BRITISH NAMES 
311 
S ti tch-wort,' lesser 
Stink-horns 
Stock July-flower 
Stock, annual, or ten-weeks 
Stonecrop ; or wall pepper 
Stork’s bill 
Stramonium ; or thorn apple 
Stramonium, purple-stalked ; or ’ 
tatula 
Strawberryf 
Strawberry, barren 
Strawberry, barren 
Strawberry blite ; or spinach 
Strawberry tree, commonJ 
Strawberry tree, oriental 
Succory—see Cichory 
Sugar cane 
Sugar palm 
Sulphur-wort; or hog’s fennel,* 
common 
Sultan flower ; or sweet sultan 
Sumach 
Sumach, myrtle-leaved 
Sumach, tanner’s 
Sumach, Venice 
Sundew 
Sun-flower, common annual 
Sun-flower, perennial 
Sun-flower, base or willow-leaved 
Stellaria graminea 
Phallus impudicus 
Ckeiranthus 
Ckeiranthus annum 
Sedum acre 
Pelargonium* 
Datura stramonium 
Datura tatula 
Fragaria vesca 
Fragaria sterilis 
Pofentilla montpdiensis 
Blitum capitatum 
Arbutus unedo 
Arbutus andrachne 
Saccharurn officinarum 
Arenga saccharifera 
Peucedanum officinale 
Ccntaurea moschata 
Rhus t 
Coriaria myrtifolia 
Coriaria ruscifolia 
Rhus cotinus 
Drosera 
Hdianthus animus 
He lia n th us m ult ifio rm 
Hdenium autumnalc 
* Pelargonium grandiflorum (great-flowered) makes a very grand appearance, 
with leaves large, funnel-form. 
f Linnaeus derived great benefit under the attacks of the gout, to which he was 
subject, from the use of strawberries ; a plate of which he found greatly relieved 
him. He had a periodical return of the disorder for a, few years afterwards, but 
always slighter and slighter by the use of his remedy; and, by perseverance, was 
at last actually cured. 
Dr. Maton’s edition of Pultney's View of the Writings of Linnseus, 1805 , 
X The fruit of the common strawberry tree is eaten in Iceland, but is apt to have 
a lethargic effect: it is a beautiful evergreen tree, and flowers in Autumn, either 
red or white; and the fruit of the former year is then ripe f for the fruit is a wbofe 
year growing to perfection. 
