The nature of this fluid appears to be essentially albuminous; experiments made upon that of leucophlegmasia show that there is albumen in it; but has not disease then altered its nature? To be satisfied in this respect, I first made a dead animal emphysematous, for the purpose of distending the cells, and to make the alkohol, which I afterwards injected by a syringe, enter them more easily. Some minutes after, the skin having been removed, the subjacent texture presented here and there different whitish flakes. By immersing in diluted nitric acid the cellular portion of the scrotum of a sound body that is dead, or which is better, a portion taken directly from a living animal, we can observe the same thing. It appears, then, that in health as well as disease, the albumen is one of the essential principles of the fluid of the cellular texture. I have taken much of this texture from the scrotum of many bodies, so as to have it separate from the fat, and I have made it boil in about the same time as nearly the same quantity of tendinous substance; at the moment of ebullition, much whitish froth rises upon the water, but little appears in that which contains the tendons.

Is the nature of the cellular fluid the same as that of the lymph that circulates in the absorbents? It cannot be doubted but that these vessels take off this fluid in the cells; it is possible that it is mixed with other substances, those especially that come from nutrition, which alter its nature. Chemical analysis is defective upon this point.

III. Of the cellular fat.

The fat is the second of the fluids for which the cellular texture serves as a reservoir.

Natural proportions of the fat.

Very abundant under the skin, around the serous surfaces, the organs of great motions, &c.; it is wanting, as we have said, upon the penis, the prepuce, the scrotum, &c. under the mucous surfaces, around the arteries, the veins, &c. Examined in the interior of the organized systems, the fat varies in quantity. There is none between the interstices of the arterial and venous coats. The lymphatic glands do not appear to contain any. The brain and spinal marrow are destitute of it. It is always found in the intervals of the nervous fibres; it is not often very evident; but in dissecting them, an unctuous substance escapes, which is constant, and which it undoubtedly furnishes. For the most part, it is in considerable quantity in the muscles, especially those of animal life; very little of it is seen in those of organic. In the bones, where there is none, its place is supplied by medullary substance; the cartilages, the fibrous bodies, the fibro-cartilages, are almost entirely destitute of it. The glandular system sometimes has it, as we see it in the parotids, around the pelvis of the kidnies; in other places, as in the liver, the prostate, &c. there is no trace of it. The serous and cutaneous systems are never fatty, although much fat surrounds them. It is the same of the mucous; the epidermis and the hair never have any of this fluid.

From this we perceive that the interior of the organized systems contain in general but very little fat. The different apparatus have but a small proportion between their various parts. It is thus that between the coats of the stomach, the intestines, the bladder, &c. between the periosteum and the bone, between that and the cartilage, between the muscle and the tendon, &c. this fluid is almost always wanting.

It follows from this that it is principally in the interstices, which the different apparatus leave between them, that fat accumulates in cellular reservoirs. Now by examining the different regions, in this point of view, we see, 1st. that upon the head, the cranium and face have an inverse arrangement; that it is very abundant in the second, and wanting in the first, especially in the interior; 2d. that the neck contains a considerable proportion; 3d. that in the thorax we see very little around the lungs, but much about the heart; that upon the exterior of this cavity, the superior part has a considerable quantity around the breasts; 4th. that in the abdomen, it particularly abounds in the posterior part in the neighbourhood of the kidnies, the mesentery, and omentum; 5th. that in the pelvis, there is much of it near the bladder and rectum; 6th. that upon the extremities it is found, like the cellular texture, more abundant above and in the vicinity of the great articulations, &c.

We observe in infancy, that the quantity of fat is in proportion much more considerable under the skin, than any where else, especially that in the abdomen the cellular viscera, the omentum in particular contains but very little at this age. I have established this fact in a great many instances. There are only some flakes of fat around the kidney, frequently these are scarcely visible. All the rest of the abdominal cavity is destitute of it. The pectoral cavity contains scarcely any more, and always much less in proportion than in after life. I have observed also that the intermuscular texture is almost every where deprived of it. We may say, then, that all this fluid is concentrated under the skin, at least while the fœtus is in good health. Does this superabundance of sub-cutaneous fat perform any important office? has it any connexion with the great size of the liver at that period? I know not: it is a phenomenon that should fix the attention of physiologists, especially when it is compared with the absence of fat in almost all the parts where it is afterwards accumulated.

Towards adult age, the abdominal fat is in much greater proportion than the sub-cutaneous. The exterior swelling is as rare towards the fortieth year, as it is common about the fourth and fifth, a period at which all the muscular forms are concealed by the superabundance of fat, and the body is remarkably rounded. Is there any connexion between the large quantity of abdominal fat at the adult period, and the frequency of diseases of which this region is then the seat?