[ 8 *i ] 
This Bone unites to the Vertebra of the Back, and 
the Scapula of the Left Shoulder, from whence it 
difengages itfelf again, and continues diftind, till it 
divides into Two towards the Small of the Back, and 
fixes itfelf into both the Hip-bones behind. The 
Vertebra of the Neck and Back are one continued 
Bone. 
In the fiefhy Part of his Thighs and Buttocks Na- 
ture feems to have fported herfelf, in fending out 
various Ramifications of Bones from his Coxendix 
and Thigh-bones, not unlike the Shoots of white 
Coral, but infinitely more irregular ; fome behind, 
and fome before,- fome in Clumps and Clufters, and 
others in irregular Shoots of Eight or Nine Inches in 
Length. You cannot pafs your Hand between his 
Two Knees, which incline much towards the Right, 
his Left Shoulder having been the higheft. One of 
the Bones of his Left Arm was once broken by a 
Fail, and Nature has fhot out another Bone a little 
above the bendinu of the Arm, which unites to the 
broken Bone, and makes it much ftronger than it 
was before, though the Bone feems more liable to 
decay about the Place where it was formerly broken. 
All the Cartilages of his Bread, Four only excepted, 
were turned to Bone. Thefe Four ferved to move 
his Bread in Rcfpiration. 
Our of his Heels there frequently grew Bones like 
the Spurs of a Cock, Two or Three Inches long, 
which he fhed as a Deer does his Horns. When he 
was di Reded, there was a Bone found in the fiefhy 
Part of his Arm, quite diftind and difengaged from 
any other Bone ; it is very thin, about Four Inches 
long, and the Fourth-part of an Inch broad, with 
