His Treatise on Generation.—Harvey's embryological work was published in 1651 under the title Exercitationes de Generatione Animalium. It embraces not only observations on the development of the chick, but also on the deer and some other mammals. As he was the court physician of Charles I, that sovereign had many deer killed in the park, at intervals, in order to give Harvey the opportunity to study their development.
As fruits of his observation on the chick, he showed the position in which the embryo arises within the egg, viz., in the white opaque spot or cicatricula; and he also corrected Aristotle, Fabricius, and his other predecessors in many particulars.
Harvey's greatest predecessor in this field, Fabricius, was also his teacher. When, in search of the best training in medicine, Harvey took his way from England to Italy, as already recounted, he came under the instruction of Fabricius in Padua. In 1600, Fabricius published sketches showing the development of animals; and, again, in 1625, six years after his death, appeared his illustrated treatise on the development of the chick. Except the figures of Coiter (1573), those of Fabricius were the earliest published illustrations of the kind. Altogether his figures show developmental stages of the cow, sheep, pig, galeus, serpent, rat, and chick.
Harvey's own treatise was not illustrated. With that singular independence of mind for which he was conspicuous, the vision of the pupil was not hampered by the authority of his teacher, and, trusting only to his own sure observation and reason, he described the stages of development as he saw them in the egg, and placed his own construction on the facts.
One of the earliest activities to arrest his attention in the chick was a pulsating point, the heart, and, from this observation, he supposed that the heart and the blood were the first formations. He says: "But as soon as the egg, under the influence of the gentle warmth of the incubating hen, or of warmth derived from another source, begins to pullulate, this spot forthwith dilates, and expands like the pupil of the eye; and from thence, as the grand center of the egg, the latent plastic force breaks forth and germinates. This first commencement of the chick, however, so far as I am aware, has not yet been observed by any one."
It is to be understood, however, that the descriptive part of his treatise is relatively brief (about 40 pages out of 350 in Willis's translation), and that the bulk of the 106 "exercises" into which his work is divided is devoted to comments on the older writers and to discussions of the nature of the process of development.
The aphorism, "omne vivum ex ovo," though not invented by Harvey, was brought into general use through his writings. As used in his day, however, it did not have its full modern significance. With Harvey it meant simply that the embryos of all animals, the viviparous as well as the oviparous, originate in eggs, and it was directed against certain contrary medical theories of the time.
Fig. 60.—Frontispiece to Harvey's Generatione Animalium (1651).