Guirye es 
so GINS KOR, IH ea, a BO " 
CHAP. I. 
The eiaidgulaa or Anatomy of a - 
Zt AM now entring upon a fervice, to which L 
am unequal, and much unqualified for. So 
many and fo great are the difficulties that 
* attend enquiries of this kind, that a much 
abler hand, and more ingenious mind, is neceflary to 
remove them, and place what comes here under confie 
deration i ina clearer and fuller view. 
After all our late improvements in natural philofophy, 
there yet remains thofe fecrets in nature, that the moft 
diligent, accurate fearch, and painful difquifition, will 
not be fufficient fully to difcover. 
In naturals, as well as fpirituals, we fhall know only 
in part. And after we have gone the utmoft lengths 
poffible, in fuch enquiries, there will be fome imperfec- 
tion in our knowledge, during the prefent depreffion of 
our nature. | ' 
Many staat obferatione have: been made in thefe fat- 
ter times, by the improvemient of the microfcope ; 
_whereby a very great difference between things natural 
and artificial hath been made manifett. 
There are fuch and fo great embellifhments and curi- 
ous inimitable embroideries in the {malleft feeds of plants 
and 
