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The kinder. 
B Ecaufe we (hall haue occafion hereafter to fpeake of certaine Cloued or Bulbed Lillies wee 
will in this chapter entreat onely of another kinde not bulbed which Iikewife is of two 
forts, differing principally in their roots : for infloures they are Lillies, but in roots Afpho- 
dilSj participating as it were of both, though neerer apptoching vnto Aiphodils than Lillies, 
2 Lilium nonbulbofutn PhxnicciiM. 
x Lilium non bulhofum. 
"The yellow Lillie. 
The Day-Lillie. 
The defer if t ion. 
1 rp He vellow Lillie hath very long fl aggie leaues, chamfered or channelled , hollow in 
I tSddeft 1 ke a gutter among the which rifeth vp a naked or bare ftalke, two cu- 
1 bfts high, branchefl toward the tip, with fundry brittle armes "Ranches, wher^n 
do grow many goodly floures likeyntc ■ thofeof cornercYhuskes^r cods, 
rous clogs, proceeding from one head, like thole of the white p , j ji te Lil- 
2 The Day-Lilliehath ftalkes and leaues like the former The flonres be ke the wh e Li 
lie in {hape,ofan Orenge tawny colour : of which floures muc ■ roig n ne is fullblowne or fpred 
inbtiefe,this plant bringeth forth in the morning his bud, w hie - • ’ ■ c becomes as rot- 
abroad,andthefamedayintheeueningitfhutsit felfe,andma i r ; n foule and'rainie 
tenandftinkingasifit had beene trodden in a dunghill a monet 1 , notbrin- 
weather : which is the caufe that the feed feldome followes, as in the other of 
ging forth any at all that I could euer obferue •, according to the old prouerbe, Soone ripe, foone 
rotten. His roots are like the former. jj ]( 
