     question without either pain, or heat, or a vacuum. Were pain in any
     way the cause, how should it happen that, with the arm bound above
     the elbow, the hand and fingers should swell below the bandage, and
     their veins become distended? The pressure of the bandage certainly
     prevents the blood from getting there by the veins. And then,
     wherefore is there neither swelling nor repletion of the veins, nor
     any sign or symptom of attraction or afflux, above the ligature? But
     this is the obvious cause of the preternatural attraction and
     swelling below the bandage, and in the hand and fingers, that the
     blood is entering abundantly, and with force, but cannot pass out
     again.

     Now is not this the cause of all tumefaction, as indeed Avicenna has
     it, and of all oppressive redundancy in parts, that the access to
     them is open, but the egress from them is closed? Whence it comes
     that they are gorged and tumefied. And may not the same thing happen
     in local inflammations, where, so long as the swelling is on the
     increase, and has not reached its extreme term, a full pulse is felt
     in the part, especially when the disease is of the more acute kind,
     and the swelling usually takes place most rapidly. But these are
     matters for after discussion. Or does this, which occurred in my own
     case, happen from the same cause? Thrown from a carriage upon one
     occasion, I struck my forehead a blow upon the place where a twig of
     the artery advances from the temple, and immediately, within the
     time in which twenty beats could have been made I felt a tumour the
     size of an egg developed, without either heat or any great pain: the
     near vicinity of the artery had caused the blood to be effused into
     the bruised part with unusual force and velocity.

     And now, too, we understand why in phlebotomy we apply our ligature
     above the part that is punctured, not below it; did the flow come
     from above, not from below, the constriction in this case would not
     only be of no service, but would prove a positive hindrance; it
     would have to be applied below the orifice, in order to have the
     flow more free, did the blood descend by the veins from superior to
     inferior parts; but as it is elsewhere forced through the extreme
     arteries into the extreme veins, and the return in these last is
     opposed by the ligature, so do they fill and swell, and being thus
     filled and distended, they are made capable of projecting their
     charge with force, and to a distance, when any one of them is
     suddenly punctured; but the ligature being slackened, and the
     returning channels thus left open, the blood forthwith no longer
     escapes, save by drops; and, as all the world knows, if in
     performing phlebotomy the bandage be either slackened too much or
     the limb be bound too tightly, the blood escapes without force,
     because in the one case the returning channels are not adequately
     obstructed; in the other the channels of influx, the arteries, are
     impeded.

     Chapter XII: That There Is A Circulation Of The Blood Is Shown

     (From The Second Position Demonstrated)

     If these things be so, another point which I have already referred
     to, viz., the continual passage of the blood through the heart will
     also be confirmed. We have seen, that the blood passes from the
     arteries into the veins, not from the veins into the arteries; we
     have seen, farther, that almost the whole of the blood may be
     withdrawn from a puncture made in one of the cutaneous veins of the
     arm if a bandage properly applied be used; we have seen, still
     farther, that the blood flows so freely and rapidly that not only is
     the whole quantity which was contained in the arm beyond the
     ligature, and before the puncture was made, discharged, but the
     whole which is contained in the body, both that of the arteries and
     that of the veins.

     Whence we must admit, first, that the blood is sent along with an
     impulse, and that it is urged with force below the ligature; for it
     escapes with force, which force it receives from the pulse and power
     of the heart; for the force and motion of the blood are derived from
     the heart alone. Second, that the afflux proceeds from the heart,
     and through the heart by a course from the great veins; for it gets
     into the parts below the ligature through the arteries, not through
     the veins; and the arteries nowhere receive blood from the veins,
     nowhere receive blood save and except from the left ventricle of the
     heart. Nor could so large a quantity of blood be drawn from one vein
     (a ligature having been duly applied), nor with such impetuosity,
     such readiness, such celerity, unless through the medium of the
     impelling power of the heart.

     But if all things be as they are now represented, we shall feel
     ourselves at liberty to calculate the quantity of the blood, and to
     reason on its circular motion. Should anyone, for instance,
     performing phlebotomy, suffer the blood to flow in the manner it
     usually does, with force and freely, for some half hour or so, no
     question but that the greatest part of the blood being abstracted,
     faintings and syncopes would ensue, and that not only would the
     arteries but the great veins also be nearly emptied of their
     contents. It is only consonant with reason to conclude that in the
     course of the half hour hinted at, so much as has escaped has also
     passed from the great veins through the heart into the aorta. And
     further, if we calculate how many ounces flow through one arm, or
     how many pass in twenty or thirty pulsations under the medium
     ligature, we shall have some grounds for estimating how much passes
     through the other arm in the same space of time: how much through
     both lower extremities, how much through the neck on either side,
     and through all the other arteries and veins of the body, all of
     which have been supplied with fresh blood, and as this blood must
     have passed through the lungs and ventricles of the heart, and must
     have come from the great veins, - we shall perceive that a
     circulation is absolutely necessary, seeing that the quantities
     hinted at cannot be supplied immediately from the ingesta, and are
     vastly more than can be requisite for the mere nutrition of the
     parts.

     It is still further to be observed, that in practising phlebotomy
     the truths contended for are sometimes confirmed in another way; for
     having tied up the arm properly, and made the puncture duly, still,
     it from alarm or any other causes, a state of faintness supervenes,
     in which the heart always pulsates more languidly, the blood does
     not flow freely, but distils by drops only. The reason is, that with
     a somewhat greater than usual resistance offered to the transit of
     the blood by the bandage, coupled with the weaker action of the
     heart, and its diminished impelling power, the stream cannot make
     its way under the ligature; and farther, owing to the weak and
     languishing state of the heart, the blood is not transferred in such
     quantity as wont from the veins to the arteries through the sinuses
     of that organ. So also, and for the same reasons, are the menstrual
     fluxes of women, and indeed hemorrhages of every kind, controlled.
     And now, a contrary state of things occurring, the patient getting
     rid of his fear and recovering his courage, the pulse strength is
     increased, the arteries begin again to beat with greater force, and
     to drive the blood even into the part that is bound; so that the
     blood now springs from the puncture in the vein, and flows in a
     continuous stream.

     Chapter XIII: The Third Position Is Confirmed

     (And The Circulation Of The Blood Is Demonstrated From It)

     Thus far we have spoken of the quantity of blood passing through the
     heart and the lungs in the centre of the body, and in like manner
     from the arteries into the veins in the peripheral parts and the
     body at large. We have yet to explain, however, in what manner the
     blood finds its way back to the heart from the extremities by the
     veins, and how and in what way these are the only vessels that
     convey the blood from the external to the central parts; which done,
     I conceive that the three fundamental propositions laid down for the
     circulation of the blood will be so plain, so well established, so
     obviously true, that they may claim general credence. Now the
     remaining position will be made sufficiently clear from the valves
     which are found in the cavities of the veins themselves, from the
     uses of these, and from experiments cognizable by the senses.

     The celebrated Hieronymus Fabricius of Aquapendente, a most skillful
     anatomist, and venerable old man, or, as the learned Riolan will
     have it, Jacobus Silvius, first gave representations of the valves
     in the veins, which consist of raised or loose portions of the inner
     membranes of these vessels, of extreme delicacy, and a sigmoid or
     semilunar shape. They are situated at different distances from one
     another, and diversely in different individuals; they are connate at
     the sides of the veins; they are directed upwards towards the trunks
     of the veins; the two-for there are for the most part two together
     -regard each other, mutually touch, and are so ready to come into
     contact by their edges, that if anything attempts to pass from the
     trunks into the branches of the veins, or from the greater vessels
     into the less, they completely prevent it; they are farther so
     arranged, that the horns of those that succeed are opposite the
     middle of the convexity of those that precede, and so on
     alternately.

     The discoverer of these valves did not rightly understand their use,
     nor have succeeding anatomists added anything to our knowledge; for
     their office is by no means explained when we are told that it is to
     hinder the blood, by its weight, from all flowing into inferior
     parts; for the edges of the valves in the jugular veins hang
     downwards, and are so contrived that they prevent the blood from
     rising upwards; the valves, in a word, do not invariably look
     upwards, but always toward the trunks of the veins, invariably
     towards the seat of the heart. I, and indeed others, have sometimes
     found valves in the emulgent veins, and in those of the mesentery,
     the edges of which were directed towards the vena cava and vena
     portae. Let it be added that there are no valves in the arteries,
     and that dogs, oxen, etc., have invariably valves at the divisions
     of their crural veins, in the veins that meet towards the top of the
     os sacrum, and in those branches which come from the haunches, in
     which no such effect of gravity from the erect position was to be
     apprehended. Neither are there valves in the jugular veins for the
     purpose of guarding against apoplexy, as some have said; because in
     sleep the head is more apt to be influenced by the contents of the
     carotid arteries. Neither are the valves present, in order that the
     blood may be retained in the divarications or smaller trunks and
     minuter branches, and not be suffered to flow entirely into the more
     open and capacious channels; for they occur where there are no
     divarications; although it must be owned that they are most frequent
     at the points where branches join. Neither do they exist for the
     purpose of rendering the current of blood more slow from the centre
     of the body; for it seems likely that the blood would be disposed to
     flow with sufficient slowness of its own accord, as it would have to
     pass from larger into continually smaller vessels, being separated
     from the mass and fountain head, and attaining from warmer into
     colder places.

     But the valves are solely made and instituted lest the blood should
     pass from the greater into the lesser veins, and either rupture them
     or cause them to become varicose; lest, instead of advancing from
     the extreme to the central parts of the body, the blood should
     rather proceed along the veins from the centre to the extremities;
     but the delicate valves, while they readily open in the right
     direction, entirely prevent all such contrary motion, being so
     situated and arranged, that if anything escapes, or is less
     perfectly obstructed by the cornua of the one above, the fluid
     passing, as it were, by the chinks between the cornua, it is
     immediately received on the convexity of the one beneath, which is
     placed transversely with reference to the former, and so is
     effectually hindered from getting any farther.

     And this I have frequently experienced in my dissections of the
     veins: if I attempted to pass a probe from the trunk of the veins
     into one of the smaller branches, whatever care I took I found it
     impossible to introduce it far any way, by reason of the valves;
     whilst, on the contrary, it was most easy to push it along in the
     opposite direction, from without inwards, or from the branches
     towards the trunks and roots. In many places two valves are so
     placed and fitted, that when raised they come exactly together in
     the middle of the vein, and are there united by the contact of their
     margins; and so accurate is the adaptation, that neither by the eye
     nor by any other means of examination, can the slightest chink along
     the line of contact be perceived. But if the probe be now introduced
     from the extreme towards the more central parts, the valves, like
     the floodgates of a river, give way, and are most readily pushed
     aside. The effect of this arrangement plainly is to prevent all
     motion of the blood from the heart and vena cava, whether it be
     upwards towards the head, or downwards towards the feet, or to
     either side towards the arms, not a drop can pass; all motion of the
     blood, beginning in the larger and tending towards the smaller
     veins, is opposed and resisted by them; whilst the motion that
     proceeds from the lesser to end in the larger branches is favoured,
     or, at all events, a free and open passage is left for it.

     But that this truth may be made the more apparent, let an arm be
     tied up above the elbow as if for phlebotomy (A, A, fig. 1). At
     intervals in the course of the veins, especially in labouring people
     and those whose veins are large, certain knots or elevations (B, C,
     D, E, F) will be perceived, and this not only at the places where a
     branch is received (E, F), but also where none enters (C, D): these
     knots or risings are all formed by valves, which thus show
     themselves externally. And now if you press the blood from the space
     above one of the valves, from H to O, (fig. 2,) and keep the point
     of a finger upon the vein inferiorly, you will see no influx of
     blood from above; the portion of the vein between the point of the
     finger and the valve O will be obliterated; yet will the vessel
     continue sufficiently distended above the valve (O, G). The blood
     being thus pressed out and the vein emptied, if you now apply a
     finger of the other hand upon the distended part of the vein above
     the valve O, (fig. 3,) and press downwards, you will find that you
     cannot force the blood through or beyond the valve; but the greater
     effort you use, you will only see the portion of vein that is
     between the finger and the valve become more distended, that portion
     of the vein which is below the valve remaining all the while empty
     (H, O, fig. 3).

     It would therefore appear that the function of the valves in the
     veins is the same as that of the three sigmoid valves which we find
     at the commencement of the aorta and pulmonary artery, viz., to
     prevent all reflux of the blood that is passing over them.

     [Note. - Woodcuts of the veins of the arm to which these letters and
     figures refer appear here in the original. - C. N. B. C.]

     Farther, the arm being bound as before, and the veins looking full
     and distended, if you press at one part in the course of a vein with
     the point of a finger (L, fig. 4), and then with another finger
     streak the blood upwards beyond the next valve (N), you will
     perceive that this portion of the vein continues empty (L. N), and
     that the blood cannot retrograde, precisely as we have already seen
     the case to be in fig. 2; but the finger first applied (H, fig. 2,
     L, fig. 4), being removed, immediately the vein is filled from
     below, and the arm becomes as it appears at D C, fig. 1. That the
     blood in the veins therefore proceeds from inferior or more remote
     parts, and towards the heart, moving in these vessels in this and
     not in the contrary direction, appears most obviously. And although
     in some places the valves, by not acting with such perfect accuracy,
     or where there is but a single valve, do not seem totally to prevent
     the passage of the blood from the centre, still the greater number
     of them plainly do so; and then, where things appear contrived more
     negligently, this is compensated either by the more frequent
     occurrence or more perfect action of the succeeding valves, or in
     some other way: the veins in short, as they are the free and open
     conduits of the blood returning to the heart, so are they
     effectually prevented from serving as its channels of distribution
     from the heart.

     But this other circumstance has to be noted: The arm being bound,
     and the veins made turgid, and the valves prominent, as before,
     apply the thumb or finger over a vein in the situation of one of the
     valves in such a way as to compress it, and prevent any blood from
     passing upwards from the hand; then, with a finger of the other
     hand, streak the blood in the vein upwards till it has passed the
     next valve above (N, fig. 4), the vessel now remains empty; but the
     finger at L being removed for an instant, the vein is immediately
     filled from below; apply the finger again, and having in the same
     manner streaked the blood upwards, again remove the finger below,
     and again the vessel becomes distended as before; and this repeat,
     say a thousand times, in a short space of time. And now compute the
     quantity of blood which you have thus pressed up beyond the valve,
     and then multiplying the assumed quantity by one thousand, you will
     find that so much blood has passed through a certain portion of the
     vessel; and I do now believe that you will find yourself convinced
     of the circulation of the blood, and of its rapid motion. But if in
     this experiment you say that a violence is done to nature, I do not
     doubt but that, if you proceed in the same way, only taking as great
     a length of vein as possible, and merely remark with what rapidity
     the blood flows upwards, and fills the vessel from below, you will
     come to the same conclusion.

     Chapter XIV: Conclusion Of The Demonstration Of The Circulation

     And now I may be allowed to give in brief my view of the circulation
     of the blood, and to propose it for general adoption.

     Since all things, both argument and ocular demonstration, show that
     the blood passes through the lungs, and heart by the force of the
     ventricles, and is sent for distribution to all parts of the body,
     where it makes its way into the veins and porosities of the flesh,
     and then flows by the veins from the circumference on every side to
     the centre, from the lesser to the greater veins, and is by them
     finally discharged into the vena cava and right auricle of the
     heart, and this in such a quantity or in such a flux and reflux
     thither by the arteries, hither by the veins, as cannot possibly be
     supplied by the ingesta, and is much greater than can be required
     for mere purposes of nutrition; it is absolutely necessary to
     conclude that the blood in the animal body is impelled in a circle,
     and is in a state of ceaseless motion; that this is the act or
     function which the heart performs by means of its pulse; and that it
     is the sole and only end of the motion and contraction of the heart.

     Chapter XV: The Circulation Of The Blood Is Further Confirmed

     (By Probable Reasons)

     It will not be foreign to the subject if I here show further, from
     certain familiar reasonings, that the circulation is matter both of
     convenience and necessity. In the first place, since death is a
     corruption which takes place through deficiency of heat,^1 and since
     all living things are warm, all dying things cold, there must be a
     particular seat and fountain, a kind of home and hearth, where the
     cherisher of nature, the original of the native fire, is stored and
     preserved; from which heat and life are dispensed to all parts as
     from a fountain head; from which sustenance may be derived; and upon
     which concoction and nutrition, and all vegetative energy may
     depend. Now, that the heart is this place, that the heart is the
     principle of life, and that all passes in the manner just mentioned,
     I trust no one will deny.

     [Footnote 1: Aristoteles De Respiratione, lib. ii et iii: De Part.
     Animal. et alibi.]

     The blood, therefore, required to have motion, and indeed such a
     motion that it should return again to the heart; for sent to the
     external parts of the body far from its fountain, as Aristotle says,
     and without motion, it would become congealed. For we see motion
     generating and keeping up heat and spirits under all circumstances,
     and rest allowing them to escape and be dissipated. The blood,
     therefore, becoming thick or congealed by the cold of the extreme
     and outward parts, and robbed of its spirits, just as it is in the
     dead, it was imperative that from its fount and origin, it should
     again receive heat and spirits, and all else requisite to its
     preservation - that, by returning, it should be renovated and
     restored.

     We frequently see how the extremities are chilled by the external
     cold, how the nose and cheeks and hands look blue, and how the
     blood, stagnating in them as in the pendent or lower parts of a
     corpse, becomes of a dusky hue; the limbs at the same time getting
     torpid, so that they can scarcely be moved, and seem almost to have
     lost their vitality. Now they can by no means be so effectually, and
     especially so speedily restored to heat and colour and life, as by a
     new efflux and contact of heat from its source. But how can parts
     attract in which the heat and life are almost extinct? Or how should
     they whose passages are filled with condensed and frigid blood,
     admit fresh aliment - renovated blood - unless they had first got
     rid of their contents? Unless the heart were truly that fountain
     where life and heat are restored to the refrigerated fluid, and
     whence new blood, warm, imbued with spirits, being sent out by the
     arteries, that which has become cooled and effete is forced on, and
     all the particles recover their heat which was failing, and their
     vital stimulus wellnigh exhausted.

     Hence it is that if the heart be unaffected, life and health may be
     restored to almost all the other parts of the body; but if the heart
     be chilled, or smitten with any serious disease, it seems matter of
     necessity that the whole animal fabric should suffer and fall into
     decay. When the source is corrupted, there is nothing, as Aristotle
     says,^2 which can be of service either to it or aught that depends
     on it. And hence, by the way, it may perchance be why grief, and
     love, and envy, and anxiety, and all affections of the mind of a
     similar kind are accompanied with emaciation and decay, or with
     disordered fluids and crudity, which engender all manner of diseases
     and consume the body of man. For every affection of the mind that is
     attended with either pain or pleasure, hope or fear, is the cause of
     an agitation whose influence extends to the heart, and there induces
     change from the natural constitution, in the temperature, the pulse
     and the rest, which impairing all nutrition in its source and
     abating the powers at large, it is no wonder that various forms of
     incurable disease in the extremities and in the trunk are the
     consequence, inasmuch as in such circumstances the whole body
     labours under the effects of vitiated nutrition and a want of native
     heat.

     [Footnote 2: De Part. Animal., iii.]

     Moreover, when we see that all animals live through food digested in
     their interior, it is imperative that the digestion and distribution
     be perfect, and, as a consequence, that there be a place and
     receptacle where the aliment is perfected and whence it is
     distributed to the several members. Now this place is the heart, for
     it is the only organ in the body which contains blood for the
     general use; all the others receive it merely for their peculiar or
     private advantage, just as the heart also has a supply for its own
     especial behoof in its coronary veins and arteries. But it is of the
     store which the heart contains in its auricles and ventricles that I
     here speak. Then the heart is the only organ which is so situated
     and constituted that it can distribute the blood in due proportion
     to the several parts of the body, the quantity sent to each being
     according to the dimensions of the artery which supplies it, the
     heart serving as a magazine or fountain ready to meet its demands.

     Further, a certain impulse or force, as well as an impeller or
     forcer, such as the heart, was required to effect this distribution
     and motion of the blood; both because the blood is disposed from
     slight causes, such as cold, alarm, horror, and the like, to collect
     in its source, to concentrate like parts to a whole, or the drops of
     water spilt upon a table to the mass of liquid; and because it is
     forced from the capillary veins into the smaller ramifications, and
     from these into the larger trunks by the motion of the extremities
     and the compression of the muscles generally. The blood is thus more
     disposed to move from the circumference to the centre than in the
     opposite direction, even were there no valves to oppose its motion;
     wherefore, that it may leave its source and enter more confined and
     colder channels, and flow against the direction to which it
     spontaneously inclines, the blood requires both force and impelling
     power. Now such is the heart and the heart alone, and that in the
     way and manner already explained.

     Chapter XVI: The Circulation Of The Blood Is Further Proved

     (From Certain Consequences)

     There are still certain problems, which, taken as consequences of
     this truth assumed as proven, are not without their use in exciting
     belief, as it were, a posteriore; and which, although they may seem
     to be involved in much doubt and obscurity, nevertheless readily
     admit of having reasons and causes assigned for them. Of such a
     nature are those that present themselves in connexion with
     contagions, poisoned wounds, the bites of serpents and rabid
     animals, lues venerea and the like. We sometimes see the whole
     system contaminated, though the part first infected remains sound;
     the lues venerea has occasionally made its attack with pains in the
     shoulders and head, and other symptoms, the genital organs being all
     the while unaffected; and then we know that the wound made by a
     rabid dog having healed, fever and a train of disastrous symptoms
     may nevertheless supervene. Whence it appears that the contagion
     impressed upon or deposited in a particular part, is by-and-by
     carried by the returning current of blood to the heart, and by that
     organ is sent to contaminate the whole body.

     In tertian fever, the morbific cause seeking the heart in the first
     instance, and hanging about the heart and lungs, renders the patient
     short-winded, disposed to sighing, and indisposed to exertion,
     because the vital principle is oppressed and the blood forced into
     the lungs and rendered thick. It does not pass through them, (as I
     have myself seen in opening the bodies of those who had died in the
     beginning of the attack,) when the pulse is always frequent, small,
     and occasionally irregular; but the heat increasing, the matter
     becoming attenuated, the passages forced, and the transit made, the
     whole body begins to rise in temperature, and the pulse becomes
     fuller and stronger. The febrile paroxysm is fully formed, whilst
     the preternatural heat kindled in the heart is thence diffused by
     the arteries through the whole body along with the morbific matter,
     which is in this way overcome and dissolved by nature.

     When we perceive, further, that medicines applied externally exert
     their influence on the body just as if they had been taken
     internally, the truth we are contending for is confirmed. Colocynth
     and aloes in this way move the belly, cantharides excites the urine,
     garlic applied to the soles of the feet assists expectoration,
     cordials strengthen, and an infinite number of examples of the same
     kind might be cited. Perhaps it will not, therefore, be found
     unreasonable, if we say that the veins, by means of their orifices,
     absorb some of the things that are applied externally and carry this
     inwards with the blood, not otherwise, it may be, than those of the
     mesentery imbibe the chyle from the intestines and carry it mixed
     with the blood to the liver. For the blood entering the mesentery by
     the coeliac artery, and the superior and inferior mesenterics,
     proceeds to the intestines, from which, along with the chyle that
     has been attracted into the veins, it returns by their numerous
     ramifications into the vena portae of the liver, and from this into
     the vena cava, and this in such wise that the blood in these veins
     has the same colour and consistency as in other veins, in opposition
     to what many believe to be the fact. Nor indeed can we imagine two
     contrary motions in any capillary system - the chyle upwards, the
     blood downwards. This could scarcely take place, and must be held as
     altogether improbable. But is not the thing rather arranged as it is
     by the consummate providence of nature? For were the chyle mingled
     with the blood, the crude with the digested, in equal proportions,
     the result would not be concoction, transmutation, and
     sanguification, but rather, and because they are severally active
     and passive, a mixture or combination, or medium compound of the
     two, precisely as happens when wine is mixed with water and syrup.
     But when a very minute quantity of chyle is mingled with a very
     large quantity of circulating blood, a quantity of chyle that bears
     no kind of proportion to the mass of blood, the effect is the same,
     as Aristotle says, as when a drop of water is added to a cask of
     wine, or the contrary; the mass does not then present itself as a
     mixture, but is still sensibly either wine or water.

     So in the mesenteric veins of an animal we do not find either chyme
     or chyle and blood, blended together or distinct, but only blood,
     the same in colour, consistency, and other sensible properties, as
     it appears in the veins generally. Still as there is a certain
     though small and inappreciable portion of chyle or incompletely
     digested matter mingled with the blood, nature has interposed the
     liver, in whose meandering channels it suffers delay and undergoes
     additional change, lest arriving prematurely and crude at the heart,
     it should oppress the vital principle. Hence in the embryo, there is
     almost no use for the liver, but the umbilical vein passes directly
     through, a foramen or an anastomosis existing from the vena portae.
     The blood returns from the intestines of the foetus, not through the
     liver, but into the umbilical vein mentioned, and flows at once into
     the heart, mingled with the natural blood which is returning from
     the placenta; whence also it is that in the development of the
     foetus the liver is one of the organs that is last formed. I have
     observed all the members perfectly marked out in the human foetus,
     even the genital organs, whilst there was yet scarcely any trace of
     the liver. And indeed at the period when all the parts, like the
     heart itself in the beginning, are still white, and except in the
     veins there is no appearance of redness, you shall see nothing in
     the seat of the liver but a shapeless collection, as it were, of
     extravasated blood, which you might take for the effects of a
     contusion or ruptured vein.

     But in the incubated egg there are, as it were, two umbilical
     vessels, one from the albumen passing entire through the liver, and
     going straight to the heart; another from the yelk, ending in the
     vena portae; for it appears that the chick, in the first instance,
     is entirely formed and nourished by the white; but by the yelk after
     it has come to perfection and is excluded from the shell; for this
     part may still be found in the abdomen of the chick many days after
     its exclusion, and is a substitute for the milk to other animals.

     But these matters will be better spoken of in my observations on the
     formation of the foetus, where many propositions, the following
     among the number, will be discussed: Wherefore is this part formed
     or perfected first, that last, and of the several members, what part
     is the cause of another? And there are many points having special
     reference to the heart, such as wherefore does it first acquire
     consistency, and appear to possess life, motion, sense, before any
     other part of the body is perfected, as Aristotle says in his third
     book, &quot;De partibus Animalium&quot;? And so also of the blood, wherefore
     does it precede all the rest? And in what way does it possess the
     vital and animal principle, and show a tendency to motion, and to be
     impelled hither and thither, the end for which the heart appears to
     be made? In the same way, in considering the pulse, why should one
     kind of pulse indicate death, another recovery? And so of all the
     other kinds of pulse, what may be the cause and indication of each?
     Likewise we must consider the reason of crises and natural critical
     discharges; of nutrition, and especially the distribution of the
     nutriment; and of defluxions of every description. Finally,
     reflecting on every part of medicine, physiology, pathology,
     semeiotics and therapeutics, when I see how many questions can be
     answered, how many doubts resolved, how much obscurity illustrated
     by the truth we have declared, the light we have made to shine, I
     see a field of such vast extent in which I might proceed so far, and
     expatiate so widely, that this my tractate would not only swell out
     into a volume, which was beyond my purpose, but my whole life,
     perchance, would not suffice for its completion.

     In this place, therefore, and that indeed in a single chapter, I
     shall only endeavour to refer the various particulars that present
     themselves in the dissection of the heart and arteries to their
     several uses and causes; for so I shall meet with many things which
     receive light from the truth I have been contending for, and which,
     in their turn, render it more obvious. And indeed I would have it
     confirmed and illustrated by anatomical arguments above all others.

     There is but a single point which indeed would be more correctly
     placed among our observations on the use of the spleen, but which it
     will not be altogether impertinent to notice in this place
     incidentally. From the splenic branch which passes into the
     pancreas, and from the upper part, arise the posterior coronary,
     gastric, and gastroepiploic veins, all of which are distributed upon
     the stomach in numerous branches and twigs, just as the mesenteric
     vessels are upon the intestines. In a similar way, from the inferior
     part of the same splenic branch, and along the back of the colon and
     rectum proceed the hemorrhoidal veins. The blood returning by these
     veins, and bringing the cruder juices along with it, on the one hand
     from the stomach, where they are thin, watery, and not yet perfectly
     chylified; on the other thick and more earthy, as derived from the
     faeces, but all poured into this splenic branch, are duly tempered
     by the admixture of contraries; and nature mingling together these
     two kinds of juices, difficult of coction by reason of most opposite
     defects, and then diluting them with a large quantity of warm blood,
     (for we see that the quantity returned from the spleen must be very
     large when we contemplate the size of its arteries,) they are
     brought to the porta of the liver in a state of higher preparation.
     The defects of either extreme are supplied and compensated by this
     arrangement of the veins.

     Chapter XVII: The Motion And Circulation Of The Blood Are Confirmed

     (From The Particulars Apparent In The Structure Of The Heart, And
     From Those Things Which Dissection Unfolds)

     I do not find the heart as a distinct and separate part in all
     animals; some, indeed, such as the zoophytes, have no heart; this is
     because these animals are coldest, of one great bulk, of soft
     texture, or of a certain uniform sameness or simplicity of
     structure; among the number I may instance grubs and earth-worms,
     and those that are engendered of putrefaction and do not preserve
     their species. These have no heart, as not requiring any impeller of
     nourishment into the extreme parts; for they have bodies which are
     connate and homogeneous and without limbs; so that by the
     contraction and relaxation of the whole body they assume and expel,
     move and remove, the aliment. Oysters, mussels, sponges, and the
     whole genus of zoophytes or plant-animals have no heart, for the
     whole body is used as a heart, or the whole animal is a heart. In a
     great number of animals, - almost the whole tribe of insects - we
     cannot see distinctly by reason of the smallness of the body; still
     in bees, flies, hornets, and the like we can perceive something
     pulsating with the help of a magnifying glass; in pediculi, also,
     the same thing may be seen, and as the body is transparent, the
     passage of the food through the intestines, like a black spot or
     stain, may be perceived by the aid of the same magnifying glass.

     But in some of the pale-blooded and colder animals, as in snails,
     whelks, shrimps, and shell-fish, there is a part which pulsates, - a
     kind of vesicle or auricle without a heart, - slowly, indeed, and
     not to be perceived except in the warmer season of the year. In
     these creatures this part is so contrived that it shall pulsate, as
     there is here a necessity for some impulse to distribute the
     nutritive fluid, by reason of the variety of organic parts, or of
     the density of the substance; but the pulsations occur unfrequently,
     and sometimes in consequence of the cold not at all, an arrangement
     the best adapted to them as being of a doubtful nature, so that
     sometimes they appear to live, sometimes to die; sometimes they show
     the vitality of an animal, sometimes of a vegetable. This seems to
     be the case with the insects which conceal themselves in winter, and
     lie, as it were, defunct, or merely manifesting a kind of vegetative
     existence. But whether the same thing happens in the case of certain
     animals that have red blood, such as frogs, tortoises, serpents,
     swallows, may be very properly doubted.

     In all the larger and warmer animals which have red blood, there was
     need of an impeller of the nutritive fluid, and that, perchance,
     possessing a considerable amount of power. In fishes, serpents,
     lizards, tortoises, frogs, and others of the same kind there is a
     heart present, furnished with both an auricle and a ventricle,
     whence it is perfectly true, as Aristotle has observed,^1 that no
     sanguineous animal is without a heart, by the impelling power of
     which the nutritive fluid is forced, both with greater vigour and
     rapidity, to a greater distance; and not merely agitated by an
     auricle, as it is in lower forms. And then in regard to animals that
     are yet larger, warmer, and more perfect, as they abound in blood,
     which is always hotter and more spirituous, and which possess bodies
     of greater size and consistency, these require a larger, stronger,
     and more fleshy heart, in order that the nutritive fluid may be
     propelled with yet greater force and celerity. And further, inasmuch
     as the more perfect animals require a still more perfect nutrition,
     and a larger supply of native heat, in order that the aliment may be
     thoroughly concocted and acquire the last degree of perfection, they
     required both lungs and a second ventricle, which should force the
     nutritive fluid through them.

     [Footnote 1: De Part. Animal., lib. iii.]

     Every animal that has lungs has, therefore, two ventricles to its
     heart-one right, the other left; and wherever there is a right,
     there also is there a left ventricle; but the contrary of this does
     not hold good: where there is a left there is not always a right
     ventricle. The left ventricle I call that which is distinct in
     office, not in place from the other, that one, namely, which
     distributes the blood to the body at large, not to the lungs only.
     Hence the left ventricle seems to form the principal part of the
     heart; situated in the middle, more strongly marked, and constructed
     with greater care, the heart seems formed for the sake of the left
     ventricle, and the right but to minister to it. The right neither
     reaches to the apex of the heart nor is it nearly of such strength,
     being three times thinner in its walls, and in some sort jointed on
     to the left (as Aristotle says), though, indeed, it is of greater
     capacity, inasmuch as it has not only to supply material to the left
     ventricle, but likewise to furnish aliment to the lungs.

     It is to be observed, however, that all this is otherwise in the
     embryo, where there is not such a difference between the two
     ventricles. There, as in a double nut, they are nearly equal in all
     respects, the apex of the right reaching to the apex of the left, so
     that the heart presents itself as a sort of double-pointed cone. And
     this is so, because in the foetus, as already said, whilst the blood
     is not passing through the lungs from the right to the left cavities
     of the heart, it flows by the foramen ovale and ductus arteriosus
     directly from the vena cava into the aorta, whence it is distributed
     to the whole body. Both ventricles have, therefore, the same office
     to perform, whence their equality of constitution. It is only when
     the lungs come to be used and it is requisite that the passages
     indicated should be blocked up that the difference in point of
     strength and other things between the two ventricles begins to be
     apparent. In the altered circumstances the right has only to drive
     the blood through the lungs, whilst the left has to propel it
     through the whole body.

     There are, moreover, within the heart numerous braces, in the form
     of fleshy columns and fibrous bands, which Aristotle, in his third
     book on &quot;Respiration,&quot; and the &quot;Parts of Animals,&quot; entitles nerves.
     These are variously extended, and are either distinct or contained
     in grooves in the walls and partition, where they occasion numerous
     pits or depressions. They constitute a kind of small muscles, which
     are superadded and supplementary to the heart, assisting it to
     execute a more powerful and perfect contraction, and so proving
     subservient to the complete expulsion of the blood. They are, in
     some sort, like the elaborate and artful arrangement of ropes in a
     ship, bracing the heart on every side as it contracts, and so
     enabling it more effectually and forcibly to expel the charge of
     blood from its ventricles. This much is plain, at all events, that
     in some animals they are less strongly marked than in others; and,
     in all that have them, they are more numerous and stronger in the
     left than in the right ventricle; and while some have them present
     in the left, yet they are absent in the right ventricle. In man they
     are more numerous in the left than in the right ventricle, more
     abundant in the ventricles than in the auricles; and occasionally
     there appear to be none present in the auricles. They are numerous
     in the large, more muscular and hardier bodies of countrymen, but
     fewer in more slender frames and in females.

     In those animals in which the ventricles of the heart are smooth
     within and entirely without fibres of muscular bands, or anything
     like hollow pits, as in almost all the smaller birds, the partridge
     and the common fowl, serpents, frogs, tortoises, and most fishes,
     there are no chordae tendineae, nor bundles of fibres, neither are
     there any tricuspid valves in the ventricles.

     Some animals have the right ventricle smooth internally, but the
     left provided with fibrous bands, such as the to be blown and to
     require a large quantity of air. But of these things, more in our
     &quot;Treatise on Respiration.&quot;

     It is in like manner evident that the auricles pulsate, contract, as
     I have said before, and throw the blood into the ventricles; so that
     wherever there is a ventricle, an auricle is necessary, not merely
     that it may serve, according to the general belief, as a source and
     magazine for the blood: for what were the use of its pulsations had
     it only to contain?

     The auricles are prime movers of the blood, especially the right
     auricle, which, as already said, is &quot;the first to live, the last to
     die&quot;; whence they are subservient to sending the blood into the
     ventricles, which, contracting continuously, more readily and
     forcibly expel the blood already in motion; just as the ball-player
     can strike the ball more forcibly and further if he takes it on the
     rebound than if he simply threw it. Moreover, and contrary to the
     general opinion, neither the heart nor anything else can dilate or
     distend itself so as to draw anything into its cavity during the
     diastole, unless, like a sponge, it has been first compressed and is
     returning to its primary condition. But in animals all local motion
     proceeds from, and has its origin in, the contraction of some part;
     consequently it is by the contraction of the auricles that the blood
     is thrown into the ventricles, as I have already shown, and from
     there, by the contraction of the ventricles, it is propelled and
     distributed. Concerning local motions, it is true that the immediate
     moving organ in every motion of an animal primarily endowed with a
     motive spirit (as Aristotle has it^2) is contractile; in which way
     the word veuPou is derived from veuw, nuto, contraho; and if I am
     permitted to proceed in my purpose of making a particular
     demonstration of the organs of motion in animals from observations
     in my possession, I trust I shall be able to make sufficiently plain
     how Aristotle was acquainted with the muscles, and advisedly
     referred all motion in animals to the nerves, or to the contractile
     element, and, therefore, called those little bands in the heart
     nerves.

     [Footnote 2: In the book de Spiritu, and elsewhere.]

     But that we may proceed with the subject which we have in hand,
     viz., the use of the auricles in filling the ventricles, we should
     expect that the more dense and compact the heart, the thicker its
     parietes, the stronger and more muscular must be the auricle to
     force and fill it, and vice versa. Now this is actually so: in some
     the auricle presents itself as a sanguinolent vesicle, as a thin
     membrane containing blood, as in fishes, in which the sac that
     stands in lieu of the auricles is of such delicacy and ample
     capacity that it seems to be suspended or to float above the heart.
     In those fishes in which the sac is somewhat more fleshy, as in the
     carp, barbel, tench, and others, it bears a wonderful and strong
     resemblance to the lungs.

     In some men of sturdier frame and stouter make the right auricle is
     so strong, and so curiously constructed on its inner surface of
     bands and variously interlacing fibres, that it seems to equal in
     strength the ventricle of the heart in other subjects; and I must
     say that I am astonished to find such diversity in this particular
     in different individuals. It is to be observed, however, that in the
     foetus the auricles are out of all proportion large, which is
     because they are present before the heart makes its appearance or
     suffices for its office even when it has appeared, and they,
     therefore, have, as it were, the duty of the whole heart committed
     to them, as has already been demonstrated. But what I have observed
     in the formation of the foetus, as before remarked (and Aristotle
     had already confirmed all in studying the incubated egg), throws the
     greatest light and likelihood upon the point. Whilst the foetus is
     yet in the form of a soft worm, or, as is commonly said, in the
     milk, there is a mere bloody point or pulsating vesicle, a portion
     apparently of the umbilical vein, dilated at its commencement or
     base. Afterwards, when the outline of the foetus is distinctly
     indicated and it begins to have greater bodily consistence, the
     vesicle in question becomes more fleshy and stronger, changes its
     position, and passes into the auricles, above which the body of the
     heart begins to sprout, though as yet it apparently performs no
     office. When the foetus is farther advanced, when the bones can be
     distinguished from the fleshy parts and movements take place, then
     it also has a heart which pulsates, and, as I have said, throws
     blood by either ventricle from the vena cava into the arteries.

     Thus nature, ever perfect and divine, doing nothing in vain, has
     neither given a heart where it was not required, nor produced it
     before its office had become necessary; but by the same stages in
     the development of every animal, passing through the forms of all,
     as I may say (ovum, worm, foetus), it acquires perfection in each.
     These points will be found elsewhere confirmed by numerous
     observations on the formation of the foetus.

     Finally, it is not without good grounds that Hippocrates in his
     book, &quot;De Corde,&quot; entitles it a muscle; its action is the same; so
     is its functions, viz., to contract and move something else - in
     this case the charge of the blood.

     Farther, we can infer the action and use of the heart from the
     arrangement of its fibres and its general structures, as in muscles
     generally. All anatomists admit with Galen that the body of the
     heart is made up of various courses of fibres running straight,
     obliquely, and transversely, with reference to one another; but in a
     heart which has been boiled, the arrangement of the fibres is seen
     to be different. All the fibres in the parietes and septum are
     circular, as in the sphincters; those, again, which are in the
     columns extend lengthwise, and are oblique longitudinally; and so it
     comes to pass that when all the fibres contract simultaneously, the
     apex of the cone is pulled towards its base by the columns, the
     walls are drawn circularly together into a globe - the whole heart,
     in short, is contracted and the ventricles narrowed. It is,
     therefore, impossible not to perceive that, as the action of the
     organ is so plainly contraction, its function is to propel the blood
     into the arteries.

     Nor are we the less to agree with Aristotle in regard to the
     importance of the heart, or to question if it receives sense and
     motion from the brain, blood from the liver, or whether it be the
     origin of the veins and of the blood, and such like. They who affirm
     these propositions overlook, or do not rightly understand, the
     principal argument, to the effect that the heart is the first part
     which exists, and that it contains within itself blood, life,
     sensation, and motion, before either the brain or the liver were
     created or had appeared distinctly, or, at all events, before they
     could perform any function. The heart, ready furnished with its
     proper organs of motion, like a kind of internal creature, existed
     before the body. The first to be formed, nature willed that it
     should afterwards fashion, nourish, preserve, complete the entire
     animal, as its work and dwelling-place: and as the prince in a
     kingdom, in whose hands lie the chief and highest authority, rules
     over all, the heart is the source and foundation from which all
     power is derived, on which all power depends in the animal body.

     Many things having reference to the arteries farther illustrate and
     confirm this truth. Why does not the pulmonary vein pulsate, seeing
     that it is numbered among the arteries? Or wherefore is there a
     pulse in the pulmonary artery? Because the pulse of the arteries is
     derived from the impulse of the blood. Why does an artery differ so
     much from a vein in the thickness and strength of its coats? Because
     it sustains the shock of the impelling heart and streaming blood.
     Hence, as perfect nature does nothing in vain, and suffices under
     all circumstances, we find that the nearer the arteries are to the
     heart, the more do they differ from the veins in structure; here
     they are both stronger and more ligamentous, whilst in extreme parts
     of the body, such as the feet and hands, the brain, the mesentery,
     and the testicles, the two orders of vessels are so much alike that
     it is impossible to distinguish between them with the eye. Now this
     is for the following very sufficient reasons: the more remote the
     vessels are from the heart, with so much the less force are they
     distended by the stroke of the heart, which is broken by the great
     distance at which it is given. Add to this that the impulse of the
     heart exerted upon the mass of blood, which must needs fill the
     trunks and branches of the arteries, is diverted, divided, as it
     were, and diminished at every subdivision, so that the ultimate
     capillary divisions of the arteries look like veins, and this not
     merely in constitution, but in function. They have either no
     perceptible pulse, or they rarely exhibit one, and never except
     where the heart beats more violently than usual, or at a part where
     the minute vessel is more dilated or open than elsewhere. It,
     therefore, happens that at times we are aware of a pulse in the
     teeth, in inflammatory tumours, and in the fingers; at another time
     we feel nothing of the sort. By this single symptom I have
     ascertained for certain that young persons whose pulses are
     naturally rapid were labouring under fever; and in like manner, on
     compressing the fingers in youthful and delicate subjects during a
     febrile paroxysm, I have readily perceived the pulse there. On the
     other hand, when the heart pulsates more languidly, it is often
     impossible to feel the pulse not merely in the fingers, but the
     wrist, and even at the temple, as in persons afflicted with
     lipothymiae asphyxia, or hysterical symptoms, and in the debilitated
     and moribund.

     Here surgeons are to be advised that, when the blood escapes with
     force in the amputation of limbs, in the removal of tumours, and in
     wounds, it constantly comes from an artery; not always indeed per
     saltum, because the smaller arteries do not pulsate, especially if a
     tourniquet has been applied.

     For the same reason the pulmonary artery not only has the structure
     of an artery, but it does not differ so widely from the veins in the
     thickness of its walls as does the aorta. The aorta sustains a more
     powerful shock from the left than the pulmonary artery does from the
     right ventricle, and the walls of this last vessel are thinner and
     softer than those of the aorta in the same proportion as the walls
     of the right ventricle of the heart are weaker and thinner than
     those of the left ventricle. In like manner the lungs are softer and
     laxer in structure than the flesh and other constituents of the
     body, and in a similar way the walls of the branches of the
     pulmonary artery differ from those of the vessels derived from the
     aorta. And the same proportion in these particulars is universally
     preserved. The more muscular and powerful men are, the firmer their
     flesh; the stronger, thicker, denser, and more fibrous their hearts,
     the thicker, closer, and stronger are the auricles and arteries.
     Again, in those animals the ventricles of whose hearts are smooth on
     their inner surface, without villi or valves, and the walls of which
     are thin, as in fishes, serpents, birds, and very many genera of
     animals, the arteries differ little or nothing in the thickness of
     their coats from the veins.

     Moreover, the reason why the lungs have such ample vessels, both
     arteries and veins (for the capacity of the pulmonary veins exceeds
     that of both crural and jugular vessels), and why they contain so
     large a quantity of blood, as by experience and ocular inspection we
     know they do, admonished of the fact indeed by Aristotle, and not
     led into error by the appearances found in animals which have been
     bled to death, is, because the blood has its fountain, and
     storehouse, and the workshop of its last perfection, in the heart
     and lungs. Why, in the same way, we find in the course of our
     anatomical dissections the pulmonary vein and left ventricle so full
     of blood, of the same black colour and clotted character as that
     with which the right ventricle and pulmonary artery are filled, is
     because the blood is incessantly passing from one side of the heart
     to the other through the lungs. Wherefore, in fine, the pulmonary
     artery has the structure of an artery, and the pulmonary veins have
     the structure of veins. In function and constitution and everything
     else the first is an artery, the others are veins, contrary to what
     is commonly believed; and the reason why the pulmonary artery has so
     large an orifice is because it transports much more blood than is
     requisite for the nutrition of the lungs.

     All these appearances, and many others, to be noted in the course of
     dissection, if rightly weighed, seem clearly to illustrate and fully
     to confirm the truth contended for throughout these pages, and at
     the same time to oppose the vulgar opinion; for it would be very
     difficult to explain in any other way to what purpose all is
     constructed and arranged as we have seen it to be.
</p>
    </body>
    <back>
      <div type='colophon'>
        <head>Colophon</head>
        <p>This file was originally marked up using the Text Encoding Initiative XML markup language for use in an experiment/studuy colloquially called "How 'great' are the Great Books?" ( 
        <xref url='http://infomotions.com/sandbox/great-books/'>http://infomotions.com/sandbox/great-books/</xref>) by Eric Lease Morgan. It's Infomotions unique identifier is harvey-on-4652.</p>
        <p rend='center'>
          <figure url='http://infomotions.com/logo.gif' rend='center'>
            <lb />
            <figDesc>Infomotions Man says, "Give back to the 'Net."</figDesc>
          </figure>
        </p>
      </div>
    </back>
  </text>
</TEI.2>
