298 INFLUENCE OF EMOTIONS UPON SECBETIONS. 
but they are strongly affected by emotions of the mind. This 
has been already pointed out in regard to the Saliva (§ 190); 
and it is equally evident in the case of the Lachrymal secre¬ 
tion (§ 541). In these instances, however, the effect of the 
emotion is manifested upon the quantity only of the secretion; 
in the case of the secretion of Milk, not only the quantity but 
quality is greatly influenced by the mental state of the nurse. 
The more even her temper, and the more free from anxiety 
her mind, the better adapted will be her milk for the nourish¬ 
ment of her offspring. There are several instances now on 
record, in which it has been clearly shown, that the influence 
of violent passions in the mother has been so strongly exerted 
upon the secretion of milk, as almost instantaneously to com¬ 
municate to it an absolutely poisonous character, which has 
occasioned the immediate death of the child. 1 The influence of 
emotional states upon the Secretions is probably communicated 
by the Sympathetic system of Nerves (§ 461), which is very 
minutely distributed, with the blood-vessels, to the several 
glands which form them. 
Nature of the Secreting Process.—Structure of the Secreting 
Organs. 
354. 1STotwithstanding the different characters of the pro¬ 
ducts of Secretion and Excretion, and the variety of the pur¬ 
poses to which they are destined to be applied, the mode in 
which they are elaborated or separated from the blood is 
essentially the same in all. The process is performed, in the 
Animal, as in the Plant, by the agency of cells; and the 
variety of the structure of the different Glands , or secreting 
organs, has reference merely to the manner in which these, 
their essential parts, are arranged. The simplest condition 
of a secreting cell, in the animal body, is that in which it 
exists in Adipose or fatty tissue ; which is composed, as 
formerly explained (§ 46), of a mass of cells, bound together 
by areolar tissue that allows the blood-vessels to gain access 
to them. Every one of these cells has the power of secreting 
or separating fatty matter from the blood; and the secreted 
product remains stored-up in its cavity, as in Plants (Veget. 
1 See the Author’s Principles of Human Physiology, chap. xv.; and 
Dr. A. Combe on the Management of Infancy, chap. x. 
