[ ] 
wardly Teems to be nothing elTe but the Abdomen 
with the Legs? thefe are well-fhaped and propor- 
tioned, with the Toes, and the Beginning of the 
Nails? the Right Foot however is, as it were, crooked, 
and bending inwards. Having opened it, I found 
indeed but one Cavity, which in the upper Part 
contains a fmall Bladder. There is not in all the 
Cavity any thing befides a Bit of Inteftine, the two 
Kidneys, the Bladder, and the Right Tefticle, which 
lay upon the Ring. The Flefh was hard, and, as it 
were, carcinomatofe. The Navel-ftring went in a 
little higher than naturally, and a little towards the 
Right Side, entering into the Inteftine. There is a 
llender Inteftine of about 14 Lines in Length, pro- 
ceeding from the fame Place, where the Navel 
entered into the Cavity ; next comes the Caecum 
with its vermicular Appendix, the Colon and the 
Re^umyt\\z Whole together of the Length of about 
two Feet. Thefe Inteftines go from above to below 
in Zk-Zac, and are attached to the Spina ^orjt. 
There is no Footftep of the Heart, the Lungs, the 
Stomach, the Liver, the Spleen, the Pancreas, the 
Mefentery ; all that is wanting. The fmall Bladder 
I mentioned was flefhy, and contained fome Sero- 
jfity ; it is attached .to the firft: of the Vertebras of 
the Neck. This Beginning of the Spina is bent 
forwards like a Bow, and forms the Monfter’s Round- 
nefs from above. The bended Extremity kept the 
little Bladder, as it were, under, and fhut up in the 
Cavity clofed up by the Ribs. This Cavity was to 
form the Thorax, but the Sternum was wanting as 
well as the ^Diaphragm, 
‘Def- 
