This termination has a great analogy with the preceding, since there are two nerves, which meeting at their extremity, are blended in such a manner, that we cannot tell where one begins, or the other ends. I shall treat of this in the following system.
Termination in the organs.
The exposition of the following systems will show us the varieties that exist as it respects the nerves. 1st. In some there are many of them, as in the mucous, dermoid and muscular systems of animal and organic life. 2d. In others we find fewer of them, as in the cellular, glandular systems, &c. 3d. Some require a more attentive examination than has heretofore been made of their nerves, which are little known, as the serous, the medullary, a portion of the fibrous, &c. 4th. In fine, many, as the cartilaginous, the fibro-cartilaginous, the pilous, the epidermoid, the tendons of the fibrous, &c. are evidently destitute of nerves.
We are ignorant of the situation of each nervous filament at its termination; is it deprived of its covering, and does the pulp only penetrate the interior of the fibres? In the optic nerve this last arrangement is evident. The covering of the nerve is continued only to the entrance of the eye, and the pulp is expanded to form the retina. A similar expansion seems to take place in the olfactory and the auditory. But nothing is known concerning any of the others.
ARTICLE SECOND.
ORGANIZATION OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM OF ANIMAL LIFE.
I. Texture peculiar to this organization.
Every nerve is formed, as I have said, of a greater or less number of cords lying in apposition to each other. These cords arise from filaments likewise in apposition and united together, like the cords by cellular texture. I have already mentioned how both are interlaced in the interior of the nerve, so as to form a kind of plexus, which differs from the true plexus only in this, that the branches applied to each other, do not allow us at first view to see their intermixing.
The general character of the nervous cords varies considerably. 1st. Their size is not always the same. Those of the sciatic and the crural are smaller than those of the brachial nerves, except those of the median. 2d. Some nerves, as the par vagum, are formed of one cord only, divided by many furrows. Sometimes the filaments form around it a net-work, a very delicate kind of plexus. 3d. In the same nerve, there is sometimes united large and small cords; in many they are all equal, as in the sciatic. 4th. The optic nerve, though furrowed in its whole extent, from the commissure to the eye, does not appear to have in its interior that interlacing, that the others evidently exhibit. 5th. In the posterior part of this nerve, and in the trunk of the olfactory, the cords are not distinct. 5th. Most of their nerves at their origin are separate in their filaments; the trigemini on the contrary, exhibit a common pulpous portion, in which all their's seem to be implanted, &c.
It follows from all these considerations and many others for which we are indebted especially to Reil, that the internal arrangement of the nerves varies singularly, that each presents almost a different texture, that under this point of view they do not resemble the arteries and veins, which are every where the same, whatever be their size, their course, &c. These varieties however, do not affect the intimate structure, and our business is to describe this intimate structure even to the last fibres that we can separate. Reil appears to me to have thrown great light upon this subject. I have repeated exactly his experiments; they have given results very analogous to his. Some only have appeared to me so difficult, that I have not even undertaken them. I have added to his researches many new facts as will be easily seen by comparing his work with this article, in which will only be found that which rests on accurate observation; I have omitted all the theoretical ideas that Reil has added to the facts which he offers.