flike tli6ife--<iSf£ri55ed itt^-to^ 3. Fig. 4. 
where I fpokebt AUum) being clear as^a poliftitDiamond; 
about them- lay brown Globules, pretty to look on, e- 
ipecially in the Evening, when the light of a Candle 
paffiag thro' ■ fh^iii, makes a gtifteS'ilig.'^ The greateft df 
thefe Salts wbiild covei" a hair of ones head i but the leaft 
could nbt bediftinguiflit by a Microfcope that magnifies 
a hair to the thicknefs of ones finger, and from hence 
may be judged the fmallnefs of fome Salts prodnced in 
this moillurei There were likewife fome Saks having a 
iquare Bafis, and- others an Oblong; but their number 
was tew and fcard6 v^or4:h taking notice ef. . : 
The preceding^ '^Obfervations were made in a mode- 
rately dry feafon, but 2 days after when it was rayny 
weather, I lookt for the(ame Salts, but they were melt- 
ed, and run am^b^ng the brown Globules. ...^;.. 
I examined the ^nd f^und in it 2: or 3 . water 
bladders which lay deep and were half hid, and one 
that was reddifh, the reft that ftuck out more, being the 
greater number, were of an afli-colour and confifted of 
Glandulous parts. I lookt alfb ?how the Eggs might have 
a Paflage to come downy but could find none 
I received from a Butbher, the Uterus of a Sheep 
which wasfaid to have taken the Rams days before, as 
I opened each of the Cornua, the moifture run plentifully 
out, which I put feparately in 2 Difhes, fearching with 
my common Microfcope till I found a fmall body of a* 
bout the bignefs of a courfe Sand. At firft .1 could pSr- 
ceive no figure it had, but when I applyed it to a good 
Microlcope , it proved to be a young Lamb, with the 
head and back bent forward, but in very good Order : 
thejawbone and Eys were very diftind:, but the back 
bone muchlefs. 1 intended to have ihewen the Animal 
to fome Learned Men, but in handling it, I had the mif- 
fortuneto bruifeitshead, which made the parts thereof 
indiftinca, and when I feparated the body, the Bowells 
dryed 
