It is the sensible organic contractility that is the predominant property in this system, all the functions of which rest almost entirely upon this contractility, as all the functions of the preceding muscular system are derived as it were from the animal contractility. We shall now examine more in detail this essential property, with regard to which physiology owes so much to the illustrious Haller. We can consider it in three relations; 1st, in the stimuli; 2d, in the organs; 3d, in the action of the first upon the second.

Of the Sensible Organic Contractility considered in relation to Stimuli.

Stimuli are natural or artificial. The action of the first is continual during life; upon them turn in part the organic phenomena; they place in action the muscles, which without them would be immoveable; they are as it were to these organs what pendulums are to our machines; they give the impulse. The second can hardly have effect until after death, or in our experiments.

Natural Stimuli.

These stimuli are blood for the heart, urine for the bladder, aliments and excrements for the gastric organs. Every organic muscle has a body, which, habitually in contact with it, supports its motions, as every animal muscle habitually in relation with the brain, borrows from it its power of motion. The natural stimuli support the organs at the same degree of mobility while they remain the same. All things being equal on the part of the organs, the pulse does not vary, the digestive periods continue for the same length of time, the intervals between the excretion of urine are equal, whilst the blood, the chyle or the urine exhibit no differences. But as these substances experience an infinite number of varieties, the organs preserving the same degree of sensibility, have yet frequent changes in their motion.

At the instant chyle enters the blood during digestion, the pulse changes, because the heart is differently irritated. We observe the same phenomenon under different circumstances; 1st, in re-absorptions in which pus goes into the mass of blood; 2d, in the injection of different fluids in the veins, injections that were so frequently made in the last age, at the period of experiments upon transfusion, and which I have also had occasion to make with other views which I shall mention; 3d, in inflammatory diseases in which the blood takes a peculiar character that is yet but little known, and which occasions the formation of the pleuritic buff; 4th, in various other affections, in which the nature of this fluid is remarkably altered; 5th, in the passage of the red blood into the system with black blood. I have observed that in putting a curved tube into the carotid of one side and the jugular of the opposite of a large dog, so that one forces blood into the other, the passage of the red blood into the veins is not fatal like that of the black blood into the arteries; but there is almost always at first an acceleration of the motions of the heart.

The influence of the degeneracy of the fluids in diseases has no doubt been exaggerated; too frequent a source of morbid derangements has been placed in this portion of the economy. But it cannot be denied, that according to the different alterations that the fluids exhibit, they may be capable of exciting differently the solids that contain them. We know that in the same individual, and with the same mass of aliments, digestion varies from one day to another in the duration of its periods; that some aliments prolong and others accelerate it; that some remain very long in the stomach, as it is said, and others as it were only pass through it. Now in all these cases the organ remains the same, the fluid only varies. According as the kidney secretes urine more or less acrid and consequently more or less irritating, the bladder retains it for a longer or shorter time. Such is oftentimes its stimulating qualities, that the moment it comes into this organ it is involuntarily rejected. Shall I speak of emetics and evacuants by the intestinal canal, the effects of which are so variable? We know that the words drastic, purgative, laxative, &c. indicate the different degrees of the stimulating qualities which certain substances introduced into the alimentary canal exhibit, degrees which are to be considered abstractedly from those of the sensibility of the organs; this in fact can be such, that a laxative may produce greater effects than a drastic purge.

Not only the quality, but also the quantity of the fluids contained in the organic muscles, has an influence upon their contractility. 1st. The word plethora is certainly employed too loosely in medicine; but we cannot doubt that the state which it expresses sometimes exists; now the more blood there is in the heart, the more are its contractions accelerated. 2d. I have many times made transfusion in dogs, whether with a view to that alone, or in researches relative to respiration and circulation. Now I have always observed, that by not opening a vein, to empty the blood as fast as the external jugular receives it (for I always choose this vein for the experiment) by thus producing consequently an artificial plethora, I have, I say, always observed that the motion of the heart was accelerated. I have even seen the eye of a dog become bright and as it were inflamed; in others this phenomenon has not been observed. 3d. We know that in running, in which all the muscles by contracting press out from all sides the venous blood contained in their texture, this which enters the heart in abundance, makes it palpitate powerfully. 4th. There is not doubt but that the quantity of urine and excrements as much and more than their quality, is for the bladder and the rectum, a cause of involuntary contraction. 5th. We know the serious consequences that arise from giving emetics and cathartics in too large doses. 6th. A glass of tepid water often does not produce vomiting when a pint will bring it on powerfully, &c. &c.

Artificial Stimuli.

The artificial stimuli are in general all the bodies in nature. Such is in fact the essence of organic contractility, that a muscle because it is in contact with a body to which it is not accustomed, instantly contracts. If the muscles are not irritated by the organs that surround them and with which they are in relation, it is because habit has blunted the sensation which arises from this relation. But when these organs change their modifications, when extracted from the body of the animal, they become cold, and are afterwards applied to the organic muscles laid bare, they will make them contract.