Mr. Fleming has not omitted the cause, in his fine poem on the maladies of the nerves:
Quin etiam nervos frangit quæcunque voluptas[66].
Sanctorius positively establishes his assertion, that the motions weaken more than the emission of the seed: and it is surprising that M. de Gorter, his commentator, should have sought to persuade the contrary. The reason which he gives, in his averment that these motions do not weaken any more than any other motion, “because they are not convulsive,”[67] will persuade no one. One example, could he produce it, would not pass for a law of nature. Lister, Noguez, Quincy, who had commented this work before him, are not of his opinion; they attribute part of the danger to the weakness that remains after the convulsions. “Coition (says Noguez) is itself a convulsion; it disposes the nerves to convulsive motions, and the slightest occasion consequently produces them.”
J. A. Borelli, one of the first creators of physiology, had not looked upon them in the same light as M. Gorter. He is clearly positive upon this article.
“This act (says he) is accompanied with a sort of convulsive pathos, which carries with it the most sensible affections of the brain, and of the whole nervous system[68].”
Mr. Senac specifically imputes to the nerves the weakness which follows coition.
“The most likely cause (says he) of the fainting fit which comes when an abscess breaks in the interior of the abdomen, is the action of the nerves then brought into play. This is confirmed by the ejection, or by the fits of faintness which follow the effusion of seed; for it is only to the nerves that this sinking can be imputed[69].”
M. Lewis[70] attributes more to this cause than to the other, in which he is of the opinion of Sanctorius. Where there is convulsion, the nervous system is in a state of tension, or, to say more correctly, in an extraordinary degree of action, of which the necessary consequence is an excessive relaxation. Every organ, that has been wound up beyond its natural pitch, falls beneath it; and from that very fall must necessarily result a bad performance of the functions which depend on it; and as the nerves have an influence over them all, there is not one of the functions but what must be more or less disordered when the nerves are weakened.
One reason, too, that may contribute to the weakness of the nervous system, is the augmentation of the quantity of blood in the brain, during the venereal act; an augmentation well demonstrated, and which has gone sometimes so far as to produce an apoplexy. Many examples of it are furnished by observing practitioners, and Hoffman relates one of a soldier, who, in the rage of lust with which he abandoned himself to this act, died apoplectic in the very instant of fruition. On being opened, the brain was found full of blood. It is by this augmentation of blood, that the reason is explained of those excesses producing madness[71]. Such a quantity of blood distending the nerves, enfeebles them: they can the less resist impressions, and thence their weakness.