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Show CL r Moifture may ftick upon the Thongs. which theyferape it off with Knives: Thisis done in the hotteft Time of the ee Ts which Reafon, the Labour of ¢g Ladanumn is exc flive, and a—_intole fince they - obliged to remain on the tains for whole Days together, in the ver Heat of Summer, or the par ee there any Perf this Labour, e é Monfieur Zouruefort alfo delaiaes the fame in his Travels, where he fays, That the Shrubs which produce the Le #2 grow upon dry fandy Hillocks, and that he obfervedfeveral Country-Felloyws in their Shirts and Drawers, that were brufhing the Shrubs with theirW hips the Straps whereof, being drawn over the Leaves ofthe Plant, licked upieafort of odor - 3, CrTREUM 5 Large Citron. . Crrxrorpes; vulgd Citratum, Florey. 1gno, plerumque turb tnato levi vi medulla, cortice odoratiffir Citro. ‘Hort. Piff Florentine Citron, ‘with large {weet Fruit, of a {weet- {melling Kind, = long Leaves 5. Crrrrorpes ; feu Citratum, Fi ucronato és recurvo, ¢ Piff Florentine Citron, hapointed aidit, which is recurve d, and a warted {weet-{melling . nd, 6. Cir RIOIDESfe uC itratum, Florentinum, e Hort. IPif Florentine Citron 1 {mall roundifh Fees with a tharp Tafte, Beas {melling ; feu Citratum, F/ ] ero. Hort. Puff. hefuppofes to be Part oF the nutritious Juice jing Florentine Citron, with Fruit coming of the Plant which exfudes thro’ the Pores of the Leaves, where it re s like a fattifh Dew, out of eachother. bere: ase fe yeral other Varieties of this in fhining D i Turpentine, h the Baglifh aecene have When the Whips are fufficiently laden with this Gre y take < K nife and ferape it yr the feveral Parts ae BE clean off t straps, ce it up into a Mafs a of Trees: And the Gardeners who of Cak differer es: ‘This is what comes vate them there, are as fond of introduto us a newVariety to their Collection, as the nun, ferous Balfamfticking upon the Leaves, w hic aiid i dayidafilt Pounds tw ces per or more, they fell for a Crown ont pot. ‘This Wo is rather eafant than laborious ; beca it muft be done in the hott eft Time ofthe Day, andi iim. purett Ladantn And yet the Subftance upon the 1, by the glewy i of the Leaves, is thereby de tained anne mixed therewith. But to add W kneadit up with avery fi 1e bi. in thofe Pa to teach thetmv hos It ; is The Rind is {moother, and the Wood lefs knotty, than either the Orange or on, and will take either Sort full as well as own Kind; which is what none ofthe other Sorts will do. And thefe Stocks, if rightly managed, will be very ftrong the fecond Year C , andcapable to receive any B CLE MAAT mbs up Trees w Henceit is alio obfequalus 5 nually increafed, as are any of our Fruits a Seeds, thereis like to be no End of the ae thefe, nor of the Orange and tho’ : ‘For the i CAVES being rd to the Skin, burnit into is in the Peftilence: and ( be cropp’din and bruis’d T ie moft “valuable Kind of thefe Fruits is , Which is in fo great Efteem, that e Fruits are fold at Florence for Two it will caufe This Fruit is not to be faft. ‘ c. mon or Ordiinary5 Cit es . Crrreu M5 dulci medu lji Sweet Citron. The pect . Crematitis ; five Fh C. B: Unieght W rhite c Hie1 Ciemariris ; caerulea, Great Wild Climber, or ’ The Soil ought to be much the fame as for the Orange-Tree, but not quite fo ftrong. The But 6 you part Flowers may be ply’d in By \ Situation in the Summer, though not to muchexpos’d to the Sun in the Heat of tbe oftener repeated. te are again remov'd ; carry’d in again fooner in the Autumn; 48 alfo to have a warmer and better- defended little water at each time, which muft be the will not be fo trong : But fhould let them remai Upright Blue Climber, 3. CLeMati1 a &bumitior, fle Spanifh Climber, with a whitifh they require a greater Plenty of Water in the Summer 3 and in Winter they fhould have but wife their Flowers Eyes; and then it matters not how {mall you divide them, for their fhould therefore have a warmerSituation in Shoots ftronger than thofe of the Orange, fo 4° a tion: But if the Soil is very dry, they fhould alevesys be new planted in the Autumn, other- preferve to every Off fet fome Repe tion: but fhall only remark, that thefe are fomewhat tenderer than the Orange, and Day. Andas their Leaves are larger, and theif win 25 the Spring. The Roots may be cut through their Crowns with a fharp Knife, obferving to to which I fhall refer the Reader, “to avoid Winter ; otherwiife, they are very fubject to i after j nore re they flower} the latter i rally Ctis'd. The beft Sx¢ aan for i Roots, is either in C er or E ary; either juft e their’ ¥E Branches decay, or before theyrife again in he Spring th They will grow almoft in any Soil or Situa= if the Soil be wet, it is better to deferit until each, and arefent as Prefents to the caft their Fruit. They fhould alfo continue4 little longer in the Houfe in the Spring, andbe M I } The feveral Sorts of Citrovs are cultivated much in the fame manneras the Oraynge-Tree 5 Citron- to. Crematiris Red creeping Clim 1, CLeMATITIs ; CLAVICLE, [Claviculus, Lat.] a Cla{per, planted from that Spot to divers other Parts of‘Italy, yet they are found to lofe much of that excellent Tafte with which they abound in thofe Plains, to it. 9. CLemArrrts ; carne a "Pore pleno. C. B. Blue Climber with a double Flower, or Double Virgins Bower ; walgé. or Tendril. And altho’ Trees of this Kind have beentranf- order to purify caerulea, vel purpurea Putple creeping Climber, or d will bave Strength to force themout vigc but in the Plain between Pifa and Leghorn: no C. B: roufly ; whereas it often happens, whenthefe and a reflex o inoculated into weak Stocks, they Cred ly die, or remain till the fecond } fore“aa t ey put out: And thofe that do fho ‘Clim the next Spring after budding, are oftentimes Yhe ”2d, and3dSorts die to the Surface fo weakashardly tobe fit to remain, as bei of the Ground every Winter ; but tl incapable to make a ftraight handfome Stem, are of long Continuance, arifing a which is the great Beauty. of thefe Trees, Spring. The 2d and 3d uf us about three orfour Feethi CYTRUL ; « Pepo. great Quantities of Flowers ;* but the ft S is of humbl Growth, feldom: rifing CLARY; vide Horminum, or Sclarea. eighteen Inches high, but in other y-men in England are of a Pear, Peach, &c. So that the Wasieties being Courts of Princes. 8) Crematiris ; repens. it being the {traighteft and freeft Single Virgins Bower ; had in Perfection in any other Parts of Italy when the wx TRE E « ee from Filth; becaufe 4 a have blown dity. The Common Citrom is by much the beft Stock to bud any of the Orange or Lemon 4. CLemartri fy! SLEMATETES 5 |[ylvefiri > hardy, enduring ae are | about and often continue to tifol Great W id Cimtian or vith undivided Leave 6. CLEMATITIS ; peregrina, foliis pyri in- C. B. Spanith Climber, or Travellers Joy, with cut Leaves, EMATITIs; Cana e albo. H. R. Par. trifolia den Three-leay’d Ca- nada Climber, with a white Flower. 1 until Oéfober ; which naeaitts them valuable, efpecially fince they very little Care in their Culture ; for their Roots may be fuffer’d to remain feveral Years undifturb’d » if we donot, want to part whtich Ww “ not in theleaft prejudice them. sth Sorts are found wild in moft FParts : Engl wd, efpecially the 4th, which grows upon the Sides of Banks, under Hedg |