Book
1 1| pulsatile facultyin the heart, and in each of the other
2 1| the lungs, and thatof the heart; so also the proper substance
3 1| is carried upwards to the heart, and the other mounts upon
4 2| be in the region of the heart and lungs; for the heart
5 2| heart and lungs; for the heart alone of the parts which
6 2| receive nourishment from the heart). If, however, in order
7 2| about to say. ~ Imagine the heart to be, at the beginning,
8 2| by vein, liver, arteries, heart, alimentary canal, or any
9 3| liver, veins, arteries, and heart. ~ We must therefore observe
10 3| the left the spleen, the heart above, and along with it
11 3| liver, veins, arteries, heart, or any other organ. For
12 3| and in all men alike, the heart is stronger than the liver
13 3| seen in the case of the heart, in the various arteries,
14 3| arteries rough and smooth, the heart, the mouth, and the nostrils
15 3| as also in the case of heart, thorax, and lungs; for,
16 3| power which derives from the heart, and by virtue of which
17 3| arteries which are near the heart, it is on the heart itself
18 3| the heart, it is on the heart itself that they exert their
19 3| those which pass up from the heart into the neck, and that
20 3| these - draw mostly from the heart itself; and those which
21 3| which are farther from the heart and skin necessarily draw
22 3| place at the expense of the heart itself and the numerous
23 3| Therefore, in the case of the heart and the arteries, it is
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