i82 EXPERIMENTS 



aperture of the glanduloiis body ; and, having 

 cut along the probe as a du'ectory, 1 found that 

 the cavity was filled with a hquid matter. This 

 liquor, when examined w^ith the microfcope, 

 prefented the fame phaenomena, the fame mor 

 ving bodies, as in Exper. XXXVI. But I could 

 difcover in none of them either filaments or tails. 

 The liquor of the veficles was (till tranfparent, 

 and contained nothing like life or motion. 



EXPER. XLL 



/The uteri of feveral other cows were brought 

 to me at different times. In the tefticles of fome 

 of them, there were glandulous bodies almofl 

 ripe ; in thofe of others, they were in different 

 flares of growth ; and I perceived nothing new 

 or uncommon, except that I difcovered, in the 

 teflicles of two of them, glandulous bodjes in a 

 decayed flate, the bafe of one of which was as 

 large as>the circumference of a cherry. The ex- 

 tremity of the nipple v/as foft and withered : 

 The two nnall holes. through which the fluid 

 had iifued were ftill vifible. I introduced a fmall 

 brillle into them;" but there was no liquor either 

 in the canal, or in the internal cavity, which 

 could ilill be diftingui filed. The extindion of 

 the glandulous bodies;, therefore, commences at 

 the moft external part, or extremity of the 

 jiipple. They fird dimiaifli in heiglu, and then 



in 



