( 487 ) 
1. A Defcription of fix feveral trunks of Plants, as they ^p- 
pt^v to ihG ^ai^edeye^ VIZ. of Borage y Dandelyofs^ Colewort^ Holy- 
oak^ wild Cucumer^ Endive^ 
2. An accurate Dtfcription of feveral Trunks and parts of 
Trunks, as they appear through a good M/Vr^>/f(?^^ ^ which parts 
are, the Bar\^ ihe Wood, and the Pith. Of the Bark he defcribes 
the Skirt^ the Parenchyma.diwd the fejjels^ the laft of which he finds 
in the Bark to b^al wales and ony Sap-vef els which yetarefpc- 
cificated and diftinguiOi'c one from another , both in the fan e 
Plant, and in the feveral Species's of Plants, by many properties, 
which are not accidental, but fuchas fliew the conftanc and uni« 
verfaldefign of Nature : Which he fiiews by the defcription of tic 
E^r/tr/ of feveral Trunks, viz.i/t?///, Hazel, Barbery, Jpfle, Pear^ 
plumy Elm, Afh, Walnut, Fig, Piney Oak^ Sumach, Wormmod, J a 
fonieof which he finds Sap-veffels to be only Lymph^duffs in 
others, LymphaduSs and Laffifetous ; in others, LymphadnSfs and 
PLefimferous \ laftly, in feme, two kinds of Lymph/du^s, and one of 
a fort of Refinom. To which he fubjoyns an Anfwcr to that cu- 
rious QuefUoD, viz. if the Stringy parts of the Bark are made up 
oftubes^ what thefe Tubes themfelves are made up of? And that 
done, aflerts the Analogy betwixt the r^jf^/i of an Animal and a 
Plant, 
9. Having thus defcribed the he proceeds to the H^W^ 
pArt\ and here,, in the feveral Trunks aforefaid, he confiders their 
two general parts, namely the Parenchymous part or Infer tions,dind 
the Vejfels : The Infertions much diverfified according to the feve- 
ral Species of Plants, for number, pofition and texture : The Vef^ 
/?//have likewife much variety, yet are of two genera! kinds, 
namely, Sap-veffels znd Jir-vejfels , whereas 'tis proper to the 
Bark, (as was intimated above; to havt only Sap wjfels. Of both 
thefe kinds of Veffels he notes the vat iety, as to nua)ber,ficua[ion, 
andfize; thefe affeflions being in no two fpecies of Plants the 
fame. 
4. Laftly, he defcribes the J/Vi^yfirft in general, and proves it 
to be, as to i'ts fubftance, the fame with the parenchyma in the Bark, 
and t^'^ hfertionsm the Wood : And then,he obfervcs both the va- 
riety of ics fize, being not the fame in any two branches,reprefent- 
edbyhim; and its being compounded of two parts, z Parenchy- 
and Sap vejfels : The Parenchyma made up of Bladders,o{vtxy 
different 
