There growelh wild in fome places of the Woods a Pkm Tome- 
what like our Wheat-Plum^ but it doth exceed it, being much more 
fa ecu lent. 
In the Woods there arc abundance of Vines , which twine about 
the Oaks and Poplars, and run up to the top of them ; thefe bear a 
kind of CUret'grafes, * of which fome few of the Plan- ^ rhcfc vims 
tersdo make Wine, whereof I have tafted; itis fome- ^^'^*:'^«0'''>^.?« 
what fmaller than Fref$ch Claret j but I fuppofe, if fome 
of thefeWines were planted in convenient vine-yards, where the Sdn 
might have a more kindly influence on them , and kept with dili- 
gence and feafonable pruning^ they mig^t afford as good grapes as. 
the Claret-Grapes of France are. 
Thereisalfo in the Woods a little Shrub which bearetb a Berry 
likeour JEW^r-^d'yr^, and is a very pleafant Berry to eat. 
I lately made mention of the Chefmt^ Walmt and Hafel-Trec^ . 
which all of them bear their fevcral Nuts and befide thefe, here is 
another called a Chinccpmy which is like a Chefnut , with a Burry 
husk, but leffe by far. 
Their Gardens have all forts of Ersglijh Pot-herbs,and falletsjthey 
have Cabbages^ Colmrts^ Colly fiomrs^ FarJ^ips, lumps, Garrets^ Po- 
Utoes^ and Xams \ and fuch Herbs as grow wild in England^ and do 
not grow there, they plant, zsWormmod^Fetherfevp y Uoufekek^ 
€arduu4 Benedi^us, Rue^ Coriander, Enula^ and the like. 
They havelikewife in their Gardens Rofes^ Clove-Gillifiorvers^ 
and variety of other forts of Flowcrs.- 
There grow wild in the Woods, PZ/^i;^^;;^ of all forts, TeUorp* 
Doc\j, Bur- Dock jSolomoHS'feal^ Egrimony, CentorytScabious^Ground^ r 
fel, Dwarf-Elder^ Tarrovo, Furjlany^nd white Maiden- hair th^ beft 
that ever I faw. Upon the fides of the Hil Is, Afarum^ and on the Bay- . 
fide, Soldanella or Sea-Scurvygrafm great plenty* 
Here groweth the Radix Serfemaria Nigra , which was fo much 
ufed in the laft great peftilence, that the price of it advanced from 
ten Shillings to three pounds fterling a pound ; Here is alfo an herb- 
which ^oxxitcdWDittanyfith^xs^Pepper-mrt'^ it is nolDiUany of Can- 
dia,tior Englijb Dittander\\t groweth a foot or a foot and half high^ - 
the leaves are about the bredth of a groat , and figur'd like a heart^^ 
and Ihort out of the ftalk and branches one of a fide direftly oppo- 
fite to each other; it finelleth hot like Pepper , and biteth upon the 
Tongue. The water of this herb diftill'd out of a Limbeck, is one 
of the beft things I know to drive worms out of the Body • and aa > 
ounce of this water taken, provoketh fwcac plentifully^ 
