<SPAN name="VADEMECUM_PART_I_CHAPTER_XIV"id="VADEMECUM_PART_I_CHAPTER_XIV"></SPAN>
<h2>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
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<p><i>A description of the Fabric of the Womb, the preparing
Vessels and Testicles in Women. Also of the Different and
Ejaculatory Vessels</i>.</p>
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<p>The womb is joined to its neck in the lower part of the
<i>Hypogastrium</i> where the hips are the widest and broadest, as
they are greater and broader there than those of men, and it is
placed between the bladder and the straight gut, which keeps it
from swaying, and yet gives it freedom to stretch and dilate, and
again to contract, as nature requires. Its shape is somewhat round
and not unlike a gourd, growing smaller and more acute towards
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<!-- Page 85 --> one end, being
knit together by its own ligaments; its neck likewise is joined by
its own substance and by certain membranes that fasten into the
<i>os sacrum</i> and the share-bone. Its size varies much in
different women, and the difference is especially great between
those who have borne children and those who have had none. Its
substance exceeds a thumb's breadth in thickness, and so far from
decreasing conception, it rather increases; and in order to
strengthen it it is interwoven with fibres which cross it from side
to side, some of which are straight and some winding, and its
proper vessels are veins, arteries and nerves. Amongst these there
are two small veins which pass into the womb from the spermatic
vessels, and two larger ones from the neck: the mouth of these
veins pierces as far as the inward cavity.</p>
<center><ANTIMG src='img/co007.jpg' alt='Position of a Child in the Womb just before delivery.' title=
'' /></center>
<center><ANTIMG src='img/co006.jpg' alt='The action of quickening' title='' /></center>
<p>The womb has two arteries on both sides of the spermatic vessels
and the hypogastric, which accompany the veins; and besides these,
there are several little nerves in the form of a net, which extend
throughout it, from the bottom of the <i>pudenda</i>; their chief
function is sensibility and pleasure, as they move in sympathy
between the head and the womb.</p>
<p>It may be further noted that the womb is occasionally moveable
by means of the two ligaments that hang on either side of it, and
often rises and falls. The neck of the womb
<!-- Page 87 --> is extremely
sensitive, so that if it be at any time out of order through over
fatness, moisture or relaxation, it thereby becomes subject to
barrenness. With pregnant women, a glutinous matter is often found
at the entrance to the womb so as to facilitate the birth; for at
the time of delivery, the mouth of the womb is opened as wide as
the size of the child requires, and dilates equally from top to
bottom.</p>
<p>The spermatic vessels in women, consist of two veins and two
arteries, which differ from those of men only in size and the
manner of their insertion; for the number of veins and arteries is
the same as in men, the right vein issuing from the trunk of the
hollow vein descending and besides them there are two arteries,
which flow from the aorta.</p>
<p>These vessels are narrower and shorter in women than in men; but
it must be noticed that they are more intertwined and contorted
than in men, and shrink together by reason of their shortness that
they may, by their looseness, be better stretched out when
necessary: and these vessels in women are carried in an oblique
direction through the lesser bowels and testicles but are divided
into two branches half way. The larger goes to the stones and forms
a winding body, and wonderfully inoculates the lesser branches
where it disperses <!-- Page 88 --> itself, and especially at the higher part of the
bottom of the womb, for its nourishment, and that part of the
courses may pass through the vessels; and seeing that women's
testicles are situated near the womb, for that cause those vessels
do not fall from the peritoneum, nor do they make so much passage
as in men, as they do not extend to the share-bone.</p>
<p>The stones of woman, commonly called <i>testicles</i>, do not
perform the same function as in men, for they are altogether
different in position, size, temperature, substance, form and
covering. They are situated in the hollow of the muscles of the
loins, so that, by contracting greater heat, they may be more
fruitful, their office being to contain the ova or eggs, one of
which, being impregnated by the man's seed engenders the child.
They are, however, different from those of the male in shape,
because they are smaller and flatter at each end, and not so round
or oval; the external superficies is also more unequal, and has the
appearance of a number of knobs or kernels mixed together.</p>
<p>There is a difference, also, in the substance, as they are much
softer and more pliable, and not nearly so compact. Their size and
temperature are also different for they are much colder and smaller
than in men, and their covering or enclosure is likewise quite
different; for as <!-- Page 89 --> men's are wrapped in several covers, because they
are very pendulous and would be easily injured unless they were so
protected by nature, so women's stones, being internal and thus
less subject to being hurt, are covered by only one membrane, and
are likewise half covered by the peritoneum.</p>
<p>The ejaculatory vessels are two small passages, one on either
side, which do not differ in any respect from the spermatic veins
in substance. They rise in one place from the bottom of the womb,
and do not reach from their other extremity either to the stones or
to any other part, but are shut up and impassable, and adhere to
the womb as the colon does to the blind gut, and winding half way
about; and though the testicles are not close to them and do not
touch them, yet they are fastened to them by certain membranes
which resemble the wing of a bat, through which certain veins and
arteries passing from the end of the testicles may be said to have
their passages going from the corners of the womb to the testicles,
and these ligaments in women are the <i>cremasters</i><SPAN name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></SPAN> <SPAN href='#Footnote_3_3'><sup>[3]</sup></SPAN> in men, of which I shall speak
more fully when I come to describe the male parts of
generation.</p>
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<p>FOOTNOTES:</p>
<SPAN name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></SPAN> <SPAN href='#FNanchor_3_3'>[3]</SPAN>
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<p>Muscles by which the testicles are drawn up.</p>
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