112 New Principles of Gardening. 
3. The Temperature and Virtues. 
The Leaves and Flowers are of the fame Temperature as the 
Borage,-and their Virtues alfo. 
. 4. The Parts for Ufe. 
The fame as of the Borage. 
s. The Quantity is at Pleafure alfo. 
6. Ihe Cultivation. 
Tis encreafed as the Borage from Seed, but its Root doth 
~ not die in the Winter as the Borage, wherein is the only dif- 
ference between them. 
$.E C 4. 3am 
Of Burnet. 
1. Its Names. 
“7 ™ F Burnet there are two Kinds, the one called Garden Bur- 
net, and in Latin Pimponella Hortenfis, and the other 
Pimpinella Sylvefiris or wild Burnet. 
The later Herbarifts call Burnet Pimpinella Sanguiforba, that 
it may differ from the other, and yet ’tis called by many San- 
Luiforba, and Sanguinaria. 
~ Gefner chufes to call it Peponella of the {mell of Melons 
to which it is like, and by others ’tis called Pimpinella, or 
Bipennula, and Solbaftrella; in High Dutch ’tis called Kol- 
bleskraut, her Gots Bartlin, Blutkraut, Megelkraut, in French 
Pimpennelle, Sanguiforbe, and in Englife Burnet. 
2. The Defcription. 
The Leaves of Garden Burnet are very fmall, indented, and 
thick fet upon fingle Stems or Ribs, each Leaf oppofite to an- 
other, and withal fomewhat hairy. y 
The Stalk rifes from the Head of the Root, bearing divers 
of thofe compofed Leaves on its Sides, dividing themfelves 
ee into 
