C 50 ) 
flore majore Spi. 346 'C £. Pi„. Gramen leu- 
canthemumG^*. Vark. f he greater Stitchn'ort, in 
Jioodlme going to St. Jme’s Well, in the Road 
to Lora)ick and elfe where. 
Caryophyllus holofteus arvenfis glaber ' 
flore minore Syn. ibid. C. B. Vw. Gramen ' 
Leucanthemim alterum Gm The leferStichivo-rt. ' 
they both belong to Cl. I Gen. XXIV. i. flo- i 
yver from the latter End oi March to the Begin- i 
mg of June. This I obferved in Wcodlane. and 
on the Moor between Bridgefqrd and Gamjion. 
Caryophyllus minimus mufcofus. vid. Alfinella. | 
Caryophyllus pratenfis laciniato fore /implicit \ 
vid. Lychis plumaria. ! 
Castanea Syn. 440. Ger. vulgaris Vark. \ 
lylveftns qu^e peculiariter Caftanea C. E' Pin. 
The Chelnut Tree. Cl. II. G. I. i. flowerj in 
/^pril. 
This is the wild commonly called the Horfh 
Ll'ejtiut^ jt Js doubtfuJI whether an indigenous PJar** 
Id &ny England, the’ very commonly oblerved' 
about hottingham, there are ibrae hy the Engine Houle 
and m Sr. 'Peters Church yard. ' 
The reddifh Skin which is the immediate Covering 
01 the Kernel, as w^ell of this as the cultivated CheOnu, 
IS very aftringent and fit to flop all manner oi Fluxes 
where Inch ^Jedicines are lafe, The poor People in 
Italy make Bread of the fwTet which when 
new js pleafant tailed enough but very heavy, it grows 
looney and very hard and thenthcyarc forced to break 
Jt to Pieces WTth a Afaller, and fcak it in JVarer lefore 
they can eat it. This kind of Food is what thofo pocr 
^Vl etches 
