( 138 ) 
is to be met with in (everal Animals, tho' their Struflure 
be different; as in the Gt^^/ and Deer Kind; and very 
remarkably in a Woodcock, 
But we Will have done with the Guts^ to proceed to 
other Parts ; for their Comparative Anatomy is too large 
a Field, and would be too great a Digreffm, to engage 
in the Defcription of them m a Jingle 5ubje(ft. 
The Pancreas was large, having one part (if I mis-re- 
member not) running towards the Spleen^ and the 
other down by the Duodenum. 
The Spleen was Two Inches and half long, and One 
Inch in the broadeft Part, and was of a dark Red 
Colour. 
The Liver in this Animal was very large, of a brigiit 
Red Colour, CGnfiftingof Three Doles f ; Two of them f nb. 
were much larger than the third, which lay out of fight, ^^^^^* 
and was not to be feen, but upon inverting the Liver : 
and here we found not only at the Edges of ode of the 
hxgttLohes^ d^cp hcifures\ which rendered it jagged ^^f^^^ 
but alfb in the middle of the Concave part of the lamj 
Loh^ feveral deep Fijjures t ; PofTibly for this Reafon, J^d dd 
that fb it might yield and give way the better when 'tis 
inverted, as 'tis always, when this Animal hangs by its 
Tail, The Bladder * of 6a//htre was very large. The^c. 
Situation of the Liver and Spleen here, appeared as in 
other Animals. 
In the Vrinary Parts I did not obferve any thing pe- 
culiar or different from the ufual Strufture, unlefs what 
we fliall remarke of the Bladder oi Vrine. T\\t Kidney s\\i tab, 2 
of each fide were a little above an Inch and half long^Fig,!. 
about three quarters of an Inch broad, and of the Figure 
almoftofa Kidney-Bean.The Entulgenff Veins and Arte-^f hb. 
ries were very plainly feen : But on the infide of the Kid- ^ c 
neys, towards the upper Part, were placed the GlanduU 
Renales% or Renes Succenturiati, as they are called by||Da, 
fome. 
