OCR Text |
Show The Anatomy 4d {> become a of Plants. wronoht more ea will Jl:moreeahigher * wrought, Liquor L: As < Liquor firft receiv'd, and to become a hig fily mount upwards.And moving 1n the Pith,elpecially in the oie or Hive sd. asin the Arterys, in equal altitude with the upper-LnferRopes pee ‘t volatile parts of all will {till continue their direct af es ee Tew .. But thofe of a middle nature, and, as not set mee Sa ahien than thofe beneath them, not to defcend ape + ae will ee ‘fom the Pith towards the Infertions in a Moneither 9 n ee both Through which Injertions (feeding the Lignous Hoe aah Body in its paffage) 1t1 s, bythe next fubfequent S«p, difcharged off intoJ the Corti rats and fo into the Sap- Fibres themfelves, . es the } back again.. Wherein, being ftill purfu'd by ah fromthe Center, and moreoccurring from the Circumferenes, onan s the lower Ixfértions, it thus defcends. Through ee een ith part ofthe sap afrefh imbib’d from the Earth,it re-enters the L. into Pith, f From whence, into tr > Cortical Body, 4 and frem thence > . the Pith, the cruderr part thereof, is reciprocally part thereof, reciprocally disbursd disbursd 35 while the moft Volatile, not y afcendeth towar ding ing the the help helg of a Circulation, > more direct CHAP. II. Of the TRUNK. Villge SV ING thus declar’d the degrees of Vegetatioz Lx) in the Root 5 the continuance hereof in the Trunk all next be fhew’d: in order to which, the Parts whereofthis likewife is compounded, we fhall firft obferve. Q 1. §. That which without diffeGion thews it Hd telf, is the CoarSure: I cannot fay of the Root, nor of the Trwk 5 but what I choofe here to mention, as ftanding betwixt them, and fo being common to them both; all their Parts being here boundin clofer together, asin the tops of the grown Roots of very many Plants, is apparent. 2. §. Of the Parts of the Trunk, the firkt Occurr ing is its Skin : The Formation whereof, is not from the Air, but in the Seed, from whence it is originated 5 being the production of the Cuticle, there invefting the two Lobes and Plume. 3. §. The next Part is the Cortical Body; which here in the Trunk is no new fubftantial Formation; but, as is that of the Root, originated from the Parenchyma of the Plume in the Seed 3 andis the increafe and augmentation thereof The Skin, this Cortica only Tab.3. f. qt, l Body or Parenchyma, and (for the moft part ) fome Fibers of the Liguons & 4. mixedherewith, alltogether make the Barque. 4. §. Next, the Lignous Body, which, whether it be vifibly vided into many fofter Fibers or {mall Threads, asin the Bean, diFen- Tab.3. fut zel, CHAP and molt Herbs; or that its Parts {tand more compa¢ t and clofe, fhewing one hard, firm andfolid plece; as in Trees; it is, in all, one and the fame Body; and that not formed origina lly in the Truwk, but in the Seed 5 being nothing elfe but the prolongation of the Seminal Root diftributed in the Lobes and Plume thereof. 5. §- Laftly, The Infertions and Pith are here origin ated likewile from the Plume, as the fame in the Root, from the Radicl e: So that astotheir Subftantial Parts, the Lobes of the seed, the Radicle and Plume, the Root and Trunk are all one, 6. §. Yet fome things are more fairly obferv able in the Trunk. Firft, the Latitudinal fhootings of the Lignous Body, which in Trunks offeveral years growth, are apparent in fo many Riwgs, as nly known. For feveral young Fibers of the Lignous Body,is commo as in the 7Tab 3. fi Root, fo here, fhooting in the Cortical one year, andthe {paces be- & 8, twixt them being after fill’d up with more (I think not till) the next, at length they become altogether a firm compact Rings; the Perfection of one Ring, and the Ground-work of another, being thus made concomitantly. 4, |