( II? ) 
circumjacent glanduls and other parts, and to be convejed in* 
- to the neighbouring veins,d"^. Here alfo he treats of that Que- 
ftion, Whether through his duitus all the Chyle paffeth to the 
fubclavial veflTel ? which he anfwers affirmatively, except that 
fometimes, yet very feldom, and in an extraordinary cafe it 
flows to the Bladder, and ordinarily in Women with child to 
the Womb, and in thofe that give fuck, to the Breafts.Refuting 
withal B^egius^DeuJingm^ and others, that labour to maintain 
the contrary. 
Inquiring into the Lymphatic Veflels, he explodes the afler- 
tion ofthe fame Pf jB/7/^;teaching,that the Lymfhais th^ felf 
fame liquor with the chylous Juyce contained in the Lafteals , 
and that it paffeth out of theChyliferous veffels into the Liver 
and Glanduls , and from thence into the Spermatic veffels for 
their humedation and nourifliment, and not from the Glanduls 
and Liver to the Chyliferous veffels. Having difpatch't this 
controverfy,heexamines,What kind of liquor this Lywpha is<? 
Where having endeavoured to difprove the opinion of Dn 
G//^^;^, efteemingic to be made of the Steams of the Blood, 
collefted like dew, and impelled into thefe Veffels, and repaf- 
fing with the vehicle of the aliment carried through theNervesi 
heaffertsthe Lymfha to be a peculiar fubtile liquor, feparated 
in the conglobate glanduls from the S'm^/^ of the Blood, and 
embued with ftoreof volatile Salt and with fome Sulphureous 
particle^jgetting into thofe fmall veffels,and by them conveyed 
partly into the chyliferous veffels, partly into many veins ; in- 
to the /(i?r^^r,the more to attenuate the chyleand thereby to fa- 
cilitate ies dilatation in the heart ; into t.\\t later ^ to prepare al- 
fo the Venal Blood to a more expedit rarefaction in the fame 
part. Before he leaves thefe veffcls,he notes, that the rupciire of 
them often caufeth the Jfciies^ and that their being obflnifled 
occafions other dangerous difeafes. 
In the Anatome of the Liver ^ he chiefly commends the accu- 
racy and diligence of Br. GlifomrA Signor Malpighi^ efpeci- 
ally as to the pofirion of the branches of the vena cava and forta^ 
and the veffels of the Bladder of Gall, and how the Blood of 
the PoriA enters into the roots of the Cava and thofe of the faid 
Bladder, not by opening ihemfelves into one another, nor by 
Q_2 having 
