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Show Of £179; Conro‘ffit‘c Faculty of the gum. 364 Book I. Part 1 I, Book I. Part I I. Of t/rc Concofi‘iw Faculty 0/ the Limit. 365 by the contents 0? the Stomach) from the Mouth, Gulet, Stomach, Intefiiiies, to the Army. And in. ionic Filh, as a Lamprey, and Garlilli, the Stomach and Outs {cent to be the lame, and are parted by no clofing of the Stomach by a (Pylg. ms, or Sphynéhn‘ Mufcle', ii) that thq thtrrcle and ~Guts, have one con. tinued Cavity, running the whole lengtn of the Body, in a Ilraight courfe, , . without any Circunwolution. it. a ' and (2mm. WWW, My ' huh, i -} "i (principally lodged in the New; and Calm) wherein the Albuminous and liaiieorniiiir gentle Particles of the Purple Liquor, being fecemed from the red Cralfa- 31°" merit, are tranfinitted through fecret Duets into the Guts, wherein thefe fe- Learned Sir Chin-Icy Shirl/mg}, (mofi excellent mthe Art of Anatomy, and rous parts of the Blood, being highly enabled with its Volatil, Saline, and Phyl‘ '_ as Wt‘ll as in many other Scrcnccs) gave an account in fi3mc familiar Sulphureous Particles, endued with a fubtle and active Conftitution, do iniinuate themlelves into Porous parts of the Alimentary Liquor, and aft it is in the Colledg of Phyficians, that in a Body he ordered to be ' he Found the Stomach very linall, and very little different in its Ca "v um that oi the thts; in reference the dead Perfon, when living, did uii: a wry {lender Diet, and Eat and Drink little, which very much contrac'tcd the capacity of the Stomach. rs: Stomach The Ventricle and Intellines, hold alfo a farther Analogy with each other, ‘ H as they are both {cpolitories of Aliment, and are acted with the fame Fa?" culties and Operations, otRetentive, Concoétivc, Diflributive, and Ex- ' t with a. new Efi'ervefcence, whereby it is very much Meliorated, and improved, confpicuous in the white drels of Chyle, accompanied with new, and more inward, noble Difpoiitions. pulfive ordained by Nature to the Produflion, Refinement, and Propagation of Ch'yle, and the fecretion of it from grohs Faeculencies, which is ac- The hit and molt excellent Ferment, . belonging . to the Concoé‘tivc Facul- "cm" . . . c . l-crment of ty of the Intefimes, is the Nervous liquor, taking its hrfl: rife from the throws, in Cortical Glands of the Brain, and being received into the Extreamities of §§£¥?"‘L" the Nervous Fibrils, is thence traniinitted through the various ProcclTes of the Brain, into the Intercollal Nerves, and rPar Vagnm, and afterward into the numerous Melentericlt Branches (implanted into the Glands of the In- complii‘hed as well in the Inteltines as Stomach : Firlh, by opening the Com page of the Aliment by Heat and various Ferments, produétive ofColli- tefiines) out or» whole Terminations, the Animal Liquor doth defiil into the interltices of the Veliels (appertaining to the Glands of the Guts) quittion, and rcfolution of the more folid into fluid parts, whereby the Ali- wherein the Succm Nutritim, aflbciated with the more Albuminous parts of the Blood, is conveyed through the Minute Pores of the Inteftines, into their: mentary Tnic‘lure is extraéted, and a Secretion made or the Nutricious Particles, born the groller Recrements. m Mm, Sonic part or the Alimentary juice, embodied with the reliques of Con23:5??3'532 coé‘tion, after it is tranfmitted from the Stomach into the Intel'tines, is prethebuii. pared and exalted by divers Ferments; among which, the PancreancltLiquor may Item to challenge the priority of order, in reference to the Guts, "spam": intefiine Motion, in order to the Extraction and Refinement of Chyle. A third Ferment conducive to the digel'cion of Aliment in the Guts, are T'jcti‘rchfthe Chryllralline parts of the Blood, which being impelled into the Glands, gillmniitt‘hcc by realbn it is excerncd into the finodemrm, the firth of them. .This Juice, I conceive, takcth its origen from the Terminations of the Cavity 3 wherein this noble Liquor, ( imprxgnated with Volatil, Saline Par; ticles, and Animal Spirits, inlpired with Elaflick Particles of Air ) doth em- body it {elf with the Liquid parts of Meat (not digcfied in the Stomach, and thence thrown into the Guts) whereupon the Chyle is very much hightned by the Volatil and Spirituous Particles of Nervous Liquor, and rendred more fluid and fit for Motion into the Laéteal \/ efTels. A now I will endeavour. to give a more clear Dilbription of the ElaboraThe Conce. a . , . than of the iiiiriiiilclii" it Catliack Artery, imparting Vital Liquor to the fiibltance of the Pancreas, non of Chyle in the Intcliines, where the Contents or the Stomach (morfl- Chylcixithe_ l‘iiliiiligigs wherein the rnore foft Particles of Blood are {evercd in the numerous Glands, ned with Salival Liquor, inl‘pired with intraereal Particles in the Mouth) flaming liltciuthc and being allocratcd with Nervous Liquor ( flowing from the Extreamines mm" of the Nerves) are tranlinitted into the Excretory Vellels, (as holding a are acted with Vital Heat, flowing from the Blood of the Stomach, and "‘parts adiacent, and imptrtguated with Serous and Nervous Liquor, whereby conformity in {hape and lize, with the atomes of the Serous, Pancreatick Liquor) and from thence into the empty {pace of the Intef'tines, whereup- fome Alimentary parts are extraéted in the Ventricle, and others pals confufed with the crude Nourilhmcnt into the Guts, where they encounter many other Fermcuts of Pancreatick, Bilious, Serous, and Nervous Liquor; on the Faline and Spirituous parts of the Pancreatick Juice, do infinuate whereupon the lhbjeét matter of Concoftion, confilling in its own nature theml‘elves into the Compage of the liquid contentsj dilbharged the StomaCh of various Elements ( of which all mixed Bodies are compofed) is alfo im- into the Guts, and extract the Alimentary Liquor, mixed, and running confufed with the indigellied reliques of Concoétion', lb that the Liquor ol the proved by many difi‘erent Ferments, which being conflituted of oppofite Pancreas, being impregnated with fubtle and Viral parts, doth colliquate Principles, do make great Confliéts with each other, and produce an Effervcfceuce, and intefiine Motion, as both the Contents of the Intefiines, and the Chyle, and attenuate its crude clammy nature, by exalting it to a greater thinnels and whitenel‘s. , The next Ferment relating to the Concoéiion of the Guts, iS the BihoUS the divers Ferments confaederated with them, are made up of different Salts, and Sulphurs, Acids, and Alkalys, fome fixed and grofs, and others Volatil and Spirituous, which are {0 many Combatants cutting the Iifi, and fight- Humour, which being fecerned from the Vital Liquor in the Hepaml‘ Glands, the more pure parts are afterward received into the Cyl'tick EKCF?‘ tor-y Veliels, and from thence conveyed to the Receptacle of Gall, wherein ing for Victory, and the {ubdued and conquered Parties do at 1:19: clofe with each other in an amicable Converfe : Whereupon the Compage of the Ali- it is detained fome (pace, till their Saline and Sulphureous parts grOng ment being opened and concocted in the Stomach, and then tranfmitted to the Guts, and farther Extraéted and Colliquated, by reafon the difagreeing Alimentary parts being rendred Homogeneous, do enter into Alibciation, as more exalted, and Fermentative, are at laft carried by a large Excretch Duet into the Intefiines, Where the Oily and [harp particles of Bile being confederated with the more (of: Pancreatick Liquor, do pnetratc the BMW of crude Aliment (protruded out of the Stomach) and give it a Elsie; ' being ambitions to perfeét and conferve each other, and do quit the com- pany of groflbr parts, difl'erviceable to Nutricion1 by a kind of Precipitation, which is chiefly efl‘eé‘ted by Nitrous Particles of Air (mixed with the Con- inte in Bbbbb tents |