His Ac - 
-aunt of the 
Bile. 
Cf the Pan 
crear. 
( 90 
& The Membrane that inverted the Liver, was raifed from ic 
4 a coniiderable way, as if it had been joined to it. Though 
1 this Membrane Teem’d to be whole, and look’d like the Cun- 
1 cuU raifed by a Bliftring Plaifter, yet there was no Serum con- 
4 tain'dinit -, and where it Teem’d to be intimately joyn’d to the 
4 Liver, by a gentle pull it came off, v ithout tearing any thing 
‘ that 1 could take notice of, as if it had been but very flightiy 
4 faftned to the Livery or rather as a Bag, which contained and 
‘ exa&ly fitted it. He takes the ufe of this to be chiefly to ter- 
1 minate the Capillary Veflels, and prevent the gleeting of Serous 
4 Humours ; and concludes, that he mud wholly impute the clear 
* in fome Places, and in others that eafy Separation of the Mem- 
4 brane from the Liver, to the Firp: By all which this feeras to 
be nothing different from the proper Membrane which I obferv’d, 
and you fee the Circumftance of firmly adhering and loofely in- 
verting. 
The Pile, as he gives an Account, was depofited at the end of 
the firft Gut, 4. \ Inches below the Py 'orus y from whence he 
trac’d the Duftus Communis to the Liver, to fee the Heficula Felled ; 
but it was wanting, and in the place of it he found the Porus 
bib anus coming out of the Liver, as the DuPlus hepaticus ufually 
does. He obferv’d likewife, that the Ptlis found in that, differ d 
both in Colour and Conrtftence from that he found in the DuUus 
hepatic us , for the latter was of a clear light yellow Colour, con- 
geal’d like a Jelly, and the .former of a dark C’een* and fome- 
vvhat more fluid than the Gall of an Ox. He Ttcpes Time will 
difeover fuch a difference in the Galls of mofl Animals, and that 
difeerning Men will be excited to find out their Ufes. 
I fail’d alio to obferve the Pancreas, becaufe it was taken away 
in Cumulo , with the reft of the Inteftinesy and therefore fhall give 
you Dr. Moulin s Account of it too. 
4 The Pancreas- was very long and large; for it reach'd from 
4 about the middle of the Stomach to the Jejunum , which fpace 
* could not be lefs than 6 Foot. ’Twasa G l andula Cone lower ata, 
4 as the Pancreas always is and had its Dattus fo wide, that it 
6 could without force contain ones little Finger, It open’d n:o 
‘ the Gut, where the Ductus felleus did. Whether both the Paf- 
4 fages join’d into one before their Aperture into the Intefcines 
’* or not, he has forgot. The Succus in the DhEIus was not limpid, 
4 as it ufually appears, but of a very dark Green Colour, and yet 
* very fluid, feeming to contain no vifcuous Phlegm. 
- The 
