.532 ON PARTURITION. 



same thing happens to the fruit of the womb ; it depends 

 on the abundance or deficiency of nutriment, on the strength 

 or weakness of body, and on the right or Avrong ordering of 

 life with reference to what physicians call the " non-naturals/' 

 whether the child arrives sooner or later at maturity, i. e. 

 is born. 



Fabricius describes the manner of parturition as follows: "The 

 uterus having been so enlarged by the bulk of the foetus that 

 it will admit of no further distension without risk, and thus 

 excited to expulsion, is drawn into itself by the action of the 

 transverse fibres, and diminishes its cavity. Thus whilst pre- 

 viously neither the excrementitious matters from their quan- 

 tity, nor the foetus from its bulk, could be contained within it, 

 the uterus, contracted and compressed as it is now, becomes 

 still less able to retain them. Wherefore, first of all, the mem- 

 branes, as being the weaker parts, and suffering most pressure, 

 are ruptured, and give exit to the waters, which are of a 

 very fluid consistence, for the purpose of lubricating the pas- 

 sages. Then follows the foetus, which tends towards, and, as 

 it were, assaults the uterine aperture, not only by the force of 

 its own gravity as no longer floating in water, but compressed 

 and propelled by the action of the uterus : the abdominal 

 muscles and the diaphragm also assist mightily in the entire 

 process." 



Now in these words Fabricius rather describes the process 

 of defaecation or an abortion than a genuine and natural birth. 

 For although in women, as a general rule, the membranes are 

 ruptured before the escape of the foetus, it is not universally 

 so ; nor does it hold in the case of other animals which bring 

 forth their young enveloped in their membranes. This can be 

 observed in the bitch, ewe, mare, and others, and more parti- 

 cularly in the viper, which conceives an ovum of an uniform 

 colour and soft shell (resembling in fact the product of con- 

 ception in the woman) ; this is retained until the foetus is com- 

 pletely formed; it is then expelled entire, and, according to 

 Aristotle, 1 is broken through by the young animal on the third 

 day. It sometimes happens, however, that kittens, whilst yet 

 in utero, gnaw through the membranes, and so come into the 

 world uninvolved. 



1 Hist. Aniin. lib. v, cap. 34. 



