(621) 
T too forts of the Itfangle-Trie, of the Arbor de Rai^ kind, though no Ffgg °, 
the tuft is the Paretuveir of Monfieur Rochfort, the fame with the Oyfter- 
bearingTree, that grows In Sierra Liona of Pure has Navigat Tom. i. the 
xtue Arbor de Rai^of Linfchoten,V. 4. Ind. Or. and one of the Kandels of 
Hon. Malab. The Manihot Tndorum, or Mandioca, whereof the Indians make 
their Bread Caffadar. 
The Angelina of Pifo> and Blackwood of thofe of Barbados. 
A ftrange fort of a Milky Oleander , with a yellow Flower, the Efnotli, Nov. 
Hi/pan. Tereut. apud Recount, p. 443. ANymphiea (romMaderaJpatan, with 
a Leaf like the larger Indian Crefle, but much ftifYer, which our Author con- 
ceives to be a fort of the true Colocajia or Egyptian Bean of Diofcorldes and 
Thsopbraftus, whofe Root was called Colocajia. 
Several ftrange Nuts from America and Cfy/0«, and one kind intercommoo 
to the Iflands both of Barbados and : As alfo another in the Appendix, 
that came from Veracruce. Two forts of moft fragrant BafiCs from Made r&« 
fpatan. Various Paffiflorx, from Curajfau, Brafil, and other Parts of America. 
Pentaphylloides from Sweden, Scotland, and Ireland :■ A pretty Mvrtifoliatc 
P mclimenum, from Maderajpatan ; and another from the fame piace. Ano- 
ther ftrange kind from Zeflon ; a fourth from America, and a fifth Variegate 
in its Leaves from the Royal Garden at Paris. Great variety of Phafeoli from 
Africa and both the Indies j a long ?(pper from fir^/ and feveral Vurflanes 
both with and without Thorns, from the Summer Iflands of America. Plumbs 
in abundance from Barbados, Virginia, Malabar, and Mad er a fpatan. Two 
forts of sebefiens, the true Elemnifem, which is a Plumm-Tree, and that Nnci° 
pruniferom, which in Barbados they call the MajiickjTree. The Sope-Bmy f 
which is properly a Plumm, or between Nut and Plumm , Indian Damo\?n r 
and the Bully Bay ; the Acaja of the Brazilians, and Icaco Plumm-Tree, thac 
has this peculiar,that thereon Birds as big as Jays, with black & gold-colour'd 
Feathers build their pendulous Nefts. The Rbamnui's from Maderafp£ian 9 
and the Trifoliate Sumachs from the Coaft of Africa, are altogether new. 
Two forts of FoUiculiferom Willows from Barbados, and the Sxffafras-lree? 
with its Fruit, whofe Flowers are like the male Cornel, of which for many 
Reafons it may well be efleemed a Kind. Its leaves break with araneous fila- 
ments, like thofe of fcabious, which is proper alfo to the Cornels. It flowers 
early in the Spring, before its Leaves begin to put forth, fo does the Cornel 5 
nor are their Fruit and Qualities unlike. Our Author takes this to be the 
fame with the Lignum Auifi ex Orbe Atlantico adveUum Gorcpii Hifpan. lib- 7. 
An Iron wood from the Cape, and another from Barbados, which as it is the 
fame mentioned in Ltgon.-. It may alfo be the Sidtroxyhm Charibbxarum mn~ 
cronatis foliis Ogilb. Americ. 371. 
There are noJefs than feven ftrange Sifynrichia (from Africa and Ceylon, a 
moft elegant Syringa with winged Leaves like A(h, fcandent, > and with Cla- 
fpers, from Maderafpatan. A golden-flov.er'd Tiltpbwn, from the Cape. The 
Ttcbfo 
