He thought, he had enough, we drew the pipe out of his Veine, 
^eSteps-bloud ran through it with a full team 5 which it had 
not done, if there had been any flop before, in the {pace of thofe 
two minutes 5 the bloud being fo very apt to coagulate in the 
Pipes upon the leaft flop, especially the Pipes being fo long as 
threeQuills. 
The Man after this operation, as well as in it, found him-' 
Self very well, and hath given in his own Narrative under his own 
hand, enlarging more upon the benefit, he thinks, he hath recei- 
ved by it, than we think fit to own as yefi He urged us to have 
the Experiment repeated upon him within three or fourdayes al- 
ter this 5 but it was thought advifable, to put it off fomewhat 
longer. And the next time, we hope to be more exaCf, efp ea- 
sily in weighing the Emittent Animal before and after the Ope- 
ration, to have a more Juft account of the quantity of Bloud, it 
toll have loft. 
A Relation 
Of feme Trials of the fame operation , lately made m 
France.- 
1* M. D^^Profeffor of the Mathematicks and Natural Pbtlofo- 
phy at Paris , in a Letter of his to the PMfier relateth. That 
they had lately tranfmitted the Bloud of four Weathers into a 
Norfe of 26. years old, and that this Horfe had thence received 
much ftrength , and more than an ordinary ftomach.- * 
2. The fame perfon was pleafed to fend to the fame hand a 
Printed Letter^ written to the Abbot Bour delot by M ^Gadroys^ be- 
ing an Anfrver to a Paper of one M* Lamy^wad confirming the 
Transfofm of Blood by New Experiments* In this Anfrver the 
Author is vindicating the T ransfttfion from Objections 5 where 
firft he takes notice, That, whereas the ohje&or undertakes to 
refute the Experiments made, by ftmple Ratiocinations, it ought to 
be confidered, that the guodlibeticall Learning of the Schools is 
■capable enough to find Arguments for and againfl all forts of Opi- 
nions, but that there is nothing, but Experience , that is able to 
Mmm 2 give 
