The general internal motion which takes place in the first moments of existence, and which is produced by the suddenly increased activity of the involuntary muscles, has an important use with respect to the mucous surfaces, which it relieves of the fluids that load them, and whose presence becomes painful. Where the mucous surfaces have not around them fleshy layers of the involuntary muscles, as in the bronchia, the nasal fossæ, &c. the muscles of animal life more or less distant, perform this function, as for example, the diaphragm and the intercostals, free the bronchial surface by coughing, and the pituitary by sneezing.

As we recede from the period of birth, the organic muscles grow in general much less in proportion than the others; it is this that gradually re-establishes the equilibrium between the two systems. I would remark however, as it respects the predominance of the first, that it is much less conspicuous in the fœtus than that of the nervous system. The brain, for example, is in proportion much larger than the heart.

It is probable that the muscles of which we are treating, exhibit, at this period, the same varieties of composition as the others, that gelatine especially predominates in them, that they have less fibrin, &c. This last substance perhaps exists, in the early periods, more abundantly in the heart than in the other muscles of this class.

We have observed two very distinct periods in the growth of the other muscles; one is finished when they have acquired their length; the other, when their thickness is complete. The first has not, in the organic system, a term as distinct; when the stature no longer increases, the gastric and urinary organs, and the heart still lengthen and grow.

We have considered growth in too general a manner. Each system has a different term in this great phenomenon. The osseous and muscular systems of animal life, and those which depend on them, as the fibrous, the cartilaginous, &c. have especially an influence upon the general stature of the body; it is these which produce this or that height; but this height has no influence upon the length of the intestines, or the capacity of the stomach, the heart, the bladder, &c. The glandular, serous, mucous systems, &c. are equally independent of stature; thus in these numerous varieties, it has much more influence upon the extremities, than upon the abdomen, the thorax, &c. A great height indicates the predominance of the apparatus of locomotion, but not of those of digestion, respiration, &c. The termination of the growth in height, which we consider in a general manner for the whole body, is only the termination of the growth of the muscles, the bones and their dependancies, and not of that of the internal viscera, which still lengthen and become thicker. It is easy to be convinced of this, by comparing the organic muscles of a young man of eighteen years, with those of a man of thirty or forty.

The organic muscles do not appear to be subject to those irregularities of growth which the other muscles and the bones frequently exhibit. We know that the stature often remains stationary for many years, and that suddenly it acquires very great dimensions in a very short time; this phenomenon is remarkable especially after long diseases. Now notwithstanding these inequalities, the heart and all the other analogous muscles grow in an uniform manner; the regularity of the internal functions to which these muscles especially contribute, could not adapt itself to those aberrations which would be unable to disturb the functions of the locomotive organs. Besides, if they took place, the circulation, digestion, excretion of urine, &c. would exhibit corresponding aberrations; now this is never observed. The heart and the gastric muscles, &c. always grow in an infant whose stature remains stationary; they do not grow suddenly in one who grows at once; hence why the thorax and the abdomen become large in the first case, and remain contracted in the second in proportion to the extremities.

Besides these two systems are never in precise relation of nutrition and power. I have already observed that very large organic muscles often exist with very small voluntary ones, and vice versa.

Let us consider neither the growth nor nutrition in an uniform manner; each system is developed and increases in its own way; all are never found at the same periods of this function. Why? because nutrition, like all the other acts over which life presides, is essentially dependant on the vital forces, and these forces vary in each system.

The growth of the involuntary muscular system is not uniform in all the organs which compose it. Each increases more or less, or is differently developed; one often predominates over the others in an evident manner; a bladder with strong, fleshy fibres, with columns as they are called, is often found in a subject with a debilitated stomach, with small intestines, &c.; reciprocally, the stomach, the heart, &c. have often an insulated predominance.

III. State of the Organic Muscular System after Growth.