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that make up the oval particles, if not always, at leafk 
for the moft part. 
Tis eafie to conceive how fix little globes, which 
are pliant and always in motion, and driven one up- 
on another, fliould fettle entirely in the faQiion of a 
bowl. Thus Fig. 6. reprefents the firft coalition of 
the fix little bullets into one, five oi which are pre • 
fented to our view, and the fixth with-held from the 
fame. 
I have made up fuch a globe as is reprefented in fig. 
6. of fix Wax bullets put together, in order to (hew 
them to thofe who enquire narrowly after the form 
and compofition of the little globubar particles of the 
bloody adding withal, that I am certain each of thefe 
little globes is at leaft compounded of fix and thijety 
others. 
Thefe little bullets being mov'd and fqueez'd toge- 
ther, and being at the fame time pliant, and: packed up 
into one compleat round form, reprefented fig. 7. 
From fuch a Scheme we may conceive hov/ the glo- 
bular parts of the blood of man and other animals ac- 
quire a roundnefs 5 but ,how the oval particles are 
compounded of tlie fix globes is not eafily appre* 
henfible. 
I have afferted formerly, that every one of the little 
globes, fix of which make up one globe, does confift 
of 6 other globes 3 and the more we divide fuch a 
globe of blood by our imagination into fmaller and 
fmaller parts, the little parts that enter into the com- 
pofition will fl:ill be unconceivably lefler. IVe won- 
dered to hear fome offer to trace fuch things to the firft 
beginning 5 for my part, fuppofing I could difcover 
the figure and fhape of parts lefler than a globe of 
blood by a thoufand millions, I fliould ftiU befarfrom 
reacliing the firft conftituent parts. 
As 
