41 6 POLYADELPHIA POLYANDRIA. 



iphserical berry, firft green, afterwards red, and 

 foft and black when ripe, containing many red- 

 difii feeds. 

 It is a good vulnerary, the leaves readily healing 

 any frefh wounds, whence it took the French 

 name of Tutfan or Tout-Jain^ i. e. All-heal. > 



HYPERICUM fioribus trigynis, caule quadrate 

 herbaceo. Sp. fl 1104. {Ger. em, 5^2. f. i. Mo- 

 ris, hiji.f. 5. /. 6./. 10. Pet. herb. t. 60. f. 11.) 



St. Peter's Wort. Anglis. 



In moid paftures, and by the fides of ditches and 

 rivulets. It, VJI. 



The ftalk is a foot high, wing'd with four angles : 

 the leaves are oval, imperforate^ and have nine 

 nerves : the calyx is without glands : the petals 

 are marked towards the top with black glandu- 

 lar dots on the margin. 



perforatimi H. fioribus trigynis, caule ancipiti, foliis obtufis 

 3* pellucido-pundatis. 1105. Sj?. pi. [Ger. em. ^^(). 



f. I. Moris, hijt.f. ^. t. 6. f. i. Blackwelli. 15.; 

 St. John's Wort. Jnglis. 

 Achlafan-Challum chille. Gaulis. 

 In woods, thickets and hedges. 1;. VII. 

 The ftalk is a cubit high, and has two elevated 

 lines •, otherwife is round, fmooth, and branch- 

 ed. The leaves are oval and obtule, and marked 

 with fmall, black, glandular dots on the margin, 

 and if held up between the eye and the light ap- 

 pear 



