Of Quadrupeds. 
Befides thefe fmaller Glands, the Jejunum and Ileum to- 
gether, are furnifhed with four or five Clufters, about as 
broad as a Two-penys $ and every Gland as big as Wallflower- 
Seeds. 
Where the Ileum enters the Colon, it hath a very thick 
white and Glandulous Body,or Pancreas Inteftinale : and the 
mouth of each Gland very apparent. 
The Caecum, of a prodigious fize$ above 3 a yard long,and 
and an inch and 3 over where widefh 
At the End of the Caecum hangs a certain Label, alfo con- 
tinuoufly hollow with the Caecum, and may be accounted 
pajt of it. Betwixt three and four inches long 5 and at the 
upper end, ? of an inch over 5 in fhape like a Man's Finger. 
Lined quite through with a thick Glandulous Bodyjike that 
in the end of the Ileum. 
All the reft of the Caecum very thin, and tranfparent : fo 
as being blown up, it looks like thofe Skins of Iceing-Glafs, 
formerly us'd for Tranfparent Flower-Works. 
This Gut feemeth at firft, to have many Valvule Conni- 
ventes. But by being blown up, is fairly reprefented one 
iingle Valve or Plate, ftretched out perpendicularly from 
the circuit of the Gut, and mofi curioufly winding, in a 
fpiral Line, from one End to the other. 
This Gut runs into the Colon, which is above a foot long, 
where wideft or next the Caecum, an inch over 5 at the other 
end 1 an inch. It hath a double Vinculum, one on each fide 5 
by which 'tis gather'd up into a great number of little Cells, 
contiguous one to another throughout. 
In opening this Animal, being juft dead, the Periftaltick. 
motion of the Guts, was very apparent, efpecially in this 
Gut. By means whereof, the feveral Cells aforefaid, were 
made reciprocally to move in and out 5 fo as while one 
moved and was convex inward, another next adjacent, mo- 
ved and was convex outward 5 and fo on by a kind of un- 
dulation, for feveral inches together. 
This Gut is very thick and Glandulous all over,the Glands 
(landing every where clofe and contiguous : fo that the in- 
fide of the Gut, looks like the Seal-Fijhes Skin. The Glands 
are not flat, as in the Guts above defcrib'd, but flanding up 
round and high, like an infinite number of Papillae : the 
Mouths of each vifibly open 3 from whence a Mucus may 
v eafily be exprefs'd, B 2 So 
