40, JOHN GOODYER . 



inch and a quarter broad, nickt or indented about the edges, and 

 hath one side longer than the other, as the first hath, and are also 

 harsh or rough on both sides, the barke or rinde will also strip as 

 the first doth : hitherto I have not observed either the flovi'ers or 

 seed, or blisters on the leaves, nor have I had any sight of the 

 timber, or heard of any use thereof. This kinde I have scene 

 growing but once, and that in the hedges by the high way as I rode. 



The Narrow-leaved Elm.^ 



betweene Christ Church and Limmington in the New Forrest in 

 Hampshire, about the middle of September 1624, from whence 

 I brought some small plants of it, not a foot in length, which now, 

 1633, are risen up ten or twelve foot high, and grow with me by 

 the first kinde, but are easily to be discerned apart, by any that 

 will looke on both. 



' Dodoens, 837; reproduced in Ger. emac. 1480, 2; copied in Parkinson^ 

 1404. 4. The leaves have been attacked by insects. 



