ASUfPLEMiUtto 



As to peafe, the earlieft and beft that I 

 know of in England Is the feen hotfpur, 

 fo caird from a place of that name near 

 the T>eviz€Sy where tho' above eighty 

 htiles diftant, yet they have them as 

 foon as any where about Londdn. 



This kind of pea, is, I doubt not?, by 

 this time plenty enough to be had in the 

 feed (hops in and about London ; but if 

 notjthey may be well furnifhed with it by 

 Mr. Matthew Figgens at the Devizes 

 eminent dealer this way. Where are alfo 

 to be fold fome of the beft fruit and fo- 

 rcft trees, that the Weft, or perhaps any 

 other part of Englmd, affords. 



There is alfo another kind of pea I 

 have omitted, which by the name feems 

 to be of the North Britijh extraclion, and 

 is caird Fraziefs nonfuch. It is a grey 

 pea, and is planted muck in LeicefteYj and 

 Nottinghamjhire 5 and may be had of Mr. 

 John Kirk Gardiner at Nottingham 5 and 

 I believe it is propagated alfo in many 

 places in the Weft, though not known 

 by that name. Its excellency confifls in 

 f hi's> that if you ftick the haulm, fo as to 

 keep if froiti running on the ground, the 

 ftaiks will advance, and you may have 

 ^reen young peafe, one under another, 



for 



