CHAP. 69.—THE HEART; THE BLOOD; THE VITAL SPIRIT.
In all other animals but man the heart is situate in the
middle of the breast; in man alone it is placed just below
the pap on the left-hand side, the smaller end terminating in
a point, and bearing outward. It is among the fish only that
this point is turned towards the mouth. It is asserted that
the heart is the first among the viscera that is formed in the
fœtus, then the brain, and last of all, the eyes: it is said, too,
that the eyes are the first organs that die, and the heart the
very last of all. The heart also is the principal seat of the heat
of the body; it is constantly palpitating, and moves as though
it were one animal enclosed within another. It is also enve-
loped in a membrane equally supple and strong, and is protected by the bulwarks formed by the ribs and the bone of
the breast, as being the primary source and origin of life. It
contains within itself the primary receptacles for the spirit and
the blood, in its sinuous cavity, which in the larger animals is
threefold,[1] and in all twofold at least: here it is that the
mind[2] has its abode. From this source proceed two large
veins, which branch into the fore-part and the back of the body,
and which, spreading out in a series of branches, convey the
vital blood by other smaller veins over all parts of the body.
This is the only one[3] among the viscera that is not affected by
maladies, nor is it subject to the ordinary penalties of human
life; but when injured, it produces instant death. While all
the other viscera are injured, vitality may still remain in the
heart.