( JI2 ) 
Tendency of the Sides of the Veflels fo 
come together, whereby the Remains are 
left ftill thicker, grofler, and lefs difpoled 
for Motion. This grofs Part of the Blood 
that is Hop’d, refills the Contraction of the 
Veflels, and both refill one another ; hence 
the Heat of the Body is encreafed. Now 
whatever adds to the Vifcidity of the Blood, 
adds likewife to the Caufe of the Difeafe, 
and tends to make it more obllinate ; but 
the Cheefe and Butter being taken out of 
the Milk, it is an admirable good Drink in 
Fevers. And becaufe the Ufe of Milk does 
not fo well in a rarified State of the Blood, 
when a great Part of it is thrown into the 
fmall Veflels, it is therefore an improper 
Drink when the Body is exceeding [hot at 
Labour, and the Circulation rapid, for then 
it is great odds but it generates ObllruClions 
of dangerous Conlequence, either in the 
Lungs, and caufe an Allhma ; or in the 
Liver, and produce Dropfy, Swelling, Schir- 
rus, or Inflammation or Ulceration, or load 
the fmall Veflels on the Body’s Surface* and 
caufe a Dropfy, or obftruCt the Lafteals, 
and occalion a Diarrhea ; at which time it 
alfo cools and debilitates the Tone of the 
intellinal 
