STRAWBERRY.| NATURAL HISTORY. 299 
pass tofore them, as it were leading the Storks, and with- 
stand with all their might fowls that hate Storks. 
Bartholomew (Berthelet), bk. xii. § 8. 
STORKS nourish their parents when oppressed with age. 
Minshew’s Dictionary, 5.7. 
Stover. 
Tempest, iv. I, 63. 
Stover, or Estover—Fodder. 
Minsheu’s Dictionary, 5.7. 
TuresH barley as yet but as need shall require 
Fresh threshed for Stover thy cattle desire. 
Tusser, “ November’s Husbandry.” 
Straw. 
\ 
Some Straw is kept to fodder of beasts, for it is first meat 
that is laid tofore beasts, namely in some countries, as in 
Tuscany. And the kind thereof is cold that it suffereth 
not snow that falleth to shed [melt], and is so hot that it 
compelleth apples for to ripen. 
Bartholomew (Berthelet), bk, xvii. § 65. 
Strawberry. f 
The strawberry grows underneath the nettle, 
And wholesome berries thrive and ripen best 
Neighbour’d by fruit of baser quality. 
Kine Henry V., i. 1, 6c. 
My lord of Ely, 
When I was last in Holborn, 
I saw good strawberries in your garden there. 
Kine Ricwarp III., iti, 4, 34. 
STRAWBERRIES do grow upon hills and vallies, likewise 
in woods, and other such places that be somewhat shadowy; 
they prosper well in gardens. Gerard’s “Herbal,” «v. 
[Evelyn (‘‘ Kalendarium Hortense’’) enumerates the follow- 
ing kinds: Common Wood, English Garden, American or Vir- 
ginian, Polonian, White Coped, Long Red, Green, Scarlet, etc.] 
