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Show M Book I. SEE 0f tlac limit. 3" Bool; I. Part ll. 0f t/JL' gm, 3 53 \ (vii-1; being (horter then the Coats, contrae‘tcdi them into many great and fimiler (3,3115, 2,511, many {new} receptacles of Excrements, till the alimenwry Liquor i; extracted and received into the I ae‘tea' 3 this Cut makcth its proniils lianetimes in large Cavities, and then gt‘oiveth Contracted again into many fmall Necks, to give a [top to the overdrafiy motion of the Faces. Tut: Calm: afeendeth in Gyres, till it almoll reacheth the skirts ofthc L1. crements ', and belide the Sphynéter, may be found fome femilunary Valves which do not exactly clofc up the Artur, and do not touch each other, except when the AIIM is {but up by the Sphyné‘ter 5 thefe femilunary Valves, may be more clearly feen in Dogs and Cats then Men. This lnteltine is alfo accommodated with two other Mufcles belide the Tl‘f'viurtlss Sphynéter, named Lee/4mm" Am, which are derived from the OJ Coxmdicir, iii-Sufi?"and the ligament of the GI Sacrum, which is ordained by nature, to keep vet; and then palleth tranlhrlLly, underthe bafe ofthe Ventriele (in many lhoir circuiuvolutions, to the Left Side,) and then making a fliort double or turn near the Pancreas, tendeth to the Spleen and Kidney, Where it is formed into ihort circumflexures, refembling the Letter S. and then go- the Inteflinum realm; in its due place, and to reduce it, when it is forced eth farther down the Left "ide, in greater Circumvolutions, divided from extrcainzty , from the lixth Joynt of the 0: Sum»: to the Arms, without Emit"; any circumvolution, by realon it is not dellined for a long [lay of Excre- {Tamm- each other by narrow pallages. This Out bath a ligament -l- about the Breadth of the little finger, palling in the middle of the upper Surface, all alone from the (1015" to the termination ofthe Colon,in which, divers tanlts of fei'ous ‘\ alves .‘1'(' lituated. "' Barri in ulhed with runierous Semi-valves 'l‘ which are membra‘lT. 7~H l q. nous appendgges, affixed to the inward Coat of the Cola/z, making, as it were, a kind of Semicircles, cauling many afperities in the inward Surface of this, lnteftine, for form part, and the tell is left plain, forthe more ea- dOWn by a violent expulfion of hard and grofs Excrements7 or when relax~ ed by fome great indifpofition. The Reflux}: goeth in a firaight coutfe from its Origcn , to its utmofi The agaum ments; whereupon it isdeltitute of the ligament, making Connivent Valves, which would give a check to the palfage of the cmes. The Guts are Enamelltd with divers Vellels, Arteries, Veins, Nerves, flfllefif andlaétcal Tubes. ‘ The Arteries and Veins relating to the Intellines, are the Cct'lidf, the £11523? upper and lower Me hrnterie Branches, and the lilymorrhoidal. f;‘fl:‘,l‘f,',"c'r:;,‘fl The Cazliack Artery is a very eminent Branch, fpringing our of the defcen- "My Thefe Valves are called by Kmringim, dent Trunk of the Aorta, little above the Midrifi‘e, which is principally or~ 11 7.1a". Cozzniryezr t r ,1 by teafon they do not wholly encircle the inward Surface of "any," this Inn lime, in M ich they are greater then in the 7thszng and every glut, , \vherc obferve this order, that fome incline toward the Ila-on, while others dained by Nature for the StOmach, whence it rccciVCth its denomination of lie trauii '7" 7'", of Excrements. del‘cend towards the rectum, and by degrees, grow lcfs and leis, and after= ward do \vholly difappear. If any man he ambitious to infpeét thefe great Curiofities of Nature, ordained for great ttfes; it may be belt performed by the gentle inflation of the Gut, wherein a moderate Tenfion is made 3 upon which the Tuniclesof the lnrefline growing thin, the Connie/em Valves may be more clearly feen through the Coats of the Colon, 1/2077, and 7ejmmm. T‘nc‘evt'hof The (ll/0n is about Seven Foot in length, and iinmureth the finall Guts LllL‘ Cult/71. . r . ‘ Within its embraces, both above, below, and laterally, that they may the better refcnt the Comprellion of the abdominal Mufcles in the expullionof Excrements, and being tied in its beginning to the Kidney, and by the upper Coat of the Caul, to the bottom of the Stomach, and by the binder, to the Pancreas and Loins, and to the skirts of the Fpleen, and Left Kidney, doth keep the 79117111111 and Ilia in their proper Feats. am. The hall of the great Guts is denominated Ream", by reafon of its ltraigh: , l" Ixrogl‘efsavhich taketh its Origen about the firft V ertiber of the 0; $11010") and defcendeth through the rPele/it to the Anus, where it terminateth gand is ten degrees (hotter than the Colon, but much thicker in its Coats; whereupon, and as beiner Carnous and Fat, it is thought to be delicious Meat, though its whole Office is mean, being deltined to the Entertainment of grofs Excrements. \ The Inlefiiimm rcfi'nm is falteued to the Orflwrnm and 0th by the inter- polition of the fPcrilozzmmr, in Men, to the Root of the Twit; and in W0‘ mm. men to the utcm, by the mediation of its Mufcular fubllance, whence thefi: Caliaclt hats/um, a Valium/r); and when this Artery , r hath imparted its digniihiV-lii‘rd Branches tathe Stomach, Liver, Bladder of Gall, and Caul 3 it communica- 333;!" teth alfo many divarications to the Duodemtmr to the Origen of the 7tyumtm, and fo.ne part of the Colo/z; to all which Guts, Veins, (allociating with the Cazliack Ai‘tei‘y,aiidariliitg out of the afcendirigz Trunk ofthe Cava fgfifg'ffg, are derived in fruitful ramifications, which return the Blood by the Porta ‘nto the Cava ; and thence to the Right Auricle and ventricle ofthe Heart. The upper Mefenteiick Artery, lprouting out of the l)efL‘endent Trunk of the Aorta, a little below the leiaclt, doth adorn with numerous ramulets, thefijunztm, Ilcmz, and that part of the Cu/o/z which palleth from the Concave lurface of the Liver, to the Right Kidney. And afterward the AMYThsuvrsr $235323" KEEPGTE‘: Veins, allociltes of the upper Mefeutcrick Artery, do reconvey the vital by the Port-.1, lodged in the l iver, where the Blood is depurated from its bilious Faces, before it is rect-ived into the numerous Extreamities of the Cava. In the anterior parts of the defcendent Trunk of the Aorta, before it is dividedintothe lliac Branches, arifeth the lower Mefenteriek Artery, near the O: Sdtrum, and is difperfed into the Calm ( featcd in the Left Side) and into the Imcflz'mmz ream", from its‘Origen to the flaws. The lower Mefenterick Veins, every where accompanying the Arteries, do return the Blood toward the greater Branches of Veins, and Right Ventricle of the Heart, to make good the circulation of the Purple Liquor. hifciii‘c'hik Alytcriuharh for-"it‘s/t‘lfllbsci: "‘5' The lower Mefentericlt ( Artery being difperfed in numerous Branches in» Eofidgf'xféo to the I}lfl'/l'iflll771 "Elam, make the Internal Ha‘morrhoidal Arteries,and are ac- ricsv 3r?". . . . . . . , . compamcd companied in the fame Gut wrth fruitful dcvarications of Veins, which being with Vcius. opened by the application of l eeches, to the margent of the Anugthe Spleen, Kidneys, and Melbntcry, are very much freed from grofs Humonrs embodied MW e various parts are alfeéted with a mutual Confent. {l hififiliiitin' This Gut endeth in the Anur, where it is furniflied with a Sphynéter Mu C 6, many circular ( annexed to the lower Margent of the 0: Sacmm, ) drefled With many an"me nular Fibres, which being contraéted, do purfe up the perforation of the AW: thereby giving a (top to the involuntary exclufion of grofs and flatulentEX- with the Blood ; becaule the internal Hzemorrhoidal Vellels do arife out of the 7'thluxtscf the HzmorTrunk of Blooel-veflcls, a little below the Splenick and emulgent Branches: rhoidc: an. and f0 may divert the Blood in its courfe, down the Defcendent Trunk, into :3 :53???" the lower Mefcnterick and Haetnorthoidal Velfels, whofe terminations being . creme!"S Yyyy opened |