Page:The Works of William Harvey (part 1 of 2).djvu/573

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.
ON GENERATION.
473

and excrements to inferior portions of the gut, as if they were surrounded and compressed with a ring forced over them, or were stripped between the fingers.

The uterine veins, as in woman, all arise from .the vena cava, near the emulgents; the arteries (and this also is common to the deer and the human subject) arise from the crural branches of the descending aorta. And as in the pregnant woman the uterine vessels are relatively larger and more nu- merous than in any other part of the body, this is likewise the case in the pregnant hind and doe. The arteries, how- ever, contrary to the arrangement in other parts of the body, are much more numerous than the veins ; and air blown into them makes its way into the neighbouring veins, although the arteries cannot be inflated in their turn by blowing into the veins. This fact I also find mentioned by Master Riolanus ; and it is a cogent argument for the circulation of the blood disco- vered by me ; for he clearly proves that whilst there is a pas- sage from the arteries into the veins, there is none backwards from the veins into the arteries. The arteries are more nume- rous than the veins, because a large supply of nourishment being required for the foetus, it is only what is left unused that has to be returned by the latter channels.

In the deer as well as in the sheep, goat, and bisulcate ani- mals generally, we find testicles; but these are mere little glands, which rather correspond in their proportions to the prostate or mesenteric glands, the use of which is to establish divarications for the veins, and to store up a fluid for lubricat- ing the parts, than for secreting semen, concocting it into fecundity, and shedding it at the time of intercourse. I am myself especially moved to adopt this opinion, as well by nu- merous reasons which will be adduced elsewhere, as by the fact that in the rutting season, when the testes of the buck and hart enlarge and are replete with semen, and the cornua of the uterus of the hind and doe are greatly changed, the female testicles, as they are called, whether they be examined before or after intercourse, neither swell nor vary from their usual condition; they show no trace of being of the slightest use either in the business of intercourse or in that of generation.

It is surprising what a quantity of seminal fluid is found in the vesiculae seminales and testicles of moles and the larger