Book
1 1| animalis emitted from the vessels, it is in the first place
2 2| without giving it also to the vessels which abstract the biliary
3 2| to result in the emptied vessels: either there will be an
4 2| adjusts itself to the narrower vessels and stomata, and the blood
5 2| situation, the narrowness of vessels, and a common space into
6 2| Since there are two kinds of vessels opening at the same place,
7 2| received into both kinds of vessels, some being carried into
8 2| common space for all three vessels, which becomes filled from
9 2| foolishly in reducing the simple vessels to elements such as these.
10 2| For in these minute simple vessels constituting the large perceptible
11 2| nutrition of these simple vessels was impraticable according
12 2| In the ultimate simple [vessels], which are thin and narrow,
13 2| place from the adjacent vessels, the nutriment being attracted
14 2| through the sides of the vessels and deposited in the empty
15 2| through the sides of the vessels." Now I, too, agree that
16 2| through the so-called biliary vessels; now, this is thin, moist,
17 3| it is caught up by the vessels which pass into the intestine;
18 3| and after this all the vessels contained in it), for it
19 3| the stomach by the same vessels by which it was carried
20 3| cardiac openings of the vessels with membranous attachments,
21 3| for the openings of the vessels to be closed so accurately
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