270 
BRITISH M4MES. 
Grass, toad 
Grass, vernal, sweet-scented 
Grass, wrack 
Grass, worm 
Gravel-bind 
Green-wood ; or dyer’s broom 
Greeny-sauce; or sorrel 
Grim the collier 
Gromwel, common 
Gromwel, German 
Groundsel 
Groundsel, common 
Groundsel, Bolonian 
Groundsel tree ; or plowman’s T 
spikenard j 
Groundsel tree, with a ficoides leaf 
Guava; or guayava; or bay plum 
Guiljs ; or com marigold 
Grim succory 
Bufonia tenufolia 
Authoxanthum odoratum 
Zoster a marina 
Spigelia anthelmia 
Convolvulus 
Genista tinctoria 
Rumex acetosa 
Hieracium durantiacum 
Lithospermum officinale 
Stelkra 
Senecio 
Senecio vulgaris 
Erigeron holoniense 
Baccharis halimfolid 
Cacaliaficoides 
Psidium pyrferum 
Chrysanthemum segetum 
Chondrilla juncea 
Hag-berries ; or bird cherry Prunus padrn 
Jdairilf;* clivers ; or gooseg^ass Galium aparine 
Balimus; or shrubby sea orach ftriplex halimus 
Hare-bells Hyacinthus hon-scriptus 
Hare’s-ear Bupleurum tenuissimum 
Hare’s-ear, base shrubby; or sim- \ n , /7 . 7 . 
planobla )Phylhsnobta 
Hare’s-foot trefoil 
Hare’s lettuce or sowthistle 
Hard-head; or knapweed 
Hart’s-tongue spleen-wort 
Hart-wort, French; or wild spiguel Seseli glaucum 
Hart-wort, common Tordylium officinale 
Trifolium arvense 
Sonchus oleraceus 
Cent a urea nigra 
Asplmium scolopendrium f 
* A very remarkable case is recorded in the Monthly Magazine for July, 18 09, 
p. 573 , of the cure of a cancer ; by taking first a mercurial purge, and'then twice 
a day, between meals, drinking about quarter of a pint of the juice of hairiff; part 
of the juice being mixed with hog.’s lard, and kept constantly applied to the wound, 
along with some of the leaves bruised.-—In six months the cure was completed. 
f Asplinium scolopendrium hath many varieties.—Aiton’s Hort. Kew. 
