celling therein the blood of the Vein, The Calf, When drefs’d » 
had , by the information of the Butcher , as little blood as the 
Sheep *, and wefaw him look whiter, than ufually they do in the 
ordinary way of killing, 
2. I took out 45 ounces and better , of blood , out of the Ju- 
gular Vein of a Sheep, of alefler fize than the former 5 by which 
time 3 the Spectators , as well as my feif 5 found her exceeding faint, 
and fome thought her pafs’d recovery , without a fupply of blood. 
Then I convey’d blood from the Jugular Vein of a Calf into that 
of the Sheep, for thefpaceof 7 minutes , when we did believe, by 
the continuance of a goodftream from the Calf, that the Sheep 
had already received more blood , than die had loft. Whereupon 
wefet her free ? and die had no fooner got her liberty, but feeing 3 
Dog near her (which was a Spaniel , that had formerly differed the 
tranfmiflionof Sheeps-blopd into him) die butted with great vio- 
lence at him three or four times ■> not appearing at all concern’d at 
what (he had endured in the Experiment. We keep this Sheep 
alive ? die being fent to grafs again , and Teeming hitherto very 
ftrong andlufty. . 
T he Calf was much larger than the Sheep. We bled the Calf 
to death , and received from him fix Porringers full of blood , af- 
ter the Sheep had been fuppleid , each Porringer containing 
ill ounces of water. The Sheep loft four of the fame meafures 
full of blood 5 which being fupply ’d by that of the Calf , we 
reckon , that the Calf loft 10 fuch meafures in all. 
An Account 
Of another Experiment of Transfufion , viz. 
of ‘Bleeding a Mangy into a Sound Dog. 
this was made by Mr, Thomas Coxe, and imparted likemfe 
to the Royal Society in manner following, 
I procured an old Mungrell Curr 3 all over-run with the Mainge* 
of a middle fize , and having, fome hours before, fed him plenti- 
felly with Cheefe-parings and Milk, I prepared the Jugular frith 
Nan 2 $$ 
