94 NOTES. 



P. 45, 1. I. guweom. Apparently for Gitlicorn. 

 Compare p. 7 : Lacterida, GiScom ; where Lacterida 

 on the same page is a Spm-ge, TiOvixaWos. 



1. 24. Frisgonem, fresgun, cue-hole. This should be 

 one-hole, i.e. cneow-holen. In Bartholomseus : ' fres- 

 gtmda i. bruscus,' 



P. 47, 1. I. Morella, morele, atter lo])e. Maurella 

 in Macer is doubtfully identified by Chonlant with 

 Solanum nigrum. He compares Dios. iv. 71 orpvxvos 

 fcrjiraios ; ApiJ. c, 74 solata s, strychnum ; Platear. S. 

 2, solatrum. 



P. 48, 1. I. Mirtus, ga5el. Probably Myrica gale, 

 the sweet Gale, called also Bog myrtle. LeecMoms, 

 ii. V. Gagel. 



P. 49, 1. 21. Hec emhroca, maythe. The plant is 

 Anthemis nobilis, Camomile, which was used for eye- 

 wash ; and emhroca, which is the Greek efj.l3poxn> means 

 an infusion, or as apothecaries say, Embrocation. Her- 

 harium Apul. xxiv. apud Cockayne, i. 120. 



P. 53, 1. 10. new tre, i. e. an yew tree. 



1. 16. ascer, i.e. acer. 



1. 24. Hec sorhus. The rendering of Sorbus,Sorbum, 

 and Mespila, seems to point to the Medlar, Mespilus 

 germanica L. In Virgil Geor. iii. 380, when the 

 cave-dwellers of the glacial world are revelling in the 

 warmth of huge fires and wine-cups of acidis sorbis — 

 the Service Tree is commonly understood, Pirus do- 

 mestica. 



P. 55, 1. 14. Hoc stragum. 'For fragum. 



P. 59, 1. 6. ' Sene folium estcujusdam arboris cre- 

 scentis circa Damascum.' Bart. fol. 268, verso. 



P. 60, 1. 5. Vermicularis, ston-croppe. So Bart. : 

 ' Vermicularis, crassula minor, stan croppe.' Mr. 

 Mowat asked a little girl at South Hinksey what she 

 called that plant (which was Stone crop) ; and she said 

 they called it Creeping Jenny. This starts a sugges- 



