Xx CONTENTS OF VOL. I. 
Page. 
CHAE. ViIt. 
Muscular System. 
Structure of the Muscles.—Filaments, tendons. Simple, 
ventriform, radiated, penniform, and compound 
muscles. Voluntary and involuntary. Effect of 
excitement. Lose their tenacity at death. Circu- 
lar and longitudinal muscles. : 
Provision for resting.—Proneness. Grasping. Suc- 
tion. Cementation. : 4 ; 128 
Motions executed.—Standing. Walking. Suckers. 
Leaping. Flying. Swimming. Sleep. . - 130 
122 
CHAP. 1X: 
Nervous System. 
Structure of the Nervous System. Brain, its integu- 
ments, concretions and medullary matter, cere- 
brum, cerebellum. Spinal Marrow. Nerves, neu- 
rilema, plexus, ganglion. Termination of the 
Nerves. , 6 3 : 141 
Varieties of Structure in different Animals. ‘a 149 
Nervous System in Action. The Brain. Nerves, sen- 
sation, volition, involuntary motion, ganglia. Re- 
pairing power of the Nerves. Nervous energy 
neither electrical nor magnetical. 2 . 152 
CHAP. X. 
Organs of Perception. 
They intimate at first the presence only of bodies. 
Meaning of the terms Sensation, Perception, and 
Idea: i 3 , : 164 
1. Sense of Touch. 
The Organs in which it resides. Mode of excitement. 
Information which it communicates. : ; 167 
