134 THE CLASSICAL PLANTS OF SICILY. 
unciali, flava, nitida, glaberrima, calyce persistente, longé 
breviori, suffulta; intüs viscida, amara, nauseosa, notante 
Hermanno maxim? deleteria: demüm  pulverulento-sicca, 
friabilis, undé, ut videtur, nomen specificum.—(p. 30.) 
Common on waste ground, along the coast of Sicily and 
Calabria; I observed it in particular at Messina and Reggio. 
LABIAT/E. 
94. Rosmarinus officinalis.— Common | Rosemary.— 77. 
Grac. vol. i. t. 14. 
AiBavwrig Diosc. lib. iii. cap. 87, and Theoph. lib. ix. cap. 
19. Both these authors mention two species. Asvdz0A/Savov, 
hodiè. Sibth. 
On hilly places, and in the dry beds of streams. 
95. Salvia officinalis. — Officinal Sage. 
EAcMogaxor.— Diosc. lib. iii. cap. 40.—EA)/ogaxog.— Theoph. 
lib. i. cap. 2.—Xpaxog vel 3gáxsc, species culta, apud Stack- 
housium. The apples or tumours on the Sage, gasxownduc, 
(i. e. opaxoumrix) the effect of puncture of a species of Cynips, 
are made into a conserve with honey, in Zante.  Sibthorp. 
* In Cretà ac etiam in quibusdam Apuli: et Calabriz locis, 
Salvia in cacumine gignit tubercula quzdam, gallarum instar, 
subalbida. | Diosc. Mathiol. 378.—(See Walpole’s Turkey, 
p. 249.) I have not heard of their being so used in Sicily. 
This sort varies sometimes with narrow leaves;—@. angusti- 
folia. 
96. Ajuga Iva.—Iva Bugle.— Fl. Grec. vol, vi. tab. 525. 
Xamomirug.— Diosc. lib. ii. cap. 175.—secund. Sibth. 
97. Teucrium Polium—White-leaved Germander.—Z7. 
Grac. vol. vi. t. 535. 
TléAsoy ógenpb». Diosc. lib. ii. cap. 124. 10x. Theoph. lib. 1. 
cap. 16.—Ilavayebyleror, 7 ducgavro, Holy-herb, or Amaranth, 
in Romaic, according to Sibthorp. It is called à» in 
this verse from Apoll. Arg. lib. i. v. 454,— 
DuAAdda, sudus Tord Tgirag abyiaroio, 
