. v 





"J 



o 



An Appendix to 



Whortles 



are of 



greene vntill they be full ripe,foas when the ripe ones lookc red tL> „„,; y are . a Ver y Pale wh;^ 

 * Cloud-berry afluredly isno other than Knout-berry J the VMl P e on « looke 4ite . hltc 



#«&•// Primrofe groweth in Clapdale. If M l #«£<?* found it th • 

 luxurious floure, for now I am well afliired no fuch is there to be feene bwfr f? m ? x ? aord ^y 

 our gardens. uc iccne, dw it is only cherifhed 



Gerard faith many of thefe Northerne plants do grow in Crag-clofe In th, Mn « " 



and village neere vnto any craggie ground both with vs and in \\>ftmerlanit Nor I th r euer y "*ne 

 whereby Gerards Crag- dole is kept clofe from our knowledge * ue clofes fo called, 



* • ■- ii I 



/* 



berry 







* t 



<fi 



J 



faith 5 one of the brambles, though without any prickles) hath roots as frail 



cfcr the ground, of anouerworne red co 

 illockes tufts of fmall threddy firings 



;vs 'in the North, and 

 i " perhaps, as Gtmd 



as packe-thred, which 



joynts putting vp fmall 



ftalks rather tough than wooddy,halfe a foot Y^ooJ^S^^^^ 9 

 or three leaues of a reafonablcfad greefle colour, with foot folks an inriM^ J? 8ro " r|wo 

 without order : the higheft is but Ii!tle,and ^^^^^^^^^'^ 

 <»"ofnerues^ 



deeper than the reft,wherby the whole leafe is lightly d iuided into fine portTonS fht op of t 

 fta ^Ikecommethonefloureconfiftingoffoure, fometimes offiuc^apicct^W^tt 

 der.and rather crumoled than olainr. with fnm^ f™, n,™ ,^u^„ .i^j. :i.v. ITT* v V" tea V a ren - 



red ofXr* uske r ^ ,ea 7rif of ' m ? ch wh , cn ^ floure fades > C0 ™ eth * ^ 



£rW ?«S « g I T ?? ° f ' u C b Tu Cj 3S ° f ci S bt ' cen > or twc K Crimes of feVer, a P n d 

 perhaps through fome mifchance but of three or two,fb joyned, as they make fome referable of 



Sun. 



fruit ts firft whitifti greenerafter becommeth 



1 1 groweth naturally in a blacke moift earth or moiTe, whereof the countrey maketha fewell wee 

 call Turfe,and that vpon the tops of wet fells and mountaines among the Heath, mofle,and brake : 

 asaboutlngleboroughinthe Weft part of Yorke- (hire, on Graygreth a high fell on the edge of 

 Lancafhire,on Stainraor fuch a like place in Weftmerland,and other fuch like high places. 



late in Iuly. 



thebeginningofl 



berries hauc a ha 





«/? 



wholly \hmng them by me, I foillgiucyoH them w 



f tinted before fuch time as we receiued aH the figures ft 

 itted f thefe following in their fitting f laces :6ut thinking it mtf 



they he long. 



ference to the fL 





* 



AuguftlaftwhilesthisworkewasinthePreflejand drawing to an end,I and |M r WiBim 

 Broad were at Chiflel-hurft with my oft mentioned friend M r George Bowles ^aM going ouer the 

 heath there I obferued this fmall Sfartum whofe figure I here giue,and whereof you (hall find men- 

 tion,in the place noted vnder the title of the figure ; but it is not there defcribed, for that I had not 

 Teen it,nor could finde the defctiption therof in anv Author,but in Dutch,which I neither had,nor 

 — J "■ — '•-""- ' * * ' ' e Matweed hath fome fmall creeping ftringy roots:on which grow fom. 



ng of three or foure leaues, as it were wrapt together in one skin,biggeit 



fmaller 



wherein 



(whereof the Ion 



growes vp a fmall graflie ftalke,fomehandfull or better high,bending backe the top, 

 two rowes of fmall chaffie feeds. It is in theperfe&ion about the beginning of Aug 





Fi^Cls. 



