INDEX. 



385 



Druids, their manner of gathering the 



Mistletoe, i. 10. 

 DuDAiM, rightly translated Mandrake, ii. 



65. 



E 



Earth, what is meant by the 

 term, i. 14, 



Earwigs, how to destroy, ii. 160. 



Elder, its uses, ii. 114. 



Elm, its different kinds, i. 115, 

 How to raise, 117. How to 

 transplant, 125. Its proper soil, 



126. When to fell, 129. Uses 

 of the wood, ib. The leaves 

 given to cattle, 130. 



EvoNYMUS, its uses, ii. 115.. 



Ear of Corn, its mode of parturition, ii. 

 155. 



Eddystone light-house, when, and how 

 destroyed, ii. 351. 



Education, the mode of, condemned by 

 Mr. Evelyn, ii. 41. 



Egg, its state on the fourth day of incu- 

 .bation, ii. 135. 



Elder, its Class and Order, ii. 113. 



Elm, the seeds of, how to sow, i. 41. Its 

 various species, 115. Class and Order, 

 117. Manner of propagation, ib. Proved 

 an indigenous tree from Doomsday-book, 



127. The leaves used by the an- 

 cients for feeding of cattle, 130. Vir- 

 gil esteems the flowers pernicious to 

 bees, ib. 



Eradicator, one invented by the hon. 



John Bentinck, recommended, i. 104. 

 Evonymus, its Class and Order, ii. ] 15. 

 Eyre, justices in, cannot sell timber unless 



it be sedente curia, ii. 278. Have divi~ 



sum imperiu7n with the exchequer, ib. 



Have no right to windfalls, ib. 



F 



Faggots, the statutable measure 



of, ii. 255. 

 Felling of trees to be determined 



by the growth of the wood, ii. 

 217. The season of, 218. 



Fences recommended, ii. 98. 



Fern, how to destroy, ii. 126. 



Fir, its two principal species de- 

 scribed, i. 282. How to sow 

 the seeds, 291. How to trans- 

 plant, 293. Uses of the wood, 

 312. 



Forests, laws and statutes for 

 their improvement, ii. 271, — 

 What was anciently meant by a 

 forest, 274. Orders given to 

 the commander of the Spanish 

 armada to destroy the forest of 

 Dean, 276. Foreign forest 

 laws, 278. Proposals how to 

 improve our forests, 285. Ex- 

 hortation to the nobility and 

 gentry to improve their forests 

 and woods, 301. 



Fuel, how to fell, ii. 250. How 

 measured by the statute, 254. 



Furze recommended to be sown, 

 ii. 112. 



Farms, the king's on Windsor forest, ii, 

 2S7. 



Filbert, how cultivated in Kent, i. 221. 



Fir, Scotch, how to raise from seed, i. 48. 

 Is an indigenous tree, 136. Caesar mis- 

 taken in supposing it not a native of Bri- 

 tain, ib. Classed with the Pines, 281. 

 The inner rind made into flour by some 

 northern nations, ib. White and red 

 Fir the same, 2Si4. 



Flowers, strewed upon the graves of the 

 deceased, ii. 345. 



Foliation of trees and shrubs, the order 

 of, in England, i. 230. Should be con-, 

 sidered as a dii-ectory for sowing grain,, 

 229. 



Forests in England, enumeration of, li^ 

 300. 



