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A34010 A systeme of anatomy, treating of the body of man, beasts, birds, fish, insects, and plants illustrated with many schemes, consisting of variety of elegant figures, drawn from the life, and engraven in seventy four folio copper-plates. And after every part of man's body hath been anatomically described, its diseases, cases, and cures are concisely exhibited. The first volume containing the parts of the lowest apartiments of the body of man and other animals, etc. / by Samuel Collins ... Collins, Samuel, 1619-1670. 1685 (1685) Wing C5387; ESTC R32546 1,820,939 1,622

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frequently returneth again at the change of the Moon which is vulgarly called a Lunacy Sometimes Madness proceeds from an ill Diet Madness may come from an ill Diet. or from the suppression of accustomed evacuations by the Haemorrhoides Nostrils or Uterus in Women whereupon the Blood depressed by saline and sulphureous Particles being transmitted to the fibrous frame of the Brain doth enrage the Animal Liquor and Spirits and produce a Mania The Blood also being infected with a Venenate disposition This Disease may be propagated from the Venenate nature of Blood as in a Licanthropia Hydrophobia upon the biting of a Mad Dog doth cause Madness as the poisonous Miasmes are conveyed to the Blood and raise a high Fermentation in it and afterward in the nervous Liquor and its choice Spirits which giveth them a turbulent motion through the Interstices of the nervous Filaments confounding the true use of Reason and Imagination This Venenate affection lieth long in the Blood before it exerteth it self This Disease li●th long in a poisoned mass of Blood Before it exerteth it self as I have seen in one Dyer a Barber of Willington in Sussex who being bit by a Mad-Dog was well Three Months and then fell sick of a violent Fever attended with a raging Delirium and a foaming Mouth endeavouring to bite all that came near him and afterward died about the Fourteenth day of his sickness This venome infecting the Blood caused by the biting of a Mad Dog is mixed with the salival Liquor The manner how the poison flowing from the biting of a Mad Dog is conveyed to the Heart and first carried into the Veins of the ambient parts of the Body and then by greater and greater Channels is communicated to the Heart and Lungs and afterward by the ascendent Trunk of the Aorta and Carotide Arteries into the Cortical Glands of the Brain where it infected the nervous Liquor and Spirits lodged in the fibrous parts of the Brain whereupon the Animal Faculties lost their due Oeconomy and a raging Delirium ensued destructive of Reason Sense and Life Having given an account of the Essence and continent cause of this Disease it may not seem altogether amiss to speak somewhat of its symptomes following it as so many attendants So that this Disease is not accompanied with the sneaking guards of Fear and Sorrow as in Melancholy but with Boldness and Courage The symptomes of Madness The aetiology of the symptomes of this Disease attempting any assault though never so desperate which proceedeth from the enraged Vital and Animal Spirits acted with nitro-sulphureous Particles which render the Blood highly fermentative and spirited and put the Animal Spirits into irregular motion whereupon the Soul is so highly disordered as if it would violently leap out of the confines of the Body in which it seemeth to be imprisoned The active and fierce particles of the Blood put it into an extraordinary motion and great effervescence which highly acting the carnous Fibres of the Muscles do render them vigorous and strong able to encounter the great opposition of others that endeavour to master Mad men and bring them to obedience when they are guilty of extravagant actions offering violent hands to themselves and others and give great disturbance to the Families where they live and converse It is also very remarkable that Mad Men endure Labour and Travail Mad Men are highly patient of Labour and great conflicts without any manifest weariness which is occasioned as I humbly conceive from the nature of Vital and Animal Spirits which though they are impregnated with many volatil Particles yet they are also debased too with nitro-saline fixed Atomes which do confine the more subtle and spirituous parts of the Vital and Animal Liquor not suffering them to evaporate and quit those noble Juyces whereupon Mad Men when exposed to long and laborious action which is frequent with them are not easily tired but will fight and struggle in high fury to the wonder of the beholders This Disease often followeth Melancholy The cause of rage in Madness from bilious Particles of Blood An Instance of this case and is produced by a great ebullition of Blood rendring the Cortex of the Brain very dry whence ariseth a great fierceness of the Vital Spirits causing high boldness and fury A Citizen being first addicted to Melancholy afterward fell into a violent Distraction and Madness attended with Rage which could not be appeased by the power of Art and proper Medicines And after death the Skull being taken off the Cortex of the Brain appeared very dry and of friable nature an Inch deep where it was hued with Yellow as tinged with bilious or sulphureous Particles of the Blood In this Malady the Brain is often tumefied The Brain is often swelled in Madness taking its rise from a great quantity of Black torrefied blood sometimes extravasated and other times lodged in the Vessels making them varicose and knotty A Child complaining first of a great pain of his Head An example of a tumefied Brain in a Mania afterward fell into a high distraction howling like a Dog and so continued till he died And his Skull being removed the Brain was very much swelled and the Dura and Pia mater had their Vessels very turgid with Black Blood which was also very much lodged in the Sinus and torcular of the Brain and in the more inward parts of it were discovered a great many Red specks coming from Particles of extravasated Blood and afterward the lower Region of the Brain being opened a quantity of serous Recrements gushed out Other times Madness issueth from putrefaction of the Coats and substance of the Brain out of which arise sharp and fierce Humors Madness coming from the putrefaction of the Coats and substance of the Brain The difference of Madness infesting the Animal Liquor and Spirits which hath been observed in Dissections This Disease admitteth many descriminations as being sometimes of a small continuance othertimes lasting and habitual sometimes continued and other times hath lucid intervals and is very various in reference to its several symptomes and distractions As to the Prognosticks of this Disease it is seldom mortal but very difficult to be cured by reason the Blood and nervous Liquor are highly disordered with nitro-sulphureous Particles which are hardly removed and the Patients affected with this Malady can scarcely be perswaded to take Medicines as being Enemies to themselves as well as Physicians The Cure of Madness importeth as great a difficulty as advantage oftentimes successive to Melancholy and Phrensy in which Three The Indications First is the Curative the primary Indications do offer themselves The First is Curative relating to the Disease and consisteth in the reducing the exorbitancies of the Animal Spirits to a due and regular motion The Second Indication is preservatory The Second is Preservatory and is referred to the causes of the Disease to correct
due Spirits and Tenseness especially when they are affected with high Narcotick steams which despoil them of their laudable temper and tone The motive Faculty is impeded or abolished The motive Faculty is hindred when the Origen of the Nerves is obstructed by reason the Origens of the Nerves are obstructed in the Cortex or their progress in other Processes of the Brain Cerebellum or Medulla Spinalis or in the Trunks of the Nerves and their diverse Plexes and divarications The origination of the Nerves The Origen of the Nerves may be stopped by a gross nervous Liquor may be obstructed by the grossness of the Succus Nervosus as not being capable to be received into the beginning of the Interstices relating to the nervous Filaments constituting the body of the Nerves The grossness of the nervous Liquor may arise from a thick faeculent albuminous part of the Blood the Materia substrata of the Succus Nervosus The cause of a gross nervous Liquor or when the cortical Glands being not well disposed as having too large extravagant Vessels or Pores are not able duely to percolate the more thin mild Particles of the Blood from its more gross parts whereupon the thick Animal Liquor is not capable to insinuate it self into the Origens of the fibrous parts of the Brain The Origens of the Nerves are straightned by the Tumors of the adjacent parts which are also rendred too close and straight by the swelling of the neighbouring parts coming from the cortical Glands by a quantity of extravasated Blood in Inflammations or of serous Recrements in a Hydrocephalus in a Hydropick constitution of the Brain compressing the Origens of the nervous Fibrils in the ambient parts of the Brain And not only the Origens of the minute nervous Fibrils in the Cortex The progress of the Fibrils may have their Filaments over-close but the progress of more large Fibrils in the Medulla oblongata and Medulla Spinalis may have the spaces of their Filaments so closely conjoyned to each other by a quantity of Blood or Pus or by the tumors of the adjacent parts that the current of the Animal Spirits is intercepted whereupon the adjoyning Nerves grow flaccid and unfit for Sense and Motion A Palsey also may arise from a Solution of the unity of parts The solution of the unity of parts may be a cause of a Palsey when the fibrous Compage of the Brain is wounded or affected with a great blow or by Concussion when the order of the fibrous parts of the Brain is perverted as it hath the Fibres too much separated or too closely united dashing one against another A greater or less obstruction or compression of the fibrous parts of the Brain often produceth an Apoplexy Carus Lethargy Hemiplegia and when the Paroxysmes of these Cephalick Diseases are gone A Palsey often succedeth an Apoplexy The cause of the Palsey how it is more or less universal a Palsey often succeedeth sometimes affecting one other times both sides of the Body so that sometimes one or more Limbs and other times the Limbs of the whole Body are disabled in point of Motion As the matter of the Disease is more or less imparted to the Nerves of the Brain Cerebellum and Medulla Spinalis so the parts affected are not only rendred destitute of Motion but of Sense too in some cases And if some curious persons be so inquisitive The cause why Sense remaineth when motion is taken away as to be informed of the reason why the Sense remaineth where motion is taken away this may be offered in point of their satisfactions that Physicians have assigned some Nerves to celebrate the act of Sensation and others to motion but if this Opinion be not satisfactory as being improbable because all Nerves are endued as well with Sense as Motion I will presume to give the courteous Reader another Reason which may seem more probable that the act of motion is more difficult and laborious as supposing an action whereas Sensation intimates only a Passion which is more easy then the other and may be performed by a sensible impression continued from the common Sensory by the continuation of the coats of nervous Filaments propagated from the Brain to the Medulla Spinalis and other parts of the Body But Motion is accomplished by a higher nixus of the Nerves requiring a greater quantity and more refined Animal Spirits expa●ding the nervous Filaments and rendring them plump and stiff in order to motion The Compression of the Corpora Striata The Compression of the Corpora Striata hinder the progress of the Animal Liquor may arise from some extravasated Blood or serous Recrements outwardly crouding the Interstices of the Filaments relating to the Corpora Striata whereupon the progress of the nervous Liquor and Spirits being checked the Nerves grow relaxed and their motion abolished The Medulla oblongata The seat of the Palsey and the elongation of it the Medulla Spinalis may be the seat of the Palsey when the Fibrils of the said parts are obstructed inwardly by some gross Matter or outwardly by the compression of some stagnated Blood or faeculent Humors or by the Tumors of some adjoyning parts sometimes this disaffection is placed in the Nerves Sometimes this Disease is seated in the Nerves without the Brain without the limits of the Brain Cerebellum and Medulla Spinalis either in the Trunks or smaller Branches of Nerves stopped by obstruction compression or by solution of their unity Whereupon the progress of the Animal Liquor and Spirits is interrupted and the Filaments of Nerves become loose and flabby as having lost their tenseness a requisite condition of the action of the Nerves Immoderate Cold being a great enemy to the nervous Cold as incrassating the nervous Liquor may be the cause of a Palsey as well as vital Liquor doth incrassate the Animal Spirits so that they loose their volatil and elastick Particles and are rendred unfit to invigorate the Nerves in reference to Motion The immoderate use of Opiates which being taken too frequently The immoderate use of Opiates may cause a Palsey and in too great a quantity doth vitiate the I one of the Animal Spirits an dits energetick disposition which is also produced by the venenate Fumes of Minerals So that Miners working in Mineral Earth are affected with the steams of Antimony Mercury and Auripigmentum or Arsnick which cause Tumors in the Limbs as also sometimes a relaxation of the Nerves whereupon ensueth a paralytick distemper taking away the use of the Muscular parts the proper Engines of Motion For the most part the Brain is not only affected but the Medulla Spinalis and sometimes the Cerebellum is concerned by serous Recrements diffused between the Skull and the Coats of the Brain which afterward fall down and compresse the Fistula Sacra or Silver Cord The Palsey may arise from the Compression of the Medulla Spinalis A quantity of
of Birds 804 805 Lungs and Gills of Fish 806 Lungs of Frogs Lizards Vipers c. 808 Lungs of Insects 809 The Lungs have no proper principle of Motion as destitute of fleshy Fibres The Lungs in their Systole and Diastole do not keep time with the pulsa●●●n of the Heart 830 Of the Pathology of the Lungs and its Cures Of an Inflammation and its causes and sometimes a Peripneumonia is accompanied with a Pleurisy and othertimes a Hemiplegia and Apoplexy follow it The Prognosticks Indications and Cures 842 843 An Abscess of the Lungs and its causes 845 The Structure Coats and Rise of the Lymphaeducts of the Liver 439 to 441 The Colour Rise and Composition of the Lympha 441 to 444 The Motion and Vse of the Lympha 443 Hydatides coming from a quantity of Lympha 446 Pathology of the Lymphaeducts 444 to 447 The Lymphaeducts are broken by a quantity of Lympha The depraved action of the Lymphaeducts 445 Lymphaeducts their rise and progress from the Liver 390 The broken Lymphaeducts are a cause of a Dropsie 446 The Lymphaeducts corroded by Vlcerous Matter 396 M. OF a Mania or Madness and how it is akin to Melancholy of its Definition Subject and Symptomes illustrated by Mineral Waters 1156. And how the Animal Spirits move in Mad persons and of the cause of this Disease 1157. And of its Origen and evident causes 1158. Of Madness succeeding Melancholy or a Phrensy flowing chiefly from an ill mass of Blood and from an ill Pancreas 1159 Madness is sometimes Hereditary and of its causes and is propagated from the venenate nature of Blood 1160 And how in this Disease the poison coming from the biting of a Mad Dog is conveyed to the Heart Ibid. The symptomes of Madness and Aetiology and the cause of the Rage in Madness and how the Brain is swelled in this disease and cometh sometimes from the putrefaction of the Coats and substance of the Brain 1161 The Indications of Madness and how Bleeding out of the Jugular and Temporal Artery are very proper and also Vomitories are very advantageous in this disease 1162 Mercurial Medicines and strong Purgatives Chalybeats clarified Whey prepared with Cephalicks Electuaries Apozemes c. 163 In Madness Hyponoticks may be administred as also Cupping-Glasses Leeches and attractive Medicines to a wounded part as also Cauteries 1164 Mamillary Processes and their Perforations and how they cannot be truly called Nerves and of the Cavities of the mamillary Processes 1040 Marriage is of Divine Institution 513 Marrow proceeds from the oily Particles of the Blood and of its use 1214 Measles and their Cure 62 63 Mediastine is a duplicature of the Pleura and of its structure 695 And of its vessels and uses 696 The Medium of Flying and Swimming agree as fluid and differ in consistence 126 The Medulla oblongata and its appendant Processes its Connexion The Thalami nervorum opticorum and the rise of the optick Nerves 1017 The Natiforme Processes are larger then the Testiforme and of their covering and colours of the inward Protuberancies and some Physicians conceive the Natiforme and Testiforme Processes to be the Origens of the Cerebellum and of the use of these Processes 1018 A Process of the Medulla oblongata called the Pons Varolii or annular Process which is a part of the Medulla oblongata and of its use and of the fourth Ventricle of the Brain 1019 Of the Medulla Spinalis or ●ith of the Back which hath not the nature of Marrow and is an elongation of the Medulla oblongata and is composed of four orbicular Processes and how the Medulla Spinalis is not the Origen of the Brain as Learned Malpighius would have it 1070 The Fibres of the Medulla Spinalis are illustrated by Malpighius according to a Cabbage but this seemeth to be strange by reason the alimentary Liquor out of the Medulla Spinalis is different in order from that of a Cabbage The Medulla Spinalis is acted by Liquor coming from the Brain 1072 The Medulla Spinalis and Brain have their Conception at the same time Ibid. The Medulla Spinalis is double and of its substance 1072 The Coats of the Medulla Spinalis and is divided into equal parts 1073 And is parted by the Pia Mater Ibid. Each side of the Medulla Spinalis hath proper Channels to convey the Latex nervosus and the Medulla Spinalis is like the Brain in substance and vessels 1074 The various Blood-vessels of the Medulla Spinalis and how the Arteries come from the ascendent and descendent Trunk of the Aorta and how the Arteries meet in a common Trunk and of the Spinal Artery 1075 The vertebral Arteries in Beasts unite in the Medulla Spinalis The third branch of the vertebral Artery is dispensed into the Chine The Arteries of the Chine do often inosculate and resemble a chain of Rings and Arteries of the Spine are implanted into the Rete mirabile and the Arteries meet and make numerous Anastomoses all along the Chine 1076 The use of the inosculations of the Spinal Arteries and of the Sinus of the Medulla Spinalis and of their use and of the first venous Channel belonging to the Sinus and of the other venous Channel and of the entercourse of the Sinus and of the veins of the Medulla Spinalis 1078 The Sinus of the Medulla Spinalis are like Veins and of their elegant divarications and how they are propagated from the Sinus Muscles are the efficient cause of local Motion 1089 Of Melancholy and its description difference and of various Fancies and how it is called Vniversal or Particular and of its Symptomes 1146 The antecedent and continent cause of Melancholy and of the cause and manner how Melancholy operates 1148 And of Melancholy coming from an Atrabilarian Humor and from the Praecordia and Blood 1149 Some conceive the Melancholy is seated in the Womb and how it proceedeth from sanious Matter 1150 Melancholy also cometh from an obstruction of the Uterus 1151 Of the Cure of Melancholy by good Diet and by Correcting the acide disposition of the Blood by Antiscorbuticks and by Chalybeats 1153 And by other methods of Physick and Medicines 1155 Melicer des 142 Membrana Adiposa 73. And is accommodated with many Cells 75. And Carnous in Bruits 74 Its Situation and Connexion 76 The Membrana Musculorum communis the common covering of the Muscles 78 79 80 Membranes are contextures of carnous Fibrils 201 Membranes endued with minute Pores may be colatories of the Blood 182 Membranes may be colatories of the Blood 76 Membranes encircling the Foetus 635 Membranes of the Ovaries of Fish 636 Menstruous Flux and its cause manner time c. 576 to 578 Pathalogy of the Menstruous Flux 579 The suppression of the Menstrua 580 The immoderate Flux of the Menstrua 582 The menstruous Flux suppressed and its causes and Cures 579 580 581 582 The menstruous Flux immoderately flowing and its cause and a Gangreen of the Womb as a consequent of it 582 583
the neighbouring parts be wounded and the Blood is not immediately to be stopped upon the application of the Trepan and drying Medicines are to be applied upon fractures of the Scull The second kind of fracture called Contusio 974. And the kinds of it and the third kind of wound of the Scull called depression in which the Trepan may be used 975 The fourth kind of wound of it called Sedes and of its diverse kinds and Cures 976. The fith kind of fracture named Contrafissura and its various kinds 977 The Prognosticks relating to the wounds of the Scull and of a small fissure of the Scull proveth often dangerous and how the wounds of both Tables are often fatal and of the ill symptoms of a wounded Scull 978 The semen hath its Goodness from the Disposition of the Testicles 515 Similar parts 3 The fourth sinus and the uses of the sinus and of the Arterys and Veines of the Dura Menynx and how the Blood is conveyed out of it into the sinus 984 A passage going from the Lateral sinus into the Jugular Vein and how the Vertebral Venous Branches in the Loins are immediately derived from the spine 1078 Of Sleepy Diseases and their Causes and as coming from a kind of Mineral Particles 1125 The Nature of Sleepy Diseases 1129. And of their Cures by Vomitories Cupping Glasses Vesicatories strong Purgatives Julaps Suffumigations Oyntments Gargarismes Sternutatories 1133. As also Bleeding may be advised Electuaries Aposems Powders c. 1134 Of Smelling and its Nerves their temper object and its faculty 371 and the causes of various smells 372 Soft Parts 4 5 Solid Parts 3 Solid Meats give a more substantial Nourishment P. 61 and require a greater heat then liquid to open their more close Pores 311 Sounds and their several kinds and Description and of Vocal sounds 935 The Soul keepeth its Court in the Head and of the more Noble Operations of the Soul and the seat of the fancy and its Operations 1087 The sensitive Soul of Brutes is not capable of reflex acts 1094 The sensitive Soul of subservient to the Rational and of its seat 1165 Speaking 236 to 234 and its Prognosticks Indications 856 857 Spermatick Parts 2 Spermatick Arteries 513 514 One Spermatick Artery was found in an executed Person 515 The Spermatick Veins and their Maeanders Valves and varicose Tumors 516 Spitting of Blood and its causes 854 855 Spittle and its several kinds 239 to 243 Spleen 411 to 416 Spleens of Fish and other Animals 416 to 420 Spleens of Beasts 421 to 422 Spleens of Birds 422 Pathology of the Spleen 423 to 427 Situation Connexion Colour dimensions and Perforations and greatness of the Spleen 412 The Arteries Veins Nerves and Nervous Fibres of the Spleen 413 Nervous Fibres terminating into the Glands of the Spleen 414 Spleen hath Lymphaeducts 414 Membranous Cells and sinus of the Spleen 415 Glands of the Spleen 416 The use of the Spleen to prepare a ferment for the Liver 420 Inflammations Preternatural greatness putrefaction Dropsie Hydatides and Scirrhus of the Spleen 424 425 426 Spungy substance of the Yard 335 The Stamina or threads of Plants 665 666 Steatomes 142 Stomach of Man 264 to 268 The Coates of the Stomach 265 to 267 and its various Fibres Ibid. Stomachs of Beasts 269 to 271 Stomachs of Birds 272 to 275 Stomachs of Fish 276 to 279 Diverse causes of an ill tone of the Stomach 322 The Serous Ferment of the Stomach 305 to 308 The Nervous Ferment of the Stomach 301 Stomacick pains proceeding from sour Pancreatick Liquor whereupon ariseth a Doglike Appetite 407 Stones of the Kidney 488 to 492 Stone of the Kidney and its Cure 493 Of Stupidity and Mopishness and how it is a consequent of habitual madness and its description by symptoms and of its Causes 1165 Stupidity may also proceed from too great a quantity ill conformation Texture and narrow Interstices of the Nervous filaments 1166 The evident causes of Stupidity and how the vital and Nervous Liquor grow effaete in this Disease and of the ill consequents of Opiats and deep thoughts 1167 The distinction of this Disease and of the Causes and Prognosticks 1168 The Method of Curing it by Bleeding Fontanels Purging Medicines prepared with Cephalicks Cephalick Apozemes Spirits Magistral Destilled Waters Electuaries c. 1169 Ale Medicated with Cephalicks and of Topicks 1170 The Succus Nervosus is first generated in the Brain c. 1072 Swimming of Fish which having more heavy Bodies do move in more solid Bodies then Air 125 The Swimming of Fish is chiefly performed by the motion of their Tails caused by Tensors and Flexors seated in their hinder R●gion 125 Swimming of Fish 124 to 126 T. TAsting is not seated in the Palate 223 Tasting floweth from saline and sulphureous Particles making appulses upon the Nerves seated in the Tongue 231 The Subject of Tasting is the Membrane of the Tongue beset with Nervous Fibrils 231 Tasting is not seated in the Papillae of the Tongue 232 Various kinds of Tasts and their causes 233 234 235 Tasting is disordered and vitiated by many ways 249 Fibres of the Tongue consigned to Tasting 225 Teeth 207 to 211 Pathology of the Teeth 211 to 219 Teeth and its several kinds and how they are fastned to the Gooms 207 of Teeth their rudiment and substance 209 Diseases and pains of the Teeth and their Causes 215 discolouring of the Teeth 212 Nodes of the Teeth 213 A fungous Bone of the Teeth Cured by a Cantery 213 Teeth defective or excessive in Number 214 Convulsive Motions and Vomitories in breeding of Teeth 216 Blistering Plaisters proper in ill breeding of the Teeth 217 Tendon how it is Compounded of Nervous and Ligamentous Fibrils 100 Testicles of Man 515 to 526 Diseases of the Testicles 552 to 556 The Tunicles of the Testicles Bursa Dartos Erythroeides Vaginalis Albuginea 518 519 The Testicles have a pulpy and Glandulous substance 520 Testicles are systems of many Vessels c. 521 Testicles have Lymphaeducts demonstrated by an experiment 522 The Testicles and their Parenchyma and of other Viscera 524 525 The Diseases of the Testicles and Scrotum Inflammations Tumors Epiplocele Entrocele Sarcocele and their Cures 552 553 554 Testicles or Ovaries of Women 588 to 592 Diseases of the Testicles or Ovaries of Women 614 Cartilaginous Tumors and many other Swellings Inflammations Vlcers and Abscesses and Hydatides of the Testacles 614 615 Dropsies Atheromes Steatomes Obstructions of the Testicles from a viscide Matter 616 The manner how the Impraegnated Egg of the Testicles is carried out of the Ovary into the Oviducts 619 Testicles or Ovaries of Beasts 684 Testiforme processes 1018 Thirst 282 to 286. The requisites of Thirst 282 Thirst lost 286 Thymus and its situation rise Membranes Structure Figures and Fibrils 697. Its Vessels Parenchyma and uses 698 Thoracick Chyliserous Ducts are sometimes double and of their Vnion by cross Branches their Valves insertion and uses 681 The Tongue of Man and its