Conglobate Glanduls are called 
thofe , that doconftft , as it were, of one 
continued fub fiance , having an even 
fuperficies • whereof there are many 
tn the i Mefentery , and in other pla- 
contra diftinguijht to thofe , tkat 
ces 
bear the name of Conglomerate 
G landisls ,which are made up of feve- 
rsil [mall Kernels, fuch as the Pan- 
creas, Salivating Glanduls, &c> 
Salivare Mxteritts ] paling from the Parotides (or the two chief Arteries that 
are on the right and left fide neer the Throat) into the Montand conveying the 
Spittle : Where he alfo gives an account of feveral other Veffels and Glanduls, 
fome about the Lips ; others under the Tongue •, others in the PaHate &c. To 
which he adds the Veffels of the Eye-lids , which have their root in the Glanduls 
that are about the Eyes, and ferve for the fhedding of T ears . He mentions alfo fe- 
veral things about the Lymphatiekveftels, and is of opinion, that the knowledge 
thereof may be much iliuftrated by that kind oil Glanduls that are called Conglo - 
bat a , and by their true infer tion into the 
veins • the miftake of the latter whereof, 
he conceives to have very much milled 
the Noble Ludovicus de Bills , notwiths- 
tanding his excellent method of diffeUion. 
And here lie obferves firft , that all the 
Lymphatic^ veffels have fuch a commerce 
with the. GUncms, that none of them is 
found in the body, which either has not its 
origins from y oris inferted into a Glan- 
dule : And then, that Glanduls arc a kind 
of Strainer sfio form’d, that whilft the Blood paffes out of the Arteries into the 
Veins through the final! Capillary veffels, the Serous parts thereof, being freed 
from the Sanguineous, are by vertue of the beat expell’d through fit pores into 
the Capilaries of the Lymphaticks 5 the dire&ion of the-JV*rv« concurring. 
Of the two annex’d E fifties, the Firft gives an account of the diffe&ion of two 
JRaja'j or Skates , and relates that the Author found in the bellies of thefe Fillies 
a Haddock, of i f fpan long,and a Sole, a Plaife, and nine midd'e-fized Sea-crafjhes ; 
whereof not only the three former had their flefh, in the bines ftomack , turn’d 
into a fluid, and ihe Griftles or Eones into a foft fubllance , but the Crafi/heshzd 
their fhels comminuted into very final! particles, tinging here and there the Chyle 
near the Pylorus-, which he judges to be done not fo much by the heat of the Fi- 
fties ftomack, as by the help of fome digefting jiiyce. Coming* to the ZJterus of 
thefe Fifties, he takes occafion to examine, with what ground feveral famous JVa- 
turalifls and Anatomifts have affirm’d, that Eggs are the uterus expofed or ejefted 
out of the body of the Animal. Taking a view of their Heart , he there finds but 
one ventricle, and difcourfesof the difficulty arifing from thence. As for the Lungs, 
be faw no clearer footfteps of them in thefe , than he had done in other Fifties : 
but within the mouth he trac’d feveral gaping figures, and found the reeeffcs of 
thzGills fo form’d, that the water taken in at the mouth, being let out by thefe 
dores cannot by them re-enter, by reafon of a skin, outwardly palling over every 
bole, and covering it.Wbere he inti : mates,that though Fifties have not true Lungs, 
yet they want not a Succtdaneum thereto- to wit, the Gills . and if water may be 
to Fifties , what Air is to terreftrial Animals, for Refpiration : afferting , chat 
whereas nothing is fo neceffary for the confervation of Animaliife.asa reciprocal 
A ccefs and R eccfs of the Ambient to the fanguineous veffels, tis all one, whether 
that be done by receiving, the Ambient within the body , or by its gentle palling 
by the Prominent veffels of the Gills. 
The other IT */?/<?, contains fome Ingenious Obfervations, touching the way, by 
which the Chicken, yet in the fthell,is nourifti’t, v.idel. not by the conveyance of 
the Tolkfmio the Liver by the V'mbilual veffels , for into the Stomack hy the 
Mo-utk} 
