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Show 1250 me Of the ‘Hiftorie of Plants. Li B2. ~ Dine. ~_— OF| the Hiftory of Plants: 1251 ‘ghem. The floures pe tee thofe oforher Pulfes, ofcolour white : the cods are fome inchandhalfe thefe cods grow one at long, containing fome halfe dozen darke yellowor blackith {mall Peafe : My Worfhipfull friend D‘: cargent hath toldme, that many yeares ago he was in this place, aweanfed:his man'to pull away the beach with his hands, and follow the roots fo lone vatill hy fine Ervilia. neo, Penaand Leb:!call ivOchruss fylucftris, a cubithigh, being very flender, diuided into bran. fometimes growvp this of falkes The 2 bedrawne, purpofing to fet chem forth in that Workewhich he intended to haue publithed; ! 5 ifif Godhad fpared him longerlife. Now whether thefe Peafe be truly {0 calied.and be the famew: the Pit fyluefire Perenav, or different ; or whether they be ratherof the flocke of the z, “ho ae aioynt, on {hott foor- ftalkes comming forth of the bofomes of the leaues, and are welted on their growes with vs only in gardens, Dodo. broaderfide,which {tands towards the maine ftalke. This pen : gotfomeequall in length vntohisheight, yet could cometo no ends ofthem: hee br ought <A Shell thefe =: ' i to pestonaie gaueie waeretih ipwith him themto D*, Lobel, whowasthen liuing and he caufedthem to the tops of the ftalkes and ches, and fet vnorderly with many graffe-like long narrow leauies :on floures of a faire and pleafanr branches, vponpretty long foot-ftalkes grow pretty peafe-fafhioned re nine,ten, or iworoffome other Pulfe here formerly defcribed, I canaffirme nothing of yadda 4 3 xse , whereina ctimfon colour :which fallen,there followcods, long, fmall, andround die more round hardblacke fhininggraines : the root1s fmall,with divers fibres, but whetherit s haueleené 110 part ofthem, nor couldgather by any that had, any certaintie of heh! thsge f gueryetwould [not paffe them ouer in filence,for that 1 hope this may come tobe readiby fs wilde- in manyplace whenthe {eedis perfected, or no, as yet [haue norobferued, This growes Dodon.call this Lobeland Church. e Pancridg about grounds medow and pafture Withvs, as.in the , and by that s Diofcoride Of Catanance firft the tobe iudgeit partly both Epwum fylucftre s and they nipliaethéreabout, that may by fending me the things themfelues, giue me certaine sass “ee oftiem ; that fo { maybe made able, as I am alwaies willing, to impart it to others, feedis ripe in Auguft. nameitis viually called. Ir floures in lune and July,and the it in t benot frequently found, isno ftranger withvs ; for I havefound 3. a] The Temperature and Verines: Thisalfo, thanghi Thane not Hane not foundany thing written ofthe faculties of the two firft s but of Aphice,Galen Ithath long {lender ioynted creethé corne fields about Dartford in Kent and,fomeother places. pretty greene three cornered leauestwo ping ftalkes, diuided into fundry branches, whereon ftand he bofomes of thefe balan ringent facultie likeas the Lentill, and alfo is vfed tobe eaten like as it yetitis eo, hi it a ee powerfully, and heates moderately. The feeds (faith hee) a facultie hanean aftringent ot erefore parched, pegiey, ; wherefore roken, ane an beyted sas) ftay-fluxes of ithe belly. Wek y i (fa | odoneans) byj certaine experience, f that the 4phace hace here Ni defcribed ed hath i i es gat force andfacultie. + : ery Binde-weed. Outoft ata ioynt, in fhape and bignefle like thofeof the leffer Jeaues at each ioynt comes aclafping tendrel, and commonly together with it a foot-ftalke fome inchor more long, bearinga pretty little £3 cAphaca. peafe-fafhioned yellow floure,whichis fucceeSmall yellow Fetch. ded by a fhort flattith cod containingfix or fevenlittle feeds. This floures in Iune,Iuly,and Augutt,andforipens the feed. It isby Lobs and others thought to be the _4phace of Dia Cuap. 528. feorides, Galen, and Pliny : and the Pitine of The phraftus, by A aguillarde I finde mention in Stowes Chronicle,in Amm Of baftard ‘Rubarb. 1 Thilietrum, (ive Thalittrum mains. Gteat baflard Rubarb. 2 Thalidtrum minus. Small baftard Rubatb. 1555, 0facertaine Pulfe or Peafe,as theyterm it,wherewith the poore people at that time, therebeing a great dearth, were miraculoufl helped : he thus mentionsit ; In the monethot Auguft(faith he)in Suffolke,ata place by the fea fide all of hard ftone and pibble,called m thofe parts a fhelfe, lying betweenethetownes ofOrford and Aldborough,whereneither gre graffe, noranyearth was euerfeene; it ch inthis barrenplace fuddenly to {pring vpwit out anytillage or fowing,great aboundanee 0 Peafon, whereofthe poore gathered (as mc iudged) aboue an hundred quarters, yet rel ned fome ripe andfomebloffoming,asm cuer there werebefore:to the whichplac the Bithop of Norwichand the Lord ## éy, with others in great number,who found! thing but hard rockie ftone the {pace OF BNC’ yards vadertheroots of thefe Peafon + ¥™ : roots were great andlong,andvery fiveets Gefneral{o,de Aquati king mention, out of D'.Caj fpotted Englifh Whale, taken aboutt at Lin in Norfolke,alfo thus mentio! pectat,certo gquodaminloc peale : Pifa (faithhe) én Lttore nofiro Britannico quod Oriewtem[ circumfula, terra mCe Ort fordinmoppida, {axis infidentia (mirabile dittu) nulla Alburni us hemteewpore ANn015 55> Jponte nata (unt, adeo magna copia, vt fufficerent vel millil thepoore that yeare,without doubt gr us to good fuch did encreafe great their whichby am a rill | Maciffer artis, ingenique la gitor , many yeares betore; but were not obdferned n, which common) inventio their d quickne and them, of notice take hunger made them peopleis very dull;efpeciallyin finding out food of this nature, & The Defcription. § : a ; Lys : T He hathlarge leaues parted or diuided into diuers or lbaftard Rubarb oe Thalietrum er {mall leaues, fomewhat {nipt'about the edges; ofa blacke or darke green colour : the |