* 
he ESSAYS anp OBSERVATIONS 
: * Graught of them, as reprefented in fg. 5. 
_ where the vein AA, and the artery BB, ap- 
' pear twifted frequently round each other ; and 
-fometimes as if the artery entered into the 
» vein;—C, the fimbriae of the tuba Fallopi- 
_ anaj—D. the ovarium;—E, part of the figa- 
mentum latum. ‘ 
,  Tuar others may judge how long my fab- 
ject had been with child, I have added. the 
 aiithinds of the foetus of the natural dimen- 
fions, in fig. 6 
_ Tuus, Grefitigmieay I have fairly related all 
hat I obferved in the diffection of this pre- 
nant uterus; and beg leave to be allowed to 
add fome few remarks upon the whole. 
’ From the figure of the womb I diffected, 
compared with thofe of Cowper, Nortwyk, 
Albinus, Hunter and others, it appears, that 
the fundus of the impregnated womb, is al- 
ways greatly extended upwards, in the time 
of gravidation, by which the round liga- 
ments and Fallopian tubes, which are inferted 
into the angles of the unimpregnated womb, 
are then much lower than the fundus: for, 
ins my figure, thefe ligaments and tubes, are 
almotft o1 one third of the length-of the womb 
4 | Tower 
