88 NATURE AND LIFE. 



in the system of vital operations. The constituent humors, 

 the blood, chyle, and lymph, conveying throughout into 

 the inmost parts of the tissues and organs those materials 

 of nutrition designed to be assimilated, and that oxygen 

 fitted to aid the work of assimilation, are eminently the 

 vivifying fluids. They bathe the whole system, they pour 

 into it ceaselessly new stores of strength and warmth, 

 they maintain it in its harmonious and perfect working. 

 They are true organic media, intervening between the ex- 

 ternal medium surrounding the individual, and the ana- 

 tomical elements lodged deep within the body. They are 

 organized, and have the faculty of nutrition, that is, their 

 substance is molecularly renewed in a continuous way. 

 While the secretions, and the excretions particularly, are 

 liquids devoid of life, made by the glands and the paren- 

 chyma at the expense of the blood, the blood, so to speak, 

 creates itself with the materials it receives as well by way 

 of the lungs as by that of the whole digestive canal. The 

 blood is a laboratory in which the most varied and elusive 

 transformations take place, in very minute intervals of 

 time so minute that it is impossible for the biologist's 

 vision to seize all their phases, and follow their headlong 

 successive course. The whole of chemistry of which we 

 have any knowledge unfolds itself in this laboratory ; but 

 another chemistry also moves there in incessant action, of 

 whose laws we can but gam a glimpse. In fact, those im- 

 mediate principles which pass into the blood in the form 

 of fatty substance, of sugary and of albuminoid matter, 

 and pass out of it under the form of cholesterine, leucine, 

 tyrosine, urea, creatine, etc., do not pass instantly from 

 one state to another. During all the course of combustion 

 sustained by breathing they undergo a thousand isomeric 

 modifications and specific changes, of which we know 

 nothing. We seize only the beginning and the end of the 

 phenomenon, but the middle course of it evades our view. 



