As all animals which feed upon flesh, are more subject to diseases, nature has provided them with these advantages: that when any thing is obnoxious to their nature, and received into their stomach, or their being over loaded, it can discharge itself of so troublesome a burthen, by vomiting, which is effected thus: when the inner coat of the stomach, which is irritable and nervous, is stimulated by whatever is obnoxious, it will cause in the whole stomach, a contraction; and by that, force its contents to the shortest direction of evacuation, namely, by the canal of the oesophagus, through the mouth. This expulsion is peculiar to carnivorous animals only.

Purging or discharging by the fundament is common to all animals of whatever kind; and is performed by an irritation in the intestines, by which the peristaltic motion is increased; to this I must add a reversion of the secretion of the lacteal vessels, by which the humours are increased, the motion accelerated, and the fæces discharged, without giving any nourishment to the body, and consequently the system diminished.

Digestion is that act by which the aliment or food is prepared, so as to produce a good chyle, and consequently good blood, for the nourishment of the body. Though no animal has a more delicate stomach than man, yet it must be observed, that none has a stomach better adapted for all kinds of food.

Whence therefore in the common course of life, temperance and gentle exercise is what nature requires to maintain health. But nothing becomes more obnoxious to that blessing, than gluttony, voluptuousness, and idleness.


SECT. VII.

Of the Bones, Muscles, Ligaments, Tendons, and their Connections.

The bones may be considered as the timber-work of the human frame; by which this wonderful fabric is supported, and kept in its due form, that the whole may be brought into its various movements, without confusion or obstruction to each other.

The bones are the most solid parts of the human body, composed of hard and indurated fibres, striated over each other, in a manner peculiar to that substance. The bony fibres are in themselves insensible, yet as the parts are variously distributed with arteries and veins, and that the nerves must necessarily have a share in their formation, they have a peculiar sensibility, which is perceptible in some parts more than others; they cannot strictly speaking, be deemed quite insensible.

The whole bony frame is covered with a tendinous and nervous tegument, called periosteum; except such parts of the teeth as are designed for mastication, which are provided with a peculiar enamel, that is harder than the rest of the bony substance.