HAUL 
yamiong the correfpondents of Haller, who neverthelefs 
= him in the highelt eftimation, as a philofopher and a 
AS a vegetable phy pogit Dr. Hales is aogien to the 
hono His rem 
no experiments an 
to thofe of Du Hamel, Bonnet, and all that see followed. 
His ener of obtervation, and fidelity of relation, have 
dle n impeac 
pe] 
e Dr s at Edinburgh — three — 
a which ot — of this sritcle has bee een 
and which wa 
Gen. 237. Schreb. 
2 4, Mart rt. Mill. Di@. v. 2. Ait. 
Lamarck. Iluttr. t. 404. 
——— a 
» Juff. 
Kew. v. 2. 125. 156. 
-32.—Clafs nk wane 
Nat. Ord. Bicornes, Linn. Guaiaca 
_ Gen. C “Cal. Perianth fapeior mo vof oe leaf 
ar 3 its in four, un- 
STE 5 or Gightly fpreading, lobes. 
16, awl-fhaped, equal, ereét, ra- 
,.inferted into its tube, and con- 
ty 
B 
a 
a 
aS 
— 
ary, obovate, pointed at sade end, ; 
Seeds Tolitary from the bottom of each 
» flightly curved. 
f. Ch. Calys wis four teeth, fuperior. = Corolla bell- 
bap -cleft.. Drupa at with four gerne Nut of 
four — ae poses 
fit often scope 
FA. tetraptera. Linn “§ Pi. 6. aoe. Diff. 
_ £186. Curt. Map. t. = Sp Ellis in Ph hil. Tranf. ca 
ben eae f. A.—Leaves ovate, pointed. Wings of the 
ne Qe A. native of the rivulets in 
Eaath Can arclina, where Catelby oie i ity and figured it 
s vol. 1. t. t. 64. Dr - fent feeds t to Mr. Ellis in 
” when j was : England, } y the’ 
way ftyle. 
with ps fituated partly in the county of Sal 
of W 
HAL 
are alternate on downy footftalks, ovate ted, two or 
ies inches long, ferrated, downy berieadhe when young, for 
afterwards they are nearly fmooth, deciduous. Fruit, as 
well as the fowers, pendulous, crowned with the bafe of the 
It is faid the kernels are catable and very pleafant to 
~ tafte, but they are very {mall. 
. H. diptera. Linn. ~ Pl. 636. Cavan. Diff. 3387 
t. te Ellis as above, t. 22. f. B.—Leaves ovate, acute. 
Two eg fins of the ‘teuit very narrow,—Native of 
the fame country. We have already, in our biographical 
article > eae, adverted to the confufion which attends 
this {pecies, ee indeed the preceding, in the Linnzan her- 
ium. We protefs ourfelves entirely. ignorant of every 
thing in this int the ri except from the plate in Cava- 
nilles, who fufpects it to be a 
pom oy in errs ace were alw 
Magazine, as fuc 
valuab Ss 
HALESOWEN, in ‘Geography, a sdleahcdall and pa- 
Salop, and part aly int 
circumttance it occa- 
illuitrations render that work truly 
orcefter, from which. 
a 
fl 
il ahs macau ive 
sommes > in if pops to C Bri 
ftates, that the parifh of Halefowen is « ‘ div: ided into eight 
tow s, and five fubordinate manors.’’’ The foil is 
and fertile: 3 Sead § are fome fine oe and in the manor 
——. is the ae head of the river Stour. ad 
mis been obtained. in he hill townthip, and in 1745 was’ 
dug up ‘a valt foflil oak’’ The poft-way, fuppoted to be 
part of the Icknield-ftreet, pafles through part of this 
rifh. Oldbury, one of the hamlets, indicates y by et its 
antiquity ; and tradition fixes a caftle and town 
after the Norman ee Shropfhire part of oF this Pp 
was given to Roger de Montgomery. In the tim 
Hen it was 
rfeited to the crown 5 but king 
— is to Peter de | - feunded an al 
ae ee ° afterwards ae 
alef 
a priory o monitratenfians, valued at 280/- 13s. 2 2d.” 
This church ditphose: fome parts of ancient architeéture, 
monumental m In it were in- 
d John, lord | baron of Weoleigh, in the time 
of Richard = 3 fir Hugh Burnell, a great favourite with 
that monarch ; and fir William Lyttleton, who lived in the: 
time of Henry VI. Some fragmnentes of the abbey ftilt 
7 as goa Dr. Adam Sealife author 
