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The Harvard Classics Volume 38 by Several Authors
Book, page 101 / 424


through the lungs, impelled by the right ventricle into the
pulmonary artery, and that it: then passed through the veins and
along the vena cava, and so round to the left ventricle in the
manner already indicated. This motion we may be allowed to call
circular, in the same way as Aristotle says that the air and the
rain emulate the circular motion of the superior bodies; for the
moist earth, warmed by the sun, evaporates; the vapours drawn
upwards are condensed, and descending in the form of rain,
moisten the earth again. By this arrangement are generations of
living things produced; and in like manner are tempests and
meteors engendered by the circular motion, and by the approach
and recession of the sun.

And similarly does it come to pass in the body, through the
motion of the blood, that the various parts are nourished,
cherished, quickened by the warmer, more perfect, vaporous,
spirituous, and, as I may say, alimentive blood; which, on the
other hand, owing to its contact with these parts, becomes
cooled, coagulated, and so to speak effete. It then returns to
its sovereign, the heart, as if to its source, or to the inmost
home of the body, there to recover its state of excellence or
perfection. Here it renews its fluidity, natural heat, and
becomes powerful, fervid, a kind of treasury of life, and
impregnated with spirits, it might be said with balsam. Thence it
is again dispersed. All this depends on the motion and action of
the heart.

The heart, consequently, is the beginning of life; the sun of the
microcosm, even as the sun in his turn might well be designated
the heart of the world; for it is the heart by whose virtue and
pulse the blood is moved, perfected, and made nutrient, and is
preserved from corruption and coagulation; it is the household
divinity which, discharging its function, nourishes, cherishes,
quickens the whole body, and is indeed the foundation of life,
the source of all action. But of these things we shall speak more
opportunely when we come to speculate upon the final cause of
this motion of the heart.

As the blood-vessels, therefore, are the canals and agents that
transport the blood, they are of two kinds, the cava and the

 
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