<SPAN name="VADEMECUM_PART_I_CHAPTER_XV"id="VADEMECUM_PART_I_CHAPTER_XV"></SPAN>
<h2>CHAPTER XV</h2>
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<p><i>A Description of the Use and Action of the several Generative
Parts in Women</i>.</p>
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<p>The external parts, commonly called the <i>pudenda</i>, are
designed to cover the great orifice and to receive the man's penis
or yard in the act of sexual intercourse, and to give passage to
the child and to the urine. The use of the wings and knobs, like
myrtle berries, is for the security of the internal parts, closing
the orifice and neck of the bladder and by their swelling up, to
cause titillation and pleasure in those parts, and also to obstruct
the involuntary passage of the urine.</p>
<p>The action of the clitoris in women is similar to that of the
penis in men, viz., <i>erection</i>; and its lower end is the glans
of the penis, and has the same name. And as the <i>glans</i> of man
are the seat of the greatest pleasure in copulation, so is this in
the woman.</p>
<p>The action and use of the neck on the womb is the same as that
of the penis, viz., erection, brought about in different ways:
first, in copulation it becomes erect and made straight for the
passage of the penis into the womb; <!-- Page 91 --> secondly, whilst the passage is filled
with the vital blood, it becomes narrower for embracing the penis;
and the uses of this erection are twofold:—first, because if
the neck of the womb were not erected, the man's yard could find no
proper passage to the womb, and, secondly, it hinders any damage or
injury that might ensue through the violent striking of the
<i>penis</i> during the act of copulation.</p>
<p>The use of the veins that pass through the neck of the womb, is
to replenish it with blood and vigour, that so, as the moisture is
consumed by the heat engendered by sexual intercourse, it may be
renewed by those vessels; but their chief business is to convey
nutriment to the womb.</p>
<p>The womb has many properties belonging to it: first, the
retention of the impregnated egg, and this is conception, properly
so called; secondly, to cherish and nourish it, until Nature has
fully formed the child, and brought it to perfection, and then it
operates strongly in expelling the child, when the time of its
remaining has expired, becoming dilated in an extraordinary manner
and so perfectly removed from the senses that they cannot
injuriously affect it, retaining within itself a power and strength
to eject the foetus, unless it be rendered deficient by any
accident; and in such a case <!-- Page 92 --> remedies must be applied by skilful hands to
strengthen it, and enable it to perform its functions; directions
for which will be given in the second book.</p>
<p>The use of the preparing vessels is this; the arteries convey
the blood to the testicles; some part of it is absorbed in
nourishing them, and in the production of these little bladders
(which resemble eggs in every particular), through which the
<i>vasa preparantia</i> run, and which are absorbed in them; and
the function of the veins is to bring back whatever blood remains
from the above mentioned use. The vessels of this kind are much
shorter in women than in men, because they are nearer to the
testicles; this defect is, however, made good by the many intricate
windings to which those vessels are subject; for they divide
themselves into two branches of different size in the middle and
the larger one passes to the testicles.</p>
<p>The stones in women are very useful, for where they are
defective, the work of generation is at an end. For though those
bladders which are on the outer surface contain no seed, as the
followers of Galen and Hippocrates wrongly believed, yet they
contain several eggs, generally twenty in each testicle; one of
which being impregnated by the animated part of the man's seed in
the act of copulation, descends <!-- Page 93 --> through the oviducts into the womb, and thus in
due course of time becomes a living child.</p>
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