Besides, in thus comparing the duration of animal contractility, the same stimulant should always be employed; for the effects are more or less evident according to those which we use. When the whole brain and the nerves are no longer sensible to mechanical or chemical agents, they still powerfully obey galvanic impulses. The irritation of the metals is of all the means at present known, the most efficacious in perpetuating animal contractility some time after death.

Organic Properties.

Organic sensibility is the manifest portion of the muscles of which we are treating; constantly brought into action in them by nutrition, absorption and exhalation, it becomes still more apparent, when we irritate muscles that are laid bare; they feel this irritation, and the motion, of which we shall speak hereafter, is the result of this feeling which is centred in the muscle, and which is not referable to the brain.

Insensible organic contractility is the attribute of this muscular system, as of all the others.

The sensible organic contractility is very evident in it. If we lay bare a muscle in a living animal, and irritate it with any agent, it curls up, contracts and is agitated. A detached muscular portion exhibits for some instants the same phenomenon.

Every thing is irritating to the naked muscle, the air, water, neutral salts, the acids, the alkalis, the earths, metals, animal and vegetable substances, &c. The mere contact is sufficient to produce contraction. Yet besides this contact, there is something also which depends upon the nature of the stimuli, and which makes the intensity of the contractions vary. A powder of wood, coal, metal, &c. sprinkled upon the muscles of a frog, produce but slight motions in it; pour on it a neutral salt in powder, the marine salt for example, immediately irregular agitations, and a thousand different oscillations are manifested. Each body is by its nature capable of irritating the muscles differently, as according to individuals, ages, temperaments, seasons, climates, &c. the muscles are capable of answering differently to excitements made upon them.

It is not necessary to irritate the whole of a muscle to produce its contraction; two or three fibres only being pricked bring into action all the others. Often even when we make these experiments on a living animal, the contraction is communicated from one muscle to another. In general I have constantly observed that during life these experiments are less easy, and give results much more various, as we have already stated with regard to animal contractility. Lay bare a muscle, irritate it at many different times; sometimes it does not give the least sign of contractility; sometimes it moves with force; this varies from one instant to another. Whereas if it is upon an animal recently killed that the experiments are made, the results are always nearly the same in a given time, with the difference however of the weakness which the contractions have in proportion to the length of time after death. It never happens that you see a muscle immoveable under stimuli, which is not rare in a living animal. This essential difference which authors have not sufficiently pointed out, and which I have frequently proved upon different animals, arises from this, that during life, the effects of the nervous influence counteract those of the stimuli; for example, if an animal extends with force his thigh by the posterior muscles, we may in vain irritate the anterior ones, we cannot produce flexion by this irritation. The cerebral excitement in the extensors being stronger than the mechanical excitement in the flexors, triumphs. Often when we apply the stimulant, the brain acts with force upon the muscle, the effect is then much superior to the excitement we have applied. We are astonished; but the astonishment ceases, if we recollect that there is a concurrence of two excitements, of that of the external agent and of that of the brain. In general, those who have made experiments, have not paid sufficient attention to this concurrence of the two forces in a living animal.

In order to estimate correctly the sensible organic contractility, it is necessary to destroy the animal contractility. So long as these two clash, interrupt and counterbalance each other, we cannot properly estimate them, and determine what belongs to each and what is common to both. Now we destroy animal contractility in the living subject, by cutting all the nerves of a muscle or an extremity, which then become paralyzed. The brain can no longer act upon them, and the results we obtain from stimuli, belong to the sensible organic contractility.

The duration of this last property, after the experiment I mentioned, proves completely that the nerves are wholly foreign to it, that it resides essentially in the muscular texture, that it is, as Haller said, inherent in it. Thus whilst in the different paralyses the muscles lose the power of obeying the cerebral influence, or rather this influence becomes nothing, they preserve that of contracting in an evident manner when stimulated.

This contraction of the muscles of animal life by stimulants, appears under two very different modes. 1st. The whole of the muscle can contract and shorten so as to approximate the two points of insertion. This happens in general when death is recent, when the muscle is still fully possessed of life. 2d. There are oftentimes numerous oscillations of the fibres; all are in action at the same time; now this action is not a contraction, but a real vibration, a fluttering, which has not a sensible effect upon the whole of the muscle, which not contracting cannot approximate its moveable points. When life is about abandoning entirely the muscle, it is thus that it moves. The diversity of the stimuli occasions also this double mode of contraction. Carry a scalpel over a living muscle, a contraction of the whole will be the consequence; afterwards sprinkle the same muscle with a neutral salt, sometimes there is an analogous contraction; but frequently there are only oscillations, vibrations similar to those of a muscle which life abandons.