T R i b e. l. The Theater ofTlants. Ch a v»i ®. 57 
kindes doe, the fmell hereof is more pleating and leffe heady than moflof the others. _ 
There is another of this kinde that differeth chiefly from it, m that it groweth much higher , and hath thicker ( 
{hikes, larger and thicker leaves alfo, fpotted with divers white ftrakes, and fpots thercin.ellc in forme and colour ; 
both of leaves and flowers, there is no difference. _ r 
jo- Horminumfupinum Crctlcum. Low Candy Clary. 
T The low Clary of Candy hath divers leaves lying upon the ground, having every one a long foote-llalke fome¬ 
what fmall toward it, and growing broader to the middle, ending in a fmall point, and three or foure inches long, 
rough or rugged, or fnipt about the edges: the (hikes are fomewhat cornered,on which doe grow fuch like leaves, 
fet by couple! as in the reft, and towards the toppes white flowers,very like for forme and colour unto the flowers 
of Garden Neppe, yet without any fwcetfcent to commend it. 
i j . Horminum anguftifolium htcinintum, Tornc and narrow Icaicd Clary* 
This Clary is fmall and low alfo, growing not above a foote high with his (hikes, which are fquare and hairy, 
feldomc divided into branches; the leaves that are fee thereon by couples, as in the other forts, are lomewhat fmall 
and hairy, about one inch in breadth, and three in length, torne in deepely on the edges, efpecially the lowed; but 
thofethat grow up higher are but onely waved.or grofely endented like the leaves of Seelefemtnum, or Milt wafte, 
the flowers are fmall and whiteiftanding in rundles about the toppes of the [hikes, ending in a long fpike, which 
bendeth downewards with the length : after which come black feed. 
II. Horminum luteum five CoinsIovu. Yellow wilde Clary, or /«/««•/diftaffe. 
This kinde of yellow wilde Clary,hath divers large hoary, or whitifh greene leaves, dented about the edges, dam 
ding upon long foote-ftalkes, riling from the roote, which are broader at the bottome, fmoother alfo, and fome¬ 
what fat or clammy in handling, as the fquare (hikes alfo are, and fomewhat hairy, that anie from among them 
to the height of two or three foote, whereon are fet by couples fuch like leaves as grow below, but fomewhat lef- 
fer • at the toppes of the (hikes the flowers come forth, fet at fpaces, which are gaping, and like unto Clary, but of 
a faint yellow colour, after which come brownilh black feed; the roote is compofed of many long firings, where¬ 
by it taketh ftronq hold in the ground, and abideth many yearcs: both leaves and flowers fmell lomewhat ftrong. 
I, ScUreti JkthiopioifiW'y£thiopis Ucimatis , & non UcitiUtisfolijs. Plaine and jagged /Ethiopian Clary. 
The nearer refemblance that both thel'e Ethiopian hearbs liave.the one being fet forth in my former Worke,under 
the name of Eethiopian Mullein, hath made me upon more mature cogitation and deliberation, to what gem* oc 
kind they ought to be bed referred, rather to joync them to this tribe of the Claries, and elpecially to our common 
garden Clary, than to the Vnbtfica M»lleins,ns all Authors before me have done ; for although they may be Wol- 
leins in regard of their woollines, yet the whole forme and frame of leaves, flowers and feed are more like unto the 
garden Clary, as alfo the time ofabiding and periflring, as the Clary doth after feed-bearing, which few of the o- 
fter wild Claries doe: and finely Mulleins they cannot properly be,m regard«f their hooded or gaping flowers 
Which no Mulleins properly fo called have,as I have (hewed more largely in the Chapter of Sage going before, and 
