964 WILLIAM A. LOCY 
do. ve digeltio fua conforrareé. Laro eri eft calida z bumtda. Ex quibus du 
pendet pened eftine.in aiali Rotundus vt fua rotuditate cibu reciperet 
plioré.z vt malt bumiozes tn eo generati facilius po fline veficcart. Oblon; 
vt facilius ci fuptozibsz inferioub» tungeret.Zatus vero inferivs.quia ci 
mo fit erecte figure.cibus ex fus grauedine fernp tefcendit. Mcrnolus fup 
ad vigorandu appetitum. 
Mecrivel a yfopbagus 
ftomachi 
igura 
cozpos 
pmant 
@ Stomach? vt 5t Loftantin’ epate circudaé. vt ci calor maior ad obey t 
ctioné ab epate adiiftraret. Spar aii futs Gnq3 pénulis tomachii circiict 
et eicalozem tribuens fuccofitaté z bumozé ynde fanguis giistur per quaf 
verras mefaraicas reciptt z fortiori calozis actione in fangying alterando 
nertit. Dirtad ciboy wecoctiones erpumendo spd operationé s£¢ offycti 
machi.q2ftomachus eft coti? cozpis paffamilias.oin: mébpy nutrimenth 
piés.£t finguloy mébrox puterpedit admiftrae neceffitatt. Loponié aur 
mecbnsex onabo tunic? fine pelliculis. Ona eft interioz.g eft fubtilioz z Gf 
Fig. 7 Part of page from Peyligk, showing sketch of stomach and intestines, 1499 
of the brain. The original of fig. 9 is 3$ x 54 inches. It is in 
some particulars more crude than the corresponding figure of 
Peyligk. In the thoracic cavity one sees the undivided lung, 
the heart, the trachea and the cesophagus. In the abdominal 
cavity is the large many-lobed liver with the gall bladder on its 
surface, the pouch-like stomach, the spleen, the loops of the intes- 
tine, and, pushed to one side, the kidneys, the bladder and the 
testes. The blood vessel connected with the liver is the ‘vena 
chilis’ and the blood vessels to the kidneys are the ‘venz emul- 
