the Carotid Artery in a young Sheep, we inferted a Silver- Pipe in- 
to the Quills to let the Blood run through it into a Poring er, and 
in thefpaceof almofta minut^ about i 2. ounces ef the Sheeps- 
blond ran through the Pipe into the Pbringer $ which was fome- 
what to direct us in -the quantity of Bloud now to be Transfus’d 
into the Man,' Which done/when we came to prepare the Feme in 
the Mans Arme, the Veine Teem’d toofmallfor that Pipe, which 
we intended to infert into it •, fo that we imployed another, about 
one third part lefte, at the little end.Then wd made an indfion in 
the Veine, after the Method, formerly publiftit Numb, 2$ - which 
Method we obferv’d without any other alteration, but in the 
fhape of one of our Pipes 5 which we found more convenient 
for our purpofe. And, having open’d the Veine- in the Man’s 
Arme, with as much eafe as in the common way of V ena^-fedti- 
on> we let thence run out 6 or 7 ounces of Blood. Then we 
planted our filver-pipe into the faid Incifion, and inferted Quils 
between the two Pipes already advanced in the two fubje&s, to 
-convey thejrteriall blond from the Sheep into the Veine of the 
Maxi; But this Blood was near a minnt^ before it had pad through 
the Pipes and Quills- into the Arme \ and then it ran freely into- 
-dies Mans veine for the fpace of 2. minutes at l£aft% fo that we 
could feel a Fttffe in the faid veine juft beyond the end of the Sib 
ver-pipe ^ though the Patient faid, hedid not feel the blood hoi 
(as was reported, of the fubjedlin the French Experiment,) which 
may very well be imputed to the length of the Pipes, through 
which the blood palfed, lofing thereby fo much of its Heat, as 
to come in a temper very agreeable to Venal Blood, Andas to 
the quantity of Blood receiv’d into the Man’s Veine, we Judge , 
there was about ^.or 10. ounces : For, allowing this pipe fleffe, 
than that, through which 1 2. ounces pafs d in one minute before, 
we may very well fuppofe^it might in two minuts conveigh as much 
blood into the Veine, as the other did into the Porringer, in one 
minuts granting withall, that the Bloud did not run fo vigoroufly 
the fecond minut, as it did the firft, nor the third, as the fecond, 
ire, But, that the Blood did run all the time of t'hofe two mi- 
notes, we conclude from thence 5- ^^becaufe we felt a PulCe 
daring that time » £ econdlj ,.b eea ufe whea upon the Man’s faying, 
' • ■ - T - • ' • : He- 
