Lid. i. Of the Hiftorie of Plants. j$g 



foac Hcrbarifts haue called SanicuU alpina pro rttbro : the leaues fhoot forth in the beginning or 

 theSpring,verythickeandfat,and arelikeaputfe or round lumpeat their firft com mine out of 

 tbe ground 5 and when it is fpread abroad,the vpper part thereof is full of veines or finewes,and ho- 

 uen vp or curled like Rmmctdut Lufitanicus, or like the crumpling of a cabbage ieafe ; and are not 

 onely indented about the edges, but each leafe is diuided into fix or more jagges or cuts, deepely 

 hackcd,grcenifh aboue,and of an ouerworne greene colour vnderneath,hot in taftejfrom the middle 

 whereof (hooteth forth a bar or naked ftalke,fix inches long } fomewhat purple in colour, bearing at 

 thetopa tuft offmall hollow floures,looking or hanging downewards like little bells.not vnlikein 

 forme to the common CowfIips,butofan*ne deepered colour tending to purple, hauing in the 

 middle a certaine ring or circle of white, and alfo certaine pointals or firings, which turne into an 

 i„>iA wherein is contained feed. The whole nlant f<s rmuwl » it-«r««» ..,;.!, ^ ,^..~i m- . ** 



hcadw 



ihc root is fibrous and threddy. 



woollinefle 



^J The Place, 



Tbcfc plants are fhangers in England • their naturall country is the Alpifh mountaines of Hel- 



riajrhrvtrrowin mv Garden. wnprpfhpvflnnrifT. pv^^inn-i,r nv ^„.D. »• t 



Biitterwort 



cth in our Eng ifh fqually wee grounds, and will not yeeld to any cukuring or transplanting : it 



ornwrrh efocciallv M a field cafdCrAcr.P.fnfr *nA a* n^ck« o r.-^ .w*VZ P . 



I 



. Weftmerland 



Harwood in the fame rnnnrv nn^rt* tr 



Preftdn in Aundernefle vpon the bog 



Wittles 



London,in Huntingdonfhire. | Itgroweth alfo in Hampfhire, and abundantly in many places 



a t 



^J The Time, 



They floure and flourifh from May to the end of Inly. 



Names 



£L^SS^f^^^^/CT 5**# *e Houre, « «bW» 



Pratling Parncll. 



fpotted 



called Pwguicula,oUhe fatneiTe or fulneffe 



uttenvorts 



and white root : but the laft name belongeth more properly to Solomons Seale. 

 They are hot and dry in the third degree. 



Temp 



f The Venues. 



the fat and A 



oilous Itivrp rJt th u k » w """" c uo vie co annoinc tne augs ot ttieir kwe with the fat and 



J their fhcepe, when for want of other food they 



■ « 



B 





■ 







h a p , 1 7 7* Of Fox ~g hues. 



% Tbe Defc 





Fthe?^ UC %"*! - h u purple fl . 0l,re is moft common, the leaues whereof are long nicked in 

 he tKlfla ^ g r ne ^ D ^ H \ e th ° fe of Mullein,but Icfler.and SSSSwS 

 0ne by another* r lght> { \° m the midd,c whcreof to th * ">P ftmd the floures fet in a 3 



*^ , «aii«a^feS t fe f "f S a UCh fm r ? thcr ' na "owe rj and greener,hauin S thenerucs or 



5 awngft ltjneither are the nerufis fmptnor fmuated ^ & > t & 



Vuu 3 5 4 We 



