w ; th manv that have it, and is likely to be that fort which faith he found m J*Jh* with white flowers, 
and rnayalfo be <Wr his Alpim ,bat that the figute doth better reprefent an »m«than Sage. The third as 
fZZs naturall to the hot Countries of £&. Candy, r>c. but will not abide with us, nor ever bcare thofeapples. 
The fourth is in many of out gardens, and Lctyuu faith, groweth plentifully in Spame.md fo doth the fift. The 
fife came out of J»4i'Z,and is the fweeteft ofall other, yet it differeth as I faid, from the former fmall Sage, which 
o ovvSh in S;«ilikewife abundantly. Thefixt was taifed from the feed that came out of C«dy whereof 
S„1 e th mention,that he received the figure thereof fet forth to the life in colours, from Ua>hus TUseaa, as it grew 
wnh bim. The leventh ^.,Wfaithhefirftfawinan Apothecaries Garden in *•$* ' ** afterwards in the 
Duke of yt-iumberis Garden at Mom Telgard, but from whence it was brought to them.he doth not declare The 
faith he recaved from D&tor Ne«Jorfer„s, and faith no more. The ninth heefa.thhkew.fehee 
had from an Apothecaric at S malcald : the two next throughout Spam and ?»rt»M/plentifully .and the elec enth a- 
bo" 4 "&' alfo: the laft grew in Candy. Ml thefe forts will grow by the flippes taken from them, and planted 
ill Match or Aprill- 
The Time. _ . , _ 
hiofi ofthefe forts of Sage doe flower in Iuly, or about the time of the ordinary Sage, yet feme of them flowefi 
not untill Auguft. All of them alfo doc beare feed, but the fmall ordinary Pigge Sage, or Sage of vertue, which al¬ 
though Idoe Acknowledge to give feed in fome places, and in feme yeares, yet moft commonly, and with many it 
doth not, nor the fmcet lmall Spanilh kindc 
The Names. _ , 
Sane is called in Sreeke'EMXiVpixor. The pale a(h-coloured dry and withered deformity of the leaves of Sage,efpe- 
ciallv on the dry and burnt hills in the hot Countries where it groweth naturall, was the caufc to give it that name, 
as ifvoLi fhouldcall it, fcorched or confumed by biafting, for i^«v doth figmfie intorquere and cmtr*here to bee 
drawne together, or wound within it (elfe, and or rather v?taA©- doth figmfie that dUcafe in plants, which 
the Latine”call Jutenuio, a biafting, that is, when the hearbe or tree by the extreame heate of the Sunne in the Do S* 
daves or otherwife pierfing into it, and drying up the moiftute that nounlhed it, feemeth to grow faint and dry, 
o/as it were fcorched. It might faith PoL be fitly fo named, fromithehelpe this hearbe giveth to t^fe parts of a 
mans body that l'eeme to be as it were dead by lorne blading, in reftoring the naturall heat and vigour to the part, 
in which quality it excelleth, giving a friendly and beneficial! comfort to the vitall fpmts; 
tines called it Salvia, avia falvos homines & incotames efficiac, becaufe it maketh men fafe and found in health. 1 
the I atine verfifyer from hence tooke his occafion to fay ^.rmorisur homo cumSalv,* ertf*, »Wta AndSagem 
En^lifh, from the property in comforting and {lengthening the head and memory,to make: men lage W > 
miftaking the Grceke word v*ax©-> and tianllacing it?**© - which is j 
that 
