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<h2>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
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<p><i>The External, and Internal Organs of Generation in
Women</i>.</p>
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<p>If it were not for the public benefit, especially for that of
the professors and practitioners of the art of midwifery, I would
refrain from treating the secrets of Nature, because they may be
turned to ridicule by lascivious and lewd people. But as it is
absolutely necessary that they should be known for the public good,
I will not omit them because some may make a wrong use of them.
Those parts which can be seen at the lowest part of the stomach are
the <i>fissure magna</i>, or the <i>great cleft</i>, with its
<i>labia</i> or lips, the <i>Mons Veneris</i>, or Mountain of
Venus, and the hair. These together are called the <i>pudenda</i>,
or things to be ashamed of because when they are exposed they cause
a woman <i>pudor</i>, or shame. The <i>fissure magna</i> reaches
from the lower part of the <i>os pubis</i>, to within an inch of
the <i>anus</i>, but it is less and closer in virgins than in those
who have borne children, and has two lips, which grow thicker and
fuller towards the pubis, and meeting on the middle of the <i>os
pubis</i>, form that rising hill <!-- Page 80 --> which is called the <i>Mons Veneris</i>, or the
Hill of Venus.</p>
<p>Next come the <i>Nymphae</i> and the <i>Clitoris</i>, the former
of which is a membrany and moist substance, spongy, soft and partly
fleshy, of a red colour and in the shape of two wings, which are
joined at an acute angle at their base, producing a fleshy
substance there which covers the clitoris, and sometimes they
extend so far, that an incision is required to make room for a
man's instrument of generation.</p>
<p>The <i>Clitoris</i> is a substance in the upper part of the
division where the two wings meet, and the seat of venereal
pleasure, being like a man's <i>penis</i> in situation, substance,
composition and power of erection, growing sometimes to the length
of two inches out of the body, but that never happens except
through extreme lustfulness or some extraordinary accident. This
<i>clitoris</i> consists of two spongy and skinny bodies,
containing a distinct original from the <i>os pubis</i>, its tip
being covered with a tender skin, having a hole or passage like a
man's yard or <i>penis</i>, although not quite through, in which
alone, and in its size it differs from it.</p>
<p>The next things are the fleshy knobs of the great neck of the
womb, and these knobs are behind the wings and are four in number,
<!-- Page 81 --> resembling
myrtle berries, and being placed quadrangularly one against the
other, and here the orifice of the bladder is inserted, which opens
into the fissures, to evacuate the urine, and one of these knobs is
placed before it, and closes up the passage in order to secure it
from cold, or any suchlike inconvenience.</p>
<p>The lips of the womb, which appear next, disclose its neck, if
they are separated, and two things may be observed in them, which
are the neck itself and the <i>hymen</i>, or more properly, the
<i>claustrum virginale</i>, of which I have spoken before. By the
neck of the womb we must understand the channel that lies between
the above-mentioned knobs and the inner bone of the womb, which
receives the penis like a sheath, and so that it may be more easily
dilated by the pleasure of procreation, the substance is sinewy and
a little spongy. There are several folds or pleats in this cavity,
made by tunicles, which are wrinkled like a full blown rose. In
virgins they appear plainly, but in women who are used to
copulation they disappear, so that the inner side of the neck of
the womb appears smooth, but in old women it is more hard and
gristly. But though this channel is sometimes crooked and sinks
down yet at the times of copulation, labour, or of the monthly
flow, it is erected or distended, <!-- Page 82 --> which overtension occasions the pain in
childbirth.</p>
<p>The hymen, or <i>claustrum virginale</i>, is that which closes
the neck of the womb, and is broken by the first act of copulation;
its use being rather to check the undue menstrual flow in virgins,
rather than to serve any other purpose, and usually when it is
broken, either by copulation, or by any other means, a small
quantity of blood flows from it, attended with some little pain.
From this some observe that between the folds of the two tunicles,
which constitute the neck of the womb there are many veins and
arteries running along, and arising from, the vessels on both sides
of the thighs, and so passing into the neck of the womb, being very
large; and the reason for this is, that the neck of the bladder
requires to be filled with great vigour, so as to be dilated, in
order that it may lay hold of the penis better; for great heat is
required in such motions, and that becomes more intense by the act
of friction, and consumes a considerable amount of moisture, for
supplying which large vessels are absolutely necessary.</p>
<p>Another cause of the largeness of the vessels is, that menses
make their way through them, which often occasions pregnant women
to continue menstruating: for though the womb be
<!-- Page 83 --> shut up, yet
the passages in the neck of the womb through which these vessels
pass, are open. In this case, we may further observe, that as soon
as the <i>pudenda</i> are penetrated, there appear two little pits
or holes which contain a secretion, which is expelled during
copulation, and gives the woman great pleasure.</p>
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