slings 
eorrofive fublimate of mercury in ee of wine, to which 
added. 
a 
ey 
_renders them b and the fmoke of a coal fire foon 
poils any collet ton & to which it has accefs. Heat alfo pro- 
motes the propagation of infefts, which are very perni- 
cious, unlefs the colleétion be poifoned as above recom- 
mende m3 
ie heeds of a working or publifhing botanift ac- 
quires Sai and ineflimable value, as being the repofitory _m 
of his authorities, the teft of his accuracy, and the corrector 
of his overfights and miftakes. Hence, the ufe of the Lin- 
nan and Dillenian herbariums, the vat colleGtions at Oxford, 
London, Paris, and elfewhere, accumulated by the various 
q 
Shan to be confulted, and no garden or Mibary, fupply . 
their place. 
HERBAULT, in in Gengra aphy, a town of France, in the 
department of the Loir nd Ch Cher, and chief place of a 
canton, in the diftri€&t of Blois ; 8 miles W. of Blois. The 
Place ‘contains 7065 and ‘the canton 105544 inhabitants, on 
+ kiliometres, in 21 communes. 
Academies, a reward, or fome 
good {tuff given toa horfe that. has as well i in the 
manege, 5 
Hersg, in Ge 
15 miles S. of Ve 
HERBELOT, Kien cued D’, in Biography, cele- 
brated for his Oriental knowledge, was born at Paris i ‘s 162 5: 
e made 
raphy, a'town of Italy, in the Veta 
: w language his great pur eies 
might the better come to the right u ceding of the Old 
Teitament, He went to Italy that be might have an oppor- 
the age. 
bol of fecretary, and interpreter of the : Oriental languages 
at Paris; This was after his return from a fecond journey 
to Italy ; and upon another vifit to that country, his repu- 
tation acquired him the notice of many perfons of eminence, 
Particularly of Ferdinand II., grand-duke of ees 27 = 
purchafed for him a valu able collection, of Ealtern 
mipts. It was in this country that he made a eae betw 
ment of his « Bibliothéque Orientale,”’ and upon being re- 
Paris by the celebrated Colbert, a penfion was 
on him, to eng rable: him't to continue his labours. He 
originally intended to his work with the Arabie 
¢ sep and sepia 
ol that of a his. pagep <n 
he royal profeliorthip of the ee aces ae ae 
continued till his death, which took place Boone at 
age of feventy. D’ Herbe eal = ak gene-. 
el szuition, and of an eftimation asa rs pate cnn 
fc) eee and pride; upr Pat charita- 
be “His rest work, fs pubbibed ia avi 1697, 2d 
thin re-printed in = ‘Mand, is a valt Z Tego? 8 
relative to the hittory, Biography; and: cul~ 
1682 
the life se viet I.—Bio og. ir 
HE ® 
toms of the Eaftérn nations, 
* this wo rk i 
RBEMONT, 3 in ipaianhie a a town of France, in © 
the anlar of the Forefts, fituated on a mountain, near 
a emoy; 20 miles W. of Arlon. 
ERBEN ee or HARBINGER, Ri ec HARBINGER. 
ue ERBE n the cies oat is ufed arriers to denote 
an application for # tothe difeafes in wiles particularly of thé” 
head and the anticor. 
Big bags being put into Aig middle of the horfe’s counter, 
fell and fibpure 
meg, » in Biography, countefs of Pem 
broke, was ay filter of fir Pit Sidney. She tranilated 
from the French a tragedy entitled Annius, 159 5 and ren- 
dered into Englifh fome of David's Pialms. She died in 
1621. The following well known epitaph was written for 
her by the celebrated Ben Jonfon : 
« Underneath this fable hearfe 
Lies the fubje of all verfe, 
Sidney’s fifter, Pembroke’s mother 
Death! ere thou haft killed another 
Fair, and good, and learn’d 
‘Time fhall throw a dart on soe a 
~ Herpert, Wit11aM, earl of Pembroke, was 
in 162 wa 
of the binge s houfehold. He died in the year 1630, and his 
poems were printed in 1660 
the nie Pe e party 
n the ete caufe, 
e died in 
He wrote an hiftorical account of the two laft years 
p, Lord, was 
3 née 
for a vifit to the continent, ying with him thofe 
ideas with which his kni the Bath 
and ceremonial, feems 
im many friends, ‘asa ge whom 
table pee fear At a feat of this noble- 
g hares = 
the En, a” fen oat the 
Onaga eo sla ‘Here fignalifec 
It confifts only of a piece of hellebore- 
