Dr. Willis's practice of physick being the whole works of that renowned and famous physician wherein most of the diseases belonging to the body of man are treated of, with excellent methods and receipts for the cure of the same : fitted to the meanest capacity by an index for the explaining of all the hard and unusual words and terms of art derived from the Greek, Latine, or other languages for the benefit of the English reader : with forty copper plates.
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Title
Dr. Willis's practice of physick being the whole works of that renowned and famous physician wherein most of the diseases belonging to the body of man are treated of, with excellent methods and receipts for the cure of the same : fitted to the meanest capacity by an index for the explaining of all the hard and unusual words and terms of art derived from the Greek, Latine, or other languages for the benefit of the English reader : with forty copper plates.
Author
Willis, Thomas, 1621-1675.
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London :: Printed for T. Dring, C. Harper, and J. Leigh,
1684.
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Subject terms
Medicine.
Medicine -- Early works to 1800.
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http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A66516.0001.001
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"Dr. Willis's practice of physick being the whole works of that renowned and famous physician wherein most of the diseases belonging to the body of man are treated of, with excellent methods and receipts for the cure of the same : fitted to the meanest capacity by an index for the explaining of all the hard and unusual words and terms of art derived from the Greek, Latine, or other languages for the benefit of the English reader : with forty copper plates." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A66516.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 7, 2025.
Pages
descriptionPage 145
THE TABLE To the First Part of PHARMACUTICE RATIONALIS.
A
AFfections, Description, and Uses of the Parts in which Medicins being first to operate. pag. 3.
Anatomical description of an Artery. p. 123.
Anodinous Medicins their distinction. p. 137.
Antimony, wherein its vomitive power consists. p. 25.
Crude Antimony no Vomit, how the particles of it become a Vomit. ibid.
Its various Preparations. ib.
As Glass of Antimony, and the reason thereof ib.
Flower of Antimony, and its reason. ib.
Crocus Metallorum. p. 26.
And the reason of it. ib.
Sulphur of Antimony how to prepare, and the reason of it. ib.
It is a Composition of Antimony and common Sulphur. ib.
The reason of the Preparation. p. 27.
Its Correction. ib.
Antimony Diaphoretick. p. 92.
Antidotes and Cordials have always been of most common use. p. 104
Their common Attributes. ib.
Whence Remedies that preserve Life, are so called. ib.
They act not properly on the Heart, but on the Bloud and Animal Spirits, and how on the Bloud. ib.
They are requisite when the Blood is too loose p. 106
Antidotes preserving and curing. p. 112
Opiates, why called Antidotes. p. 132
Aptness to catch Cold. p. 97
The Reason. p. 98
Its Original. p. 99
Cure. ib.
Arteries are endued with moving fibres, and are moved like other Muscles, or the heart it self. p. 116
Are often troubled with Convulsions. ib.
Their Anatomical Description. p. 123
They have four Coats according to Galen, ib.
Their use. p. 124
In an Artery the Plat of Vessels above the Muscular Coat, is otherwise in the Viscera, and the reason. ib.
Aurum Vitae. p. 29
B
Bezoarticum Minerale, its preparation, and reason thereof. p. 91
Bloud, that it might rightly separate the Serum, it ought to be kept from being too thick, or too thin. p. 63
Faulty in its heat and temperature. p. 105
how it becomes less hot than it should be ib.
Being irritated in its temper or mixture, it requires Cordials onely in Fevers. ib.
And then it is either too strict or close in its constitution, or too loose. ib.
What remedies the latter fault requires. p. 106
Bovius's Hercules. p. 29
And the reason of the Preparation. p. 30
His Epicaene, or common Menstruum of both kinds. p. 30
C
Catalogue of all Narcoticks. p. 137
Cause of the frequent motions in Purges. p. 39
Ceruse of Antimony. p. 92
Coffee and its effects. p. 142
The reason of it. ib.
Its conveniences, and inconveniences. p. 143
It makes People lean and paralytic, &c. ib.
Common Precipitate Mercury. p. 28
The reason of the preparation, and why it grows red in this case. p. 29
Composition of Antimony and common Sulphur. p. 26
The reason of its preparation. ib.
Its correction. ib.
Convulsive motions in Muscles explained and distinguished. p. 119.
Some private Convulsions belong to them on∣ly. ib.
Two sorts of them. ib.
The latter a kind of trepidation in a Muscle, p. 120
Its true reason. ib.
Their Causes not rightly imputed to the Spleen ib.
...
descriptionPage 146
...Contractions performed by fibres onely. 4
Cordials and Antidotes, have always been of more common use. 104
When Remedies that preserve Life are so called. ib.
They act not properly on the Heart, but on the Bloud and Animal Spirits. ib.
How on the Bloud. ib.
They are required onely in Fevers, the bloud being vitiated in its temper or mixture, as being either too strict and close in its con∣stitution, or too loose; what the latter re∣quires, and what the first. p. 106
Salt Cordials of different sorts. p. 107
Some impregnated with volatile Salt. ib.
Some with an Alcali, or petrifying Salt. ib.
Some have a fluid, or sower Salt, or a fixed Salt in them. ib.
Or a nitrous Salt in them. p. 108
Which are all more properly called Vitals. ib.
How when taken into the Stomach, they pre∣sently operate upon the Bloud. ib.
Cordials that respect the Animal Spirits ib.
Are of two kinds, smooth and gentle to the spirits. ib.
And how they work upon the Bowels, or Sen∣ses, or Brain: or they are rough or provo∣cative, which reduce the spirits to order, by as it were lashing them. ib.
Cordials, their several sorts and Receipts. p. 110
Of such as increase the heat of Bloud. ib.
Their abuse. ib.
Of such as allay its excessive heat. p. 111
Of such as open the Constitution of the Bloud, whilest it boils up, and is too close. ib.
Of such whose ground is a volatile or alcali Salt. ib.
Nitrous Cordials, and such whose ground is an acid, or fixed Salt. p. 112
What Cordials most proper in Pleurisies. ib.
Crocus Metallorum, and the reason of its preparation. p. 26
D
Description, uses, and affections of the Parts in which Medicins begin first to operate. p. 3
Diabetes, its description. p. 71
Formerly rare, and is not yet well known. ib.
Proceeds not from the attraction in the Reins, but rather from a fusion in the Bloud. ib.
Its immediate cause, chiefly in the Bloud. p. 72
Sometimes partly in the Reins. ib.
Most commonly it proceeds from the dissolu∣tion of the Bloud. ib.
Its original cause. p. 73
How it and a Dropsie differ. ib.
Its evident causes. p. 74
Its symptoms explicated. ib.
Its prognosticks p. 75
Indications of cure. ib.
Stories. p. 76
It proceeds from the same cause as the English Sweat. p. 103
Diacodiates. p. 138
Diaphoreticks, what are their Forms. p. 87
Such as have the Integral p•…•…rts of a mixed Body for their Basis. ib.
The Receipts of them. ib.
Those that are easily got. p. 89
Forms of Chymical Diaphoreticks. ib.
Such as have spirituous particles for their foundations, and such as have spirituous
particles united with others. ib.
Those whose Basis is Salt, fixed, or volatile, or nitrous, or acid Salt. p. 90
Sulphurous Diaphoreticks. p. 91
Dogs-Tongue, its preparation. p. 140
Dropsie, how it and a Diabetes differ. p. 73
Dysentery of London. p. 81
Two sorts thereof. ib.
Its cure. ib. & 54, 56
The reason thereof, p. 52
Its remove causes. p. 53
Why Autumnal and Epidemical. ib.
Its first and evident causes. ib.
Its description. p. 54
An irregular Fever useth to accompany it. ib.
Three things concur to cause it. p. 56
Its Stories. p. 57, &c.
An unbloudy Dysentery proceeds from the same cause as the English Sweat. p. 103
E
Evacuation by Stool, what moves it. p. 38
Expansions caused by nervous fibres. p. 4
Examples of strong Purges. p. 42
Extract of Black Hellebore. p. 49
F
Fallopius his opinion of the motion of the Mem∣branes. p. 4
Fibres, Membranes, Vessels, and Passages, the second subjects upon which Medicins work. p. 3
Flower of Antimony, and the reason of its Pre∣paration. p. 25
Of Sal Armoniack. p. 92
Forms of Diureticks. p. 64
G
Galens Anatomical Description of an Artery. p. 123
Its Coats, according to him, are four. ib.
Glass of Antimony, and the reason of its Prepa∣ration. p. 25
Guts, they have three Coats. p. 10
How fastned to the Mesentery. ib.
Their Use. p. 11
Their motion whence it proceeds. ib.
Their natural expulsive motion, how perfor∣med. p. 36, 37.
How excited. ib.
descriptionPage 147
H
Hairy Vail, its uses, p. 5
Heart, its indispositions, are either a trembling, or a beating of it, p. 114
The latter described, and its cause inquired into, ib.
It depends oftentimes upon the indisposition of the Bloud, and Vessels belonging to the Heart, p. 115
How it is a convulsive Distemper, p. 116
Whence it often arises, ib.
Why this Disease is familiar to Hypochon∣driacal People, p. 117
Its Cure, by what means procured, when the Bloud is in fault, ib.
How it ought to be dealt withal when it ariseth from an obstruction. ib.
Its cure when it arises from Convulsions in the Arteries, p. 118
How the Hearts trembling differs from its Palpitation, ib.
Its trembling described, it depends upon the doctrine of the Muscles, ib.
The Heart not disturbed by vapours, p. 120
Among the Hearts distempers, an intermit∣ting Pulse may be reckoned for one, p. 121
Helmonts Laudanum, p. 140
Histories of the efficacy of Opiates, p. 132
Humours, their several sorts, p. 2
How Medicins operate on them, ib.
They and the Spirits are the first subjects upon which Medicins work, p. 3
I
Indications of Vomiting, p. 23
Indispositions in the Heart, are either a trem∣bling, or the beating of it, p. 114
The latter described, and its cause inquired into, ib.
It depends oftentimes upon the Indisposition of the Bloud and vessels belonging to the Heart, p. 115
How it is a convulsive Distemper, p. 116
Intermitting Pulse may be reckoned for one among the Distempers of the Heart, p. 121
Two sorts thereof, ib.
The first by default of the Aorta, ib.
The second from the Heart it self, p. 122
Not always an ill token, ib.
Its several sorts, ib.
Its cause, ib.
How to know when it is coming, ib.
Its cure, ib.
L
Lasks symptomatical, what is to be done in them, p. 50
Laudana, or Opiates invented by the Modern Doctors, p. 139
Laudana in the Form of an Extract, ib.
Liquid Laudana, ib.
What is the best Menstruum to make Lau∣danum with, ib.
Helmonts Laudanum, p. 140
Laudanum extracted, p. 142
Liquid Laudanum lactarized, ib.
Liquid Laudanum prepared with Quinces, ib.
M
Medicins, an account of their operations want∣ing, p. 1
Their Mechanical reason inquired into, ib.
The places where they begin to operate, ib.
The Subjects on which they operate, ib.
How they operate upon the Spirits and Hu∣mours, p. 2
In every kind of Medicin are three things to be observed, ib.
Medicins causing sleep, 125
Hindering sleep, 142
Stopping excessive pissing, p. 77
Against excessive Purging, p. 50
Excessive vomiting, p. 31
Membranes, Fibres, Vessels, and Passages, se∣cond subjects for Medicins to work upon, i p. 3
Menstruum of Bovius his Hercules, and the reason of it, p. 30
The best Monstruum to make Laudanum with, p. 139
Milk, how to hinder its curdling, p. 61
The Reasons shewed, p. 62
Mercurial Medicins how they work, p. 27
Upon the Stomach, p. 29
Mercury, or Quick-silver not purging or ve∣miting of it self, p. 27
How made to operate, ib.
Precipitated by it self, how prepared, and the reason of its process, p. 28
Precipitate Solar, how made, and the reason of its preparation, ib.
Common Precipitate with corrosive liquors, and the reason of it, ib.
Mercurius Vitae, and the reason of its Prepa∣ration, p. 27
Its correction, ib.
Mercurius Dulcis, and corrosive Mercury sub∣limate, how prepared, and the reason of both, p. 48
Method of this Treatise, p. 2
Minerals, some of their Medicins not properly called Purging, p. 44
N
Narcoticks, A Catalogue of all of them, p. 137
Their grounds, p. 141
Nerves, to what end so many are inserted into the Coats of the Arteries, p. 116
O
Opiates, Four things to be inquired into concer∣ning their Nature, p. 125
...
descriptionPage 148
...How they work upon the Animal Spirits, ib.
In what sort of Particles their virtue consists, p. 126
In what places they work primarily and chiefly, ib.
When they kill the outmost spirits, they make the next to them white, ib.
And lessen or recall the affux of them, p. 10
The nervous parts, ib.
The reason thereof, p. 127
How far and into what parts their Virtue is extended, ib.
They poison not the Bloud, as théy do the Spirits, ib.
They work chiefly upon the Animal Spirits, p. 128
Sometimes their force reaches the Cerebellum, ib.
Their good and bad effects, ib.
The good respect either the Spirits, or Bloud and Humours, ib.
Good for the Spirits, in respect to sense and motion, ib.
To both in a different kind, ib.
In respect of the inward senses to Watching and Madness, ib.
In respect of the external sense for pain, p. 129
How they remove Pain without sleep, or af∣ter it, ib.
The reason thereof, p. 130
They remove Convulsions, for the same rea∣son, ib.
They are good in the Gout and Stone, ib.
How they cure irregularities of Motion, ib.
They diminish the vehemency of the Pulse and respiration, ib.
They regulate the disorders of Respiration, p. 131
How their Particles work upon the Bloud, ib.
They soon pass through the Bloud, ib.
Therefore are called Antidotes, p. 132
They cause Sweat and Urine, ib.
Notable Histories of their Efficacy, ib.
Opiates of the Ancient, p. 138
Opium, how many and by what way it h•…•…rs us, p. 133
Its poison works first upon the Brain, and then upon the hinder part of the Brain, ib.
Hurtful to the Head, Breast, and Belly, p. 134
How it works upon the Turks, ib.
What hurt it doth the Breast, ib.
What to the Belly, p. 135
Medicinal cautions concerning its use, in re∣spect of the Patients constitution, of the Distemper of the Animal Spirits, and the Bloud and Humours, ib.
Its Nature and Parts, p. 137
In what its power consists, ib.
It works not the same way in all, ib.
Hurts not a Dog, as it doth a Cat or a Man, ib.
Some Instances thereof, p. 138
Its Preparation, ib.
Oil Diuretick p. 68
Oil of Wine, p. 70
Oils how extracted, p. 94
P
Palpitation of the Heart described, p. 114
Its cause inquired into, ib.
It depends oftentimes upon the indisposition of the Bloud and vessels belonging to the Heart, p. 115
How it is a convulsive Distemper, p. 116
From whence it often arises, ib.
Why this disease familiar to Hypochondria∣cal persons, p. 117
Its cure, and by what means procured, when the Bloud is in fault, ib.
How it ought to be dealt withall when it ari∣seth from an obstruction, ib.
Its cure when it ariseth from Convulsions in the Arteries, p. 118
How it dissers from the trembling of the Heart, ib.
Palsie in the Stomach, how it may be cured, p. 34.
The first Passages, Fibres, Membranes, and Ves∣sels, are the second Subjects upon which Medicins work, p. 3
Passages and Vessels belonging to the Guts, p. 12
Philonium, is good for the Colick in a cold tem∣perament, p. 142
Physick, its original, progress, and increase, p. 1
It supplies the defects of natural evacuations p. 80
Pills purgative of several sorts, p. 46
Diuretical, p. 66
To cause sleep, p. 142
Of Storax and Cynogloss, to cause sleep, ib.
Places where Medicins begin to operate, p. 1
Poppy, white, its nature, p. 137
Red Poppy, its preparation, p. 140
Preparations of Opiates, p. 137
Of other Medicins in their several titles
Prevention of excessive Purging, p. 50
Pulse intermitting, a Distemper of the Heart. p. 121
Two sorts thereof, ib.
The first by the default of the Aorta, ib.
The second proceeds from the Heart it self, p. 122
Not always an ill token, ib.
Its several sorts, ib.
Its cause, ib.
How to know when it is curing, ib.
Its cure, ib.
Purging, its description, p. 35
Contrary to Vomiting, ib.
Purgers, how they work upon the Stomach and Guts, p. 38
The cause of their frequent motions, p. 39
...
descriptionPage 149
...Their operation in the Duodenum, Gall, and Sweet-bread juice, ib.
The Glandules and mouths of the Arteries, p. 40
The Bloud and whole habit, ib.
Three degrees of Purging by Medicin, ib.
Purges work not by attraction or specifick qualities, p. 41
Purging operations, their differences, ib.
Strong Purges, the ills that follow them, ib.
A notable Example thereof, p. 42
A Purges Virtues are either irritating or fermenting, p. 43
Purges are taken most from Vegetables, p. 49
Their various sorts, ib.
Scarce any made of Minerals though Vomits and Sweating Medicins are, ib.
Those from Minerals improperly so called, ib.
Purging Vegetables need not much Chymical Preparation, p. 45
Some bettered by Extraction, ib.
Excessive Purging, p. 50
By Urine, p. 59
Q
Quicksilver, of it self not Purging or Vomiting, p. 27
How made to operate, ib.
See Mercury.
R
Reason why Membranes are distended, p. 5
Why we vomit rather than discharge by Stool, p. 20
Of the several Preparations of Antimony, p. 25, 26, &c.
Of the difference of Mineral Medicins, &c. p. 44
Of some Chymical Preparations, p. 48
Of excessive Purging caused by Medicins, p. 50
Of some Chymical Diaphoreticks, p. 91, &c.
Why Sweating is sometimes a symptome, sometimes an effect of another Disease, p. 96
Receipts for Vomits, p. 24, &c.
Against Vomiting, p. 32
For Purges, p. 45
For excessive Purging, p. 50
To provoke Urine, p. 64
For excessive Pissing. p. 77
To cause Sweat, p. 87
Of Opiates, p. 137
Reins, their make and use, p. 60
They have a ferment in them, ib.
Part of the Nutritive juice is carried away through them, ib.
Relation between Piss and Sweat, p. 59
Remedies proper when the Bloud becomes less
hot than it should be, p. 105
And when it is too hot, ib.
Renodeus his complaint against Laudanum, p. 139
Rosin of Jalap and Sca•…•…, and 〈◊◊〉〈◊◊〉 their Preparations, p. 49
Of Guaiacum, and •…•…e rea•…•…on of its prepara∣tion, p. 94
S
Sal Prunellae, and the reason of its Preparation, p. 68
Sal Armoniac, its Flowers, p. 92
Its Spirit, p. 93.
It hath no Sulphur as that of Harts horn, &c. hath, ib.
It of Amber, p. 70
Reason of its process, p. 71
Salt, their divers states, p. 64
Salt of Tartar, what it contributes to the ex∣tracting a purging Tincture, p. 45
Salt Cordials imprognated with volatile Salt, p. 107
With an Alcali, or petrifying Salt, ib.
Such as have in them a fluid, or sower Salt, ib.
Fixed Salt, ib.
A Nitrous Salt in them, p. 108
Serum, how separated from the Bloud, p. 59
Not attracted to the Reins, p. 60
It is separated by percolation, ib.
With it part of the nutritive Juice is carried away through the Reins, ib.
It is separated from the Bloud, sometimes with difficulty, sometimes too easily, p. 61
Reason thereof how explained, ib.
That the Bloud may rightly separate it, it ought to be kept from growing too thick or too thin, p. 63
Its excessive and defective separation, ib.
Septalius says that Physitian is a sneaking Fool that draws Opiates into practice in light Distempers, p. 135
Stories of Dysenteries, p. 57
Of Diabetes, p. 76
Of immoderate Sweating, p. 101
Of the English Sweat, ib.
Spirits and Humours are the first Subjects upon which Medicins work, p. 3
Spirit of Nitre, and the reason of it, p. 69
Of Sea-salt, ib.
Of Soot, Harts horn, &c. p. 93
Of Sal Armoniack, ib.
It hath no Sulphur in it, as that of Harts horn, &c. hath, ib.
Spirit of Guaiacum, Box, &c. p. 94
Of Tartar, ib.
Stomach, its description, p. 5
Anatomy, 7, &c.
How affected in Vomiting, p. 15
An Organ of Sense in it, p. 17
Sulphur of Antimony how to prepare, p. 26
The reason thereof, ib.
Sulphur, or Oil of Wine, p. 70
Sulphurous Diaphoreticks, p. 91
Suppression of Urine proceeds from compactness of Bloud, p. 72
Confirmed by Anatomical Observations, ib.
...
descriptionPage 150
...Sweating, how it differs from Purging, 80
Sweat, its matter, ib.
Things required in Sweating, p. 81
Sweating excessive, its causes, p. 82
Its true nature, and unmediate and remote cause, ib.
Too frequent, p. 95
Sometimes the symptom; sometimes the effect of another Disease, ib.
The reason, p. 96
Its causes and cure, ib.
Its third sort, 101
A notable story of it, and its reason, ib.
The English Sweat, ib.
Its Story, ib.
Its description, p. 102
Cure, ib.
The reason thereof, ib.
Its primary cause, in the nervous liquor, ib.
Reasons of its symptoms, p. 103
Symptomatical Lasks, what to be done to them, p. 50
Syrup and Water of Rhead Poppy, p. 144
T
Tobacco, a Narcotick, the effects of Smoaking it, and the reason, p. 140, 141
Theophrastus his Gilla, p. 24
Its use, ib.
Tincture of Tartar, and reason of it, p. 70
Trembling of the Heart, how it differs from the Palpitation thereof, p. 118
Its description, ib.
It depends upon the doctrine of the Muscles, ib.
Its Cure, p. 120
Turbith Mineral, and the reason of its prepa∣ration, p. 29
Tympany, its cause hinted at, p. 6
V
Vessels, Fibres, Membranes, and Passages are the second Subjects upon which Medicins work, p. 3
Vessels and Passages belonging to the Guts, p. 12
Vomits, what Fibres perform its business, p. 15
Vomiting is a Convulsion, p. 16
How it differs from other Sp•…•…sms, ib.
Its immediate cause, ib.
How Vomiting moves the Spirits, ib.
Its remote and chief cause, p. 17
Provocatives to Vomit, are either taken in at the mouth, or generated in the Stomach, or sent from some other part, ib.
The Vomitive matter comes through the Nerves too, p. 18
Vomiting by consent of what parts it comes, ib.
Causes of Vomiting, p. 19
Vomits, how they work, p. 20, 21
The stronger Vomits are next to poison, ib.
Why Intervals in Vomiting, p. 21
Vomits not easily stopt, ib.
Why they work sooner in some, p. 22
How they work in a solid Form, ib.
They work not alike in all Doses, ib.
Nor by a specifick virtue, ib.
Nor upon peculiar Humours, ib.
If convenient, they are better than any other Thysick, p. 23
They are to be used with caution, ib.
Their Indications, ib.
Their Receipts, p. 24
Immoderate Vomiting proceeds either from an Emetick Medicin, or other causes, p. 31
The reasons of the former explained, ib.
Its Cure, ib.
Natural Vomiting is either Critical or Sym∣ptomatical, ib.
The latter is either Idiopathetical, or affect∣ing one proper part; or Symphathical, af∣•…•…〈◊〉〈◊〉 by consent. p. 32
H•…•…w Vom•…•…ng that arises from a vitiated St•…•…mach is to be cured ib.
Vomiting caus•…•…d •…•…akness of the Sto∣m•…•…•…•…es; either the Fibres are 〈◊〉〈◊〉 much relax•…•…d; or the Nerves are obstructed, so as the Animal spirits cannot flow into them, p. 33
The Cure in the former case, ib.
The Cure in the latter, p. 34
Urine, what its matter is, and whence it comes, p. 59
It is threefold, ib.
Its matter proceeds chiefly from the mass of Bloud, p. 61
Its suppression proceeds from the compactness of the Bloud, p. 72
The same confirmed from Anatomical Obser∣vations, ib.
Why sweet like Honey in a Diabetes, p. 74
Uses, Descriptions, and Affections of the parts in which Medicins begin first to operate, p. 3
W
Water and Syrup of Rhead Poppy, p. 141
Weazon, it hath three Coats, p. 3
The inner Coat is nervous, but covered with a kind of Doun, ib.
It goes into the mouth of the Stomach, and covers it for some space, and creates a sense of tasting in the Weazon and mouth of the Stomach, ib.
The second Coat hath two opposite ranks of Fibres that cause motion, ib.
The third and outmost is common to it and the Stomach, &c. ib.
The uses of these Coats inquired into, ib.
Y
Yawning how performed, p. 4
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