J^Ba ) we cannot well difpofe dt| any other way, then 
by faying, it reenters the blood by the LaHeals, and is 
that very liquor, which conduces to the making lome 
of them appear tranfparent after fo long a faft. 
2 It feems probable, from the fame forementioncd 
Experiments o( the firft kind. That the L<^ff^a/j are ve- 
ry feldom, ornever, allempty at the fame time j for the 
ihQ Chyle flows only in certain Tides^ or Flajhes, prora* 
tione Ingefiorum yet th.^ Liquor l^efiuus, running in a 
more conftant ftream, does , when there is no Flafli of 
Chyle going in, keep the La^eals from being abfolutely 
empty. 
3. But, to come nearer to my purpofe, tis farther 
evident from the fame Experiments ^ that this Liquor 
J^fluus is, in its own nature, tranfparent \ and paflTes 
fucli thro the L^si^^^/j-, after long falling, whennoC^y/^ 
is mixt with it 5 which is no inconfiderable ftep to the 
making out of my Propofition, if we recount how long, 
and how often, very many ^^<^ri//?^^j-, be(ideMen,do 
faft from all forts ot aliment; during which time, after 
^Q^Chyle of the laft Meat , or time of drinking, is all 
mixt with the blood, we may fuppofe that this pellucid 
Liquor l^flum^ ^oqs alone into the LaBeals, 
4, The Experiments both of the fecond , and third 
kinds, feem to intimate, that a great part of the Chyle 
it felf is, in its journey thro the La^leals , altogether 
Limpid: againft which if it be objeded , that lome of 
the LaUeals were, in a like manner, pellucid, in all the 
Experiments of all the three kinds, and therefore it does 
not appear but that they may be fiU'd with a liquor 
^fluus in the 2 laft cajes, as well as f for certain ) they 
were in the firft Cafe ; to this Objedion, befide what 
may be anlwered from the extraordinary number, 
and fulnefsof the limpid laUeals in the 2 laft kinds of 
Experiments^ comparing thefe fejjlels with thcfe of the 
fame 
