§ GO. LUXURIES. 199 



BuEE ("W. U.). Cultivating tte Clove Tree. Lond. 1797. 4°. 

 [Chalonek (E.), & Gr. O'GrOEMAN.] The Mahogany Tree; its 



Botanical character . . . Liverpool, [1851]. 8°. 

 JMtjkeay (J.). Palo de Vacaor Cow Tree of the Caracas [Brosimum. 



Galactodendron]. Lond. 1837. 8°. Ed. 2. 

 Bennett (Gr.). Introduction, cultivation, and oeconomic uses of the 



Orange ... [Sydney?] 1871. 8°. 

 JAbbla t Satnz de Andino (E.). El naranjo y demas arboles 

 confamiliares de las Aurantiaceas. Madrid, 1879. 12°. 



§ 61. MEDICINAL PLANTS. 



JThomson (Gr.). Short method of discovering the virtues of Plants. 

 Lond. 1734. 8°. 



JAechek (J.). A compendious Herbal. Lond. 1673. 8°. 



Forming Part 2 of Every man his own Doctor, with separate 

 register. 



MuNTiNG (A.). De vera antiquorum herba Britannica. Amst. 



1681. 4°. 

 Pomei (P.). Histoire generale des drogues . . . Paris, 1694. fol. 

 In English, History of Drugs, Lond. 1712, 4°. 



JPEAOHrB (J.). Some observations made upon the Eoot Cassum- 

 muniar, called otherwise Rysagone . . . Lond. 1679. 4°. 



Ed. 2. 1693. Author's name, and dedication to Sir Jonathan 

 Keate, Bart., omitted. 



Similar treatises in the same form, small quarto, and usually 

 extending only to 7 pages, were anonymously issued, bearing dates, 

 Lond. 1680-95, as follows: (b) Koot called Nean or Ninseng ; (c) 

 Brassflian root called Ipepocoanha ; (d) Angola seed ; (e) Virginian 

 Nutts ; (f) Bengala bean ; (g) Casmunar (above cited, Ed. 2.) ; (h) 

 Malabar Nutt ; (i) Maldivar nut ; (j) Banellas ; (k) Eoot called 

 Serapias, or Salep ; (1) Herb called Perigua; (m) Wood called 

 Nephriticum ; (n) Calumba wood, otherwise called Calumback ; (o) 

 Bermudas Berries ; (p) Barbado Seeds ; (q) Russia seed ; (r) 

 Mexico seeds ; (s) Herb Cassiny ; (t) Cylonian Plant. 



The last-named is signed James Mullins, which proves that the 

 treatise was either several years old, or that the author's name was 

 assumed, for Dr. MuUins died in 1686, nine years before. 



Dale, in his Pharmacologia, Ed. 3. p. 309, and elsewhere, speaks 

 of the anonymous author of these tracts as ' Marloe,' but there does^ 

 not appear to have been any physician of that name then living, nor 

 can I find any apothecary so named, and hence infer a mistake. 



