Lib. 2 . 
I Ciccr (yliteflre, 
The wilde Cich. 
Of the Hiftory of Plants. iz 5 
2 Cicer [yfneftrAfct foham. 
Broad leafed wilde 'Cich. 
f The Vince. 
Thefe plants are fowne in the partsbeyond thefeas formfeed their -catted with inwinter, aswe 
do fares. vetches, and fuch other bafepulfc. 
«j The Time. 
The time anfwereth the V etch or tare. 
C 7 . he Names. , 
Thewild Cich hath noothername in Latine but Cictrfihejlre : the later waters hauenotfound 
any name at all. 
Thel" ttnyertfure <wd V ertueso 
Their temperature and vertues are referred to the garden C ich,as T^«^r4/?»r affirmes • and Ca- 
Icn faith that the wilde Cich is in all things like vnto that of the garden but m Phyfic« vfc more 
effe£hiall,by reafontt is more hotter and drier, and alfo more biting and bitter. 
Chap. 513- Of Lentils, 
TheDcfcripio'/i. 
1 nr He fir ft Lentil growes vp with flender ftalks,and leaues which be fomwhat hard grow- 
T in, aflope from both tides of the rib or middle ftalke, narrow and many in number Ike 
thofe of TareAut narrower and IefTer : the floures be fmall, tending fomewhat towards a purple: 
the cods are little and broad : the feeds in thefeare in number three or foure, little, round, platne, 
"fy&ffi tender »d pU.itbnt.clnt, a AM Urtjj. 
Jo gro\v leahes dinided o, confiding of r un ^ r rotlicr jmall leaner, like the wilde Vecch.endm^at 
flat cods, containing little browne flat feed, and fometinKS n hlte. ^ r/; . 
