L-r b.2. 



Of the Hiflorie of Plants* 



% 



— T'^Tn^fltlingular again ft the griefcs aforefaid . being tunned vp in ale and dtunke, it alfo 



* h the bead from rheumaticke humors flowing from the braine. 

 P 01 ?*/ . ..rrrfirU ho vied in water ftaieth the rermes 4 and boy led in mutton broth it helps wcake 



H (dent err ejf 



■XL hauc vfed to put it into ointments againft burning with fire,gunpouder,and fuch like* 



t .n.:, K»in<T honnfl in a hnnH1e_nrrhr»r»r a«herh<*« fnrfh<»nnr and eaten and drunk 



thin broth ftaieth the flux in women. 



c 



HAP. 



315 



OfLv. 





^ ThcKindes. 



Here be two kindes of Ivie, as Theoptrroflu* witneifeth, reckoned among the number of thofe 

 plants which haue need to be propped vp b for they ftand not of tbemlelues, but are faftned to 

 (tone walls, trees, and fuch like, and yet notwithftandingbothof a wooddy fubftance,and yet not 

 tobc placed among the trees, (hrubs, or bullies, becaufe of the affinicie they haue with climbing 

 herbes ; as alfo agreeing in forme and figure with many other plants that clirabe, and are indeed 

 firaplyV) be reckoned among the herbes that clamber vp. But if any will cauill,or charge me with 

 my promife made in the beginning of this hidory, where we tjiadc our diuifion, namely, to place 



hbourhood 





following 



on the ground. 



peth 



Of the greater or the climing Ivie there are alfo many forts j but efpecially three, the white,the 



Hcdcrajlcrilis 





1 



hfa 



1 



Hedera Helix. 



Clymbing or berried Ivie. 



Barren or creeping Ivie 



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3 



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 \ 



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V-' 



1 



^ ^f TheDefcripton. 



"c greater Ivie cl irabeth on trees,o!d buildings, and walls: the ftalkes thereof are 

 wooddy,and now and then Co great as it feemes to become a tree 5 from which ic fen- 

 deth a multitude of little boughes or branches cuery way, whereby as ir vrerc with 



Cccc armes 



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. 



4 





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