grfjole of gfumtdts* 123 fhaftes, and dartes on. The tree called Sen. Hipp. Cornus was fo common to make fhaftes of, that in good authours of ye latyn tongue, Cornus is taken for a Ihafte, as in Seneca, and that place of Virgill, Vug. end. 9. Volat Itala Cornus. Yet of all thynges that euer I warked of olde authours, either greke or latin, for fhaftes to be made of, there is nothing fo common as reedes. Herodotus in def- cribynge the mightie hooft of Xerxes doth tell that thre great contries vfed fhaftes ym* made of a rede, the Aethiopians, the Lycians (whofe fhaftes lacked fethers, where at I maruayle mofle of all) and the men of Inde. The fhaftes in Inde were verye longe, a yarde and an Amanus. s. halfe, as Arrianus doth faye, or at the _ c leafl a yarde. as Q. Curtius doth faye, and therfore they gaue ye greater flrype, but yet bycaufe they were fo long, they were the more vnhanfome, and leffe profitable to the men of Inde, as Curtius doeth tell. In Crete and Italic, they vfed to haue their fhaftes of rede alfo. The heft reede for fhaftes grewe in Inde, and in Rhenus a flood of Italy. pim. 16.3e. But bycaufe fuche fhaftes be neyther eafie for Englifhe men to get, and yf they were gotten fcarfe profitable for them to vfe, I wyll lette them paffe, and fpeake of thofe fhaftes whyche Englyfh men at this daye moHe commonly do approue and allowe. A fhaft hath three principall partes, the flele, the fethers, and the head: whereof euerye one mufle be feuerallye fpoken of. Ct Steles be made of dyuerfe woodes. as. Brafell. Turkie wood. Fuflicke. Sugerchefte. Hardbeame. Byrche,