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Show __,___.__-,' 354 Boole 1. Par? II f M"; _, MW, Book I. Part II. opened by Nature, m the Blood being freely evacuated by Stool, dis-h cure many Dillifes, whim do proceed from the fuppi‘ellion of its wontcrl €Va~ cuation, of which cafe, ,lifypacrater giveth an account in his Sixth Section and Twelfth Apliorifme; 1‘3 71'3"! mild: «inure/413'"; ti W" Maxi) C H A P. XXXV, MC L'Ma p7,: ‘ ,,, r If a long ilux of Bleed by the Haemorrhoides be cured, unlefsone ? Aninreteiate "(ll/‘5 Flux of El") COIllllmPtion Hrmorrhmd 5, Win be kept open7 there is danger of an enfuing Droplie or is not to he (urtd wi:hout Blood- dili;hargc by the lower Mefenterick Artery, called theinternal lia-morrhoi. letting. 7790 (jar: of Bea/it. that is if the noifom humouts be filppi‘elied, which nature is acciil'tomed td cincs, in the external meorrhoidal Artery, arifing out of the H,pogallriclt Am a great Servant to Comparative Anatomy, which hath coll me a rear. deal of Time, and Money, in the procurement of Various Animals, Which l have Opened with great Pains and Care, and infpec°ted their inward Recelles, as God's wonderful Works, which if viewed, will read us many Branch, the Blood hath a recourfe by the external Hcemorrhoidal Vein, and and Lectures of His VVifdom and Goodnefs, wherein we may fee, admire, dal; thin the ill mafs of Blood being tranfmittcd by the G'orm into the Liver, do:h pervert its Cralis, and beget an Afiim. ‘ Or if a natural evacuation of ill Blood, be {topped by Aliringent Medi. to the Pulmonary Artery and Parenchyma of the Lungs, whereuPon the adore the molt Powerful Hand of the Omnipotent Archyteét, who hath Created all things for our ufe and infiruétion, to pay him the melt humble Blood confiliin;7 of faline and acid Particles, doth ealily Corrode the tender Bleflings, duty of out Thanks, as the great Author and Fountain of all our Compage of the lungs, and produce an Ulcer, often determining in Death. The Guts are not only endued with Arteries and Veins, but Nerves too, and to teach us to improve them in His Service, to His Glory. Comparative Anatomy is of great moment, that in feeing the variety of $333,???" very mime: Parts, and their Structure in other Animals, how they hold Analogy, and by the z‘ifcendent Trunk of the Cava, and right Ventricle of the Heart, iii. The Nerves of the Guts fprouting ml of the Far "grim. t as they are fine Contextures of molt acute Senfe, integrated of numerous Filaments curiouliy interwoven, which are derived from the eight pair of Nerves, aneicntly called the Sixr, and PM Vagum, and from the intercollal differ from the Body of Man; we may more clearly difcover the Ufes and ifiiiieti‘; of Branch of Nervm, confrituting the middle Mefenterick Flex; which Dodor being lefs vilible in one, may be more clearly difcerned in the greater bodies of other Animals. l‘viy province at this time, is to Treat of the Intellines of Beal‘ts, which confinin a Camel, are worth our remark: The Dnotlemzm, or firfl Gut, Willi: rcfemblcth to the Sun, fending forth various Fibrils, as f0 many Rays, into all regions of the lntellines. The Guts do all claim a {bare in the origens of the Laéteal Velfels, of The n ' an of . ' ' . . .0 . al the Duodenum, and very many in the Mummy, in rooted are fonrc \‘Vliltll m; various bats - Ileon, Colon, and fome few in the Ream"; all which Guts are perforated by the Laé‘tex into their Cavities, through which they receive the Alimen- mty Liquor ( when it is extracted and feparated from the Feeces) and firll convey it to the Glands of the Mefentery, and afterward to the common Receptacle. The Guts at: bci'ct "llllll Great variety of Glands may be difcovered in the Intellines, as Learned " Dofior Grew hath Well obferved, and after him, induftrious Prycrm 5 fome few Glands. fmall Glands are feared in the iDuoalermm and jejunum, and many more, and greater toward the Extreamity of the Ilcon; near the great Cuts, in the Cotcum, (Recium, and Colon, may be found fome Glands, about the biguefs 0E Lentils And in all the Guts, we dilcerned fome Glands in a Woman lately Diileé‘ted in the Colledg Theatre 5 and thefe have been feen in the Guts of Beafts, Oxen, Sheep, Goats, Hogs, Fowls, and lnfeé'ts, as Grafs-HOpperSE of which Learned Malpighem, giveth an aceount in his Book dc BambyteHoles may In Oxen, holes may be feen in the inward Coat of the Intefiines, which {earn in the Guts. which are the Extreamities of Excretory Duéts, coming from the Glands of the IHCFOUS are the Tar- mimtionsot Guts, out of which a clammy Liquor may be fqueezed into their Cavity, Or‘ thc Excretory of Nutritious Yell-clsibclon s- d?f€d by Nature as a Ferment, conducive to the extraction mg tn the Liquor in the Intel'tines. Glands $323,355 is Functions of our own Body, by reafon divers molt Curious and Minute parts "1° "and" $5,321,?" Thccuisjota C‘ml‘ s, ing on the Termination of the fourth Ventricle, is of an ordinary greatnef r have and lhort in length, being about five or fix Foot long; as the Tarifimi well obfcrvr'd. fur- The fecond Intelline, which is rare in other Animals, is middle nilhed witlmnany Cells and Folds, made by a Ligament palling the of the upper Region of the Gut, contraéting it into many hollow Spaces, in fomc part as f0 many Apartiments of grofs Excrements, till the Aliment is is of a moderate extraéted and diftributed into the Milky Veiléls ', this Cut The Bore, and much longer then the other, being twenty Foot in length. above not much larger in its Cavity, and {hotter in Extent, being;r third is ten Foot in length. Bore The fourth is the leall of all, whofc fiualnefs of length. is Compenfatcd by its great length, being Fifty fix Foot in < full of The Guts ct A Lion Diil'eéled by Dr. Thoma; Brzrrbolz'ne, had his greater Guts Abdo- "m" black moill Excrements) covering the whole Circumference of the faw I men, in two great CircumVolurions. They were very final], which and Tyfrm, in an Emaciarcd 2 ion ( DilTeéted by Learned Doétor Edward ; all the Bowels its in ents Excrem grofs no or few had Doéior Slimr) which the Inteliines of a Lion are twenty Foot in length, of which the Colo/z is melt eminent. s, whofc TheGiitsoF 5 The Illtcfiinc‘s of a Tygre are few, and have few Circumvolution hath fre- "my" great Gut: are wholly deliitute of Cells ; whereupon this Animal quent eieétiriii of grofs Excrements, as having no Cells to give a flop to the over-hafiy motion of the Forces. and "came" The Guts in a Bear, Hedghog, and others, are of the fame bignefs, are found in ""54"" do not admit the divifion of {mall and great Intellines, which _CH_AP! molt perfect Animals. The j‘ejunum and Ileon in an African Goat, are ac- greater Cut, commodated with many {mall Cells, in which the Colon, or is defeélive, which is fupplied by the Cells of the {mallet Intefiings. Th e |