ORA 
s out, and the fkins collapfe; but there is 
fomething farther remarkable, which is, that the whole fub- 
ance, near the wounded place, is in motion, and feems as 
if alive, and fenfible of the wound. The glandules are 
found full of water, and refembling {mall tranfparent bot- 
tles ; and what goes to the ftructure of the fubftance befide 
thefe, is an aflemblage of a vaft number of filaments, all 
which are alfo hollow, and filled with a clear and tranfparent 
fluid. 
There is another fubftance of this kind, defcribed by 
count Marfigli, Triumfetti, and others, and called the 
ramofe, or branched orange. This is ch o 
in of confifting of one 
round globule, it is formed of feveral oblong ones, all joined 
fo together, that they reprefent the branches of fome of 
the fucufes, but that :hey are fhorter; and thefe are all 
green within urface, viewed by the ofcope, ap 
pears rough, as in the other, and the glandules are of the 
fame kind, and are always found full of clear water. ar- 
figli, Hift. dela Mer, p.81. See CornALLINES 
ORANGE-Colour, is a hue or die that partakes equally of 
red and yellow ; or is a medium between the two. 
In heraldry, the term orange or orenge is given in blazon 
to all roundles that are tenne or tawny. 
Orance-Dew, a fort of dew which falls in the {pring- 
time from the leaves of orange and lemon-trees, and i 
tremely fine and fubtile. M. De LaH 
it, 
defirous of finding out what it was. He 
Orance-flower-Water. See Waren. 
Orance-Lake. § E 
ck. See PHILADELPHUs. 
ORANGE, in Geography, a bay on the N.E. coatt of Ja- 
ica ; Io the N.W. end of the fame ifland, 
in which is a {mall ifland, called « Orange-key, or Cay.””"— 
f Newfoundland. N. lat. 50° 
32, ng. 56° 10!. ~Alfo, a cape, the E, point of 
Oyapok river, S.E. of Cayenne ifland. N. lat. 4°20, W. 
long. 50° sol. 
NGE, a county of Vermont in America, containing 
20 townfhips and 18,238 inhabitants. The county-town is 
Newbury, and the townfhips S. of it are Bradford, Fairlee, 
and Thetford. The land is high and furnifhes numerous 
ORA 
ftreams in oppofite direGtions, both to Conneticut river and 
f nfhi ine of 
w 
afcomy river ; incor- 
and ee 203 inhabitants; 20 miles 
7 0 
containing 766 inhabitants.— 
county of New York, divided into g townth 
Ips, the ¢ 
ofhen; containing 29,35 
inhabitants, of 
w flaves. he excellent butter of this county 
is colle&ted at: Newburgh and New Wirdfor, and thence 
York. 
tains 
.W. of Newark, a county of 
Hillfborough diftna, N Carolina; containing 15,657 
inhabitants, of whom 3327 are flaves. The chief town 1s 
Hillfborough.—Alfo, a county of South Carolina, in 
Orangeburg diftri.—Alfo, a county of Virginia, contain- 
ing 6207 free inhabitants, and 5242 flaves: this county is 
55 miles long and to broad, and co 
Tt has bi 
nce, and principal place of a 
uclufe; before the revolu- 
At the clofe of the year 1714, it 
uphiny, the generality 
and intendancy of Grenoble and Montelimart. In 19722, 
Louis i i It contained 
ges, and was 
N. lat. 44° 8! 
ment of the Cape of Good Hope, 
the Indian fea, and after a welterly 
miles runs into the Atlantic, S. lat 28° 
RANGE-Town, or Greenland, a plantation in C 
county, and ftate of Maine in America, N.W. 
0 1s 18 @ mountainovs country ; 
tains having precipices 200 feet perpendicular, 
umberland 
of Water- 
f its moun- 
The fides 
of 
