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William Harvey On the Motion of the Heart and Blood in Animals IntraText - Concordances (Hapax - words occurring once) |
Chapter
1501 II | is circularly disposed, tends to become straight when 1502 II | action, acquire vigor and tenseness, and from soft become hard, 1503 II | consists in a certain universal tension-both contraction in the line 1504 VII | a preceding part of the tenth chapter: "Were there no 1505 IV | the egg immersed in clear tepid water. In the midst of the 1506 VI | artery, to perforate and terminate in the great artery or aorta. 1507 VII | propriety, merely changing the terms, for the passage of the 1508 VII | those of La Madonna, in the territories of Padua, or others of an 1509 XVI | contaminate the whole body.~In tertian fever, the morbific cause 1510 XI | the ligature, we see the testes and large fleshy tumours 1511 XVII| the mesentery, and the testicles, the two orders of vessels 1512 Pref| this the learned Riolanus testifies along with me, in his Seventh 1513 Pref| differ in many respects from th the workshop of the spirits, 1514 IV | countries, which is taken in the Thames and in the sea, the whole 1515 Int | gave public notice of his theories on the circulation of the 1516 XVI | pathology, semeiotics and therapeutics, when I see how many questions 1517 | thereby 1518 XII | how many pass in twenty or thirty pulsations under the medium 1519 VII | Were there no valves, a threefold inconvenience would result, 1520 XVII| rebound than if he simply threw it. Moreover, and contrary 1521 XI | higher at each diastole, to throb more violently, and to swell 1522 III | a drum, a long piece of timber, etc.) the stroke and the 1523 X | the systole, of a deeper tint in the diastole; and almost 1524 VII | through the veins, through the tissues of the kidneys, and through 1525 XIII| means explained when we are told that it is to hinder the 1526 Pref| less is that opinion to be tolerated which, as a two-fold material, 1527 V | elevation of the root of the tongue, and the compression of 1528 XIII| veins that meet towards the top of the os sacrum, and in 1529 XV | at the same time getting torpid, so that they can scarcely 1530 X | so the blood escapes in torrents, but that the same thing 1531 IX | sixth, or an eighth, to the total capacity of the ventricles, 1532 XIII| single valve, do not seem totally to prevent the passage of 1533 V | where, the trigger being touched, down comes the flint, strikes 1534 VI | pulmonary vein, there is a thin tough membrane, larger than the 1535 XVII| pulsate, especially if a tourniquet has been applied.~For the 1536 | toward 1537 XVI | so widely, that this my tractate would not only swell out 1538 Pref| held by the vulgar and by tradition, in order that what is true 1539 I | indifferently, have essayed to traduce me publicly, I have moved 1540 Pref| pulmonary veins, namely, the transference of air from the lungs to 1541 VI | the heart by its action transfers the blood from the vena 1542 V | a kind of deglutition, a transfusion of the blood from the veins 1543 XI | is used, they cease from transmitting anything, they are only 1544 XVI | would not be concoction, transmutation, and sanguification, but 1545 VIII| the canals and agents that transport the blood, they are of two 1546 XVII| an orifice is because it transports much more blood than is 1547 V | to the left ventricle by transuding through the septum of the 1548 V | forced downwards by the transverse muscles, and then carried 1549 VIII| powerful, fervid, a kind of treasury of life, and impregnated 1550 XI | recommend ligatures in the treatment of disease, yet very few 1551 VIII| the envy of a few, but I tremble lest I have mankind at large 1552 XVII| animals, - almost the whole tribe of insects - we cannot see 1553 IV | But in the pale-blooded tribes the heart pulsates sluggishly 1554 IX | the experiment is easily tried of leaving the vein untouched 1555 VII | would be looked upon as no trifle, etc." Shortly afterwards 1556 V | to firearms, where, the trigger being touched, down comes 1557 Ded | ancient and beaten pathway trodden for so many ages, and illustrated 1558 XII | practising phlebotomy the truths contended for are sometimes 1559 Pref| had rather need of annular tubes, such as those of the bronchi 1560 XI | that they are gorged and tumefied. And may not the same thing 1561 IX | amputations and removing tumors in the human subject.~Nor 1562 Pref| their extreme investing tunic, but none in either the 1563 Pref| on passing a quantity of turbid, fetid and acrid urine. 1564 XI | the vulgar say, from the turning of the blood.~Farther, when 1565 XI | and knotted; after ten or twelve pulses of the artery, the 1566 VII | the food we consume pass twice through this organ in the 1567 XI | blow upon the place where a twig of the artery advances from 1568 XVI | in numerous branches and twigs, just as the mesenteric 1569 X | whilst nursing a child or twins, which must manifestly be 1570 V | the right ventricle, as if twisting itself slightly in performing 1571 Pref| be tolerated which, as a two-fold material, one aerial, one 1572 XIII| trunks of the veins; the two-for there are for the most part 1573 XVII| subdivision, so that the ultimate capillary divisions of the 1574 IV | whole, is the primum vivens, ultimum moriens, - the first part 1575 I | receiving my views with uncandid minds and understanding 1576 Pref| invisible porosities, to uncertain and obscure channels, to 1577 XVI | channels it suffers delay and undergoes additional change, lest 1578 XI | glide through, as it were, underneath the finger; and he, too, 1579 Int | when he was too infirm to undertake the duties, he was offered 1580 XI | mostly at the moment of undoing the fillet, as the vulgar 1581 XI | cold, when the fillet is undone is aware of something cold 1582 Ded | their opinion if truth and undoubted demonstration require them 1583 VII | by certain invisible and undoubtedly very narrow passages. Now 1584 XVII| Things Which Dissection Unfolds)~I do not find the heart 1585 XVII| but the pulsations occur unfrequently, and sometimes in consequence 1586 Pref| right ventricle which is unfurnished with lungs), and that the 1587 VIII| a character so novel and unheard-of that I not only fear injury 1588 XVII| texture, or of a certain uniform sameness or simplicity of 1589 X | happen in the healthy and uninjured body when no outlet is made; 1590 Ded | observe that the dull and unintellectual are indisposed to see what 1591 XIII| the vein, and are there united by the contact of their 1592 II | heart consists in a certain universal tension-both contraction 1593 XVII| in these particulars is universally preserved. The more muscular 1594 Int | later at both the English universities. After his return to England 1595 Int | degree of M.D. from the University of Padua. He took the same 1596 Ded | than all that still remains unknown; nor do philosophers pin 1597 II | more easy to perceive and unravel what the motions really 1598 I | mind was therefore greatly unsettled nor did I know what I should 1599 | until 1600 XI | into the bruised part with unusual force and velocity.~And 1601 IV | single pulsation, slowly, unwillingly, and with an effort.~But 1602 Ded | Neither do they think it unworthy of them to change their 1603 VII | kidneys, and through the ureters into the bladder.~To those, 1604 Ded | profitable to the learned, and useful to letters.~Farewell, most 1605 Ded | therefore, will not be useless to a Prince, as embracing 1606 VI | embryos just taken out of the uterus, shows that the heart moves 1607 V | the dark, for they give utterance to various, contradictory, 1608 VIII| the warmer, more perfect, vaporous, spirituous, and, as I may 1609 XIII| or cause them to become varicose; lest, instead of advancing 1610 XVII| an animal, sometimes of a vegetable. This seems to be the case 1611 IV | live after the manner of vegetables, or of those other productions 1612 XI | part with unusual force and velocity.~And now, too, we understand 1613 V | the left draw it from the venae cavae. This fact is borne 1614 XIII| skillful anatomist, and venerable old man, or, as the learned 1615 Pref| does not suffice for the ventilation and refrigeration of the 1616 IV | distinguished, then is the ventricular part of the heart also produced, 1617 IV | too increased and acquired ventrieles, which then began to receive 1618 Ded | fear from others. I even ventured to hope that I should have 1619 XVII| force and fill it, and vice versa. Now this is actually so: 1620 II | fibres, although the great Vesalius giving this notion countenance, 1621 XVII| contractile; in which way the word veuPou is derived from veuw, nuto, 1622 XVII| word veuPou is derived from veuw, nuto, contraho; and if 1623 XVII| to force and fill it, and vice versa. Now this is actually 1624 X | have had opportunity of viewing the truth contended for 1625 II | when in action, acquire vigor and tenseness, and from 1626 II | tense, is it moved and made vigorous.~Neither is it by any means 1627 III | frequent as that acts more vigorously, still preserving the rhythm 1628 XVII| forced, both with greater vigour and rapidity, to a greater 1629 VII | Chapter VII: The Blood Passes Through 1630 XVII| their inner surface, without villi or valves, and the walls 1631 Pref| spirituous and arterious, and virtually concede that the office 1632 V | with this, the most noble viscus of the body, unless for 1633 IV | pin; so that betwixt the visible and invisible, betwixt being 1634 III | in size; this tumour was visibly distended as it received 1635 XV | labours under the effects of vitiated nutrition and a want of 1636 VII | others of an acidulous or vitriolated nature, or who simply swallow 1637 IV | as a whole, is the primum vivens, ultimum moriens, - the 1638 VI | certain sense, as they have a voice. I have many observations 1639 II | conveyed through the chest wall), is emptied. Whence the 1640 VI | lest I should be held as wandering too wide of my present purpose, 1641 VII | who, when their assent is wanted, fear, and when it is not, 1642 X | smaller than at first, from wanting blood: and then it begins 1643 Pref| and indeed every animal wants a right ventricle which 1644 Int | until the close of the Civil War, being present at the battle 1645 Int | he was, for a short time, Warden of Merton College, Oxford ( 1646 II | become more distinct in warm-blooded animals, such as the dog 1647 VIII| bodies; for the moist earth, warmed by the sun, evaporates; 1648 XI | conscious of a sensation of warmth, and of something, viz., 1649 Ded | suffer their minds to be warped by the passions of hatred 1650 XI | animals and the removal of warts and fleshy tumours. But 1651 VII | persons who use the Spa waters or those of La Madonna, 1652 XVI | stomach, where they are thin, watery, and not yet perfectly chylified; 1653 XII | and farther, owing to the weak and languishing state of 1654 Ded | which unfit men duly to weigh the arguments that are advanced 1655 XIII| hinder the blood, by its weight, from all flowing into inferior 1656 Ded | informed, but that they welcome further information from 1657 XV | and their vital stimulus wellnigh exhausted.~Hence it is that 1658 IV | motionless, I kept my finger wetted with saliva and warm for 1659 V | machinery, in which, though one wheel gives motion to another, 1660 V | to another, yet all the wheels seem to move simultaneously; 1661 XVII| colder animals, as in snails, whelks, shrimps, and shell-fish, 1662 Ded | from whomsoever and from wheresoever it may come; nor are they 1663 Pref| constitute one body (like whey and butter in milk, or heat 1664 IV | towards the centre; the whiteness indicated is most conspicuous 1665 IV | they are seen to become whiter, especially where they contain 1666 IV | month, the heart then being whitish and bloodless, although 1667 IV | occasion, after the heart had wholly ceased to pulsate, and the 1668 Ded | further information from whomsoever and from wheresoever it 1669 VI | be held as wandering too wide of my present purpose, which 1670 Ded | I would not charge with wilful falsehood any one who was 1671 XVII| first to be formed, nature willed that it should afterwards 1672 I | step I take all the more willingly, seeing that Hieronymus 1673 IV | had been seen through a window.~I have also observed the 1674 VI | vena cava, will pursue the wisest course if they seek by dissection 1675 VI | and after a time becomes withered, and finally almost removed, 1676 Ded | general been the faithful witnesses of almost all the instances 1677 X | and more in a day, and a woman two or three pints whilst 1678 XII | the menstrual fluxes of women, and indeed hemorrhages 1679 Int | once; on the Continent it won favor more slowly. Before 1680 XVII| and others, it bears a wonderful and strong resemblance to 1681 Ded | Accept therefore, with your wonted clemency, I most humbly 1682 XIII| passing over them.~[Note. - Woodcuts of the veins of the arm 1683 Pref| urine. But he died at last, worn out by disease; and when 1684 XI | upon the faith of the old writers, recommend ligatures in 1685 X | Chapter X: The First Position~(Of 1686 XII | Chapter XII: That There Is A Circulation 1687 XIII| Chapter XIII: The Third Position Is Confirmed~( 1688 XIV | Chapter XIV: Conclusion Of The Demonstration 1689 XV | Chapter XV: The Circulation Of The 1690 XVI | Chapter XVI: The Circulation Of The 1691 XVII| Chapter XVII: The Motion And Circulation 1692 XVII| the warmer season of the year. In these creatures this 1693 V | movement produces a sound and yields a pulse both to the ear 1694 | yourselves 1695 Ded | quarter, by an old man from a youth, by a person of understanding 1696 XVII| compressing the fingers in youthful and delicate subjects during