Lib. 3 



Of the Hiftoric of Plants. 



1*75 



forth fraall weakc branches or tender ftems of a foot high • whereon do grow at certaine diftances 

 rough Ieaues in fbape like thofeof the Mallow, not vnlikc to the leaues of the Goofeberry butTi • 

 on the top of each branch ftandeth one floure and no more 3 confiding of fiue fmall leaues of a dark 

 purple colour : which being fallen,the fruit fucceedeth, like vnto that of the Mulberry, whereof it 

 was called C6am*merus,dwaxfe Mulberry- at the firft white and bitter, after red and fomewhat plea- 

 lant : the root is long, fomething knotty • from which knots or joynts thru ft forth a few threddie 

 firings, t I take that plant to which our Author hereafter hath allotted a whole chapter, and cal- 

 led Vdccivia nubitpx Cloud-berrics,to be the fame with this ; as I (hall fliew you more largely in that 

 place* -j- 



4 RuhtuSaxatilis. 



Stone blacke-Berry bufh. 



4 CfjAmxmorus. 



>t 



4 c nam g.morut. v *" 



Knot berry bufli. , . f r y^ \ 



1 c-r'i) 



* 



t 





Y 









ir 



moftp 



•ii ^ a *P* s i s P' ance d in gardens : it groweth not wilde that I know of, except in the field by a 

 Village in Lancaftire called Harwood,not far from Blacke.burne. 



I found it among the bufhes of a caufey, neere vnto a village called Wiflerfon, where I went to 

 lchoole,two miles from the Nantwich in Chertiire. 



The ftone bramble I haue found indiuers fields inthclfle of Thanet, hard by a village called 

 iiirchinton,neere Queakeshoufe/omtimes Sir Henry Crips dwelling place. 1 1 feareour Author 

 romooke that which was here added in the fecond place,for that which he figured and defcribed in 



fourth) which I know not yet to grow wilde with vs. $ 





doloue 



s 



vpon 



n ~ w- -,-_ betheh 



England . 



They grow vpon Stane-more betweene Yorkefliire and Weftmei land, and 

 a mountaines. *» 



n 



tember. 



May and Iune with the Rofes : their fruit is ripe in the cod of Avg a( l 



ir V>s 



\.\ 



v 





