OCR Text |
Show Book I. Part II, Book I. Part "I I. 0f the gm of Iii/€85. '36; Thefe Veffels are furnifhcd with Liquors of a white and yellow Colour, hitch/fill: C H A P. and, as I conceive, the fitlh Liquor is either preparatory to the other, and is ilwcllow at lafl: turned into it; or, which is more probable, the white Liquor is Nu- lquor' XXXVIII. tricious, and carried by proper Veerls into the Heart, and thence into the Ambient parts of the Body; and the yellow being Excrementitious, is dif- Of the guts of Infiffr. n: mamas «n n W r- He [nteflines of a Viper, begin near the Termination of the Stomach, or @ylarm, in a finall Neck, and afterward are enlarged into greater in! "W Cavities now and then interlperfed with fmaller 'l‘ which run obliquely; and the Intellines fome inches before they Terminate, make their progrel's ir'a'l'.4i.n. in Arches + crofs-ways, reaching from one fide of the Belly to the other, and at lall do end into a Vent. The Inteflines of this Animal7 conlilli of greater and lefs Cavities, are enameled with great variety of Blood Vef- charged by the Imeflz'rmm Refine: through the Vent. Infeflshave Silk-Worms, Palmer-Worms, Arteria, (through which Air is propagated, and having fruitful the manner of Net-work, are at dri‘inijgai'ic :‘n‘gb‘;",:}:,;'s"'0 Vikcm TIIeFermcn. and other Infech, haveaTrnnk, or Afpem received) from whence many Vefl'els are Branches inofculated with each other, in laft inferted into the Ambient parts of the Body, and alfo into the Heart, Stomach, Guts, and into all the Vifcera: $22 if" Wherenpon the Blood in the Heart, and the Chyle in the Stomach and In~ {32,3223}; tellines, being impratgnated with Volatil, Saline, and Elal'tick Particles of 31:5"???Air, are much exalted in their due Fermentation, and brought to perfection. voiarilé‘niuc. iliflfrifl. ~r. ,1, 71m. fels +, framed in the manner of Network. . (M, In a Silk-"form, about the fmaller part of the Stomach, near its Termi'": nation, is feared a Protuberance, out of which arifeth a Trunk of a Tubular . _v- 17 ignre, which palleth fingle for fome little fpace, and afterward fproureth "1 [1‘2 into two Branches of finall VelIels, which make an Arch in their firlt Origen, and then climb up the back-fide of the Stomach, and in their top make many Circumvolutions in the form of Arches, and afterward creep down, C H A P. XXXIX. Of the Concofi‘ire Faculty of the (jun. and encircle fome part of the Stomach. The Intefhnes have a Perforation into the common Trunk ', f0 that the _ , Ventricle ofa Silk~Worm being cut crofs-ways, when it is emptied, and f the varicofe productions of 'VefI'els being fquceled near the inlenion of (yr the Trunk, a white, and fometimes a yellow Liquor is thrown into the in- t.) non, fide of the Venter 3 as Learned Malngbim hath obferved. Not far diflant from the fair! Veerls, may be difcovered others, which are n feated in the lower part of the Venter, and make their progrefs in different pollnrcs, and fport themfelves in variety of Figures, and have little Areas, form of which are Oblong, and others Triangular, and fome are Orbicular. Thefe fmall Tubes, I conceive to be the Inteflimtla Crew, of a Silk-Worm, ",0, which do often decullate each other, and make various Circumvolutions of different Figures, and do encompafs both the Utriculi of this Infeét, and chiefly the lower Region, and are affixed to the Inleflimtm Ream!" Thfll? Tubes being Tranfparent, and wonderfully involved with each other in Varicofe Productions, do fornewhat refemble cluflers of Globules, or Glands. A I'ahner-VVormhath Veffels (analogous to thofe of a Silk-Worm) ari- A'iuimcr- iiiriimiuhs, "mm ling out of the Termination of the Stomach, and fporting themfelves up; ward and downward in various Circumvolutions; which are more evident in this lnfee't, then in a Silk-Worm. '1 he V'efl'tls In a. large Palmer-Worm, thefe finall Tubes (which I apprehend to be fjffiflffffm Intt'lllnes) are hued with variety of Colours, fome are White, and others Hm "NW: Yellow : The firflt have Cells, in which they fomewhat refemble the (Mamas liL‘HlllIL‘ lune Elli}: iil‘il‘l‘c ingenioushfdlpigbim hath obferved, and their Semilunary Prominencies, arc hollow Within, and have one common Duct, full of Liquor 5 and the other Co," yellow Tubes have more fmooth furfaces, and are of a round Hattilh Figure, and being adorned with variety of Marauders ( as palling up and down the lower Venter in different pollures) are fafined to thofe Tubes, that fprollt out of the narrow part, near the end of the StomaCh, and at laf't make a G)'re about the Intel/lien"; 996111211. Thefe ' i ‘He . Stomach cannot arrogate to it. felf, the fole , prerogative, of Conco~ _ . . etion or Chyle, but the lute-{lines alfo do claim a [hate in it, as it is ‘ ‘ ' moft confprcuous to thofe, that do pry into the actions and ufes of the Guts; which do farther colliquare the ill Concoéted Meat in the Stomach, and make a fecretion of fome Alimentary parts, remanent in the Fa-ces, after the Ventricle hath performed its Operation, and expelled the reliques of Con. Th‘Gmm' a power [0 :fircvflgand mlcn as theyharethe r"‘°""°‘°‘ tau: and net323,515,335? mach- coc'lion into the lnteflines :, which by the afllllance of various Ferments, do give a more perfect Digeflion to grols and vifcid Chyle, extracted out of the crude part of the Meat difcharged the Stomach into the Guts: Which are fit inftruments of Concoétion, as they participate the fame ltrufiure, "mum? and Ferments common to them and the Stomach, and have the farther ad- mkagmbnli- . . . . oulequorarc vantage of two other, the Pancreatick, and Bilious Liquor, when they are proper rer- not fdund in the Stomach in their laudable conftitution, but when by their 8335:" "w ill qualities they irritate the [nteflines, and put them upon an unkindly in- verted IVIOtiOll, to throw them up into the Stomach, wherein they being ill difpofed, do pervert the due Conconétion of Aliment. The Intellines do jufily claim great affinity with the Stomach, in the like- Rféfi‘gf'ggyc nefs of Fabrick, as having the fame number and nature of Coats, endued tlIclamcllruj with lVIembranous, Carnous, and Nervous Fibres, and fumilhed with Ar- £33233:an- teries, \ eins, Nerves, and numerous Minute Glands, the colatories of Vi- ""m cm" tal and Nervous Liquor ; and the inward Coat of the Intefiines, as well as Stomach, is alfo lined with a Pituitous Matter, defending its tender Ner- vous Compage, againll: the fevere alfanlts of Iharp Cholerick, Acid, and Pancreatick Recrements : So that the Inn-{lines in Rruéture are like to the Stomach, to which the beginning of the Guts being united, may be fliled, as it Were, the Elongation and Proceifes of the Vt'ntrlclc', as endued with one continu- ed Cavitie ( which is only contracted in the 'Pylorwr, and afterward opened by |