ON GENERATION. 177 



E X P E R. XXXIV. 



I procured the uterus of a cow that had beeii 

 Recently killed. It was brought to me in a 

 bafket, wrapped in warm cloths, along with a 

 live rabbit, to prefcrve it from cooling. The 

 teflicles were as large as a fmall hen's egg ; ori 

 one of them was a glandulous body of the fize of 

 a pea, which protruded from the tefticle like 

 a little nipple : But it had no fifiure or external 

 aperture. It was (o firm and hard, that I could 

 prefs no liquor out of it with my lingers. Be- 

 fore cutting this tefticle, I obferved two other 

 glandulous bodies at a diftance from each other. 

 They were very fmall, and of a whitilh yellow 

 colour; but the large one, which feemed to have 

 pierced the membfane of the tefticle, was as red 

 as a rofe. 1 examined this laft with great atten- 

 tion, but could difcover no liquor ; from which I 

 concluded, that it Vvas ftill far from being mature, 



E X P £ R. XXXV. 



In the other tefticle, there were no glandulous 

 bodies which had yet pierced the membrane that 

 covers the tefticle. Two fmall ones only began 

 to appear under the membrane. I opened them 

 both; but procured no liquor from them. They 

 ■vere hard bodies, with a tindurc of yellow. 



Vol. 1 1. M Oil 



