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Show 0f ‘Urin‘e. Book I. Part Ill. Book I. Part III. 0f ‘Urine. 5'09 fore it hath received an Amber hue, produced by the Saline and SulphureouS fuperHuities of the Blood, Having given an account of the Chiantity and Colours of Urine, it may feem pertinent now to Difcourie foinewhat of its Contents, or Hypoftalis, and its matter and manner of Production. Tr: xii-no." flafis or Urine. The white ( outcnts of U; me. The tnntcnts of Urine as to its (i.b~ three. The Vital Juice being in perpetual motion to give it heat and Life, as arav, give the fame Tinéture to the Hypof'cafis, which is their more crude Particles, dilierviceable to Nutricion, as being not capable to be received into the innumerable Pores of the folid parts, in order to be turned into their fubfiance. . . alfo refinement in its pallage through divers Colatories, and laft of all Nu- It is of a kind of equal Confiftence, not grol's in one part, and thin in trition too, while the Blood is impelled out of the Terminations of Arteries, another, and hath a kind of round, or rather, asI conceive, an Oval Fi- into the Interftices of various Vellels, before it is received into the Roots of the Veins, to make good the Retrograde Motion of the Blood, into the gure, when the Urine is confined within the fides of a Urinal, and hangeth in the body of the Urine, fomewhat tending towards its lower Region. right Auricle and Ciitern of the Heart 3 whereupon I humbly conceive, Nutrition is performed by the motion of the Blood, through the fubllance of The Confiltcnce oi Urine in healthy Perfons, is of a middle nature, between Thick and Thin, fomewhat refembling a high bodied Langoon white the Vifcera, Membranes, and Mnfcular parts, wherein the Vital Liquor be- Wine, or well-brued Ale, as Doctor Willi: will have it, confil'ting of ma- ing fome fmall time extravafated in its motion between the Vegels, from the Termination of one to the beginning of the other; during which pallagc, ny Well diflolved particles of Salt and Sulphur, and fome Earth broken very (mall, and lodged in the innumerable Pores of Urine: So that if they be deltitute of Saline, Sulphureous, and Earthy Particles (as it is often found in forne {oft and albuminous parts of the Blood, embodied with the 8mm Nutririm, are received into the innumerable Pores of the Vefiels, and Aflimilated by a kind of accretion into their fubfiance, and the parts improper for Nutricion, as being too crude and grofs, do embody with the watry fuperfluities of the Blood, which being carried down the Def'cendent Trunk of the Aorta, and Emulgent Arteries, into the Glands of the Kidneys, a fecretion is made of the Potulent parts of the Blood, and the reliques of the third Concoétion, which being of a clainmy nature, do eafily incorporate with each other, and do produce the White Contents, of the Urine, inclining to the bortom of the Urinal. great Drinkers) the Urine hath a thin palecolour ; but in other Bodies, that have foul Mailes of Blood, the Urine groweth thick and turbid, as filled with gtols Recrements, the products of an ill Concoéted Blood, and vitiated Nutricion, wherein the folid parts of the Body are rendted Emaciated, as wanting a due matter of Nutricion. Learned Doctor Willir, maketh the Contents of Urine to bea Compofiti- on of many long finall Filaments, interwoven and complicated with each other, produced by various motions upward and downward, this and that way, whereby they mutually embody : Of which the Renowned Author giveth a farther account, Tag. I 1. De Mrim': Filzzmenta ifia fnnt langa (av Icrtirt, etiam afieritaribm quibnfdam weprium inflar pmdim, ut him inde common; facile fe int/item carxipiant, @ inter fe complitentur, "an aliter ac fi malracio aqm plena plurimor injiciM pilot, ac deitzde WM iflnd din canqunflkndo cirtumdum 3 pili primo [par/2m imzalanm, brat/i pofl tempura fe mntua comprehendenr, ac in Imam fafi‘iolam tolligentm‘ pari ( mi widetur ) rations Filamenta, gut Iijrpo/iafiiz conflitmmt, 01:10:42 6» Spiritz'bm urinal infitit warie hint inde agimm, fe invite»! implied")? év protrudunt, dome mutno omnium implexn in unam nubemldm coe- amt; (9v quoniam Filamema iUd jimt compaéfa, (5* Catterir tontentir folio/ion, ponderefuo werfu: fundnm fnbfidnm. This Hypothefis may be probably reinforced, by reafon of the Filaments feared in the Blood, which being endued with a laudable difpofiti- on ( fit for Nutrition) is afl‘eéted with many white Fibres, becaufe the Blood let out of the Vefiels being immitted into warm Water, the red Craf- A good HypoRafiset‘ a uhite colour. Blood, embodied with the Nervous Liquor; which being both of a Wllitifl‘l fament is diluted, and the long white Filaments may be dil'covered to fwim on the furface of the Water. In ill Hydropick Confiitutions of Bodies, the Blood being clogged with watry Recrements, is defpoiled of its well digel'ced Filaments, whereupon the Urine is defiitute of all Hypofiafis, or groweth turbid and confufed, which is ended by a quantity of grofs reliques of Concoé'tion, filling UP the Pores of the Urine. A good and laudable Hypoflafis, is of a white Colour, proceeding from the remains of Nutricion, which is repaired by the Cryll'alline part of dz; B 00 a The Em! of the Third Tart. The figure of tthypoflafis The good confluence of Urine. |