[48] Sanguinis a dextro in sinistrum Cordis Ventriculum defluentis facilis reperta via, fol. Venet. 1639.
[49] Gassendi, ‘De Septo Cordis pervio,’ published in a collection by Severinus Pinæus, 12mo, Leid. 1640.
[50] D. de Marchettis, Anatomia, 8vo, Padova, 1652.
[51] Elementa Philosophiæ in Præfat.
[52] Thomas Nimmo, Esq., of New Amsterdam, Berbice: “On a passage in Shakespeare’s Julius Cæsar.” The Shakespeare Society’s Papers, vol. ii, p. 109.
[53] Shakespeare died in 1616, the year when Harvey began to lecture at the College of Physicians. Harvey and Shakespeare may very well have been acquainted,—let us hope that they were,—but there is no authority for saying that they were friends.
[54] Comment. super Anatomiam Mundini, 4to, Bonon. 1521.
[55] De Re Anatomica, fol. Venet. 1559.
[56] Quæstiones Peripateticæ, fol. Florent. 1569; Quæst. Medicinales, fol. Venet. 1593; De Plantis, Florent. 1583.
[57] Qua autem ratione fiat alimenti attractio, &c. De Plantis, lib. i, cap. 2, p. 3, 4to, Florent. 1583.