APPENDIX. 



tures ; 7th, the glandular textures, including the parenchyma of the viscera ; 8th, the 

 corneous textures, embracing Jl, the pilous, and D, the epidermoid textures. 



Proceeding synthetically, we may arrange all the solids of which the animal body is? 

 composed after the following manner. 



CLASS I. OR ELEMENTARY ANIMAL SOLIDS. 



The cellular fibre. The nervous fibre. 



The muscular fibre. 



CLASS II. SECONDARY OR COMPOUND ANIMAL SOLIDS. 

 ORDER I. GENERAL SYSTEMS. ' 



The cellular system.^ The nervous system. 



Including the adipose tissue. Jl. The involuntary or ganglial order 



of nerves, or system of the great sym~ 

 pathetic. 



JB. The voluntary order of nerves. 

 Ths muscular system. The vascular system. 



A. Involuntary muscles. Jl. Arterial vessels. 



B. Voluntary muscles. J5. Venous vessels. 



C. Absorbents. 



a. Lymphatic absorbents. 



b. Lacteal absorbents. 



ORDER II. PARTICULAR TEXTURES, 



Mucous textures. Serous textures. 



Erectile textures. Fibrous textures, 



Jl. The fibrous. 



Ji. Fibro-cartilaginous textures* 

 C. The clermoid textures. 



Glandular textures. Corneous texture. 



Cartilaginous textures. Jl. The epidermoid. 



Osseous textures. M. The Pilous. 



CLASS III. ASSOCIATED OR COMPLEX ANIMAL SOLIDS. 

 ORDER I. OR&ANS OF NUTRITION. 



Digestive organs. Organs of absorption and circulation. 



Organs of respiration and assimilation. Organs of secretion and animal heat, 



ORDER II. ORGANS OF RELATION. 



Organs of sensation. Organs of voluntary motion* 



ORDER III. ORGANS OF REPRODUCTION. 



Organs of generation in both sexes. 



Of Sensibility and Contractility. 



Note D. 



Sensibility. The phenomena classed by the author under this property of Animal 

 Life, at p. 19 and 20, are evidently refcrrible only to organic contractility, \vith which 



