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Show a The Anatomy 3awith a moft wetranfp Boy rane is filled 16. §. The Concave of this Memb onan petzte a ng cutti asin 5 d forme is Seed the rent Liquor, out of w!hich yet better ina young Walnut. ~ and Tnfani-Bean, maybe feen; and boyling, into a tender white upon turn, to it ved obfer Beans 1 have Coagulum. Lig s Body or Seed-Bran§. Through thisi Membrane,? the> Lignou laft thoot downright two flenshee difttibuted ce inner Coat, at one into each Lobe of the Bean. s, ffring Naveltwo like , Fibres der ; are near the Tab. 4 fs. Jaces the> Lobes, i ‘abr fhootinto i Fibres where the faid nefs well enough remark’d: ras Radicle 5 and by their Blackifh {mall, as {carcely1 to be difcern’d. very fmall, fo very are r a lves es omf{elv but t the Fibers themfe Navel- places where the Yet ina Lupine, of the larger kind, both the the Bafis of the Radicle Fibres {hoot into the Lobes ( which here from are fairly vifible. For lves, themfe Fibres the and ) remote ig more of the Lupine, is prethe Seed-Branch, uponits entrance into the Coat two into other lefs5 thofe and es, Branch main fently divided into two and towards whereof fome underly, others aloft, run along the Coat, two oppofite, sts other end meet and are inofculated: where about, Specks of fhallow, round, and moft minute Cavities, an{werable to two Tabs 4. f.17- a Cartilaginous glofs, one in either Lobe, may be obferved 5 which ng of the Specks are the ends of the faid Navel-Fibres, upon the ripeni seed there broken off. Thefe Fibres from the Superficies of cach Lobe, divided into defcend a little way direétly down : prefently, each is two Branches, one diftributed into the Lobes, the other into the RaChapter is defcribed. Tab. 4 f+ dicle and Plume, in the manner as in the Firft brief accountof the a with only now fhall I Hiftory. the ‘And thusfar Generation of the Seed, as hereupon dependent , conclude this Dif An Account courfe. 18. ¢. LET USfay then,that the Sap having in the Root,Trukand of the Gene- Leaves, pafled divers Concoétions and Separations, in the mannerasthey ration of the are {aid to be perform’d therein s ‘tis now at laft, in fome good maSeed. I turity, advanced towards the Seed. 19. §. The more copious and cruder part hereofis again feparated bya free reception into the Fruit, or other Part analogousto it : beimg either fufficiently ampleto contain it, or at leaft Jaxe enoughfor its tranfpiration, andfoits due difcharge. The more Effential part is into the Seed-Brauch or Branches entertian'd. Which, becaufe they are evermore of a veryconfiderable length, and of aConftitution veryfine, the {aid Sap thus becomes in its Current therein as in the Spermatick Feffels, til) more mature. 20. § In thismature eftate, from the Seed- Branch. into the Coats of the Seed, as into the Womb, ‘tis next delivered up. The meaner part hereof again, to the Outer, as Aliment good enough, is fupplied. The finerpart is tranfmitted to the Iver; which being, as is faid, a Parenechywous and more {patious Body, the Sap therefore is not herein, asin the Outer, a meer Aliment 5 but in orderto itsbeing, by Fermentation, farther prepared, a1. g. Yet the Outer Coat, being on the contray hard and denfe ; for that reafon, as it admitteth not the Fermentation of the Sap fo well within itfelf; fo dothit the more promote and favour it in the Inners being Bounds bothtoit andits sap; and alfo quickneth the procefs of the whole Work inthe formation ofthe Seed. 22 §. Book I. 22. g. ofPlants. Nor doth the Outer Coat, forthe fame reafon, more pro= mote, than declare the purity of the Sap now contained in the Inner : For being more hard and denfe, and fo not perfpirable, muft needs fuppofe the Parts of the sap encompafledbyit, fince thus uncapable of anyevacuation, to be therefore all fo choice, as not to need it. 23. g. The Sap being thus prepared in the Inner Coat, asa Liquor now apt to be the Swb/fratum of the future Seed-Embrio; byfreth fupplies, is thence difchargd. Yet that it may not be over-copious ; which, becaufe of the laxity of the Inner Cozt, from whenceit iffues, it might eafily be: therefore, asthe faid Inner Coat is bounded without, by the upper Coat 5 fo by the Secundine, is it bounded within. Through whichSecumdine the Sap being filtr’d, or, as it were, tran{piring; the depofiture hereof, anfwerable to the Colliquamentum in an Egg, or tothe Semen Mulibre, into its Concave at lat is made. 24. §. The other part of the pureft sap embofom’din the Ravimlets of the Seed-Branch, runs a Circle, or fome progrefs therein 5 and fo becomes, as the Semen Mufculinun, yet more elaborte. 25. §, Wherein alfo, left its Current fhould be too copious or precipitant, by their co-aréwre and divarication where theyare inofculated, it is retarded 5 the nobleft portion onlyobtaininga pals. 26. §. With this pureft sap, the faid Ramulets being fupplied, from thence at laft, the Navel-Fibres thoot (as the primitive Artery into the Colliquamentum ) through the Secundineinto the aforefaid Liquor depofited therein. 27. §. Intowhich Liquor, being nowfhot, and its own proper Sap or TinGures mixed therewith, it ffrikes it thus into a Coagulum5 or of a Liquor, it becomes a Body confiffent and truly Parenchymous. And the fupply of the faid Liquor ftill continu’d, and the fhooting of the Navel-Frbres, as is above defcribed, ftill carried on, the {aid Coagulation or Fixation is therewith likewife. 28. §. And inthe Interim of the Coagulation, a gentle Fermentation being alfo made, thefaid Parenchyma or Coagulun becometh fuch, not of any Texture indifferently, but is thus raifed (as we {ee Bread in Baking ) intoaCongeries of Bladders : For fuch is the Parenchyma of the whole Seed. |