144
part of m
r. Leeuwenhoeks Letter. To witt concerning the con
stituent
parts of Blood and milk. the
se by making v
se of a small peice of
Looking gla
sse plate (in
stead of the vsuall foot of the micro
scope) which
was very smooth & cleer and spreading a little of the Blood and .
milk in the top of it
were plainly . . . and looking again
st the flame
of a Candle were very plainly to be seen.
To wit Fir
st that the Blood consi
sted of two sub
stances the one
a conteining liquor
. . . vndetermined
. . . and indi
stin
gui
shable as to its parts flowing about and in compa
ssing the other -
which con
si
sted of an infinite number of exceeding small parts which -
were plainely perceiud to be globular, all w
ch. parts were very equal
as to bigne
ss and were seen vpon the turning of
the micro
scope to moue
to & fro very
. . . swiftly and very freely. they seeming to cro
sse one ano
ther very much and to moue confusedly though all ending the same way.
next he exhibited
. . . milk to be examined after the same manner when
in the like sub
stances were very vi
sible only w
th this Difference that
whereas the globular parts of the blood were /all/ of very
differing /equall/ magnitudes
tho
se of milk were exceeding Differing. the
se were exceeding white
. . .like little pearles whereas tho
se of the blood were red.
Then the Latter part of m
r. Leewenhoeks Letter was read wherein
the writer gaue an account of his obseruations on Phlegme -
wherein he had Di
scouerd the same globules as in the blood but that the
ve
sicles as he conceiud of them had Receiud some kind of corruption
and greene
sse, As al
so of a sort of exceeding small vermiculs in Pepper water not
one thousandth part as thick as a hair. but 3 or 4 times as long as thick
the
se shot very nimbly through
the water and Length of their shoot was but about
1/2 a hairs bredth. In old pepper water al
so he had found eels noe thicker than the
former & but one hundredth part in length of the length of an eel in
vineger -
Ref: CELL/RS/HF_146 © Centre for Editing Lives and Letters