Xii INTRODUCTION. 



between the highest of the lower animals and Man, of all beings, alone 

 endowed with the power of reason and the faculty of speech, a dis- 

 tance still more incalculable. 



Animals have been defined to be organized bodies, which have life 

 and sensation, and are capable of voluntary motion; — Vegetables, 

 organized bodies, endowed with a vital principle, but wanting sensa- 

 tion; — and Minerals, unorganized bodies, without life, and, of course, 

 without sensation. 



It has been found impossible to give a satisfactory delinition of Life; 

 and physiological writers have therefore limited their eiforts to com- 

 municate some idea of the vital principle, by remarking its effects. 

 Life, where its effects are most easily recognized, seems to consist in 

 the faculty with which certain corporeal combinations are endowed, 

 of existing for a certain period under a determinate form, and assimi- 

 lating to their substance a part of the surrounding bodies ; at the same 

 time restoring to the elements part of their own substance. This 

 vital principle, which, when allied to matter, controls its affinities and 

 directs its forms, is not palpable to the senses in an uncombined shape ; 

 and it is only from its effects on material substances, that its existence 

 is demonstrated. Baron Cuvier compares the mechanical action of 

 life on matter to a vortex, more or less rapid, more or less complicated, 

 where the supply and the waste of particles occasion a constant move- 

 ment. While this movement subsists, the body which exercises it 

 lives ; when the movement is stopped beyond recall, the body dies. 

 After death, the elements which composed it, delivered to the ordi- 

 nary chemical affinities, soon separate, to form other and new com- 

 binations. 



All living bodies die, after a period, of which the limit is determi- 

 nate for each species ; and death, indeed, appears to be a necessary 

 result of vital action, which insensibly alters the organic structure. 

 The living body, which derives its mysterious birth from another 

 living body which has preceded it, at first enlarges in dimensions, 

 according to certain proportions and limits fLxed for each species, and 

 for each of its parts ; these parts gradually increase in density ; the 

 fibres and vessels which compose them, imperceptibly acquire a rigid- 

 ity, which unfits them for the discharge of their functions ; the vital 

 impulse ceases, and the body naturally dies. In short, absorption, 

 assimilation, exhalation, developement, and generation, are functions 

 common to all living beings ; their birth and their death, the universal 

 terms of their existence. '' 



