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valleys and cultivated plains of merry England. It is 
thus regarded in the Prophecy of Jeremiah, Ghap. vii. 
v. 6., where, a curse being proclaimed against the “man 
who maketh flesh his arm, and whose heart departeth 
from the Lord,” it follows, 
“ He shall be like the heath in the desert, and shall not see when 
good coraeth; but shall inhabit the parched places in the wilderness, in a 
salt land and not inhabited.” 
And again, when the prophet foretells the destruction of 
Moab, he says. 
“ Flee, save your lives, and be like the heath in the wilderness.” 
Intimating, very forcibly, that as “ the heath in the 
wilderness” “ is out of the reach of observation and 
discovery, to what a remote distance it would be 
necessary for the Moabites to fly to escape the danger 
which threatened them.” 
The common ling, which, together with the cross¬ 
leaved and Cornish heaths, makes up the little group 
in the accompanying figure, grows freely on the yet 
uncultivated wastes of England, particularly in West¬ 
moreland and Cumberland. 
