132 FARCY. 



That they are right muft be admitted^ and 

 that they are fo is the Icfs extraordinary, when 

 a very fuperficial furvey of the cafe will evi- 

 dently prove it would be a difficult taflc to 

 be wrong. One author gives us many pages 

 replete wi^h figurative defcriptions, and runs 

 through the whole animal mechanifm to de- 

 nionftrate the caufe very clearly, but unluckily 

 never draws nearer the point than to prove 

 what a writer of more modern authority 

 LEARNEDLY tells US in t%vo lines, that " the 

 *''^ true FARCY is properly a diftemper of the 

 " blood veflels, which generally follows the 

 *' track of the veins.'* What infinite fatisfac- 

 tion mud it afford every reader, to be in- 

 formed from the fountain-head of inftrudion, 

 that *' the blood veffels generally follow the 

 " track of the veins !" Anxiom for inform- 

 ation, and open to convidion, I receive the 

 intelligehce with gratitude ; and, although 

 my retentive faculties are deceptive and im- 

 perfed, I (hall exert their utmoft influence 

 to preferve, In high efteem, fo excellent a 

 monitor \ making no doubt but it will prove 

 highly fatisfadory to the curious to be in- 

 formed they need not look for a diftemper of 

 the blood veffels in the ''TRACK" of the 



inteftincSa 



