( 6 ) 
Glands ) which conflitute each diftindLobe, and has the 
fame ftrudure as the Pancreatick Dud. Each Lobe is 
deprefled on its Tides, where it is joined to other Lobes ; 
and between the Lobes many Buccal Glands are inter- 
fperfed. 
In Calves fcldom more than fix or feven Duds admit 
any Probe ; when the Animal grows older, the Duds ap- 
pear more plain and open. 
In Sheep fix excretory Duds are always found in each 
external Maxillar Gland- 
In Dogs and Cats, &c. thefe Du^ls are fewer, in propor- 
tion to the fmallnefsof the Glands. Tis obfervable, that 
thefe Duds in Dogs open obliquely towards the Mouth, 
whereby the Saliva may be better mixt with the Food in 
Maftication ; which might be {wallowed unmixt from 
another ftrudure of Duds, in thefe Animals that fwal- 
low greedily. 
Dr. Wharton * firfl mentions the external Maxillar 
Glands. What he fays of them, is applicable only to 
their appearance in Men, in which Subjeds they are of 
the Conglobate kind, and very fmall, unlefs in S'crophu- 
lous and Venereal Cafes. ’Tis plain that he had not feen 
them in Brutes ; for in his Figures ( which were drawn 
from Brutes) no notice is taken of thefe Glands. He 
defcribes them as very fmall, and calls them Emundorics 
of the Nerves, which was the Notion ( in his time ) con- 
cerning the ufe of the Conglobate Glands; and the Sa- 
liva was faid f e Nervofo Gencrc. profundi . 
* Stcno j u fU y blames Blafius for afcribing to the exter- 
nal Maxillars an Excretory Dud opening into the Mouth, 
like the common one from the Parotid Gland. Yet Stcno 
( otherwife very accurate) does not truly defcribe thefe 
Glands, nor diftinguifh them from the Buccal, tho’ they 
* Cap. 21. 
* Ob/. Anat, p. 14. 
are 
t Cap. 2T. pag. 1 34, 
