that the fpiked head is longer, and fpiring upwards, 
is linall at the top, but lomeching broad below, 
with Oaten like Husks fet on them j the Leaves alfo 
are more, and much fhorter. 
CVI. 7. Gr amen Alopecuroides fpica afperfa bre- 
vi. Short rough Ear'd Bayard Eoxtai /-Grafs. It has 
a fmall white perilhing Root, from -Whence fpring 
up two or three upright fmall Stalks , with fome- 
what narrow and foft Leaves on them , at whole 
tops Hand thick fhort rough heads, an Inch and half 
long, not fully, but as it were half round the Stalk, 
the backfide being as it were bare, fo that they feem 
to ftand but on one fide^ in thefe heads is contained 
the Seed, which is fmall and white. 
CVII. 8. Gramen Alopecuroides Spica longa ma- 
jtts Lf minus , Bajlard Foxtail-Grafs long Ear'd great 
and fmall. Thefe Grades are much like one ano- 
ther, one being greater, the other fmaller, both in 
Stalk and Leaf the fpiked heads are long and Ren- 
der, and of a whitifh color. 
CVIII. 9. Gramen Alopecuroides minus Spica af- 
per a longa , Small Bajiard Foxtail- G rafs long rough 
Ear ' d. It differs from the laft, in being greener, more 
replenilhed with Stalks and Leaves, the fpiked 
heads being more Render, long alfo, and rougher. 
CIX. 10. Gramen Alopecuroides Cuf pi datum mi- 
nus, Bajiard Foxtail-Grafs fmall fharp pointed. Ii 
grows about a Foot high, ftored but with few Joints, 
and fhort narrow Leaves on them , having a Spike 
or Ear almoft as big as the laft, but fharper pointed, 
with fome pieces growing out of the fides. 
CX. 11. Gramen Alopecuroides Cufpidatum mini- 
mum, Smalleft Bajiard Foxtail-Grafs pointed. This 
is lefler than any of thofc going before, in Stalks and 
Leaves , but longer in both, as is alfo the Spike or 
Ear, which is very fmall. Render, and pointed at 
the end. 
CXI. 1 2. Gramen Alopecuroides alterum Radice 
repent e , five Pfeudofcbuenanthum, Another Bajiard 
Foxtail-Grafs with a creeping Root, called alfo Ba- 
jiard Schmnant. It has a creeping Root, which 
fpreads it felf under Ground, fhooting forth Leaves 
and Stalks in feveral places ; the Plant fomewhat 
refembles the great ejl Englijh Foxtail-Grafs (at Se£t. 
102. N®. 3. above J faving that this has thicker, hard- 
er and ftiffer Leaves, like unto Rujhes *, the Head or 
Spike is long aad clofe, five or fix Inches long, of 
a Silver like fhining color, but the Blooms are of a 
pale red, and the Husks redder, which when it has 
flood long, begins to open it felf, expofing its 
Do wny fubftance to the T ‘ ’ 
CXII. The Places and Times. The firft and 
twelfth grow with us only in Gardens, the other ten 
grow in Fields and Meadows in many places of 
England, fome of them about Hackney, near Lon- 
don, and feveral others of them in Kent-, I have 
found them all in Fields, Paftures , and Meadows 
in many parts of Norfolk • and they all keep the 
times of Flourifhing and Seeding with other Mea- 
dow-GraJJes. 
Hairy IFood-Grafs narrow Leav d /offer 
XVI. v Ay§ar/i xdoict, Gramen Hirfutum , Lf Hirfu- 
tum Nemorofum, Hairy-Grafs, and Hairy Wood- 
Grafs, nine Kinds. 
CXIII. 1. Gramen Hirfutum latifoliumNemorum 
majus. The greater Hairy Wood- Grafs broad Leav'd. 
It has a Root confuting of a tuft of many fmall 
long Fibres or Threads , and has feveral long and 
fomewhat broad Leaves riling from the Root, fmal- 
ler to the end, greyilh underneath, and green above, 
fet about the edges with whitilh fmall long Hairs ^ 
the Stalk rifes up from among them, and comes to 
be about two Feet high, with Leaves at the Joints, 
