"What strengthened me in this opinion was my observation"
In this letter, Leeuwenhoek accounted for how he acquired his specimens and how he studied them.
When, in the summer of last year, I was gathering the seed of oak-trees, which we call acorns, in order to examine the beginning of the plant from the said seed, I observed to my surprise that the gall-nuts of the trees were produced from the leaves. This appeared to me the more strange because I had previously thought that the gall-nut was a fruit of a tree, whereas I now saw that this gall-nut was produced only by accident on the leaves of the oak-tree.
What he "previously thought" was not different from the erroneous beliefs of his fellow citizens of Delft. The difference came from Leeuwenhoek's curiousity.
Upon getting home I examined these gall-nuts more closely, and found that each of them had in the centre a small cavity, in which was enclosed a small live worm, which had very little movement.
He didn't stop there.
When, after this, I again went to the Woods of The Hague to continue my investigations, I observed that these worms had changed into small flies.
Always the empiricist reasoning by induction, he concluded:
From these observations I then concluded that these little animals were produced in the following manner ...
He recounted the process as he understood it. Always willing to let evidence change his mind, he wrote several pages later:
But on continuing my investigations, until the latter part of October, I saw that I had been mistaken in my opinion; for I found, and observed very clearly ...
What strengthened me in this opinion was my observation that ...
After getting new evidence that changed his opinion, Leeuwenhoek seemed compelled to seek even more new evidence.
Since then, I have been out again, in the month of January, to gather gall-nuts from the young oak-trees whose branches were low near the ground. ...
I laid a few gall-nuts on my study, and now and then opened one of them. ...
I also enclosed 10 gall-nuts in a wooden box with screwed-on lid, which box I opened at the end of April.
A couple of weeks later, he finally wrote this letter, concluding this very long letter:
I have some further observations ready for despatch; but in order not to burden Your Honours unduly with my excessive writing I will break off here.