ADDITIONAL
NOTES. XI.
HEREDITARY
DISEASES.
The
feeble births acquired
diseases chase,
Till
Death extinguish
the degenerate race. CANTO
II.
1.
165. |
AS all
the
families
both
of
plants
and
animals
appear
in
a
state
of
perpetual
improvement
or
degeneracy,
it
becomes
a
subject
of
importance
to
detect
the
causes
of
these
mutations.
The
insects,
which
are
not
propagated
by
sexual
intercourse,
are
so
few
or
so
small,
that
no
observations
have
been
made
on
their
diseases;
but
hereditary
diseases
are
believed
more
to
affect
the
offspring
of
solitary
than
of
sexual
generation
in
respect
to
vegetables;
as
those
fruit
trees,
which
have
for
more
than
a
century
been
propagated
only
by
ingrafting,
and
not
from
seeds,
have
been
observed
by
Mr.
Knight
to
be
at
this
time
so
liable
to
canker,
as
not
to
be
worth
cultivation.
From
the
same
cause
I
suspect
the
degeneracy
of
some
potatoes
and
of
some
strawberries
to
have
arisen;
where
the
curled
leaf
has
appeared
in
the
former,
and
barren
flowers
in
the
latter.
This
may
arise
from
the
progeny
by
solitary
reproduction
so
much
more
exactly
resembling
the
parent,
as
is
well
seen
in
grafted
trees
compared
with
seedling
ones;
the
fruit
of
the
former
always
resembling
that
of
the
parent
tree,
but
not
so
of
the
latter.
The
grafted
scion
also
accords
with
the
branch
of
the
tree
from
whence
it
was
taken,
in
the
time
of
its
bearing
fruit;
for
if
a
scion
be
taken
from
a
bearing
branch
of
a
pear
or
apple
tree,
I
believe,
it
will
produce
fruit
even
the
next
year,
or
that
succeeding;
that
is,
in
the
same
time
that
it
would
have
produced
fruit,
if
it
had
continued
growing
on
the
parent
tree;
but
if
the
parent
pear
or
apple
tree
has
been
cut
down
or
headed,
and
scions
are
then
taken
from
the
young
shoots
of
the
stem,
and
ingrafted;
I
believe
those
grafted
trees
will
continue
to
grow
for
ten
or
twelve
years,
before
they
bear
fruit,
almost
as
long
as
seedling
trees,
that
is
they
will
require
as
much
time,
as
those
new
shoots
from
the
lopped
trunk
would
require,
before
they
produce
fruit.
It
should
thence
be
inquired,
when
grafted
fruit
trees
are
purchased,
whether
the
scions
were
taken
from
bearing
branches,
or
from
the
young
shoots
of
a
lopped
trunk;
as
the
latter,
I
believe,
are
generally
sold,
as
they
appear
stronger
plants.
This
greater
similitude
of
the
progeny
to
the
parent
in
solitary
reproduction
must
certainly
make
them
more
liable
to
hereditary
diseases,
if
such
have
been
acquired
by
the
parent
from
unfriendly
climate
or
bad
nourishment,
or
accidental
injury.
In
respect
to
the
sexual
progeny
of
vegetables
it
has
long
been
thought,
that
a
change
of
seed
or
of
situation
is
in
process
of
time
necessary
to
prevent
their
degeneracy;
but
it
is
now
believed,
that
it
is
only
changing
for
seed
of
a
superior
quality,
that
will
better
the
product.
At
the
same
time
it
may
be
probably
useful
occasionally
to
intermix
seeds
from
different
situations
together;
as
the
anther-dust
is
liable
to
pass
from
one
plant
to
another
in
its
vicinity;
and
by
these
means
the
new
seeds
or
plants
may
be
amended,
like
the
marriages
of
animals
into
different
families.
As
the
sexual
progeny
of
vegetables
are
thus
less
liable
to
hereditary
diseases
than
the
solitary
progenies;
so
it
is
reasonable
to
conclude,
that
the
sexual
progenies
of
animals
may
be
less
liable
to
hereditary
diseases,
if
the
marriages
are
into
different
families,
than
if
into
the
same
family;
this
has
long
been
supposed
to
be
true,
by
those
who
breed
animals
for
sale;
since
if
the
male
and
female
be
of
different
temperaments,
as
these
are
extremes
of
the
animal
system,
they
may
counteract
each
other;
and
certainly
where
both
parents
are
of
families,
which
are
afflicted
with
the
same
hereditary
disease,
it
is
more
likely
to
descend
to
their
posterity.
The
hereditary
diseases
of
this
country
have
many
of
them
been
the
consequence
of
drinking
much
fermented
or
spirituous
liquor;
as
the
gout
always,
most
kinds
of
dropsy,
and,
I
believe,
epilepsy,
and
insanity.
But
another
material,
which
is
liable
to
produce
diseases
in
its
immoderate
use,
I
believe
to
be
common
salt;
the
sea-scurvy
is
evidently
caused
by
it
in
long
voyages;
and
I
suspect
the
scrofula,
and
consumption,
to
arise
in
the
young
progeny
from
the
debility
of
the
lymphatic
and
venous
absorption
produced
in
the
parent
by
this
innutritious
fossile
stimulus.
The
petechiæ and
vibices
in
the
sea-scurvy
and
occasional
hæmorrhages
evince
the
defect
of
venous
absorption;
the
occasional
hæmoptoe
at
the
commencement
of
pulmonary
consumption,
seems
also
to
arise
from
defect
of
venous
absorption;
and
the
scrofula,
which
arises
from
the
inactivity
of
the
lymphatic
absorbent
system,
frequently
exists
along
with
pulmonary
as
well
as
with
mesenteric
consumption.
A
tendency
to
these
diseases
is
certainly
hereditary,
though
perhaps
not
the
diseases
themselves;
thus
a
less
quantity
of
ale,
cyder,
wine,
or
spirit,
will
induce
the
gout
and
dropsy
in
those
constitutions,
whose
parents
have
been
intemperate
in
the
use
of
those
liquors;
as
I
have
more
than
once
had
occasion
to
observe.
Finally
the
art
to
improve
the
sexual
progeny
of
either
vegetables
or
animals
must
consist
in
choosing
the
most
perfect
of
both
sexes,
that
is
the
most
beautiful
in
respect
to
the
body,
and
the
most
ingenious
in
respect
to
the
mind;
but
where
one
sex
is
given,
whether
male
or
female,
to
improve
a
progeny
from
that
person
may
consist
in
choosing
a
partner
of
a
contrary
temperament.
As
many
families
become
gradually
extinct
by
hereditary
diseases,
as
by
scrofula,
consumption,
epilepsy,
mania,
it
is
often
hazardous
to
marry
an
heiress,
as
she
is
not
unfrequently
the
last
of
a
diseased
family.
|