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Show fiA, book 11. ,, __..c__ca_~v_-._, , .,___.,,.._.c_, Of in,» Man/f" 681 éiion, and is feared above with the bigeli Ribs and Clavicles, and adorned within with the thin wall of the Medialtine (parting the middle Apart} CHAP. mcnt into two Allodgments) and with the line hanging of the rFlaunt, en- wrapping the excellent [er‘llllS of the middle Story, the Heart and Lungs, II. he various h'larhincs of the motion of Blood and Air. In the lon'cfl Venter the h'iilky Extract isprepared out of Aliment as 21: 0f the Midri/f, fociated with \ Arions fer-merits or the Stomach, and lntellincs, and is thence . Aving given you a profpefi of the parts of the lowcl‘t Venter at , large in the former Book, I will now contract them into a more middle Apartiment, with which I defignhereafter to entertain you Part by hvnzc mixed with the . iood is receptive Ofa farther comminution, as it is tranlinirted into the lid, tee of the Brant/Jig and film; of the lungs, where Part accordirg LC) the flame Method, as Nature hath infiituted them. it metrs and Conic-dot tcsit'itlr the Nitrous and Eiall'iclt Particles ofAir, open" narrow Model, and thew you how they are fubfervient to the Vifrem of the The Fabric}: of Man's body, The walls and houfliold-llizfi' of the lowtlt Apartment. . The goodly {tructure of Man's body may be flyled the Mailer-piece of Na- ing the Cor tures Architecture, as bemtified with acomely Figure, and compofed of va- cles into Vii riety of Parts, fer together in excellent order, and compiled of three Stories, fianding upright one above another. whileit c tlirovvh the Arteries. I have given an Hifiory of the Lowell, encircled with the four common Coverings, as fo many Out-buildings, and decked more inwardly with the Thus hamig Siren a lhort Account in general of the Utenlils relating to. the middle Aptitimcut, I will endeavour now to give a more particular dev rare expanfions of the rim of the Belly, and Can], immuring within their fcription of them, beginning with the Midriff, as the firlt in order. {oft embraces the tender Bowels, as f0 many choice Utcnfils furnilhing the lowell: #‘rpai'timent; The Aliment is prepared with divers Ferments, as fo many Menjlrzm in the cavity of the Stomach, as in a Retort, whereby a gram fizz/mo Marie, and is imparted to the Inteftines, as fo many Recipients, wherein it is farther concocied by new Ferments, and is afterward The ufeful Machine of Motion may be offered to our Confirlssrarion under divers Notions, in reference to Situation, Connexion, figure, Compage and Ufe. The Midriff is called by the Greeks, ziéye: "m, hat-W, m. 7",. w, Chg. by the Latines, feptum tranfwerfum, prtl'fol‘ditl, and is feared in the lower region 0 l[.4 the middle Apartiment as a Floor clofrng its circular Aperture, r ml is a part tranfmitted into the Mefenterick Laé'tealVelTeiS, while the Magma 0t graf- of the Thorax, as it allil‘teth refpiration by its COHfi'Ildl'li‘lL and hers eth as a fer reliques of the concocted Aliment, are conveyed through the Membra~ nous Tubes of the Inteftincs in order to Expulfion. . The Spleen prepareth a ferment for the Liver in reference to the Secre- party-wall 'l‘ to feverthe Middle from the lentil 8 Anal 3: uh its Com nexion behind by the mediation of two Carnoirs l'rocu cs, inn; fed with many tendinous Fibres inferred into the lower V‘ertebres of the Back and upper of the Loins: Thtfe Fibres beingr propagated from the h'lembmnous Circle of the Diaphragm do paf3 tranfverfely to the Vertebrcs of the Spine Milky Tinc'iure is extracted by the gentle heat of the neighbouring part5, tan. The 1: Fe of the liver. tion of Erie from the Blood ; and the Liver, Tammy, and Kidneys, are {0 many Colatories of the Vital Juice, and thereupon are attended with the bladder of Call, and Urine, as Receptacles to entertain Bilious and Serous Retirements. The Integrimcnts of the middle Scory nfMau's body. The lowell Apartiment is minillerial to the middle, as it prepareth and tranfmitteth to it a Milky Extract (the Materia Sub/irate of Blood ) by the Thoraciclt Duéls. Thus having given you a fhort Narrative of the feleét Houlhold fluff ofthe lowefi Story, with your permiflion, I will take the freedom to Treat you with a light of the more noble furniture of the middle Apartiment, outwardly eneompalled with four univerllil Coverings as f0 many fine walls, and moreinwardly behind with the Mtftulm lariflz‘mur é» longiflimur dorji, fatralnmbarer, femi-fpinah , firratz' pafliti fii/ieriorer (7 inferior", fupponed with a Column made up with many Vertebres of the Back, finely Carved with acute, oblique and tranfverfe Procelles: And this Story is encircled on each lide with twelve Ribs, as f0 many bony Arches, interfperfed with in‘ tcreolialMufcles: and is guarded before with the Mufculur pefioralir, femgt; agar?" major ('9. minor, and more firmly with the Sternon, as with aflrong rea -p ate. The furniture of the middle Story. conveyed through the b'lefcntery and Thorax by proper l\"llll()' vellels, into the Suhclavian Ve 'i‘, and by branches of the (1m: into the Heart, and bro~ hen into finall Particles acainft the wall of its right Chamber", And the The middle Venter is clofed below with the Midrifl‘ as with :1 Floor, en:dnedm i and and Chyme, and converts its purer Parti~ t , . h receives more and more peril-cl Alllmilation. late farmer, and converfes more with the Blood in its motion ( and accompany for ionic fpace the great Artery) adhering to the Nlufclcs of the loins, andg 01'. in; leis by degrees do creep unter the Trunk of the Aorta, till the ' {hid the Vertebres void of Flelh, and then are molt firongly inferred into t a. The Diaphragm alfo is firmly fallned by many Tendin ions Fibres both above and below to the extremities of the baltard Ribs, and to the iniide of the Sternon, which defends the exterior confines of this foft moving ei‘erine as with a \Vall ; and the Midriff is not only inferred in~ to the Carti eof the twelfth Rib, but is fallned according to its ficlhy‘ margent by the interpofition of Fibres to the circular Termination of the Ribs, and to the oblique, afcendeut, and tranfverfe abdominal Mufcles. This fine Organ of Motion is beautified with a circular Figure ‘l‘, and is iT- r- r r-r ci.tui.ir carried round in an oblique pollure from the Vertebres of the Back and 'lhe Figurenf the Loins, all along the confines of the lowell; Ribs to their Cartilaginous E); tremities, and thcinward region of the Sternon, and hath not only one or~ bicular Figure heated in its flelhy circumference, but another Nervous kind of finaller Circle placed within the other, and if it be curioully infpected, it cannot be called a true Circle by rcafon it is more expanded in its Origen, and terminates after a manner into an acute Angle. its repofe With a concaye Surface toward the loivel't Apartiment, and With a Convex toward the middle, and with a kind of Plain in its Contraétion, Nnnnnnnn' As Midritf. |