Book 1. of Planes 
22. $. Nordoth the Outer Coat, for the fame reafon, more pro+ 
mote, than declare the purity ofthe Sap now contained in the Inner : 
For being more hard and denfè, and fo not perfpirable, muft needs 
fuppofe the Parts of the Sap encompafled by it, fincethus uncapable of 
any evacuation, to be therefore all fo choice, as not to need it. 
23. $. The Sap being thus prepared in the Inner Coat, as a Liquor 
now apt to be the Subjiratum of the future Seed-Embrio by freh fup- 
plies, is thence difchargd. Yet that it may not be over-copious 5 
which, becaufe of the laxity of the Inner Cost, from whence it iffues, 
it mighteafily be: therefore, asthe faid Inner Coat is bounded with- 
out, by the upper Coat 5 fo by the secuadine, is it bounded within. 
Through which secundine the Sap being filtrrd, or, asit were, tranfpi- 
ring; the depofiture hereof, anfwerable to the Colliquamentum in an 
Egg, or to the Semen Mulibre, into its Concave at laft is made, 
24. $. The other part of the pureft sap embofom’d in the Ramu- 
lets of the Seed-Branch, runs a Circle, or fome progref therein 3 and 
fo becomes, as the Semen Mafiulinym, yet more elaborte. 
25. $. Wherein alfo, left its Current (hould be too copious or 
precipitant, by their co-aréfare and divarication where they are inofcu- 
lated, itis retarded ; the nobleft portion only obtaining a país. 
26. $. With this pureft sap, the faid Ramnlets being fupplicd, 
from thence at laft, the Navel-F7bres hoot ( as the primitive Artery 
into the Colliquamentu ) through the Secuadine into the aforelaid Li- 
quor depofited therein. 
27. $. Intowhich Liquor, being now (hot, and its own proper 
Sap or Tindures mixed therewith, it rikes it thus into a Coagulum 5 
or of a Liquor, it becomes a Body confiflent and truly Parenchymous, 
And the fupply of the faid Liquor ftill continu’d, and the fhooting of 
the Navel-Fibres, as is above deferibed, {till carried on, the faid Coagu- 
lation or Fixation is therewith likewife. 
28. §. And in the Interim of the Coagulation, a gentle Fermentation 
being alfo made, the faid Parenchyma or Coagulum becometh füch, not 
ofany Texture indifferently, but is thus raifed (as we fee Bread in Bak- 
ing ) into aCongeries of Bladders : For fuch is the Parenchyma of the 
whole Seed. 
PAPNTIES: 
Mo.Bot. Gardon, 
1902. 
