CIRCULATION OF THE BLOOD. 



dency will be to disperse by the lifting power toward 

 surface of the body. This lifting of minute particle 

 of blood continues through minute passages that were 

 formed in the fermenting process as a means of com- 

 munication between the action of heat and cold in 

 continuing life or beginning life. When the particles 

 reach the surface they are acted upon by the cold. The 

 cold molding the particles of blood into greater bodies, 

 or units. 



When the cold has molded the particles of blood 

 \vhen near the surface into particles of greater size, 

 they no longer can be buoyed up by the action of the 

 given heat in the locality or portion of bodily surface. 

 They cannot fall or sink down into the minute pas- 

 sages where they were buoyed upward, owing to solid- 

 ifying into greater units. Consequently they become 

 subject to a new law, governed by cold. Cold having 

 by its cohesive tendencies upon the particles of matter 

 congregated the particles into greater units. The 

 units being subject to a given temperature of dispersal. 

 The units of a given size having a course in which 

 they can sink by attraction generated by cold contend- 

 ing for limits with heat to a given point. In conse- 

 quence the particles are driven inward by cold and 

 attracted inward by the center of gravity or line where 

 heat and cold are equal. In this course their action is 

 uniform, owing to the weight of particles being equal 

 after the action at surface. There being no means of 

 separation of the particles into more minute units until 

 a certain temperature had arrived, and consequently 



141 



