180 
The Anatomy Book IV- 
Tab. 65. 
Tab. 65, 
Tab. 65. 
Tab. 65: 
Tab, 66, 
Tab. 66, 
Tab. 66. 
That whereas in the Barque, they are Jpherical, and very {mall, moft of 
them, through a good Glaf, not exceeding +, of an Inch in Diame- 
tre, and fome of them, lef: here,they are oblong and very large, moft 
of them about 34 of an Inch in Length, or more,according to the large- 
nefs and tenderneß of the Fruit; being all uniformly tenter’d or 
ftretched out, by the arching of the Veffels, from the Coar towards the 
Circumference of the Apple. 
4. $. The Veffels, as in the other Parts ofa Plant, are Succiferons, 
and for Aer. Both the Branches of the former, and the fingle reffels 
ofthe latter, are extream fmall. They run every where together, not 
collateral, as Veins and Arteries do in Animals 5 but the latter, fheathed 
in the former. 
5. 5. They are diftributed into Twenty principal Branches. The Ten 
outmoft, a little within the Apple, are diverted from a ftraight Line into 
fo many great Arches; from which a few {mall Fibres are without any 
order difpearfed through the Apple. The Five middlemoft, and the 
Five inmoft, run in a ftraight Live as far as the Coar, and are there di- 
verted into as many lefler Arches; the former, at the outer, and the 
latter at the iner Angles of the Coar, Upon thefe Five inmoft hang all 
the Seeds. 
6. $. Thefe Ten, and the other Ten abovefaid, do all meet toge- 
ther at the top of the Apple, where originally, they all ran into the 
Flower, But betwixt them, there are fcarce any intercurrent Fibres; 
fo that they appear every where disjunét fromthe bottom to the top 
of the Apple. 
7. § A LIMON hath a Threefold Parenchymas which feem 
to be derived one from another : the Texture, upon every derivation, 
being fomewhat altered, and fo made more clofe and elaborate. The 
utmoft, called the Rixd, hath the moft open, and the courfeft Texture 3 
being compofed of the largeft Threds, and tho Threds woven up into 
larger Bladders. Thole little Cells, which contein the Efential Oyl of 
the Fruit, and ftand near the Surface of the Rind, are fome of the faid 
Bladders much more dilated. 
8. $. From this utmolt parenchyma, Nine or Ten Infertions or La- 
mells are produced, betwixt as many Portions of the Pulpy Part, to- 
wards the Centre, where they all unite into one Body, aniwerable to 
the Pith in the Trunk or Root of a Tree; and is a confpicuous demon- 
ftration, of the communion betwixt the Barque and the Pith; which 
there, is much more obícure and difficult to obferve. At the bottom, 
but efpecially the top of the Fruit, the Pith is fo far expanded, as with- 
out the mediation of any Lamels, to be joyned to the Rind. 
9. § Throughout this Parenchyma, the Vefels are difpearfed. Bue 
the chief Branches {tand on the iner Edge of the Rird, and the outer 
Edge of the Pith, juft at the two extremities of every Lamel. From 
thofe Branches on the Edge of the Pith, other little and very fhort 
ones fhoot into the Puip of the Fruit, upon which the Seeds are ap- 
pendant. Inthe Centre of the Pith, are Eight or Nine, in a Ring, 
which run through the Fruit up to the Flower. 
10. $. Between the Rind and the Pith and thofe feveral Lamels, 
which joyn them together, ftands the fecond Sort of Parenchyma, dif- 
ferent from the former, in being fomewhat clofer, and finer wro 
Divided, by the Lamels, into feveral diftiné Bodies 3 every one of them 
a great and entire Bag. Il. $. 
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