, t 3^0 ] ■ 
Acer majus Ger. Nullibiquod fciam in Anglia fponte 
oritur. Raii Syn. A ftranger in England, only 
where planted, Gerard, Perhaps we have not 
any tree more hardy, or more apt to be propagated- 
from the feeds ; fince thofe of this tree do not 
often fail of taking root, upon whatever foil they 
fall, and if they were not heavier than feme other 
winged feeds, or lefs coveted by birds than fome 
• of the more folid or pulp)r kinds, there would 
perhaps be no reafon, why this tree flaould not be 
as much dilperfed throughout the country as the. 
mod; common tree we have j except that it may 
have been more lately introduced among us. 
Agaricus parvus lamellatus, pedfunculi forma, ele- 
gans. Dill. Cat. GilT. Here in November,, on 
flicks rotted on the ground. 
Agaricus trilobatus, fuperne albus, laevis, inferne fer- 
rugineus, foraminibus oblongis- et rotundis eie- 
ganter pundlatus. An Fungus arboreus lobis 
rubellis, diverlimode hguratis ct pun6latis. R. Syn. 
On a ha:i^l tree near Congleton, ’Chediire, in 
October. 
Angelica fativa C B. Ray in Cat. Angl. tit, Ilyppor 
felinum, fays, “ By this, when young, I fuppofe 
they were deceived who gave information to the 
“ compilers of PhyL' Brit, that Angelica fativa 
« grew on the rocks near Berwick.” They might 
have taken it from Dr. Johnfon’s Merc. Botan. 
However it is wild in many places by the Thames- 
lidc, particularly at Stangate, Lambeth; and I hav^e 
found it far from any water, in a gravel-pit ne.ar 
the end of St. Edmund’s-bury, toward Sudbury. 
2 ' 
Apium 
