of the ftomack proceec^s itnrrediately from the Blood it felf: 
Explaining furtherj How the Sefaration of the Ch^le is perform'd 
in the ^nteflins^ and how the fame , to facilitate the more its 
paflfage , is diluted and refined by the luyce of the Pancreas ^ fe- 
creted Into the JDuedemm : Rendring alfo the Caufe, Why all 
i\\QGUndds miht Abdomen 2Xi6. in all the lower parts dfthe Bo- 
dy do* depofite their Z^fw/'^^ or Juyce into the Common great 
Receptacle oi th^Chyle^ and Why that Receptacle is plac'd be- 
tween the Tendons of the Dafhragime-^ as alfo, Why thofc 
Channels, which convey the Chyle into the 5»^J4^'/W Vein, 
are double. To which he adds. That all the Chyle is by the 
Ductus Thoracicus alone tranfraittedinto the Bloudand Hcait , 
which he proveth by feveral confiderable Experiments , with 
fome reflexion on the Bilfian Experiment allcdged for the con- 
trary. All which he concludes by fliewing the degrees and ways 
of Change 5 whereby the Chyle is at laft converted into Bloud 5 
and howitferveth for Nourifhment and the fev eral parts of 
the Body, 
The Whole receives a fingular Elucidation and Ornament by 
the Accurate Figures ^in 6, Tables annexed. 
Many Curious and important Obfervations are occafionally 
incerfperfed ; fuch as are: That the Capillary veffels (of the 
fame fort) do open into one another in all the parts ot the Bo- 
dy : That all the Mufclcs of the Body , are Biventers or double- 
belly*d : That as the Motion.of the Heart and Bloud is Circular, 
fo the Fibres, as tke Moving J^/Tg-/^^^ ofthem, are about the 
Coneoi the Heart brought into a Circle and Center: That the 
Motion in the Mufcles is not \\kt Shootings but Fencing t, and 
many more , for which we muft referr to the Book it felf. 
F I s^l s. 
, L O N D O N, 
J»ri!Hcd by T. N. for fehn M^srtjn , Printer to the Rojml Sceiitj , and are 
to be fold at (lie Jf* a little witliout Tfw^/f-f -w, 1 668. 
