Lin. 3»-
_,/-2‘
Of the Hifrorie of Plants.
1] The D efcription.
- oad Bfiiitbizirn 41/Ermz hath flraight and vpright flalkes, a foot high. hem Wiatfilifilibtlf leaues,but very deeply cut or clouen,in fhew like vnto thofe of thc gm‘ b 61 1 gfOW white of colour : at the top of the fiaIkes,out of fcaly heads, as in an vn} - lloures,compa£’c of fix fmall white leaues: the root is long,with fome fibres annexed to it. V mid 2 This kinde of Wormewood Gefiier and that learned Apothecarie Viz/.~mim’,e; 1)o7!ffl1].iCh js Abfint/mm e/Egyfiizmz : the leaues of this plant are very like to the leaues of Trio‘/7omr;72€5,a\i-'n our common M aiden haire,of a white colour, etiery fmall leafe ftanding one oppofite ag I ther, and of a ilrong fauour.
. ' ‘kc . . . - . e1“’l‘ 3 This X/Vormewoochwhich Doeloflxzu calleth Até,/z'r2t'z’2ii:z72zizar/oieziiaz , and Iiijljozdzzfflia 1VikgVntO vnto the Sea Wormewood, in his {mall and tender leaues : the Ptalke beareth flonrcs 5!
. . . . - - t fie B013“. the forefaid Sea VVormewood,but it is ofa fad ordeepe colour, l’33LllD‘~7’ neither bittfif ” ’m Mfifle
fl afl0'
. . . ’~" 1 »- ‘Hit fauour at alhwhereupon it was called,and that very fitly,Aéfi-irbzirm z;~zoa’omm, or 3-’{,dfij;/gjirtfifi z;i,z;2z- d}2m:in Engli[h,foolifh,or vnfauoury Wormwood . 1: Dodomm faith not that his Avfif‘ ' r «
. . ‘ ‘ . 1 1W7OOLl, ' . diam is like the feat VVcurrnwood,but that it is very like our common broad leaned W 0m
. . v nt 05 fo indeed it is, and that fo like, that it is hard to be difcerned therefrom, but onely 0)’ the M bitternefle and fmell. :1: " ‘ ’ '
3 Aéfinr/3z'zm2 iaodoram.
. ".31 . I /»7 flu _ _ Aéfimhium mizrimmz,AIhmz¢r;2rf»5’~l“ f _VI113u0T1€ Wormewood.’
y Small Lauander Cotton-
.‘ This kinde of Sea-Wormewood is a fhrubby and wooddy plant, in face and {hew lilztedllg Lauander COtt0n,ofa flzrong fmell ghauing floures like thofe of the common Wormwood’ a firfi fhew like thofe ofLauander Cotton: the rootis tough and wooddy.
r y {I The Place. ffhefe plants are flrangers in EngIand,yet we haue a few of them in Herbarifls gardens. T112 Time, ’ ffhe time ofrheir flouting and feeding is referred to the other Wormwoods. «it The Nzmm‘. _ , Thc White Wormewood Coiimrlw Gefmrw nameth Strip/iizzmftzmimz, and faith that 1‘ mom)’ Called Heréa 4154 , or white herbe: another had rather name: it Samanicam : {OF 3‘ dc: _{a_i_th,Santaniwm is found in France beyond the Alpes, and beareth his name Of
a -», ‘O1 . . :
"Kari
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Li 3. 2.“ I Of the Hiftorie of Plants. > no; \.
cofimlieyiwhere it groweth - but that part of Swiflerland which belongeth to France is accounted Oi ¢ Romans to be beyond the Alps -i and the Prouince of Santon is fit from it: for this is a part of "1068, fcituatev on the coafl ofthe Ocean, beneath the {loud qerond Northward :therel'm'e SW0“ Vvormwoodfiif it haue his name from the Santons, groweth farrc from the Alps -‘but if it
"OW neere adjoyning to the Alps,then hath it not his namefrom the Santons.
W _ qr T/ye Temperature and Verna’!-
hite VVormevvoocl is hot and fornewhat dry. _ _ . A _ ‘_ I mm“ fluourie Wormewood,as it is without Imell and tal’se,fo is it fcarfelofany hot quarity,mLt.C.1 rm, lib 1‘ any {coating faculty. Thefe are notvfed in PhyfiCke,Wl‘:Uet 6 others may be had.&€- fore”: it germ Wilde 0, degengratc kindes ot’Wormwood5 fome of them participating both or the
3“ mell of other plants. tgtitoihéggurc whichwjshcrg gxmflxv in Eh: 5 fipjace? by the fl2|11B$Fr;4lJ!;Ylfhll4m arborefcevig, is theiiril ‘ol-Wzhenext chapter ("sue one, where you maylcc more
c .
v ; , . . _ " . ~ :cr is either tltc (‘mic with orone very like our Sea VVormcW.1od- i‘ gguch as ° W1!-tc Vlformcwood me.-mo Jcd nets in the Names, but no Whfil t. clfc in the chill’ I ' ’ 3
th Vt?” cur{ou5‘°°kCln"o Ed1Il€)’.1YiIGi ‘tis Hm .Med.m the title of/ibfimbiiim Simtonicum : and in Dat1aMMr'7'WP""“b' "“'P'5""'h““° “E” fi‘“d°““l"i°~’ l °"m¢wo A V I . od
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Carp. 4.53. Of efllugwort.
I K4rtemz‘{z}z,m4ter H eréarrimt * V . . Common Mugworh {I The Dcfcrrptzm. He firll kinde of Mugwort hath broad leaues, very much cut or clouen like the leaues of common
VVormewo0d,but larger, of a darke greene co. louf aboue, and hoarie vndertieath: the fialkes are long and gmight, and full of branches, whereon do grow ("mall round bu_ttOs'15sWhICh are the floures, fmell ing 119.6 l‘~’l3TJCl0"“C Wlléfl thev wax ripezthe root is great, and ofa wood-
‘ France. . d1C2fubThe fecond kinde of Mngwort hath a great thicke and wootldy root,_ from whence ayjfe fund;-y branches of a reddiih colour, be- fgclulloffmall and fine jzigged leaucs , very like vnto fea Sothernwood: the Feecl groweth alongfi the fmalltwiggie branches,_likevnto little berries , which fall not from their bran. ches ina long time alter they be ripe. ;t I know not how this differeth from the forinel‘. but only in the colour of theftalke and Hours, which are red or purplifh ;whereas the former‘ is morewhitifh. 1:
3 There is allb another Mugwort,whiC_h hath many branches rifing; from a wooddie root, {landing vpright in dillances one frO'I1 afl0th€i‘,Of an alhie colotmbefitvvith leaues not much vnlike fea Purflane;abo‘ut the lt‘j“’I9" part of the Bzalkes, and toward the CO? ‘’d 2‘: branches they are narrower and le_fI'e;',f1]?{ A U with great and deCP i3S%€9:t1l“‘.ke 13;? iiaime’ fa Whitifh colour, as all the ref’: of the PW“ is‘ it Yeeldeth 3 P1939“: f‘ne!1§il:{1ebein mg”? ””".’s3Ddintafte is fomewhat faltifhtthe Homes are many and Y‘3“"“"W fi , giv ' 6 I ere fo lower}, if f d l.k hat Ofthe Common VVOrmw0od_ 1; The l€E1U~.S or this plant ateo two F 010» 15 63 | 3 mm ‘ 1-kc thofe of[,auander(whenee Clrifim hath can . Ofts 3 for fome ofthem are long and narrow 1
'a-nag
. . , ~ d‘ ided almolt to the middlerih- as , you 1‘ Ldrtemzjizi alzo Lduendulm) otherfome are cat in or in s
. - . . - l 1 , r ‘ ‘d d leaugty fee 1; exp‘-eff am“: 1“ a figure by it felfe,which_ {hevves both t re W role as alfo diui e I
V‘ l (filg'I'lFd