ipo The ^!S(jitural Hijlory 
and. that by fome error in her procedure, one^ of each of thefe^ 
might be thruft into the belly of the other (as 1 fuppofe it hap- 
pened in fome meafure in the cafe of Lazarus Collorech and his 
Brother Baptifl^^ over which we may eafily allow a ikin to be fu- 
perinduced. But that ever any fuch fecond fddtu^ vi^as brought | 
into tlie world, living after the firft, we have no z;?///?;?^^, except \ 
this calf of Newington maypafsfor one^ which is wholly left to > 
the re^^ers- judgment. For my part, lam rather inclined to 
believe that the Cow might take Bull at ten or eleven weeks old, j 
that being the leffer wonder of the two, efpecially having lately : 
received news out of the Country from an intelligent Ladj^ that 
the thing is not fo ftrange, but pofTible enough. 
44. Hither alfo muft be referred the three calves brought firth 
by a cow atone time, thatl met with at Hardwick, not far from 
Biffeter^ which though a produdion not frequent, yet is as much 
remarkable in that they became all grown cattle^ and fo ftrangely 
alike^ that their very orrner himfelf fcarce knew them afunder, 
much lefs could J, though I obferved them ftri6:ly : whence I was 
firmly convinced, that fimilitude was a concomitant as well of 
Tergemini as Twins^ and held as well in Brutes as rational Ani- 
mals, 
45. Nor can I pafs by without admiration, the Deer of Corn- 
hury Park^ which before His MajeHies wonderful reftoration, be- 
ing (in partatleaft) turned into a Cony-warren^ the Deer upon it ., 1 
hzd 2^\dfvarf I) eads, the moft of them irregular, as in Tab. 10. ,J 
Fig, 13. but if any of them were uniform, as in Tab. 10. Fig, j 
1 4. yet they were ftill far fhort of growth, feldom exceeding 8 or i 
I o inches long, though the Deer themfelves were well enough 
grown, and warrantable ; the two that bore thofe engraven heads^ 
being both of them two years a Buck, atleaft, and in all other re- 
fpedts well enough liking: which yet as foon as the IF^rrew was 
deftroyed by the prefent Fropietor^ the Right Honorable the Earl 
of Clarendon came again, to hzve 2ls fair branched- heads as any 
Deer whatever in the ad joyning Forreft : Which slrange alterations 
I cannot guefs to proceed from any other caufe than the infefvion 
of the grafs by the urin and crotizing of the Conies^ which being 
hot and dry muft needs abate the moifture of the Deer^ which 
fuppiyed matter for the fair heads wherewith before and lince ' 
^iho.Barthol.Amtom.Med.rar.HtJl.66' \ 
they 
