, ’ B I ' - , . . , ■ . i • * - , ' . I , •- ' ' , - F A B fruitful : and another thing fhould be obferved in planting of the fucceeding crops, which is, to make choice of moift ftrong land for the later crops ; for if they are planted on dry ground, they rarely produce a crop. Thefe after-crops fhould be planted at about a fort- night diftance from each other, from the middle of February to the middle of May ; after which time It is generally too late to plant, unlefs the land is very ftrong and moift ; tor in warm dry light land all the late crops of Beans are generally attacked by the black infe&s, which cover all the upper part of their ftems, and foon caufe them to decay. Where the feeds of thefe Beans are defigned to be faved, a fufficient number of rows Ihould be fet apart for that purpofe, according to the quantity defired •, thefe fhould be managed in the fame way as thofe which are defigned for the table •, but none of the Beans fhould be gathered, though there are fome covetous perfons, who will gather all the firft ripe for the table, and are contented to fave the after-crop for feed, but thefe are never fo large and fair as the firft ; fo that if thefe are for fale, they will not bring near the price as the other •, therefore, what is gained to the table is loft in the value of the feed ; but thofe who are defirous to preferve the fcveral varieties as pure as poftible, fhould never fuffer two of the va- rieties to grow for feeds in the fame place ; for by their farina mixing with each other they will not con- tinue fo pure, but be apt to vary ; and in order to keep the early kinds perfebt, thofe which come the earlieft fhould be laved for feeds ; but this is what few people chufe to do, becaufe they are then the moft valuable. When the feed is ripe, the ftalks fhould be pulled up, and fet upright againft a hedge to dry, obferving to turn them every third day, that they may dry equally ; then they may be threfhed out, and cleaned for ufe, or otherwife ftacked up in a barn, till there is more leifure for threfhing them out ; and after- ward the feed fhould be drawn over to take out all thofe that are not fair, preferring the beft for ufe or fale. It is a very good method to change the feeds of all forts of Beans, and not to few and fave the feeds long in the fame ground, for they do not fucceed fo well ; therefore, if the land is ftrong where they are to be planted, it will be the beft way to procure the feeds from a lighter ground, and fo vice verfa ; and by this method the crops will be larger, and the Beans fairer, and not fo liable to degenerate. Having given directions for the culture of the Gar- den Beans, I fhall next proceed to that of the Horfe Bean, which is cultivated in the fields : there are two or three varieties of thefe Beans, which differ in their fize and colour ; but that which is now in the greateft efteem, is called the Tick Bean ; this doth not grow fo high as the other, is a more plentiful bearer, and lucceeds better on light land than the common Horfe Bean, fo preferred to it. The Horfe Bean delights in a ftrong moift foil, and an open expofure, for they never thrive well on dry warm land, or in fmall inclofures, where they are very fubject to blight, and are frequently attacked by a black inferi, which the farmers call the black dol- phin •, thefe inherits are often in fuch quantities as to cover the ftems of the Beans entirely, efpecially all the upper part of them ; and whenever this happens, the Beans feldom come to good •, but in the open fields, where the foil is ftrong, this rarely happens. Thefe Beans are ufually fown on land which is frefh broken up, becaufe they are of ufe to break and pul- verize the ground, as alfo to deftroy weeds *, fo that the land is rendered much better for corn, after a crop of Beans, th.ani twould have been before, efpe- cially if they are fown and managed according to the new hufbandry, with a drill plough, and the horfe hoe, ufed to ft ir the ground between the rows of Beans, which will prevent the growth of weeds, and pulverize the ground, whereby a much greater crop FAB _ ■- . ' 7 ..TV of Beatts may, with more certainty, be expe&ed, Slid the land will be better prepared for whatever crop it is defigned for after. The feafon for fowino- of thefe Beans is from the told- O die of February to the end of March, according to the nature of the foil ; tlie ftrongeft and wet land fhould always be laft fown • the ufual quantity of Beans fov/n on an acre of land is about three bufhels ; but this is double the quantity which need be fown, efpecially according to the new hufbandry -• but I Fhall firft fet down the practice according to the old hufbandry, and then give directions Tor their ma- nagement according to the new. The method of lowing is after the plough, in the bottom of the fur- rows ; but then the furrows fhould not be more than five, or at moft fix inches deep. If the land is new broken up, it is ufual to plough it early in autumn, and let it lie in ridges till after Chriftmas 5 then plough it in fmall furrows, and lay the ground ftnooth ; thefe two ploughings will break the ground fine enough for Beans, and t he third ploughing is to few the Beans, when the furrows fhould be made fhallow, as was be- fore mentioned. Moft people fet their Beans too clofe ; for, as fome lay the Beans in the furrows after the plough, and others lay them before the plough, and plough them in ; fo, by both methods the Beans are fet as clofe as the furrows are made, which is much too near •, for when they are on ftrong good land, they generally are drawn up to a very great height, and are not fo apt to pod as when they have more room, and are of lower growth ; therefore I am convinced by many late trials, that the better way is to make the furrows two feet and a half afunder, or more ; which will caufe them to branch out into many ftalks, and bear in greater plenty than when they are clofer ; by this me- thod, half the quantity of Beans will be fufficient for an acre of land ; and by the fun and air being ad- mitted between the rows, the Beans will ripen much earlier and more equally than in the common way. What has been mentioned muft be underftood as re- lating to the old hufbandry ; but where Beans are planted according to the new, the groufid fhould be four times ploughed before the Beans are fet, which will break the clods, and render it much better for planting ; then with a drill plough, to which a hop- per is fixed for fetting of the Beans, the drills fhould be made at three feet afunder, and the fpring of the hopper fet fo as to fcatter the Beans at three inches diftance in the drills. By this method lefs than one bufhel of feed will plant an acre of land. When the Beans are up, if the ground is ftirred between the rows with a horfe plough, it will deftroy all the young weeds ; and when the Beans are advanced about three or four inches high, the ground fhould be again ploughed between the rows, and the earth laid up to the Beans ; and if a third ploughing, at about five or fix weeks after is given, the ground will be kept clean from weeds, and the Beans will ftalk out, and produce a much greater crop than in the com- mon way. When the Beans are ripe, they are reaped with a hook, as is ufually praftifed for Peas ; and after hav- ing lain a few days on the ground they are turned, and this muft be repeated feveral times, until they are dry enough to ftack ; but the beft method is to tie them in fmall bundles, and fet them upright ; for then they will not be in fo much danger to fuffer by wet, as when they lie on the ground ; and they will be more handy to carry and ftack, than if they are loofe.' The « common produce is from twenty to twenty-five bufhels on an acre of land ; but I have known thirty-fix on an acre. The Beans fhould lie in the mow to fweat, before they are threfhed out ; for as the haulm is very large and fucculent, fo it is very apt to give and grow moift; but there is no danger of the Beans receiving damage, if they are ftacked tolerably dry, becaufe the pods will preferve the Beans from injury.; and they will be much eafier to threfli after they have fweat in the 5 M mow m FAG FAG mow than before ; and after they have once fweated and are dry again, they never after give. By the new hufbandry, the produce has exceeded the old by more than ten bufhels on an acre ; and if the Beans which are cultivated in the common me- thod are obferved, it will be found that more than half their items have no Beans on them •, for by Hand- ing clofe, they are drawn up very tall ; fo the tops of the ftalks only produce, and all the lower part is naked ; whereas in the new method, they bear almoft to the ground; and as the joints of the Hems arefhorter, fo the Beans grow clofer together on the Italics. In the year 1745 I made the following experiment, in planting a piece of eleven acres of Beans in Berk- fhire, viz. the gentleman’s bailiff, who was weddec to the old pradice of hufbandry, was very unwil- ling to depart from it ; and having been an old fer- vant in the family, his mafter was inclinable to hear all he could fay in favour of his opinion : however, at laft I prevailed on the gentleman to let his bailiff plant one half of the land in his way, giving him the choice which half he would have : accordingly the land was divided and planted; but the fummer proving wet, the Beans on that part of the field he had chofen grew fo tall and rank, that they produced no pods but on the upper part of the ftalks ; and when they were threfhed out, there was no more than twenty-two bufhels on an acre, whereas the other half produced near forty. FABA iEGYPTIACA, is the Arum fEgyptiacum. F A B A CRASS A, is Anacampferos. FAB AGO. See Zygophyllum. FA GAR A. Brown. Hi ft. Jam. tab. 5. f. 1. Ironwood. The Characters are. It hath "male and hermaphrodite fiowers upon different plants ; the male flowers have a flmall empalernent , Jlightly cut into flour flegments , hut have no petals , and fix fta- mina , terminated by roundijh fummits : thefle are barren. The female flowers have a larger concave permanent empalernent with flour flpr ending petals , and four flamina , crowned with oval fummits , and an oval germen , flup- porting a fender ftyle , terminated by an obtufle ftigma ; the germen afterward becomes a globular capflule with two lobes , inclojing two feeds. This genus of plants is ranged in the firft fedion of Linnaeus’s fourth clafs, intitled Tetrandria Mono- gynia ; whereas it fhould be put into hisfixth fedion of the twenty-third clafs, as the flowers are male and hermaphrodite on different plants, and the flowers have fix ftamina : but this miftake he was led into by Jacquin, who had feen and defcribed the hermaphro- dite flowers only. The Species are, 1. Fagara ( Pterota ) foliolis emarginatis. Amoen. Acad. 5. p. 393. Fagara , whofle lobes {or flmall leaves) are in- dented at the top. Lauro afflnis jafmini alato folio, cofta media membranulis utrinque extantibus alata, ligno duritie ferro vix cedens. Sloan. Hift. Jam. 2. p. 25. Ironwood. 2. Fagara ( Tragodes ) articulis pinnarum fubtus acu- leatus. Jacq. Amer. 13. Fagara with flpines under the leaves at the joints. Schinoides petiolis fubtus aculea- tis. Hort. Cliff. 489. The firft fort grows naturally in the warmeft parts of America. The late Dr. Houftoun found it growing at Campeachy, from whence he lent me dried fpeci- mens of the plants in flower, by which I am con- vinced there are male trees which are barren. It rifes with a woody ftem upwards of twenty feet high, fending out branches great part of its length, gar- nifhed with fmall winged leaves, having three or five lobes to each. The flowers come from the fide of the branches, Handing four or five together upon fhort foot- ftalks. The fecond fort I have placed here after Linn^us, but am not fare it fhould be ranged with it ; for al- though I have pretty ftrong plants of it growing in the Chelfea garden, they have not yet flowered ; but ■ by the external face of the plant, it feems to agree with the firft. 6 Thefe are both tender plants, fo muft be kept in the bark-ftove conftantly, and are propagated by feeds, and alfo by cuttings, if properly managed. FAGON I A. Tourn. Lift. R. FI. 265. tab. 141. Lin. Gen. Plant. 475. This plant was fo named by Dn Tournefort, in honour of Dr. Fagon, who was fuper- intendant of the royal garden at Paris. * The Characters are, The flower hath a flpreading empalernent , compofled of five flmall leaves ; it hath five hear t-fh aped petals , which Jpread open , aud are narrow at their bafle , where they are inferted in the empalernent. It hath ten ftamina which are erehl , terminated by roundijh fummits. In the center is Jituated a five-cornered germen , fupporting an a-wl- ftoaped ftyle , crowned by a Jingle ftigma. The germen afterward becomes a roundijh capfule having five lobes , ending^ in a point , and Jive cells , each having a Jingle roundijh feed. Linnaeus ranges this plant in the firft fedion of his tenth clafs, intitled Decandria Monogynia, from the flower having ten ftamina and one ftyle. The Species are, 1. Fagonia (. Ere Ha ) fpinofa, foliolis lanceolatis planis laevibus. Hort. Upfal. 103. Prickly Fagonia , whofle leaves are flp ear- (leaped , plain, and flmooth. Fagonia Cretica fpinofa. Tourn. Thorny Trefoil of Candia. 2. Fagonia ( Iliflpanica ) inermis. Lin. Sp. Plant. 386. Fagonia without flpines. Fagonia Hifpanica non fpi- nofa. Tourn. Spanijh Fagonia without thorns. 3. Fagonia (. Arabica ) fpinofa, foliolis linearibus con- vexis. Lin. Sp. Plant. 386. Prickly Fagonia with nar- row convex leaves. Fagonia Arabica, longiflimis acu- leis armato. Shaw. PI. Afr. 229. Arabian Fagonia , armed with very long flpines. The firft fort is a native of the ifland of Candia : this has been defcribed by fome botanifts under the title cf Trifolium fpinofum Creticum, which occa- fioned my giving it the Englifh name of Thorny Tre- foil of Crete ; though there is no other affinity be- tween this and the Trefoil, than that of this having three leaves or lobes on the fame foot-ftalk. This is a low plant, which fpreads its branches clofe to the ground, which are extended to the length of a foot or more every way, garniffied with fmall trifoliate oval leaves, placed oppofite ; and at each joint, immediately below the leaves, come out two pair of fpines, one on each fide the ftalk ; and at the fame places come out a Angle blue flower, Handing upon a fhort foot- ftalk, compofed of five fpear-ffiaped petals, which are narrow at their bafe, where they are inferted into the empalernent ; after thefe fall away, the ger- men turns to a roundifli five-lobed capfule, ending in an acute point, having five cells, each containing one roundiffi feed. It fiowers in July and Auguft, but unlefs the leafon proves warm, the feeds do not ripen in England. The fecond fort grows naturally in Spain; this dif- fers from the firft in being l'mooth, the branches of this having no thorns ; and the plant will live two years, whereas the firft is annual. The third fort was difcot ered by the late Dr. Shaw in Arabia ; this is a low plant with a fhrubby ftalk, from which come out feveral weak branches armed with long thorns; the leaves of this are thick, nar- row, and convex on their lower fide ; the flowers come out in the fame manner as in the firft fort. Thefe plants are propagated by feeds, which fhould be fown upon a border of freffi light earth, where the plants are defigned to remain, for they do not bear tranfplanting well ; when the plants come up, they may be thinned out to the diftance of ten inches or a foot; and if they are kept clean from weeds, they wfill require no other care. The firft fort is an annual p’ant, which feldom per- feds its feeds in England, unlefs the feafons prove very warm ; therefore the belt way is to low the feeds upon a warm border in the autumn, and in frofty weather flicker the plants with mats, or fome covering to fecure them ; or if they are iown in pots FAG pots and placed under a frame in the winter, and the following fpring fhaken out of the pots, and planted in a warm border, they will come early to flower, and thereby ripe feeds may be more certainly ob- tained. The other tv/o forts may be treated in the fame way; for as thefe feldom flower the Aril year from feeds, fo the plants fnould be either kept in pots, and fheltered under a frame in winter, or placed in a warm border, where they may be fheltered with mats, or fome other covering, to preferve them from the froft ; and the following fummer the fecond fort will flower and pro- duce ripe feeds, but the third has not perfected any feeds as yet in England. FAGOPYRUM. See Helxine. FA-GUS. Tourn. Infh R. H. 584. tab. 351. Lin. Gen. Plant. 951. [fo called from Gr. be- caufe fuppofed to be the food of the firft race of man- kind.] The Beech- tree ; in French, Hetre. The Characters are, It hath male and female flowers on the fame tree ; the male flowers are colleffied into globular heads ; thefe have no petals , but have fever al ftamina included in an em- pakment of one leaf. \ which are terminated by oblong fum- mits. The female flowers have a one-leaved empalement cut into four parts , but have no petals ; the germen is fixed to the empalement , fupporting three ftyles , crowned by reflexed ftigmas. 'The germen afterward becomes a roundifh capfule , armed with foft fpines , opening in three cells , each containing a triangular nut. This genus of plants is ranged in the eighth fec- tion of Linnmus’s twenty-firft clafs, which in- cludes thofe plants that have male and female flowers on the lame plant, and the male flowers have many ftamina. To this genus he has joined the Chefnut ; but as the male flowers of the Chefnut are collected in long katkins, and thofe of the Beech are globular, and the fruit of the latter being trian- gular, there is fufficient reafon for keeping them fe- parate. We know but one Species of this genus, viz. Facets ( Sylvatica ) foliis ovatis obfolete ferratis. Hort. Cliff. 447. Fagus. Dod. Pempt. 832. The Beech-tree with oval fazved leaves. There are fome planters, who fuppofe there are two diftinbt fpecies of this tree ; one they call the Moun- tain Beech, which they fay is a whiter wood than the other, which they diftinguifh by the title of Wild Beech ; but it is certain, that this difference in the colour of the wood arifes from the difference of the foils in which they grew, for I have not feen any fpe- cific difference in the trees. There have been feeds of a Beech-tree brought from North- America, by the title of Broad-leaved Beech, but the plants which were raifed from them proved to be the common fort ; fo that we know of no other variety, excepting thofe with ftriped leaves, which is accidental ; and when the trees are in vigour, the leaves become plain again. This tree is propagated by fowing the mail ; the feafon for which is any time fromO&ober to February, only obferving to fecure the feeds from vermin when early lowed ; which, if carefully done, the fooner they are fown the better, after they are full ripe : a fmall fpot of ground will be fufficient for raifmg a great number of thefe trees from feed, but you mull be very careful to keep them clear from weeds ; and if the plants come up very thick, you Ihould not fail to draw out the ftrongeft of them the autumn following, that thofe left may have room to grow ; fo that if you hufband a feed-bed carefully, it will afford a three years draught of young plants, which Ihould be planted in a nurfery ; and, if defigned for timber trees, at three feet diftance row from row, and eighteen inches aftinder in the rows. ’ But if they are defigned for hedges (to which the tree is very well adapted) the diftance need not be fo great ; two feet row from row, and one foot in the rows will be fufficient. In this nurfery they may re- main two or three years, obferving to clear them from F E N weeds, as alfo to dig up the ground between the row% at ieaft once a year, that their tender roots may the better extend themfelves each way : but be careful not to cut or bruife their roots, which is injurious to all young trees ; and never dig the ground in fummer, v/hen the earth is hot and dry ; which, by letting in the rays of the fun to the roots, is often the deftruc- tion of young trees. This tree will grow to a confiderable ftature, though the foil be ftony and barren as alfo upon'the declivi- ties of hills, and chalky mountains, where they will refill the winds better than moll other trees ; but then the nurferies for the young plants ought to be upon the fame foil ; for if they are raifed in good foil and a warm expofure, and afterwards tranfplanted into a bleak barren fituation, they feldom thrive, which holds true in molt other trees ; therefore I would advife the nurfery to be made upon the fame foil where the plan- tation is intended, but of this I fhall fay more under the article of Nursery. The tree is very proper to form large hedges to furround plantations, or large wildernefs quarters.; and may be kept in a regular figure, if Iheared twice a year, efpecially if they fhoot ftrong ; in which cafe, if they are neglebled but a feafon or two, it will be dif- ficult to reduce them again. The fihade of this tree is very injurious to molt forts of plants which grow near it, but is generally believed to be very falubrious to human bodies. The timber is of great ufe to turners for making trenchers, difhes, trays, buckets ; and likewife to the joiner for ftools, bedfteads, coffins, &c. The mail is very good to fat fwine and deer ; it alfo af- fords a fweet oil, and the nuts have in fcarce times fupported fome families with bread. This tree delights in a chalky or ftony ground, where it generally grows very faft ; and the bark of the trees in fuch land is dear and fmooth ; and although the timber is not fo valuable as that of many other trees, yet as it will thrive on fuch foils and in fuch fituations where few better trees will fcarce grow, the planting of them fhould be encouraged ; efpecially as the trees afford an agreeable fhade, and the leaves make a fine appearance in fummer, and continue green as long in autumn as any of the deciduous trees : there- fore in parks, and other plantations for pleafure, this tree deferves to be cultivated among thofe of the firft clafs, efpecially where the foil is adapted to it. The two forts with variegated leaves may be pro- pagated by budding or grafting them upon the com- mon Beech, obferving not to plant them in a good earth ; which will caufe the buds or cyons to fhoot vigorouflv, whereby the leaves will become plain, which often happens to moft variegated plants. FARINA FCECUND ANS is the impregnating meal or duft on the apices or fummits of flowers ; which, being conveyed into the uterus or vafculum feminale of plants, fecundates the rudiments of the feeds in the ovary, which otherwife would decay and come to nothing. See Generation of Plants. FEA T H E R F E W, or F E A V E R F E W. See Matricaria. FENCES. In hotter climates than England, where they have not occafion for walls to ripen their fruit, their gardens lie open, where they can have water fence and profpefts ; or elfe they bound their gardens with groves, in which are fountains, walks, &c. which are much more pleafing to the fight than a dead wall : but in colder countries, and in England, we are obliged to have walls to flicker and ripen our fruit, although they take away much from the plea- fant profpebl of the garden. Since therefore we are under a neceffity to have walls to fecure our gardens from the injury of winds, as well as for the conveniencv of partitions or inclo- fures, and alfo to ripen our fruit, brick walls are ac- counted thewarmeft and beft for this purpofe : and thefe walls being built pannel-ways, with pillars at equal diftances, will fave a great deal of charge, in that the ■ \ FEN the walls may be btfilt thinner,, thari if they were built plain without thefe pannels, for then it would be ne~ cefiary to build them thicker every where : and be- fides, thefe pannels make the walls look the hand- fomer. Stone walls are by fome preferred to thofe of brick, efpecially thofe of fquare hewn ftones ; but where they are defigned for fruit, they fhould be faced with brick. Thofe that are made of rough ftones, though they are very dry and warm, yet, by reafon of their uneven- nefs, are inconvenient to nail up trees to, except pieces of timber be laid in them here and there for to fatten a trellis to them. But in large gardens it is better to have the prolpett open to the pleafure-garden, which fhould be fur- rounded with a foffe, that from the garden the adja- cent country may be viewed, but this mutt depend on the fituation of the place •, for if the profped from the garden is not good, it had better be fhut out from the fight by a wall, or any other fence, than to be open. As alfo, where a garden lies near a populous town, and the adjoining grounds are open to the inhabitants, if the garden is open, there will be no walking there in good weather, v/ithout being expofed to the view of all pafiengers, which is very difagreeable. Where thefe fofies are made round a garden which is fituated in a park, they are extremely proper ; be- caufe hereby the profped of the park will be obtained in the garden, which renders thefe gardens much more agreeable than thofe which are confined. In the making thefe fofies there have been many in- ventions ; but, upon the whole, I have not feen any which are in all refpeds preferable to thofe which have an upright wall next the garden ; which (where the foil will admit of a deep trench) fhould be fix or feven feet high, fo as to be above the reach of boys ; and from the foot of this wall, the ground on the outfide fhould rife with a gradual eafy fiope to the diftance of eighteen or twenty feet ; and where it can be allowed, if it flopes much farther, it will be eafier and lefs perceptible as a ditch to the eye, when viewed at a diftance. But if the ground is naturally wet, fo as not to admit of a deep fofle, then, in order to make a fence againft cattle, if the wall be four feet high, and flight pofts of three feet and a half high are placed juft behind the wall, with a fmall chain carried on from poll: to poft, no cattle or deer will ever attempt to jump againft it, therefore it will be a fecure fence againft them ; and if thefe are painted of a dark lead colour, they will not be difcerned at a diftance ; and at the fame time the chain will fecure perfons walking in the garden from tumbling over : and if another chain is carried through the pofts at one foot from the ground, it will more effeftually prevent cattle from creeping under. In fuch places where there are no good profpefts to be obtained from a garden, it is common to make the inclofure of park-paiing •, which, if well performed, will laft many years, and has a much better appear- ance than a wall : and this pale may be hid from the fight within, by plantations of lhrubs and Ever- greens •, or there may be a quick hedge planted within the pale, which may be trained up, fo as to be an excellent fence by the time the pales begin to decay. There are fome perfons who make ftuckade fences round their gardens to keep out cattle, &c. which, when well made, will anfwer the purpofe of a fence ; but this being very expenfive in the making, and not of very long duration, has occafioned their not being more commonly in ufe. As to fences round parks, they are generally of pa- ling •, which, if well made of winter-fallen Oak, will laft many years •, but a principal thing to be obferved in making thefe pales, is not to make them too heavy ; - for when they are fo, their own weight will caufe them to decay ■, therefore the pale fhould be cleft thin, and the rails fhould be cut triangular, to prevent the wet lodging upon them ; and the pofts fhould be good, and not placed too far afunder, burning that part of them as goes into the ground. If thefe things are ob- 3 ferved, one of thefe pales will laft, with a little care, upward of forty years very well. The common way of making thefe fences is, to have every other pale nine or ten inches above the intermediate ones ; fo that the fence may be fix feet and a half high, which is enough for fallow-deer • but where there are red deer, the fence fhould be one foot higher, otherwife they will leap over. Some inelofe their parks with brick walls ; and in countries where ftone is cheap, the walls are built with this material ; fome with, and others without mortar. A kitchen-garden, if rightly contrived, will contain walling enough to afford a fupply of fuch fruits as require the affiftance of a wall for any family ; arid this garderi being fituated on one fide, and quite out of fight of the ho ufe, may be furrounded with walls, which will lcreen the kitchen- garden from the fight of perfons in the pleafure-garden ; and being locked up, the fruit will be much better preferred than it can be in the public garden : and the having too o-reat a quantity of walling is often the occafion that fo many fcandalous trees are frequently to be feen in large gardens, where there is not due care obferved in their management. And befides, the borders of pleafure-gardens are ge- nerally too narrow for the roots of fruit-trees, as will be fhewn in its proper place, therefore it is in vain to plant them there. The height of garden-walls fhould be from ten to twelve feet, which is a moderate proportion ; and if the foil be good, it may in time be well furni filed with bearing wood in every part, efpecially thofe parts planted with Pears, notwithftanding the branches being trained horizontally from the bottom of the walls. I would recommend the White Thorn, the Holly, the Black Thorn and Crab, for outward fences to a good ground, but I do not approve of the intermixing them. The White Thorn is the beft quick to plant, becaufe it is the moft common, and may be clipped fo as to render it the clofeft and hardieft fence of any other tree ; and being very durable, is preferred to all others for outward fences, or for the divifion of fields, where they are expofed to cattle, &c. The Black Thorn and Crab make very good fences, and are to be raifed as the White Thorn ; but if the kernels of Apples or Crabs be fown, it is beft to fow the pommace with them, and they will come up the fooner, i. e. the firft year, if fown in the autumn, foon after the fruit is ripe. If Crab-ftocks be planted while young, in the fame manner as quick, they make excellent hedges foon, and fo will fome forts of Plumbs, I mean fuch as have thorns. The Black Thorn is not accounted fo good for fences as the White Thorn, becaufe it is apt to run more into the ground, and is not certain as to the growing, efpecially if the plants are not fet very young •, but then on the other hand, the bulhes are by much the better, and are alfo more lafting than the White Thorn, or any other, for dead hedges, or to mend gaps ; nor are they fubjetft to be crept by cattle, as the others are. The richer the mould is, the better they will profper, but yet they will grow on the fame fort of foil that the White Thorn does. The Holly will make an excellent fence, and is pre- ferable to all the reft, but is a flow grower; but when once it does grow, it makes amends by its height, ftrength, and thicknefs. It is raifed of young feedling plants or berries, as the White Thorn is, and the berries will lie as long in the ground before they come up. It delights moft in ftrong grounds, but will grow upon the drieft gravel, amongft rocks and ftones. The berries lie till the fecond fpring before they come up, therefore they fhould be prepared before they are fown (for this fee the article Aquifoi.ium.) It will be beft to fow them in the place where you defign they they fhould grow, but they fhould be wall weeded i both before they come up and afterwards. French Furz will alfo do well upon dry land y banks, where few other plants will grow; but they muft be kept very clean at the bottom, and cut thin, and never buffered to grow too high : nor fhould they be cut in dry weather, or late in autumn, nor early in the fpring ; the doing either of which is fubjed: to make it die in patches., which is irrecoverable ; nor will it ever break out again from old wood, if cut clofe in, after it has been buffered long to grow out. Fences may likewife be made of Elder: if the foil be any thing good, you may put flicks of Elder,, or truncheons ten or twelve feet long, flopeways in your banks, fo as to make a chequer- work ; and they will make a fence for a garden the quickefl of any thing, and be a good fhelter. But thefe fences are improper for a fine garden, becaufe they fhocrt very irregular, an d are ungovernahle ; as likewife the roots of thefe trees fpread very far, and draw away all the heart of the ground, fo as to flarve whatever plants grow near them : and add to this the feathering of the berries, which will fill the ground near them with young plants ; which, if not timely weeded out, will get the better of whatever grows near them ; therefore this fort of fence is feldom planted, where a hedge of ■White Thorn can be had. Elder planted on a, bank, the fide of which is wafhed with a river or flream, will make an extraordinary fence, and will preferve the bank from being under- mined by the water, becaufe it is continually fending fuckers from the roots and lower branches, which is of great ad vantage where the ftream wafhes away the bank. For middle fences in a garden, the Yew is the moft tonfile, governable, and durable plant. For furrounding wildemefs quarters, Elm, Lime, Hornbeam and Beech, are very proper. FEN N E L. See Foeniculum. FENNEL-FLOWER. See Nigella. FERRUM E QU I N U M. See JTippocr.ep.is. FERULA. Lin. Gen. Plant. 305. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 321. tab. 170. [takes its name of Ferendo, Lat. becaufe the ftalks of this plant are made ufe of in fupporting the branches of trees ; or of Feriendo, be- caufe in old time flicks were made of them, with which fchool-mafters ufed to cor red then* fcholars.] Fennel Giant ; in French, Ferule. The Characters are. It hath an umbellate! flower ; the -principal umbel is glo- bular, and is compofed of feveral fmallcr called rays , of tlse fame form-, the involucrum is compofed of feveral nar- row leaves which fall off ; the principal umbel is uniform. The flowers have five oblong erect petals which are equal , and five fiamina of the fame length , terminated by Jingle fummits ; under the flower is fituated a turbinated ger- men , fupporting two reflexed fiyles, crowned by obtufe jtigmas. ‘The germen afterward becomes an elliptical, com- preffed., plain fruit, dividing in two parts , each having a large elliptical plain feed, marked with three lines on each fide . This genus of plants is ranged in the fecond fedion of Linnaeus’s fil th clafs, intitled Pentandria Digynia, which contains thofe plants whofe flowers have five fiamina and two fiyles. The Species are, 1. Ferula ( Communis ) foliolis linearibus longiffimis fim- plicibus. Hort. Cliff. 9 5. Ferula with the fmallcr leaves , very narrow , long , and Jingle. Ferula major, feu fae- mina Plinii. M. Umb. Pliny's Female Fennel Giant. 2. Ferula ( Galbanifera ) foliolis multipartitis, laciniis li- nearibus planis. Hort. Cliff. 95. Ferula whofe fmallcr leaves are divided into many narrow parts which are plain. Ferula galbanifera. Lob. Obf. G alb anum-b earing Fennel Giant. 3. Ferula ( Fingitana ) foliolis laciniatis, lacinulis trk dentatis inaequalibus. Hort. Cliff. 95. Ferula whofe fmaller leaves are cut, and fegments ending in three un- equal parts. Ferula Tingitana, folio latiffimo lucido. H. Edin. Broad-leaved fhining Fennel Giant from Fanner. & 4. Ferula (. Femlago ) foliis pinnatifidis, pinnis .linearibus ' planis trifidis. Hort. Cliff. 95. Ferula with wing-pointed leaves, whofe pinnis are narrow, plain, and trifid. Fe- rula latiore folio. Mor. Hilt. 3. p. 309. Fennel Giant with a broader leaf. 5. Ferula {Ormpalis ,) foliorum pinnis bafi nudis, .fo- liolis fetaoeis. Hort. Cliff. 95. Ferula with the wings of the leaves naked at the bafe, and the fmaller leaves bniftly. Ferula Orientalis, Cachyros folio & facie. Tourn. Cor. 22. Faftern Fennel Giant with the leaf .and ■appearance one petal , which is cut into five acute fegments thefle are placed between the fegments of the empalernent, into which they are infer ted , but are fhorter , and ftand ereSl. It hath five ftamina , which are the length of the petal , terminated by obtufe fummits ; in the center is fituated a globular germen , fupporting a fender ftyle , crowned by an obtufe fiigma. The germen afterward be- comes a round berry , inclofing two plain roundifh feeds. This genus of plants is ranged in the lecond iedion of Tournefort’s twenty-firft clafs, which includes the trees and fhrubs with a Rofe flower, whofe pointal turns to a berry. Dr. Linnaeus has joined this genus with the Paliurus, Alaternus, and Ziziphus, to the Rhamnus, making them only fpecies of one genus ; but according to his own fyftem, they (hould be fe- parated to a great diftance from Rhamnus, and be placed in his twenty-fecond clafs, becaufe it hath male and female flowers on different plants ; whereas it is placed in the firft fedion cf his fifth clafs, from the flower having five ftamina and but one ftyle. The Species are, 1. Frangula {Aims) foliis ovato-lanceolatis glabris. Frangula with oval , fpear-fhaped , fmooth leaves. Fran- gula, five alnus, nigra baccifera. Park. Theat. Black Berry-bearing Alder. 2. Frangula {Latifolia) foliis lanceolatis rugofis. Fran- gula with rough fpear-fhaped leaves. Frangula riigo- liore & ampliore folio. Tourn. Berry-bearing Alder with a larger and rougher leaf. 3. Frangula ( Rotundifolia ) foliis ovatis nervofis. Fran- gula with oval veined leaves. Frangula montana pu- mila faxatilis, folio fubrotundo. Tourn. Low moun- tain, rocky, berry -bearing Alder, with a round leaf. 4. Frangula {Americana) foliis oblongo-ovatis ner- vofis, glabris. Frangula with oblong , oval , fmooth veined leaves. Frangula Americana foliis glabris. Dale. American Berry -bearing Alder with fmooth leaves. The firft fort grows naturally in the woods in many parts of England, fo is feldorn planted in gardens this rifes with a woody ftem to the height of ten or twelve feet, fending out many irregular branches, which are covered with a dark bark, and garniftied with oval fpear-fhaped leaves, about two inches long, and one inch broad, having feveral tranfverfe veins from the midrib to the fides, and ftand upon fhort foot-ftalks. The flowers are produced in clufters at the end of the former year’s (hoots, and alfo upon the firft and fecond joints of the fame year’s (hoot, each (landing upon a fhort feparate foot-ftalk, on every fide the branches •, thefe are very frnall, of an herba- ceous colour, and do not expand •, they are fucceeded by frnall round berries, which turn firft red, but af- terward black when ripe. The flowers appear in June, and the berries ripen in September •, this (lands in the Difpenfary as a medicinal plant, but is feldorn ufed. The fecond fort hath larger rough leaves than the firft. It grows naturally on the Alps and other • mountainous parts of Europe, and is preferved in Tome gardens for the fake of variety. The third fort is of humble growth, feldorn rifing above two feet high •, this grows on the Pyrenean Mountains, and is feldorn preferved unlefs in botanic F R. A gardens for variety,; it may be increafed by laying down the branches, but muft have a ftrong foil. The fourth fort grows naturally in North America* from whence I received the feeds ; this is pretty like the firft fort, but the leaves are longer and broader 5 they are fmooth, of a lucid green, and have many veins. The flowers are very like thofe of the firft lore. Thefe fhrubs are eafily propagated by feeds, which fhould be fown as foon as they are ripe, and then Pie- plants will come up the fpring following ; but if they are kept out of the ground till fpring, the plants will not come up till the year after. When the plants come up, they muft be kept clean from weeds till autumn, then they may be taken up and planted in a nu-rfery in rows, two feet afunder, and at one fool diftance in the rows ; in this nurfery they may remain two years, and may then be planted where they are to remain ; they may alfo be propapated by layers'.and - cuttings, but the feedling plants are bed. The fruit of the firft fort is often brought into the markets of London, and fold for Buckthorn berries ; of which cheat, all fuch as make fyrup of Buckthorn fhould; be particularly careful ; they may be eafily dif- tinguifned by breaking the berries, and obferving how many feeds 'are contained in each, the berries of this tree having but two, and thofe of Buckthorn gene- rally four feeds in each berry, and the juice of the latter dies paper of a green colour. FRAXINELLA. "See Dictamnus. FRAXINUS. Lin. Gen. Plant. 1026. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 577. tab. 343. The Afh-tree ; in French, Frene. The Characters are, It hath hermaphrodite and female flowers on the fami tree , and fometimes on different trees. The hermaphro- dite flowers have no petals , but a frnall four-pointed era - palement , including two erect ftamina , which are termi- nated by oblong fummits , having four furrows. In the center is fituated an oval comprefed germen, fupporting a cylin- drical ftyle, crowned by a bifid ftigma. The germen after- ward becomes a compreffed bordered fruit, Jhaped like a bird's tongue, having one cell, inclofing a feed of the fame form. The female flowers are the fame, but have no ftamina. This genus of plants is ranged in the fecond fedion of Linnaeus’s twenty-third clafs, which includes the plants which have flowers of different fexes on the fame or different plants, which are fruitful. The Species are, 1. Fraxinus {Excelfior) foiiolis ferratis, floribus ape- talis. Lin. Sp. Plant. 1057. Afh-tree whofe fmdlkr leaves are fler rated, and flowers having no petals. Fraxinus excelfior. C. B. P. 416. The common AJh. 2. Fraxinus ( Rotundifolia ) foiiolis ovato-lanceolatis fer- ratis, floribus coloratis. Afh-tree whofe fmatler leaves are oval, fpear-fhaped, and fawed, and the flowers co- loured. Fraxinus rotundiore folio. C. B. P. 41b. Afs-tree with a rounder leaf, commonly called Manna AJh. 3. Fraxinus {Ornus) foiiolis ferratis, floribus colora- tis. Lin. Sp. Plant. 1057. Afh-tree whofe fnaller leaves are fawed, and flowers having petals. Fraxinus hu- milior five altera Theophrafti, minore & tenuiore folio. C. B. P. 416. Dwarf AJh ofTheophrafuswilh fnaller and narrower leaves. 4. Fraxinus {Paniculata) foiiolis lanceolatis glabris, flo- ribus paniculatis terminatricibus. Afh-tree with fmooth fpear-fhaped leaves, and flowers growing in ‘panicles at the ends of the branches. Fraxinus fiorifera botryoides. Mor. Prael. 265. The flowering, AJh. 5. Fraxinus (Nova Anglia) fcholis integerrimis, pen- olis teretibus. Flor. Virg. 122. Afh-tree with the frnall leaves entire, and taper foot-ftalks. Fraxinus ex. Nova Anglia, pinnis foliorum in mucronem produdioribus. Rand. Cat. ITort. Chelf. New England AJh with long acute points to the wings of the leaves. .61 Fraxinus {Carolinidna) integerrimis petiolis tefreti- bus frudu latiore. Prod. Leyd. 533. Afh-tree with entire leaves and taper foot-ftalks. Fraxinus Carol ini- ana, latiore frudu. Rand. Cat. H, Chelf. Carolina AJh with a broad fruit . , The . t FRA The firft fort is the common Afh-tre'e, which, grows naturally in moft parts of England, and is fo well known as to need no defcription. The leaves of this fort have generally five pair of lobes, and are termi- nated by an odd one ; they are of a very dark green, and their edges are ilightly fawed. The flowers, are produced in loofe fpikes from the fide of the branches, which are fucceeded by flat feeds, which ripen in au- tumn ; there is a variety of this with variegated leaves, which is preferved in home gardens. The fecond fort grows naturally in Calabria, and is generally fuppofed to be the tree from whence the manna is colledled, which is an exludation from the leaves of the tree. The fhoots of this tree are much ftiorter, and the joints clofer together than thofe of the firft fort •, the fmall leaves are {hotter, and deeper fawed on their edges, and are of a lighter green. The flowers come out from the fide of the branches, which are of a purple colour, and appear in the fpring be- fore the leaves come out. This tree is of humble growth, feldom riflng more than fifteen or fixteen feet high in England. The third fort is a low tree, which rifes about the fame height as the fecond •, the leaves of this fort are much fmaller and narrower than thofe of the firft, but are fawed on their edges, and are of the fame dark colour. The flowers of this fort have petals, which are wanting in the common Afh. The fourth fort was raifed by the late Dr. Uvedale at Enfield, from feeds which were brought from Italy by t)r. William Sherard, where the trees grow naturally ; but it was fuppofed to be a different fort from that mentioned by Dr. Morrifon, in his Prteludia Botanica, but by comparing them together they appear to be the fame. The leaves of this fort have but three or four pair of lobes (or fmall leaves) which are fhort, broad, and fmooth, of a lucid green, and irregularly fawed on the edges ; the midrib of the great leaf is jointed, and fwelling where the leaves come out. The flowers grow in loofe panicles at the end of the branches-, thefe are moft of them male, having two ftamina in each, but no germen or ftyle ; they are of a white herba- ceous colour, and appear in May. As this fort very rarely produces feeds in England, it is propagated by grafting or budding it upon the common Afh. The fifth fort was raifed from feeds, which were fent from New England in the year 1724, by Mr. Moore. The leaves of this tree have but three, or at moft but four pair of lobes (or fmall leaves) which are placed far diftant from each other, and are terminated by an odd lobe, which runs out into a very long point ; they are of a light green and entire, having no ferra- tures on their edges : this tree fhoots into ftrong irre- gular branches, but doth not grow to a large fize in the trunk. It is propagated by grafting it upon the common Afh. The flxth fort was raifed from feeds which were fent from Carolina in the year 1 724, by Mr. Catefby. The leaves of this fort hath feldom more than three pair of lobes, the lower being the leaft, and the upper the largeft; thefe are about five inches long and two broad, of a light green colour, and {lightly fawed on their edges the foot-ftalk, or rather the midrib, of the leaves is taper, and has fhort downy hairs the feeds are broader than thofe of the common Afh, and are of a very light colour. As this fort hath not yet produced feeds in England, it is propagated by grafting it upon the common Aft. Thefe trees are now propagated in plenty in the nurferies for fale, as there has been of late ^ears a great demand for all the hardy forts of trees and fhrubs, which will live in the open air ^ but all thofe trees which are grafted upon the common Afh, are not fo valuable as thofe which are raifed from feeds, becaufe the flock grows much fafter than the grafts fothat the lower part of the trunk, fo far as the ftock rifes, will often be twice the fize of the upper ; and if the trees fiend much expofed to the wind, the grafts are frequently broken off to the flock, after they are FRA grown to a large fize, which is a great difappointment to a perion after having waited ieveral years, to fee their tree's fuddenly deftroyed. Befide, if the wood of either of the forts is valuable, it can be of little life when the trees are fo raifed. The fourth fort is generally planted for ornament, the flowers making a fine appearance when they are in beauty, for almoft every branch is terminated by a large loofe panicle j fo that when the trees are large, and covered with flowers, they are diftinguiftable at a great diftance. All the other forts ferve to make a variety in planta- tions, but have little beauty to recommend them ; and as their wood feems to be greatly inferior to that of the common A{h, fo there fhould be few of thefe planted, becaufe they will only fill up the {pace where better trees might grow. 0,0 . The common Afh propagates ifcfelf In' plenty by the feeds which fcatter in the autumn, fo that where the feeds happen to fall in placeswhere cattle do not come, there will be plenty of the plants come up in the fpring ; but where any perfon is d^firous to raife a, quantity of the trees, the feeds fhould be fown as foon as they are ripe, and then the plants will come up the following fpring but if the feeds are kept out of the ground till the fpring, the plants will not come up till the year after, which is the fame with all the forts of Afh that when any of their feeds are brought from abroad, as they feldom arrive here before the fpring, the plants muft not be expedited to appear till the next year ; therefore the ground fhould be kept clean all the fummer where they are fown, and not difturbed, left the feeds fhould be turned out of the ground, or buried too deep to grow ; for many perrons are too impatient to wait a year for the growth of feeds, fo that if they do not come up the firft year, they dig up the ground, and thereby deftroy the feeds. When the plants come up, they muft be kept clean from weeds during the fummer ; and if they make good progrefs in the feed-bed, they will be fit to tranfplant by the autumn therefore there fhould be fome ground prepared to receive them, and as foon as their leaves begin to fall, they may be tranfplantecL In taking them up, there fhould be cafe taken not to break or tear off their roots to prevent which, they fhould be taken up with a fpade, and not dranw up, as is frequently prabtifed ; for as many of the plants which rife from feeds will out-ftrip the others in their growth, fo it is frequently pradtiied, to draw up the largeft plants, and leave the fmaller to grow a year longer before they are tranfplanted and to avoid hurting thofe which are left, the others are drawn out by hand, and thereby many of their roots are tom oft or broken therefore it is much the better way to take all up, little or big together, and tranfplant them out, placing the larger ones together in rows,, and the fmaller by themfelves. The rows fhould be three feet afunder, and the plants a foot and a half diftance in the rows ; in this nurfery they may remain two years, by which time they will be ftrong enough to plant where they are to remain ; for the younger they are planted out, the larger they will grow ; fo that where they are defigned to grow large, they fhould be planted very young and the ground where the plants are raifed, fhould not be better than that where they are defigned to grow for when the plants are raifed in good land, and afterward tranfplanted into worfe, they very rarely thrive ; fo that it is mueft the beft method to make the nurfery upon a part of the fame land, where the trees are defigned to be planted, and then a fufficient number of trees may- be left Handing upon the ground, and thefe will out- ftrip thofe which are removed, and will grow to a larger fize. Where people live in the neighbourhood of Aft-, trees, they may fupply themfelves with plenty of felf- fown plants, provided cattle are not fuffered to graze on the land, for they will eat off the young plants, and not buffer them to grow , but where the feeds fall in hedges, cr where they are protefted by buft.es, the 5 plants F R E F R E plants will come up and thrive ; and in' thefe hedges the trees frequently are permitted to grow till they have deftroyed the hedge, for there is fcarce any tree fo hurtful to all kinds of vegetables as the Aih, which robs every plant of its nourilhment within the reach of its roots, therefore fhould never be buffered to grow in hedge rows •, for they not only kill the hedge, but impoverish Corn, or what foe ver is fown near them. Nor fiiould Aih-trees be permitted to grow near p allure grounds, for if any of the cows eat of the leaves or ihoots of the Aih, all the butter which is made of their milk will be rank and of no value •, which is always the quality of the butter which is made about Guild- ford, Godalmin, and feme other parts of Surry, where there are Afh-trees growing about all their pafcures, fo that it is very rare to meet with any batter in thofe places which is fit to eat •, but in all the good dairy countries, they never fuffer an Afii-tree to grow. If a wood of thefe trees is rightly managed, it will turn greatly to the advantage of its owner •, for by the under- wood, which will be fit to cut every feven or eight years, for poles or hoops, there will be a continual income more than fufficient to pay the rent of the ground, and all other charges •, and frill there will be a flock preferved for timber, which in a few years will be worth forty or fifty {hillings per tree. This timber is of excellent ufe to the wheelwright and cartwright, for ploughs, axle-trees, wheel-rings, harrows, bulls, oars, blocks for puilies, and many other purpofes. The bell feafon for felling of thefe trees is from November to February •, for if it be done either too early in autumg, or too late in the fpring, the;imber will be fubjeft to be infelled with worms, and other infefts j but for lopping pollards, the fpring is pre- ferable for all foft woods. FREEZING is the fixing of a fluid, or the de- priving it of its natural mobility by the aftion of cold ; or it is the aft of converting a fluid fubftance into a firm, coherent, rigid one, called ice. The principal phenomena of freezing are, iff. That Water being dilated or rarefied, and all fluids, oil excepted, i. e. in freezing, take up more fpace, and are fpecifically lighter than they were before. That the bulk and dimenfions of water are increafed by freezing, is found by many experiments, and it may not be improper here to take notice of the pro- cefs of nature. A glafs veffel then, I A, full of water immerged in a veffel of water mixed with fait GHKL, the water prefently rifes from D to C; which feems owing to the fudden conftriction of the veffel, haftily plunged into fo cold a medium : foon after, from the point C, it con- tinually defcends condeniing, till it ar- rives at the point F ; where, for fome time, it feems to remain at reft : but it foon recovers itfelf, and begins to ex- pand, riling from F to E, and from thence loon after, by one violent leap, flf} mounts to B ; and here the water in I fi /f is immediately feen all thick and cloudy, fj and, in the very inftant of this leap, is ;1 converted into ice. Add, that while the ■ to A, 1 G being A B D F H jijil K J !ji ill! ice is growing harder, and fome of the water near the neck of the veffel I is freezing, the flux of the wa- ter is continued above B towards A, and at length runs out at the veffel. 2dly, That they lofe not only of the fpecific, but alfo of their abfolute gravity, by freezing ; fo that when they are thawed again, they are found confider- ably lighter than before. 3dly, That frozen water is not quite fo tranfparent as when it was liquid, and that bodies do not perfpire fo freely through it. i qthly, That water, when frozen, evaporates almoft as much as when fluid. 5thly, That water does not freeze in vacuo, but re- quires the prefence and contiguity of air. 6thiy, That water which has been boiled, does not freeze fo readily as that which has not. ythly, That water, being covered over with a fur- face of oil of Olives, does not freeze lb readily as it does without it ; and that nut oil abfolutely preferves it under a ftrong froft, when Olive oil will not. 8thly, That fpint of wine, nut oil, and oil of turpen- tine, do not freeze at all. 9th ly, That the fur face of the water, in freezing, appears all wrinkled , the 1 wrinkles being fometimes in parallel lines, and fometimes like rays proceeding from a center to the circumference. The theories of freezing, or the method of account- ing for thefe phenomena, are very many. The chief principles that different authors have gone upon, are, either that fome foreign matter is intro- duced within the pores of the fluid, by means of which it is fixed, its bulk increafed, &c. Or that fome matter which was naturally contained in the fluid is now expelled, by reafon of the abfence of which, the body becomes fixed. Or that there is fome alteration produced in the tex- ture or form, either of the particles of the fluid itfelf, or of fomething that is contained within it. To fome one of thefe principles all the fyftems of freezing are reducible. The Cartefians explicate freezing by the recefs or going out of the ethereal matter from the pores of the water, or other liquor •, which being once done, the finer parts are too fmall and flexible to keep the long, (lender, and eel-like particles of water fluent, or in the form of a liquor. But the Corpufcularians, or Gaffendifts, afcribe the freezing of water, with more probability, to the in- grefs of multitudes of cold or frigorific particles, as they call them ; which, entering the liquor in fwarms, and difperfing themfelves every way through it, croud into the pores of the water, and hinder the wonted agitation of its parts, and wedge it up, as it were, into the hard or confiftent body of ice ; and from hence proceeds its increafe of dimenfions, coldnefs, &c. That ice is fpecifically lighter than the water out of which it is by freezing made, is certain by its fwi na- ming in it ; and that this lightnefs of ice proceeds from thofe numerous bubbles which are produced in it by its congelation, is equally plain ; but how thofe bubbles come to be generated in freezing, and what fubftance they contain in them, if they are not quite empty, is an inquiry of great importance ; and, per- haps, if difcovered, may contribute much to the un- derftanding the nature of cold. Mr. Hobbes will have it common air, which, in- truding into the water in congelation, entangles itfelf with the particles of the fluid, prevents their motion, and produces thofe numerous bubbles, thus expanding its bulk, and rendering it fpecifically lighter. But, in anfwer to this, no fuch ingrefs of air into water appears in its coagulation ; and that it does not get into frozen oil is plain, becaufe that body is con- denfed by being frozen. And Mr. Boyle has alfo (hewn, by undoubted ex- periments, that water will freeze in veffels hermeti- cally fealed •, and in brafs bodies or veffels clofely flopped, and into which the air can have no ingrefs, hath yet been turned into ice, abounding with thefe bubbles as numerous as thole frozen in the open air. Ele alfo has proved by experiment, that water kept a while in the exhaufted receiver, till all its bubbles were emerged and gone, being afterwards turned into ice by a freezing mixture, the ice had fcarce any bubbles in it •, whence it is plain, that thefe bubbles are filled with fome matter which is within the water, if they are filled with any thing. But he proves alfo, by plain experiments, that they have none, or ex- ceedingly little, true elaftic air contained in them. Others, and thofe of the greatefl number, are of opinion, that the freezing matter is a fait •, and they argue that an excels of cold will render water torpid, but never congeal it without fait : they fay that thofe 5 S particles I F R E particles that are the chief caufe of freezing are faline, mixed in a due proportion, congelation bearing a near relation to cryftallization. This fait is fuppofed to be of the -nitrous kind, and to be fumifhed by the air, which is generally found /to abound in nitre. It is indeed no difficult matter, to account for the particles of nitre preventing the fluidity of water. Thefe particles are fuppofed to be fq many rigid pointed fpicula, which are eaflly impelled or driven into the ftamina or globules of water ; which, by this means, becoming varioufly mingled and entangled with it, do, by degrees, weaken and deftroy the mo- tion of it. The reafon that this effeift arifes only in fevere win- ter weather, is, that it is then only that the retrading adion of the nitrous fpicula is more than equal to the power or principle by which the fluid is otherwife kept in motion, or difpofed for motion. Several experiments of artificial freezing fupport this opinion. For if you mix a quantity of common faltpetre with fnow, or ice pulverized, and diffolve the mixture in the fire, and then im merge a tube full of water in the folution ; the water, that part of it next the mixture, will freeze prefently, even in a warm air. Whence they argue, that the fpicula of the fait are driven through the pores of the glafs, and mixed with the water, by the gravity of the mixture, and of the incumbent air •, for that it is evident, that the fait has this effed, inafmuch as it is certainly known, that the particles of water cannot find their way through the pores of the glafs. In thefe artificial freezings, in whatever part the mixture is applied, there is prefently a fkin or lamina of ice produced, whether at the top, bottom, or fides, by reafon that there is always a flock of faline cor- pufcles, fufficient to overpower the particles of fire ; but natural congelations are confined to the top of the water, where the laft moft abounds. But this fyftem is oppofed by the author of the Nou- velle Conjedure pour expliquer la Nature de la Glace, who objeds, that it does not appear, that the nitre always enters the compofition of ice ; but if it did, it would fall fhort of accounting for fome of the princi- pal effeds •, as, How fhould the particles of nitre, by entering the pores of the water, and fixing the parts, caufe the water to dilate, and render it fpecifically lighter ? They fhould naturally augment its weight. This and fome other difficulties, fhew the neceffity of a new theory ; and therefore the ingenious author advances this which follows, which feems to foive the phenomena in a manner that is more eafy and fimple, as not depending upon the admiffion or extrufion of any heterogeneous matter. The water freezes in the winter only, becaufe its parts, then being more clofely joined together, mutually embarrafs one another, and lofe all the motion they had ; and that the air, or rather an alteration in the 1 bring and force of the air, is the caufe of this clofer union' of water. It is evident from experiment, that there are an in- finite number of particles of grofs air mterfperfed •among the globules ot water j and it is allowed, tnat each particle of air has the virtue of a fpring V and hence this author argues, that the fmali firings of grofs air, mixed with water, have more force in cold winter weather, and do then unbend themfelves more, than at other times. Hence thofe fprings thus unbending themfelves on one fide, and the external air continuing to . prefs the furface of the water on the other, the particles of the water, being thus con- itringed land locked up together, muft lofe their mo- tion and fluidity, and form a hard,- confident body, till a relaxation of the fpring of the air, from an increafe of heat, reduce the particles to their old dimenfions, and leave room for the globules to flow again. But this fyftem feems to be built upon a falfe prin- F R E triple, for the fpring or elafticity of the air is not ia- creafed by cold, but diminiflied ; air condenfes by cold, and expands itfelf by heat *, and it is. demon- ilrable in pneumatics, that the elaftic force of ex- panded air is to that of the fame air condenfed, as the bulk when rarefied is to its bulk when condenfed. Indeed, fome authors, in order to account for the increafe of the bulk and dimenfion of the fpecific gra- vity of frozen water, have advanced as follows, viz. That the aqueous particles, in their natural date, were nearly cubes, and fo filled their fpace without the in- terpofition of many pores •, but that they are changed from cubes to fpheres, by congelation ; from whence it will neceffarily follow, that there muft be a great deal of empty fpace between them. But, in oppofition to this hypothefis, the nature of fluidity and firmnefs eaflly fuggefts, that fpherical particles are much properer to conftitute a fluid than cubical ones, and lefs difpofed to form a fixed than cubic one. But after all, in order to come to a confident theory' of freezing, we muft either have recourfe to the fri- gorific matter of the Corpufcularians, confidered un- der the new light and advantages of the Newtonian philofophy, or to the ethereal matter of the Cartefi- ans, under the improvements of Monf. Gauteron. The true caufe of freezing, or the congelation of wa- ter into ice, fay the former, feems plainly to be the, introduction of the frigoriftc particles into the pores or interftices between the particles of the water, and by that means getting fo near them, as to be juft within the fpheres of one another’s attracting force, and then they muft cohere into one folid or firm body ; but heat afterwards feparatlng them, and put- ting them into various motions, breaks this union, and feparates the particles fo far -from one another, that they get out of the dtftance of the attracting force, and into the verge of the repelling force, and then the water re-afifumes its fluid form. Now, that cold and freezing proceed from fome fub- ftance of. a faline nature floating in the air, feems pro- bable from hence : That all falts, and more eminently fome particular ones, do prodigioufly increafe the force and effeds of cold, when mixed with fnow or ice. It is alfo evident, that all faline bodies produce a ftiffnefs and rigidity in the parts of thofe bodies into which they enter. It appears, by microfcopical obfervations upon falts, that the figure of fome falts, before they fhoot into maffes, are thin, double wedged, like particles which have abundance of furface, in refped to their foli- dity ; and is the reafon why they fwim in water, when once raifed in it, though fpecifically heavier. Thefe fmali points, getting into the pores of the water, whereby they are alio, in fome meafure, fuff pended in the winter time, when the heat of the fun is not ordinarily ftrong enough, to diffolve the falts into a fluid, to break their points, and to keep them in perpetual motion, being lefs difturbed, are at more liberty to approach one another ; and, by fhoqting into cryftals of the form above-mentioned, do, by both their extremities, infmuate themfelves into the pores of the water, and by that means freeze it into a felid form. And it is apparent, that the dimenfions of water are increafed by freezing, the particles ot it being kept at fome diftance from one another, by the intervention of the frigoriftc matter. But befides this, there are many little volumes, or fmali particles of air, included at feveral diftances, both in the pores of the watery particles, and in the interftices formed by their fpherical figure! Now, by, the infinuation of the cryftals, the volumes of air are driven out of the watery particles, and many of them uniting, form larger volumes* which thereby have a greater force to expand themfelves than when they are difperfed ; and id both enlarge the dimenfions, and leften the fpecific gravity of water thus congealed into ‘ice. And hence (fays Dr. Cheyhe,- from whom this laft ac- count is taken) we -may guefs at the manner how wa- ter. F R E F R I ter, impregnated with falts, fulphurs, or earths, which are not eafiiy difiolvable, may form it-felf into metals, minerals, gums, and other foftils ; the parts of thefe mixtures becoming a cement to the particles of water, or getting into their pores, change them into thefe different jubilances. For the fecond : as an ethereal matter or medium is generally allowed to be the caufe of the motion or fluids, and as the air itfelf has all its motion from the fame principle, it follows, that all fluids muff remain in a ftate of reft or fixity, when that matter lofes of its necefiary force. And confequentiy, the air being lefs warmed in the winter time, , by reafon of the ob- liquity of the fun’s rays, is more denfe and fixed in winter than any other feafon of the year. But farther : it is evident, from divers experiments, that the air does contain a fait which is fuppofed to be of the nature of nitre. If this be granted, and the , denfity of the air allowed, it will follow, that 'the particles of this nitre mufl likewife be brought nearer together, and thickened by the condenfation of the air; as on the contrary, a rarefaction of the air, and an augmentation of its fluidity, mufl divide and fe- parate them. And if the fame happens to all liquors that have im- bibed or difiolved any fait, if the warmth of the li- quid keep the fait exactly divided, and if the cool- nefs of a cellar, or of ice, caufe the particles of the difiolved fait to approach, run into each other, and Ihoot into cryftals ; why fiiould the air, which is al- lowed to be a fluid, be exempt from the general law of fluids ? It is true, that the nitre of the air, being grofler in cold weather than in hot, mufl: have a lefs velocity •, but ftill the produbt of its augmented mafs into the velocity that remains, will give it a greater momen- tum, or quantity of motion. Nor is there any thing farther required to make this fait abt with greater force againft the parts of fluids, and this may pro- bably be the caufe of the great evaporation in frofty weather. This aereal nitre mufl: neceflarily promote the con- cretion of liquids ; for it is not the air, nor yet the nitre that it contains, which gives the motion to fluids; it is the ethereal medium, therefore a diminution of the motion of reft arifes from the diminution of that force. Now the ethereal matter, which in the -winter time Is weak enough, muft ftill lofe more of its force by its aCtion againft air condenfed, and loaded with large particles of fait. It muft therefore lofe of its force in cold weather, and become lefs clifpofed to maintain the motion of the fluids. In fine, the air, during froft, may be efteemed like the ice impregnated with fait wherewith liquors are iced in fummer time. It is very probable that thefe liquors freeze by reafon of a diminution of the motion of the ethereal medium, by its aCting againft the ice and fait together, and the air is not able to prevent Its concretion by all its fcorching heat. The air (fays Mr. Boyle) being a fluid as well as water, and impregnated with falts of different kinds, it is not improbable, that what happens in water im- pregnated with fuch falts, may alfo happen in the air. Two proper quantities of different lalts being dif- folved in hot water, they floated undiftinguifhably. in it, and retained a capacity to aCt in conjunction upon ieveral occafions ; yet when the liquor becomes cold, the faline particles of one kind being no longer agitated by a due degree of heat, fhot into cryftais ; and, lofing their fluidity and motion, vifibiy feparat- ed themfelves from die other, which ftill continued fluid in the liquor, and capable of aCting feparately. We have divers accounts in the Fhilofophical Tranl- aCtions, of a freezing rain which fell in the weft of England in December 1672. This rain, as foon as it touched any thing above the ground, as a bough, -or the like, immediately fettled into ice; and, by multiplying and enlarging the icicles broke all down with its weight; the rain that fell on the fnow im- mediately froze into ice, without finking into the.fhbw at all. It made an incredible deftruCtion of trees beyond any thing in all hiftory. A certain gentleman weighed a fprig of an Afh-tree of juft three quarters of a pound, the ice which was on it weighed 16 pounds; that fome perfons were frighted with the noiie in the air, till they underftood that it was the clatter of Icy boughs dallied againft each other. Dr. Beale remarks, that there' was no considerable Toll cbferved on the ground during the whole time 5 whence he concludes, that a froft may be very fierce and dangerous on the tops of fome hills 'and plains, while in other places it keeps at two, three, or four feet diftance above the ground, rivers, lakes, &c. and may wander about very furious in fome places, and remifs in others not far off. The froft was fol- lowed by glowing heats, and a wonderful forwardnefs of flowers and fruits. The effects of freezing vege- tables, is farther explained under the article of Frost. FRIT ILL ARIA. Lin. Gen. Plant. 372. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 376. tab. 201. Corona Imperials. Tourn i Inft. R. H. 372. tab. 197, 198. Fritillary, or Che- quered Tulip and Crown Imperial. The Characters are, The flower hath no, empalement ; it hath fix oblong petals * is b ell- jh aped , and flpreading at the bafle ; in the. hollow , at the bafle of each petal , is fitmted a nedlarium ; the flower hath fix ftamina funding near the ficyle, which are terminated by oblong four-cornered fiummits. In the center is fitmted an oblong three-cornered germen , fupporting a fingle Jlyle which is longer than the ftamina , crowned by a flpreading obtufie ftigma. The germen ' af terward be- comes an oblong capfuls with three lobes having three cells , which are filled with fiat feeds , ranged in a double order. The capfule of Fritillaria is oblong and fmooth, but that of Corona Imperialis hath acute borders, or membranaceous wings. This genus of plants is ranged in the firft febtion of Linnaeus’s fixth clafs, which includes the plants which have fix ftamina in their flowers, and but one ftyle. Thefe two genera of Fritillary and Crown Imperial, have been always feparated, till Dr. Linnaeus joined them together; indeed by their flowers they may be properly enough placed in the fame genus ; but, if their fruit may be allowed as a charabteriftic note, they fiiould be feparate ; however, as this new fyftem is generally received, I fhall, in compliance with the prefent tafte, join them together. The Species are, 1. Fritillaria {Melagris) foliis linearibus alternis, flo- ribus terminalibus. Fritillary with narrow leaves placed alternate , and .flowers terminating the ftalk. Fritillaria prrecox, purpurea, variegata. C. B. P. 64. Early , purple , variegated , chequered Tulip. 2. Fritillaria ( Aquitanica ) folks infimis oppofitis. Hort. Clift. 8 1 . Fritillary whofe lower leaves are op - pofitc. Fritillaria Aquitanica, flore luteo obfeuro. Swert. Floril. Aquitain chequered Tulips with an obfeure yellow fewer. 3. Fritillaria {Nigra) florihus adfeendentibus. Fri- tillary with flowers growing above each other. Fritil- laria nigra. Lob. Adver. 2. 496. Black chequered Tulip. 4. Fritillaria (. Lute a ) foliis lanceolatis, caule unifioro maxirtfo. Fritillary with fpear-jhaped leaves , and one large flower on each ftalk. fritillaria lutea maxima I ta- ll ica. Park. Parad. 43, Largejl yellow Italian Fritillary. 5. Fritillaria ( Umbellata ) lloribus umbellatis. Fritil- lary with flmJers growing in umbels. Fritillaria umbel ■ hfera. C. B. P. 64. Umbellated chequered Tulip. 6. Fritillaria ( Ferfica ) racemo nudiufculo, foliis ob- liquis. Hort. Upfal. 82. Fritillary with a naked [pike of flowers and oblique leaves. Lilium Periicum. Dod. Pempt. 2 2 cl The Perfian Lily. 7. Fritillaria {Racemo fa) floribus racernofis. Fritillary with flowers growing in bunches. Fritillaria ramofa, feu lilium Perficum minus. Mor. Hort. Reg. Bleft Branching Fritillary, or [mailer Perfian Lily , •8. Fr.j 7 9 ! F R I g h ritillaria ( Imperialis ) raceme comofo inferne nu- | do, foliis integerrimis. Lin. Hort. Upfai. 82. Fritillary with a tufted' bunch of leaves over the flowers, which is naked below , and entire leaves. Corona Imperialis. Dod. Pempt. 202. Crown Imperial. 9. Fritillaria {Regia) racemo comofo inferne nudo, foliis crenatis. Lin. Sp. Plant. 303. Fritillary with a tufted bunch of leaves over the flowers , which is naked below , and crenated leaves. Corona regalis lilii folio crenato. Hort. Elth. no. Royal Crown with a crenated Lily leaf. 10. Fritillaria ( Autumnalis ) racemo inferne nudo, foliis oblongis mucronatis. Fritillary with a naked ftalk , mid oblong pointed leaves. The firlt fort grows naturally in Italy, and other warm parts of Europe ; and from the feeds of this there have been great varieties raifed in the gardens of the florifts, which differ in the fize and colour of their flowers ; and as there are frequently new va- rieties produced, fo it would be to little purpofe to enumerate thofe which are at prefent in the Englifh and Dutch gardens, which amount to a great number in the catalogues of the Dutch florifts, who are very fond of any little diftindlion, either in the colour or fhape,* to enlarge their lifts. The forts which are here enumerated, I think may be allowed as diftindt fpecies, notwithftanding Dr. Linnaeus has reduced them to five •, for I have raifed many of all the forts from feed, which have con- ftantiy produced the fame as the feeds w ere taken from, and have only differed in the colour or fize of the flowers ; for the fort with broad leaves produced the fame fort again, and the umbellatcd and fpiked forts produced the fame, though there are feveral va- riet.es in the colours of their flowers. The firft hath a round compreffed root, in fhape like that of Corn flag, but is of a yellowifh white colour ; the ftalk riles about fifteen inches high, having three or four narrow long leaves placed alternately, and the top is divided into two (lender foot-ftaiks which turn downward, each fuftaining one bell-fhaped in- verted flower, compofed of fix petals, which are che- quered with purple and white like a chefs-board ; and in the center is fituated a germen fupporting one ftyle, crowned by a trifid ftigma; the fix ftamina ftand about the ftyle, but are fhorter. At the bottom of each petal there is a cavity, in which is fituated a nedlarium, filled with a fweet liquor ; after the flower is fallen, the germen fwells to a pretty large three- cornered blunt capfule, and then the foot-ftalk is turned and (lands erebl ; when the feeds are ripe, the capfule opens in three parts and lets out the fiat feeds, which were ranged in a double order. The flowers of this appear the latter end of March or beginning of April, and the feeds are ripe in July. There is a variety of this with a double flower. The fecond fort grows naturally in France •, the leaves of this are broader, and of a deeper green than the former-, the lower leaves are placed oppofite, but thofe above are alternate the ftalk rifes a foot and a half high, and is terminated by two flowers of an ob- fcure yellow colour, which fpread more at the brim than thofe of the firft fort, but are turned downward in the fame manner. This flowers three weeks after the firft. There is a variety of this with greenifh flowers, which grows naturally in lame parts of England. The third fort feldom rifes more than a foot high, the leaves are narrow like thofe of the firft fort, but are fhorter ; each ftalk is terminated by three or four flowers, which arife above each other ; they are of a very dark purple, chequered with yellowifh fpots. This flowers in April, about the fame time with the fecond. The fourth' fort rifes about a foot high, the ftalk is garnifhed with fpear-fhaped leaves four inches long and one broad, of a grafs-green colour; theft are fometimes placed oppofite, but are generally alter- nate ; the ftalk is terminated by one large bell-fhaped flower of a yellowifh colour, chequered with light - F R I purple. This fort flowers about the fame time as the firft. There are two or three varieties of this, which differ in the fize and colour of their flowers and the breadth of their leaves, but retain their fpecific dif- ference, fo as to be eafily diftingtiifhed from the other forts. The fifth fort rifes a foot and a half high ; the ftalk is garnifhed with fhorter and broader leaves than the firft fort, which are of a gravifh colour ; the flowers are produced round the ftalks like thofe of the Crown Imperial ; they are of a dark purple colour, che- quered with a yellowifh green; This flowers about the fame time with the fecond fort. The fixth fort is commonly called the Perfian Lily, and is fuppoftd to grow naturally in Perfia, but has been long cultivated in the Englifh gardens ; the root of this fort is round and large, the ftalk rifes three feet high ; the lower part of it is deftly garni (lied with leaves which are three inches' long, and half an inch broad, of a gray colour, Handing on every fide of the ftalks, but are twitted obliquely ; the flowers grow in a loofe fpike at the top of the ftalk, forming a pyramid ; they are fhaped like thofe of the other fpecies, but are much fhorter, and fpread wider at their brims, and are not bent downward like thofe. They are of a dark purple colour, and appear in May, but are feldom fucceeded by feeds in England, fo are only propagated by offsets. The i eve nth fort hath a much fhorter ftalk than the laft, but is garnifhed with leaves like thofe, only they are fmailer ; the ftalks branch out at the top into fe- veral fmall foot-ftalks, each fuftaining one dark co- loured flower. This is commonly called the fmall Perfian Lily, from its refemblance to the former fort. Thefe plants are propagated either by feeds, or off- fets from the old roots ; by the firft of which methods new varieties will be obtained, as aifo a larger flock of roots in three years, than can be obtained in twenty or thirty years in the latter method : 1 (hall therefore firft treat of their propagation by feeds. Ha ving provided yourfelf with fome good feeds, faved from the faireft flowers, you muft procure fome (hallow pans or boxes, which muft have fome holes in their bottoms to let out the moifture ; thefe you fhould fill with light frefh earth, laying a few po.t- fheards over the holes, to prevent the earth from flopping them ; then, having laid the earth very level in the boxes, &c. you muft fow the feeds thereon pretty thick, covering it with fine fifted earth a quarter of an inch thick. The time for fowing the feed is about the beginning of Auguft, for if it be kept much longer out of the ground it will not grow; then place the boxes or pans where they may have the morning fun until eleven o’clock, obferving, if the feafon proves dry, to water them gently, as alio to pull up all weeds as foon as they appear ; for ■ if they are buffered to remain until they have taken deep root into the earth, they would draw the feeds out of the ground whenever they are pulled up. Toward the latter end of September you fhould remove ths boxes, &c. into a warmer flotation, placing them clofe to a hedge or wall expofed to the fouth ; if they are fown in pots, thefe fhould be plunged into the ground, but they are beft in tubs ; thefe fhoqld be covered in fevere froft. In this flotation they may . remain until the middle of March, by which time the plants will be come up an inch high ; you muft therefore remove the boxes, as the weather increafes hot, into a more fnady flotation ; for while the plants are young, they are liable to fuffer by being too much expofed to the fun : and in this fhady flotation they may remain during the heat of the fummer, obferving to keep them clear from weeds, and to refrefli them now and then with a little moifture ; but be careful not to give them much water after their leaves are decayed, which would rot their roots. About the beginning of Auguft, if the roots are very thick in the boxes, you fhould prepare a bed of good light frefh earth, which muft be levelled very even, upon which you fhould fpread the earth in the boxes in wh ich * % F R I Which the fmall foots are contained, equally covering it about one fourth of an inch thick with the fame frefh earth : this bed fhould be fituated in a warm pofition, but not too clofe to hedges, walls, or pales, which would caufe their leaves to be long and (lender, and make the roots weaker than if placed in a more open expofure. In this bed they may remain until they flower, which is generally the third year from fowing ; at which time you fhould put down a mark to the roots of all fuch as produce fair flowers, that at the time of taking them out of the ground (which ought to be foon after their green leaves are decayed) they may be fele&ed into a bed amongft your old roots of this flower* which, for their beauty, are preferved in the belt gardens ;■ but the other lefs valuable flowers may be planted in the borders of the parterre-garden for their variety, where, being intermixed with other flowers of different feafons, they will make a good appearance. The fine forts of this flower fhould remain tiridif- turbed three years, by which time they will have pro- duced many offsets-, and fhould be taken up when their leaves are decayed, and planted into a frefh bed, taking fuch of their offsets as are large enough to produce flowers to plant in the flower-garden ; but the fmaller roots may be planted into a nurfery-bed, until they have obtained ftrength enough to flower ; but you mud never fuffer thefe roots to lie out of the ground when you remove them, but plant them again immediately, otherwife they will perifh. During thefe three years which I have advifed the roots to remain in the beds, the furface of the earth fhould be ftirred every autumn with a trowel, obferv- ing not to go fo deep as to bruife the root, and at the fame time lay a thin cover of very rotten dung or tanners, bark upon the furface of the beds ; which, be- ing wafhed into the ground, will caufe the flowers to be larger, as alfo the roots to make a greater increafe : you muft alfo obferve to keep them conftantly clear from weeds, and thofe roots which you would pre- ferve with care, fhould not be fuffered to feed. When a flock of good flowers are obtained, they may be preferved and increafed in the fame manner as other bulbous rooted flowers, which is by offsets fent out from their roots, which fhould be taken off every other year from the finefl forts; but the ordinary flowers may remain three years undifturbed, in which time they will have multiplied fo much, as that each root will have formed a clufter ; fo that if they are left longer together, the roots will be fmall, and the flowers very weak ; therefore, if thefe are taken up every other year, the roots will be the ftronger. Thefe roots may be treated in the fame manner as Tulips, and other bulbous rooted flowers, with this difference only, that the roots will not bear to be kept out of the ground fo long *, therefore, if there fhould be a necef- fity for keeping them out of the ground any time, it will be belt to put the roots into fand to prevent their fhrinking. As thefe flowers come out early in the fpring, they make a pretty appearance in the borders of the plea- fure-garden, where they are planted in fmall clumps ; for when they Hand Angle in the borders, they make but a poor figure. The eighth fort is the Crown Imperial, which is now very common in the Englifh gardens. This grows na- turally in Perfia, from whence it was firft brought to Conftantinople, and about the year 1570, was in- troduced to thefe parts of Europe; of this flower there are a great variety now preferved in the gardens of florifts, but as they have been produced accidentally from feeds, they are but one fpecies ; however, for the fatisfa&ion of the curious, I fhall here mention all the varieties which have come to my knowledge. 1. The common Crown Imperial; this is of a dirty- red colour. 2. The yellow Crown Imperial ; this is of a bright yellow. ! - 3. The bright red Crown Imperial, called FufaL F R I 4 - The pale yellow Crown Imperial: 5. The yellow flriped Crown imperial 6. The large flowering Crown Imperial. 7. The broad leaved late red Crown Imperial. 8. The double and triple crowned Imperial Crown,' 9. The double red Crown Imperial. > 10. The double yellow Crown Imperial 1 1. The filver flriped leaved Crown Imperial. 12. The yellow flriped leaved Crown Imperial There are fome few other varieties which are men- tioned in the catalogues of the Dutch florifls, but their diftinCtions are fo minute, that they are not dif- tinguifhable, fo I fhall pafs them over,' as thofe here inferted are all that I have feen growing either in England or Holland, which deferred any diftin&ion. The Crown Imperial hath a large round fcaly root of a yellow colotir, and a ftrong odour of a fox; the flalk rifes to the height of four feet or Upward ; it •is ftrong, fucculent, and garnifhed two-thirds of the length on every fide, with long narrow leaves ending in points, which are fmooth and entire ; the upper part of the flalk is naked, a foot in length ; then the flowers come out all round the flalk upon fhort foot- flalks, which turn downward, each fuftaining one large, fpreading, bell-fhaped flower, compofed of fix fpeanfhaped petals ; at the bafe of each petal is a pretty. large cavity, in which is fituated a large white neCtarium, filled with a mellous liquor. In the center of the flower is fixed a three-cornered oblong germen, upon which refts the Angle flyle, which is the length of the petals, and is crowned by a fpreading obtufe fligma ; round the flyle there are fix awl-fhaped fta- mina which are fhorter than the flyle, and are ter* minated by oblong four-cornered fummits. Thefe flowers hang downward, and above them rifes a fpreading tuft of green leaves, which are ereCt, and from between thefe come out the foot-flalks of the flowers : when the flowers decay, the getmen fwells to a large hexagonal capfule, fhaped like a water- mill, having fix cells, which are filled with flat feeds* This plant flowers the beginning of April, and th£ feeds are ripe in July. The fort with yellow flowers, that with large flowers, and thofe with double flowers, are the moll valuable; but that which hath two or three whorls of flowers above each other, makes the finefl appearance; though this feldom produces its flowers after this man- ner the firft year after removing, but the fecond and third year after planting, the ftalks will be taller, and frequently have three tier of flowers, one above ano- ther, which is called the Triple Crown. The ftalks of this fort frequently run flat and broad, when they pro- duce a greater number of flowers than ufual ; but this is only a luxuriancy of nature, not conftant, though many of the writers have mentioned it as a particular variety; As this is one of the earlieft tall flowers of the fpring, it makes a fine appearance in the middle of large bor- ders, at a feafon when fuch flowers are much wanted to decorate the pleafure-garden : but the rank fok-like odour which they emit, is too ftrong for moft people, fo hath rendered the flowers . lefs valuable than they* would have been : for there is fomething very pleaf- ing in the fight of them at a diftance, fo that lvfere it not for the offenfive fmell of the leaves and flowers, it would be more frequently feen in all gardens fbf pleafure. This may be propagated by feeds, or offsets from the root ; the firft is too tedious for moft of the Englifh florifls, becatjfe the plants fo raifed, are fix or leven years before they flower; but the Dutch and Flemifh gardeners, who have more patience, fre- quently raife them from feeds, fo get fame new va- rieties, which rewards their labour. The method of propagating thefe flowers fro in feeds, being nearly the fame as for the Tulip; the reader is defired to turn to that article, where there are full directions for per- forming it. The common method of propagating them here, is by offsets fent out from the old roots, which will 5 T flower flower ftrong the fecond year after they "are taken from . the roots ; bat in order to have plenty of thefe, the - roots fiiould not be tranfpknted oftener than every third year, by which time each root will have put out feveral offsets, fome of which will be large enough to flower the following year, fo may be planted in the borders of the flower-garden, where they are to re- main • and the fmaller roots may be planted in a nur- lery-bed, to grow a year or two according to their fize •, therefore they fhould be forted, and the.fmalleft roots planted in a bed together, which fhould remain there two years, and the larger by thertffelves to Hand one year, by which time they will have acquired ftrength enough to flower, fo may then be removed into the pleafure-garden. The time for taking up thefe roots is in the begin- ning of July, when their ftalks will be decayed; and they may be kept out of the ground two months, but they fhould be laid Angle in a dry fhady room, but not in heaps, or in a moift place, which will caufe them to grow mouldy and rot. The offsets fhould be firft planted, . for as thefe are fmall, they will be apt to fhrink if they are kept long out of the ground. As the foots are large, they muft not be planted too near other flowers ; and when they are planted in beds by themfelves, they fhould not be nearer than a foot and a half in the rows, and two feet row from row ; they fhould be planted fix inches deep at leaft, efpecially the ftrong roots : they delight in a light foil, hot too wet, nor very full of dung ; therefore, if any dung is laid upon the borders where they are planted, it fhould be buried pretty deep, fo as to be two or three inches below the roots. The ninth and tenth forts grow naturally at the Cape of Good Hope, from whence they were brought into the European gardens. The ninth has been many years an inhabitant, where it has been ufually titled Corona Regalis. This has a tuberofe root, from which afife in the autumn fix or eight obtufe leaves, near five inches long and two broad toward the top, grow- ing narrower at their bafe, and are crenated on their borders, lying flat on the ground ; thefe continue all the winter : in the fpring arifes the flower-ftalk in the center of the leaves, about fix inches high, naked at the bottom ; but the upper part is furrounded by bell-fhaped flowers, compofed of fix greenifh petals, with an oval germen fituate at the bottom, furrounded by fix ftamina, fupporting a triangular ftyle, crowned by a trifid ftigma; the germen afterwards becomes a roundifh capfule, but rarely perfeffs feeds in England. This flowers in April, and the leaves decay in June. The fecond fort I raifed from feeds, which were fent me from the Cape of Good Hope : the root of this is like that of the ninth fort, but the leaves are more than a foot long, broad at their bafe, but are narrowed to the top, where they end in acute points ; the flower- ftalk rifes rather higher than that of the ninth, but the Sowers are of the fame fhape and colour : this feidom flowers till Auguft. The roots of this fort were ftolen out of the Chelfea garden the following fpring after it had flowered, and were fold to fome perfons whofe love for rare plants exceeded their ho- FRITILLARIA CRASSA. See Asclepias. F ROM DOSE [frondofus, Lat.~\ full of leaves, • or ffioots. FROST may be defined to be an exceffive cold ftate ©f the weather, whereby the motion and fluidity of the liquors are fufpended ; or, it is that ftate of the air, &c. whereby fluids are converted into ice. s'. By froft metals contract, or are fliortened. Monf. Auzout found by an experiment, that an iron tube twelve feet long, upon being expofed to the air in a froftv night, loft two lines of its length but this may be fuppofed to be wholly the effecft of cold. On the contrary, froft does not contract fluids, but, - on the other hand, fwells or dilates them near one tenth of their bulk. Mr. Boyle gives us feveral experiments of veffels made of mejals exceeding thick and ftrong, which being filled with water, clofe flopped, and expofed to the cold, the water, being expanded by freezing, and not finding either room or vent, burft the veffels. A ftrong barrel of a gun, with water in it, being flop- ped clofe, and frozen, was rent the whole length • and a fmall brafs veffel, five inches deep, and two in, diameter, filled with water, &c. and frozen, lifted up its lid, which was preffed with a weight of fifty-fix pounds. There are alfo related many remarkable effe&s of froft on vegetables. Morery, Hift. de France, fays. That trees are frequently fcorched and burnt up with froft, as with the moft exceffive heat, and that even in fo warm a climate as Provence. Mr. Bobart relates, That in the great froft anno 1683, Oaks, Allies, Walnut-trees, &c. were mifera- bly fplit and cleft, fo as they might be feen through, and this too with terrible noifes like the explofion of fire arms ; that the clifts were not only in the bodies, but continued to the larger boughs, roots, &c. Philof. Tranfaft. M° 105. Dr. Derham fays, That the froft in 1708, was re- markable through the greateft part of Europe ; and the greateft in- degree, if not the moft univerfal, in the memory of man ; that it extended throughout Eng- land, France, Germany, Denmark, Italy, &c. but was fcarce felt in Scotland and Ireland. All the Orange-trees and Olives in Italy, Provence, &e. and all the Walnut-trees throughout France, with an in- finity of other trees, perifhed by the froft. Monf. Gouteron fays. They had a gangrene on them, which he takes to be the effect of a corrofive fait, which corrupted and deftroyed their texture. He adds. That there is fo much refemblance between the gan- grene befalling plants through froft, and that which the parts of animals are liable to, that they muft have fome analogous caufe. Corrofive humours burn the parts of animals, and the aereal nitre, condenfed, has the fame effects on the parts of plants. Memoires de 1 ’ Academie Royale de Sciences, an. 1709. Dr. Derham fays, That the greateft fufferers in the animal kingdom were birds and infefts, but vegeta- bles were much the greateft fufferers ; that few of the tender forts of vegetables efcaped the feverity of the froft ; Bays, Laurels, Rofemary, Cyprefs, Alaternufes, Phillyreas, Arbutufes, Lauruftinufes, and even Furz, with moft fort of the frutefcent herbs, as Lavenders, Abrotanums, Rue, Thyme, &c. were generally de- ftroyed. He adds, that the fap of the finer wall- fruit was fo congealed and deftroyed, that it ftagnat- ed in the limbs and branches, and produced difor- ders like to chilblains in human bodies, which would turn to mortifications in many parts of the trees ; that the very buds of the finer trees, both in the leaf, buds, and bloffom buds, w'ere quite killed, and dried into a farinacious matter. Dr. Derham relates it as a common obfervation. That vegetables buffered more from the fun than from the froft, in that the fun-lhine, melting the fnow, and opening the ground, left it more expofed to the rigour of the enfuing night. It was likewife obferved, at a meeting of the Royal Society, That the calamities which befel trees, arofe not purely from their being frozen, but principally from the winds lhaking and rocking them when they are frozen, which rent and parted their fibres. Philof. Tranfabt N° 324. Hoar froft, or white froft, is the dew frozen, or congealed early in cold mornings, chiefly in autumn. This (as Mr. Regis obferves) is an affemblage of little parcels of ice or cryftals, which are of various figures, according to the difpofition of the vapours which meet and are condenfed by cold. Dew is, to all appearance, the matter of hoar froft, though many of the Cartefians fuppofe it to be formed of a cloud, and either congealed in the cloud, and fo let fall, or ready to be congealed as foon as it arrives at the earth. In the year 1 72 8-9, there was a remakable froft, which continued for fome months, and deftroyed a great number of trees and plants in feveral parts of Europe, a brief FRO a brief account of which may not be improper to be here inferte’d. The autumn began with cold north and eaft winds, and early in November the nights were generally frofty; though the froft did not enter the ground deeper than the fun thawed the following day , but to- ward the end of November the winds blew extremely cold from the north, which was fucceeded by a great fnow, which fell in fuch quantities in one night, as to break off large arms, as alfo the tops of many Ever- green-trees, on which it lodged. After the fnow had fallen, it began to freeze again, the wind continuing to blow from the north •, the days were dark and cloudy for fome time, but afterwards it cleared up, and the fun appeared almoft every clay, which melted the fnow where expofed to it, whereby thefroftpenetrated deeper into the ground. It was oblervable, that, during thefe clear days, a great mill; or vapour, appeared in the evenings, floating near the furface of the ground un- til the cold of the night came on, when it was fuddenly condenfed, and difappeared. About the 8 th of De- cember, the nights were extremely cold ; the fpirits in the thermomoter fell 1 8 degrees below the freezing point, and on the ioth of the fame month the froft was as fevere as had been known in the memory of man ; the fpirits of the thermometer fell to 20 de- grees below the freezing point. At this time vaft numbers of Lauruftinufes, Phillyreas,. Alaternufes, Rofemary, Arbutus, and other Evergreen-trees and fhrubs began to buffer •, efpecially fuch as had been trimmed up to heads with naked ftems, or had been clipped late in autumn. At this time alfo there were great numbers of large deciduous trees difbarked by the froft, as Pear-trees, Plane-trees, Walnut-trees, with many other forts, and it was chiefly on the weft and fouth-weft fide of the trees, that the bark came off. About the middle of December the froft abated of its intenfenefs, and feemedto be at a Hand till the 23d of the fame month, when the wind blew extremely fharp and cold from the eaft, and the froft increafed again, continuing very fharp till the 28 th day, when it began to abate again, and feemed to be going off, the wind changing to the fouth , but it did not con- tinue long in this point, before it changed to the eaft again, and the froft returned, though it was not fo violent as before. Thus the weather continued for the moft part frofty, till the middle of March, with a few intervals of mild weather, which brought forward fome of the early flowers ; but the cold returning, foon deftroyed them : fo that thofe plants which ufually flower in January and February, did not this year appear till March, and before t,hey were fully blown, were cut off by the froft ; of this number were all the Spring Crocufes, Hepaticas, Perfian Irifes, Black Hellebores, Meze- reons, with fome others. The Cauliflower plants, which were planted out of the beds in the open ground, during the intervals be- tween the froft, were moft of them deftroyed, or fo much cut, that they loft moft of their leaves ; the ear- ly Beans and Peas were moft of them killed, and many fruit and foreft trees, which had been lately removed, were quite deftroyed. The lofs was very great to fome curious perfons, who had been many years en- deavouring to naturalize great numbers of exotic trees and fhrubs, abundance of which were either to- tally killed, or deftroyed to the furface of the ground j amongft this number there were many forts deftroyed, which had endured the open air many years, without receivingthe leaft injury from the cold, fuch as Paffion Flowers, Cork-trees, Ciftufes, Rofemary, Stoechas, Sage, Maftich, and fome others. In fome places the young Afh and Walnut-trees were killed ; but when the froft went off, there appeared to have been much more damage done in the gardens, than there really was, which occafioned many people to dig up and de- ftroy large quantities of trees and fhrubs, which they fuppofed were killed ; whereas thofe who had more patience, and fuffered them to remain, fared better $ for great numbers' of them ftiot out again; fbme frdni their ftems and branches; arid others from their roots* the following furnmer. Nor was the froft more fevere in England, than iri other parts of Europe •, but, on the contrary, in com- parifon, favourable ; for in the fouthem parts of France, the Olives, Myrtles,, Ciftufes, Alaternufes, and feveral other trees and fhrubs, which grow there almoft fpontaneo.ufly, were either deftroyed, of at leaft were killed to their roots ; and about Paris, and the northern parts of France, the buds of their fruit- trees were deftroyed, although they remained doled, fo that there Werevery few bloffoms which opened that fpring. The Fig-trees were in feveral parts of France quite killed, and in England their tender branches were deftroyed, fo that there was very little fruit on thofe trees the following furnmer, except where they Were protected from the froft. In Holland the Pines and Firs; with feveral Other trees, which are natives of cold countries, were great- ly injured by the cold ; and moft of the trees and fhrubs, which were brought from Italy, Spain, or the fouth parts of France, which had been planted in the full ground, in that country, were entirely killed, though many other forts, which had been brought from Virginia and Carolina, efcaped very well in thb fame gardens ; but the perfon who fuffered moft in that country, was the learned Dr. Boerhaave, who had been feveral years endeavouring to naturalize as many exotic trees and fhrubs as he could pofftbly obtairi from the feveral parts of thfe world, great numbers of which were entirely deftroyed by the froft this winter. In fome parts of Scotland they hot only loft many of their curious flowers, plants, and trees, but great numbers of fheep, and other cattle, were buried under the fnow, where they perifhed, and many poof people, who went to look after their cattle, were equal fufferers with them, being buried in the fnow, which in fome places fell eight or nine feet deep iri. one night. It has been obferved by thermometers, when that kind of hovering lambent fog arifes (either mornings or evenings) which frequently betokens fair weather; that the air, which in the preceding day was much warmer, has, upon the ablence of the fun become many degrees cooler than the furface of the earth; which being near 1500 times denfer than the air, can- not be fo foon affebted with the alteration of heat and cold ; whence it is probable, that thofe vapours which are raifed by the warmth of the earth, are by the cooler air foon condenfed into a vifible form. The fame difference has been obferved between the ebolrtefs of the air, and the warmth of water in a pond, by put- ting a thermometer, which hung all night in the open air in furnmer time, into the water, juft before the rifing of the fun, when the like reek, or fog, was rifing on the furface of the water. In the year 1739-40, we had another fevere winter, which did great mifchief to the gardens, fields, aftd woods, the effebts of which are yet, and will be many years, felt in Europe. Some particulars of thefe depredations, may not, perhaps, be unacceptable t@ the reader, if they are here mentioned. The wind fet in blowing from the north and north- eaft, about the autumnal equinox, and continued to blow from the fame quarter, with little variation, up- ward of fix months. Early in November, there was a continued fharp froft for nine days, in which time the ice upon large ponds, and other ftanding waters, was frozen fo hard as to bear perfons who fkated there- on ; but toward the end of November the froft abated, and there was little more than flight morning frofts until Chriftmas day, when it froze pretty hard that morning, and continued every morning fo to do ; but on the 28th day of December, the wind blew with great ftrength from the north-eaft, and brought on fevere cold ; that night the froft penetrated very deep into the ground, and the next day, vfz. the 29th, the wind changed to the fouthward of the eaft, and blew with great fury ; the thermometer fell this day t: twenty •twenty-five degrees below froft •, in the morning fome little fnow fell, but the violence of the wind carried it off-, but cold ftill increafing, the waters were all , frozen over, and that day it was fo intenfe, as to freeze the water of the river, which was raifed by the force of the wind into ice, before it fell down again. The wind continued to blow with the lame force, and from the fame quarter, all the 30th day, the cold Hill increafing, fo that at this time the froft penetrated into moft of the green -houfrs in England, but efpe- cially into all thofe whofe fronts had the leaft incli- nation to the eaft and fuch of them as fronted the fouth-weft efcaped heft, where the back walls were of a fufficient thicknefs to keep out the froft the fpirits in the thermometer fell in the night of the 30th day to thirty-two degrees below the freezing point, which was lower than it had been known in England be- fore the violence of the wind made it very trouble- fome for perfons of the moft robuft conftitutions to be abroad, and this alfo caufed the froft to penetrate through thick walls, and in the fpace of two days, the Evergreen-trees and ftirubs appeared as if they had been fcorched by fire, fo that they feemed to have no life ; the only trees of all the forts of Evergreens which retained their verdure at this time, were the Portugal Laurel, Savin, and fhrubby Hartwood ; thefe in the midft of this fevere froft remained un- hurt, when all the others were as brown as if they had been dead a year ; and it was very late in the fpring, before any of them refumed their ufual ver- dure : during thefe fevere days there had but little fnow fallen, fo that the froft penetrated deep in the ground, and deftroyed the roots of great part of the vegetables* where they were not well fecured; the Artichoke roots were moft of them killed in all the kitchen-gardens* fome few only efcaped, thefe were fuch as were not intended to be preferved. A fingle row of thefe roots, which were growing in a place where a great quantity of dung had been wheeled over them, whereby the ground was rendered as hard as that of a common foot-way, though there was no covering upon thefe roots, yet they furvived the froft and did well another parcel which was growing near a tan-yard, where, by accident, fome tan had been thrown, were preferved, fo that from fome of thefe accidents we were fo lucky as to retrieve the good kind of Artichoke, which the Englilh gardens were fo famous for being ftocked with. By the fharp piercing winds the Grafs was almoft to- tally burned up, fo that there was not the leaft ver- dure to be feen in the fields, and in many places the fweeteft and belt kinds of the herbage were entirely killed* fo that there remained only the ftrong rough kinds of grafs, whereby the paftures were in general much damaged-, but on the 31ft day in the evening, the wind being much abated, the feverity of the froft was not fo great, and there feemed an appearance of a thaw on the firft and fecond of January, but on the third in the evening the froft fet in again with great violence; and on the fourth of January in the morn- ing, the thermometer was fallen one degree lower than it had been before. The fame morning there was the greateft hoary froft which had been feen, the woods, trees, and hedges, appeared as if they had been covered with fnow-, and although there was no wind ftirring, yet the air was fo fharp and penetrating, as to render it difficult to endure the cold, even with great exercife. The timber-trees fiiffered greatly that morning, ef- peciaily the Oaks, which were fplit with great vio- lence ; and the noife in the woods that morning, re- fembled that of great branches breaking down in every part of the woods, and when heard at a dif- tance, like the firing of guns. This was little at- tended to at the time, but the timber which has been fince fallen, fufficiently proves the great damage which the woods then fuftained ; nor was it here the calamity flopped, for the Oaks in general had re- ceived fo much injury from the froft, as to occafion fuch a weaknefs and di (temper among them, that the 5 following fpring they were infefted with in feels to fuch a degree, as that their leaves were eaten and en- tirely deftroyed by them \ fo that at Midfummer the trees were as naked as if it had been the beginning of April -, and this diflemper continued for two years after, almoft as bad as at firft, and has .leffened by degrees, as the trees have recovered their ftrength ; and where the trees were old and weak, they have not yet gotten the better of this diflemper. The herbage was alfo fo much weakened by the fe- verity of the froft, as not to be able to refill the at- tack made upon it by infefls, fo that innumerable quantities of them were difeovered in the paftures in many parts of Europe, beginning firft in the northern countries, and afterward fpreading to the fouth and thefe infedls in many places were fo numerous; as to deftroy the fward of Grafs, and it is to be feared the diflemper which fo long raged among the cattle may- have been owing to this caufe *, for wherever the dif- temper fpread, it has been obferved, that numbers of thefe infefts have harboured about the roots of the Grafs : and as a farther proof of this, it has con- ftantly been remarked, that, when thefe grubs ate changed into a fort of beetle, and take their flight (which is commonly about the beginning of May,) the diflemper ceafes -, and when thefe beetles have depofited their eggs in autumn, the diflemper has raged again. Another remark has been made, that thefe beetles always chufe to depofit their eggs not at a great diftance from rivers, or large pieces of water, and in fuch places the cattle have been moft attacked. There might be many other circumftances mentioned in favour of this opinion, as alfo the fe- veral experiments which have been made by fome of the members of the Academy of Sciences at Paris, which are fufficient to prove, that the diftemper was not infedious, nor can be communicated by the cattle, notwithftanding it has been treated as fuch in many countries, where has been an immenfe lofs to the public of fuch numbers of cattle and their hides ; but this may require a particular treatife, therefore I fhall not enlarge farther on this head at prefent. The froft ftill continued very hard till toward the end of January, but not fo violent as at the beginning j for had the wind continued to blow with fo much force as it had done the three firft days of the froft, for any confiderable time longer, there would have been few vegetables able to have refilled the cold, nor would the animal kingdom have fared much better ; for the cold was fo intenfe during thofe few days, as to kill feveral of the weaker fort of cattle, where they were much expofed to the wind. The Walnut-trees, Afh, and feveral other trees, had. moft of their fhoots of the former year deftroyed, which caufed them to be very late before they put out their new fhoots the following fpring, and thefe fhoots were produced from the two and three years branches. The Fig-trees in many places were killed almoft to the ground, efpecialiy thofe which were growing againft the beft afpeded walls, for thofe on the north and north-weft afpe&s, as alfo the old ftandard Fig- trees efcaped better ; but all thofe ftools and layers of thefe trees, which were growing in the nurfery-gar- dens, were fo much injured by the froft, as not to be recovered under three years, during which time there were fcarce any of thefe plants to be fold. The layers of Vines, as alfo of the Oriental Plane-tree, in the nurferies, were likewife killed to the ground, and the old ftools fo much. injured, that they had better have been dug up and thrown away, than to have con- tinued them;, for in ten years after they did not recover their former vigour, making their fhoots fo late in the fummer, that their wood had not time to harden, and the firft froft in autumn frequently killed them half way to the ground. Many other deciduous trees were equal fufferers by this fevere froft, and the Evergreens were more ge- nerally injured, and abundance of them killed. The Pine and Pinafter were fo much hurt, as to lofe all their verdure, and in fome places the young plants of the the former fort were entirely killed. 1 he Rofeniary, Lavender, Stcechas, Sage, and many other aromatic •plants, were in many places quite deitroyed, fo that it was two or three years before the markets coiud be fupplied with thefe ; and in general the elculent plants in the kitchen-gardens were killed, fo that for fame months the markets were not fupplied with any quantity of garden fluff. The flower-gardens alfo were great fufferers by this winter ; for as the feafons for feme years before had been very temperate, rew perfons had made any provifion for a hard winter; and the cold fetting in fo very intenfe at the beginning, the mifehief was done before people could be pro- vided with covering. The Wheat in many parts of England, but efpecially in the open common fields, was very much hurt, particularly on the top of the ridges, where, in fe- veral places there were broad naked fpaces on the middle of the ridges, which in the fpring appeared like fo many foot-paths. And as the fpring following was very dry, and the wind continuing to blow from the north and eaft ; thefe piercing winds entered the ground, which had been loofened by the froft, and dried up the tender roots of the Corn, to the great prejudice of it ; but fome of the more expert farmers, who rolled their Wheat after the froft was over, were well repaid by the great crops which their land pro- duced them., Were I to enter into all the particulars of the damages fuftained by this fevere froft in the gardens and fields, it would fwell this work beyond the limits intended ; fo I hope, on the other hand, I fhall not be con- demned for having inferred thus much, fince, by the mention of thefe things, perfons may be inftrudted how to fave many of their valuable plants in future winters, as alfo what forts are more liable to danger from frofts than others. FRUCTIFEROUS [fruflifer, Lat.] fruit-bearing, fruitful. FRUCTUS. See Fruit. FRUIT is the produdtion of a tree or plant, for the propagation or multiplication of its kind ; in which fenfe fruit includes all kinds of feeds, with their fur- niture, &c. botanifts ufe it to fignify properly, that part of a plant wherein the feed is contained, which the Latins call Fructus, and the Greeks YLagirog. The fruit of fome plants are produced fingly, as are their flowers, and fometimes they are produced in clufters, as in moft fruit-trees, which are alfo flefhy, but in many plants they are dry. The word fruit is alfo ufed to fignify an afiemblage of feeds in a plant ; as in a Pea, Bean, Ranunculus, &c. and in its general fignification, for all kinds of grain, whether naked, or inclofed in cover, capfula, or pod, whether bony, flefhy, fkinny, membranous, or the like. Fruit is the produdt or refult of the flower, or that for whofe production, nutrition, &c. the flower is in- tended. The ftrudure and parts of different fruits are different in fome things, but in all the fpecies the effential parts of the fruit appear to be only continuations or expanfions of thole which are feen in the other parts of the tree. Dr. Beale fuggefts fome very good reafons for a di- red communication between the remoteft parts of the tree and the fruit ; fo that the fame fibres which con- ftitute the root, trunk, and boughs, are extended into the very fruit. Thus, if you cut open an Apple tranfverfly, you will find it to confift chiefly of four parts, viz. ift, a fkin, or cortex, which is only a production of the fkin or outer bark of the tree, zdly, A parenchyma or pulp, which is an expanfion and intumefcence of the inner bark of the tree. 3dly, The fibres, or ramifications of the woody part of the tree, qthly, The core, which is the produce of the pith, or medulla of the plant, indurated or ftrengthened by twigs of the wood and fibres inofculated therewith. This ferves to furnifh a cell, or lodge, for the kernels, filtrates the juice of the parenchyma, and conveys it thus pre- pared to the kernel. Of the fibres, authors generally reckon fifteen branches, of which ten penetrate the parenchyma* and incline to the bafis of the flower ; the other five afeend more particularly from the pedicle or ftalk* and meet with the former at the bafe of the flower, to which branches the capfulse, or coats of the ker-, nels are fattened. Thefe branches being firft extended through the pa- renchyma to the flower, furnifh the neceffary matter for the vegetation of it ; but as the fruit increafes, it intercepts the aliment, and thus the flower is ftarved, and falls off. In a Pear there are five parts to be diftinguifhed, viz. the fkin, parenchyma, ramification, kernel, and ace- tarium. The three firft parts are common to the Apple. The kernel, obferved chiefly in Choke Pears, or Breaking Pears, is a congeries of ftrong corpufcles, that are difperfed throughout the whole parenchyma, but in the greateft plenty, and clofeft together about the center, or acetarium ; it is formed of the ftony or calculous part of the nutritious juice. The acetarium is a fubftance of a tart acid tafte, of a globular figure, inclofed in an afiemblage of feverai of the ftony parts before-mentioned. In a Plumb, Cherry, &c. there are four parts, viz. a coat, parenchyma, ramification, and nucleus, or ftone. The ftone confifts of two very different parts ; the external or harder part, called the ftone, or ftiell, is a concretion of the ftony, or calculous parts of the nutritious juice, like the kernel in Pears, within it. The inner, called the kernel, is foft, tender, and light, being derived from the pith, or medulla of the tree by feminal branches, which penetrate the bafe of the kernel. The nut, or acorn, confifts of a (hell, cortex, and medulla ; the ffieli confifts of a coat and parenchyma, derived from the bark and wood of a tree. The cortex confifts of an inner and outer part, the firft is a duplicature of the inner tunic of the ftiell ; the fecond is a molly fubftance, derived from the fame fource as the parenchyma of the fhell. But authors are not agreed, whether the medulla, or pulp of the kernel does arife from the pith of the tree, or the cortical part thereof. Berries, as the Grape, &c. contain (befides three ge- neral parts, viz. coat, parenchyma, and ramification) grains of a ftony nature, to do the offices of feeds. Fruits in general are ferviceable in guarding, prefer- ring, and feeding the inclofed feed, in filtrating the coarfer more earthy, and ftrong parts of the nutritious juice of the plant, and retaining it to themfelves, fending none but the moft pure, elaborated, and fpi- rituous parts to the feed, for the fupport and growth of the tender delicate embryo or plantule, which is therein contained. FRUMENT ACEOUS [Frumentaceous, Lat.] a term applied by botanifts to all fuch plants as have aconformity with Wheat (called in Ltf/fivFrumentum,) in refpedt either of their fruits, leaves, ears, or the like FRUMENTUM INDICUM. See Zea. F R U T E X, a ffirub ; a vegetable of a genus be- tween a tree and an herb, but of a woody fubftance. It is pretty difficult to determine wherein moft of the writers on gardening and agriculture have made the diftindtion between trees and ffirubs, or where to fix the difference or boundary, between the trees and fhrubs, to fay where one ends, and the other, begins, for that cannot be determined by their growth ; there- fore the beft definition which can be made of a ffirub, to diftinguiffi it from a tree, is its fending forth many items from the roots, whereas the trees have a Angle trunk or body. FRUTEX PAVONIUS. See Poinciana. FRUTICOSE [Fruticofus, Lat . ffirubby] are thole plants which are of a hard woody fubftance, and do not rife to the height of trees, ■ 5 U FUCHSIA. F U M FUCHSIA. Plum. Nov. Gen. 14. Lin. Gen. Plant. •1097. This plant was fo named by Father Plunder, who difcovered it in America, in honour of the me- mory of Leonard Fuchfius, a learned botanift. The Characters are, The flower hath no empalement •, it hath one petal , with a clofed tube , which is flightly cut into eight parts at the brim , ending in acute points it hath four ftamina the length of the tube,, which are terminated by obtufe fummits. 'The oval germen is fituated under the flower , fupporting a fingle ftyle, crowned by an obtufe ftigma. ’The germen afterward becomes a fucculent berry with four fur- rows , having four cells , containing feveral fmall oval feeds. This genus of plants is ranged in the firfh feclion of Linnteus’s fourth clafs, intitled Tetrandria Monogy- nia, the flower having four ftamina and one ftyle. We know but one Species of this genus at pre- fent, viz. Fuchsia {Triphylla.) Lin. Sp. Plant. 1191. Tbree-leaved Fuchfm. Fuchfta triphylla, flore coccineo. Plum. Nov. Gen. Three-leaved Fuchfia with a fcarlet flower. This plant is a native in the warmeft parts of Ame- rica ; it was cfifcovered by Father Plunder, in fome of the French Iflands in America, and was ftnce found by the late Dr. William Houftoun, at Carthagena in New Spain, from whence he fent the feeds into England. This is propagated by feeds, which muft be fown in pots filled with rich light earth, and plunged into a hot-bed of tanners bark, and treated in the fame way as other feeds from warm countries. In about a month or fix weeks after the feeds are fown, the plants will begin to appear, when they fhould be carefully cleared from weeds, and frequently refrefhed with water to promote their growth •, and when they are about two inches high, they fhould be fhaken out of the pot, and feparated carefully •, then plant each into a fmall pot filled with light rich earth, and plunge them again into a hot-bed of tanners bark, being careful to fcreen them from the fun until they have taken new root *, after which time they muft have frefti air admitted to them every day in proportion to the warmth of the feafon, and fhould be frequently watered. As the fea- fon advances and becomes warm, the glafles of the hot-bed fhould be raifed higher, to admit a greater fhare of air to the plants, to prevent their drawing up weak ; and when the plants are grown fo tall as to reach the glafles, they fliould be removed into the bark- ftove, and plunged into the tan-bed. In winter thefe plants require to be kept very warm, and at that fea- fon they muft not have much water, but in fummer it muft be often repeated. Thefe plants are too tender to thrive in the open air in this country, even in the, hotteft part of the year ; therefore they fhould conftantly remain in the ftove, obferving to let in a large fhare of frefti air in fum- mer, but in winter they muft be kept warm •, with this management the plants will produce their flowers, and make a beautiful appearance in the ftove, amongft other tender exotic plants. FU MARIA. Lin. Gen. Plant. 760. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 421. tab. 237. Fumatory; in French, Fumeterre. The Characters are, The empalement of the flower is compofed of two equal leaves placed oppofite. The flower is of the ringent kind , approaching near to the butterfly flowers. The up- per lip is plain , obtufe , indented at the top , and reflexed the nettanum at the bafe of this is obtufe , and a little pro- minent . The under lip is like the upper in all its parts , but the bafe is keel-fhaped ; the nediarium at the bafe is lefs prominent. The chaps of the flower is four-cornered , obtufe , and perfectly bifid •, there are fix equal broad fta- mina in each flower , divided in two bodies , included in the two lips , each being terminated by three fummits. In the center is fituated an oblong germen, fupporting a floor t ftyle, crowned by an orbicular compreffed ftigma. The germen af- terward becomes a fhortpod with one cell , including roundifh feeds . This genus of plants is ranged in the firft feflion F U M of Linnaeus's feventeenth clafs, intitled Diadelphia Hexandria, which includes the plants whole flowers have their ftamina in two bodies, and have fix fta- mina. To this genus Dr. Linnaeus has joined the Capnoides of Tournefort, the Cyfticapnos of Boer- haave, the Corydalis of Dillenius, and the Cucula- riaof Jufiieu, making them only fpecies of the fame genus. The Species are, 1. Fumaria ( Officinalis ) pericarpis monofpermis race- mofts, caule diffufo. Lin. Sp. Plant. 700. Amatory with feed-vejfels growing in a racemus , with a ftngle feed and a diffufed ftalk. Fumaria officinarum & Diofcori- dis, flore purpureo. C. B. 143, The common Funiatory with a purple flower. 2. Fumaria ( Spicata ) pericarpiis monofpermiis fpicatis, caule erefto, folioliis filiformibus. Sauv. Monfp. 263. Fumatory with feed-vejfels growing in a fpike, with one feed, an upright ftalk, and thread-like leaves. Fumaria minor tenuifolia. C. B. 143. Lejfer narrow-leaved Fu- matory. 3. Fumaria {Alba) filiquis linearibus tetragonis, cauli- bus diffufis acutangulis. Lin. Sp. Plant. 700. Fuma- tory with narrow four-cornered pods , and diffufed ftalks, having acute angles. Fumaria fempervirens & fioreas, flore albo. Flor. Bat. Evergreen Fumatory with a white flower. 4. Fumaria ( Capnoides ) filiquis teretibus, caulibus dif- fufis, angulis obtufis. Fumatory with taper pods and diffufed ftalks, having obtufe angles. Fumaria lutea. C. B. 143. Yellow Fumatory. 5. Fumaria ( Claviculata ) filiquis linearibus, foliis cir- rhiferis. Lin. Sp. Plant. 70 1 . Fumatory with narrow pods, and leaves having clafpers. Fumaria claviculis donata. C. B. P. 143. Fumatory with tendrils. 6 . Fumaria ( Capreolata ) pericarpiis monofpermis race- mofis, foliis fcandentibus fubcirrhofis. Lin. Sp. Plant. 701. Fumatory with feed-vejfels growing in a racemus, with one feed, and climbing leaves having Jhort tendrils. Fumaria major fcandens, flore pallidiore. Raii ftlift. 405. Greater climbing Fumatory with a paler flower. 7. Fumaria {Cava) caule fimplici, brafteis longitudine florum. Lin. Sp. Plant. 699. Fumatory with a fingle ftalk, and brattese as long as the flowers.' Fumaria bul- bofa, radice cava, major. C. B. P. 143. Greater bul- bous Fumatory with a hollow root. 8. Fumaria {Bulbofa) caule fimplici, bradteis brevio- ribus multifidis, radice folida. Fumatory with a fingle ftalk, floorter many pointed brablea, and a flolid root. Fumaria bulbofa, radice non cava, major. C. B. P. 1 44. Greater bulbous Fumatory with a folid root. 9. Fumaria {Cucularia) fcapo nudo. Hort. Cliff. 351. Fumatory with a naked ftalk. Capnorchis Americana. Boerh. Ind. alt. 1. 309. and the Fumaria tuberofa infipida. Cornut. 129. Tuberous infipid Fumatory. 10. Fumaria {Veficaria) filiquis globofis inflatis. Hort. Upfal. 207. Fumatory with globular inflated pods. Cyf- ticapnos Africana fcandens. Boerh. Ind. alt. 1. 310. Climbing African Cyfticapnos. 11. Fumaria ( Eneaphylla ) foliis triternatis, foliolis cor- datis. Lin. Sp. Plant. 700. Fumatory with leaves com- pofed of three trifoliate fmall leaves , which are heart- fhaped. Fumaria enneaphyllos Hifpanica faxatilis. Bocc. Muf. 2. p. 83. Five-leaved Rock Fumatory of Spain. 12. Fumaria {Sempervirens) filiquis linearibus panicu- latis, caule eredlo. Hort, Upfal. 207. Fumatory with narrow pods growing in panicles, and am upright ftalk. Capnoides. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 423. Baftard Fuma- tory. The firft fort is the common Fumatory which is ufed in medicine. This grows naturally on arable land in moft parts of England ; it is a low annual plant, and flowers in April, May, and June •, and very often from plants which rife late in the fummer, there will be a fecond crop in autumn. The juice of this plant is greatly commended for bilious cholics. It is never cultivated in gardens. The fecond fort grows naturally in the fouth of France, Spain, and Portugal, but is prefer ved in bo- tanic gardens for the fake of variety. It is an annual plant, 2 - F U M plant, which rifes from the fcattered feeds better than when it is Town with care ; the (talks of this grow more ereft, the leaves are very finely divided, and the flowers grow in a clofe fpike ; they are of a deep red colour, and flower about the fame time as the com- mon fort. t The third fort grows naturally on the borders of the Mediterranean Sea ; it was fifft brought to England from Tangier. This is a perennial plant, which fends out from the root many branching (talks, which rife about fix or eight inches high, growing in tufts or bunches ; the leaves are very much divided, the (talks are angular, and the flowers grow in loofe panicles upon naked foot-ftalks, which come out from the divifions of the branches •, they are of a whitifh yel- low colour, and there is a fucceffion of them moft part of the year. The fourth fort hath an appearance very like the third, and by fome it is fuppofed to be only a vari- ety of that, but is undoubtedly a diflinft fpecies ; for I have cultivated both more than forty years, and never yet found either of them to vary. The (talks of this fort have blunt angles, whereas thofe of the third are acute ; they are of a purplifh colour, and the flowers grow in loofer panicles, each having a longer foot- ftalk than thofe of the other •, they are of a bright yellow colour, and there is a fucceffion of them great part of the year. Thefe two forts continue green all the year, and ex- cept in very fevere froft, are always in flower, which make a pretty appearance •, they grow beft on walls or rocks, and are very proper for the joints of grot- tos, or any rock- work ; where, if a few plants are planted, or the feeds fcattered, they will multiply faff: enough from their fcattering feeds, which are caft out of the pods by the elaftic fpring of the valves when ripe, to a confiderable diftance •, and as the plants will require no care to cultivate them, they fhould not be wanting in gardens. The fifth fort grows in (tony and fandy places in fome parts of England •, it is an annual plant with trailing (talks, fending out clafpers from the leaves, which fallen to any of the neighbouring plants. It flowers in May and June, but is never cultivated in gardens. The fixth fort is an annual plant with many trailing (talks, which grow about a foot long, fending out a few (hort tendrils, whereby they fatten to any neigh- bouring fupport; the flowers come out from the fide of the (talks in loofe bunches •, they are of a whitifh herbaceous colour, with a purple fpot on the upper lip. This flowers in May and June. It grows in France and Italy, on (tony places in the (hade. The feventh fort grows naturally in the fouth of France and Italy, and was fome years pad preferved in the Englifh gardens by way of ornament, but is now rarely to be found here ; it was titled Radix cava, or hollow root, from its having a pretty large tuberous root hollowed in the middle. The (talk of this fort rifes about fix inches high, and does not divide, but is garnifhed toward the bottom with one ramous leaf, fomewhat like the common Fumatory, but the lobes are broader ; the flowers grow in a fpike at the top of the (talk ; they are of a pale herbaceous colour, and appear in April. This plant delights in the (hade, and is multiplied by offsets, for it rarely ripens feeds in England. The eighth fort is pretty common in many of the old gardens in England ; it grows naturally in the fouth of France, in Germany and Italy. This hath a pretty large round (olid root of a yellowifh colour, from which come out branching leaves like thofe of the laft fort, but the lobes are longer •, the flowers grow in fpikes on the top of the (talks ; they are of a purple colour, and come out early in April. The (talks of this fort are (ingle, and rife about four or five inches high. There is a variety of this with green flowers, which is mentioned in mod of the books •, but all the plants of this fort which I have yet feen, are only abortive, F U M having no real flower, only a green bractea, which has been generally taken for the flowers : there is a.lfo mentioned a larger fort ; but if there is one which is really different from the common fort, I have not feen it in the Englffh gardens, nor the yellow and White flowering forts, which are alfo mentioned in many of the books. The ninth fort grows naturally in North America % this hath a fcaly root about the flze of a large Hazel Nut, from which come out three or four leaves upon (lender foot-ftalks ; thefe are divided into three parts, each of thefe parts is compofed of many fm after divi- lions, which have narrow lobes, divided into three parts almoft to the bottom ; the flower-ftalk is naked, and eight or nine inches long ; this is terminated by four or five flowers, growing in a loofe fpike ; thefe have two petals, which are reflexed backward, and form a fort of fork toward the foot-ftalk, and at their bafe are two horned ne&ariums, which (land horizantal. The flowers are of a dirty white colour and appear in May, but rarely produce feeds here. This is propagated by offsets from the root; it loves a fhady fituation and a light foil ; the bed time to tranfplant the roots is in autumn, when the leaves are decayed, for it (hoots pretty early in the fpring, therefore it would not be fafe to remove them at that feafon. The tenth fort grows naturally at the Cape of Good Hope ; this is an annual plant, with trailing (talks which are two or three feet long, dividing into many fmaller, which are garnifhed with (mall branching leaves fhaped like thofe of the common Fumatory, but end with tendrils, which clafp to any neighbour- ing plants, and thereby the ftalks are fupported ; the flowers are produced in loofe panicles, which proceed from the fide of the (talks ; they are of a whitifti yellow colour, and are fucceeded by globular fwollen pods, in which are contained a row of fmall ftiining feeds. This is propagated by feeds, which flhould be fown upon a moderate hot- bed in the fpring ; and when the plants are fit to remove, they muff be each planted in a fmall pot filled with light earth, and plunged again into the hot-bed, where they muff: be (haded from the fun till they have taken new root ; after which they fhould have a large (hare of air admitted to them at aft times in mild weather, to prevent their draw- ing up weak ; and as foon as the feafon is favourable, they fhould be inured to fyear the open air, to which they may be removed the beginning of June, when they may be fhaken out of the pots, preferving all the earth to their roots, and planted in a warm border, where their ftalks flhould be fupported with (licks to prevent their trailing on the ground ; and in July the plants will flower, and continue a fucceffion of flowers till the froft deftroys the plants ; the feeds ripen in autumn. The eleventh fort grows naturally upon old wafts, or rocky places in Spain and Italy ; this hath weak trail- ing ftalks which are much divided, and are garniflied with fmall leaves divided into three parts, each of which hath three heart-fhaped lobes ; the flowers are produced in fmall loofe panicles from the fide of the ftalks, they are of a greenifh white, and appear moft of the Cummer months. It is an abiding plant, which propagates itfelf by the feeds that fcatter, and thrives beft in a fhady fituation, and on old wafts or buildings. The twelfth fort is an annual plant with an upright ftalk, which grows a foot and a half high, round and very fmooth, fending out feveral branches upward ; thefe are garnifhed with fmooth branching leaves, of a pale colour, which are divided like the common fort, but the fmall leaves are larger and more obtufe ; the flowers are produced in loofe panicles from the fides of the ftalks, and at the extremity of the branches ; they are of a pale purple colour, with yellow chaps (or lips) ; thefe are fucceeded by taper narrow pods an inch and a half long, which contain many (mail fhining black feeds. This flowers during moft of the fummer months, and the feeds ripen in July, Au- guft. • . iFUM guft, and September. If the feeds of this plant are permitted to fcatter, the plants will come up without any trouble, and require no other care but to thin them where they are too clofe, and keep them clean from weeds. Thefe plants may be fuffered to grow on walls, and in fome abjeft part of the garden ; for if they are ad- mitted into the borders of the pleafure-garden, they will fcatter their feeds, and become troublefome weeds ; but they are very proper plants to grow on ruins, or on the fides of grottos or rock-work, where, by their long continuance in flower, they will have a good effe£t. The fifth, fixth, feventh, and eighth forts are propa- \ F U R gated by offsets, as other bulbous-rooted flowers j thefe produce their flowers in the beginning of April, and are very pretty ornaments to borders in a fmall flower-garden. They are extreme hardy, but do not increafe very faff, feldom producing feeds with us ; and thdir bulbs do not multiply very much, efpeeially if they are often tranfplanted. They love a light fandy foil, and fhould be fuffered to remain three years un- difturbed, in which time they will produce feveral offsets. The bell feafon for tranfplanting them is from May to Auguft, when the leaves begin to die off ; for if they are taken up when their leaves are frefh, it will greatly weaken their roots. FURZ. See Genista. G. GAL G ACANTHUS. Lin. Gen. Plant. 362. Narciffo-leucoium. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 387. tab. 208. The Snow- drop ; iti French, Perce- neige. The Characters are, ‘The ftp at ha or Jheath of the flower is oblong , blunt, and comprefled. This opens fidew ays, and becomes a dry Jkin ; the flower has three oblong concave petals, which fpread open, and are equal ; in the bottom is fituated the three- leaved neciarium, which is cylindrical, obtufe, and in- dented at the top ; under the flower is fituated the oval ger- men, fupporting a fender ftyle, which is longer than the ftamina, crowned by fmgle fligma ■, this is attended by fix Jhort hairy ftamina, terminated by oblong pointed fum- mits, which are gathered together. The germen after- ward becomes an oval capfule which is obtufe and three- cornered, opening in three cells, which are filled with roundijh feeds. This genus of plants is ranged in the firfl feftion of Linnaeus’s fixth clafs, intitled Hexandria Monogynia, which includes the plants whofe flowers have fix fta- mina and one ftyle. This plant, as alfo the great Snow-drop, was by Dr. Tournefort ranged together under the title of Nar- ciftb-leucoium ; which being a compound name, Dr. Linnaeus has altered it to this of Galanthus ; and has feparated the great Snow-drop from this, and given the Ample name of Leucoium to that genus. We know but one Species of this genus, viz. Galanthus {Nivalis.) Lin. Hort. Cliff. 134. The com- mon Snow-drop. Leucoium bulbofum trifolium minus. C. B. P. The leaft bulbous Snow-drop with three leaves. There is a variety of this with double flowers. Thefe flowers are valued for their early appearance in the fpring, for they ufually flower in February when the ground is often covered with fnow. The Angle fort comes out the firft, and though the flowers are but fmall, yet when they are in bunches, they make a very pretty appearance ; therefore thefe roots fhould not be planted Angle, as is fometimes pradifed by way of edging to borders ; for when they are fo dif- pofed, they make very little appearance. But when there are twenty or more roots growing in a clofe bunch, the flowers have a- very good effect ; and as thefe flowers thrive well under trees or hedges, they are very proper to plant on the fides of the wood- walks, and in wildernefs-quarters ; where, if they are GAL fuffered to remain undifturbed, the roots will multi- ply exceedingly. The roots may be taken up the lat- ter end of June, when their leaves decay, and may be kept out of the ground till the end of Auguft, but they muft not be removed oftener than every third year. GALE. See Myrica. G A LEG A. Lin. Gen. Plant. 770. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 398. tab. 222. Goat’s-rue. The Characters are. The empalement of the flower is Jhort, tubulous , and of one leaf, indented in five parts. The flower is of the butterfly kind ; the ftandard is oval, large, and reflexed ; the wings are near the length of the ftandard ; the keel is erect, oblong, and comprefled ; the under fide toward the point is rounded, but the upper is acute ; there are ten ftamina , which join above their middle , and are termi- nated by fmall fummits. In the center is fituated a nar- row, cylindrical, oblong germen , fupporting a fender ftyle , crowned by a fligma terminated by a punMure. The ger- men afterward becomes a long pointed pod, inclofing feve- ral oblong kidney-Jhaped feeds. This genus of plants is ranged in the third fe&ion of Linnaeus’s feventeenth clafs, intitled Diadelphia Decandria, which includes thofe plants whofe flowers have ten ftamina joined in two bodies. The Species are, 1. Galega ( Officinalis ) leguminibus ftriclis eredftis, fq- liolis lanceolatis ftridtis nudis. Lin. Sp. Plant. 1062. Goafs-rue with ere ft clofe pods, and fpear-jhaped naked leaves. Galega vulgaris, floribus cieruleis. C. B. P. 352. Common Goafs-rue with blue flowers. 2. Galega ( Africana ) foliolis lanceolatis obtufis, flori- bus fpicatis longioribus, filiquis craffioribus. Goafs- rue with obtufe fpear-jhaped leaves , flowers growing in longer fpikes , and thicker pods. Galega Africana, flo- ribus majoribus filiquis craffioribus. Tourn. Inft. R, H. 399. African Goafs-rue , with larger flowers and thicker pods. 3. Galega ( Frutefcens ) foliis ovatis, floribus panicula- tis alaribus, caule fruticofo. Goafs-rue with oval leaves , and flowers growing in panicles from the fides of the ftalks, which are fhrubby. Galega Americana, fo- liis fubrotundis, floribus coccineis. Houft. MSS. Ame- rican Goaf s-rue with roundijh leaves and fear Jet flowers. 4. Galega ( Virginian a ) leguminibus retrofalcaris com- preffis villofis fpicatis, calycibus lan ads, foliolis ovali- oblongis acuminatis. Amoen. Acad. 3_p. 18. Goafs- rue with hairy , comprefled , flekkfloaped pods 7 oblong oval- .GAL oval-pointed leaves , and woolly 'empalement s. Orobtis Virginianus, foliis fulva lanugine incanis, foliorum nervo in fpinam aberunte. Pluk. Mant. 142. 5. Galega [Purpurea) leguminibus ftri&is adfcenden- tibus glabris racemofis terminalibus, ftipulis fub- ulatis, foliis obiongis glabris. Flor. Zeyl.. 301. Goats- rue with clofe , fmooth , afc ending pods , terminating the fialks in an oblong bunch , awl-Jhaped flipuU , oblong fmooth leaves. Coronilla Zelanica herbacea, fiore pur- purafcente. Burm. Zeyl. 77. . The firft fort grows naturally in Italy and Spain, but is propagated in the Englifh gardens for medicinal ufe. This hath a perennial root, compofed of many llrong fibres, which are frequently jointed, from which arife many channelled hollow ftalks, from two to three feet high, which are garniflied with winged leaves, compofed of fix or feven pair of narrow fpe.ar- * Ihaped lobes, terminated by an odd one, which are fmooth and entire ; the flowers terminate the ftalks growing in fpikes, they are of the Pea-blofibm fhape, and of a pale blue colour, and are difpofed in loofe fpikes. They appear in June, and are fucceeded by ta- per pods about one inch and a half in length, having one row of kidney-fhaped feeds, which ripen toward the end of Auguft. There is a variety of this with white flowers, and another with variegated flowers,, which have acciden- tally been produced from feeds, fo are not conftant, therefore are only mentioned here. The fecond fort grows naturally in Africa; this dif- fers from the former, in having larger leaves, which are compofed of eight or ten pair of lobes, broader and blunter at their ends than thofe of the common , fort •, the flowers are larger, and the fpikes are longer ; the feed-pods are alfo much thicker than thofe of the common fort, but in other refpedts are very like it. Thele plants are propagated by feeds, which may be fown either in the fpring or autumn, upon a bed of ground in an open fituation ; and when the plants come up, they muft be kept clean from weeds till they are ftrong enough to remove ; then a fpot of ground ihould be prepared, in fize proportionable to the quan- tity of plants defigned ; this ihould be well dug, and cleared from the roots of all noxious weeds ; then the plants ihould be carefully taken up, and planted in rows at a foot and a half diftance, and in the rows one foot afunder, obferving to water them till they have taken new root ; after which they will require no farther care to keep them clean from weeds, which may be eafily done by hoeing of the ground fre- quently between the plants, and in the fpring the ground between the rows fhould be dug, which will encourage their roots, and caufe them to ihoot out vigorous ftalks ; and if their ftalks are cut down be- fore the feeds are formed every year, the roots will continue the longer, efpecially if they grow on a light dry foil. The feeds of thefe will grow where- ever they are permitted to fcatter, fo that plenty of the plants will come up without any care, and thefe may be tranfplanced and managed in the fame man- ner as is before direfted. The firft fort is ufed in medicine-, it is accounted cordial, fudorific, and alexipharmic; fo very good againft peftilential diftempers, expelling the venom through the pores of the fkin, and is of ufe in all kinds of fevers. Mr. Boyle, in his treatife of the Wholfomenefs and Unwholfomenefs of the Air, be- llows three or four pages, in celebrating the virtues of Goats-rue in peftilential and malignant difeafes, from his own obfervation and experience. The third fort was difcovered by the late curious bo- tanift Dr. William ITouftoun, at Campeachy, from whence he fent the feeds into Europe. This plant is propagated by feeds, which muft be fown on a hot- bed early in the fpring-, and when the' plants come up, and are fit to tranfplant, they muft be tranf- planted each into a feparate fmall pot, and plunged into a hot-bed of tanners bark, {hading them from the fun till they have taken new root 1 ; then they muft be treated as hath been directed for other .• x t GAL tedder plants, which are kept in the bark-ftovfc With this management they will flower fin July; and in September they will perfebt their feeds, but the plants may be preferved through the winter in the bark-ftove. _ , The fourth fort grows natural y in Virginia and Caro- lina ; this hath a perennial root, and an annual italic which rifes three feet high ; the lobes of the leaves are oblong and oval, generally feven or nine to each leaf : the whole plant is covered with a filvery down. The flowers are of a red colour, and are produced hi fpikes at the end of the branches : thefe are fucceeded by flckle-fhaped comprefled pods of a filvery colour, containing one-row of kidney-fhaped feeds. This plant, although it is tolerable hardy, yet it is with difficulty preferved in gardens ; for the feeds rarely ripen in England, and the plants are often ‘de- ftroyed by froft in winter. The only method in which I have been able to keep the plant, has been by pot- ting them, and placing them in a common frame iri winter, where they enjoyed the free air in mild wea- ther, but were protected from froft ; in this way I have kept the plant three years, but it has not ripened feeds here. N ; - The fifth fort grows naturally in Ceylon, and in many parts of India, from whence I have received the feeds. This fort was annual here, and decayed be- fore the feeds were ripe. It hath an herbaceous ftalk, which rifes two feet high, garnifhed with winged leaves, compofed of eight or nine pair of oval lobes, terminated bv an odd one; the foot-ftalks of the flowers come out oppofite to the leaves -, thefe fuftant a long loofe lpike or thyrfe of fmall purple flowers, which are fucceeded by (lender erebt pods. • This may be cultivated in the fame way as the third fort; and if the plants are brought ' forward early in the fpring, if the fummer proves warm, the feeds may ripen. GALEN I A. Lin. Gen. Plant. 443. Sherardia. Pouted; Epift. 14. The title of this genus was given to it by Dr. Liny nteus, from the famous phyfieian Galen. The Characters are, ‘The flower hath a j mall quadrifld empalement of one leaf ; it hath no petals , but hath eight hairy famines the length of the empalement , terminated by double fummits . In the center is ftuated a roundijh germen , fupporting tivo reflexed flyles, crowned by Jimple fiigmas. The em~ palement afterward becomes a roundijh capfule with two cells , containing two oblong angular feeds. This genus of plants is ranged in the fecond febtion of Linnteus’s eighth clafs, intitled Octandria Digynia, which includes thofe plants whofe flowers have eight ftamina and two ftyles. i. , We know but one Species of this genus, viz. .. Galenia (. Africana, ) Hort. Cliff. 1 50, -Shrubby Gaknia. Sherardia. Ponted. Epift. 14. and the Atriplex Afri- cana, lignofa frutefeens, roifnarini foliis. Hort. Pifi 20. Shrubby African woody Atriplex , with Rofemary leaves. This Ihrub .grows naturally , at the Cape of Good Llope, and in other parts of Africa ; it rifes with a fhrubby ftalk about four or five feet high, fending out many weak branches, ' garnifhed with very nar- row leaves, which are placed irregularly on every fide the branches ; they are of a light green, with a furrow running, longitudinally through the middle 5 the flowers are produced in loofe panicles from the fide and at the end of the branches ; they are very fmall, and have no petals, fo make little appearance. The flowers come out in July and -Auguft, but are not fucceeded by feeds in England. This plant will not live through the - winter iii the open air in England, fo muft be placed in the green- houie, or under a frame, with other hardy exotic, plants, where it may have a large fhare of air in mild- weather, for it only requires to be protected from froft. In the fummer it may be expofed in the open air, with other plants of the fame country, and in dry weather it muft be frequently watered. This, may be 1 5 X propagated 1 propagated by cuttings, which, if planted during dny of the fummer months, and watered frequently, will fake root in about five or fix weeks, and may then be treated as is direded for the old plants* GALEOPSIS. Lin. Gen. Plant. 637. Tciurn. Inft. R. H. 185. tab. 86. Stinking Dead Nettle. The Characters are, The empalement of the flower is tubulous , tf o'ne leaf cut into five fegments, which end in acute points. The flower is of the lip kind , having a jhort tube ; the chaps are a little broader , but the length of the impalement', from the bafle to the under lip , it is on both fides flharply indented-, the upper lip is c’oncave , roundifh , and flawed at the top ; the under lip is trifid , the middle flegment being the targeft , which is creRated. It hath four ftamina inclofed in the upper lip , two being flhorter than the other , terminated by roundijh bifid fimmits. In the center is fituated a quadrifid germen , flupporting a fiender ftyle , crowned by a bifid acute ftigma. The germen afterward become four naked feeds , fitting in the rigid empalement. This genus of plants is ranged in the firft fedion of Linnaeus’s fourteenth clafs, intitled Didynamia Gym- nofpermia, which includes thofe plants whofe flowers have two long and two fliort ftamina, and the feeds are naked. The Species are, 1. Galeopsis ( Ladanuni ) internodiis caulinis aequalibus, verticillis omnibus remotis. Lin. Sp. Plant. 579. Stinking Hedge Nettle , with equal difiances between the joints , and whorls growing at a dfiance. Sideritis ar- venfis anguftifolia rubra. C. B. P, 233. Red narrow- leaved Field Ironwort. 2. Galeopsis ( Tetrahit ) internodiis fuperne incraflatis, verticillis fummis fubcontiguis. Lin. Sp. Plant. 579. Stinking Hedge Nettle , whofe joints are thicker above , and the whorls at the top growing near each other. Lamium cannabino folio vulgare. Raii Syn. Ed. 3. p. 240. Common Head Nettle with a Hemp leaf. 3. Galeopsis {Speciofd) corolla flava, lab‘10 inferiore maculato. Flor Lapp. 193. Stinking Hedge Nettle with a. yellow flower , whofe under lip is fpotted. Lamium cannabinum aculeatum flore luteo fpeciofo, labiis pur- pureis. Pluk. Aim. 204. Prickly Hemp Head Nettle , -with a beautiful yellow flower and purple lips. 4. Galeopsis {G'aleobdolon) verticillis fexfloris, involucro tetraphyllo. Lin. Sp. Plant. 780. Stinking Hedge Nettle with fix flowers in each whorl , and a four-leaved invo- lucrum. Galeopfis five urtica iners flore luteo. J. B. 3. 323. Stinking or Head Nettle with a yellow flower. 5. Galeopsis ( Orientale ) verticillis bifloris, foliis ob- 1 'ongo-cordatis. Stinking Hedge Nettle with two flowers in each whorl, and oblong heart-flhaped leaves. Galeopfis Orientalis ocimaftri folio, flore majore flavefcente. H. R. Par. Eaftern finking Hedge Nettle, with an Ocimaftrum leaf, and a larger yellowiflh flower. 6. Galeopsis ( Hifpanica ) caule pilofo, calycibus labio corollas fuperiore longioribus. Lin. Sp. Plant. 580. Stinking Hedge Nettle with a hairy Jlalk, and the em- palement longer than the upper lip of the petal. Galeopfis annua Hifpanica, rotundiore folio. Inft. R. H. 1 86. Annual Spaniflh finking Hedge Nettle , with a rounder leaf. Thefe are all of them annual plants; except the fourth fort ; the three firft grow naturally in England. The firft is found upon arable land in many places ; the iecond grows upon dunghills, and by the fide of paths, in many parts of England. The third fort grows chiefly in the northern counties, but I have found it growing wild in Efiex, within ten miles of London. Thefe plants are feldom cultivated in gardens; for if their feeds are permitted to fcatter, the plants will tome up as weeds wherever they are al- lowed a place. The fourth is a perennial plant with a creeping root 5 this grows in the woods and under hedges in moft parts of England. The fifth grows in the Levant; this is a biennial plant, which perifties foon after the feeds are ripe. It is preferved in botanic gardens for the fake of variety, but hath no great beautv. GALEOPSIS FRUTESGENS. SeePRAsiuM. I G A L I U M. Lin. Geh. Plant, i 17. Totirri. Inft. R; HI 1 14. tab. 39. Ladies Bedftraw, or Cheefe-rennet ; in French, . Caillelait. The Characters are; . The flower hath a fmall empalement indented in four parts, fitting upon the germen. It hath one petal, divided into, four fegments almofl to the bottom ; and four awl-jhdpcd ftamina which are flhorter than the petal , terminated by flngle flummits. It hath a twin germen fituated under the flower , fupporting a fender half bifid ftyle, crowned by a globular ftigma . The germen afterward become two dry berries, which are joined together , each ikdofing a large kidney-flhaped feed. This genus of plants is ranged in the firft fedion of Linnaeus’s fourth clals, intitled Tetrandria Monogv- hi a; which includes thofe plants whofe flowers have four ftamina and one ftyle. The Species are, 1. Galium (Verum) foliis cdonis linearibus fu leads, ra- in is floriferis brevibus. Hort. Cliff. 34. Ladies Bedftraw with eight narrow furrowed leaves , and Jhort flowering branches. Galium luteum. G. B. P. 335. Fellow La- dies Bedftraw. 2. Galium {Mollugo) foliis odonis OvatoftinearibuS ftifa- ferratis patentiflimis mucronatis, caule fiaccido, ramis patentibus. Lin. Sp. Plant. 107. Ladies Bedftraw with eight oval narrow leaves, which are fpread open, [awed, and pointed, a weak Jldtlk, and flpreading branches. Mol- lugo montana latifolia ramofai C. B. P. 333. Branching broad-leaved Mountain Mollugo. 3. Galium ( Purpureum ) foliis verticillatis lineari-fefacds, pedunculis folio longioribus. Hort. Cliff. 34. Ladies Bedftraw with narrow briftly leaves growing in whorls, and foot-ftalks of the flowers longer than the leaves. Ga- lium nigro-purpureum montanum tenuifolium. Col. Ecphr. 1. p. 298. C. B. P. 335. Narrow-leaved Moun- tain Ladies Bedftraw, with a black purple flower. 4. Galium ( Glaucum ) foliis verticillatis linearibus pe- dunculis dichotomis, fummo caule floriferis. Prod, Leyd. 256. Ladies Bedftraw with narrow leaves growing in whorls, foot-ftalks divided by pairs, and flowers growing at the top of the fllalk. Galium faxatile glauco folio. Bocc. Muf. 2. p. 172. Rock Ladies Bedftraw with a gray leaf. 5. Galium ( Rubrum ) foliis verticillatis linearibus patu- lis, pedunculis breviflimis. Hort. Cliff. 34. Ladles Bedftraw with narrow leaves growing iu whorls , and jhort foot-ftalks. Galium rubrum. C. B. P. 335. Red Ladies Bedftraw. 6 . Galium ( Boreale ) foliis quaternis lanceolatis triner- viis glabris, caule eredo, feminibus hilpidis. Flor. Lappon. 60. Ladies Bedftraw with four flmocth fpe&r- Jhaped leaves having three veins, an upright folk, and rough feeds. Rubia pratenfis law is acute folio, C. B. P. 333. Smooth Meadow Madder with an acute leaf. 7. Galium {Album) foliis verticillatis, lineari-lanceolafis, ramis floriferis longioribus. Ladies , Bedftraw with narrow ftp ear-flh aped leaves growing in whorls, and longer branches of flowers. Galium album vulgare. Toum. Inft. R. H. 113. Common white Ladies Bedftraw. 8. Galium ( Linifolium ) foliis lineari-lanceolatis glabris, caule eredo ramofiffimo. Ladies Bedftraw with /even narrow, ftmooth , fpenr-flhaped leaves, and an upright branching ftalk. Galium album linifolium. Barrel. Obfer. 99. White Ladies Bedftraw with a Flax leaf. 9. Galium ( Paluftre ) foliis quaternis obovatis inaequa- libus, caulibus diffufls. Flor. Suec. 119. Ladies Bed- ftraw with four unequal oval leaves, and a dijflufled ftalk. Galium paluftre album. C. B. P. 335. White Marflh Ladies Bedftraw. The firft of thefe plants (which is the fort commonly ufedin medicine) is very common in moift meadows, and in pafture grounds, in feveral parts of England. The other varieties are preferved in curious botanic gardens, but as they are plants of very little beauty, and are fubjed to fpread very far, and over-run whatever plants grow near them, they are feldom cultivated in other gardens. Thefe forts may any of them be propagated by parting their roots, which fpread and iocreafe very fait, either in G A R in the fpring or autumn, and will grow almoft in any ■ foil or fituation, efpecially the firft fort-, the other forts require a drier" foil, but will all grow in any fi- tuation. , ■ . r GALLERIES, are ornaments made with trees of various kinds, which are very common in all the French o-ardens, but are feldom introduced into the Englifh gardens, efpecially fince the tafte for clipped trees has°been exploded ; but as there may be fome who yet fancy thefe obfolete ornaments, I foall juft mention the way of conftrufting them. In order to make a gallery in a garden with porticoes and arches, a line muft firft be drawn of the length you defign the gallery to be ^ which being done, it is to be planted with Hornbeam, as directed under the articleHoRNBEAM -, whichHornbeam thus planted, Is to be the foundation of the gallery. The management of them is not very difficult ; they require only to be digged about, and foeared a little when there is occafion. The chief curiofity required is in the ordering the fore-part of the gallery, and in forming the arches. Each pillar of the porticoes or arches ought to be four feet diftant one from the other i the gallery twelve feet high, and ten feet wide, that there may be room for two or three perfons to walk a-breaft. When the Hornbeams are grown to the height of three feet, the diftance of the pillars well regulated, and the ground-work of the gallery finifted, the next thing to be done is to form the frontifpiece : to per- form which you muft ftop the Hornbeam between two pillars at the height, and run up a trellis made for that purpofe, which forms the arch. As it grows up you muft with your ffiears even thofe boughs that outftoot the other?-, in time they will grow ftrong, and may be kept in form by the fhears. Portico galleries may be covered with Lime-trees. GARCINIA. Lin. Gen. Plant. 526. The Mango- fteen. The Characters are. The flower hath a one-leaved empalement , which is per- , manent. It hath flour roundi/h concave petals , which flpread open , and are larger than the empalement. It hath Jixteen ftamina which are ereli, and form a cylinder, ter- minated by roundifh fummits. In the center is fituated an oval germen , with flcarce any ftyle , but is crowned by a buckler-fhaped plain ftigma divided into eight parts , and is permanent. 'The germen afterward becomes a thick globular berry with one cell , including eight hairy flefloy feeds , which are convex and angular. This genus of plants is ranged in the firft feflion of Linnaeus’s eleventh clafs, intitled Dodecandria Mo- nogynia, which includes thofe plants whofe flowers have twelve ftamina and one ftyle. We have but one Species of this genus, viz. Garcinia ( Mangoftana .) Horn Cliff. 182. The Man - goflan, or Mangofteen. Arbor peregrina aurantio fi- mili frucftu. Cluf. Exot. 12. Foreign Tree with a fruit like the Orange. This tree grows naturally in the Molucca Iflands, and alfo in the inland parts of New Spain, from whence I received perfed lpecimens, which were fent me by Mr. Robert Millar, who gathered them near Tolu, but did not know the tree. It rifes with an upright ftenT near twenty feet high, fending out many branches on every fide, which are' placed oppofite, and ftand oblique to each other, and not at right an- gles -, the bark of the branches is fmooth, of a gray colour, but on the tender flioots it is green, and that of the trunk is of a darker colour and full of cracks : the leaves are of the fpear-fhape, and entire -, they are feven or eight inches long, and about half fo much in breadth in the middle, gradually diminifhing to both ends, of a lucid green on their upper fide, and of an Olive colour on their under, . having a pro- minent midrib through the middle, with feveral fmall veins running from that to both fides of the leaf. The flower is like that of a Angle Rofe, compofed of four roundifh petals, which are thick at their bafe, but are thinner toward their ends j they are of a dark / GAR t - I* - “ri' f'.fjtit. , n red colour. The fruit which fucceecls the flower iS round, the fize of a middling Orange ■, the top is covered by a cap, which, was the ftigma on the top of the ftyle, and remains to the top of the fruit, and is indented in gays to the number of fix or feven, which are obtufe. The fhell of the fruit is like that of the Pomegranate, but lofter, thicker, and fuller of juice ; it is green at firft, but changes to a dark brown with fome yellowifh fpots ; the infide of the fruit is of a Rofe colour, and divided into feveral parts by thin partitions, as in Oranges, in which the feeds are lodged, furrounded by a loft juicy pulp of a delicious flavour, partaking of the Strawberry and the Grape, and is c {teemed one of the richeft fruits in the world , the trees naturally growing in the form of Pyrabolas, whofe branches are well garnifted with large fhining green leaves : they have an elegant ap- pearance, and afford a kindly ftiade in hot. countries* therefore are worthy of cultivation, in all thofe coun- tries where there is warmth enough to ripen the fruit. As there are but few of the feeds in thele fruit which come to perfection (for the greateft part of theni are abortive) fo moft of thofe which have been brought to Europe have failed ; therefore the fureft way to obtain the plants, is to fow their feeds in tubs of earth in the country, and when the plants have obtained ftrength, they may be brought to Europe j but there ftould be great care taken in their paffage, to fcreen them from fait water and the fpray of the fea, as alfo not to give them much water, efpecially when they are in a cool or temperate climate, for thefe plants are very impatient of wet. Vfhen the plants arrive in Europe, they fhould be carefully tranfplanted, each into a feparate pot, filled with light kitchen-garden earth, and plunged into the tan-bed, obferving to ftiade them from the fun till they have taken new root ; then they muft be treated in the fame manner as other tender plants from hot countries. GARDENS are diftinguifted into flower-gardens* fruit-gardens, and kitchen-gardens : the firft, being defigned for pleafure and ornament, are to be placed in the moft confpicuous parts, i. e. next to, or juft againft the back front of the houfe j the two latter being principally intended for ufe and iervice, are placed lefs in fight. Though the fruit and kitchen-gardens are here men- tioned as two diftinCl gardens, and have by the French gardeners, as alfo by fome of our own countrymen been contrived as fuch, yet they are now ufually in one i and with good reafon, fince they- both require a good foil and expofure, and will equally require to be placed out of the view of the houfe. And as it will be proper to inclofe the kitchen-garden with walls, and to fecure the gates, that ho perfons may have accefs to it, who have no bufinefs in it, for the fake of preferving the product, fo thefe walls will anfwer the purpofes of both. Moreover, in the dif- pofition of the kitchen-garden, when it is properly divided into quarters, the planting of elpaliers of fruit-trees round each of the quarters, will be of ufe in fcreening from the view the kitchen-herbs growing in the quarters ; and, by that means, give an elegancy to both parts, and fave befides a great expence. The only objedticn which has been made to this of any confequence is, that the gardeners are tdo apt to crowd the borders near the walls with kitchen-herbs, whereby the trees are deprived of their nourifhment ; but this is in every gentleman’s power to redrefs, by not fufferifig the borders to be dips crowded. But I ftall treat more fully of this under the article of Kitchen-Garden. In the choice of a place to plan a garden in, the fituation and expofure of the ground are the moft ef- fential points to be regarded -, fince, if a failure be made in that point, all the care and expence will In a manner be loft. In a garden for pleafure, the principal things to be confidered, are, ift, the fituation ; 2diy, the foil, afpedt, or expofure $ sdly, water j 4thly, profpect. 2 ft, SI- GA R iff, Situation: this ought to be fuch an one as is , wholfome, In a place that is neither too high nor too low for if a garden be too high; it will be ex- pofed to the winds, which are very prejudicial to trees , If it be too low, the dampnefs of the ground, the vermin, and venomous creatures’ that breed in ponds and marfhy places, add much to their infa- lubrity. A fituation on a rifing ground, or on the fide of a hill, is molt happy, especially if the ground be not too fteep if the hope be eafy, and in a manner im- perceptible ; if a good deal of level may be had near the houfe j and if it abounds with fprings of water ; for, being flickered from the fury of the winds, and the violent heat of the fun, a temperate air will be there enjoyed ^ and the water that defcends from the top of the hills, either from fprings or rain, will not only fupply fountains, canals, and cafcades, for or- nament, but when it has performed its office, will water the adjacent valleys, and render them fertile and wholfome, if it be not fuffered to ftagnate in them. v Indeed, if the declivity of the hill be too fteep, and if the water be too abundant, a garden on the fide of it may often fuffer, by having the trees torn up by the torrents and floods ; and the earth above tumbling down, the walls may be demolifhed, and the walks fpoiled. It cannot however be denied, that the fituation on a plain or flat, has feveral advantages that the higher fituation has not : floods and rains make no fpoil ; there is a continued profpeft of champaigns, inter- fered by rivers, ponds, brooks, meadows and hills, covered with buildings or woods ; and the level fur- face is lefs tirefome to walk on, and lefs chargeable, than that on the fide of a hill •, the terrace-walks and ifteps are not neceffary *, but the greateft difadvantage of flat gardens is the want of an extenfive profpect, which rifing grounds afford. sdly. The fecond thing to be confidered in chufing a plat for a garden, is a good earth or foil. It is fcarce poffible to make a fine garden in a bad foil 5 there are indeed ways to meliorate ground, but they are very expenfive •, and fometimes, when the expence has been bellowed of laying good earth two feet deep over.the whole furface, which for a large garden is an expence too great for moft perfons ; and after this a whole garden has been ruined, notwith- ftanding the expofure has been foutherly and health- ful, when the roots of the trees have come to reach the natural bottom. To judge of the quality of the foil, obferve whether there be any Heath, Thiftles, or fuch like weeds, growing fpontaneoufly in it, for they are certain figns that’ the ground is poor. Likewife if there be large trees growing thereabouts, obferve whether they grow crooked, ill-ftiaped, of a faded green, and full of mofs, or infefted with vermin ; if fo, the place is to be rejected : but on the contrary, if it be covered with good Grafs fit for paflure, then you may be en- couraged to try the depth of the foil. To know this dig holes in feveral places, fix feet wide and four feet deep •, if you find three feet of good earth it will do well, but lefs than two will not be fufficient. The quality of good ground is neither to be ftony, nor too hard to work •, neither too dry, nor too moift ; nor too fandy and light, nor too ftrong and clayey, which is the worft of all for gardens, gdly. The third requifite is water. The want of this is one of the greateft Inconveniencies that can attend a garden, and will bring a certain mortality upon Whatever is planted in it, efpecially in the greater droughts that often happen in a hot and dry fituation in fummef ; befides the ufefulnefs of it in fine gardens, for making jets d’eau, canals, cafcades, &c. which are the greateft ornaments of a garden. 4thly, The fourth thing required in a good fituation is, the view and profpeft of a fine country ; ■ and though this is not fo absolutely neceffary as water, yet GAR it is one of the moft agreeable 'beauties' of a fine gar- den : befides, if a. garden be planted in a low place that is buried, as I may fay, and has no kind of prof- pe£t, it will be not only diiagreeable But unwholfome, by being too much ftiaded arid obfcurec! ; as the trees will rather retain infalubrious damps, than communi- cate the refreshing air, that is fo purifying to vege- table nature. In fhort, a garden neceffarily requires (befides the care of the gardener) the fun, a good foil, a full, or at lead an open pro Ip eft, and water, the laft hbove all ; and it would be egregious folly to plant a garden where any of thefe are wanting. Of the Defigrting or Manner of Laying out a Plea- fure Garden. The area of a handfome garden may take u o thirty O J i J or forty acres, not more. And as for the difpofition and diftriborion of this garden, the following directions may be obferved, i ft. There ought always to be a defcent from the houfe to the garden not fewer than three Heps, but if there are fix or feven it will be better. This elevation of the building will make it more dry and whoifome, alfo from the head of thefe fteps there will be a far- ther profpect or view of the garden. In a fine garden, the fir it thing that fir quid prefent itfelf to the fight, fhould be an open lawn, of Grafs, which, in fize, fhould be proportionable to the gar- den •, in a large garden it fhould not be lefs than Tut or eight acres ^ but in middling or final! gardens, the width of it fnould be confiderably more than the front of the houfe •, and if the depth be one half more than the width, it v/ill have a better effect. The figure of this lawn need not be regular - , and if on the fides there are trees planted irregularly, by way of open grove, fome of which may be planted forwarder upon the lawn than the others, whereby the regularity of the lawn v/ill be broken, it will render it more like nature, the beauties of which fhould always be ftudied in the laying out and planting of gardens 5 for the nearer thefe gardens approach to nature, the longer they will pleale *, for what is a garden, but a natural fpot of ground drefled and properly orna- mented ? there are thole who have erred in copying of what they call nature, as much as thole who have drawn a whole garden into ftrait lines, great alleys, ftars, &c. by bringing the rougheft and molt deformed part of nature into their compofiticns of gardens: as for inltance, where the ground has been naturally level, they have at great expence, made hollows and raifed mole-hills •, fo that the turf has been rendered not only more unpleafant to walk upon, but much worfe to keep : and after all the pains that have been taken to ape nature, the whole is as eafiiy discovered to be the work of art, as the ftiffeft Hopes and the moft finiflied parterres. The great art in laying out of gardens, is to adapt the feveral parts to the natural petition of the ground, fo as to have as little earth to remove as poffible •, for this is often one of the greateft expences in making of gardens j and it may with truth be affirmed, that wherever this has been practifed, nine times in ten it has proved for the worfe ^ lo that if iaftead of le- velling hills to form large terraces, ftiff fiopes, and even parterres, as have been too often practifed •, or the finking of hollows, and railing of hills, as hath by others been done ; if the furface of the ground had only been fmoothed and well turfed, it would have had a much better effect, and been more ge- nerally approved than the greateft number of thefe gardens, which have been made with an infinite ex- pence both of time and money. The next thing to be obferved is, to contrive a dry walk, which fhould lead quite round the whole gar- den •, for as gardens are defignecl to promote the ex- ercife of walking, the greater the extent of this dry walk, the better it will anfwer the intent *, 'fince In bad weather, or in dewy mornings' and evenings,. when GAR- when the fields are unpleafant or unfafe to walk over, thefe dry walks in gardens become ufeful and pleafant; and fuch walks, if laid either with gravel or fand, may lead through the different plantations, gently winding- about in an eafy natural way, which will be more agreeable than thofe long ftrait walks, which are too frequently feen in gardens. But as the tafte of defigning gardens has of late al- tered from the former method, there are many per- fons who have gone into the oppofite extreme ; and in the forming of what they term Terpentine walks, have twifted them about in fo many fliort turns, as to render it very difagreeable to walk on them ; and at the fame time they ftrike the fight with as much ftiff- nefs and appearance of art, as any of the methods formerly prabtifed. In fhort, the fewer turns there are in thefe walks, and the more they are concealed, the better they will pleafe •, and yet the turns being eafy, and at great diftances, will take off all the ap- pearance of ftraitnefs. And here let me obferve, that there can be no better, or more eafy or natural me- thod of laying out thefe walks, than by tracing the eafy turns made on a road, where it bends by the track of the coach wheels. Thefe walks fhould be fo contrived, as to lead into fhade as foon as poffible ; as alfo into fome planta- tions of fhrubs, where perfons may walk in private, and be fheltered from the wind ; for no garden can be pleafing where there is want of fhade and fhelter. Another thing abfolutely neceffary is, where the boundaries of the garden are fenced with walls or pales, they fhould be hid by plantations of flowering fhrubs, intermixed with Laurels, and fome other Evergreens, which will have a good effedt, and at the fame time conceal the fences, which are difagree- able, when left naked and expofed to the fight. In fituations where there is a good fupply of water, the defigner has room for adding one of the greatefl beauties to the garden, efpecially if it will admit of a conftant ftream ; for in fuch places, if the water is properly conduced through the garden, it will afford infinite pleafure ; for although thefe ftreams may not be fufficient to fupply a large furface, yet if thefe narrow rivulets are judicioufly led about the garden, they will have a better effedt than many of the large ftagnating ponds or canals, fo frequently made in large gardens ; for where thefe pieces of water are large, if all the boundaries can be feen from one point of view, they cannot be efteemed by perfons of judgment •, and frequently thefe Handing waters are brought fo near the houfe, as to render the air damp and unhealthy ; and many times they are fo fituated, as to occafion this inconvenience, and at the fame time are not feen to any advantage from the houfe. Where wiiderneffes are intended, thefe fhould not be cut into flars, and other ridiculous figures, nor formed into mazes or labyrinths, which in a great defign is trifling, but the walks fhould be noble, and fhaded by tall trees •, and the fpaces of the quarters planted with flowering fhrubs and Evergreens, whereby they will be rendered pleafant at all feafons of the year ; and if there are hardy forts of flowers (which will thrive with little care) fcattered about near the Aides of the walks, they will have a very good effedt, in making a variety of natural beauties almoft through the year. The fituation of thefe wiidernefles fhould not be too near the houfe, left they fhould occafion damps •, therefore it is much better to contrive fome open groves, through which there may be a communica- tion under fhade, from the houfe to thefe wiidernefles; which are much the beft when they are planted at the fartheft part of the garden, provided they do not ob- ftrubt the view of fine objebts. Buildings are alfo very great ornaments to a garden, if they are well defigned and properly placed ; but the modern tafte of crowding gardens with large ufe- lefs buildings, I prefume to think is cenfurable, with regard as well to propriety as expence. Statues and vafes are alfo very beautiful objebts, but GAR thefe fhould by no means be placed too near each other ; for when feveral of them appear at once, they fill and confound the eye, and lofe the beautiful ef- fedt which they would have, if now and then one pro- perly fituated engages the fight. What an expence might be fpared, and applied to nobler purpofes, if nature only were to be imitated, iffimplicity were ftudied in this delightful art, rather than oftentation ! for any thing may be faid to be more of nature, than what we mifcall grandeur. Fountains are alfo very ornamental to a garden, if they are magnificently built, and where a conftant fupply of water can be obtained ; but if they are meanly erebted, or have not water to keep them con- ftantly running, they fhould never be introduced into gardens, for nothing can be more ridiculous than to * fee a dry fountain ; which, perhaps, at a great ex- pence, may have water forced up, to fupply it for an hour or two, and no more ; and this perhaps not in dry feafons, when there is a general lcarcity of water. The fame may alfo be obferved of cafcades, and other falls of water, which ought never to be contrived in 'gardens, where there cannot be a conftant run of water; but where the fituation of a garden is fo happy, as to be naturally fupplied with water, thefe falls and jet’s d’eau, may be rendered very great beauties, efpecially if they are well defigned, and not made in the low mean tafte, in which too manv of thofe now in being appear, and where the water is made to fall over a parcel of regular fteps of ftone ; but the fall fhould be in one fheet from top to bottom, where fhould be placed many large rough ftones to break and difperfe the water, and to increafe the noife of the fall. Where the ground is naturally uneven, and has gen- tle rifes and falls, thefe may be fo humoured in the laying out of the ground, as to be rendered very great beauties ; but thefe inequalities of the ground muft by no means be cut into regular ftiff Hopes, nor amphitheatres, as has been too much the prabtice : but if the knolls are properly planted with clumps of trees or fhrubs, and the Hoping Tides fmoothed and left in their natural pofition, they will have a much better effedt, than can be given them by all the re- gular angles, lines, and flat Hopes, which have been till of late, introduced by all the defigners of gardens. The tafte in laying out of gardens has greatly altered, and has been as greatly improved in England, in the compafs of a few years ; for, with the revolution, the Dutch tafte of laying out gardens was introduced, which confifted of little more than flower-borders laid out in feveral fcrolls of Box-work, clipped Ever- greens, and fuch low expenfive things ; as alfo the walling round, and dividing the feveral parts of gar- dens by crofs walls ; fo that a garden confifting of eight or ten acres, was generally divided by brick walls, into three or four feparate gardens ; and thefe were reduced to exabt levels, having many gravel- walks, and the borders on each fide crowded with clipped trees and Evergreen hedges, dividing thefe fmall inclofures again ; fo that the firft making and planting of thefe fmall gardens was attended with a greater expence, as was the keeping of them afterward, than gardens of fix times the extent, when defigned after nature. Whether this tafte fo univerfally prevailed in England, in complaifance to his late Majefty King William, or was owing to the low grovelling tafte of thofe perfons, who had the defigning of moft of the Englifh gardens, it is difficult to determine ; but it is very certain, that the gentlemen, at that time, attended very little them- felves, to the difpofition of their gardens, but were con- ' tented to leave the whole direbtion of them to perfons of the meaneft talents that ever profeffed the art ; fo that foon after, when another tafte prevailed, thefe gardens were almoft totally demolifhed, and it would have been well, if a good, that is to fay, a natural tafte had fucceeded the other ; but this was not the cafe ; for though a more open and extenfive way of laving out gardens was introduced, yet this was lit- . Z Y tie G A R tie more than copying after the French', whofe tafte •was in making long avenues, ftrait walks, fliff regu- lar Hopes, cabinets, fret-work, tall hedges cut into various fhapes, jets d’eau, fountains, &c. fo.that fhere was little of nature ftudied ; but, on the contrary, all the geometrical figures introduced in wi Idem efs- work, as alio in the parterres, and other compartments of the garden : nor is it fb much to be wondered at, that this tafte prevailed in France, when the defigns of all the principal gardens were there formed by architects, who were as ftudious to have the fymmetry of the op- pofite, or correfp'onding part of the garden, as exad as the apartments of a habitation ; nor has length of time, nor the improvements already made in other countries, amended their tafte, or convinced them of its abfurdity. As the gardens of Verfailles, Marli, and others, were extolled for their magnificence, fo the plans of them were almoft univerMy copied • the designers, or imi- tators rather, only varying the parts according to the Situation or figure of the ground ; and this, was prac- ticed for feveral years, at a time, when great fums of money were expended in gardens, which might have rendered this country the molt beautiful of any in Eu- rope, had a natural tafte then prevailed in the defisn- ing of gardens ; which is the more to be lamented, as the plantations then made, have been many of them looted, out, to make way for the alterations and improvements which have been fince introduced. Many perfons, I am lenfible, will have it, that, in the defigns of gardens, the tafte fhould alter from time to time, as much as the fafhion of apparel ; but thefe cannot be perfons of judgment j for where- ver there are natural beauties in a country, they will always pleafe perfons of real knowledge and fre- quently it is obferved, that perfons of but little fkill in the art of gardening, are ftruck with thefe beau- ties without knowing the caufe ; therefore where the beautiful parts of nature are juftly imitated in gar- dens, they will always be approved by judicious per- fons, let the tafte of gardening alter as it will. When trees have been long growing in a garden, nothing can be more difagreeable than to have, them deflroyed, to alter the garden according to the fafhion of the time, becaufe it requires much time to bring up trees to fuch a height as to afford fliade ana fhelter •, and, as time is precious, fo, where the difpofition of the garden is altered, there fhould be great attention given to the prefervation of all the good trees, , wherever they can be either uleful or or- namental. There is another eftential part of gardening, which cannot be too much confidered by perfons who defign gardens, which is that of adapting the feveral forts of trees and fhrubs, to the fituation and foil of the garden, as alfo to allow the trees a proper fhare of room j but, however neceffary this will appear, yet very few perfons have made this their ftudy, in- lornuch that when one views many modern gardens, and fees the great number of trees and fhrubs, which a;e crowded into them, one would be induced to be- lieve, that private intereft has had a greater influence than any other motive, with the defigners. Indeed this fault may often be aferibed to the matter, who, per- haps, is too much in hafte for fhade and fhelter, fo will have three or four times the number of trees ana fhrubs planted as fhould have been, or that can remain long without injury, where the plantations fucceed ; sun to this over-hafte are owing the mi- fei able plantations of large trees, fo often feen in gardens and parks, where trees of all forts, and of any age are taken out of woods, hedge-rows, &c. and removed at a great expence to ft and and decay annually, till they become fo many dead flicks, than which nothing ^ can be a more difagreeable fight to the owner ; who, after an expectation for feveral years, attended with an expence of watering, dig- ging, and cleaning, finds himfelf under a nece fifty either of replanting, or giving up the thoughts of leaving any. Is! umbers of perfons have indeed amufed themfeives \v }tn the hopes of luccefs, by feeing thefe G A R nevy planted trees put out branches- for a year or two.,. . which they generally do ; but in three or four years atter, inftead of making a progyefs, they begin to decay at the top, and continue to do fo gradually, until they quite perifh, which, perhaps, may not hap- pen in eight or ten years, efpecially if no fevere win- ter, or very dry fummer, intervenes, either of which generally- proves fatal to thefe plantations ^ fo that pei Ions may be ied on with hopes, for fo many vears, i n tne-beft part of their lives, when there is a certainty or then failing, or at lea ft of their never increafing in ijze ; but of this I fhall treat more fully in the^ ar- ticle or Planting, and fhall proceed. In the bufinefs of dejigns, a mean arid pitiful manner fhould be ftudioufly avoided, and the aim fhould be always at that which is noble and great, not to brincr too many litue things into a garden, nor to make fmall pieces of water, narrow walks, &c. efpecially m large gardens ; for it is much better to have a few great things, than four times the number of fmall ones," which are trifling. . In fmall gardens there is more excufe ror this, nor indeed would it be right, to have either large lawns, broad walks, or large'pieces of water in fuch ; but yet even in thefe there^ught to bea medium, andperfonsfhouldneverattempttocrowd too many things in thefe, whereby the whole will ap- pear only as a mean and trifling model of a large garden. Before the defign of a garden is entered^ upon, it ought to be confidered, what it will be in twenty or thirty years time, when the trees and fhrubs are grown up, and fpread for it often happens, that a defign, which looks handfome when it is firfl planted, and in good proportion, in procels of time becomes fo fmall and ridiculous, that there is a neceffity either of altering or totally deftroying it. The general diftribution of a garden* and of its parts, ought to be accommodated to the different fitu- ations of the ground, for a defign may be very pro- per for a garden on a perfed level, which will by no means do for one where there are great inequalities in the ground ; fo that, as I have before intimated, the great art of defigning is, in properly adapting the de- fign to the fituation, and contriving to lave the ex- pence of removing earth, to humour the inequalities of the ground, to proportion the number and forts of trees and fhrubs to each part of the garden, and to fhut out, from the view of the garden, no objects that may become ornamental. There are, befides thefe, many other rules relating to the proportions, conformity, and difpofition of '’die different parts and ornaments of gardens, of which more may be feen under their feveral articles. GARDENIA. See Jasminum. GARIDELLA'; Tourn. Inft. R. H. 655. tab. 430. Lin. Gen. Plant. 507. [This plant was fo named Iby Dr. Tournefort, in honour of Dr. Garidel, who was profeffor of phyfic, at Aix, in Provence.] The Characters are, The flower hath a fmall , oblong , eredl empalement of five leaves it hath no petals , but five oblong equal necia- riums occupy their place ■, thefe are bilabiate. ‘The outer part of the under lip is bifid and plain • the interior '-part of the upper lip is floor t and Jingle. T he flower hath eight or ten awl-Jhaped flamina , which are jherter than the empalement , and are terminated by . obtufe eredl fum - mits. In the center \s fituated three germina, which are oblongs comprejjed . , and Jharp- pointed, having no ftyles, but crowned by fmiple ftigmas thefe become three oblong com- prejjed cap Jules with two valves , inclojmg feveral fmall feeds. This genus of plants is ranged im the third ledion of Linnaeus’s tenth clafs, which includes thole plants whofe flowers have ten flamina and three germen. We know but one Species of this genus, viz. Garidella ( Nigellaflrum .) Hort. Cliff. 170.. Garidella foliis tenuiflime divifis. Tourn. Garidella with very narrow divided leaves ■, and the Nigella Cretica folio Foeniculi. C. B. P. 146. Fennel-flower of Crete with a Fennel leaf. This plant is very near akin to the Nigella, of Fennel- flower, to which genus it was placed by the wri- ters on botany before Dr. Tournefort, and was by - him G A U him separated from it, as differing in the form of the flower. It grows wild in Candia, and on mount Baldus, in Italy, as alfo in Provence, where it was difcovered by Dr. Garidel, who fent the feeds to Dr. Tournefort, for the Royal Garden at Paris. This is an annual plant, which rifes with an upright ftalk a foot high, dividing into feveral (lender branches, garnifhed at their joints with very (lender leaves like thofe of Fennel. The (talks are terminated by one fmall flower, of a pale herbaceous colour, which is fucceeded by three capfules, each containing two or three fmall feeds. It flowers in June and July, and the feeds ripen in September. It is propagated by feeds, which fhould be fown in autumn, on a bed or border of light frefli earth, where the plants are defigned to remain (for they feldom thrive if they are tranfplanted ;) when the plants are come up, they muff be carefully cleared from weeds, and where they are too dole, they muff be thinned, leaving them about four or five inches apart ; this is all the culture the plants require, and if the feeds are per- mitted tofcatter, the plants will come up without any farther care. GAULTHERI A. The Characters are. It hath a double ■permanent empalement •, the outer has two oval , concave , Jhort leaves the inner has one bell- Jhaped leaf cut into five fiegments •, the flower has one oval petal , cut half-way into five fiegments , which are reflexed ; it has ten awl-fhaped nedtarii , which are jhort , furrounding the germen and Jiamina , and ten awl-Jhaped incurved fta- mina infer ted to the receptacle , terminated by bifid horned fummits , and a roundijh deprejj'ed germen , f upper ting a cylindrical fiyle , crowned by an obtufe fiigma •, the ger- men afterward becomes an obtufe five-cornered capfule , having five cells , fafiened to the interior empalement , which turns to a berry open at the top , filled with hard ■' angular feeds. This genus of plants is ranged in the fir(l feCtion of Linnaeus’s tenth clafs, intitled Decandria Monogynia, the flower having ten (lamina and one (lyle. We know but one Species of this genus, viz. Gaultheria ( Procumbens .) Amoen. Acad. 3. p. 14. Trailing Gaultheria. Vitis Idaea- Canadenfis, pyrolae folio. Tourn. Inft. 608. Canada IVor tie-berry with a winter-green leaf. This plant grows naturally in feveral parts of North America upon fwampy ground, fo is with difficulty preferved in the Englifh gardens. The branches of this trail upon the ground, and become ligneous, but never rife upward •, they are garniflied with oval en- tire leaves, placed alternate ; the flowers are produced on the fide of the branches •, they are of an herba- ceous colour, fo make little appearance, and very rarely are fucceeded by fruit in England. The only method in which I have fucceeded to keep this plant, was by planting of it in a pot, filled with loofe undunged earth, placing it in the (hade, and frequently watering it •, with this management I have kept the plant alive three years, and have had flowers but no fruit. G AURA. The Characters are, It hath an .empalement of one leaf which falls off, with a long-cylindrical tube , having four cblong glands fafiened to it •, the upper part is cut into four oblong fiegments , which are reflexed. I he flower hath four oblong rifling petals, which are broad at the top but narrow at their bafe , fitting upon the tube of the empalement \ and eight upright Jlender jiamina which are floor ter than the -petals , and a nefiarious gland between the bafe of each , with cblong moveable fummits. The oblong germen is fituated under the flower, flupporting a jlender fiyle the length of the jiamina , crowned by four oval fpr ending fiigmas the flower is fucceeded by , an oval four-cornered comprejfed capfule , containing one oblong angular feed. This genus of plants is ranged in the firfl; feiStion of Linnasus’s eighth clafs, intitled OCtandria Monogy- nia, the flower having eight (lamina and one (lyle. We know but one Species of this genus, viz. Gaura {Biennis.) Amoen. Acad. 3. p. 2 6 . Gaura. Uy- (imachia chamasnerio fimilis floridana, foliiisnigris punCtis capfulis carfnatis in ramulorum cymis. Pink. Amalth. 139. tab. 428. f. 1. This is a biennial plant, which grows naturally in Vir- ginia and Penfylvania : the ftalk rifes four or five feet high, fending out feveral branches, which are gar- niihed with oblong, fmooth, pale, green leaves, fit- ting pretty dole. The flowers are produced in clofe tufts at the end of the branches 5 they are compofed of four oblong petals, of a pale Rofe colour, irregu- larly placed, having eight (lamina furrounding the (lyle. The flowers appear in September, and when the autumn proves favourable, the feeds will ripen toward the end of OCtober. If the feeds of this plant are fown on open borders foon after they are ripe, they will more certainly (uc- ceed than when they are fown in the fpnng. When the plants come up, they mu ft be kept clean from weeds and if they are too clofe, fome of them fhould be drawn out, and planted in a bed to allow' room for the other to grow ; in the autumn they fhould be all tranfplanted to the place where they are defigned to (land for flowering and perfecting their feeds, and will require no other culture but to fup- port their branches to prevent the autumnal winds from breaking them down. GENERATION is, by naturaiifts, defined to be the aCt of procreating and producing a thing which before was not ; or, according to the fchoolmen, it is the total change or converfion of a body into a new one, which retains no fenfible part or mark of its former (late. Thus we fay, fire is generated, when we perceive it to be where before there was only wood, and other fuel, or when the wood is fo changed, as to retain no fenfible character of wood •, in the like manner a chick is faid to be generated, when we perceive a chick, where before was only an egg, or the egg is changed into the form of a chick. , In generation there is not properly any production of new parts, but only a new modification or manner of exiftence of the old ones, and thus generation is diftinguifhed from creation. Generation alfo differs from alteration, in that in al- teration the fubjeCt remains apparently the (ame, and is only changed in its accidents or affeCtions, as iron, which before was fquare, is now made round , or when the fame body which is well to-day, is fick to-morrow. 1 Again : generation is the oppoiite to corruption, which is the utter extinction of a former thing •, as, when that which before was an egg, or wood, is no longer either the one or the other ; whence it appearsy that the generation of one thing is the corruption of another. The Peripateticks explain generation by a change of. pafiage from a privation, or want of a fubftantial form, to the having luch a ’form. The moderns allow of no other change in generation, than what is local ; and, according to their no- tion, it is only a tranfpofition, or new arrangement of parts , and, in this fenfe, the fame matter is capa- ble of undergoing an infinite number of generations. As for example ; A grain of Wheat, being committed to the ground, imbibes the humidity of the foil, be- comes turgid, and dilates to fuch a degree, that it becomes a plant ; and, by a continual acceilion of matter, by degrees, ripens into an ear, and at length into a feed •, this feed, when ground in a mill, appears in the form of a flour, which, being mixed up with water, makes - a pafte, of which bread is generated by the addition of yeaft, and undergoing the operation of fire, i. e. by baking , and this bread being comi- nuted by the teeth, digefted in the (tomach, and con- veyed through the canals of the body, becomes flefh, or, in other words, flefh is generated. Now the only thing effected in all this feries of gene- ration, is a local motion of the parts of the matter, and their fettling again in a different order $ fo that a where” \ / GEN i - . ■ there is a new arrangement, or compofition of the elements, there is, in reality, a new generation, and thus generation is reduced to motion. Generation is more immediately underftood of ani- mal and vegetable bodies from feed, or the coition of others of different fexes,' but of the fame- genus or kind. Monf. Perrault, and fome of the modern naturalifts after him, maintained, That there is not properly any new generation, that God created all things at firft, and that what is by us called generation, is no more than an augmentation and expanfion of the minute parts of the body of the feed ; fo that the whole fpe- cies, which are afterwards produced, were, in reality, all formed at the firft, and inclofed therein, to be brought forth and expofed to view in time, and ac- cording to a certain order and (Economy. And accordingly Dr. Garden fays. It is mod proba- ble, that the ftamina of all the plants and animals that have been formed, ab origine mundi, by the Al- mighty Creator, within the firft of each refpeCtive kind ; and he who conftders, the nature of vifion, that it does not give us the true magnitude, but only the proportion of things ^ and that which feems to our naked eye but a point, may truly be made up by as many parts as feem to be in the whole univerfe, will not think this an abfurd or impoffible thing. Dr. Blair, treating of the generation of plants, fays, That when Almighty God created the world, he fo or- dered and difpofed of the materies mundi, that every thing produced from it fhould continue fo long as the world fhould ftand. Not that the fame individual fpecies fhould always remain ; for they were, in procefs of time, to perifh, decay, and return to the - earth, from whence they came ; but that every like fhould produce its like, every fpecies fhould produce its own kind, to prevent a final deftruCtion of the fpecies, or the neceflity of a new creation, in order to continue the fame fpecies upon earth, or in the world. For which end he laid down certain regulations, by which each fpecies was to be propagated, preferved, and fupported, till, in order, or courfe of time, they were to be removed hence ; for, without that, thofe very beings, which were created at firft, mult have continued till the final diffolution of all thino-s, ■which Almighty God of his infinite wifdom did not think fit. But, that he might ftill the more manifeft his omni- potence, he fet all the engines of his providence to ■work, by which one effeCt was to produce another by the means of certain laws, or rules laid down for the propagation, maintenance, and fupport of all created beings ; this his divine providence is called nature, and thefe regulations are called the laws, or rules of nature, by which it ever operates in its ordinary courfe, and whatever exceeds from that is faid to be preternatural, miraculous, or monftrous. Moles, in his account of the creation, tells us, that plants have their feeds in themfelves, in thefe words : And God faid. Let the earth bring forth grafs, the herb yielding feed, and the fruit-tree yielding fruit, after his kind, whofe feed is in itfelf upon the earth. The antients, indeed, diftinguifhed the generation of animals into two kinds, i. e. into regular, called univocal ; and anamojous, called alfo equivocal, or fpontaneous. The firft was effected by parent animals of the fame kind, as that of men, birds, beafts, &c. The fecond they fuppofed to be effected' by corruption, the fun, - &c. as that of infects, frogs, &c. but this latter is now generally exploded. Many, indeed, have effayed to treat of the generation of animals, but lew have been able to give that fa- tisfactory account of it that were to be wiffied for, and far fewer yet have been able to treat of the generation of plants as it ought to be 5 for that which ftill kept them in the dark, was, Firft, That though there were two different fexes in animals, by whofe mutual affiftance the fpecies was i GEN pfopagated, yet there was no fuch thing then known in plants. Secondly, That though it Can now be made appear, that every animal is produced by univocal generation, i. e. from an egg, and not by corruption, &c. as molt of the antients imagined the infeCts were , yet there are ftill thofe who maintain, that thofe which they call imperfeCt plants, are the produCt of a certain rotten- nefs in the earth. The generation of plants bears a clofe analogy to that of fome animals, efpecially fuch as want local motion, as mufcles, and other immoveable fhell-filh, which are hermaphrodite, and contain both the male and female organs of generation. The flower ol a plant is found to be the pudendum, or principal organ of generation ; but the ufe of fo much mechanifm, and fo many parts, has been but little known till of late years. The flower of a Lily confifts of fix petala, or flower- leaves, from the bottom of which, in the middle, arifes a kmd of tube, called by Tournefort, the piftillum, and by Dr. Linnseus the ftyle *, this refts upon the germen, which is the female organ of generation ; round this are placed pretty fine threads, called the ftamina, or filaments j thefe ftamina arife likewife from the bottom of the flower, and terminate at the top in little fummits, called by fome apices, which are replete with a fine dull, called farina ^ thefe are the male organs of plants. This is the general ftruCture of the flowers of plants, although they are infinite ways diverfified, and to fuch a degree, that fome have no fenfible piftil, and others want the ftamina ; others again have the ftamina, but want the apices, and fome plants exceed all others in this, that they have no vifible flowers ; but if it be al- lowed, that this before-mentioned is the molt common ftruCture of flowers, it will follow, that thefe parts that feem wanting are ufually only lefs apparent, or are fituated in different plants, or in different parts of the fame plant. The fruit is ufually at the bafe of the piftillum, fo that when the piftillum falls with the reft of the flower, the fruit appears in the ftead of it ; but oftentimes the piftiflum is the fruit itfelf, but ftill they have both the fame fituation in the center of the flower, and the petala, or flower-leaves, which are difpofed around the little embryo, feem to be defigned only to prepare a fine juice in the little veffels, for the fupport of it during the little time that they laft, and it requires but fome fuppofe the chief ufe of them to be to defend the piftillum, &c. The apices of the ftamina arefmall capfulte, or bags, full of a farina, or dull, which falls out when the cap- fula grows ripe, and burfts. Monf. Tournefort fuppofed this duft to be only an excrement of the food of the fruit, and the ftamina to be nothing but excretory duCts, which filtrated this ufelefs matter, and thus difcharged the embryo ; but Mr. Morland, Mr. Geoffrey, and others, find nobler ufes for this duft ; on their principle the ftamina, with the apices and farina, make the male part of the plant, and the piftil, the female. Mr. Morland fays, It hath been long ago obferved, that there is in every particular feed a leminal plant conveniently lodged between the two lobes, which conftitute the bulk of the feed, and are defigned for the firft nourilhment of the tender plant. But the admirable Dr. Grew, to w 7 hofe generous in- duftry, and happy fagacity, we are indebted for the beft improvements of this part of knowledge, is the only author I can find, who hath obferved that the farina, or fine powder, which is, at its proper feafon, fhed out of thofe thecs, or apices feminiformes [i. e. feed-forming cafes] which grow at the top of the ftamina, doth fome way perform the office of male fperm. But herein, I think, he falls ffiort, in that he fuppofes them only to drop upon the outfide the ute- rus, or vafculum feminale, and to impregnate the in- cluded feed by fome fpirituous emanations, or energe- tical imprefs. That GEN That which is now fubjeded to the difquifidons and cenfure of fuch whofe exquifite flkill conftitutes them judges of fuch performances, is, Whether it may not be more proper to fuppofe, that tne feeds which are lodged in the proper involucra, are at the firft tin- impregnated ova (or eggs) as or ammais ; that this farina is a congeries of lemma! plants, one 01 which mull be conveyed into every ovum before it can be- come prolific ; that the ftylus, in Mr. Ray’s language, or the upper part of the piftillum, in Mr. Tourne- fort’s, is a tube defigned to convey thefe feminal plants into their nefts in the ova; that there is fo vaft apro- vifion made, becaufe of the odds there are,_ whether one, of fo many, fhall ever find its way into, and through fo narrow a conveyance. To make this fuppofition the more credible, I fhall lay down the obfervations I have made upon the flot- ation of thefe ftamina, and the ftylus, in feme few fpe- cies of plants. Firft, In the Corona Imperialis, where the uterus, or vafculum feminale of the plant Hands upon the center of the flower •, and from the top of this arifeth the ftylus, the vafculum feminale and ftylus together re- prefenting a piftillum. Round this are placed fix ftamina ; upon the ends of each of thefe are apices, fo artfully fixed, that they turn every way with the leaft wind, being in height almoft equal to the ftyles about which they play, and which in this plant is manifeftiy open at the top, as it is hollow all the way ; to which we muft add, that upon the top of the ftylus there is a fort of tuft, confiding of pinguid villi, which I imagined to be placed there to catch and detain the farina, as it flies out of the thecae ; from hence, I fuppofe, the wind {hakes it down the tube, till it reach the vafcu- lum feminale. In the Caprifolium, or Honeyfuckle, there rifes a fty- lus from the rudiments of a berry, into which it is in- ferted to the top of the monopetalous flower ; from the middle of which flower are fent forth leveral fta- mina, that fhed their farina out of the cafes upon the orifice of the ftylus, which, in this plant, is villous or tufted, upon the fame account as, in the former. In Allium, or common Garlic, there arifes a tricoc- cous uterus, or feed- veflel ; in the center of which is inferted a fhort ftylus, not fo high as the apices, which thus over- topping it, have the opportunity of fhed- ding their globules into an orifice more eafily •, for which reafon, I can difeern no tuft upon this (as in the former) to infure their entrance, that being pro- vided for by its fituation juft under them. The reader, I hope, will excufe me, if I prefent him now with fome fuch reafonings or refledions as the foregoing account doth fuggeft, and will fupport ; and I cannot but hope to perfuade thofe that are candid, that I have afilgned to the feveral parts of the flowers I have mentioned, their true and real ufe. For nothing can be more natural than to conclude, that where a fine powder is curioufiy prepared, care- fully repofited,, and fhed abroad at a peculiar feafon, where there is a tube fo placed as to be fit to receive it, and fuch care in difpofing this tube, where it doth not lie diredly under the cafes that fhed the powder, it hath a particular apparatus at the end, to infure its entrance. Nothing can be more genuinely deduced from any premiles, than it may from this, that this powder, or fome of it, was defigned to enter this tube. If thefe ftamina had been only excretory duds, as has been hi- therto fuppofed, to feparate the groffer parts, and leave the juice defigned for the nourifhment of the feed more referved, what need was there to lodge thefe ex- crements in fuch curious repofitories ? They would have been conveyed any where, rather than where there was fo much danger of their dropping into the feed-vefiel again, as there is here. Again : the tube, over the mouth of which they are fhed, and into which they enter, leads always diredly in.to the feed-vefleL GEN To which we rnuft add, that the tube always begins to die when thefe thecas are emptied of their contents ; if they laft any longer, it is only wfiilft the globules, which enter at their orifice, may be fuppofed to have finifhed their paflage. Now, can we well exped a more convincing proof of thefe tubes being defigned to con- vey thefe globules, than that they wither when there are not more globules to convey. If I could now fhew, that the ova, or unimpregnat- ed feeds, are ever to be observed without this feminal plant, the proof would arife to a demonftration ; but having not been fo happy as to obferve this, I fhall content myfelf at prefent with fuggefting, that hence one would conclude, that the petala of the flower were rather defigned to fever fuperfluous juices from what was left to afeend in the ftamina, than the ftamina to perform this office, either for them, or the unimpreg- nated femina, and obferve the analogy between ani- mal and vegetable generation, as far as was necefiary there fhould be an agreement between them. I fhall recommend the enquiry to thofe gentlemen who are mafters of the belt microfcopes, and addreis in ufing them •, though, in the mean time, I have made fome fteps toward a proof of this fort, and have met with fome fuch hints, as make me not defpair of being able, in a fhort time, to give the World even this fatisfadiom For, not to infift upon this, that the feminal plant always lies in that part of the feed which is always nearefl to the infertion of this ftylus, or fome propa- gation of it into the feed-veflels, I have difeovered in Beans, Peas, and Kidney-beans, juft under one end of that we call the eye, a manifeft perforation, (difcernible by the grofifer fort of magnifying glafles) which leads diredly to the feminal plant, and at which I fuppofe the feminal plant did enter ; and, I am apt to think, the Beans or Peas that do not thrive well, may, be found deftitute of it. But I muft now proceed to deferifie fome other 1 plants, whereby it will appear, that there is a parti- cular care always exercifed to convey this powder, fo often mentioned, into a tube, which may convey it to the ova. , Now* in leguminous plants, if we carefully take off the petala of the flower, we fhall difeover the pod, or filiqua, clofely covered with an involving membrane, which, about the top, feparates into nine ftamina, each fraught with its quantity of farina ; and thefe ftamina clofely adhere to the ftyle, which is obferv- able at the end of that tube, which here alfo leads di- redly to the pod ; it Hands not upright, indeed, but fo bent, as to make near a right angle with it. In Roles there Hands a column, confifting of many tubes clofely clung together, though eafily feparable, each leading to their particular cell, the ftamina in a great number placed all round about. In Tithymalus, or Spurge, there rifes a tricoccous veflel, that,whilft it is fmall, and not eafily difcernible, lies at the bottom till it is impregnated, but- af- terwards grows up, and Hands fo high upon a tall pedicle of its own, as would tempt one to think, that there were to be no communication betwixt this and the apices. In the Strawberries and.Rafpberries, the hairs which grow upon the. ripe fruit (which, I fuppofe, may be lurprifing to fome) are lb many tubes leading each to their particular feed ; and therefore we may obferve, that in the firft opening of the flower there Hands a ring of ftamina, within the petala, and the whole in- ward area appears like a little wood of thefe hairs or pulp, which, when they have received and conveyed their globules, the feeds lwell, and rife in a carneous pulp. Thus far Mr. Morland. We may obferve a veflel at the bottom of the piftil of the Lily, which veflel we may call the uterus, or womb, in which are three ovaries filled with little eggs, or rudiments of feed found in the ovaria, which always decay, and come to nothing, unlefs im- pregnated with the farina of the fame plant, or fome other of the fame kind ; the ftamina alfo ferve for the conveyance of the male feed of the plant to be per- 5 Z fedec! fe£ted in the apices, which, when ripe, burft forth in s little particles like dull ; fome of them fall into the ‘orifice of the piftil, and are either conveyed thence into the utricle, to fecundify the female ova, or lodged in the piftil, where, by their magnetic virtue, they draw the nourifhment from the other parts of the plant into the embryos of the fruit, making them fwell, grow, &c. In flowers that turn down, as the Cyclamen, and the Imperial Crown, the piftil is much longer than the ftamina, that their duft may fall from their apices in fufficient quantities on the piftil, for the bufinefs of impregnation. Mr. Geoffroy allures us, That in all the obfervations he had made, the cutting off the piftil before it could be impregnated by the farina, adfually ren- dered the plant barren for the feafon, and the fruit abortive. In many kinds of plants, as the Oak, Pine, Willow, &c. the flowers, Mr. Geoffroy obferves, have their ftamina and apices, whofe farina may eafily im- pregnate the rudiments of the fruit, which are not far off. Indeed there is fome difficulty in reconciling this fyftem with a certain fpecies of plants, which bear flowers without fruit ; and another fpecies of the fame kind and denomination, which bear fruit with- out flowers ; fuch are the Palm, Hemp, Hop, Pop- lar, &c. which are hence diftinguifhed into male and female ; for how fhould the farina of the male here, come to impregnate the ova of the female ? This difficulty Mr. Geoffroy folves, by fuppofing the wind to be the vehicle that conveys the male duft to the female uterus, which is confirmed by an inftance of Jovianus Potanus, of a Angle female Palm-tree growing in a foreft, which never bore fruit, till, having rifen above the other trees of the foreft, and being then in a condition to receive the farina of the male by the wind, it began to bear fruit in abun- dance. As to the manner wherein the farina fecundifies, Mr. Geoffroy advances two opinions : jFirft, That the farina being always found of a ful- phureous compofition, and full of fubtil and pene- trating parts (as appears from its fprightly odour) which, falling on the piftils of the flowers, there re- folves, and the fubtileft parts of it, penetrating the fubftance of the piftil, excite a fermentation, which putting the latent juices of the young fruit in mo- tion, occafions the part? to unfold the young plant that is inclofed in the embryo of the feed. In this hypothefis, the plant in miniature is fup- pofed to be contained in the feed, and to want only a proper juice to unfold its parts, and to make them grow. The fecond opinion is, That the farina of the male plant is the firft: germ or femen of the new plant, and ftands in need of nothing to enable it to grow or un- fold, but a fuitable nidus with the juice it finds pre- pared in the embryo of the feed or ovary. It may be obferved, that thefe two theories of vege- table generation bear a ftrid analogy to thofe two of animal generation, viz. either that the young ani- mal is in the femen mafculinum, and only ftands in need of the juice of the matrix to cherifh and bring it forth •, or that the female ovum contains the animal, and requires only the male feed to excite a fermentation. Mr. Geoffroy rather makes the proper feed to be in the farina, inafmuch as the belt microfcopes do not difcover the lead appearance of any bud in the little embryos of the grains, when they are examined, be- fore the apices have fhed their duft. In leguminous plants, if the petala and ftamina be removed, and the piftil, or that part which becomes the pod, be viewed with the microfcope before the flower be open, thofe little green tranfparent veftculte, which are to become grains, will appear in their na- tural order, yet ftiil fhewing nothing die but the mere cgat, or fkin of the grain. If you continue to obferve the flowers as they ad- vance for feveral days iucceffiveiy, you will find them to fwell, and, by degrees, to become replete with a nmpid liquor ; in which, when the farina comes to be fired, and the leaves of the flower to fall, there may be obferved - little greeniffi fpeck, or globule, float- ing about at large. There is not at firft any appearance of an' organiza- tion in this little body ; but in time, as it^grows, you may begin to diftinguiffi two little leaves like two irnall horns •, as the little body grows, the liouor di- minifhes infenfibly, till at length the grain becomes qinte opake ; and upon opening it, the cavity will be found filled with a young plant in miniature, confift- mg of a little germ, or plantula, a little root, and the lobes of the Bean, or Pea. The manner wherein this germ of the apex enters the veficula of the grain, is not very difficult to deter- mine . for, befides that the cavity of the piftil reaches from the top to the embryos of the grains, or thofe veftculse, have a little aperture correfponding to the extremity of the cavity of the piftil, fo that the fm all duft,^ or farina, may eaiily fall, or find an ealy paff- fage in the aperture in the mouth of the veiTels, which is the embryo of the grain. The aperture, or cicatricula, is much the fame in both grains •, and it is eafily obferved in Peas, Beans, &c. without a microfcope. Dr. Patrick Blair, treating of the generation of plants, fays, That a vegetative life is common to them, as well as animals \ and that the propagation or production of the fpecies is the effed of the v-eo-e- tative, not the fenfitive life in animals, as well as. ia plants j and that if there be a neceffity of the con- currence of two different fexes in animals, at the be- ginning or generating of the fpecies, the fame ne- ceffity muft be in plants too ; for as a cow, a mare, a hen, a ffie-reptile, an infeft, &c. cannot produce an animal without the male, no more can it be fup- pofed, that a plant can produce fertile feed without the concurrence of the male plant, or the male parts of the plant. Mr. Ray fays, That he will not deny, that both trees and herbs may produce fruit, and even come to ma- turity, without the male feed being fprinkled upon them. For though moft birds do not lay eggs with- out congrefs of the male, yet the hen often does it without copulating with the cock, but then thefe eggs are barren and wind eggs ; juft fo, though a fe- male plant may produce feed of itielf, yet that feed is never fertile. For, Firft, As the work of generation in animals does not pioceed from their animal or fenfitive life but from their vegitative, which being the fame as in plants, that operation muft be performed after the fame manner in both ; therefore, as there is a neceffity of two different fexes in animals, it muft be fo too in plants. Secondly, As paffive feminal matter in female ani- mals cannot be productive or fertile of itfelf, without being impregnated, animated, or its particles fet in motion and dilated by the adtive principles of the male feminal matter ; neither can the female feed in plants be rendered fertile, until it be impregnated by the farina foecundans from the male parts of the plants. As to the flowers of plants, if they were not affift- ing to, or if there were not fome extraordinary ufe from them in the perfedlion of the feed, they would not be lb often obferved upon plants as they are. But fince there is no fruit or feed without a previous flower; and fince where the one is obvious the other is con- fpicuous, and fince one is fcarce to be obferved with the naked eye, neither is the other this implies a re- lation between them, that the one of them is not to be expefted without the other. It is true, there may be flowers upon a plant, where the fruit is feldom feen, efpeciaily in thefe northern climates ; fuch as the Pervinca, the Nymphaea alba minima, and feveral others ; where the planf exhaufts the GEN the nutritious juice, in puihing forth tendrils or creeping roots, which fo weaken the plants, as not to be able & to bring the fruit to perfection ; but there is no fruit or feed to be feen, unlefs a flower has been fent as a meflenger before it, to give notice of its approach ; though it is not always upon the fame plant, yet it is ftill upon fome other plant of the fame fpecies •, for the flowers are to be feen upon diftinct plants, different branches, or different parts of the branch from the fruit, in the Abies, Corylus, Nux Juglans, &c. the Mercurialis, Spinachia, &c. But the fruit never appears, or never begins to in- creafe upon thefe plants, till the flower is fpent and gone 5 therefore they muff ferve for another ufe, than to be merely ornamental ; for if that were their prin- cipal ufe, they would be always confpicuous, which they are not for the moft part in apetalous flowers ; and they would always be to be feen, and never be hid; which is not fo in the Afarum,- Hydrocotyle, &c. where, though the flower is large enough in pro- portion to the fruit, yet it is not to be feen, unlefs the leaf be turned up, and both flower and fruit be narrowly fearched for. The Frumenta and Gramina have their ftamineous flowers ; yet in fome of them the flower is feldom to be feen, unlefs the fpike be fhaken; and then the apices will appear. The Polypodium, and other capillary plants, have regular flowers, which precede the minute capfuls or feed-veffels, but neither of them are confpicuous with- out a microfcope. From thefe inftances it appears, that the flowers are not conftantly a guard to preferve the tender em- bryos from the injuries of the air, for then the flowers muft always have been upon the fame pedicle with the fruit. Therefore, fince the appearance of the flower is the firft ftep towards the production of the feed, whether both be upon the fame pedicle or not, it neceflarily follows, that the one muff contribute towards the bringing of the other to perfection. The antients taking notice, that feveral plants did produce flowers and had no feeds, and that other plants of the fame fpecies, and fown from the fame feed, did produce the feed without a previous flower, they were ready to call the one male, and the other female, without any notion that the one was aflifting to the other ; for they looked upon fuch flowers to be only barren ; and therefore they called thofe which had flowers female, and thofe that produced the fruits, male plants. Thus Mercurialis is called Spi- cata Fcemina, and Tefticulata Mas. That which produces the fruit muft needs be the female, as the female animal brings forth the foetus ; therefore the tefticulata muft needs be the female, and the fpicata the male. Wherever the plants are annual, thefe with the flowers, and fuch as have the feed, are always near to each other but where the root is perennial, and where the plant is more frequently propagated by the root than the feed, the cafe alters ; for there being no need of the feed to propagate the plant, there is the lefs need of the flower to be nearer to the plant which produces the feed. So the Spinachia and the Lupulus are frequently feen to grow, to produce the feed, and the other the fqua- mous fruit when the plants which produce the male flowers of the one or the other, are at fome diftance. And this is fo far from being an objection againft the neceffity of two fexes in plants as well as in animals, that it is an argument to confirm it ; for it Ihews the wonderful contrivances in order to preferve the fpe- cies, when the ordinary means of propagating it by the feed cannot be fo conveniently attained. Thefe, and more that might be produced, being evident proofs of two fexes in plants, as well as in ani- mals, we ftiall in the next place, give fome experi- ments to confirm this in a negative way, as have been already done in a pofitive. When plants have been deprived of their male flowers, GEN l • • ; - * * . * -"J or male parts ih the flower; they either produced no feed at all, or if they did, they became abortive; dried up, or dwindled away ; or though the feeds did come to perfection, they were barren; of did not produce. Experiment i. Mr. Geoffroy having cut off all the ftamineous tufts of male flowers from the top of the ftalk in the Maiz or Turky- wheat, asfoon as they ap- peared, and before the fpike loaded with the em- bryos of the femen had put forth from the alae of the leaves, feveral of thefe embryos decayed and dried up after they were pretty big ; but fome grains upon their pedicles all along the fpike fwelled confiderably* and feemed to be full of the bud, and were confe- quently fertile, while all the others mifcarried, and there was not one fpike where the whole feeds did not ripen to the full. This experiment is a fufficient proof of the ufe of the male flowers of this plant for whatfoever that is which flows from the racemi of thefe flowers, it feems it muft be conducive not only for the impregnation of the feed, but alfo for the growth and impregnation of the fruits At prefertt we fhall Ihew, that what nourifhment is ufually furnifned by the pedicle to the embryos, does not appear to be capable to dilate or expand itfelf, or contribute to the continual fupply of nutritious par-* tides, unlefs the embryos were animated or enlivened by the fpirit which fhould have flowed from the male flowers ; fo that they were fo debilitated and weaken- ed, in afcending from the body of the plant towards the embryos, before they could arrive at them, that they which otherwife might have ferved for the aug- mentation and increafe of all the embryos upon the fpike, could not now do any thing more than com tribute to the ripening of a few. And although Mr, Geoffroy might have imagined, that thefe few feeds which came to perfection were fertile alfo, becaufe they were full of germs, yet he could not be fnre of that, unlefs he had fown the fame feeds next feafon* and tried whether they would chit or not, Gardeners who buy Onion and Leek-feed brought from Strafburgh, commonly try the following expe- riment : they put a few of the feeds into a pot of wa- ter mixed with earth, and if they find they begin to fpring, or fend forth the feminal leaf or fibre of the root, after a few days, they judge of the product of it ; and notwithstanding all the feeds without this trial may feem to be productive, being equally firm, hard, and folid, perhaps not more than one third of them will prove fertile. And this barrennefs may proceed, either becaufe they had never been impregnated by the male parts of the flower, or that they had been too much expofed to the air ; being fome time or other too much moift- ened, and not afterwards been carefully dried, or have been kept too long, by which neglect they lofe their fpirit or life, Now, if the fulnefs, folidity and firmnefs of a feed is not a fure fign of its fertility, then Mr. Geoffroy might have been miftaken in his opinion of the ferti- lity of thefe feeds in the Maiz, fince he did not make any trial of it, by committing it to the ground. In like manner, as to his fecond experiment of the Mercurialis Diofcoridis, where he railed fome plants which had the fruit, and others which had the fta- mineous flowers, and removed the fforiferous plants before the flowers were blown, every one of the feeds upon the fructiferous plants, except five or fix, mif- carried ; wljich feeds were fo full, that he was per- fuaded they Were capable of producing new plants, and the like was found by Camerarius in the Cannabis, Yet inafmuch as neither of them tried the experi- ment, by lowing the fame feed the fecond year, they could not be fure but that they might have failed in their expectation. Mr. Bobart, overfeer of the phyfic-garden at Oxford, many years fince, which was before the doctrine of the different fexes of plants was well underftood, being herbarizing, found a plant of the Lychnis iylveftris iimplex^ zu GEN implex, no apices-, and taking notice that this was not only in one, but in all the flowers upon the lame plant, lie imagined it might be a new fpecies and therefore ■marked the plant, and took care to have it preferved till the feeds were ripe ; and then, they being full, hard, and firm, and to outward appearance full of germ, he fowed them in a proper place in the garden the next feafon, but not a plant fprung up from them. Thefe and other inftances, fet the opinion of the dif- ferent fexes of plants upon another footing than has been received by moll of our modern authors j for it imports, that it is not the nourifhment of the grofs fubftance of the feed itfelf which is hereby meant, nor the increafe of the feed-veffel, which is thereby de- ilgned , for (as is already obferved) a hen can lay an egg, without having before had congrefs with a cock ; and this, when newly laid, jfhall be of the fame big- nefs, colour, tafte, and fmell, with another egg which lias been cocked (as they call it ;) i. e. which has been fecundated by the mafculine feminal materies : but the difference will appear, when both are put under the hen, in order to be hatched ; for the one fhali pul- lulate or chit, and the other fhali become fetid and rot. The cafe is juft the fame with the feed of a plant, it may be augmented and increafed in its bulk •, it may become firm, hard, and folid, and have all the tokens of a perfecft ripenefs ; the feed- veffels may be enlarged, and the pulp or parenchyma of the fruit may be aug- mented ; and yet the particles of the feed may remain crude, indigefted, and incapable to be explicated and dilated, or fet in a fuitable motion, whereby to pro- trude the fibrilla of the root at one end, and the fe- minal leaves at the other ; except it has before re- ceived fome extraneous matter, or fome a&ive particles from the male parts of the flower, or from the male flower itfelf. In order to confirm the neceffity of two fexes of plants, as well as in animals, this familiar confideration may be added : that the fertility or barrennefs of any tree, in the more or lefs fruitful feafons, may be known to ignorant or lefs curious perfons, by the quantity of the flowers which appear in the fpring time ; and that not only in trees alone, where the flower and fruit are upon one and the lame foot-ftalk, but alfo in fuch trees, where the flowers are upon diftind trees, or fe- parate places upon the fame tree ; for it is eafy to determine by the catkins or iuli upon the Walnut, Filbert, or Hazle-trees, whether fuch or fuch trees will be fertile or barren for the enfuing feafon, before any of the embryos begin to break, be pufhed forth, or appear. Having already treated of the male and female parts of flowers, we fhali next confider their ufe. Flowers, in this refped, may aptly be divided into that of male flowers, which (as has been before ob- ferved j were formerly reputed barren ; and die plants which produce them were alfo called female plants, becaufe thofe perfons not having any notion of dif- ferent fexes in plants, they were called female, upon account of their weaknefs ; or if they had any thought of fexes in them, it was only illufive. The ancients were ignorant of thofe which are now- a-days called hermaphrodite flowers ; and they, 'not having a true notion of fexes of plants, could not ima- gine that the parts of both fexes Ihould be in one -flower, upon one and the fame foot-ftalk. And although hermaphrodite animals bear the leaft proportion in the animal kingdom, yet hermaphro- dites have the greateft (bare in the vegetable, though they are not fo numerous as they have been fuppofed to be •, for upon a ftridt examination it will be found, that a great many more plants have diftinbl male and female flowers, than was formerly believed. The neceffity of different fexes in plants having been demonftrated, and that die female feed, though it Should ripen to the full, cannot be fertile, except it be impregnated by what it receives from the male parts of flowers, 'we fhali next explain the organs of generation in both fexes. .... • 5 GEN In the animal oeconomy, there are, befides thofe veffels that are deftinated for nutrition, and the fecre- tion of the feveral juices in the body, fpermatic veffels, which confift of prteparantia, deferentia, and conti- nents femcn. The praeparantia in males, are the blood-vefiels and the teftes the one conveys the blood, and the other feparates the fernen from blood, and elaborates it. So likewife in plants there are veffels that receive the nutritious particles from the earth, and convey it to the extremity of the plant ; fome of which tend di- reftly to the leaf, and others to the flowers. Thofe which go to the foot-ftalk of the flower may not improperly be called fpermatic-veffels, for it is from them that the feminal particles in male, female, and hermaphrodite flowers are feparated ; therefore the foot-ftalks of the hermaphrodite flowers are pro- portionably larger than thofe either of the male or fe- male ; they have a double office, and contribute fuc- cefiively to both. ' In thofe where the calyx becomes the fruit, the greateft fupply is furnifhed to it firft, and diftributed in its cortical parts, as is vifible in the Rofef in which the foot-ftalk is fo far enlarged at firft, as to be of an equal bignefs with the bud. After the. calyx is thus formed, the next diftribution is to the inner or centrical part of the flower, which Dr. Grew calls attire, and where the piftffium becomes the fruit ; the piftillum and ftylus are formed at the fame time with the ftamina and apices. The ftylus at the very firft acquires both its due length and bignefs 5 for the nutritious particles afcending in the center never ftop till the ftylus is ftretched out to its full length ; and in fuch as are furnifhed with a peculiar apex, that is formed firft ; the neck of the ftylus, or that part next to it, is the biggeft from thence it gradually decreafes in its grollnefs, till it comes to the piftillum. This is eafily perceived by thofe who will take the pains to open the bud of a Lily, Tulip, &c. before they are half blown. The ftamen is furnifhed next with an extraordinary fupply of the nutritious particles before the flower is blown ; thefe, whether fewer or more, are at firft: brought to their proportional largenefs, being round and juicy. The apex is the third which receives this extraordinary fupply of the nourifhment, for after that the ftylus is formed, that it may lean to it after the veffels of the ftamen and fummit are extended to their full length, and fo formed, that they can convey fuch an extraordinary quantity of particles as may fill up the capacity of the apex, it is then more enlarged than ever after ; for if the flower of a Lily be opened be- fore it be blown, the apex will be found to .be full as long as the ftamen ; for as the one half of the apex covers the ftamen, fixed to its center, fo the other half of it is fo far extended above the ftamen, as the ftamen remained uncovered below it, towards the pe- dicle or foot-ftalk. The fourth part of a flower is the petala, which re- ceives this extraordinary fupply of nourifhment be- fore the blowing ; thefe upon the reverfe, are firft en- larged towards the pedicle, and are afterwards ex- tended and ftretched forth in proportion to the en- largement of the attire ; at firft they are all groffer, and more fucculent towards the origin, and gradually become thinner and broader. The ftamina of mono- petalous flowers do, for the moft part, arife partly from the petalon itfelf, and partly from the calyx ; efpecially if the ftamina correfpond in number to the petala, as in the Hexapetalas, or Polypetalte Liliaceas of Tournefort, where every ftamen arifes oppofite to the middle of the petalon. This obfervation (how and when this more than or- dinary fupply of nourifhment is carried to the flowers) eafily demonftrates wherein the analogy of the organs of generation in plants and animals confifts. In animals, the feminal matter is received by proper veffels from the fame blood from whence the other fecretions, fit for the prefervation of the animal oeco- nomy 1 GEN nomy proceed;' fo that the blood in animals being the fame with the lap in plants, and both being con- veyed after the fame manner throughout the feveral bodies, it neceffarily follows, that the one as well as the other, muft have proper veffels for fecretion of the feminal matter. Let it then be confidered, that the fap or nutritious juice afcends in common to the pedicle of the flower, as the blood flows by the aorta defcendens •, and that at the calyx or bottom of the flower, fome fhare goes to one part of it, and fome to another •, as the aorta fends one branch to the fpermatic veffels, and the re- mainder of it goes to perform the other functions ; and as a part of the fap is feparated by the pedicle of the flower, when the remainder is diftributed through- out the remaining parts of the plant, fo the arteria prteparans goes directly to the teftes in the males, and ovarium in the female : and in flowers fome veffels tend direff ly to the calyx (if it becomes the fruit) or to the perianthium (if there be any,) fome to the pe- tala, fome to the ftamina, fome to the piftillum or uterus, as it is called by Malpighius. Thefe things being ferioufly refleffed on, we muff of neceffity conclude, 1. That the fame due care is taken to elaborate and prepare the more fubtile and impenetrable particles of the nutritious juice in plants, as of the blood in animals. 2. This fubftance fo prepared, as it muff be defigned for fome extraordinary ufe, fo this ufe can be no other than that of being the means of fecundating the fe- male feed in plants, as the other is of the feminine oval in animals. If any one fhall take a flower full blown, and pull one of the ftamina from the pedicle, he will find a rough vifcid liquor, like to the fperma, which remains here till its moft fubtle parts have afcended the fta- men, or perhaps the more grofs particles might have remained there, after the moft fubtile had afcended, before the flower was blown ; this is as plain and de- monftrable as can be in the Lilies, particularly in the Orange Lily, and moft of the Martagon Lilies, there is a contrivance more obvious. This vifcid liquor afcending by parallel duffs to the apex, there this fubtile matter is retained till it is farther elaborated by the evaporations of the more humid and aqueous particles, by the heat of the fun; and then it becomes a moft fubtile, fine, impalpable dull, which is then faid to be ripe, and is called the farina. Dr. Blair, after having given the fentiments of feven different authors upon the fubjeff, proceeds to give his own, without fubfcribing to the fentiment of either the one or the other ; and endeavours by a ftriff ex- amination of the flowers themfelves, to find out which of thefe two opinions, fo diametrically oppofite to each other, are moft agreeable to faff. But before he begins, he lays down this general maxim, which he takes for granted, that nature is uniform in all her operations, and never recedes from thofe rules laid down by the wife Difpofer of all things at the creation, by performing the fame thing after two different and contrary methods ; and thence con- cludes, that if the farina be a congeries of feminal plants in one fpecies, it muft be fo in all. If there be an open and direff paffage, or though it be not fo direff, yet if by any direff paffage, by which it can be demonftrated, that one fingle grain of the farina can enter every individual feed in one plant, it muft be fo in all ; but if neither of thefe hold good, and if it can be proved by ocular infpeff ion, without the affiftance of a microfcope, in thofe very plants exemplified by Mr. Morland, Mr. Geoffroy, and Mr. Bradley, that the farina in fubftance cannot enter the feminal veffel ; or if it does, that there is no direff paffage for it to enter each particular feed, after it has fo got into the capfula or filiqua; then he hopes, both their queries, fuppofitions, and affertions, muft fall. As for the Corona Imperialis, the firft example given GEN by Mr. Morland, the flower of which hangs down* wards, though he does not deny but its ftylus may be hollow all the way, and that it may be open at the extremity, yet by its fituation, and feveral other cumftances, it does not feeni to him to favour this opinion. For firft, as there is a continual conflux of particles through the fkin in animal bodies, it is alfo fo in ve- getables : this appears by the immediate fading of flowers, or any other part of the plant, after it has been plucked off ; which proceeds from the evapora- tion of the particles in the little tubes, without any- more fucceeding in their place. He thinks it as reafonable to fuppofe, that thefe par- ticles flow out by the hollow ftylus, as by any other part, and alfo more fenfibly there than elfewhere, be* caufe of their being concentrated within fuch narrow bounds ; and that if thefe particles defcend by the ftylus hanging downwards, the particles, or rather grains of the farina, can never afcend the fame way. 2dly, That if it fhould be granted, that thefe grams did afcend by the ftylus, how do they get into the fe- minal veffel ; that being clofely fliut up, as will ap- pear to any one who fhall obferve it. ^dly, Whereas Mr. Morland fuppofes, that the rain either wafhes it, or the wind fhak.es it down the tube, till it reaches the feminal veffel ; Dr. Blair obferves, that the extremity which is the upper part of the ftylus in an ereff flower, muft be the lower in a dependent one ; fo tha't if either the ram or wind have accefs to it, it muft neceffarily either wafh or drive it away from the feminal veffel, which is now the ftylus. But here the Doffor takes notice of another contri- vance, for anfwering that purpofe, i. e. a fort of a pelvis or ciftern, called by Linnaeus neftarium, ft- tuated at the origin or root of each petalon, filled with a vifcous liquor which continues there, and never ex- ceeds its bounds fo long as the petalon is in health : for flnce the apices are here fo artfully fixed, that they turn every way with the leaft wind, as Mr. Morland rightly obferves, when they burft, and the farina is driven to and fro, though it cannot fo eaflly enter the tube, yet it may conveniently be blown up towards the orifice of the petala furrounding the ftylus, where it is flopped or flaid by this vifcofity, till it has per- formed its office. To confirm this, he inftances Mr. Fairchild, who, he fays, being perfuaded that this vifcous liquor did fome way or other contribute towards the f ruff ifying of this plant, but not underftanding how it did fo, he tried the experiment, by wiping this liquor off as loon as it was depofited in the pelvis, and the flower which he fo ferved did not bear any fruit. And the way the doffor accounts for this is, that the humidity being removed, the farina is no fooner blown upwards, than it immediately falls down, without producing any effeff ; and that which he takes to be a confirmation of this is, that both Tulips and Fri™ tillarias have this pelvis or bafon, yet it is for the moft part dry and empty ; becaufe the flowers of the for- mer being ereff, they have no fuch need of this liquor to retain the dull ; for that the rain, having immediate accefs to them, may wafh the duft towards the origin of the petala, where it can remain till it has performed its office ; whereas the rain having no accefs to the inner furface of the flower of the Corona Imperialis, it is naturally endowed with this humidity, depofited there by feveral excretory duffs, in order to render it fit for the purpofe : and Malpighius himfelf takes notice of this Angularity in this flower, though he af~ cribes no ufe to it. The next example propofed- by Mr. Morland, is the Yellow Lily, which, according to his figure, is rep re - fented as having the apices equally high with the top of the ftylus, and the petala over-topping each other 5 whereas he fays, that by the narroweft infpeffion he ever could make, the top of the apices (they being then perpendicularly fituated) reaches no higher than the neck of the button upon the top of the ftylus, and that this is before the apices begin to burft and 6 A fhed G E N Hied the dull j but as foon as the flower begins to , open, they depart from the ftylus,, and force the pe- tala outwards, by a certain eiafticity, and expand themfelves; this being done, they immediately change : their poftufe from a perpendicular to an oblique or horizontal one •, nor do they ever pour out their duft or farina, till they can conveniently drop it upon the bottom of the flower, and towards the root of the piftilium. But taking it for granted that it whs fo, the top of the ftylus (which the Dodlor calls the button, in oppofition to the apices ftaminum,) he fays, is fo compadt, and of fo firm a fubftance, that it is next to impoffible, that the farina in fubftance; or in integral parts, can pafs through it. If the integral parts, the complete grain, the minute giobuli, in which the whole feminal plant is contained, cannot then enter, the whole compound muft be dif- folved, and the minute feminal particles in this fmall grain of duft muft be difunited ; and if fo, how fhall thefe again come to cement, fo as to make up one continued body? or how fhall this little body, fo united, penetrate a fecond time the partition-wall betwixt the ftylus and piftilium ? and again, how fhall it find out its way to its neft, in the proper embryo of the feed ? TheDodor takes notice of the White Lily, the Orange Lily, the Martagon Lily, &c. as objedtions to the opinions of Mr. Morland, Bradley, &c. and alio mentions the Iris, as a moft pregnant inftance, that the farina cannot fo much as come at the piftilium ; for having fix petals, the three ftamina with long apices lie hid between the three petala which hang downwards, and three large expanfions of the bifid ftylus, and the upper part of the down-hanging pe- talon : the farina can never reach the center of the ftylus, though it were hollow, which it is not, but muft defeend along its outftde, to the top and outfide of the rudiment of the fruit, there to emit its effluvia. Thefe and other inftances he concludes, are fuffleient proof, that the farina cannot enter the ftylus, penetrate into the piftilium, or inner part of the feminal veffel, nor have the leaft accefs to the embryo of the feed. As to the objedion, that there is not paffage fuffleient to admit the male feed into the uterus, or even into the ovaries, it is thus anfwered : If it be confidered how every flower, when it is pre- pared for the ad of receiving the male feed, is fo much under the influence of the fun, that the petals open at its approach, and ftiut up again at its depar- ture, it very well explains how the piftilium, or fe- male parts of generation, are relaxed at one time more than another, i. e. that the female parts are more re- laxed at the opening of the flower, than when the flower is fhut up ; for the flower-leaves adhering to the bottom of the piftilium, muft confequently, when they bend back, put every part of the piftilium into a different pofture to that in which it was when the petals were fhut. And it is certain, that it is the prefence of the fun that ripens the male duft in the apices, and opens the little cafes in which it is contained, giving them a fpringinefs that flings forth that duft as foon as it is ripe, fo as to fcatter it to a confiderable diftance. The female parts are at this time dilated by the opening of the flower-leaves, and the apices and chives, con- curring at the fame time in flinging forth their male duft, anfwer the fame end in the generation of plants, that the ad of copulation does among animals. Having thus given feveral reafonings and arguments iifed by various authors, who have made it their ftudy to inveftigate the mode of generation of vegetables, whether the impregnation of them proceeds from the farina foecundans, or male duft, entering the uterus of plants in fubftances, or by effluvia, I fhall not take upon me to determine the difpute ; efpecially fince Mr. Boyle has proved, that all effluvia are fubtile par- ticles of matter ; fo that it matters not how fmall or minute thefe particles are, fince a body in its firft ftate may be fo minute as to be fcarcely perceptible. I fnall therefore conclude with mentioning a few ex- G E N periments of my own, which I communicated to Dr. Patrick Blair, which he improved as a proof of his opiilion of effluvia y and Mr. Bradley aifo, as a proof of the farina entering the uterus in fubftance, and leave the curious enquirer to determine on that fide of the -queftion, to which reafoning and experiment fhall influence him. I feparated the male plants of a bed of Spinach from the female ; and the confequence was, that the feed did fwell to the ufual bignefs, but when fown it did not grow afterwards ; and foarching into the feed, I found it wanted the pundtum vine, or what Geoffrey calls the germen. I fet twelve Tulips by themfeives, about fix or Feven yards from any other, and as foon as they blew, I took out the ftamina with their fummits fo very care- fully, that I fcattered none of the male duft ; and about two days afterwards I faw bees working on a bed of Tulips, where I did not take out the ftamina ; and when they came out, they were loaded with the farina or male duft on their bodies and legs ; and I faw them fly into the Tulips' where I had taken out the ftamina, and when they came out, I found they had left behind them fuffleient to impregnate thefo flowers, for they bore good ripe feeds which afterward grew. In a parcel of Savoys, which were planted for feed near white and red Cabbages, the feeds, when fown, produced half red, and fome white Cabbages, and lbrne Savoys with red ribs, and fome neither°one fort nor the other, but a mixture of all forts together iri one plant, which I fuppofe might happen by the ef- fluvia of the different forts impregnating the uterus, of each other. In a letter communicated by Paul Dudley, jSfq-, to the Royal Society, written from New England, he mentions the interchanging of the colours of the In- dian Wheat, if the various colours are planted in rows near each other ; but if they are planted feparately, they conftantly keep to their own colour ; and this interchanging of colours has been obferved, when the diftance between the rows of Com has been feveral yards, though he fays, if there happens to be a high board fence between the different coloured Corns, the alteration of colours is entirely prevented. It is from different flowers impregnating each other, that the feveral varieties have been produced g and this gives new light to the florifts, for raifing a much, greater variety of flowers ; for by planting the dif- ferent coloured flowers near each other, fo that the flowers when fully blown may be intermixed, their farina will impregnate each other, fo that the feeds will produce variegated flowers partaking of both co- lours. But it muft be obferved, that flowers of dif- ferent genera will not impregnate each other, therefore the plants muft be of the fame genus which are placed together. Cucumbers and Melons always produce male and fe- male flowers upon different parts of the fame plant j the male flower (which appears upon a (lender foot- ftalk, and has a large ftyle in the middle, covered with an Orange-coloured farina) is by the gardeners commonly called falfe blolfoms, and are fometimes by unfkilful perfons pulled off foon after they appear, fuppofing that they weaken the plants, if fuffered to remain, which is a very great miftake ; for, in order to try this experiment, I planted four holes of Melons in a place pretty far diftant from any other; and when the flowers began to appear, I conftantly pulled off all the male flowers from time to time before they opened ; the confequence was, that all the young fruit dropt off foon after they appeared, and not one Angle fruit remained to grow to any fize, though the vines were equally ftrong with thofe which I had planted in another place, where I fuffered ail the flowers to re- main upon them, from which I had a great quantity of fruit. But this dodtrine is now fo well eftablifhed among the gardeners, being confirmed by experience, that they now carry the. male flowers of the Cucum- bers and Melons to the female, if there are none fituated. GEN; . fituated very near them, and gently ftrike the farina o the male, into the bofom of the female flowers, and thereby fet the young fruit, which would otherwife drop off. There are fome perfons, who ftill objeCt to this theory of the generation of plants, from having obferved fome plants, which were termed female, growing iingly, and at a very great diftance from any male plants of the fame kind, which had for fome years produced feeds which were perfect, and grew when fown ; and indeed I was myfelf a little ftaggered in my opinion, on having obferved a female plant of the white Briony, which grew fingly in a garden, where there were no other plants of the fame kind •, which for feveral years produced berries, which grew and flourifhed perfectly well. This put me upon examining . the plant more carefully than I had before done, when I found there were great numbers of male flowers in- termixed with the female, on the fame plant ; and fince then I have frequently found the fame in many other plants, which are fometimes male and female in different plants, yet have fometimes both fexes on the fame plant; fo that the objections which have been made to this doCtrine, may not have proper evidence for their fupport. It is certain, that the female plants may produce fruit, without the impregnation of the male ; but it is not certain, that this fruit or feed will, if fown, produce another plant. What has been fo often related by travellers and hiftorians, of the neeeffity of the male Palm-tree being near the female, in order to render it fruitful, hath been fully confirmed by Father Labat, in his account of Africa, where he has treated of the feveral forts of Palms : he fays, that he obferved in Martinico a large Palm-tree, which grew by the fide of a convent, which produced plenty of fruit, though there was no other Palm-tree growing within two leagues of this ; but he alfo obferved, that none of thefe fruit would grow, though they had made many trials of them ; fo that they were obliged to procure fome fruit from Barbary, in order to propagate thefe trees. He likewife adds, that the fruit which grew on this female tree, never ripened fo perfedly, nor was fo well tailed, as thofe which came from trees which had flood near fome of the male : therefore we may conclude, that the fruit or feed may be produced by the female plants of moll kinds, without the af- fillance of the male fperm, which may appear to fight perfeCt, and fit to produce others ; but if we examine the feeds, we fhall find that mofl of them have not the germ or little plant inclofed, nor will grow if they are fown. From thefe and many other experiments, it is very plain, that there is a neeeffity that the embryo of the female flower ffiould be impregnated by the farina or male dull, in order to render the fruit perfeCt ; but how, or in what manner it is performed, is what we can only guefs at, fince in the generation of animals, our greatefl naturalifls differ very much in their opi- nions ; nor can any of them afeertain any particular method how it is performed. I fhall therefore con- clude with quoting the words of the Rev. Dr. Hales, which are a mofl ingenious fummary of the whole doCtrine of the generation of plants. 44 IF I (fays he) may be allowed to indulge conjecture 44 in a cafe in which the mofl diligent enquirers are, 144 as yet, after all their laudable refearches, advanced 44 but little farther than mere conjecture, I would 44 propofe it to their confideration, whether from the 44 manifefl proof we have, that fulphur ftrongly at- 44 traCls air, a hint may not be taken, to confider 44 whether this may not be the primary ufe of the fa- 44 rina foecundans, to attraft or unite with elaflic or 44 other refined aCtive particles. That this farina 44 abounds with fulphur, and that a very refined fort, 44 is probable from the fubtile oil which chymifls ob- 44 tain from the chives of Saffron ; and if this be the 44 ufe of it, was it poffible that it could be more aptly 44 placed for the purpofe on very moveable apices 44 fixed on the (lender points of the ftamina, whereby 44 it might eafiiy, with the lead breath of wind, be 44 difperied in the air, thereby 'Unrounding the plant, 44 as it were, with an atmofphere of iu mimed fulphu- 44 reous pounce ? for many trees and plants abound 44 with it, which uniting with the air particles, may, 44 perhaps, be infpired at feveral parts of the plant, 44 and especially at the piftillum, and be thence con- 44 veyed to the capfula feminalis, efpecially towards 44 evening, and in. the night, when the beautiful pe- 44 tala of the flowers are clofed up, and they, with all 44 the other parts of the vegetable, are in a ftrongly 44 imbibing Hate. And if to thefe united, fulphureous 44 and aereal particles, we fuppofe fome particles of 44 light to be joined (for Sir Ifaac Newton has found, 44 that fulphur attracts light ftrongly ;) then the re- 44 fult of thefe three by far the moil aCtive principles 44 in nature, will be a punCtum faliens to invigorate 44 the feminal plant ; and thus we are at laft con- 44 duCted, by the regular analyfis of vegetable nature, 44 to the ftrft enlivening principle of their minuteft 44 origin.” GENISTA. Lin. Gen. Plant. 766. Tourn. Inll. R. H« 643. tab. 412. Broom; in French, Genet. The Characters are, The empalement of the flower is ofl one leaf , tubulous , and divided into two lips ; the upper lip is deeply cut into two, and the under into three equal parts. T 'he flower is ofl the butterfly kind ; the ftandard is oval , acute, and remote from the keel , being wholly reflexed ; the wings are a little fhorter than the ftandard , and are loofle : the keel is eredl , and longer than the ftandard , and is indented at the top. It hath ten ftamina joined in two bodies , which are fituated in the keel , terminated by fingle flummits. In the center is an oblong germen , fupporting an afeending ftyle , crowned by an acute twiftedftigma. The germen afterward becomes a roundijh turgid pod with one cell , opening with t-wb valves , inclojing kidney-fhaped feeds. This genus of plants is ranged in the third feClion of Linmeus’s feventeenth clafs, v/hich includes the plants with flowers having ten ftamina, joined ‘in two bodies ; and to this he adds fome of Tournefort’s fpecies of Spartium, and the Geniftella of Tournefort. The Species are, 1. Genista ( Sagittalis ) ramis ancipitibus articulatis; fo- lks ovato-lanceolatis. Hort. Cliff’. 355. Jointed Broom i with two-edged branches , and jointed, oval, fpear-jhaped leaves . Chamae Genifta fagittalis. C. B. P. 395. Dwarf arrow-jhaped Broom. 2. Genista (-Florida) foliis lanceolatis, ramis ftriatis te- retibus racCmis fecunbis. Hort. Cliff. 355. Broom with fpear-jhaped leaves , and eredi taper branches abounding with flowers. Genifta tinCloria Flifpanica. C. B. P. 395, Spanijh Dyers Broom. 3. Genista ( Tindioria ) foliis lanceolatis glabris ramis ftriatis teretibus ereCtis. Hort. Cliff. 355. Broom with jpear-floaped leaves which are acute, and taper channelled branches proceeding from the fide ofl the ftalk. Genifta tinCloria Germanica. C. B. P. 395. Common Dyers Broom , or Wood-waxen. 4. Genista (Pufgans) ipinis terminalibus, ramis tereti- bus ftriatis, foliis lanceolatis fimplicibns pubefeem tibus. Lin.Sp. 999. Broom with taper freaked branches terminated by jpines, and fimple, fpear-jhaped, hairy leaves . Genifta five fpartium purgans. J. B. 1. p. 404. 5. Genista ( Candicans ) foliis ternatis fubtus viliofis, pe- dunculis lateralibus fubquinqueftbris foliatis, legumi- nibus hirfutis. Amcen. Acad. 4. p; 284. Trifoliate Broom with hairy leaves , foot-ftalks from the fide cfl the branches having five flowers , and hairy pods. Cy til us Monfpef- fulanus, mediae folio, liliquis denfe congeftis & vil- iofis. Tourn Inft. 648. 6. Genista ( Tridentata ) ramis triquetris fubarticulatis, foliis tricufpidatis. Lin. Sp. Plant. 710. Broom with three-cornered jointed branches , and leaves ending in three points. Geniftella fruticofa Luiitanica. Tourn. Inft. 646. Shrubby Portugal Dyers Broom. 7. Genista (Pilofa) foliis lanceolatis obtufis, cauie tu- berculato decumbente, Hort. Cliff, 355.. Broom with ebiufe G E N flbtufle fpear -Jh aped leaves , and a declining ftalk having tubercles. This is the Genifta ramofa, foliis Hyperici. C. B. P. 395. Branching Broom with leaves like St. Johnfwort. •8. Genista ( Anglic a ) fpinis fimplicibus, ramis floriferis inermibus, foliis lanceolatis. Hort. Cliff. 355. Broom with Jingle J pines , flower-branches without fpines , and fpear -flhaped leaves. Genifta fpartium minus Anglicum. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 645. Small Englijh Broom , called Petty Whin. 9. Genista ( Hiflpanica ) fpinis decompofitis, ramis flo- riferis, inermibus, foliis lanceolatis. Lin. Sp. Plant. 7 1 1 . Broom with decompounded flpines , flower-branches without flpines , and narrow hairy leaves. Genifta fpinofa minor Hifpanica villofiffima. C. B. P. 395. Moflt hairy, finally Spanifh, prickly Broom. The firftffort grows naturally in France, Italy, and Germany. This plant fends out feveral ftalks from the root, which fpread flat on the ground, and divide into many flat branches which are jointed, and their two fides are edged like a broad fword ; thefe are green and herbaceous,- but are perennial. At each of the joints is placed one frnali fpear-fhaped leaf, with- out any foot-ftalk. The flowers are produced in clofe fpikes at the end of the branches ; they are yellow, and of the Pea-bloom kind, and are fucceeded by Abort hairy pods, which contain three or four kidney- fhaped feeds. The plants flower in June, and the feeds ripen in September. This fort is propagated by feeds, which, if fown in the autumn, the plants will come up the following fpring but when they are fown in the fpring, the plants rarely come up the fame year : when the plants come up, they will require no other culture but to keep them clean from weeds, and thin them where they are too clofe at Michaelmas they may be tranf- planted where they are deftgned to remain, and after that they will only require to be kept clean, for they are very hardy, and will live feveral years. The fecond fort rifes with ligneous ftalks about two or three feet high, fending out many taper channelled branches which grow eredt, garnifhed with fmall fpear- fhaped leaves placed alternate, and are terminated by feveral fpikes of yellow flowers, which are of the Pea- bloom kind ; thefe are fucceeded by Ihort pods, which turn black when ripe, and contain four or five kid- ney- fhaped feeds. It flowers in June and July, and the feeds ripen in autumn. The third fort grows naturally in England. This hath fhrubby ftalks, which rife about three feet high, gar- nifhed with fpear-fhaped leaves, which are broader, and end in fharper points than thofe of the former ? the branches come out from the fide of the ftalks, al- moft their whole length, and do not grow fo upright as thofe of the fecond thefe are terminated by loofe fpikes of yellow flowers, which are fucceeded by pods like thofe of the fecond fort. It flowers, and the feeds are ripe about the fame time as the former. The branches of the plant are ufed by the dyers, to give a yellow colour, from whence it is called Dyers Broom, Green- wood. Wood- waxen, or Dyers-weed. The fourth fort grows naturally about Montpelier. This rifes with fhrubby, ftriated, taper ftalks four feet high, fending out feveral branches which are terminated by fpines ; the leaves are fpear-fhaped, Angle, and hairy j the flowers are produced in fpikes at the end of the branches, they are larger than thofe of the other forts, and are of a paler yellow colour. They appear in June and July, and are fucceeded by pods like the former forts. This fort is tender, and in fevere frofts is often killed in England, where the plants are not protected. The fifth fort grows naturally about Montpelier. This rifes with a wmody ftalk to the height of feven or eight feet, fending out many Gender branches, garnifhed with trifoliate leaves, hairy on their under fide ; the upper part of thefe branches, for more than a foot in length, fend out fmall flowering branches on their fide, fupporting five yellow flowers. Thefe GEN I appear in June and July, and the feeds ripen in au- tumn. The fixt.h fort hath a low fhrubby ftalk, which feldom is more than a foot high, fending out feveral weak branches which arc jointed? garnifhed with final! leaves ending in three acute parts. The flowers are produced in loofe fpikes at the top of the branches, they are of a pale yellow colour, and appear the latter end of June and in July, and the feeds ripen in September. This plant grows naturally in Portugal. The feventh fort hath a fhrubby ftalk which declines toward the ground, and is fet over with tubercles - it divides into a few fmall branches, which are garnifhed with fmall obtufe leaves. The flowers are difpofed in fmall loofe fpikes at the end of the branches j they are fmall, of a pale yellow colour, and are fucceeded by fhort pods filled with kidney-fhaped feeds. It flowers in June, and the feeds ripen in autumn.- This grows naturally in Germany and France. The eighth fort grows naturally upon open heaths in many parts of England. It hath a fhrubby ftalk which rifes about two feet high, fending out many* flender branches, which are armed with long Angle fpines, and garnifhed with very fmall fpear-fhaped leaves, placed alternate on every fide the branches : the flower-branches have no fpines ; thefe are fhort, and have five or fix yellow flowers growing in a clut- ter at the end. They come out in April and May, and are fucceeded by fhort turgid pods, which con- tain four or five fmall kidney-fhaped feeds. Thefe ripen in July. The ninth fort grows naturally in Spain. This hath a low fhrubby ftalk, which fends out many ligneous branches, armed with branching thorns, competed of feveral fharp thorns, which come out from each other, but the Ihort branches which produce the flow- ers have no fpines ? thefe are garnifhed with fmall hairy leaves of different forms, feme of them being as narrow as hairs, and others are of the fpear-fhape , the branches are terminated by clufters of yellow flowers, which are fucceeded by fhort, compreffed, hairy pods, filled with kidney-fhaped feeds. The: whole plant has much the appearance of the common Furz or Gorfe, but is very hairy, and the flower- branches being without thorns, are the moft obvious diftincftions. All thefe forts of Brooms are propagated by feeds, which, if fown in the autumn, will fucceed much better than if fown in the fpring, and a year will be thereby faved ; as thefe plants fend out long, ftringy, tough roots, which run deep into the ground, they do not bear tranfplanting well, efpecialiy if they are not removed young ; therefore the belt way is to few a few feeds in thofe places where the plants are de- figned to remain, and to pull up all except the moft; promifing plants as foon as they are paft danger after this the plants will require no other culture, but to keep them clean from weeds : but where this cannot be praflifed, the feeds may be fown thin upon a bed of light earth, and when the plants come up, they muft be kept clean from weeds till the following au- tumn, when the plants fhould be carefully taken up and tranfplanted where they are defigned to remain. They are all very hardy plants except the fourth, fifth, and ninth forts, which muft have a warm flickered fituation and dry foil, otherwife they will not live through the winter, but the others will grow in almoft any foil or fituation. GENISTA S FI NOS A, the Furz, Whins, or Gorfe. See Ulex. GENTIAN A. Lin. Gen. Plant. 285. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 80. tab. 40. [takes its name from Gentius, a king of Illyrium, who firft difeover'ed the virtues of this plant.] Gentian, or Fellwortj in French, Gen* tiane. The Characters are, It hath a permanent empalement , which is cut into five acute fegments. Phe flower hath one petal, which is tu- hulous , cut into five parts at the top , which are flat. It hath GEN hath five awl-Jhaped fiamina , which are ft or ter than the petal , terminated by Jingle fummits. In the center is fituated an oblong cylindrical germen , having no fiyle , is crowned by two oval ftigmas. The germen af- terward becomes an oblong taper-pointed capful e, with one cell , containing many j mall feeds fafiened to the valves of the capjule. This genus of plants is ranged in the fecond fedtion of Linnaeus’s fifth clafs, intitle i Pentandria Digynia, which includes the plants whofe flowers have five fta- mina and two ftigmas. The Species are, i. Gentian a ( Lutea ) corollis quinquefidis rotatis ver- ticillatis, calycibus fpathaceis. Flail. Helv. 479. Gen- tian with quinquefid wheel-Jhaped petals growing in whorls , and hood-like empalements. Gentiana major lutea. C. B. P. 187. Greater yellow Gentian. I . Gentiana ( Pneumonathe ) corollis quinquefidis cam- panulatis oppofitis pedunculatis, foliis linearibus. Lin. Sp. Plant. 228. Gentian with bell-fhaped quinque- fid petals placed oppofite upon foot -jialks, and very nar- row leaves. Gentiana auguftifolia autumnalis major. C. B. P. 188. Greater narrow-leaved autumnal Gentian. q. Gentiana ( Afclepiades ) corollis quinquefidis cam- panulatis oppofitis feftilibus, foliis amplexicaulibus. Lin. Sp. Plant. 227. Gentian with bell-jhaped quinquefid petals fitting clofe to the /talk oppofite , and leaves em- bracing the jlalk. Gentian Afclepiades folio. C. B. P. 187. Gentian with a Swallow-wort leaf. 4. Gentiana ( Acaulis ) corolla quinquefida campanil- lata, caulem excedente. Lin. Sp. Plant. 228. Gen- tian with a bell-jhaped quinquefid petal exceeding the jlalk. Gentiana Alpina latifolia, magno flore. C. B. P. 187. Broad-leaved Alpine Gentian with a large flower , com- monly called Gentianella. 5. Gentiana {Nivalis) corollis quinquefidis infundibu- liformibus, ramis unifloris alternis. Lin. Sp. Plant. 229. Gentian with funnel-jhaped quinquefid petals, and alternate branches having one flower. Gentiana annua, foliis Centaurii minoris. Tourn. Inft. 81. Annual Gen- tian with lejfer Centaury leaves. 6 . Gentiana ( Cruciata ) corollis quadrifidis imberbibus verticillatis feftilibus. Lin. Sp. Plant. 231. Gentian With quadrifid petals without beards , growing in whorls clofe to the jialks. Gentiana cruciata. C. B. P. 188. Crojfwort Gentian. 7. Gentiana ( Cilliata ) corollis quadrifidis margine ci- liatis. Lin. Sp. Plant. 231. Gentian with a four-pointed petal , whofe border is hairy. Gentianella caerulea oris pilofis. C. B. P. 188. Blue Gentian with hairy brims. 8. Gentiana ( Utriculofa ) corollis quinquefidis hypo- crateriformibus, calycibus plicatis alatis. Lin. Sp. Plant. 229. Gentian with falver-jhaped quinquefid petals, and winged plaited empalements. Gentiana utriculis ventricofis. C. B. P. 188. Gentian with a ventricofe tube. 9. Gentiana ( Centaureum ) corollis quinquefidis infun- dibuliformibus caule dichotomo. Lin. Sp. Plant. 229. Gentian with a funnel-jhaped, five-pointed petal, and a forked Jlalk. Centaurium minus. C. B. P. 278. Lejfer Centaury. 10. Gentiana ( Perfoliatum ) corollis odlifidis, foliis per- foliatis. Lin. Sp. Plant. 232. Gentian with an eight- pointed petal, and Thorough-wax leaves. Centaurium lu- te'um perfoliatum. C. B. P. 278. Yellow perfoliate Cen- taury. . 1 II. Gentiana ( Spicata ) corollis quinquefidis floribus alternis feftilibus. Lin. Sp. Plant. 230. Gentian with funnel-jhaped five-pointed petals , flowers growing alter- nate, and fitting clofe to the Jialks. Centaurium minus ilpicatum album. C. B. P. 278. Lejfer Centaury with a white fpiked flower. 12. Gentiana {Exalt at a) corollis quinquefidis co- ronatis crenatis, pedunculo terminali longiflfno di- chotomo. Lin. Sp. 331. Gentian with a five-pointed petal , a very long foot-jialk, and forked branches. Centaurium minus maritimum amplo flore casruleo. Plum. Cat. 3. Lejfer maritime Centaury with a large blue flower. The firft fort is the common Gentian of the [hops, whofe root is one of the principal ingredients in bitters. This plant has a large thick root of a yellolvilh brown colour, and a very bitter tafie •, the lower leaves are of an oblong oval fhape, a little pointed at the end, ftiff, of a yeliowifh green, and have five large veins on the back of each, and are plaited. The ftaik riles to the height of three or four feet, which is garnifhed with leaves, growing by pairs at each joint, almoft embracing the ftaik at their bafe 5 thefe are of the fame form with the lower, but di- minfth gradually in their fize to the top. The flowers come out in whorls at the joints, toward the upper part of the ftalks, ftanding on Abort foot-ftalks, whofe origin is from the wings of the leaves thefe are of a pale yellow, and have one petal, which is divided almoft to the bottom, having an oblong cylindrical germen, which afterward fwells to an oblong taper capfule, which is bifid at the point, and opens in two cells, filled with fmall feeds. It grows naturally in the paftures in Switzerland, and in the mountainous parts of Germany, from whence the roots are brought to England for medicinal ufe ; there is a compound water, and an extradt made of them. The root of the Gentian is alfo one of the principal ingredients in bitters, and is frequently ufed in many diforders. But a few years ago, there was a mixture of Henbane roots brought over with Gentian, which was unhap- pily ufed, and occafloned great diforders in the perfons to whom it was adminiftered ; upon which great en- quiry was then made to find out what that root could be, lbme ftifpedring it to be the root of Deadly Nightfhade, and others believing it to be fome of the poifonous umbelliferous roots, but on comparino- it with fome dried roots of the Henbane, I found they were the fame. We have likewife an account of the noxious quality of thefe roots, printed in the Synopfis Stirpium Hibernicarum, which was communicated to the author by Dr. Thomas Molyneux, phyflcian to the, ftate p it was as follows : The Dean of Clonfert was making fome alterations in his garden, and, looking over his workmen, he ob- ferved them to dig up many roots, which he took for Skirrets, and therefore ordered fome of them to be carried in and drefied for dinner, which was accord- done ; but all thofe who eat of them were in a fhort time feized with dizzinefs in their head, fick- nefs at the ftomach, attended with an unufual heat and drinefs in their throats-, and two, who had eaten a larger fhare than the reft, loft the ufe of their rea- fon, and became delirious, which continued for fome days ; and as it appeared evident thefe diforders were occafioned by the roots, the Dean caufed fome of them to be planted, that he might be afiured what the plant was whofe roots had this bad quality ; and in the fpring, when they put out their leaves, they proved to be the Henbane, which has been noticed by old writers to be poflefted of thefe qualities. And as the diforders which were occaficned by thefe fuppofed Gentian roots, were nearly the fame^ as is above re- lated, I thought it might be of ufe to infert it here, to caution others againft eating of roots which they are unacquainted with* This plant delights in a light loamy foil and a fhady fituation, where it will thrive much better than in a light dry foil, or in an open expofure. It is propa- gated by feeds, which fhould be fown in pots foon after it is ripe, for if it is kept till the fpring, it will not fucceed ; thefe pots fhould be placed in a fhady fituation, and kept clean from weeds. In the fpring; the plants will appear, when they mu ft be duly wa- tered in dry weather, and kept clean from weeds till the following autumn ; then they fhould be care- fully fhaken out of the pots, fo as not to break or injure their roots and a fhady border of loamy earth fhould be well dug and prepared to receive them, into which the plants Ihould be planted at about fix inches diftance each way, obferving to let the top of the roots be a little below the furface of the 6 B ground. ( \ ground, then prefs the earth clofe to the roots ; af- ter this they will require no farther care, but to keep them conftantly clean from weeds; and if the fol- Jowing fpring fliotil’d prove dry, they fhould be duly watered, which will greatly forward their growth. In this border the plants may ftand two years, by which time they will be lit to tranfplant where they are defigned' to remain ; therefore in au- tumn, fo foon as their leaves decay, they may be re- moved ; but as the roots of thefe plants run deep into the ground, like Carrots, there muft be great care taken in digging them up, not to cut or break their roots, for that will greatly weaken, if it does not kill them. After the plants are well fixed in their places, they require no other culture, but to dig the ground about them early in the fpring before they begin to ihoot, and in the fummer to keep them clean ffrom weeds. The roots of thefe plants will continue many years, but the ftalks decay every autumn ; the fame roots do not flower two years together, nor fel- dom oftener than every third year ; but when they flower ftrong, they make a fine appearance ; and as thefe delight in fiiady moift .ground, where but few ornamental plants will thrive, fo they fhould not be wanting in good gardens. The fecond fort grows naturally in moift paftur.es in many parts of England, but particularly in the north ; this riles with an upright ftalk about a foot high, glrnifhed with frnooth leaves an inch and a half long, and lefs than a quarter of an inch broad ; they are placed oppofite, and have no foot-ftalks. The flowers are produced on the top of the ftalk, three or four in number, ftanding upon foot-ftalks alternately above each other ; they are large, bell-fhaped, and divided into five points at their brim, and are of a deep blue colour, fo make a fine appearance ; thefe come out the latter end of July in the warm parts of England, but in the north they are full a month later. It may be propagated by feeds in the fame manner as the firft fort, and the plants may be treated in the fame way ; but as this fort does not fhoot its roots deep into the ground, it may be tranfplanted with lefs . hazard ; however, if thefe are removed with a ball of earth to their roots, they will not feel their removal fo much as when the earth is all taken from them. This fort fhould be planted in a ftrong, moift, loamy foil, in which the plants will thrive and flower annu- ally, but in a warm dry foil they will not thrive or flower. , The third fort grows naturally upon the Helvetian mountains ; this rifes with an upright ftalk near a foot high, garnifhed with frrlooth leaves about two inches long, and three quarters of an inch broad at their bafe, where they embrace the ftalk, but they end in acute points ; they are placed oppofite, and are of a fine green, and diminifh in their fize as they are nearer the top ; they have five longitudinal veins, which join at both ends, but diverge from each other in the middle. The flowers come out by pairs op- pofite, from the bottoms of the leaves, ftanding on fhort foot-ftalks ; they are pretty large, bell-fhaped, and of a fine blue colour, fo make a fine appearance when they are open. This fort flowers in June and July. It may be propagated by feeds in the fame manner as the firft fort, and the plants may be treated in the fame way, but they muft have a moift loamy foil, otherwife they will not thrive. It may alfo be pro- pagated by offsets, which may be divided from the roots ; thefe fhould be taken off in autumn, which Is the belt feafon for removing all thefe forts of . plants ; but thefe fhould not be removed, or parted oftener than every third year, where they are expe&ed to produce ftrong flowers. The fourth fort grows naturally on the Alps and Helvetian mountains, but has been long cultivated in molt of the curious gardens in Europe ; this is com- monly known by the title of Gcntianella. It is a low plants the ftalks feldom growing more than three or i- • r • tour incites high ; they are garnifhed with frnooth leaves placed oppofite, which are two inches long, and half an inch broad, fitting clofe to the 'ftalk. The flowers grow creed on the top of the ftalk, To ftand quite above them; thefe are often Angle, but fom'e- times, when the plants are ftrong, there will be four or five at tfie end of each ftalk ; they are large, belh Draped, and of a deep azure blue, fo is the fineft of that colour of any flower yet known. It ufually flowers in May, but fometimes the plants flower again in autumn. 'I his is commonly propagated by parting of the roots, in the fame manner as is before directed for the third fort, but thefe muft not be often tranfplanted, or parted, if they are wanted to flower ftrong ; this fort fhould have a foft loamy foil and a fhady fitua- tion, where the plants will thrive and flower well every year. It may alfo be propagated by feeds, which, in a good foil, the plants will produce in plenty ; thefe fhould be fown in autumn, in the fame manner as is before directed for the firft fort ; and if the plants are planted in a good foil, they will be ftrong enough to flower the fecond year after they come up, and thefe feedling plants will flower much ftronger than thofe which are propagated by offsets. The fifth and eighth forts are low annual plants, which grow naturally upon the Alps and other moun- tainous places in Europe, and are very rarely cultivated in gardens. The fifth feldom rifes more than two inches high, branching out from the root into feveral flender ftalks, garnifhed with very fmall leaves placed by pairs, and each ftalk is terminated by one fmaller blue flower ftanding ereft. The eighth fort grows about four inches high, with a Angle upright ftalk of a pur- ple colour. The leaves at the root are oval, but thofe upon the ftalk are narrow, and ftand oppofite. The ftalk is terminated by one blue flower, with a large bellied empalement, which is plaited, and the petal of the flower rifes but a little above the empale- ment, fo does not make much appearance. After the top flower decays, there are frequently two fmaller flowers which come out from the fide of the ftalk, at the two upper joints ; thefe flower after each other, the upper one coming firft, fo that there is a fucceffion of flowers till autumn. As thefe plants ufually grow upon moift fpongy ground, it is very difficult to cultivate them in gar- dens ; for unlefs they have a foil approaching near to that in which they naturally grow, they will not thrive ; the only method to obtain them is, either to low their feeds in pots, or upon a moift boggy ground in autumn, but it muft be in the fliade ; and when the plants come up, they may be thinned, and the furface of the ground about them covered with mofs, which fhould be conftantly kept moift ; with this management I have feen the plants thrive and flower very well. The fixth fort is a perennial plant, which, grows na- turally upon the Appenines and the Helvetian moun- tains ; this rifes with an upright ftalk about fix inches high, garnifhed with frnooth fpear-fhaped leaves about two inches long, and one broad in the middle, fitting clofe to the ftalk ; they are placed oppofite, and each pair of leaves crofs one another, from whence it is called Croffwort Gentian. The flowers are pro- duced in whorls round the ftalks at the tipper joints, fitting very clofe to the ftalks, and at the top there is a large duller growing in the fame form ; thefe are of a light blue colour, and appear in May. This may be propagated by feeds, or offsets, in the fame manner as the third and fourth forts, and the plants muft be treated in the fame way. The feventh fort grows naturally upon the Alps, and other mountainous parts of Europe ; this is a low pe- rennial plant,- whole ftalks are very flender, and rarely rife more than three or four inches high, garnifhed with fmall, narrow, acute-pointed leaves, placed in pairs ; each ftalk is terminated by one large blue flower, which is hairy on the infide at the Trim. This ' . flowers G E R G E R flowers in July and Auguft, and may be propagated and treated in the fame manner as the third and fourth forts. ^ , . The ninth fort is the Leffer Centaury of the fhops-, this grows naturally upon dry paftures in moft parts of England, where it rifes in height proportionable to the goodnefs of the foil •, for in good land it is ire- quently a foot high, but in poor foils not more than three or four inches. It is an annual plant, with upright branching ftalks, garnifhed with fmall leaves placed by pairs. The flowers grow in form of an umbel at the top, and are of a bright purple colour ; they come out in July, and the feeds ripen in autumn. This plant cannot be cultivated in the gardens. The tenth fort grows naturally upon chalky grounds in many parts of England. It is an annual plant, rifing with an upright ftalk a foot high, garniilied with oval- pointed leaves, whofe bafe furrounds the ftalk *, they grow by pairs, and are of a gray colour •, the ftalks and leaves are very fmooth. The flowers grow in form of an umbel on the top of the ftalk •, they are of a bright yellow colour, and are cut into eight parts at the top. Thefe appear in July, and the feeds ripen in autumn. The eleventh fort is an annual plant, which grows naturally in the fouth of France and in Italy ; this rifes with an upright ftalk about a foot high, fending out feveral branches toward the top, which are garnifhed by fmall leaves placed oppoflte. The flowers are produced from the fide and at the top of the ftalk, in formofloofe irregular umbels •, they are white, and about the fize of thofe of the common Centaury. The twelfth fort grows naturally in the Weft-Indies, where it was difcovered by Father Plumier, and the late Dr. Houftoun found it growing in plenty at La Vera Cruz, in low moift places where the water ftag- nates, but at a remoter diftance from the fea. The feeds of this plant he fent to England, which fuc- ceeded in the Chelfea garden •, this rifes with an up- right branching ftalk near two feet high, garnifhed with oblong, fmooth, acute-pointed leaves, placed oppoflte •, the upper part of the ftalk divides into fe- veral forks, between which are fix or feven long na- ked foot-ftalks, each fuftaining one large blue flower, divided into five fegments at the brim. The flowers are fucceeded by oblong capfules with one cell, filled with fmall feeds. This is propagated by feeds, which muft be fown on a hot-bed foon after they are ripe, and the plants afterward treated in the fame manner as other tender annual plants from warm countries, being too tender to thrive in the open air in England. If the feeds of this plant are fown in autumn, in pots placed in the tan-bed of the ftove, they will fucceed better than when they are fown in the fpring, and the plants will flower early, fo good feeds may be obtained. GENTIANELLA. See Gentiana. GERANIUM. Lin. Gen. Plant. 346. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 266. tab. 142. [takes its name from Gr. a crane, orftork, becaufe its fruit refembles the bill of a Crane.] Crane’s-bill-, in French, Bee de Grue. The Characters are. The flower hath a permanent empalement , compofed of jive fmall oval leaves. 'The- flower hath five petals, which are oval, or heart-floaped , fpreading. open thefe are in fome fpecies equal, and in others, the upper two are much larger than the three lower. It hath ten ftamina, which are alternately longer, but' are floor ter than the pe- tals, and are terminated by oblong fummits. In the bot- tom of the flower is fituated a five-cornered gerrnen , fup- porting an awl-fhaped ftyle longer than the ftamina, which is permanent, crowned by five reflexed fligmas. The flower is fucceeded by five feeds , 'each being wrapped up in the hufk of the beak, which is extended the length of the ftyle, where they are twifted together at the point , fo as to form the refemblance of a ftork’s beak. This genus of plants is ranged in the fecond feftion of Linnaeus’s fixteenth clafs, which includes thofe plants whofe flowers have ten ftamina, and the male and fe- male organs are joined in one body. Tournefort places it in the fixth fectlon of his fixth clafs. In which he ranges the herbs with a Rofe flower, whofe pointal becomes a fruit with feveral capfules. The Species are, 1. Geranium ( Pratenfe ) pedunculis bifloris, folds fub- peltatis multipartitis pinnato lacimatis rugofis acutis, petalis integris. Hort. Cliff. 344. Crane’s-bill with two flowers on each foot-ftalk , target-Jhaped leaves cut into many acute fegments, and entire petals. Geranium ba- trachiodes, Gratia Dei Germanorum. C. B. P. Crane’s- bill with a Crow-foot leaf, and large blue flowers. 2. Geranium ( Macrorrhizum ) pedunculis bifloris, caly- cibus inflatis, piftillo longiflimo. Hort. Cliff. 343. Crane s-bill with two flowers on each foot-ftalk, inflated empalement s, and a very long pointal to the flower. Gera- nium batrachioides, longius radicaturn, odoratum. J. B. Long-rooted fweet -fuelling Crane’ s-bill, with a Crow-foot leaf. 3. Geranium ( Sanguineum ) pedunculis unifloris, folds quinquepartitis trifidis orbiculatis. Lin. Sp. Plant. 685. Crane’s-bill with one flower on each foot-ftalk, and orbicular leaves, which are trifid and divided into five parts. Geranium fanguineum, maximo flore. Pi. Ox. Bloody Crane’s-bill with a larger flower. 4. Geranium ( Lancaftrenfe ) pedunculis unifloris, fo- lks quinquepartitis laciniis obtufis brevibus, caulibus decumbentibus. Crane’s-bill with one flozver upon each foot-ftalk, leaves divided into five parts , whofe fegments are fhort, blunt , and declining ftalks. Geranium has- matodes Lancaftrenfe, flore eleganter ftriato. Rail Plift. Bloody Crane’s-bill with a variegated flower. 5. Geranium {Nodofum ) pedunculis bifloris-, foliis cau~ Unis trilobis integris lerratis, furnmis fubfeffilibus. Hort. Cliff. 343. Crane’s-bill with two flowers on each foot-ftalk, the leaves upon the . ftalks having three entire flawed lobes, the upper leaves fitting clofe to the ftalk. Geranium 5. nodofum. Plateau. Club Hilt. Knotty Crane’s-bill. 6 . Geranium ( Phaum ) pedunculis bifloris, foliifque al- ternis, calycibus lubariftatis, caule erefto, petalis un- dulatis. Lin. Sp. Plant. 681. Crane’s-bill with two fliovoers on each foot-ftalk, alternate leaves, bearded, em-* , palements, an eredl ftalk, and waved petals to the flower. Geranium phteum five fufeum, petalis reflexis, folio non maculofo. H. L. Brown Crane’s-bill with reflexed petals , and leaves not fpotted. 7. Geranium ( Fufeum ) pedunculis bifloris, foliis quin- quelobatis inciiis, petalis reflexis. Crane’s-bill with two flowers upon each foot-ftalk, leaves divided into five lobes , which are cut, and the petals of the flowers reftexed. Geranium phaeum five fufeum,. petalis reftis feu pla- nis, folio maculato. H. L. Brozvn Crane’s-bill with plain petals, and fpotted leaves. 8. 'Geranium ( Striatum ) pedunculis bifloris, altero'bre- viore, foliis quinquelobis medio dilatatis, petalis bilo- bis venofo reticulatis. Burm. Ger. Crane’s-bill with two flowers upon each foot-ftalk, one bigger than the other, leaves having jive lobes, and flowers with two lobes . Ge- ranium Romanum, verficolor five ftriatum. Park. Par. Roman Crane’s-bill with flriped flozvers. 9. Geranium ( Sylvaticum ) pedunculis bifloris, foliis fubpeltatis quinquelobis incifo-ferratis, caule erecto, petalis emarginatis. Flor. Lapp. 266. Crane’s-bill with two flowers on each foot-ftalk , tar get -ft: aped leaves with five lobes deeply flawed, an eredl ftalk, and indented petals to the flower. Geranium batrachioides montanum noftras. Ger. Mountain Crane’s-bill with a Crow-foot leaf. 1 10. Geranium {Oriental ) pedunculis bifloris, foliifque oppofitis, petalis integris, calycibus brevioribus. Eaft- ' ern Dove’s-foot Crane’ s-bill, with oppoflte leaves, tzvo flowers on each foot-ftalk , and a fhort empalement. Ge- ranium Orientaie columbinum, fibre maximo, afpho- deli radice. T. Cor. Oriental Dove’s-foot Crane’s-bill, with an Jfphodel root and large flowers . 11. Geranium {Perenne) pedunculis bifloris, folds in- ferioribus quinque-partito-multifidis rotundis, fuperi- oribus trilobis, caule ereefto. Hudf. Flor. Ang. 265. Crane’s-bill with two flowers on each foot-ftalk, ihs lower leaves having five many-pointed lobes, the upper three , i/ G E R three, and an ereft ftdk. Geranium Cokimbinum pe- fenne Pyrenaicum maximum. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 268. Great eft 'perennial Dove’ 5-foot Crane’ s-bill of the Pyrennes. 12. Geranium {Alpinum) pedunculis longifflmis multi- floris, calycibus ariftatis, foliis bipinnatis. Crane’s- bill with very long foot-ftalks fuftaining many flowers , bearded empalements , and double wing-pointed leaves. Geranium Alpinum Coriandri folio, longius radica- tum, flore majore purpureo. Michel. Alpine Crane’s- bill with a Coriander leaf a long root , and a larger pur- ple flower. 13. Geranium ( Argent sum ) pedunculis bifloris, foliis fufapeltatis feptempartitis trifidis tomentofo-fericeis, petalis emarginatis. Amcen. Acad. 4. p. 324. Crane’s- bill with two flowers on each foot-Jialk , t ar get -flo aped leaves divided into f even parts, which are Jilvery , and the petals of the flower indented. Geranium argenteurn Alpinum. C. B. P. 318. Silvery Alpine Crane’s-bill. 14. Geranium ( Maculatum ) pedunculis bifloris, caule dichotomo erecto, foliis quinquepartitis incilis fum- mis feflilibus. f lor. Virg. 78. Crane’ s-bill with two flowers on each foot-ftalk , upright Jtalks divided by pairs , and cut leaves divided into five parts , the upper fitting clofe to the ftalk. Geranium batrachioides America- num maculatum, floribus obfolete cmruleis. Hort. Elth. 158. American fpotted Crane’s-bill with obfolete blue flowers. 15. Geranium ( Bohemicum ) pedunculis bifloris petalis emarginatis arillis hirtis cotyledonibus trifidis medio truncatis. Burm. Ger. 4. Crane’ s-bill with two flowers on each foot-ftalk , indented petals to the flower , hairy beards , and a trifid leaf. Geranium annuum minus ba- trachiodes Bohemicum, purpuro-violaceum. Mor. Hift. 2. 51 1. LeJJer annual Crane’ s-bill of Bohemia-, with a purple Violet flower. 16. ^ Geranium ( Sibiricum ) pedunculis fubunifloris, fo- liis quinquepartitis acutis foliolis pinnatifidis. Lin. Sp. Plant. 683. Crane’s-bill with one flower on a foot- ftalk^ leaves divided into five acute parts, and the fmall- er leaves wing-pointed. 17. Geranium ifMofchatum) pedunculis multifloris, fio- ri'bus pentandris foliis pinnatis incifis cotyledonibus pinnatifidis. Burm. Ger. 22. Crane’ s-bill with many flowers on each foot-ftalk , having five ftamina to the flowers , and cut winged leaves. Geranium cicutae folio, rnofchatum. C. B. P. Mufked Crane’s-bill, frequently called Mufcovy. 18. Geranium ( Gruinum ) pedunculis fub multifloris, floribus pentandris, foliis ternatis lobatis. Burm. Ger. 32. Crane’s-bill with many flowers on a foot-ftalk, five ftamina to the flotver, and ternate lobed leaves. Geranium latifolium annuum, cseruleo flore, acu lon- giffima. H. Ox. Broad-leaved annual Crane’s-bill with a blue flower, and a very long beak. 19. Geranium ( Ciconium ) pedunculis multifloris, caly- cibus pentaphyllis, floribus pentandris, foliis pinna- tis acutis finuatis. Lin. Sp. Plant. 680. Crane’s-bill with many flowers on each foot-ftalk , having five-leaved empalements, five ftamina to the flowers, and acute, finuated, winged leaves. Geranium Cicutas folio, acu longiffima. C. B. P. 319. Crane’ s-bill with a Hemlock leaf , and very long beaks to the feed. 20. Geranium ( Vifcofum ) pedunculis multifloris, caly- cibus pentaphyllis, floribus pentandris, foliis bipin- natis multifidis -caule erecto. Crane’ s-bill with many flowers on each foot-ftalk, having five-leaved empale- ments, flowers with five ftamina , and many -pointed winged leaves. Geranium cicutae folio vifcofum erec- tum, acu longiffima. Juflieu. Ere hi vifcous Crane’s-bill with a Hemlock leaf, and very long beaks to the feed. 21. Geranium ( Cucullatum ) calycibus monophyllis, fo- liis cuculatis dentatis. Hort. Cliff. 345. Crane’s-bill with an empalement of one leaf, and indented hooded leaves. Geranium Africanum arborefcens, ibifci folio rotun- da, carlinse odore. H. L. African-tree Crane’s-bill with a round Marfhmallow leaf, and fmell of the Carline Thiftle. 22. Geranium {Angulofum) calycibus monophyllis, fo- liis cuculatis anguioljs, acute dentatis.. Crane’s-bill GER with a one-Uaved empalement , and angular hooded leaves Jharply indented . Geranium Africanum' arborefcens, /olio angulofo, floribus amplis purpureis. Phil Irani. 388. African-tree Crane’s-bill with an 'angular Marflomallow leaf, and large purple flowers. 23. Geranium ( Zonale ) calycibus monophyllis, foliis cordato-orbiculatis incifis zona notatls. Hort. Upfa-L 190. Cr ane s-bill with a one-leaved empalement , and round heart-floaped leaves, which are cut, and marked wito a circle. ~ Geranium Africanum arborefcens, ai- chimillae hirfuto folio, floribus rubicundis. Com. Prc^.1. African-tree Grand s-bill with ana hairy Ladies Mantle leaf, and red flowers. 24. ^Geranium ( Inquinans ) calycibus monophyllis, fo- liis 01 biculato-remformibus tomentofis crenatis inte- griulculis, caule fruticofo. Hort. Upfal. 195. Crane’s- bill with a one-leaved empalement , and round kidney- fljaped leaves which are woolly, crenated , entire , and a Jhrubby ftalk. Geranium Africanum arborefcens, mal- vas folio piano lucido, flore elegantiffime kermefino. Di van Leur. Boerh. Ind. African-tree Crane’s Bill, with a p’.am, flovnmg, LTallow leaf, and an elegant fear- let flower. * " J 25. Geranium ( Capitatum ) calycibus monophyllis, fo- liis lobatis undatrs villofis, caule fruticofo. Hort. Upfal. 196. Crane’s bill with empalements of one leaf. \ leaves divided into lobes, which are waved, and hairy , and a florubby ftalk. Geranium Africanum frutefeens, raaivas folio odorato laciniato. H. L. African jhrubby Crane’s-bill with a jagged, fiveet- fuelling , Mallow leaf. 26. Geranium ( Vitifolium ) calycibus monophyllis, fo- liis adfeendentibus lobatis pubefeentibus, caule fruti- cofo. Hort. Upfal. 196. Crane’s-bill with one-leaved empalements, afeending leaves which have lobes , are co- vered with foft hairs, and a florubby ftalk. Geranium Africanum frutefeens, malvas folio laciniato, odo- rato inftar meliffas, flore purpurafeente. Boerh. Ind. African florubby Crane’s-bill, with a jagged Mallow leaf fuelling like Balm , and a purplijh coloured flower. 27. Geranium ( Papileonaceum ) calycibus monophyllus, corollis papilionaceis, alis carinaque minutis, "foliis angulatis, caule fruticofo. Llort. Cliff. 345. Crane’s- , bill with an empalement of one leaf. \ a butterfly flower , whofle wings and keel are very flmall, and a Jhrubby ftalk. Geranium Africanum arborefcens, malvse fo- lio mucronato, petalis florum inferioribus vix con- fpicuis. Phil. Tranf. African-tree Crane’s-bill with a pointed Mallow leaf, and the under petals of the flower fcarce difcernible. 28. Geranium jAcetofum) calycibus monophyllis, foliis glabris ' obovatis carnofls crenatis, caule fruticofo. Hort. Cliff. 345. Crane’s-bill with empalements of one leaf, flmooth, oval, flefhy leaves, which are crenated, and a Jhrubby ftalk. Geranium Africanum frutefeens, folio craffo & glauco, acetofse fapore. Com. Pnel. African florubby Crane’s-bill with a thick glacuous leaf, and an acid tafte like Sorrel. 29. Geranium ■{Carnofum) calycibus monophyllis, caple fruticofo, articulis carnofo gibbofis, foliis pinnatifidis laciniatis, petalis linearibus. Lin. Sp. Plant. 67. Crane’s-bill with an empalement of one leaf, a florubby ftalk with flefhy knees, wing-pointed leaves, and very narrow petals to the flower. Geranium Africanum frutefeens, chelidonii folio, petalis florum anguftis albidis, carnofo caudice. Phil. Tranf. Geranium Afri- canum, folio alceae, flore albo. Boerh. Ind. alt. Afri- can Jhrubby Crane’s-bill with a leaf like the Alcea, the petals of the flower white and narrow, and a flefhy ftalk. 30. Geranium (Gibbofum) calycibus monophyllis, caule fruticofo, geniculis carnofls gibbofis, foliis fubpin- natis appends. Lin. Sp. Plant. 677. Crane’s-bill with a one-leaved empalement , jhrubby ftalk with fiefloy knees , and winged leaves placed oppofite. Geranium Africa- num noftu olens, tuberofum & nodolum, aquilegise foliis. LI. L. African Crane’s-bill fmelling flweet in the night , with knotty tuberous j talks , and leaves fike Co- lumbine. ' 31. Geranium ( Fulgidum ) calycibus monophyllis, fo- liis tripartitis incifis, intermedia majore Umbellis, ge- minis, caule fruticofo carnofa. Lin. Vir. 67. Crane’s- bill \ G E R bill with one-leaved empalements , leaves cut into three fegments , the middle one being the largeft , double foot- ftalks with flowers growing in umbels , and a Jhrubby flejhy ftalk. Geranium Africanum, folio alceas, flore coccineo fulgidifiimo. Boerh. Ind. ait. i. p. 264. African Crane 1 s-bill -with a Vervain Madow leaf , and a deep fcarlet flower. 32. Geranium {Pelt at um) calycibus monophyllis, fo- bs, quinquelobis integerrimis glabris peltatis, caule fruticofo. Hort. Cliff. 345. Crane's-bill with empale - ments of one leaf and fmooth target-foaped leaves , hav- ing five lobes, which are entire. Geranium Africanum foiiis inferioribus afari, fuperioribus ftap.hidifagrias, maculatis, fplendentibus, & acetofe lapore. ^ Com. Prael. African Crane's-bill with the under leaves like Afa- rabacca , and the upper leaves like Stavefacre, Jhining , , fpotted , and tafting like Sorrel. 33. Geranium ( Alchimilloides ) calycibus monophyllis, foiiis orbicularis palmatis incifis pilofis, caule her- baceo. Lin. Vir. 67. Crane's-bill with empalements of one leaf \ roundifh hand-jhaped leaves , which are divided , hairy , and an herbaceous flalk. Geranium Africanum, alchimillae hirfuto folio, floribus albidis. H. L. Afri- can Crane's-bill with a hairy Ladies Mantle leaf , and whitifh flowers. 34. Geranium {Odoratijflmum) calycibus monophyllis, caule carnofo breviflimo, ramis herbaceis longis foiiis cordatis. Hort. Cliff 345. Crane's-bill with empale- ments of one leaf a very fhort flefhy ftalk , long her- baceous branches , and heart-floaped leaves. Gerani- um Africanum, folio malvte craflo molli odoratil- fimo, flofculo pentapetalo albo. Boerh. Ind. alt. Afri- can Crane's-bill with a thick , foft , fweet-fmelling Mal- low leaf and a fmall white flower compofed of five leaves. 35. Geranium ftrifte) calycibus monophyllis, feflili- bus fcapis bifidis monophyllis. Lin. Sp. 950. Crane's- bill with feflile empalemerJs of one leaf \ a bifid ftalk , and a roundifh root. Geranium Americanum, nodu olens, radice tuberosa, trifle. Corn. H. Ox. American tube- rous-rooted Crane's-bill , fuelling fweet in the night. 36. Geranium ( Myrrhifolium ) calycibus monophyllis, foiiis bipinnatis, inferioribus cordatis lobatis, caule herbaceo, calycibus flrigofis. Burm. Ger. 59. Crane's- bill with empalements of one leaf, doubly wing-pointed leaves, the lower heart-floaped with lobes, and an herba- ceous ftalk. Geranium Africanum tuberofum, ane- mones folio, incarnato flore. Par. Bat. Puberous- rooted African Crane's-bill with an Anemony leaf , and a pale, flefh-coloured flower. 37. Geranium ( Paftinactefolium ) calycibus monophyllis, foiiis decompofitis pinnatifidis, acutis pedunculis lon- giflimis. Crane's-bill with empalements of one leaf de- compounded leaves ending in acute winged points , and very long foot-ftalks to the flower. Geranium Africa- num nodlu olens, radice tuberosa, foiiis paflinacse incanis lanuginofls latioribus, flore pallide fiavefeente. H. L. B. Night-fmelling Crane's-bill with a tuberous root, broad, woolly , hoary, Parfnep leaves, and a pale yellowifh flower. 38. Geranium ( Villofum ) calycibus monophyllis, foiiis pinnatifidis villofls, laciniis linearibus. Crane' s-bill with empalements of one leaf, hairy wing-pointed leaves , having very narrow fegments. Geranium /Ethiopicum, nodfu olens, radice tuberosa, foiiis myrrhidus anguflioribus. Breyn. Cent. Night fweet-fmelling Ethiopian Crane's- bill with a tuberous root, and narrow Cicely leaves. 39. Geranium ( Lobatum ) calycibus monophyllis, caule truncato, fcapis lubradicalibus, umbella compofita. Lin. Sp. 950. Crane's-bill with empalements of one leaf, a truncated ftalk, fcot-ftalks arifing from the root, and a compound umbel of flowers. Geranium Africa- num nodtu olens, folio vitis hirfuto, tuberofum. H. L. Night fweet-fmelling African Crane's-bill with a hairy Vine leaf and a tuberous root. 40. Geranium ( Coriandri folium ) calycibus monophyllis, foiiis bipinnatis linearibus fquarrofis, caule her- baceo Iseviufcuio. Lin. Sp. 949. Crane's-bill with a one-leaved empalement , doubly winged rough leaves , and a very fmooth ftalk. Geranium Africanum, folio GER coriandri, floribus incarnatls, minus. H. L. Lefler African Crane's-bill with a Coriander leaf and a flejh ■* coloured flower. 41. Geranium ( Romanum ) pedunculis mifltifloris, flo- ribus pentandris, foiiis pinnatis incifis, fcapis radica- libus. Burm. Ger. 30. Crane' s-bill with many flowers on each foot-ftalk , cut winged leaves, and foot-ftalks fifing from the root. Geranium myrrhinum tenuifolium, amplo flore purpureo. Barrel, rar. 563; 42. Geranium ( Groffularoides ) calycibus monophyllis, foiiis cordatis fubrotundis lobatis crenatis, caule her- baceo laevi. Burm. Ger. 53. Crane's-bill with empale- ments of one leaf, roundifh heart-floaped leaves which are crenated, and herbaceous fmooth ftalks. Geranium Africanum, uvm crifpae folio, floribus exiguis rubel- lis. H. L. African Crane's-bill with a Gooftberry leaf, and fmall reddifh flowers. 43. Geranium ( Betulinum ) calycibus monophyllis, fo- iiis ovatis intequaliter ferratis planis, caule fruticofo. Lin. Sp. Plant. 679. Crane' s-bill with one-leaved empale- ments, and oval plain leaves unequally flawed, and a Jhrubby ftalk. Geranium frutefeens, folio lato den- tato, flore magno rubente. Burm. Afr. 92. tab. 33. Shrubby Crane's-bill with a broad indented leaf, and large reddifh flower. 44. Geranium ( Chium ) pedunculis multifloris, floribus pentandris, foiiis cordatis incifis, fuperioribus lyrato- pinnatifidis. Burm. Ger. 35. Crane's-bill with many flowers on each foot-ftalk, heart-floaped cut leaves at bot- tom, the upper lyre-fhaped and winged . Geranium chium vernum Caryphyllatse folio. Tourn. Cor. 20. 45. Geranium ( Malacoides ) pedunculis multifloris, flo- ribus pentandris foiiis cordatis fublobatis. Hort. Cliff. 344. Crane's-bill with many flowers on each ftalk „ and heart-floaped lobed leaves. Geranium folio Althaese. C. B. P. 318. 46. Geranium ( Glaucophyllum ) pedunculis multifloris, floribus pentandris, foiiis ovatis ferratis incanis line- aris. Lin. Sp. 952. Crane's-bill with many flowers ort each ftalk , and oval flawed leaves. Geranium fEgyp- tiacum glailcophyllon, roftris lohgiflknis plumofls. 47. Geranium ( Carolinianum ) pedunculis bifloris, caly- cibus ariflatis, foiiis multifidis, ariliis hirfutis. Prod. Leyd. 351. Crane's-bill with two flowers cm each ftalk , bearded empalements, many pointed leaves, and hairy beaks. Geranium columbinum Carolinum, capfulis nigris hirfutis. Hort. Elth. 162. 48. Geranium ( Althaoides ) calycibus monophyllis, fo- iiis cordato-ovatis plicatis flnuatis crenatis, caule her- baceo proftrato. Hort. Cliff. 354. Crane's-bill with a one-leaved empalement, oval heart-fhaped plaited leaves, which are indented, and a proftrate herbaceous ftalk. Geranium folio Althasse. Africanum odore meliffse. Boerh. Ind. 1. p. 263. The firft fort grows naturally in moift meadows in many parts of England, but is frequently planted in gardens for the beauty of its large blue flowers ; of this there is a variety with white flowers, and another with variegated flowers *, but thefe are apt to dege- nerate to the common fort, if they are railed from feeds, but by parting of their roots they may be continued. It hath a perennial root, which fends up many ftalks, which rife near three feet high, garnifned with tar- get-fhaped leaves, divided into fix or feven lobes ; thefe are cut into feveral acute fegments, after the manner of winged leaves, ending in many points. The flowers are produced at the top of the ftalks, each foot-ftalk fuftaining two flowers, whofe petals are large and equal , they are of a fine blue colour, and appear in May and June. The varieties of this may be prefer ved by parting of their roots in autumn ; they may be planted in aim oft: any foil or fituation, and require no other culture but to keep them clean from weeds. They may alfo be propagated by feeds, but by this method they are very apt to vary in the colour of their flowers. If the feeds of thefe plants are permitted to Latter, the' plants will come up without any farther care. The fecond fort grows naturally in Germany and Switzerland j this hath a thick, flefhy, perennial root, 6 C from \ G E R from which arife feveral branching Halles, which grow about one foot high, garnifhed with 'leaves at each joint, which are divided into five lobes •, and are di- vided at the top into many fhort iegments, which are crenated on their edges; they are of a light green, and fmooth. The flowers are produced at the end of the brandies, many growing together in a bunch, but each fhort fpot-ftalk fuflains two flowers. The flowers have fwollen empalements, refembling inflated blad- ders. The petals are pretty large, equal, and of a fine bright purple colour, and the ftamina and ftyle are much longer than the petals ; the whole plant, when rubbed, emits an agreeable odour. This flowers about the fame time with the firft fort, and may be propagated and treated in the fame manner, the plant being equally hardy. The third fort grows naturally in many parts of Eng- land, but is often admitted into gardens *, this hath pretty thick, fleftiy, fibrous roots, which grow to a large head, from which arife many {talks, gar- nifned with leaves, divided into five lobes, which are again divided almoft to the midrib. The flowers Hand upon long hairy foot-ftalks, which come out from the fide of the (talk, each fuftaining one flower, compofed of five broad regular petals, which are of a deep purple colour. This fort flowers in June and Ju- ly •, there are two varieties mentioned of this fort as diftindt fpecies, one whofe {talks grow more eredl, and the other hath leaves more deeply divided ; but the plants whi,ch I have raifed from feeds of thefe do not come up the fame as the parent plants, fo they are only feminal varieties. This hath a perennial root, which may be parted in autumn, and thereby propagated ; or it may be pro- pagated by feeds, and the plants treated in the fame manner as the firft:. The fourth fort hath been fuppofed by fome to be only a variety of the third, but it is undoubtedly a diftinbl fpecies for I have frequently raifed the plants from feeds, which have always proved to be the fame. The ftalks of this plant are fhorter than thofe of the third, and fpread fiat on the ground ; the leaves are much lefs, and not fo deeply divided, and the flowers much fmaller and of a pale colour, marked with purple ; it grows naturally in Lancafliire and Weftmoreland, where I faw it in plenty. This may be propagated and treated in the fame manner as the others. The fifth fort is a perennial plant, of fmaller growth than either of the former. It rifes with branching ftalks about fix inches high, garnifhed with leaves, having three pretty broad lobes, which are undi- vided, and crenated on their edges : thofe on the lower part of the ftalks are placed oppofite, upon pretty long foot-ftalks, but the upper leaves fit dole to the ftalks and arefingle. The flowers are produced at the end of the ftalks, {landing together upon two fhort foot-ftalks ; they are of a dirty purple colour, and appear in June. It grows naturally in France. This fort may be propagated and treated in the fame manner as the firft. The fixth fort grows naturally on the Alps and Hel- vetian mountains, and is found in fome places in the North of England : this hath a perennial root, from which arife feveral ftalks near a foot high, with leaves whieh are divided into five or fix lobes, which are laciniated on their edges •, thofe which grow near the root have long 'foot-ftalks, but thofe on the up- per part of the ftalk fit clofe ; the ftalk branches out at the top into three or four diviflons, each being terminated by two or three foot-ftalks, fuftaining two flowers of a dark purple colour, with eredl petals. This flowers in June, and may be propagated by feeds or parting of the roots, in the lame manner as the firft fort. The feventh fort is very like the fixth, but the leaves are larger, the lobes {hotter, broader, and not fo much cut they are ftriped with black ; the ftalks rife higher, the flowers are larger, and the petals are telexed. Thefe differences are permanent, fo are G E R fufficient to conftitute a ipecific difference between them. This may be propagated and treated in the fame manner as the firft lort. It grows naturally on the Alps. i he eighth fort hath a perennial root, which fends up many branching ftalks a foot and a half high, garnifhed with light green leaves ; thofe on the lower part of the ftalk hath five lobes, and Hand upon long foot-ftalks ; but thofe on the upper part have but three lobes, fit clofer to the ftalks, and are fharply indented on the edges ; the flowers ftand upon long {lender foot-ftalks, each fuftaining two flowers, compofed of five obtufe petals, which are deeply indented at the top ; they are of a dull white, with many purple {tripes running longitudinally thro* them. Thefe appear in June, and in cool feafons there will be a iucceftion of flowers a great part of July. This fort is very hardy, fo may be propagated by dividing of the roots, or from feeds, in the lame manner as the firft fort. The ninth fort grows plentifully in the meadows in Lancafliire and Weftmoreland ; this hath a perennial root, which fends out three or four upright ftalks about nine inches high, garnifhed wkh leaves, having five lobes, which are fawea on their edges ; they are placed oppofite on the ftalks ; thofe on the lower part have pretty long foot-ftalks, but thofe on the upper part fit clofer. The flowers are fituated on the top of the ftalks, {landing upon fhort foot- ftalks, each fuftaining two pretty large blue flowers, with entire petals. This flowers in May and June* and may be propagated and treated in the fame way as the firft fort. v The tenth fort was difeovered by Dr. Tournefort in the Levant, from whence he fent the feeds to the Royal Garden at Paris ; this hath a perennial root, from which arife a few weak ftalks about nine inches long, garnifhed with leaves which are round, and divided into five lobes, which are indented at the top, and placed oppofite on the ftalks. The flowers ftand upon pretty long foot-ftalks, which come Angle from the joints of the ftalks, each fuftaining two purplifli flowers with entire petals, having very fliort empale- ments. It flowers in June, and may be propagated either from feeds, or by parting of the roots in the fame manner as the firft fort, but the plants require a drier foil and a warmer fltuation ; for although in common winters it will live in the open air, yet in fe- ver£ froft thefe plants are fometimes killed, efpecially when they are planted in moift cold land. The eleventh fort grows naturally on the Pyrenean mountains ; this hath a perennial root, from which arife many branching ftalks a foot and a half high, garniflied with round leaves, divided into many ob- tufe fegments at the top, placed oppofite. The flowers are produced upon fliort foot-ftalks, which come out at the divifions on the fides, and at the top of the ftalks ; they are in fome of a pale purple co- lour, and in others white. The petals of the flowers are bifid, like thofe of the common Dove’s-foot Crane’s-bill, to which the whole plant bears fome re- femblance ; but the ftalks are eredl, the leaves and flowers much larger, and the root is perennial ; this will propagate itfelf fall enough by its fcattered feeds where it has once got pofleflion, and will thrive in any foil or fltuation. The twelfth fort grows naturally upon the Alps. The feeds of this were fent me by Sig. Micheli, of Flo- rence ; this hath a perennial root, which runs very deep into the ground. Thp lower leaves of the plant have very long foot-ftalks, they are doubly winged and fmooth. The ftalks rife a foot and a half high, which are garniflied with leaves of the fame form as the lower, but fmaller, and ftand oppofite. The flowers grow many together upon very long foot- ftalks ; they are purple. This flowers in June, but has never ripened any feeds in England. The plant is hardy, and lives in the open air, but as the root puts out no offsets, nor perfects feeds here, we have not been able to propagate it. / The G E The thirteenth fort grows naturally on the Alps ; this hath a very thick perennial root, from which come cut roundifti leaves, divided into many parts, (landing upon pretty long foot-ftalks •, they are very filvery, and fhining like filk. The flower-ftalks rife about four or five inches high, garnifhed with one or two filial 1 leaves like thofe below, which fit clofe to the (talk. The ftalks are terminated by two pretty large pale flowers, whofe petals are entire, and fpread open flat. It flowers in June, but rarely ripens feeds here ; it may be propagated by parting of the roots in the fame manner as the firft, and mud have a fhady fi- tuation. The fourteenth fort grows naturally in North Ame- rica, from whence the feeds were lent to England ; this hath a perennial root, from which arife feveral (talks about one foot high, which divide by pairs, and from the middle of the divisions come out the foot- ftalks of the flowers, which are pretty long and naked, each fuftaining two pale purple flowers with entire petals. The leaves are divided into five parts, which are cut on their edges, and are placed oppofite, the ' lower having pretty long foot-ftalks, but the upper fit clofe to the ftalks. It flowers in June, and fre- quently ripens feeds, from which the plant may be propagated ; it thrives very well in the open air, and requires no other culture but to keep it clean from weeds. The fifteenth fort grows naturally in Bohemia; this is an annual plant, which fends out many ftalks, di- viding into feveral fmaller, which are garnifhed with leaves divided into five lobes, crenated on their edges; they ftand upon long foot-ftalks, and are for the moft part oppofite. The flowers ftand by pairs upon pretty long (lender foot-ftalks, which come out from the fide of the ftalk ; they are of a fine blue colour, and are fucceeded by feeds, whofe capfules and beaks are black. It flowers moft part of fummer, and the feeds ripen foon after, which, if permitted to fcatter, there will be a fupply of plants, which want no other care but to keep them dean from weeds. The fixteenth fort grows naturally in Siberia. The feeds of this plant were fent me by Sir Charles Lin- naeus, profeftbr of botany at Upfal ; this fort hath a perennial root. The leaves are divided into five acute lobes, which are cut into many (harp wing-like (fig- ments on their edges ; they are placed oppofite, and have long (lender foot-ftalks. The foot-ftalks of the flower come out from the wings of the ftalk ; they are pretty long, (lender, and each fuftain one pale purplilh flower. This fort flowers in June, and per- feels its feeds very well, fo may be eafily propagated; it will grow on any foil, or in any fituation. The feventeenth fort is an annual plant, which is fometimes found growing naturally in England, but is frequently preferved in gardens for the mufky odour of the leaves, which in dry weather is very ftrong. The leaves of this are irregularly winged, the lobes grow alternate, and are cut into many obtufe fegments on their edges. The ftalks branch into many divi- fions, and frequently decline to the ground. The flowers are produced in umbels upon long foot-ftalks, which arife from the wings of the ftalks ; they are fmall, blue, and have but five ftamina in each, their empalements are compofed of five leaves. It flowers in May, June, and July, and the feeds ripen foon after ; which, if permitted to fcatter, there will be a fupply of plants without care, which will require no other culture but to keep them clean from weeds, and thin them where they are too clofe ; it will thrive on any foil, or in any fituation. The eighteenth fort grows naturally in Crete ; this is an annual plant with very broad leaves, which are cut on their fides regularly, in form of winged leaves, and are crenated on their borders. The flowers are pro- duced on pretty long foot-ftalks, which come out from the wings of the ftalk ; they have five-leaved empalements, and are compofed of five entire blue petals ; thefe are fucceeded by the larged and longed beaks of any fpecies of this genus yet known. It G E R flowers in June and July ; this ripens feeds very well, and if they are permitted to fcatter, the plants will come up without care ; or they may be fown in the fpring where they are defigned to remain, and will require no other culture but to thin them where they are too clofe, and keep them clean from weeds. The nineteenth fort grows naturally in Germany and Italy ; this is an annual plant, which hath feveral proftrate ftalks near a foot long, garnifhed with winged leaves, cut into feveral acute parts, placed oppofite. The flowers come out from the wings of the ftalk, upon foot-ftalks about three inches long ; Come of thefe fuftain many flowers, but others have no more than two ; they are of a pale blue colour, and are fucceeded by very long beaks, but not fo long or large as thofe of the former fort ; but the feeds of this are frequently ufed for hygrometers, to (hew the moifture of the air : if the feeds of this are permitted to fcatter, the plants will come up and thrive without any other care than to keep them clear from weeds, and the plants which come up in autumn will flower early in May, but thofe which are fown in the fpring feldom flower till July. Dr. Linnaeus fuppofes this and the former fort to be the fame, but whoever has leen the two plants, cannot doubt of their being diftinCt fpecies. The feeds of the twentieth fort were fent to the Chel- fea garden by Dr. Juflieu, profeflbr of botany at Pa- ris ; this is an annual plant, which hath upright ftalks near two feet high, which are garniflied with double winged leaves, ending in many points ; thefe are very vifeous, and ftand oppofite. The flowers are produced on long naked foot-ftalks, (landing many together upon each ; they are of a pale blue colour, and have but five ftamina ; their empalements are compofed of five leaves, which end with awns. It flowers in May, June, and July, according to the times when the feeds are fown, and the feeds ripen a month after; this requires no other culture than the two former forts. There, are feveral other forts of annual Geraniums, fome of which grow naturally in England, and are troublefome weeds in a garden, others grow naturally in France, Spain, Italy, and Germany, and are pre- ferved in botanic gardens for the fake of variety ; but as they are plants of little beauty, they are rarely ad- mitted into other gardens, therefore I (hall not trouble the reader with an enumeration of the fpecies, which would fwell this article too much ; fo I (hall next treat of the African Crane’s-bills, which are preferved in moft of the curious gardens, where there is conveniency to fereen them from' the froft in winter. The twenty-firft fort grows naturally near the Cape of Good Hope ; this rifes with a fhrubby ftalk eight or ten feet high, fending out feveral irregular branches, garnifhed with roundifti leaves, whofe fides are eretft, fo form a fort of hood by the hollow cavity made in the leaf. The bafe of the leaves are cut in form of a heart- fhaped leaf, and from the foot-ftalk run many nerves a fifing from a point, but diverge toward the fides ; the borders of the leaves are (hafply indented, thofe on the lower part of the branches have long foot-ftalks, and are placed without order on every fide, but thofe on the upper part have (horter foot-ftalks, and ftand oppofite. The flowers are produced in large panicles on the top of the branches ; their em- palements are of one leaf, deeply cut into five feg- ments, and clofely covered with foft hairs. -The pe- tals are large, entire, and of a purple blue colour. It flowers in June, July, Auguft, and September, and the flowers are fucceeded by feeds, having fhort hairy beaks. The twenty-fecond fort has fome appearance of the twenty-firft, but the leaves are of a thicker fubftance, divided into many acute angles, having purple edges, which are acutely indented. The ftalks and leaves are very hairy. The branches are not fo irregular as thofe of the former, nor are the bunches of flowers near fo large; thefe differences are permanent in the plants which are railed from feeds, fo it is undoubtedly a diftimft t \ a (Min& fpecies, though Dr. Linnaeus fuppofes them to be the fame. The twenty-third fort comes from the Cape of Good Hope, but is one of the oldeft, and the molt common fort in the Englifh gardens ; this rifes with a fhrubby ftalk four or five feet high, and divides into a great number of irregular branches, fo as to form a large head, which is often eight or ten feet high. The branches are garnifhed with roundifh heart-fhaped leaves, indented on their edges in feveral obtufe feg- ments, which are cut into fhort teeth at their brims ; thefe have a purplifh circle, or mark, like a horfe- fhoe, through the leaf, going from one fide of the bafe to the other, correfponding with the border of the leaf ; thefe leaves when gently rubbed, have a fcent like fcalded Apples. The flowers are produced in pretty clofe bunches, ftanding upon foot-ftalks about five or fix inches in length, which come out from the wings of the ftalk, toward the end of the branches ; they are of a reddifh purple colour, and continue in fucceflion great part of fummer ; there is a variety of this with fine variegated leaves, which is preferred, in moft of the Englifh gardens for the beauty of its leaves ; but as this accidentally came from the other, it is not a diftindt fpecies, therefore I have not enu- merated it. The twenty-fourth fort grows naturally at the Cape of Good Hope •, this rifes with a foft fhrubby ftem to the height of eight or ten feet, fending out feveral branches, which are generally ereft •, thefe are gar- nifned with roundifh kidney-fhaped leaves, which are of a thick fubftance, and of a lucid green, ftanding ojy pretty long foot-ftalks ; they are covered with foft hairs on their under fide, and are placed without any order. The flowers grow in loofe bunches upon long ftiff foot-ftalks, which come out from the wings of the ftalk ; they are of a bright fcarlet colour, fo make a fine appearance, and there is a fucceflion of thefe flowers during all the fummer months. I he twenty-fifth fort grows naturally at the Cape of Good Hope, but has been many years an inhabitant or the Englifh gardens ; this rifes with a fhrubby ftalk four or nve feet high, dividing into feveral weak ir- regular branches, garnifhed with leaves divided into three unequal lobes, which are hairy and waved on their edges ; they are placed alternate on the branches, and ftand upon hairy foot-ftalks. The flowers grow in clofe roundifh heads on the top of the foot-ftalks, forming a fort of corymbus ; they are of a purplilh blue colour, and continue in fucceflion great part of the fummer. T he leaves of this fort, when rubbed, have an odour like dried Rofes, from whence many have given it the title of Rofe Geranium. The twenty-fixth fort is a native of the Cape of Good Hope ; this rifes with an upright fhrubby ftalk to the height of feven or eight feet, fending out many pretty ftrong branches, garnifhed with leaves fhaped fome- what like thoie of the Vine ; thofe on the lower part ftand upon long foot-ftalks, but the upper have fhort ones ; when the leaves of this are rubbed, they have a fcent of Balm. The flowers grow in compact cluf- ters on the top of long naked foot-ftalks, which come out from the wings of the ftalk, but rife much higher than the branches ; they are fmall, and of a pale blue colour, fo make no great figure, but there is a fuc- ceflion of them moft part of the fummer. The twenty-feventh fort rifes with an upright fhrubby ftalk feven or eight feet high, fending out feveral fide branches, garnifhed with large, angular, rough leaves, ftanding upon long foot-ftalks. The flowers are produced in large panicles at the end of the branches ; thefe are fhaped fomewhat like a Butterfly- flower, the two upper petals, which are pretty large, turn upward like a ftandard in the leguminous flowers^ thefe are finely variegated, but the three under petals are fo fmall, as not to appear at a fmall diftance ; thefe are reflexed downward, fo are fcreened from light, unlefs the flowers are viewed near. This fort flowers in May, at which time the plants make a j fine appearance, but they are not fucceeded by any j more afterward, as moft of the other forts are ; this grows naturally at the Cape of Good Hope. The twenty-eighth fort is from the fame country ; this rifes with a fhrubby ftalk fix or feven feet" hio-h, fending out feveral fide branches, garnifhed with ob- long, oval, flefliy, fmooth leaves, of a gray colour, which are crenated on their edges, and have an acid tafte like Sorrel. The flowers ftand upon pretty long foot-ftalks, which arife from the wings of the ftalks^ each fuftaining three or four flowers, whole petals are narrow and unequal in fize ; they are of a pale blulh colour, with fome ftripes of a light red ; thefe con- tinue in fucceflion moft part of the fummer. There is a variety of this with fcarlet flowers, which is faid to have been raifed from the feeds of this fort. The leaves of it are larger, and feem to be an intermediate fpecies between this and the twenty-fourth fort, for the flowers are larger than thofe of the twenty-eighth fort, and are of a pale fcarlet colour. The twenty-ninth fort hath a thick, flefliy, knotted ftalk, which rifes about two feet high, fending out a few {lender flefhy branches, garnifhed thinly with double winged leaves, which, on the lower part of the ftalk, ftand upon foot-ftalks, but thofe above fit clofe to the branches. The flowers are produced in fmall clufters at the end of the branches ; thefe have five narrow white petals, which make no appearance, and continue in fucceflion moft part of the fummer. It grows naturally at the Cape of Good Hope. The _ thirtieth fort hath a round flefliy ftalk with fwelling knots at the joints, which rife about three feet high, and fend out leveral irregular branches, which are fmooth ; they are thinly garnifhed with fmooth, flefhy, winged leaves, ending in obtufe points; they are of a gray colour, and ftand upon fhort foot- ftalks. The flowers ftand four or five upon each foot- ftalk, which arifes from the wings of the ftalk, and are of a dark purple colour. The petals are broader than thofe of the former fort, and have a very agree- able fcent in the evening, after the fun has left them fome time ; this and the former fort are fuppofed to be one fpecies by Dr. Linnteus, but they are very dif- ferent in many particulars, which are permanent in the plants which come up from feeds. The thirty- firft/ort hath a flefhy ftalk which feldom rifes a foot high, and puts out very few branches ; thefe are garniftied with fmooth, light, green leaves, divided into three lobes, the middle fegrnent being much larger than the others. The flowers ftand upon fhort foot-ftalks, each fuftaining two or three flowers on the top, which are of a very deep fcarlet colour, and have unequal petals ; this fort is not regular in its feafon of flowering, fometimes it is in fpring, at other times in fummer, and frequently in autumn. The leaves of this fort fall off, fo that the ftalks are fre- quently deftitute of them for three or four months in fummer, and appear as if they were dead, but in autumn they put out frefh leaves again. The thirty-fecond fort hath many weak fhrubby ftalks, which require fupport to prevent their falling on the ground ; thefe extend to the length of two or three feet, and are garnifhed with flefliy leaves, divided into five obtufe lobes, which are entire ; thefe have (lender foot-ftalks, which are fattened to the middle of the leaf like the handle of a target. The leaves are fmooth, of a lucid green, and have a circular purple mark in their middle; they have an acid flavour, and are placed alternate on their branches. The flowers are produced upon pretty long foot-ftalks, which come out from the wings of the ftalk, each foot-ftalk fuf- taining four or five purple flowers, competed of five unequal petals. This fort continues a fucceflion of flowers moft of the fummer months, and frequently ripen feeds here. The thirty-third fort fends out feveral herbaceous ftalks about a foot and a half in length, which trail upon the ground if they are not fupported ; thefe are garnifhed with roundifh. hand-fnaped, leaves, which are cut into many parts, and are very hairy. The flowers are of a pale blufh colour-, and ftand feveral together G E R i . - -J together upon very long foot-ftalks ; there is a fuc- ceffion of thefe during all the fummer months, and the feeds ripen accordingly about a month after the flowers are fallen : there is a variety of this fort which has a dark circle in the middle of the leaves, which is mentioned as a diftind fpecies, but I find it is apt to vary from feeds. The thirty-fourth fort hath a very fhort fiefhy ftalk, which divides near the ground into fever al heads, each having many leaves, which ariJe on feparate foot- ftalks from the heads ; thefe are heart-fhaped, foft, and downy, and have a ftrong fcent like Anifeed ; from thefe heads come out feveral (lender ftalks near a foot in length, which lie proftrate on the ground, and are garnifned with rounder leaves than thofe near the root, but are of the fame texture, and have the like odour. The flowers are produced from the fide of thefe ftalks, three, four, or five Handing together upon (lender foot-ftalks ; they are very fmall and white, fo make little appearance, but the plant is pre- ferved in gardens for the fcent of its leaves. The thirty-fifth fort hath a thick, roundifh, tuberous root, from which arife feveral hairy leaves, which are finely divided, almoft like thofe of the Garden Carrot; thefe fpread near the ground, and between thefe come out the ftalks, which rife about a foot high, which are garniflied with two or three leaves of the fame fort with thofe below, but are fm after, and fit clofer to the ftalks •, from thefe arife two or three naked foot-ftalks, which are terminated by a bunch ofyellowifli flowers, marked with dark purple fpots, which fmell very fweet after the fun hath left them ; thefe are frequently fuc- ceeded by feeds, which ripen in autumn. This is the fort which has been long cultivated in the gardens, and is known by the title of Geranium noctu olens, or Night-fcented Crane’s-bill. The thirty-fixth fort hath a knobbed tuberous. root like the laft, from which come out feveral pretty large leaves, cornpofed of many lobes, fet along the mid- rib in the form of a winged leaf; thefe are narrow at their bale, but are very much enlarged at their ends, which are rounded, and cut aft along their fide and top into many acute points ; the ftalks which fuftain the flowers arife immediately from the root, and fometimes have one cr two fmall leaves toward the bottom, where they often divide into two naked foot-ftalks, each being terminated by a bunch of pale reddifti flowers, which fmell fweet at night. The thirty-feventh fort hath oblong tuberous roots, from which come out feveral decompounded winged leaves, ending in many acute points; the fegments of thefe leaves are broader than thofe of the thirty-fifth fort, and the leaves are very hairy. The ftalks rife a foot and a half high, which are garnifhed with a fingle leaf at the two lower joints ; thefe are fingly winged, and the lobes are narrow, Handing at a wider diftance, and the fegments are more acute than thofe of the lower leaves ; at the two lower knots or joints, arife two long naked foot-ftalks, each being termi- nated by a bunch of yellowifti flowers, which have long tubes, and fmell fweet in the evening when the fun has left them. This grows naturally at the Cape of Good Hope. The thirty-eighth fort hath a tuberous root like the former, from which fpring out many hairy leaves, which are finely divided like thofe of the Puifatilla, which have a hoary appearance, and rife immediately from the root, fpreading on every fide near the ground. The foot-ftalk of the flower is naked, and riies from the root ; this grows about nine inches high, and is terminated bv a loofe bunch of flowers, which are. of a very dark purple colour, and fmell fweet in the evening. The thirty-ninth fort hath fiefhy tuberous roots like thofe of the former forts, from which come out three or four broad leaves, divided on their borders into feveral lobes, in form of a Vine leaf ; thefe fpread flat on the ground ; they are hairy, and crenated on their edges, (landing upon fhort foot-ftalks. The foot- ftalks of the flowers arife immediately from the root. and grow about a foot high ; they are naked, and are terminated by abunch ofdarkpurple flowers, with long tubes, fitting clofe to the foot-ftalks, which have a very agreeable odour in the evening. The four firftlbrts of tuberous-rooted Crane’s-bill, are by Linnaeus fuppofed to be but one fpecies; but' I have propagated them from feeds feveral times, and have never found either of them vary from their parent plants, fo I make no doubt of their being diftindt fpe- cies, for their difference of leaves is as great as in anv of the other fpecies. The fortieth fort is an annual plant, which grows na- turally at the Cape of Good Hope ; this rifes with herbaceous branching ftalks near a foot high, which are garniflied with doubly-winged leaves at each joint; the lower leaves Hand upon long foot-ftalks, but thofe on the upper part fit clofe to the ftalks. The flowers (land upon naked foot-ftalks, which proceed from the fide of the ftalks, on the oppofite fide to the leaves ; they grow three or four together upon fhort feparate foot-ftalks ; thefe are ihaped fomewhat like a papili- onaceous flower; the two upper petals, which are large, form a kind of ftandard, the other three petals are narrow, and reflexed downward ; they are of a pale fiedi colour, appearing in July, and the feeds ripen in September, foon after which the plants decay. The forty-firft fort hath a pretty thick tuberous root, from which is fent out feveral irregular ftalks, which divide into branches, and grow diffufed ; thefe have fwelling joints, and are fomewhat ligneous ; they are garniflied with one double winged leaf at each of the joints, and oppofite to the leaves come out the foot- ftalks of the flowers ; thofe which are fituated on the lower part of the ftalk, are very long and naked, but thofe which terminate the branches are {hotter, and have one or two fmall leaves fet at their bafe ; thefe foot-ftalks are terminated by a fmall bunch of flowers, fhaped like thofe of the former fort, but larger, and of a paler colour; thefe continue in fucceflion mod part of the fummer : this and the former fort are fup- pofed to be the fame by Dr. Linnaeus, but the former is an annual plant in every country, perifhing foon after the feeds are perfeded, and the latter is an abiding plant with ligneous ftalks. The forty-fecond fort is a biennial plant, which grows naturally at the Cape of Good Hope ; this fends out a great number of very (lender trailing ftalks, which are proftrate on the ground, and extend a foot and a half in length, garniflied with fmall, roundifh, hand- fhaped leaves, which are crenated on their edges. The flowers (it upon fliort (lender foot-ftalks, which come out at every joint from the fide of the ftalks ; they are very fmall, and of a reddifh colour ; fome- times they are fingle, and at other times there are two or three flowers upon a foot-ftalk. They con- tinue in fucceflion all the fummer, and the feeds ripen in about five weeks after the flowers decay. The forty-third fort hath a llirubby ftalk/ which rifes to the height of four or five feet, fending out feveral branches, which are garniflied with oblong leaves, indented, and unequally fawed on their edges ; the flowers (land upon long foot-ftalks, which come out from the fide of their branches; they are large, of a red colour, and the two upper petals are larger than the other; this fort flowers in June and July. The . forty-fourth fort grows naturally in the i fie of Chio in the Levant. This is an annual plant, which fends out feveral branches a foot long; the lower leaves are almoft heart-fhaped, but thofe on the branches are formed in the fliape of an ancient lyre. Thefe are placed alternate on the branches ; the foot-ftalks of flowers are produced on the fide of the branches, thefe are fix inches long, fuftaining many bright purple flowers at the top, which are iucceeded each by five feeds, having long {lender beaks ; thefe ripen in five or fix weeks after the flowers fall away, and if they are permitted to fcatter, the young plants will come up in the autumn ; and if the winter is favourable, they will live in the open air, fo will flower early the 6 D following Following fpring : but if thefe fhould be killed ifl the winter, fome feeds fhould be fown in the fpring, on a border of light ground,, and when the plants come up they fhould be thinned, and kept clear from weeds ; thefe will flower in July, and their feeds will ripen in Auguft:. The forty-fifth fort grows naturally in Portugal and Spain ; this is an annual plant, whofe lower leaves are heart-fhaped, and divided into three lobes •, the foot- ftalks of the flowers are placed on the fide of the branches, which extend a foot and a half each way •, thefe incline to the ground. The foot-fcalks fuftain many bright red flowers, which are fucceeded each by five feeds, having pretty long beaks. This flowers and feeds about the fame time as the former fort, and requires the fame culture. The forty-fixth fort grows naturally in Egypt. This is an annual plant, having oval fawed leaves of a gray colour ; the branches extend a foot in length, adorned with fmall leaves placed alternate, and toward the end have three or four foot-ftalks produced from their fides, fuftaining feveral pale blue flowers, which are each fucceeded by five feeds, having long feathery beaks. This fort is much tenderer than the two former, there- fore if the feeds are fown on a moderate hot-bed in the fpring, and when the weather becomes warm, the plants are carefully tranfplanted on a Iheltered border, then? will be greater certainty of their perfecting feeds. , * The forty-feventh fort grows naturally in Carolina, and is an annual plant, greatly refembling our common Dove’s-footCrane’s-bill, but is fmaller, and the branches are fhorter •, the flowers are very fmall, of a pale blue colour; thefe are fucceeded by five feeds, having Ihort ereCt beaks, which are black. If the feeds of this fort are permitted to fcatter, the plants will arife without farther care; and if thinned and kept clean from weeds, will produce flowers and feeds. The forty-eighth fort has fome refemblance of the forty-fifth, but the leaves are more of an oval heart- Ihape ; the flowers are alfo of a bright red colour. This grows naturally at the Cape of Good Hope; the plant is tender, therefore will require the fame treat- ment as the forty-feventh fort, with which they will produce flowers and feeds, after which the plants decay. All the forts of African Crane’s-bill may be propa- gated by feeds ; thefe may be fown upon a bed of light earth toward the end of March, where the plants will appear in a month or five weeks after, and by the beginning of June the plants will be fit to remove; when they fhould be carefully taken up, and each planted into a feparate pot, filled with light kitchen- garden earth, and placed in a fhadv fltuation till the plants have taken new root; then they may be removed into a fheltered fltuation, and placed among other of the hardier green-houfe plants, where they may remain till autumn, when they mull be removed into the green-houfe, and treated in the fame manner as other hardy kinds of green-houfe plants. But thefe who are defirous to have their plants large, and flower foon, fow the feeds upon a moderate hot- bed in the fpring, on which the plants will come up much fooner, and will be fit to remove long before thofe which are fown in the open air ; but when thefe plants come up, there muft be great care taken not to draw them up weak ; and when thefe are tranfplanted, the pots fhould be plunged into another moderate hot- bed, obferving to fhade them from the lun till they have taken new root; then they muft be gradually inured to bear the open air, into which they fhould be removed the beginning of June, and placed in a fhel- tered fltuation with other exotic plants. If thefe plants are brought forward in the fpring, moft of the forts will flower the fame fummer, and the plants will be very ftrong before the winter, fo will make a better appearance in the green-houfe. The fnrubby African Geraniums, from the twenty- firft to the thirty-fecond inclu five, and alfo the for- ty-firft and forty-third forts, are commonly propa- gated by cuttings, which, if planted in a fhady bor- der in June or July, will take good root in five or fix weeks, and may then be taken up and planted into feparate pots, placing them in the fhade till they have taken new root ; after which they may be removed in- to a fheltered fltuation, and treated in the fame man- ner as the feedling plants. The twenty-ninth, thir- tieth, thirty-firft, and thirty-fecond forts, have more fucculent ftalks than either of the other, fo the cut- tings of thefe forts fhould be planted into pots filled with light kitchen-garden earth, and plunged into a very moderate hot-bed, where they fhould be fhaded from the fun in the heat of the day, and fhould have but little water ; for thefe are very apt to rot with much moifture, fo they muft only be gently refreilied now and then with water. When thefe are well root- ed, they may be feparated and planted in pots filled with the fame fort of earth, and placed in the fhade till they have taken new root ; then they may be re- moved into a fheltered fltuation, where they may re- main till autumn. Thefe four forts fhould be fparing- ly watered at all times, but efpecially in the winter, for they are apt to take a mouldinefs with moifture, or in a damp air : they will thrive much better in an airy glafs-cafe than in a green-houfe, becaiffe in the former they will have more lun and air than in the latter, fo will not be fo liable to have a mouldinefs or rot. But all the other fhrubby forts are proper furni- ture for the green-houfe, where they will only require protedtion from froft, but fhould have a large fhare of free air when the weather is mild ; they will re- quire water every week, in mild weather once or twice, but it fhould not be given them in too great plenty, efpecially in frofty weather. Thefe plants fhould be hardened in the fpring gradually, and toward the middle or latter end of May, they may be taken out of the green-houfe, and at firft placed under the Shelter of trees, where they may remain a fortnight or three weeks to harden ; then fhould be removed into a fl- tuation where they may be defended from ftrong winds, and enjoy the morning fun till eleven o’clock, where they will thrive better than in a warmer fltuation. As thefe fhrubby forts grow pretty faft, fo they foon fill the pots with their roots ; and if they ftand long unremoved in fummer, they frequently put out their roots through the holes at the bottom of the pots into the ground, and then the plants will grow vigoroully; but when they are buffered to grow long in this manner, it will be difficult to remove them, for if their roots are torn off, all the younger branches will decay, and many times the plants are killed. There- fore the pots fhould be moved once in a fortnight of three weeks, in the fummer months, and the roots which may be then pufhing through the holes in the pots cut off, to prevent their ftriking into the ground. Thefe plants will alfo require to be new potted at leaft twice in the fummer ; the firft time fhould be after they have been three weeks or a month out of the green-houfe ; the lecond fhould be towards the end of Auguft, or the beginning of September, that the plants may have time to eftabhfh their new roots be- fore they are removed into the green-houfe. When thefe are new potted, all the roots on the out- fid e of the balls of earth fhould be carefully pared off, and as much of the old earth drawn away from the roots, as can be done with fafety to the plants j then if they require it, they fhould be put into pots a fize larger than thofe out of which they were taken, putting a quantity of frefh earth into the bottom of the pot ; then place the plants upon that, being care- ful the ball about the roots of the plant is not fo high as the rim of the pot, that fome room may be left to contain the water which may be given to the plants* Then the cavity all round the ball fhould be filled up with frefh earth, which fhould -be gently preffed down, and the bottom of the pot beaten upon the ground, to fettle down the earth; then the plant fhould be well watered, and the item fattened to a rail, to prevent 5 the GER the wind from difplacing of the root before they are fixed in the new earth. The compoft in which I have always found thefe plants thrive belt (where there has not been a conve- niency of getting fome good kitchen-garden earth) was freffi hazel loam from a pafture, mixed with a fourth or fifth part of rotten dung •, if the earth is inclinable to bind, then a mixture of rotten tan is preferable to dung ; but if it is light and warm, then a mixture of neat’s-dung is bell: this compoft fhould be mixed three or four months before it is ufed, and fhould be turned over three or four times, that the parts may be well mixed and incorporated ; but where a quantity of good kitchen-garden earth can be had, which has been well worked, and is clean from the roots of bad weeds, there will need no compofttion, for in that they will thrive full as well as in any mix- ture which can be made for them, efpeeially if the earth has lain in a heap for fome time, and has been two or three times turned over to break the clods, and make it fine : thefe plants fhould not be planted in very rich earth, for that will caufe them to grow very luxuriant, but they will not flower fo well as in a poorer foil. The thirty-third fort hath herbaceous ftalks, fo is belt propagated by feeds, which the plants produce in great plenty, but the cuttings of this will take root as freely as either of the other, but the feedling plants are preferable to thofe propagated by cuttings •, and where the feeds of this and many other of the African forts are permitted to fcatter, there will be a fupply of young plants come up the fpring following, pro- vided the feeds are not buried too deep in the ground. The thirty-fourth fort may be propagated by feeds, or from heads flipped off from the fliort flefhy ftalk ; thefe heads fhould have their lower leaves ftripped off, that the ftalk which is to be planted may be clear of leaves *, then they may be planted lingle into a fmall pot, or if the heads are fmall, there may be two or three put into one fmall pot; then they may be plunged into a very moderate hot-bed, which will forward their putting out roots, and if they are fhaded from the fun and gently refrefhed with water, they will take root in a month or five weeks, when they muft be hardened gradually, and removed into the open air, where they may remain till autumn, when they muft be removed into fhelter for the winter feafon. The thirty-fifth, thirty-fixth, thirty-feventh, thirty- eighth and thirty-ninth forts are generally propagated by parting of their roots ; the beft time for doing this is in Auguft, that the young roots may be efta- blifhed before the cold comes on. Every tuber of thefe roots will grow, provided they have a bud or eye to them ; they may be planted in the fame fort of earth as was before directed, and if the pots are plunged into an old tan-bed, under a good frame in winter, the plants will thrive better than in a green- houfe ; the glaffes of the frame may be drawn off every day in mild weather, whereby the plants will enjoy the free air ; and if in hard froft the glaffes are well covered fo prevent the cold penetrating to the plants, it is all the fhelter they will require ; but in this fttuation they fhould have but little wet in win- ter, therefore the glaffes fhould be kept over them in heavy rains to keep them dry ; but in mild weather the glaffes may be raffed on the upper fide to ad- mit the frefh air to the plants, which will give them greater Hope to carry off the wet. With this ma- nagement the roots will thrive and flower very ftrong every yean Thefe forts may alfo be propagated by feeds. The fortieth font is an annual plant, and is only propagated by feeds, which fhould be fown upon a gentle hot-bed in the fpring, to bring the plants for- ward ; otherwife if the feafon fhould not prove very warm, the plants will not perfect their feeds in this country. When the plants are come up, and grown ftrong enough to remove, they fhould be each planted into a feparate fmall pot, and plunged into a moderate hot-bed again, obferving to fbade them till they have taken new root; then they muft be gradually hardened to bear die open air, into which they fhould be re- moved in June ; and when the plants have filled the fmall pots with their roots, they fhould be fnaken 0114 and the ball of earth preferved to their roots, and put into pots a fixe larger, in which they will flower and ripen feeds, and foon after the plants will decay. The forty-fecond fort is alio propagated by feeds, which may be either fown upon a moderate hot-bed in the fpring, or upon a bed of light earth in the open air, where the plants will come up very well, though they will not be fo forward as thofe on the hot-bed. Thofe which are fown in the open air will require no other care but to keep them clean from weeds, and thin the plants where they are too clofe. Thefe plants will flower in July and Auguft, and if the autumn proves favourable, the feeds will ripen in September % but if thefe fhould fail, thofe which were railed on the hot-bed will come earlier to flower, fo there will be no danger of their perfecting feeds ; and thefe plants, if they are in pots, may be preferved through the winter, if they are plunged into an old tan-bed under a frame, and treated in the fame manner as the tu- berous-rooted forts before mentioned-. The fhrubby forts muft be looked over frequently during the winter, while they are in the green-houfe, to pick off all decayed leaves from them, which, if left on, will not only render the plants unfightly, but by their falling off, they will occafton litter among the other plants ; and if they are fuffered to rot iirthe houfe, they will occafion a foul, nafty, damp air, which will be very prejudicial to all the plants; there- fore to avoid this, they fhould be conftantly picked off every week ; and during the fummer feafon, they will require to be picked every fortnight or three weeks to keep them clean from dead leaves ; for as the branches advance, and new leaves are produced on their top, the under ones as conftantly decay ; and if left on till they drop off, will render the plants very unfightly. GERMANDER. See TEtrcRiuMi GEROPOGON. Goat’s-beard. The Characters are. The empalement is Jingle, compofed t)f niarij keel-floaped leaves which are longer than the corolla ; the flower is compofed of fever al hermaphrodite florets , which are im- bricated and Jhorter than the empalement , and are of one petal , divided into five figments at the top. Thefe havt each five floor t flamina, terminated by cylindrical fummits*, and an oblong germen with a fender fly le, fupporting two thread-like ftigma which are recurved ; the feeds are in- cluded in the empalement, and are crowned by five bearded flpr ending rays * This genus of plants is tanged in the firft fedion of Linnaeus’s nineteenth clafs, intided Syrigenefia Poly- gamia JEqualis, the florets having five conneded fta- mina, and are fruitful. The Species are, 1. Geropogon ( Glabrum ) folks glabris. Lin. Sp; lickp Goaf s-beard with fmooth leaves. Tragopogon gramineo folio glabrum, flore dilute incarnato. Raii Sup. 14 94 2. Geropogon ( Hirfutnm ) foliis pilofis; Lin. Sp. 1 ropj Goaf s-beard with hairy leaves. Tragopogon gramineo folio, fuave rubente flore. Col. Eephr. 1. p. 232. The firft fort grows naturally in Italy; this hath an ered ftalk more than a foot high, garnifhed with fmooth, Grafs-like, long leaves; the ftalk branches up- ward into two or three divifions, each being terminated by one flefh-coloured flower, compofed of leveral florets ; The fecond fort grows naturally in Italy and Sicilyd This rifes with an ered ftalk a foot high, garnifhed with hairy narrow leaves, and feldom divides into branches, but is terminated by one flower compofed of four or five hermaphrodite florets, which are foe* ceeded by fo many bearded feeds. Thefe plants require the fame treatment as the Tra- gopogon, to which article the reader is defired to turn for their culture. GESNERAc l ZrO G E S G EISNER A, Plunder Nov. Gen. 27. tab. 9. Lin. Gen. Plant. 667. This plant was fo named by father Plumier, who difcovered it in America, in honour of Conrad Gefner, a very learned botanift, and natural hiftorian. The Character's are, The empalement of the flower is of one leaf, cut into five acute parts at the top , and is permanent , in which is fi- tuated the go-men-, the flower hath one petal which is tu- hulous, and firfi bent inward , and afterward out again like a bugle-horn ; the brim is divided into five obtufle fcgments which are equal-, it hath four ftamina which are Jh or ter than the petal, terminated by Jingle fummits the germen which fits under the petal Jupports a fiingle crooked fiyle, crowned by a headed ftigma. The germen afterward be- comes a roundifh capfule with two cells, filled with fimall feeds, which are fixed on each fide the partition. This genus of plants is ranged in the fecond feftion of Linnaeus’s fourteenth clafs, intitled Didynamia An- giofpermia, which includes thole plants whole flowers have two long and two fhorter ftamina, and the feeds are included in a capfule. The Species are, 1. Gesnera ( Tomentofa ) foliis ovato-lanceolatis crena- tis hirfutis, pedunculis lateralibus longiffimis corym- biferis. Hort. Cliff. 318. Gefnera with oval, hairy , crenated leaves , and long foot-j talks proceeding from the fides of the ftalks, fupporting flowers in a corymbus. Gef- nera arnplo digitalis folio tomentofo. Plume Gen. 27. 2. Gesnera ( Humilis ) foliis lanceolatis ferratis feffili- bus, pedunculis ramofis multifloris. Lin. Sp. Plant. 612. Gefnera zvith fpear-Jhaped flawed leaves fitting do fie to the Jlalks , and branching fcot-ftalks having many flowers. Gefnera humilis fiore flavefcente. Plum. Nov. Gen. 27. Low Gefnera with a yellowifh flower. The firft fort grows naturally in the Weft-Indies ; the feeds of this were lent me from Jamaica, which fuc- eeeded in tlie Chelfea garden; this rifes with a fhrubby Calk to the height of fix or feven feet, which divides into two or three irregular branches, covered with a rufiet wool, and garnifhed with hairy leaves which are feven or eight inches long, and two and a half broad in the middle, having a ruffet woolly midrib, and the edges are crenated ; thefe are placed on every fide the branches without order, and have fhort foot- ftalks ; towards the end of the branches come out the foot-ftalks of the flowers at every joint, arifing from the wings of the italic-, they are naked, and nine inches in length, branching at the top into many lmaller foot-ftalks, each fuftaining a Angle flower, having a fhort crooked tube, indented at the top in five obtule parts, and of ah oblolete purple colour. Thefe are Succeeded by roundifh capfules fitting clofe in the em- palement, the divifions of which arife above the capfule ; which Dr. Linnaeus, from Plumier’s figure, has taken for the empalement fitting upon the capfule, whereas the capfule is didPtncb from the empalement and is inclofed by it. The capfule is divided into tv/o cells which are filled with fmall feeds. It flowers here in July and Auguft, but hath not ri- pened feeds. The fecond fort is a plant of humbler growth •, this feldom riles more than three feet high ; the leaves are much fmaller, are fawed on their edges, and fit clofe to the ftalk the flowers ftand upon branching foot- ftalks, each fuftaining many yellowifh flowers, which are deeper cut at their brims than thofe of the firft fort. This was found growing naturally by the late Dr. Houftoun at Carthagena in New Spain. There is a third fpecies of this genus mentioned by Plumier, which grows to to a tree, and hath fpotted and fringed flowers but this I have not feen in anv of the Englifh gardens. Theie plants are propagated by feeds, which muft be procured from the countries where they grow naturally ; thefe fhould be brought over in their capfules, which is the beft way to preferve the feeds' good; for as they are very linall and light, fo when they are feparated from the par- tition to which they adhere, they foon lofe their j vegetative quality ; for I have received the feeds fe- G E U veral times from America, which were taken out of the veffels, but not one of them grew, till I pro- cured fome to be fent in their veffels, which fucceecled very well. The feeds fhould be fown in pots filled with light earth, and plunged into a hot-bed of tanners bark as loon as they arrive, for they fometimes lie long in the ground ; thofe which I have fown in autumn, came up the following fpring ; therefore when they happen to arrive here at that feafon, the pots in which the leeds are fown fhould be plunged into the tan-bed in the ftove, and during the winter the earth fhould be now and then gently watered to prevent its drying too much, but it muft not be tpo moift. In the fpring the pots fhould be removed out of the ftove, and plunged into a frefh hot-bed, which will bring up the plants foon after. When thefe are fit to remove, they fhould be each planted into a feparate pot, and plunged into a good hot-bed of tan, obferving to fhade them till they have taken new root; then they muft be treated in the fame way as other tender plants from the fame countries. In autumn they muft be plunged into the tan-bed in the ftove, where, during the winter, they fhould have but little water given to them ; for if they re- ceive much wet, it will deftroy them. In this ftove the plants muft conftantly remain, for they will not thrive if they are kept out of the tan. In the fum- mer, they fhould have free air admitted to them at all times when the weather is warm ; and they muft be frequently refrefhed with water during that feafon, but it muft not be given to them in too great plenty. As the plants advance in growth they will require larger pots, but there muft be care taken not to over-pot them, for they will not thrive in large pots. With this management the plants will flower the fecond year, and may be continued three or four years, but they are not of long duration in their na- tive country. G E U M. Lin. Gen. Plant. 561. Caryophyllata. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 294. tab. 151. Avens, or Herb Bennet ; in French, Benoite. The Characters are. The flower hath a one-leaved empalement , cut at the top into ten fegments , which are alternately fmaller than the other. The flower has five roundifh petals, which are narrow at their bafle , where they are inferted in the empalement it hath a great number of awl-fhaped fta- mina, which are the length of the empalement, into which they are inferted, and are terminated by broad obtufle fum- mits. In the center of the flower is fituated a great number of germen collected into a head ; thefe havejlyles inferted in their fides, which are long , hairy , and crowned by Jingle fligmas. The germen afterward become fo many flat rough feeds , which are hairy, and have the ftyle which is bent like a knee adhering to them ; thefe Jit in the common em- palement. This genus of plants is ranged in the fifth feftion of Linnaeus’s twelfth clals, intitled Icofandria Polygynia, in which he places thofe plants whofe flowers have more than twenty ftamina, and have many ftyles in- ferted into the empalement. The Species are, 1. Geum ( Urbanitm ) floribus ereftis, fruftu globofo, ariftis uncinatis nudis, foliis lyratis. Hort. Cliff. T9 5. Geum with ered flowers , a globular fruit, naked hooked beards, and harp-fhaped leaves. Caryophyllata vulgaris. C. B. P. '321. Common Avens, or Herb Bennet. 2. Geum [Rivale , floribus nutantibus, fru Phafeoius Marianos feandens,. floribus commofis. Pet. Muf. 453. Climbing Kidney- bean of Maryland with fipiked flowers. 5. Glycine ( Lament of a ) foliis ternatis tomentofis, race- mis axillaribus brevilllmis, ieguminibus difpermis, Lin. Sp. Plant. 754. Glycine . with vooolly trifoliate leaves, and very floor t fpikes of flowers proceeding from the fides of the ftalks , with pods containing two feeds „ Anonis phafeoloides fcandens, floribus flavis feffilrbus. Hort. Elth. 30. tab. 26. Climbing Refit-Harrow like Kidney -bean, with yellow flowers fitting clofe to the ftalks* '6 £ ' The M) * % G L Y The fir ft fort grows naturally in Virginia •, this hath roots compofed of feveral knobs, or tubers, which hang to each other by fmall firings ; from thefe come out in the fpring {lender twining ftalks, which rife to the height of eight or ten feet, garnifhed with winged leaves, compofed of three pair of oval fpear- fhaped lobes, terminated by an odd one. The flowers come out in fhort fpikes from the fide of the ftalks ; they are of a Pea-bloflbm kind, of a dirty flefh- colour, having little fcent. Thefe appear in Au- guft, but do not produce feeds in England. The ftalks decay in autumn, but the roots continue ; this is propagated by parting of the roots, each of the tubers being feparated from the principal root, will grow ; the beft time for this is about the end of March, or the beginning of April, before they put out fhoots. The roots fhould be planted in a warm fltuation, and in hard froft covered with tan or mulch to prated them, otherwife they will not live abroad in this country : where they have been planted againft a fouth wall, they have thriven and flowered extremely well, which they feldom do in any other fltuation ; and thofe roots which are planted in pots rarely flower, nor do their ftalks rife near fo high as thofe which are planted in the full ground •, fome ignorant perfons call this the Twickenham Climber. The fecond fort was brought from Carolina, but has been ftnce obferved in Virginia, and fome other places in North America ; this fort has woody ftalks, which twift themfelves together, and alfo twine round any trees that grow near, and will rife to the height of fifteen feet, or more. The leaves are winged, and in fnape fomewhat like the Afh-tree, but have a greater number of pinnas. The flowers are produced in clufters from the wings of the leaves, which are of a purple colour ; thefe are fucceeded by long cylin- drical pods, fhaped like thofe of the fcarlet Kidney- bean, containing feveral kidney-fhaped feeds, but thefe are never perfected in England. This climbing fhrub is propagated in feveral nur- feries near London, where it is known by the name of Carolina Kidney-bean-tree. It is increafed by laying down the young branches in October, which will be rooted well by that time twelvemonth (efpecially if they are duly watered in dry weather) and may then be tranfplanted, either in a nurfery for a year to get ftrength, or to the place where they are to remain for good, which fhould be in a warm light foil and a fheltered fltuation, where they will endure the cold of our ordinary winters very well ; and if their roots are covered with ftraw, Fern, Peas-haulm, or any other light covering, there will be no danger of their being deftroyed by the froft. The third fort grows naturally in both Indies, and alfo in Egypt. This is a perennial plant, with {lender twining ftalks, which twift about any neighbouring fupport, and rife to the height of eight or ten feet, garnifhed with winged leaves, compofed of fixteen pair of fmall, oblong, blunt lobes, fet clofe together; thefe have the tafte of Liquorice, from whence the inhabitants of the Weft-Indies have given it the name of Wild Liquorice, and ufe the herb for the fame purpofe as the Liquorice in Europe. The flowers are produced from the fide of the ftalks in fhort fpikes or bunches ; they are of a pale purple colour, and fhaped like thofe of the Kidney-bean thefe are fucceeded by fhort pods, each containing three or four hard round feeds of a fcarlet colour, with a black fpot or eye on that fide which is fattened to the pod. The feeds of this plant are frequently ftrung, and are worn as or- naments by the natives of thofe countries, where the plants grow naturally : they are frequently brought to England from the Weft-Indies, and are wrought into various forms, with fhells and other hard feeds. This plant is propagated by feeds, which muft be fown upon a good hot- bed in the fpring ; but as the feeds are very hard, fo unlefs they are foaked in water twelve or fourteen hours before they are fown, they frequently lie in the ground a whole year before they G L Y ' vegetate * but when foaked, the plants will appear id a fortnight after the feeds are fown, if they are good, and the bed in a proper temperature of heat. When the plants are two inches high, they fhould be each tranfplanted into a feparate pot, filled with light earth, and plunged into a hot-bed of tanners bark, where they fhould be {haded from the fun till they have taken new root ; after which they muft be treated in the fame manner as other tender plants from the fame countries, always keeping them in the bark-ftove, for they are too tender to thrive in any other fltuation in England. This fort will flower the fecond year from feeds, and fometimes ripens feeds here. There are two other varieties of this plant, one with a white, and the other a yellow feed, but the plants do not differ from the other in leaf or ftalk; but as thefe have not as yet flowered in England, I do not know how their flowers may differ. The fourth fort hath a perennial root and an annual ftalk, which decays in the autumn. This rifes from two to three feet high, with {lender herbaceous ftalks, which are garnifhed with trifoliate hairy leaves, fitting clofe to the ftalks •, the fmall leaves or lobes, are of the oval fpear-fhape, ending in acute points. The flowers come out from the fide of the ftalks, at the foot-ftalk of the leaves ; the naked part of the foot- ftalk is about two inches long, and the fpike of flowers is about the fame length, and is recurved ; the flowers are of a Pea-bloffom kind, fitting clofe toge- ther. They are fmall,- and of a fine blue colour, coming out the beginning of June., and are fome- times fucceeded by feeds in England, which ripen in Auguft. This fort grows naturally in North America, and is hardy enough to live in the open air in England. It may be propagared by feeds, or parting of the roots ; the former is the beft method, where good feeds can be obtained : thefe may be fown on a bed of light earth in the fpring, and if the feafon fhould prove dry, they muft be frequently refrefhed with water, otherwife they will remain a long time in the ground before they vegetate : when the plants come up, they muft be kept clean from weeds in the fummer, and in the autumn when their ftalks are decayed, if fome rotten tanners bark is fpread over the furface of the ground, it will prated the roots from being injured by the froft. In the fpring, the roots fhould be tranfplanted to the places where they are deflged to re- main, which muft be in a warm fheltered fltuation, but not too much expofed to the fun, and in a light foil, where they will thrive and produce flowers annually. If this is propagated by parting of the roots, it fhould be done in the fpring, before the roots begin to fhoot, which is the beft feafon for tranfplanting the plants : but thefe roots fhould not be parted oftener than every third year, for if they are often removed they will not flower fo ftrong. The fifth fort hath a perennial root and a climbing ftalk, which rifes near four feet high, garnifhed with woolly trifoliate leaves : the flowers come out in fhort bunches from the fide of the ftalks ; they are fmall, of a yellow colour, and are fucceeded by fhort pods, which contain two roundifh feeds in each. This flowers in June, and the feeds ripen in autumn. It grows naturally in America, but is too tender to live in the open air in England. This is propagated in the fame manner, and requires the fame treatment as the third fort. GLYCYRRHIZA. Lin. Gen. Plant. 788. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 389. tab. 210. [fo called of yXu>tuk, fweet, and P Y£a, Gr. a root, q. d. fweet root: the ancients called it Scythian Root, becaufe the Scy- thians firft brought it into ufe.] Liquorice ; in French, Reglttfe. The Characters are. The flower hath a -permanent tuhulous empalement of ons leaf \ divided into two lips ; the upper lip is cut into three parts , the middle one being broad and bifid , the under lip is Jingle. The flower hath four petals , is of the butterfly kind , having a long ereft ftandard , with GLY cblcng wings, and a two-leaved keel which is acute. It hath ten Jlamina , nine joined and one ft an ding j ingle ; they are longer than the keel , and terminated by roundijh fum- mits. In the bottom is fituated a fhort germen , fupporting an awl-Jhaped ftyle the length of the Jlamina, crowned by a rifting obtufe ftigma. 'The germen afterward becomes an oblong , or oval comprejfed pod with one cell , including two or three kidney-Jhaped feeds. This genus of plants is ranged in the third fedion of Linnseus’s feventeenth clafs, intitled Diadelphia De- can dria, which includes thofe plants which have ten ftamina joined in two bodies. The Species are, 1. Glycyrrhiza ( Glabra ) leguminibus glabris. Hort. Cliff. 490. Liquorice with fnooth pods. Glycyrrhiza fi- ' liquofa, vel Germanica. C» B. P. Common Liquorice. 2. Glycyrrhiza ( Echinata ) leguminibus echinatis. Prod. Leyd. 386. Liquorice with prickly pods. Glycyrrhiza capite echinato. C. B. P. Rough-podded Liquorice. Glycyrrhiza ( Llirfuta ) leguminibus hiriutis. Prod. Leyd. 386. Liquorice with hairy pods. Glycyrrhiza Orientalis, filiquis hirfutiffimis. Tourn. Cor. Eaftern Liquorice with hairy pods. The firft fort is that which is commonly cultivated in England for medicine ; the other two kinds are pre- ferved in curious botanic gardens for variety, but their roots are not fo full of juice as the firft, nor is the juice fo fweet ; though the fecond fort feems to be that which Diofcorides has defcribed and recom- mended, but I fuppofe the goodnefs of the firft has occafioned its being fo generally cultivated in Europe. The roots of this run very deep into the ground, and creep to a confiderable diftance, efpecially where they are permitted to ftand long unremoved ; from thefe arife ftrong herbaceous ftalks, four or five feet high, garnifbed with winged leaves, compofed of four or five pair of oval lobes, terminated by an odd one-, the leaves and ftalks are clammy, and of a dark green -, the flowers come out in fpikes from the wings of the ftalks, ftanding ered -, they are of a pale blue colour, and are fucceeded by fhort compreffed pods, each con- taining two or three kidney-fhaped feeds. It flowers the latter end of July, but the feeds do not ripen in England. This plant delights in a light fandy foil, which fhould : be three feet deep at leaft, for the goodnefs of Li- quorice confifts in the length of the roots : the greateft quantity of Liquorice which is propagated in England, is about Pontefrad in Yorkfhire, and Godalmin in Surry -, though of late years there hath been a great deal cultivated in the gardens near London : the ground in which you intend to plant Liquorice, fhould be well dug and dunged the year before you plant it, that the dung may be perfectly rotted, and mixed with the earth, otherwife it will be apt to flop the roots from running down ; and before you plant it, the ground fhould be dug three fpades deep, and laid very light ; when your ground is thus well prepared, you fhould furnifh yourfelf with frefh plants taken from the fides or heads of the old roots, obferving that they have a good bud or eye, otherwife they are fubjed to mifcarry -, thefe plants fhould be about ten inches long, and perfedly found. The beft feafon for planting them is in the be- ginning or middle of March, which muft be done in the following manner, viz. Firft ftrain a line crofs the ground in which you would plant them, then with a long dibble made on purpofe, put in the fhoot, fo that the whole plant rriay be fet ftrait into the ground, with the head about an inch under the furface in a ftrait line, about a foot afunder, or more, in the rows, and two feet diftance row from row ; and after having finifhed the whole fpot of ground, you may fow a thin crop of Onions, which being plants that do not root deep into the ground, nor fpread much above, will do the Liquorice no damage the firft year; for the Liquorice will not fhoot very high the firft feafon, and the hoeing of the Onions will alfo keep the ground clear from weeds ; but in doing of of this you muft be careful not to cut off the top fhoots G N A the Liquorice plants when they appear above grounds which would greatly injure them ; and alfo obferve tO cut up. all the Onions which grow near the heads of the Liquorice ; and after your Onions are pulled up, you fhould carefully hoe and clean the ground frond weeds ; and in October, when the fhoots of the Li- quorice are decayed, you fhould fpread a little very- rotten dung upon the furface of the ground, which will prevent the weeds from growing during the winter, and the rain will wafii the virtue of the dung into the ground, which will greatly improve the plants. In the beginning of March following you fhould fiightly dig the ground between the rows of Liquorice^ burying the remaining part of the dung-, but in doing of this, you fhould be very careful not to cut the roots. This ftirring of the ground will not only preferve it clean from weeds a long time, but alfo greatly ftrengthen the plants. The diftance which I have allowed for planting thefe plants, will, I doubt not; by fame, be thought too great ; but in anfwer to that, I would only obferve, that as the largenefs of the roots is the chief advan- tage to the planter, fo the only method to obtain this, is by giving them room; and befides, this will give a greater liberty to ftir and drefs the ground, which is of great fervice to Liquorice ; and if the plantation defigned were to be of an extraordinary bignefs, I would advife the rows to be made at leaft three feet diftant, whereby it will be eafy to itir the ground with a breaft plough, which will greatly leffen the expence of labour. Thefe plants fhould remain three years from the time of planting, when they will be fit to take up for ufe; which fhould not be done until the ftalks are perfebtly decayed ; for when it is taken up too foon, it is fub- jed to fhrink greatly, and lofe of its weight. The ground near London being rich, increafes the bulk of the root very faft ; but when it is taken up; it appears of a very dark colour, and not near fo lightly as that which grows upon a fandy foil in an open country. The fecond fort grows naturally in fome parts of Italyj and in the Levant ; the ftalks and leaves of this are very like thole of the firft, but the flowers are pro- duced in fhorter fpikes, and the pods which fucceed them are very fhort, broad at their bafe, ending in acute points, and are armed with fharp prickles. This flowers about the fame time as the firft, and in warm feafons will perfed feeds in England. The third fort grows naturally in the Levant, from whence the feeds were fent to the royal garden at Paris, by Dr. Tournefort. This hath much the ap- pearance of the other two fpecies, but the pods of it are hairy, and longer than thofe of the other. Both thefe forts may be propagated in the fame manner as the firft, or from feeds, which may be fown in the fpring on a bed of light earth; but as neither of thefe are tiled, fo they are feldom propagated unlefs for thfi fake of variety. . ' . GN APHALIUM. Lin. Gen. Plant. 850. Elichry- fum. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 452. tab. 259. Goldylocks^ or Eternal Flower ; in French, Immortelle . The Characters are, It hath a compound flower , made up of hermaphrodite florets and female half florets , included in one fcaly empale - ment ; the hermaphrodite florets are tubulous, funnel-Jhaped, and cut into five parts at the brim , which are reflexed ; thefe have five Jhort hairy ftamina , terminated by cylin :■* drical fummits. In the center is fituated a germen , fup* porting a flender ftyle the length of the ftamina, ct owned by a bifid ftigma ; the germen afterward becomes a Jingle feed , which in fome fpecies is crowned with a hairy down$ and in others a feathery down. The female flowers which are intermixed with thefe have no ftamina , but a germen fupporting a flender ftyle, crowned by a bifid reflexed ftig- ma. Thefe are in fome fpecies fruitful, and in others they are barren. The empalement of the flower is permanent and Joining. si 34 r ! his genus of plants is ranged in the firft feftion of Linnaeus’s nineteenth clafs, which includes thofe plants which have hermaphrodite and female flowers inclofed in one common empalement, and are fruitful. The Species are, 1. Gnaphalium ( Stcechas ) fruticofum foliis linearibus, ramis virgatis, corymbo compofito. Hort. Cliff. 401. Goldilocks with a Jhrubby Jtalk gar nijhed with very narrow leaves , and a compound cory mbits of flowers, Elichryfum feu ftoechas citrina anguftifolia. C. B. P. 264. CaJJi- dony , or narrow -leaved Goldylocks. 2. Gnaphalium (. Anguftijfmum ) foliis linearibus, caule fruticofo ramolb, corymbo compofito. Hort. Cliff. 40 1 . Goldy locks with a branching fhrubby Jtalk , and very narrow leaves , with a compound , corymbus of flowers. - Elichryfum anguftiffimo folio. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 452; GoUylocks with beery narrow leaves. 3. Gnaphalium ( Uniflorum ) foliis alternis, acute den- tatis, fubtus villofis, pedunculis longiffimis unifloris. Goldylocks with alternate leaves Jharply indented , woolly on their under fide, with very long foot-ftalks fuflaining one flower. Elichryfum fylveftre latifolium, flore par- vo fingulari. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 452. Broad-leaved wild Goldy locks, with a -Jingle J mall floiver. 4. Gnaphalium [Luteo- album) foliis femiamplexicaulibus enfiformibus, repandis obtufis, utrinque pubefcenti- bus, floribus conglomeratis. Prod. Leyd. 149. Goldy- locks with fword-floaped leaves half embracing the folks , which are obtufe , reflexed , woolly on both fides , and flowers growing in clufters. Elichryfum fylveftre latifolium ca- pitulis' conglobatis. C. B. P. 264. Broad-leaved wild Goldy locks, with heads growing in clufters. 5. Gnaphalium (. Aquaticum ) eaule ramofo diffufo, flo- ribus confertis. Flor. Lapp. 300. Goldy locks with a diffiifed branching Jtalk , and flowers in clufters at the top. Elichryfum aquaticum, ramofum, minus, capitulis, foliaceis. Tourn. Inft. 452. Leffer branching aquatic Goldy locks, with leafy heads. 6 . Gnaphalium (fylvaticum) caule fimpliciffimo, flo- ribus fparfis. Flor. Lapp. 298. Goldylocks with a fnigle Jtalk, and flowers growing feat ter ingly. Elichryfum fpi- catum. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 453. Spiked Goldylocks. 7. Gnaphalium ( 'Dioiciim ) caule fimpliciffimo corymbo fimplici terminali, farmentis procumbentibus. Hort. Cliff. 400. Goldylocks with a Jingle Jtalk terminated by a fingle corymbus , and trailing branches. Elichryfum mon- tanum flore rotundiori candido. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 453. Mountain Goldylocks with a rounder white flower. 8 . Gnaphalium ( Montanum ) foliis radicalibus cuneifor- mibus, caulinis acutis feflilibus, caule fimpliciffimo, capitulo terminali aphyllo, floribus oblongis. Goldy- locks with the lower leaves wedge-Jhaped, thofe on the Jtalks acute, and fitting clofle , a fingle Jtalk without leaves, terminated by oblong flowers. Elichryfum montanum longiore folio & flore albo. Tourn. Inft. 453. Moun- tain Goldylocks , with a, longer leaf and white flower. 9. Gnaphalium ( Chryfocomum ) humile, caule fuffruti- cofo, foliis linearibus fubtus argenteis, fquamis caly- ciiiis longioribus acuminatis. Low Goldylocks with a fhrubby Jtalk , very narrow leaves , Jilvery on their under fide, and longer acute-pointed feales to the empalement. Ghamafeehryfocoma prselongis purpurafcentibufque Jackie capitulis. Barrel. Icon. 406. Dwarf Goldylocks with longer andpurpjijh heads like Knapweed. 10. Gnaphalium [Orient ale) fubherbaceum, foliis li- neari-lanceolatis Teffilibus, corymbo compofito, pe- dunculis elongatis. Lin. Sp. 195. Herbaceous Goldy- locks with 'narrow fpear-fhaped leaves, and a compound clufter of flowers. Elichryfum Orientale, C. B. P. 264. Eaftern Goldylocks, called Immortal Flower. 11. Gnaphalium ( Ignefcens) fruticofum, foliis fublan- ceolatis tomentofis feflilibus, corymbis alternis con- globatis, floribus globofis. Prod. Level. 149. Shrubby Goldylocks , with fpear-fhaped woolly leaves fitting clofe to the Jtalks , and alternate clufters of globular flowers. Eli- chryfum Germanicum, calyce ex aureo rntilante. .Tourn. Inft." R. H. 452. German Goldylocks having a reddijh gold- coloured empalement . 12. Gnaphalium ( Margaritaceum ) herbaceum' foliis li- neari-lanceolatis acuminatis, alternis, caule fuperne A ramofo corymbis fafttgiatis. Hort. Cliff. 401. Herba- ceous Goldylocks with narrow , fpear-fhaped , pointed leaves placed alt e? nate, and the upper part of the jtalk branching, with a compact corymbus of flowers. Elichryfum' Ame- ricanum latifolium. Tourn. Inft. R; H. 453. Broad- leaved American Goldylocks. 13. Gnaphalium (Fcetidum) herba'ceiirri foliis amplexi- caulibus, integerrimis- acutis fubtus tomentofis, caule ramofo. Hort. Cliff. 402. Lin. Sp. Plant. 850. Her- baceous Goldylocks with entire leaves embracing the Jtalks , woolly on their under fide , and a branching ft alk. Elichryfum Africanum foetidiffimum, ampfiffimo folio. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 454. Mojl ftinking African Goldylocks with a large leaf. 14. Gnaphalium ( Argent eum ) foliis amplexicaulibus in- tegerrimis ovatis nervofis utrinque tomentofis, caule ramofo. Hort. Clift. 402. GoUylocks with entire acute leaves embracing the Jtalks, woolly on both fides, and a branching jtalk. Elichryfum Africanum feetidiflimum ampliflimo folio calyce argenteo. Tourn. Inft. 454,, Mojl ftinking African Goldylocks, with a very large leaf \ and a ftlvery empalement to the flower. 15. Gnaphalium ( Undulatum ) herbaceum foliis decur- rentibus lanceolatis acutis, undatis, fubtus tomentofis, caule ramofo. Hort. Cliff. 402. Goldylocks with acute running leaves which are waved, and woolly on their under fi.de, and a branching Jtalk. • Elichryfum graveolens acutifolium, caule alato. Hort. Elth. 130, Stinking Goldy locks, with an acute leaf and winged Jtalk. 16. Gnaphalium ( Cymofum ) herbaceum foliis lanceo- latis trinerviis fupra glabris caule inferne ramofo ter- minali. Hort. Cliff. 401. Goldylocks with fpear-fhaped leaves, having three veins , fmooth on their upper fide, and the under branches terminated with flowers. Elichryfum Africanum folio oblongo, fubtus incano, fupra viridi, flore luteo. Boerh. Ind. alt. 1. 12 1. African Goldylocks with an oblong leaf, hoary on the under fide, and green above , with a yellow flower. 17. Gnaphalium {AMricanum) caule herbaceo fimpli- ciftimo, foliis lanceolatis obtufis tomentofis, floribus fpicatis lateralibufque. Goldylocks with a fingle herba- ceous Jtalk , obtufe , fp ear-Jh aped, woolly leaves , and flowers growing in fpikesfrom the fides of the Jtalks. Gnaphalium adfloechadem citrinam accedens. Sloan. Cat. Jam. 125. Cudweed like golden Caflidony. 18. Gnaphalium ( Rutilans ) herbaceum foliis lineari- lanceolatis, caule inferne ramofo, corymbo compofito terminali. Hort. Cliff. 401. Herbaceous Goldylocks with narrow fpear-fhaped leaves , the under part of the Jtalk branching, and a compound corymbus terminating the branches. Elichryfum Africanum, folio oblongo an- gufto, flore rubello poftea aureo. Boerh. Ind. alt. 12 1. African Goldylocks with an oblong narrow leaf and a reddijh flower , which is afterwards yellow. 19. Gnaphalium ( Sanguineum ) herbaceum, foliis de- currentibus lanceolatis tomentofis planis apiculo nudo terminali. Amoen. Acad. 4. p. 78. HerbaceousGoldylocks , with fpear-fhaped , woolly, running leaves, terminated by a naked point. Chryfocoma Syriaca, flore atrorubente. Breyn. Cent. 146. 20. Gnaphalium ( Fruticofum ) frutefeens foliis inferne lanceolatis caulinis lineari-lanceolatis, utrinque tomen- tofis, corymbo compofito terminali. Shrubby Goldylocks with the under leaves fpear-fhaped, thofe on the Jtalks narrow, fpear-fhaped , woolly on both fides, and the Jtalks terminated by a corymbus of flowers. Elichryfum Af- ricanum frutefeens, anguftis & longioribus foliis in- canis. Hort. Amft. 2. p. 109. Shrubby African Goldy- locks, with longer and narrower leaves which are hoary . , 21. Gnaphalium (i Odor at ijf mum ) foliis decurrentibus obtufis inferne villofis, corymbis conglobatis termi- nalibus. Goldylocks with obtufe running leaves, hoary on their under fide, and a clujtered corymbus of flowers ter- minating the jtalk. Elichryfum foliis linearibus decur- rentibus, fubtus incanis, floribus corymbofis. Fig. Plant, tab. 13 1. fob 2. Goldylocks with narrow running leaves, hoary on their under fide , and flowers growing in a corymbus. 22. Gnaphalium {Plant agini folium) farmentis procum- bentibus eaule fimpliciffimo, foliis radicalibus ovatis Hiaximis, * f G M A maximis, farmentis procurnbentibus. Eiri. Sp. Plant. 8 50. Goldylocks with a Jimple Jlalk , large oval leaves at bottom , and trailing runners. Gnaphalium plantaginis folio, Virginianum. Pluk. Aim. 171. Virginia Goldy- locks with a Plantain leaf. 23. Gnaphalium ( Obtufifolium ) herbaceum foliis lan- ceolatis, caule tomentofo paniculato terminalibus glo- meratis conicis. Lin. Sp. Plant. 851. Goldylocks with Jpear-floaped leaves , a woolly Jlalk , terminated by a conical dujlcr of flowers. Elichryfum obtufifolium, capitulis argenteis conglobatis. Hort. Elth. 130. Blunt-leaved Goldylocks , with filvery heads growing in cluflers. 24. Gnaphalium ( Spicatum ) foliis lanceolatis decurren- ftbus tomentofis, floribus fpicatis terminalibus latera- iibufque. Goldylocks with fpear-Jhaped . , woolly , running leaves , and flowers growing in fpikes at the ends and fldes of the flalks. Elichryfum caule alato, floribus fpi- catis. Sloan. Cat. Jam. 125. Goldylocks with a zvinged Jlalk and fpiked flowers. The firfl fort hath a fhrubby ftalk, which rifes about three feet high, branching out into long (lender flalks irregularly j the lower branches are garnifhed with ob- tufe leaves, two inches and a half long, and an eighth of an inch broad at the point, but thofe upon the fiower-ftalks are very narrow, ending in acute points ; the whole plant is very woolly : the flowers terminate the flalks in a compound corymbus ; their empale- jnents are of a filvery colour at firfl, and very neat, but afterward turn of a yellowifh fulphur colour. If thefe are gathered before the flowers are much opened, the heads will continue in beauty many years, elpe- cially if they are kept from the air and duft. The plants begin to flower in June, and there is a fuc- ceflion of flowers all the fummer, fome of which will continue in beauty moft part of the winter. This is generally fuppofed to be the true golden Caflidony of the fhops, but the fecond fort is ufually fubftituted for it in England. It is propagated by flips or cuttings, which may be planted in June or July, in a bed of light earth, and covered with glafles, or fliaded with mats, oblerving to refrelh them frequently with water, but it muft not ■be given in large quantities ; thefe cuttings will put out roots in fix or eight weeks, then they Ihoulcl be taken up and planted in pots filled with light earth, and placed in a fhady fituation till they have taken new root, when they may be removed to an open fituation, and placed among other hardy exotics, till about the middle or end of Odtober ; at which time they ihould be placed under a common frame, where they may be protected from froft, but in mild weather they fhould be expofed to the open air. With this ma- nagement in winter, the plants will be much ftronger than thofe which are kept in the green-houfe, where they generally draw too weak ; for this fort only wants to be flieltered from hard froft, being fo hardy as in very mild winters to live abroad in warm borders near walls, with little fhelter. The fecond fort hath a flirubby ftalk, which divides into many flender branches, covered with a white bark ; thefe form a thick bulky under flirub, and rife near three feet, garniftied with very narrow leaves, hoary on their under fide, but green on their upper, placed without order on every fide the flalks •, the flowers are produced in a compound corymbus at the end of the branches *, their heads are fmall, and are qf a yellow colour when fully blown ; thefe are con- tinued in fucceflion moft part of fummer. This grows naturally in France and Germany, and is hardy enough to live in the open air in England. It is propagated by flips or cuttings, which may be planted in a fhady border during any of the fummer months, and in the autumn they may be tranfplanted into the places where they are defigned to remain. This fhould have a dry undunged foil, in which it is rarely injured un- lefs in the moft fevere froft. The third fort is an annual plant, which grows na- turally in Italy and Sicily ; this hath an herbaceous ftalk, which rifes little more than a foot high, gar- nifhed with acute indented leaves, which are hoary on G N A their under fide j the flowers Hand upon long foot- flalks, which rife far above the branches, each fuftain- ing one fmall whitifh flower. Thefe appear in July, and the feeds ripen in September. It is propagated by feeds, which fhould be fown in autumn upon a bed of light earth, where the plants are defigned to re- main j and when the plants come up in the fpring, they fhould be thinned where they are too clofe, and kept clean from weeds, which is all the culture they require. The fourth fort is an annual plant with woolly leaves, which rife with woolly flalks about eight inches high, garniftied with oblong leaves which embrace the flalks with their bafe ; the flowers grow in clofe cluflers at the top, and from the fide of their flalks, which are included in dry filvery empalements. There is another fpecies of this with narrower leaves, not quite fo woolly ; the flalks rife higher, and are more branched ; the flowers grow in clofe bunches on the top of the flalks, and are of a pale yellow colour. Both thefe forts will come up better from the flattered feeds, than when they are fown by art ; but if the feeds are fown, it muft be foon after they are ripe, otherwife they will not fucceed. The plants requi e no other care but to keep them clean from weeds, and thinned where they are too clofe. They flower in July, and the feeds ripen in autumn. The fifth fort is an annual plant, which grows natu- rally in many parts of England, on places which are covered with water in the winter ; this is a low branching plant, with filvery leaves and dark heads of flowers, but being of no ufe is not cultivated in gardens. The fixth fort is alfo an annual plant with narrow leaves, which are hoary on their under fide $ the flalks grow eredt about a foot high, and at every joint is produced a fhort fjpike of white flowers, with dark- coloured empalements. This is found growing na- turally in fome parts of England, fo is not often ad- mitted into gardens. If the feeds of this fort are per- mitted to flatter, the plants will come up in the fpring with greater certainty than if Town, and they will re- quire little culture. Thefe flower in July, and the plants decay foon after they have ripened their feeds* I he flventh fort grows naturally in the northern parts of England, upon the tops of hills and mountains, where the fhoots which are fent out from every fide of the plant put out roots, whereby it is propagated in great plenty : the leaves of this grow clofe to the ground, they are narrow at their bafe, but rounded at the end where they are broad ^ they are near an inch long, and hoary on their under fide ; the (talks are Angle, and rife about four inches high, terminated by a corymbus of flowers which is Angle. This flowers in May and June. There are two varieties of this, one with a purple and the other a variegated flower, which have rifen ac- cidentally from feeds, but continue their difference in the gardens. They are cafily propagated by offsets, which fhould be planted in the autumn, in a fhady fituation, where they will require no other care but to keep them clean from weeds. This plant is called Pes Cati, or Catsfloot. The eighth fort grows naturally on the Alps. This is a low plant, with under leaves like the laft men- tioned ; the flalks are Angle, and rife about fix inches high, garnilhed with very fmall acute leaves, and terminated by four or five oblong flowers, which in fome plants are white, and in others of a purpliih co- lour. They appear about the fame time as the for- mer fort, and the plants may be propagated and treated in the fame manner. The ninth iort grows naturally in Spain and Italy. This is a low plant with a ligneous ftalk, which fel- dom riles more than fix inches high, garnilhed with very narrow leaves, white on their under fide ; the. flowers are produced from the fide qf the flalks, each Handing upon a feparate foot-ftalk •, their empalements are flaly and long, ending in acute ftiff points, and are of a purpliih colour. This fort flowers in July, but feldom perfects feeds in this country. S G ' The The' tenth fort is fuppofed to have been brought hr ft from India to Portugal, where it has been long pro- pagated for the beauty of its golden heads of flowers, which, if gathered before they are too open, will con- tinue in beauty feveral years •, fo that in the winter feafon they ornament their churches with thefe flowers, and many of them are annually brought to England, and fold for ornaments to the ladies- T hefe plants have a fbort fhrubby ftalk, felclom rifing more than three or four inches high,, putting out many heads ; the leaves are narrow and woolly on both iides, and come out without order ; the flower-ftalks arife'fram thefe heads ; they grow eight or ten inches high, are garni feed all ‘the way with narrow hoary leaves, and terminated by a compound corymbus of bright yellow flowers with large heads. Thefe begin to flower in May, and there is a iuccefikm of them moil part of hammer. This is propagated by flipping off the heads during any of the furnmer months, and after ftripping off the lower leaves, they fhould be planted in a bed of light earth, covering them with hand-glaffes, which muff be (haded every day when the fun is warm •, and the cuttings muff be fupplied with water, which fhould be often repeated, but not in too great quantities ; when thefe are rooted they fhould be planted in pots, and treated in the fame manner as hath been directed for the firft fort. Thefe plants in mild winters will live abroad in a very warm border with little fhelter, and the hardier they are treated, the greater number of flowers they will produce ; for when they are drawn weak in a green-houfe, they never flower lo ftrong. The eleventh fort hath very woolly (talks and leaves, which are much longer than thofe of the tenth ; the (talks rife a foot high, fending out a few fide branches; thefe are terminated by a compound corymbus of flowers, whole heads are lmall, and of a gold colour, changing a little red as they fade. This is propagated by flips in the fame manner as the laft mentioned, but the plants will live in the open air, if they are planted on a dry foil. The twelfth fort grows naturally in North America, but has been long in the Englifti gardens. This hath a creeping root, which fpreads far in the ground, lo as to become a troubled) me weed very often, unleis it is kept within bounds ; the (talks of this are woolly, rifing a foot and a half high, garnifhed with long leaves ending in acute points, which are placed alter- nate, and are woolly on their under fide'; the upper part of the ftalk branches into two or three divifions, each being terminated by a clofe corymbus of flowers, with pretty large fllvery empalements, which, if ga- thered and properly dried, will retain their beauty fe- veral years. This fort will thrive in almoft any foil or fituation, and is eafily propagated by its creeping roots. It flowers in June and July, and the (talks decay in autumn. The thirteenth fort grows naturally at the Cape of Good Hope. This is an annual plant, which fends out many oblong blunt leaves near the root ; the (talks rife a foot and a half high, garnifhed with leaves placed alternate, which are broad at their bafe where they embrace the (talks, but end in acute points ; they are woolly, and when handled, emit a very rank odour; the (talks are terminated by a corymbus of flowers, -in large fllvery empalements, which will retain their beauty feveral years. The fourteenth fort grows naturally at the Cape of Good Hope, and is an annual plant, very like the former fort, but the leaves are of a yellowifh green on their upper fide, and woolly on their under ; the (talks branch, and the heads of flowers . are of a bright yellow colour, and thefe differences are permanent. Both thefe plants are propagated by feeds, which, if fown in the autumn on a warm border, will more cer- tainly fucceed, than when they are iown in thefpring; or if the feeds are permitted to fcatter, the plants will come up without care, and may be tranfplanted while they are young, to the places where they are defigned to rerqain : when the plants have taken root, they will require no other care but to keep them clean from weeds. They flower in July, and the feeds ripen Mi autumn. The fifteenth fort grows in Africa, and alfo in North America, from both thefe countries I have received the feeds. It is an annual plant, with oblong leaves at the bottom, which are a little waved, and hoary on their under fide. The (talks rife about a foot high,, and are garnifhed with acute-pointed leaves ; from their bafe runs a border or wing along the ftalk ; the whole plant has a difagreeable odour. The flowers grow in a corymbus on the top of the (talks, they are white, and appear in July. The feeds ripen in the autumn, which, if permitted to fcatter, the plants will come up without care, as the two former forts. The fixteenth fort rifes with a (hrubby ftalk three or four feet high, fending out many branches from the lower part, garnilhed with narrow fpear-fhaped leaves, which half embrace the ftalks with their bafe; they are of a dark green on their upper fide, but are hoary on -their under ; the ftalks are terminated by a com- pound corymbus of yellow flowers, whofe heads are (mail : thefe continue in fucceflion great part of the furnmer, but are rarely fucceeded by feeds in England. It is eafily propagated by cuttings in any of the fum- mer months, which may be planted in a fhady border, and duly watered. Thefe will take root in a month or five weeks, and may then be taken up and planted in pots, placing them in a fliady fituation till they have taken frefli root ; then they may be removed to a fheltered fituation, and placed with other hardy green-houfe plants till autumn, when they muft be carried into the green-houfe, where, during the winter feafon, they fhould have as much free air as poffible in mild weather, for they only require protection from froft, fo they fhould be treated in the fame manner as other hardy green-houfe plants. The feventeenth fort is an annual plant, which grows naturally in France, Italy, and Spain. This hath a woolly herbaceous ftalk, which rifts fix or eight inches high, garnifhed with obtufe, fpear-fhaped, woolly leaves. The flowers are produced in fhort fpikes from the fide, and at the top of the ftalks ; they are of a filvery colour, and appear in June and July. The feeds ripen in autumn, which, if permitted to fcatter, the plants will come up without care, and require no other culture, but to keep them clean from weeds. The eighteenth fort grows naturally at the Cape of Good Elope ; this rifes with a (lender (hrubby ftalk, which fends out many lateral branches below ; thefe are garnifhed with very narrow leaves, which are hoary on their under fide. The flowers are produced in a compound corymbus at the end of the branches ; they are at their firft appearance of a pale red colour, but afterward change to a gold colour ; the empalements of this fort are (mail, and dry like the other fpecies of this genus. This fort is propagated by cuttings, in the fame manner as the fixteenth, and the plants re- quire the fame treatment. The nineteenth fort grows naturally in Egypt and Pa- leftine. This is a perennial plant, whofe under leaves fpread near the ground; they are woolly on their under fide ; the ftalks rife about fix inches high ; the leaves upon thefe are fpear-fhaped, ending in acute points ; the ftalks and leaves are woolly, and the ftalk is ter- minated by a large corymbus of flowers fitting very clofe ; thefe are of a fine foft red colour, fo make a pretty appearance in the month of June, when they are in beauty. This fort is propagated by offsets in the fame manner as the feventh and eighth forts, but this doth not produce them in plenty, fo is very uncommon in the Englifh gardens at prefent : it requires a drier foil than the feventh, and a warmer fituation, but not too much expofed to the mid-day fun, fo fhould be planted to a fouth-eaft afpeci. The twentieth fort grows naturally at the Cape of Good Fiope, but has been long preferred in many curious gardens in Europe ; the ftalk rifes three or four feet high, fending out feveral long irregular branches, which' are terminated by a compound co- rymbus rymbus of flowers. The heads of this fort are com- peted of leaves, which are much longer than thofe of any other fort ; the heads of the flowers are of a bright filver colour. This is propagated by cuttings, which fhould be planted in the fame manner as hath been directed for' the tenth fort, and the plants fhould alfo be treated in the fame way. The twenty-firft fort was raifed from feeds in the Chelfea garden, which came from the Cape of Good Hope ; the lower leaves of this are oblong and blunt. The {talks are fhrubby, and divide into many irregular branches, which rife about three feet high •, theft are o-arnifhed with oblong blunt-pointed leaves, hoary on their under fide, but of a dark green above •, from the bafe of the leaves runs a border along the ftalk, like a wing, of the fame confidence with the leaves, fo is what the former botanifts termed a winged ftalk, but Dr. Linnaeus calls it a running leaf. The ftalks are terminated by a compound corymbus of flowers, which are very clolely joined together, and are of a bright gold colour, but the flowers are fmall, and change to a darker colour as they fade ; there is a fucceflion of thefe flowers moft part of the fummer, and the early flowers are frequently fucceeded by feeds in Engla id. Thi sfort may be propagated by flips, or cuttings, in the fame manner as the tenth, and the plants may be treated in the fame manner as is diredted for that. It is engraven in the 131ft plate of the figures of plants. The twenty-fecond fort grows naturally in North America, from whence the feeds have been brought to England ; this is a perennial plant, whofe lower leaves are large and oval ; from the main ftalk there come out runners, which take root in the ground, and have young plants at their extremity. The ftalks are Angle, and garnifhed with narrower woolly leaves, ’ placed alternate. The flowers are produced at the top of the ftalks in a corymbus, they are of a white co- lour and fmall. They appear in June and July, and fometimes are fucceeded by feeds, but the plants pro- pagate fo faft by offsets, that the feeds are little re- garded ; this will thrive in the open air, if planted in a dry foil and a warm fituation. The twenty-third fort grows naturally in North Ame- rica ; it is an annual plant, with woolly obtufe leaves. The ftalks are Angle, and rife about nine inches high. The flowers grow in fpikes from the fide of the ftalks ; they are of a dirty white colour, fo make no great appearance. If the feeds of this are permitted to fcatter, the plants will rife without trouble, and only require to be kept clean from weeds. The twenty-fourth fort grows naturally in Jamaica, and other of the hot parts of America •, this riles with a fhrubby ftalk about two feet high, garnifhed with leaves about the ftze and fhape of thofe of Sage, but woolly on their under fide, and much veined ; from the bafe of each leaf runs a border along the ftalk. The flowers are produced in fpikes from the fide, and at the end of the ftalk ; thefe are long, and clolely joined in the fpike. It flowers in July and Auguft, but never perfedts feeds in England. It is propagated by feeds, which fhould be fown on a hot-bed in pots, becaufe the plants do not often rife the fame year ; therefore when it fo happens, the pots fhould be placed in the ftove in winter, and the fol- lowing fpring put upon a frefh hot-bed to bring up the plants -, when thefe appear they muft be planted into pots, and kept conftantly in the hot-bed, other- wife they will not thrive in England. GNAPHALGDES. See Micropus. GNIDI A. The Characters are. It hath a funnel-fhaped empalement of one coloured leaf with a long tube divided into four fegments •, the flower hath four plain petals floor ter than the empalement infer ted to it, and eight briftly erebl ftamina , terminated by fimple fummits, and an ovalgermen fupporting a fender ftyle on the fide inferred with the ftamina , crowned by a flinging ftig- maf the germen afterward becomes one oval oblique-pointed feed , inclofed in the empalement. This genus of plants is ranged in the firft order of Linnaeus’s eighth clafs, intitled Octandria Monogyms, the flower having eight ftamina and one ftyle. We have but one Species of this genus, viz. 1. Gnidia ( Pinifolia ) folks fparfis lineari-fubulatis, flo- ribus verticillatis, aggregatis terminalibus. Lin. Sp, 512. Gnidia with linear awl-fhaped leaves , and flowers placed clofely in whorls terminating the branches. Kapun- culus foliis nervofis linearibus, floribus arsenteis non galeatis. Burm. Afr. 112. This plant grows naturally in ^Ethiopia. It hath a low fhrubby ftalk, which rifes three or four feet high, fending out a few fide branches, garnifhed with narrow, oblong, acute-pointed leaves, which are green on their upper fide, but pale on their under, with a ftrong longitudinal nerve, refembling the leaves of Kofemary : the flowers come out almoft in whorls from between the leaves on the extremitv of the branches, {landing on fhort foot-ftalks ; they have long flender tubes, and are divided at the top into four fegments which ipread horizontally, having eight very fhort ftamina in the bottom of the tube, and an oval germen with a flender ftyle fattened to the fide of the ftamina ; the germen is afterward fucceeded by one oval-pointed feed. There are two varieties of this, one with a white, and the other hath a blue flower. This is ufually propagated here by cuttings, which if carefully planted during the fummer months, in pots filled with light earth, plunged into a very moderate hot-bed, covering the pots clofely with either bell or hand-glaffes to exclude the air, being careful to fhade the glaflfes daily, the cuttings will put out roots in fix weeks, when they fhould be gradually inured to the open air. In winter the plants fhould be placed in a dry airy glafs-cafe, where they may enjoy free air in mild weather, but protected from frolt and damp air. GOMPHRENA. Lin. Gen. Plant. 2 79. Amaran- thoides. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 654. tab. 420. The Characters are, I he flower hath a large three-leaved empalement , which is coloured and permanent. The petal is ereffi , and cut into five parts at the top ■, it hath a cylindrical tububus em- palement the length of the petal , cut into five fmall parts at the brim, which flpread open *, it hath five ftamina fcarcely difcernible, fituated in the brim of the ncBarium, terminated by fummits, flout up in the mouth of the nec- tarium. In the center is fituated an oval-pointed germen , with two fmall ' ftyle s, crowned with Jingle ftigma the length of the ftamina. The germen afterward becomes one large roundijh feed , inclofed in a thin cruft ed capfule with one cell. This genus of plants is ranged in the fecond fection of Linnaeus’s fifth clafs, intitled Pentandria Digynia, which includes the plants whole flowers have five fta- mina and two ftyles. The Species are, 1. Gomphrena ( Globofa ) caule eredto, foliis ovato-lan- ceolatis, capitulis folitaris, pedunculis diphyllis. Hart, Cliff. 86. Gomphrena with an erebl ftalk, oval flpedr- jhaped leaves. Jingle heads , and foot-ftalks having two leaves. Amaranthoides Lychnidis folio, capitulis pur- , pureis. Tourn. Inft, R. H. 654. Globe Amaranthus with purple heads. 2. Gomphrena (Serf at a) caule eredto, fpica interrupt;!. Prod. Leyd. 419. Gomphrena with an ere hi ftalk, and an interrupted fpike of flowers. 3. Gomphrena ( Perennis ) foliis lanceolatis, capitulis di- phyllis, flofeulis perianthio proprio diftindtis. Lin. Sp, Plant. 224. Gomphrena with fpear-fhaped leaves , two leaves to the heads, and each floret having its proper em- palement. Amaranthoides perenne, floribus ftramineis radiatis. Hort. Elth. 24. tab. 20. Perennial Globe Arna- ranthus with radiated ftr aw -coloured flowers. The firft fort grows naturally in India, from whqnce the feeds were brought to Europe, and the plants have been many years cultivated in all the curious gardens : it is an annual plant, which rifes with an upright branching ftalk about two feet high, garnifhed with fpear-fhaped leaves placed oppofite. The branches alfo come out oppofite, and the foot-ftalks of the flowers, which are long and naked, having two fhort leaves. i G O M G O R leaves, clofe under each head of flowers arifes from the forks of the branches. The heads at their ap- pearance are globular, but as they increafe in fize be- come oval-, thefe are compofed of dry fcaly leaves or petals, placed imbricatim like the lcales of fifli; under each of thefe is fituated a tubulous flower, which juft peeps out of the covering, but thefe are uot much regarded by the generality of people ^ for the fcaly empalement which covers them is lo beau- tiful, and thefe if gathered before they are too much faded, will retain their beauty feveral years. After the flowers are paft, the germen, which is fituated in the bottom of each, becomes a large oval feed, in- clofed in a chaffy covering, which ripens late in au- tumn, and the plants decay foon after. There are two varieties of this fort, one with fine bright purple heads, the other hath white or filvery heads, and thele never alter from feeds, fo that they are permanent varieties, though in other refpects they do not differ : thefe is alfo one with mixed colours, but whether this arofe accidentally from the feeds of either of the former, I cannot determine, for this va- riety continues from feeds, and the other two I have cultivated more than thirty years, and have never found either of them vary. There are alfo two varieties of thefe which grow na- turally in the Weft-Indies, one with purple, and the other with white heads, which are much fm aller and rounder than thofe before-mentioned. The plants grow much larger, and fpread more into branches, and they are later before they flower, fo that in cold feafons the feeds rarely ripen in England ; thefe are called Bachelors Buttons by the inhabitants of America, but whether they are fpecifically different from the others, I cannot with certainty determine. The fecond fort hath much flenderer ftalks than the firft, which grow taller, and are irregular. The leaves are fmaller, but of the fame fhape. The flowers grow in fpikes at the end of the branches, which are broken, or divided into three or four parts with fpaces between them. The (pikes are fmall, and of a pale purple colour. The feeds of this fort were fent me by the late Dr. Houftoun from Campeachy. The third fort hath (lender upright ftalks, which are garnifhed with fpear-fhaped leaves placed oppoflte •, they are hairy, and fit clofe to the ftalks, which alfo are hairy, and terminated by fmall heads of flowers, which fpread open from each other, fo as that the em- palement appear diftindt ; thefe are of a pale draw co- lour, and appear in July. The feeds femetimes will ripen in England, but the plants will live two or three years, if they are preferved in a ftove. The two forts with large heads of flowers which are firft mentioned, one with purple, and the other which is filver-coloured, are very ornamental plants in gardens, and are now very commonly cultivated in the Eng- lifti gardens. In Portugal, and other warm countries, they are cultivated, to adorn their churches in the winter ; for if thefe are gathered when they are fully grown, and dried in the (hade, they will retain their beauty a long time, efpecially if they are not expofed to the air , thefe plants are annual, fo are only pro- pagated by feeds, which (hould be fown on a good hot-bed the beginning of March ; but if the feeds are not taken out of their chaffy covering, it will be proper to foak them in water for twelve hours before they are fown, which will greatly facilitate their growing. When the plants are come up half an inch high, they Ihould be tranfplanted on a frefh hot-bed, at about four inches diftance, obferving to fliade them till they have taken root ; then they (hould have frefh air ad- mitted to them every day, in proportion to the warmth of the feafon ; they will alfo require to be frequently refrefiied with water. In about a month’s time, if the hot-bed is of a proper warmth, the plants will have grown fo large, as to nearly meet, therefore they will require more room, otherwife they will draw up weak then a frefh hot-bed fhould be pre- pared, into which there (hould be a fufficient num- ber of three farthing pots plunged, filled with light rich earth, and when the bed is in a proper ternptrak ture of warmth, the plants (hould be carefully taken- tip with balls of earth to their roots, and each planted into a feparate pot, obferving to (hade them till they have taken new root, afterward they muft be treated I in the fame manner as other tender exotic plants; When the plants have filled thefe pots with their roots, they fhould be ftiaken out of the pots, and their roots on the outfide of the ball of earth muft be carefully pared off ; then they fhould be put into pots a fize larger, and when there is conveniency of a deep frame, to plunge the pots into another gentle hot- bed, it will bring the plants early to flower, and caufe them to grow much larger than thofe which are placed abroad. In July the plants (hould be inured gradually to bear the open air, into which they may be removed about the middle of that month, and intermixed with other annual plants to adorn the pleafure-garden ; but it will be proper to keep a plant or two of each fort in fhelter for feeds, becaufe when the autumn proves cold or wet, thofe plants which are expofed abroad, feldom produce good feeds. GOOSEBERRY. See Grossularia. GORTERI A. The Characters are, 1 The empalement of the flower is ft iff, fcaly , ending inbriftly fpines ; the flower is compofed of hermaphrodite florets in the diflk , and female in the rays or border the hermaphro- dite florets are funnel-fhaped, five-pointed, having five floor t ftamina terminated by cylindrical fummits , with a hairy germen flupporting a fender ftyle , crowned by a bifid ftigma-, the germen afterward becomes one roundifh feed , furrounded by fine hairs. ’The female florets are tongue-fhaped , have no ftyle or ftigma , and are barren. This genus of plants is ranged in the third fedlion of Linnaeus’s nineteenth clafs, intitled Syngenefia Poly- gamia fruftranea, the flowers being compofed of her- maphrodite florets in the difk which are fruitful, and female florets in the border, having neither ffyle 6r ftigma, fo are barren. The Species are, i. Gorteria ( Ringens ) fcapis unifloris, foliis lanceolatis pinnatifidis, cauie depreffo. Amcen. Acad. 6. p. 86 . Gorteria with one flower on each foot-ftalk , flpear-Jhaped , "mug-pointed leaves , and a depreffed ftalk. Ardlotis ra- mis decumbentibus, foliis lineari-lanceolatis rigidis fubtus argenteis. Ed. prior. 2. Gorteria (Fruticofa) foliis lanceolatis integris den- tato-fpinofis fubtus tomentofis, cauie fruticofo. Lin. Sp. 1284. Gorteria with entire fpear-fhaped leaves, whofe indentures end in fpines , woolly on their under fide , and a Jhrubby ftalk. Carthamus Africanus frutelcens, folio ilicis, flore aureo. Walth. Hort. 13. tab. 7. The firft fort grows naturally at the Cape of Good Elope ; it is a low fpreading plant, with ligneous ftalks fix or eight inches long trailing on the ground, having two or three fide branches, each terminating in a clofe head of leaves, which are narrow, green on their upper fide, but filvery on their under, cut into three or fivefegments at their ends. The foot-ftalks of the flowers arife from the heads, and are fix inches long, naked, fupporting one large Orange-coloured flower at the top, compofed of feveral hermaphrodite florets in the di(k, which are fruitful •, but the female half florets on the border are tongue-fhaped, fpreading open, each having a dark mark toward their bafe, with, a white fpot intermixed. The flowers appear in May and June, but are feldom fucceeded by feeds iq England. This plant is eafily propagated by cuttings planted in a fhady border during any of the fummer months, and the plants muft be afterward treated as is directed for Arctotis. The fecond fort grows naturally at the Cape of Good Hope. This riles with a fhrubby (lender ftalk three feet high, fending out a few weak branches, garnifhed with oblong leaves fitting dole to the branches •, they are fmooth on their upper fide, woolly underneath, and indented on their edges, each indenture ending with a weak fpine. The flowers terminate the ftalks, having t GOS having leafy empalements ending ...with Ipines ; the itowers are yellow, and appear in the fummer months, but are net fucceeded by feeds in England. It is propagated by planting ofthefmall heads at the end of the branches, in June or July, which mull be clofely covered with either bell or hand-glaffes, or they will not fucceecl, andfhould be carefully fereened from the fun. When thefe are well rooted, they fhould be put each into a ftnall pot, and in winter fhould be placed in an airy glafs-cafe fecure from damps. GORZ. See Ulex. GOSSYPIUM. Lin. Gen. Plant. 755. Xyion. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 10 1. tab. 27. Cotton. The Characters are, fflje flower has a double empalement ; the outer is large , cf one leaf and cut halfway into three fegments ; the in- ner is cup-Jhaped , of one leaf , cut into five obtufe feg- ments at the top. It hath five plain heari-fhaped petals , which join at their bafe , and fpread open. It hath a great number of ftamina , which are joined at botto?n in a column , but are twfe above, and infierted into the petals \ thefe are terminated by kidney-fljaped fummits. It hath a round ger men, fuppor ting four flyles, joined in the column, and are the fame length cf the jiamina, crowned by four thick ftigmas. The germen afterward becomes a roundifh capfule, ending in a point , having four cells, which are filled with oval feeds, wrapped up in- down. This genus of plants is ranged in the third fedtion of Linnaeus’s fixteenth clafs, inticled Monodelphia Polyandria, which includes the plants whole flowers have many ilamina, which are joined together with the flyles in one column or body. The Species are, 1. Gossypium ( Herbaceum ) foliis quinquelobis, caule herb-aceo lsevi. Ido it. Upfal. 203. Cotton with leaves having five lobes, and a fmooth herbaceous ftalk. Gof- fypium. Camer. Epit. 203. The common herbaceous Cotton. 2. Gossypium ( Barbadenfe ) foliis trilobis integerrimis fubtus biglandulofis. Hort. Upfal. 205. Cotton-tree with entire leaves, having three lobes with three glands under their fide. Gofiypium frutefeens annuum, folio trilobo Barbadenfe. Pluk. Aim. 172. tab. 188. Shrub- by annual Barbadoes Cotton, with leaves having three lobes. 3. Gossypium ( Arbor eum ) foliis palmatis, lobis lanceo- latis, caule fruticofo. Lin. Sp. Plant. 693. Cotton with handfioaped leaves, having five fpear-jhaped lobes , and a jhrubby ftalk. Xyion arboreum, flore flavo. T ourn. Inll. R. H. 1 o 1 . Tree Cotton with a yellow flower. 4. Gossypium ( Hirfutum ) foliis trilobis & quinquelobif- que acutis, caule ramofo hirfuto. Cotton with leaves having three and five lobes, ending in acute points, and a hairy branching ftalk. Xyion Americanum praeftan- tiflimum, femine virefeente. Lign. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 1 o 1 . Tine ft American Cotton with a green feed. The firft fort is the' common Levant Cotton, v/hich is cultivated in feveral Elands of the Archipelago, as alfo in Malta, Sicily, and the kingdom of Naples ; it is lown in tilled ground in the fpring of the year, and is ripe in about four months after, when it is cut down in harveft as Corn is in England; the plants always perifh foon after the feeds are ripe : this plant grows about two feet high, with an herbaceous ftalk, garnifhed with fmooth leaves divided into five lobes. Theftalks fendout afewweak branches upward, which are garnifhed with leaves of the fame form but fmaller. The flowers are produced near the extremity ol the branches, at the foot-ftalks of the leaves ; thefe have two large empalements, the outer is cut into three parts, and the inner into five. The petals of the flower are of a pale yellow colour; inclining to white ; thefe are fucceeded by oval capfules, which open in four parts, having four cells, which are .filled with feeds wrapped up in down, which is the Cotton. The fecond fort grows naturally in feveral iflands of the Weft-Indies ; this riles with a fhrubby fmooth ftalk four or five feet high, lending out a few fide branches, which are garnifhed with fmooth leaves, divided into three lobes. The flowers are produced toward the end of the branches, which are fhaped like thole of G R A the former fort, but are larger, and of a deeper yellow colour. The pods are larger, and the feeds are black. The third fort hath a perennial fhrubby ftalk, which rifes fix or eight feet high, and divides into many fmooth branches, garnifhed with hand-lhaped leaves, having four or five lobes. The flowers- are produced toward the end of the branches ; thefe are larger than thofe of the two former forts, and are of . a deep yel- low colour. The pods of this fort are larger than thofe of the former. The fourth fort is a native of the Eaft and Weft- Indies, from whence the feeds have been brought to Europe ; this is alfo an annual plant, which perukes foon after the feeds are ripe. It rifes to the height of three feet or more, and fends out many lateral branches, which extend to a great diftance, where they are al- lowed room to grow ; thefe are hairy, and gar- nifhed with leaves, having in fome three, and others five acute-pointed lobes, with fhort hairy down on their furface. The flowers are produced from the fide, and at the end of the branches ; thefe are large, of a dirty fulphur colour, each petal having a large purple foot at the bafe, and are fucceeded by oval pods, which open into four cells, which are filled with oblong green feeds wrapped up in a foft down. Where the plants have room to fpread, their branches will produce four or five pods of Cotton upon each, fo that from a fingle plant, thirty or more pods may be pro- duced ; and each of thefe are as large as middling Ap- ples, fo there will be a much greater produce from this than from any other fort, and the ftaple is much finer ; therefore it is well worth the attention of the inhabitants of the Britifh colonies in America to cultivate and im- prove this fort, fince it will fucceed in Carolina, where it it has been cultivated for fome years ; and might be a commodity worthy of encouragement by the pub- lic, could they contrive a proper gin to feparate the Cotton from the feeds, to which this fort adheres much clofer than any of the other forts, the Cotton from this fhrub being preferable to any other yet known. All thefe forts are very tender plants, therefore will not thrive in the open air in. England, but they are frequently fown in curious gardens for variety,: the firft and fourth forts will produce ripe feeds in England, if their feeds are fown early in the fpring, upon a good hot-bed ; and when the plants are come up, planted each into feparate pots, and plunged into a hot-bed of tanners bark to bring them forward ; and when they are grown too tall to remain under the frames, re- moved into the tan-bed in the Hove, and fhifted into larger pots, when their roots have filled the other ; with this management I have had their flowers appear in July, and toward the end of September the feeds have been perfectly ripe, and the pods as large as thofe produced in the Eaft and Weft-Indies but if the plants are not brought forward early in the fpring, it will be late in the fummer before the flowers will appear, and there will be no hopes of the pods coming to perfection. The Shrub-cotton will rife from the feeds very eafily, if they are fown upon a good hot- bed ; and when they are fown early in the fpring, and brought forward in the fame manner as hath been direfted for the for- mer forts, the plants will grow to be five or fix feet high the fame fummer; but it is difficult to preferve the plants through the winter, unlefs they are harden- ed gradually in Auguft during the continuance of the warm weather ; for when they are forced on at that time, they will be fo tender, as to render them inca- pable of re filling the lead injury. The plants of this fort mull be placed in the bark-ftove in autumn, and kept in the firft clafs of heat, other wife they will not live through the winter in England. GRAFTING is the taking a,fhoot from .one tree, and inferring it into another, in fuch a manner, as that both may unite clofely, and become one tree ; this is called by the ancient writers in hufbandry and gardening, incifion, to diftinguifh it from inoculat- ing, or budding, which they call inferere oculos, 6 H The The life of grafting is to propagate any curious forts of fruits, fo as to be certain of the kinds, which cannot be done by any other method ; for as all the good fruits have been accidentally obtained from feeds, fo the feeds of thefe, when fown, will many of them degenerate, and produce inch fruit as are not worth cultivating j but when flioots are taken from fuch trees as produce good fruit, thefe will never alter from their kind, whatever be the dock, or tree, on which they are grafted ; for though the grafts receive their nouriihment from the docks, yet their varieties are never altered by them, but continue to produce the fame kind of fruit as the tree from which they were taken-, the only alteration is, that when the docks on which they are grafted do not grow fo fad, and afford a fufficient fupply of nouriihment to the grafts, they will not make near fo great progrefs as they otherwife would do, nor will the fruit they produce be fo fair, and fometimes not fo well flavoured. Thefe Ihoots are termed cions, or graffs ; in the choice or thefe the following directions fliould be care- fully obferved. id. That they are flioots of the for- mer year, for when they are older, they never fuc- ceed well. 2dly, Always to take them from healthy fruitful trees, for if the trees are fickly from whence they are taken, the grafts very often partake fo much of the didemper as rarely to get the better of it, at lead for fome years -, and when they are taken from young luxuriant trees, whofe veffels are generally large, they will continue to produce luxuriant dioots, and are fel- dom fo fruitful as thofe which are taken from fruitful trees, whofe fhoots are more compaCt, and thejoints clofer together ; at lead it will be a great number of years before the luxuriant grafts begin to produce fruit, if they are managed with the greated fkill. 3dly, You diould prefer thofe grafts which are taken from the lateral, or horizontal branches, to thofe from the drong perpendicular flioots, for the reafons before given. Thefe grafts, or cions, fliould be cut off from the trees before their buds begin to fwell, which is gene- rally three weeks or a month before the feafon for grafting therefore, when they are cut off, they fliould be laid in the ground with the cut downwards, bury- ing them half their length, and covering their tops with dry litter, to prevent their drying ; if a frnail joint of the former year’s wood is cut off with the cion, it will preferve it the better, and when they are grafted, this may be cut off 5 for at the fame time the cions mud be cut to a proper length before they are inferted in the docks ; but, till then, the fhoots fliould remain their full length, as they were taken from the tree, which will preferve them better from fhrinking if thefe cions are to be carried to a con- fiderable didance, it will be proper to put their ends into a lump of clay, and to wrap them up in mofs, which will preferve them frefii for a month, or longer ; but thefe fliould be cut off earlier from the trees than thofe which are to be grafted near the place where the trees are growing. Having given directions for the cions and grafts, we next come to that of the dock, which is a term applied to the trees intended for grafting thefe are either fuch old trees as are already growing in the places where they are to remain, whofe fruit is intended to be changed, or young trees, which have been raifed in a nurfery for a fupply to the garden ; in the former cafe there i$ no other choice, but that of the branches, which fliould be fuch as are young, healthy, well fituated, and have a frnooth bark if thefe trees are growing againd walls, or efpaliers, it will be proper to graft fix, eight, or ten branches, ac- cording to the fize of the trees, by which they will be much fooner furnifhed with branches again, than when a lefs number of cions are put in ; but in ftandard-trces, four, or at mod fix cions will be dif- fident. in the choice of young docks for grafting, you fliould always prefer fuch as have been raifed from the 5 feed, and that have been once or twice tranfplanted. Next to thefe, are thofe docks which have been raifed from cuttings, or layers, but thofe which are fuckers from the roots of other trees diould always be re- jected, for thefe are never fo well rooted as the others, and condantly put out a great number of fuckers from their roots, whereby the borders and walks of the garden will be always pedered with them dur- ing the dimmer feafon, which is not only unfightly, but they alfo take off part of the nouriihment from the trees. If thefe docks have been allowed a proper didance in the nurfery where they have grown, the wood will be better ripened, and more compadt than thofe which have grown clofe and have been there drawn up to a greater height ; the wood of thefe wiil be foft, and their veffels large, fo that the cions grafted into them wiil fnoot very drong, but they will be lefs difpofed to produce fruit than the other and when trees acquire an ill habit at fird, it will be very difficult to reclaim them afterward. Having directed the choice of cions and docks, we come next to the operation, in order to which you mud be provided with the following tools. 1. A neat fmall hand-faw to cut off the heads of large docks. 2. A good drong knife with a thick back, to make clefts in the docks. 3. A fharp penknife to cut the grafts. 4. A grafting chiffel and a fmall mallet. 5. Bafs drings, or woollen yam, to tie the grafts with, and fuch other indruments and materials as you fhould find neceffary, according to the manner of grafting you are to perform. 6. A quantity of clay, which fliould be prepared a month before it is ufed, and kept turned and mixed, like mortar every other day, which is to be made af- ter the following manner : Get a quantity of drong fat loam (in proportion to the quantity of trees intended to be grafted, then take fome new done-horfe dung, and break it in amongd the loam, and if you cut a little draw, or hay, very fmall, and mix amongd it, the loam will hold together the better ; and if there be a quantity of fait added, it will prevent the clay from dividing in dry weather ; thefe mud be weil dirred together, putting water to them after the manner of making mortar ; it fhould be hollowed like a difh, and filled with water, and kept every other day dirred but it ought to be remembered, that it diould not be ex- pofed to the frod, or drying winds, and the oftener it is dirred and wrought the better. Of late years fome perl'ons have made ufe of another compofition for grafting, which they have found to anfwer the intention of keeping out the air, better than the clay before deferibed. This is compofed of turpentine, bees-wax, and rofin, melted together, which, when of a proper confidence, may be put on the dock round the graft, in the fame manner as the clay is ufually applied ; and though it be not above a quarter of an inch thick, yet it will keep out the air more effectually than the clay j and as cold will harden this, there is no danger of its being hurt by frod, which is very apt to caufe the clay to cleave, and fome- times fall off ; and when the heatef dimmer comes on, this mixture will melt, and fall off without any trou- ble. In udng of this, there fliould be a tin, or cop- per-pot, with conveniency under it to keep a very gentle fire v/ith fmall-coal, otherwife the cold will foon condenfe the mixture but you mud be careful not to apply it too hot, led you injure the graft. A perfon who is a little accudomed to this compofition, will apply it very fad, and it is much eafier for him than clay, efpecially if the feafon fliould prove cold. There are feveral ways of grafting, the principal of which are four : 1. Grafting in the rind, called alfo fhoulder-grafe- O m _ w ^ ^ ing, which is only proper for large trees ; this is called crown-grafting, becaufe the grafts are fet in form of a circle, or crown, and is generally per- formed formed about the latter end of March, or the be- ginning of April. 2. Cleft-grafting, which is alfo called flock, or Hit- grafting *, this is proper for trees or flocks of a leffer fize, from an inch, to two inches or more diameter , this grafting is to be performed in the months of Fe- bruary and March, andfiipplies the failure of the efcut- cheomvay, which is praftifed in June, July, and Auguft. 3. Whip-grafting, which is alfo called tongue-graft- ing ; this is proper for fmall flocks of an inch, half an inch, or lefs, diameter ; this is the moft effectual way of any, and which is moil in ufe. 4. Grafting by approach, or abla&ation $ this is to be performed when the flock you would graft on, and the tree from which you take your graft, Hand fo near together, that they may be joined , this is to be performed in the month of April, and is alfo called inarching, and is chiefly ufed for Jafmines, Granges, and other tender exotic trees. We come next to the manner of performing the fe- deral ways of grafting. The firft method, which is termed rind, or fhoulder- grafting, is feldom pradifed but on large trees, where either the head, or the large branches, are cut off horizontally, and two or four cions put in, accord- ing to tire fize of the branch, or idem ■, in doing of this, the cions are cut flat on one fide, with a flioul- der to reft upon the crown of the flock , then the rind of the flock muft be railed up, to admit the cion between the wood and the bark of the flock, which muft be inlerted about two inches, fo as the fhoulder of the cion may meet, and clofely join the crown of the flock •, and after the number of cions are inferred, the whole crown of the flock fhould be well clayed over, leaving two eyes of the cions uncovered there- with, which will be fufficient for fhooting , this me- thod of grafting, was much more in practice formerly than at prefent , the difcontinuance of it was occafion- ed by the ill fuccefs it was attended with , for as thefe cions were placed between the rind of the flock and the wood, fo they are frequently blown out by ftrong winds, after they had made large fhoots, which has fometimes happened after five or fix years growth •, fo that whenever this method is praftifed, there fhould be fome flakes fattened to fupport the cions, until they have almoft covered the Hock. The next method is termed cleft, or flock-graft- ing ; this is pradifed upon flocks, or trees, of a fmaller fize, and may be ufed with fuccefs, where the rind of the flock is not too thick, whereby the inner bark of the cion will be prevented joining to that of the flock , this may be performed on flocks, or branches, which are more than one inch diameter , in the doing of this, the head of the flock, or branch, muft be cut off with a flope, and a flit made the con- trary way, in the top of the flope, deep enough to receive the cion, which fhould be cut Hoping like a wedge, fo as to fit the flit made in the flock, being careful to leave that fide of the wedge, which is to be placed outward, much thicker than the other , and in putting the cion into the flit of the flock, there muft be great care taken to join the rind of the cion to that of the flock •, for if thefe do not unite, the grafts will not fucceed : when this method of grafting is ufed to flocks which are not ftrong, it will be proper to make a ligature of bals, to prevent the flit of the Hock from opening •, then the whole fhould be clayed over, to prevent the air from penetrating the flit, fo as to deftroy the grafts, only leaving two eyes of the cions above the clay for fhooting. The third method is termed whip, or tongue-graft- ing, which is the moft commonly pradifed of any by the nurferymen near London, efpeciaily for fmall flocks, becaufe the cions much fooner cover the flocks in this method than in any other. This is performed by cutting off the head of the flocks Hoping , then there muft be a notch made in the Hope toward the upper part downward, a little more than half an inch deep, to receive the cion, which muft be cut with a flope upward, and a flit made in this flope like a tongue, which tongue muft be in- flated into the flit tnade in the flope of the ftock,* Mel the cion muft be placed on one fide of the ftock, fd as that the two rinds of both cion arid ftotk may be fcqual, and join together exadly , then thefe fliotlld be a ligature of bafs to fatten the cion, fo as that it may hot be eafily' difplaCed, and afterward clay it over,' a£ in the former methods. . The fourth fort of grafting is termed inarching- grafting by approach, or abladation. This is only to be performed when the flocks,’ which are defigned. to be grafted, and the tree from which the graft is to be taken, Hand fo near together, or may be brought fo near together, as that their branches may be united j this method of grafting is commonly pradifed on ten- der exotic plants, and fome other forts which do hot fucceed in any of the other methods. In performing this operation, a part of the flock,- or branch, rnuft be flit off about two inches in length* obferving always to make choice of a fmooth part of the ftock •, then a fmall notch fhould be made in this flit of the ftock downward, in the fame manner as hath: been directed for whip-grafting •, then the branch of the tree defigned to be inarched, fhould have a part flit off in like manner as the ftock, and a flit made upward in this, fo as to leave a tongue ; which tongue fhould be inferted into the flit of the ftock* obferving to join their rinds equally, that they may unite well together-, then make a ligature of bafs, to keep them exadly in their fituation, and afterward day this part of the ftock over well, to keep out the air ; in this method of grafting, the cion is not feparated from the tree, until it is firmly united with the flock, nor is the head of the ftock, or branch, which is grafted, cut off till this time, and only half the wood pared off with a flope, about three inches in length, and the fame of the cion, or graft. This method of grafting’ is not performed fo early in the feafon as thofe of the other, it being done in the month of April, when the fap is flowing, at which time the cion and ftock will join together, and unite much fooner than at any other feafon. The Y/alnut, Fig, and Mulberry, will take by this method of grafting, but neither of thefe will fucceed in any of the other methods ; there a.re alfo feveral forts of Evergreens, which may be propagated by this method of grafting ; but all the trees which are graft- ed in this way are weaker, and never grow to the fize of thofe which are grafted in the other methods j therefore this is rarely pradifed, but on fdcli forts of trees as v/ill not take by the other methods. The next thing which is neceffary to be known, by thofe who would pradife this art, is, what trees will take and thrive by being grafted upon each other , and here there have been no fure diredions given by any of the writers on this fubject, for there will be found great miftakes in all their books, in relation to this - matter but as'it would fwell this article too great, if all the forts of trees were to be here enumerated, which will take upon each other by grafting, I fhall only men- tion fuch general directions, as, if attended to, will be fufficient to inftrud perfons, fo as they may fucceed. All fuch trees as are of the fame genus, i. e: which will agree in their flower and fruit, will take upon each other : for inftance, all the Nut-bearing trees may- be fafely grafted on each other, as may all theTIumb- bearing trees, under which head I reckon not only the feveral forts of Plumbs, but alfo the Almond* Peach, Nectarine, Apricot, &c. which agree exadly in their general charaders, by which they are dif- tinguifhed from all other trees , but as many of thefe are very fubjed to emit large quantities of gum from the parts of the trees as are deeply cut and wounded, fo the tender trees of this kind, viz. Peaches and Nec- tarines, which are moft fubject to this, it is found to be the fureft method to bud or inoculate thefe forts of fruits, for which fee Inoculation. Then all fuch trees as bear cones will do well ilpoii each other, though they may differ in one being ever- green, and the other fhedding its leaves in winter ; as is obiervbale in the Cedar of Libanus, and the Larch- tree, which are found to fucceed upon each other very well *3 ' "Well •, but thefe moft be grafted by approach, for they abound with a great quantity of refin which is apt to evaporate from the graft, if ieparated from the tree before it is joined with the flock, whereby they are often, deicroyed ; as alfo the Laurel on the Cherry, or the Cherry on the Laurel. All the maft-bearing trees will alfo take upon each other, and thofe which have a tender foft wood will do well if grafted in the com- mon way • but thofe that are of a more firm contex- ture, and are flow growers, fliould be grafted by ap- proach. By Acridly obferving this rule, we fhall feldom mif- carry, provided the operation be rightly, performed, and at a proper feafon, unlefs the weather fhould prove • very bad, as it fometimes, happens, whereby whole quarters of fruit-trees mifcarry ; and it is by this rne- . thod that many kinds of exotic trees are not only propagated, but alfo rendered hardy enough to en- dure the cold of our climate in the open air ; for, being grafted upon flocks of the fame fort which are hardy, the grafts are rendered more capable to endure the cold, as hath been experienced by moft of our valuable fruits now in England, which were formerly tranfp|inted here from more foutherly climates, and were at firft too impatient of our cold to fucceed well abroad, but have been, by budding or grafting upon more hardy trees, rendered capable of refilling our fevered: cold. And thefe different graftings feem to have been greatly in uie among the ancients, though they were certainly miftaken in the feveral forts of fruits which they mention to have fucceeded upon each other ; as the Fig upon the Mulberry, the Plumb, upon the Cheft- nut, with many others of the like kind •, moft of which 1 have already tried, and find they will not fucceed •, therefore what has been advanced on this head by the ancients, is not founded on experience •, or at leaft they did not mean the fame plants, which at prefent are called by thofe names ; though J cannot help thinking we are apt to pay too much deference to the writings of the ancients, in fuppofmg them feldom to be miftaken, or to affert a falfnood ; whereas, if their works are carefully examined, it will be found, that they have often copied from each other’s writings, without making experiments to prove the truth of their affertions : and it is well known, that the ranging of plants' before Cadalpinus’s time (which is about 170 years fince) was, by their outward appearance, or from the fuppofed virtues of them, which me- thod is now juftly exploded; and it hath been ob- ferved, from many repeated trials, that however plants may refemble each other in the Ihape and make of their leaves, manner of {hooting, &c. unlefs they agree in their fruit, and their other diftindive cha- rade rs, they will not grow upon each other, though performed with ever fo much art. G R A M E N. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 516. tab. 297. Raii Meth. Plant. 171. Grafs-, in French, Chien-dent. To enumerate ail the fpecies of Grafs which are found growing naturally in England, would fwell this arti- cle greatly beyond the defign of the work therefore I , fhall only take notice of a few fpecies, which are ei- ther ufed in medicine, or cultivated for fodder for there is fcarce a pafture in this country, where at leaft twenty different fpecies are not to be found in- termixed, and in moft of them more than twice that number. Thefe were, by the former writers on bo- tany, all included under the common denomination of Gramen, but were divided into different fedions. Mr. Ray has ranged them in the following order, Gramen Trkicum, i. e. Wheat-grafs. Gramen Seca- linum, i. e. Rye-grafs. Gramen Loliaceum, i. e. Dar- neffgrafs. Gramen Paniceum, i. e. Panic-grafs. Gra- men Phalaroides, i, e. Canary-grafs. Grarnen Alope- curoides, 1. e. Fox-tail-grafs. Gramen Typhinum, i. e. Cat’s-tail-grafs. Gramen Echinatum, i. e. Hedge- hog-grafs. Gramen Criftatum, i. e. Crefted-grafs. Gramen Avenacium, i. e. Oat-grafs. Gmamen Dac- tylon, i. e. Cock’s-foot-grafs. Gramen Arundina- ceum, i. e, Reed-grafs. Gramen Milieacem, i. e. Millet-grafs.' And under each of thefe fe&ibns there are many fpecies. And there are many others, which, by older writers, were included under this general title, fome of which have no relation to this clafs % but there are others which are near nearly allied to it, as the Cyperus and Cyprels Grades, &c. Thefe Dr. Linnaeus has divided into genera ; but by this method of claffing them, he iitiS Ieparated them to a great cliftance from each. other ; for all thole whofe. flowers have three (lamina, are ranged in his third clafs ; and others ^ which have male and female flowers, are re- moved to his twenty-firft clafs. However, it would have^been much better to have kept them together, as Dr. Van Royen has done in the Prodromus of the Leyden garden, under one general tide to the clafs of Graminea. As the feveral genera under which the different foe- cies of Grafs are ranged, have different characters by which they are diftinguifhed, fo it would be to little purpofe to give them all in this work ; and as there are no general charaderiftics by which the whole clafs can be known, lb I fhall not trouble the reader with any of them here, but proceed to enumerate a few of the fpecies. 1. Gramen fpica triticea repens vulgare, can in urn d ilium. Raii Syn. 2. p. 247. Common creeping Grafs with a fpike like Wheat , called Dog-grafs. "'Trki- cum calycibus fublatis trifloris acuminatis. Lin. Sp. Plant. Wheat with an awl-fhaped pointed empalemenl including three flowers, commonly called Couch , Couch-grafs , or Quick-grafs. J 2. Gramen loliaceum, anguftiore folio & fpica. C. B. P. Darnel-grafs , with a narrower leaf and flpike . . Lolium fpica mutica. Lin. Sp. Plant. 83. Darnel with a chaffy flpike , commonly called Ray , or Rye-grafs. 3. Gramen pratenfe, paniculatum majus anguftiore folio. C. B. P. 2. Meadow-grafls with larger panicles and a narrower leaf. Poa panicula diffusa, fpiculis qua- drifioris pubefeentibus, culmo eredo tereti. Ffor. Suec. 77. Poa with a difflufled panicle, the flmaller flpikes having flour hairy flowers , and a taper erect fir aw'.. 4. Gramen pratenfe, paniculatum majus, latiore folio. C. B. P. 2. Meadow-grafs with a larger panicle arid broader leaf. Poa panicula diffufa fpiculis trifloris pfla- bris, culmo eredo tereti. Flor. Suec. 76. Poa with a diflfufed panicle, frnall flpikes with three flowers, and an up- right ftraw. 5. Gramen avenacium pratenfe elatius panicula flave- feente, locuftis parvis. Raii Syn. 407. Patter Mea- dow Oat-grafs, with ay ellowifh pdnicle and fmallhnfts. Avena panicula laxa, calycibus trifloris brevibss, flofeulis omnibus ariftatis. Prod. Leyd. 66. Oat-grafs with a loofe panicle, three flowers in each empalement, which is floort, and all the flowers having awns. . 6. Gramen fecalinum. Ger. Emac. lib. 1. cap.' 22. n. 4. Pall Meadow Rye grafs. 7. Gramen tremulum maximum. C. B. P. 2. Great eft Quaking-graft, or Ccwqnakes. Briza fpiculis cordatis, flofeulis feptendecim. Hort. Cliff. 23. Briza with heart-ftoaped little fpikes , and feventeen flowers in each. - The firft fort of Grafs is that which is direded to be ufed in medicine ; the roots of this are chiefly ufed, and are accounted aperitive and diuretic, opening ob- ftrudions of the reins and bladder,' provoking urine, and are of fervice againft the gravel and ftone. The juice of the leaves andftalks was greatly efteemed by Dr. Boerhaave, who generally preferibed this in all cafes where he fuppofed there were any obftrudions in the bile conduit. This hath a creeping root, which fpreads far in the ground, and is a very troublefome weed in gardens and arable land for every fmali piece of the root will grow and multiply exceedingly, fo it is very dif- ficult to extirpate where it once gets pofiefiion : in gardens, the common method of deftroying it is, to fork out the roots as often as the blades appear above ground where this is two or three times carefully repeated, it may be totally rooted out ; but when the furface of the ground is very full of the roots cf this Grafs, the fhorteft way cf deftroying it, is to trench the G R A the ground two fpits and a (hovelling deep, turning all the couch into the bottom, where it will rot, and never (hoot up ; but this can only oe piattiied, where there is a fufficient depth of foil ■, for in fh allow ground the roots cannot be buried fo deep, as to li - belov/ the depth to which they naturally (hoot. Where the roots of this Grafs get poffeffion in ara- ble fields, it is very difficult to root out again j the ufual method is by laying the land fallow in fummer, and frequently harrowing it well over to draw out the roots : where this is carefully pradtifed, the ground may be fo well cleaned in one fummer, as that the roots cannot much injure the crop which may be fown upon it ; but iuch land (hould be cropped with Beans, Peas, or fuch things as require the horfe-hoeing cul- ture •, for where the land can be frequently ftirred and harrowed afterward, it will be of great Service in cleaning it from the roots of this Grais and other bad weeds. The blade of this Grafs is fo rough, that cat- tle will not feed upon it. The fecond fort is frequently cultivated,^ efpecially in ftrong cold land, upon which this Grais will Suc- ceed better than any other fpecies, and is an earlier feed in the fpring but this is a very coarfe Grafs, and unlefs it is cut very early for hay, it becomes hard and wiery in the (talks, fo that few cattle care to eat it ; for this fpecies has but few leaves, running all to ftalk, fo is ufually called Bents, and in Tome counties Bennet •, when this grafs is fed, it will be proper to mow off the Bents in the beginning of June, other- wife they will dry upon the ground, and have the ap- pearance of a ftubbie field ail the latter part of fum- mer •, fo that it' will not only be very difagreeable to the fight, but alfo be trcublefome to the cattle that feed on it, by tickling their noftrils ; fo that the want of better pafture only, will force them to eat of the young Grafs which fprings up between thefeBents, for thofe they will not touch •, therefore thofe who fuppofe that thefe are eaten in Scarcity of feed by the cattle, are greatly miftaken •, for I have many years clofely attended to this, and have always found thefe Bents remaining on the ground untouched, till the froft, rain, and winds, deftroy it in winter ; and, by permitting thefe to (land, the after-growth of the Grafs is greatly retarded, and the beautiful verdure is loft for three or four months ; fo that it is good hufbandry to mow them before they grow too dry, and rake them off the ground : if thefe are then made into the hay, it will ferve for cart-horfes or cows feed in winter, and will pay the expence of mow- ing it. There is another fpecies of this Grafs called Red Dar- nel, which is of a worfe nature than the firft, the (talks growing hard much fooner, and having nar- rower leaves. This is very common in moft pafture grounds, for as it comes early to (lower, fo the feeds are generally ripe before the hay is cut, and from the falling feeds the ground is fupplied with plenty of this iort ; therefore thofe who are defirous to keep their paitures as clear from this Grafs as poffible, (fiould always mow it before the feeds are ripe. This Grafs is ufually fown with Clover, upon fuch lands as are defigned to be ploughed again in a few years, and the common method is to fow it with Spring Corn ; but from many repeated trials, I have always found, that by fowing thefe feeds in Auguft, when there has happened a few (howers to bring up the Grafs, that the crop has anfwered much better than any which has been fown in the common way •, for the Grafs has often been fo rank, as to afford a good feed the fame autumn *, and the following fpring there has been a ton and a half of hay per acre mowed very early in the feafon, and this has been upon cold four land ; fo that I am convinced of that being the bed feafon for fowing thefe Graffes, though it will be very difficult to perfuade thofe perfens to alter their prac- tice, who have been long wedded to old cuftoms. The quantity of feeds which I allow to an acre is about two bufhels, and eight pounds of the common Clover, which, together, will make as good plants upon the ground as can be defired ; but this is nor to be pram tiled upon Inch lands where .the beauty of the verdure is principally regarded, therefore is fit for thole who have only profit in view. The third and fourth forts are the two bed fpecies of Grafs for paitures, io that if the feeds of there were carefully collected and (own leparately without any other mixture of Grafs-feeds, they would not only af- ford a greater quantity of leed on the fame (pace of land, but the Graft would alfo be better, the hay fweeter, and the verdure more lading than of any other forts ; but there requires feme attention to the faving of thefe feeds pure without mixture. I have tried to lave the feeds of feverai fpecies of Grafs (se- parately, in order to determine their qualities, but have found it very difficult to keep them diftindl in gardens where the feeds of other (arts of Grais have been fcattered : the only method in which I could (uc- ceed, was by fowing each fpecies in a diftindt pot, and when the plants came up, to weed out all the other kinds of Grais which came up in the pots ; by this means I preferved a great variety of the graffy tribe feverai years, but not having ground enough to propagate the moft ufeful fpecies in any quantity, I was obliged to abandon the purfuit : but I muft re- commend this to perfons of ieifure and (kill who have a fufficient quantity of land for the purpofe, to carry this project into execution, which may be of lingular benefit to the public for we have an inftance of the advantage which the inhabitants of the Netherlands have made, by faving the feeds of the White Clover, or Honeyfuckle Trefoil, which is a plant common to moft of the Engliffi paitures ; yet few perfons in this country ever gave themielves the trouble to collect the feeds from the fields for fowing, but have pur- chafed vaft quantities of this feed annually, at a con- fiderable price from Flanders, where the peafants have been fo induftrious, as to collect the feeds and fow great quantities of land with it, with a view of (ale to this country only. This is not an inconsiderable ar- ticle in hufbandry, but deferves the attention of all thofe, who, by choice or otherwife, are engaged in the bufinefs of agriculture •, for one acre of land will produce as much feeds of this fpecies of Trefoil, as will fell for 12 1. wheie it is well planted and laved from the fpring crop ; and if the Grafs-feeds before- mentioned were Separately fown, and carefully weeded from all other fpecies, and permitted to (land till their feeds were ripe, it might be of equal advan- tage with the other, efpecially now, when every gen- tleman is endeavouring to improve the verdure near their habitations. The fifth and fixth forts are alfo, very good Graffes for paftures, and have perennial roots, fo are the next bed forts for fowing to thole before-mentioned, which, in my opinion, delerve the preference to all the other; but as it will be difficult to lave a fufficient quantity of feeds of thofe alone, to Supply the de- mand which may be for their Seeds •, So thefe two fpe- cies may be admitted in aid of the other, as they are very leafy kinds of Grafs, and their ftaiks do not be- come (tiff and harfh like many other fpecies, but with proper care may be made very fine ; and, if duly rolled, their roots w 11 mat and form a very dole fward, therefore thefe (fiould be included in the num- ber of fown Graffes. The feventh fort is mentioned for the fake of variety, and not for uSe ; this hath an annual root, which fends up many broad hairy leaves, between which arife (len- der (tiff ftaiks from a foot to near two two feet high, dividing upward into a large look panicle, garnifhed with heart Shaped Small Spikes, each having about Se- venteen Small flofcules or florets ; thefe, after the flowers are paft, have a Single Seed Succeeding them ; the heads hang by (lender long foot-ftalks, which are moved by every wind. So that they generally appear (Baking, from whence it had the title of Quaking Grafs. There arc four fpecies or this Grafs, two of them grow naturally in England •, and thefe Graffes coming to head m May, occasioned the following 6 I Englii'k i JJ3 G R A Englifh proverb. May come foe early come foe late, .makes the cow quake. The large fort here mentioned, grows naturally in the fouth of France and Italy, and- is only preferred in feme Engiith gardens for the fake of variety. If the feeds of this fort are fown in the autumn, or permitted to fcatter when ripe, the plants will come up ftronger, and flower much earlier, than when they are fown in the fpring, fo good feeds may always be expected from them, which can feldom be attained from the fpring plants in England •, and as two or three plants of this fort will be full enough in a garden for variety, fo thefe fhould be allowed to fpread ; for where they grow at a diftance from each other, the roots will fend out a great number of ftalks, which will be ftronger, and produce much larger panicles than thole which are too near together. The Cock’s- foot Grafs, Capon’s-tail Grafs, and Mil- let Grades are too coarfe todeferve attention in Eng- i land, though feme of their fpecies are very ufeful in the warm parts of America, where there is a great fear- city of finer Grafs •, and feme of thefe are much bet- ter adapted to thofe warm countries, than any of our European Graffes, for many of them lie flat on the ground, and emit roots from their joints, fo are well prepared for heat •, their ftalks are large and juicy, fo will live in heat where few of the European Graffes can be made to thrive. The land on which Grafs-feed is intended to be fown, fnould be well ploughed, and cleared from the roots of noxious weeds, fuch as Couch-grafs, F ern, Rufties, Heath, Gorfe, Broom, Reft-harrow, &c. which, if left in the ground, will foon get the better of the Grafs, and over-run the land. Therefore in fuch places where either of thefe weeds abound, it will be a good method to plough up the furface in April, and let it lie feme time to dry ; then harrow the roots into fmall heaps, and burn them. The allies fo produced, when fr fad on the land, will be a good manure for it. The method of burning the roots is particularly direbled under the article Land, which fee : but where Couch- grafs, Fern, or Reft-harrow is in plenty, whole roots run far under ground, the land mult be ploughed two or three times pretty deep in dry weather, and the roots carefully harrowed off after each ploughing, which is the riofbfure method to deftroy them. Where the land is very low, and of a ftiff clayey nature, which holds water in winter, it will be of Angular fer- vice to make feme under-ground drains to carry off the wet ; which, if detained too long on the ground, will render the Grafs four. The method of making thefe drains is preferibed under the article Land, which fee. Before the feed is fown, the furface of the ground fhould be made level and fine, otherwife the feed will be buried unequal. When the feed is fown, it muft be gently harrowed in, and the ground rolled with a wooden roller, which will make the furface even, and prevent the feeds being blown in patches. When the Grafs comes up, if there fhould be any bare fpots, where the feed has not grown, they may be fown again, and the ground rolled, which will fix the feeds ; and the firft kindly fhowers will bring up the Grafs, and make it very thick. Where the land is defigned to continue in pafture, it fhould be fown with the belt forts of Grafs-feeds, and white Dutch Clover, or what is commonly called Ho- neyfuckle Grafs in many parts of England, but there is a great difficulty of procuring hay-feeds which are good ; for in all the good paftures near London, which abound with the belt forts of Grafs, the hay is com- monly cut before the feeds of the Grafs are ripe ; fo that thofe feeds which are procured from the ftables where the horfes are fed with the belt fort of hay, are little more than chaff, or at beft are only fuch as are of the early kinds of Grafs, -wi th a great quantity of Plan- tain and other weeds : which has difeouraged many gentlemen from fowing them, nor has any one at- tempted to lave thefe feeds properly; and as it requires longer time, and more attention, to fave a quantity of. G R A feeds of the purer fort of Grafs than the generality of people care to beftow, fo I would recommend the letting feme of thole upland paftures, which .are cleaneft from weeds, and have the fweeteft herbage afide, to Hand for feeds ; and although by lb doing the hay will be lefs valuable, yet from the fale of the feeds, it may anfwer better to tiie pofieffor, than to mow it merely for the hay ; for any gentleman who has' regard to the beauty of his land, had better give fix times the price for fuch feeds, as is ufually paid for the ordinary feeds, fince the firft expence of feeds is not to be put in competion with the beauty and' ad- vantage of having fuch as are good •, for when the land is brought to a good fward (which may be done in one year, where it is properly prepared and fown with good feeds) it may be kept in good order, and by good management improved annually, and 'will con- tinue fo, as long as proper care is taken of it. I know feme land which was fown in the method here- after directed above forty years ago, which are now as good paftures as any I have feen, and may be al- ways continued fo. Thefe grounds abounded with many bad weeds, fo they had a winter andfummer’s fallow, in which time they were five times ploughed and ten times harrowed in order to deftroy the weeds, and make the furface of the ground fine ; in Auguft they were fown with the belt Grafs-feeds as could be procured, three bufh- els of this, and nine pounds of the white Dutch Clo- ver-feeds were allowed to each acre ; as there happened rains foon after the feeds were fown, fo the Grafs came up well ; but among it were a great number of weeds, which were drawn up and carried off the ground, and in the beginning of Obuober the fields were rolled with a Barley roller •, in the fpring the fields were again weeded, and afterward roiled, and that fummer there was more than two tons of hay per acre mowed off the land ; and by conftant weeding twice a year, fweeping it with a buffi-harrow, rolling and dreffmg of the land, the Grafs has been greatly improved fince, and is now as good pafture as any in England : and fince I have laid down great quantities of land in the fame manner, and with equal fuccefs ; therefore from many years experience can recommend it, as the fureft method of having good paftures. But I know the generality of farmers will objeeft to the firft lofs of their crop, and alfo to the after ex- pence of weeding, rolling, &c. as too great for com- mon praftice : however, I am well fatisfied from ex- perience, that whoever will be at the expence, will find their account in it ; for the crops of hay will be fo much better, and the after pafture alfo, that it will more than pay the expence, as from many exact ac- counts, which have been kept of the whole, is fuffici- ently demonftrated, and the verdure of thefe paftures is charming to all thofe who have any tafte of natural beauties. The proper management of pafture land is the leaft underftood of any part of agriculture ; the farmers never have attended to this, being more inclined to the plough, though the profits attending that have not of late years been fo great as to encourage them in that part of hufbandry ; but thefe people never think of laying down land for pafture, to continue longer than three years, at the end of which time they plough it up again, to few it with grain. There is a fort of ffriped Grafs which is preferved in many gardens for the beauty of its variegated leaves, which continue frelli the greateft part of the maimer. This fort is eafily propagated by parting^ the roots, either in fpring or autumn, for every offset will in- creafe to be a large root in one year’s time. It, will grow on any foil or in any fituation, therefore may be planted in any abje& part of the garden, where it will thrive, and afford an agreeable variety. _ This fort is by many perfons called ■ Ribband-grafs, from the ftripes of white and green, which run the whole length of the blade, like the ftripes in feme rib- bands. For G R A For the further management of Grafs in fields, fee Pasture and Meadow; and for that in gardens, fee Grass. Clover-grafs. See Irifolium. Saint-foin. See Onpbrychis, or Hedysarum. La Lucerne. See Medica. Nonefuch, See Melilot-us, or Trifolium. Trefoil. See Trifolium. Spurry. See Spergula. GRANADILLA. See Passiflora. GRAPES. See Vitis. GRASS. The Englifti Grafs is of la good a qua- lity for walks or Grafs-plats, that if they be kept in good order, they have that exquilite beauty that they cannotcome up toin b ranee, andfeveralothei countries. But green walks and green plats are, for the moft part, not made by fowing tne Grais-ieed, but by lay- ing turfs ; and, indeed, the turfs from a fine common or down, are much preferable to fown Grafs. In fowing a fine green plat, there is a difficulty in get- ting good feed ; it ought not to be fuch as is taken out of the hay-loft without diftindtion ; for that feed ffiooting too high and making large ftalks, the lower part will be naked and bare ; and although it be mow- ed ever fo often, it will never make handfome Grafs ; but, on the contrary, will come to nothing but tufts of weeds and Quick-grafs, very little better than that cf the common fields. If walks or plats be made by fowing, the beft way is to procure the feed from thofe paftures where the Grafs is naturally fine and clear, or elfe the trouble of keeping it from fpiry and benty Grafs will be very great, and it will Icarce ever look handfome. In order to fow Grafs-feed, the ground muft be firft dug or broken up with a fpade ; and when it has been dreffed and laid even, it mult be very finely raked over, and all the clods and ftones taken off, and co- vered over an inch thick with good mould, to facili- tate the growth of the feed ; this being done, the feed is to be fown pretty thick, that it may come up clofe and ffiort ; and it muft be raked over again to bury and cover the feed, that if the weather Ihould hap- pen to be windy, it may not be blown away. As to the feafon of fowing Grafs, the middle or lat- ter end of Auguft is a good time, becaufe the feed naturally requires nothing but moifture to make it grow : if be" not fown till the latter end of February, or the beginning of March, if the weather proves dry, it will not fo foon make the walks or quarters green. It is alfo beft to fow it in a mild day, and inclining to rain ; for that, by finking down the feed in the earth, will caufe it to fhoot the looner. But where Grafs is fown in gardens, either for lawns or walks, there ihould always be a good quantity of the White 1 re- foil or Dutch Clover fown with it, for this will make a fine turf much fooner than any other fown Grafs, and will continue a better verdure than any of the Grafs tribe. After the feed is well come up, and the Grafs is very thick and of a beautiful green, it will require a con- ftant care to keep it in order : this confifts in mowing the Grafs often, for the oftener it is mowed, the thicker and handfomer it grows ; it muft alfo be rolled with a cylinder or roller of wood, to level it as much as pcffible. If Grafs be neglected, it will run into Quick-grafs and weeds ; and if it does fo, there is no way to re- cover it, but either by fowing it, or laying it over again, and that once in every two years ; but if the ground be well cleared from the roots of ftrong weeds, and the turf be taken from a fine level common, it will continue handfome for feveral years, provided it be well kept. In order to keep Grafs-plats or walks handfome and in good order, in autumn you may fow fome freffi feed over any places that are not well filled, or where the Grafs is dead, to renew and furnifh them again ; but there is nothing which improves Grafs fo much as conftant rolling and polling it, to deftroy wormcafts, and thereby the turf is rendered fine . G R A It is a general practice when turf is laid in gardens, ia cover the furface of the ground under the turf, either with fand or very poor earth ; the defign of this is to keep the Grafs fine, by preventing its growing too rank. This' is proper enough for very rich ground,- but is not fo for fuch land as is but middling or poor ; for when this is practifed in fuch places, the Grafs will foon wear out, and decay m patches. When turf is taken from a common or down, there fhould be regard had to the cieannefs of it, and' not to take fuch as is full of weeds : for it will be a very tedious piece of work, to weed them out after the turf is laid ; and unlels this is done, the Grafs will ne- ver appear handfome. Where turf is defigned to remain for years without renewing, there ihould be dreffing laid upon it every other year, either of very rotten dung, afhes, or, where it can be eafily procured, very rotten tan, is a good dreffing for Grafs ; but thefe dreffings ihould be laid on early in winter, that the rain may waih them into the ground, before the drought of the fpring comes on, otherwife they will occafion the Grafs to burn when the warmth of fu turner begins. Where Grafs is fo dreffed, and kept well rolled and mowed, it may be kept very beautiful for many years ; but where it is not dreffed or fed with fheep, it will rarely continue handfome more than eight or ten years. GRATIOLA. Lin. Gen. Plant. 27. Raii Meth. Plant. 90. Digitalis. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 165. Hedge Hyffop. The Characters are, ! The flower hath a permanent empalement , which is cut into five parts ; it hath one petal of the grinning kind , with a tube longer than the empalement , cut at the top into four J mall figments , the upper being broader and in- dented at the end zvhere it is reflexed ; the other three are erett a.nd equal. It hath five awl-floaped ftamina , three of which are Jhorter than the petal , and fleril ; the other two are longer , and adhere to the tube of the petal ; thefe are fruitful in male dufl ; they are terminated by roundifh fummits. In the center is fituated a conical germcn, flip- porting an ere It ftyle , crowned by a fiigma with two lips , which clofe after being fecundated. I'he germen af- terward becomes an oval capfule aiding in a pointy having two cells which are filled with f mall feeds. This genus of plants is ranged in the firft feftion of Linnaeus’s fecond clafs, intitled Diandria Monogynia, which includes thofe plants whofe flowers have! but two ftamina and one ftyle, for he does not efteera the three barren ftamina as worthy notice. The Species are, 1. Gratiola {Officinalis) fioribus pedunculatis, foliis lanceolatis ferratis. Lin. Mat. Med. 18. Hedge Hyffiop with flowers funding on foot-flalks , and fpear-foaped leaves. Digitalis minima Gratiolata di&a. Mor. Hift. 2. 479. Leaf Foxglove , called Gratiola. 2. Gratiola ( Virginiana ) foliis lanceolatis obtufis fub dentatis. Flor. Virg. 6. Hedge Hyffiop with obtufl in- dented leaves. * 3. Gratiola {Peruviana) fioribus fubfeffilibus. Lin. Sp. Plant. 17. Hedge Hyffiop with flowers fitting clofe to the branches. Gratiola latiore folio flore albo. FeuilL Peruv. The firft fort grows naturally on the Alps, and other mountainous parts of Europe. This hath a thick, fleffiy, fibrous, creeping root, which propagates very much when planted in a proper foil and fituation, from which arife feveral upright fquare ftalks, near a foot high, garnifhed with narrow fpear-fhaped leaves placed oppofite ; the flowers are produced on the fide of the ftalks at each joint, they are Inaped like thofe of the Foxglove, but are fmall, and of a pale yellowifh co- lour. Thefe appear in July, but are feldom fuc- ceeded by feeds in England. It is eafily propagated by parting of the roots ; the beft time to do this is in the autumn, when the ftalks decay ; the plants fhould have a moift foil and a fliady fituation, in which they will thrive exceedingly ; but in dry ground they often decay in fummer, unlefs they are plentifully watered. Ji® This G R A This Hands in the lift of medicinal plants, but is very rarely ufed in England, though it is recommended by fotne good writers as a purger of ferous and choleric humours. The fecond fort grows naturally in North America, from whence I received the feeds. This .grows natu- rally in moift places, where it riles more than a foot high, but in England I have not feen it more than eight inches ; the leaves are blunt, and indented at their extremities ; the flowers are white, and come cut from the fide of the ftalks, like thofe of the other, but are not iucceeded by feeds here. It may be pro- pagated in the fame manner as the firft fort, and re- quires the fame treatment. The feeds of the third fort were fent me from Car- thagena, where it was found growing naturally in places where there had been Handing waters, which were then dried up ; this plant grew about nine inches high, with a weak ftalk, and the leaves placed oppo- fite ; they were about three quarters of an inch long, and half an inch broad, fawed on their edges •, the flowers came out Angle on each fide the ftalk •, they were white, and much fmaller than thofe of the firft fort, but were not fucceeded by feeds, fo the plant was loft here. GRAVEL and Grafs are naturally ornaments to a country-feat, and the glory of the Englifh gardens, and things in which we excel all other nations, as France, Holland, Flanders^ &c. There are different forts of Gravel, but for thofe who can conveniently have it, I approve of that Gravel on Blackheath, as preferable to moft that we have in England •, it confifting of fmooth even pebbles, which, when mixed with a due quantity of loam, will bind exceeding clofe, and look very beautiful, and conti- nue handfome longer than any other fort of Gravel which I have yet feen. Some recommend a fort of iron-mould Gravel, or Gravel with a little binding loam amongft it, than which nothing, they fay, binds better when it is dry but in wet weather it is apt to ftick to the heels of one’s Ihoes, and will never appear handfome. Sometimes loam is mixed with Gravel that is over fandy or fharp, which muft be very well blended to- gether, and let lie in heaps, after which it will bind like a rock. There are many kinds of Gravel which do not bind, and thereby caule a continual trouble of rolling, to lit- tle or no purpofe ; as for fuch. If the Gravel be loofe or fandy, you ffiould take one load of ftrong loam, to two or three of Gravel, and fo caft them well together, andturnthismixtureoverthree or four times, that they may be well blended toge- ther ; if this is done in proper porportion, it will bind well, and not ftick to the feet in wet weather. There are many different opinions about the choice of Gravel ; feme are for having the Gravel as white as pofiible, and in order to make the walks more fo, they roll them well with ftone rollers, which are often hewn by the mafons, that they may add a whitenefs to the walks ; but this renders it very troublefome to the eyes, by reflecting the rays of light fo ftrongly, there- fore this fhould ever be avoided •, and luch Gravel as will lie fmooth, and refled the leaft, fhould be pre- ferred. Some fereen the Gravel too fine, which is an error for if it be caft into a round heap, and the great ftones only raked off, it will be the better. Some are apt to lay Gravel-walks too round, but this is likewife an error, becaufe they are not fo goo'd to walk upon, and befides, it makes them look nar- row •, one inch rife is enough in a crown for a walk of five feet *, and it will be fufficient, if a walk be ten feet wide, that it lies two inches higher in the middle than it does on each fide •, if fifteen feet, three inches ; twenty feet, four ; and fo in proportion. For the depth of Gravel-walks, fix or eight inches may do well enough, but afoot thicknefs will be fufficient for any ; but then there fhould always be a depth of rubbifh laid under the Gravel, efpecially if the $ G R A ground is wet •, in which cafe there cannot be too much care to fill the bottom of the walks with large ftones, flints, brick rubbifh, chalk, or any other mate- rials which can be belt procured, which will drain off the moifture from the Gravel, and prevent its being- poachy in wet weather •, but as it may be difficult in iome places to procure a fufficient quantity of thefe • materials to lay in the bottom of the walks, fo there may be a bed of Heath, or Furze, which ever can be procured at the leaft expence, laid under the Gravel to keep it dry : and if either of thefe are ufed green,, they will lie a long time, as they will be covered from air, and thefe will prevent the Gravel from getting down into the clay, and will always keep the Gravel dry ; and where there is not this precaution in the firft lay- ing of the Gravel upon clay, the water being detained by the clay, will caufe the Gravel to be poachy when- ever there is much rain. In making of Gravel-walks, there muft be great re- gard had to the level of the ground, fo as to lay the walks with eafy defeents toward the low parts of the ground, that the wet may be drained off eafily ; for when this is omitted, the water will he upon the walks a confiderable time after hard rains, which will ren- der them unfit for life, efpecially when the ground is naturally wet or ftrong ; but where the ground is level, and there are no declivities to carry off the wet, it will be proper to have fink-ftones laid by the Tides of the walks, at convenient diftances, to let off the wet and where the ground is naturally dry, that the water will foon foak away, the drains of the fink-ftones may be contrived fo as to convey the water in feffpools, from which the water will foak away in a Ihort time ; but in wet land there fhould be under-ground drains, to convey the wet off, either into ponds, ditches, or the neareft place to receive it ; for where this is not well provided for, the walks will never be fo hand- fome or fo ufeful. The month of March is the propereft time for laying Gravel ; it is not prudent to do it fooner, or to lay walks in any of the winter months before that time.' Some indeed turn up Gravel-walks in ridges in De- cember, in order to kill the weeds •, but this is very- wrong, for befides that it deprives them of the be- nefit of them all the winter, it does not anfwer the end for which it is done, but rather the contrary for though it does kill the weeds for the prelent, yet it adds a fertility to them, as to the great future in- creale of both them and Grafs. If conftant rolling them after the rains and froft will not effe&ually kill the weeds and mofs, you fhould turn the walks in March, and lay them down at the fame time. In order to deftroy worms that fpoil the beauty of Gravel, or Grafs-walks, fome recommended the water- ing them well with water, in which Walnut-tree leaves have been fteeped, and made very bitter, efpe- cially thofe places moft annoyed with them ; and this they lay, as foon as it reaches them, will make {hem come out haftily, fo that they may be gathered •, but if, in the firft laying of the walks, there is a uood bed of lime rubbifh laid in the bottom, it is the moft ef- fectual method to keep out the worms, for they do not care to harbour near lime. G R E E N-H OUSE, or Confervatory. As of late years there have been great quantities of curious exotic plants introduced into the Englifh gar- dens, fo the number of Green-houfes, or Con fury a to- ' ries, have increafed-, and not only a greater flrilj in the management and ordering of thefe plants has increafed therewith, but aifo a greater knowledge of the ftruc- ture and contrivance of thefe places, fo as to render them both ufeful and ornamental, hath been acquired ; and fince there are many particulars to be obler/ed in the conftruttion of thefe houfes, whereby they will be greatly improved, I thought it neceffary not only to give the heft inftrudions for this I was capable of, but aifo to give a defign of one in the manner I would chule to erebt it, upon the annexed copper-plate. 2 As i \ GRI G R E- As to the length of thefe houfes, that muft be pro- portioned to the number of plants they are to contain, or the fancy of the owner ; but their depth fhould never be greater than their height in the clear, which in fmall,^ or middling houfes, may be fixteen or eighteen feet, but for large ones, from twenty to twenty-four feet, is a good proportion •, for if the Green-houfe is long, and too narrow, it will have a bad appearance both within and without, nor will it contain fo many plants, if proper room be allowed for paffing in front, and on the backfide: of the Hands on which the plants are placed ; and on the other hand, if the depth of the Green-houfe is more than twenty- four feet, there muft be more rows of plants placed to fill the houfe, than can with conveniency be reached in watering and cleaning ^ nor are houfes of too great depth fo proper for keeping of plants, as thofe of moderate fize. The windows in front fhould extend from about one foot and a half above the pavement, to within the fame diftance of the deling, which will admit of a cornice round the building, over the heads of the windows. As it is neceflary to have thefe windows fo long, it will be impoffible to make them in proportion as to their breadth •, for if in the largeft buildings the fafhes are more than feven, or feven feet and a half broad, they will be fo heavy and troublefome to move up and down, as to render it very difficult for one perfon to perform •, befides, their weight will occafion their foon decaying. There is alfo another incon- venience in having the windows too broad, which is that of fixing proper fhutters to them, in fuch a manner as that they may fall back clofe to the piers, fo as not to be incommodious, or when open to ob- ftrud any part of the rays of light from reaching the -plants. The piers between thefe windows fhould be as narrow as poffible to fupport the building, for which reafon I fhould chufe to have them of ftone, or of hard well-burnt bricks ; for if they are built with fine rubbed bricks, thofe are generally fo foft, that the piers will require to be made thicker, and the building will be lefs ftrong, efpecially if there are any rooms over the Green-houfe ; which is what I would always advife, as being of great ufe to keep the froft out in very hard winters. If thefe piers are made of ftone, I would advife them to be two feet and a half in dia- meter, worked as columns cylindrical, whereby the rays of the fun will not be taken off, or obftrufled by the corners of the piers, which it would be if they were fquare ; but if they are built with bricks, it will be proper to make them three feet in front, other- wife they will be too weak to fupport the building ; thefe I would alfo advife to be floped off toward the infide to admit the fun. At the back of the Green-houfe there may be erefted a houfe for tools, and for many other purpofes, which will be extremely ufeful, and will alfo prevent the froft from entering the houfe on the backfide, fo that the wall between thefe need not be more than two bricks and a half in thicknefs; whereas were it quite expofed behind, it ftiould be at leaft three bricks, or three and a half in thicknefs •, and by this contrivance, if you are willing to make a handfome building, and to have a noble room over the Green-houfe, you may make the room over the tool-houfe, and carry up the ftair- cafe in the back, fo as not to be feen in the Green- houfe, and hereby you may have a room twenty-five or thirty feet in width, and of a proportionable length ; and under this ftair-cafe there ftiould be a private door into the green-houfe, at which the gardener may enter In hard frofty weather, when it will not be fafe to open any of the glaftes in the front. The floor of the Green- houfe, which fhould be laid either \yith Bremen fquares, Purbeck ftone, or broad tiles, according to the fancy of the owner, muft be raifed two feet above the furface of the ground whereon the houfe is placed, which in dry ground will be fufficient ; but if the fi- tuation is moift and fpringy, and thereby fubjeft to damps, it fhould be raifed at leaft three feet above the furface ; and if the whole is arched with low brick arches under the floor, it will be of great fervice in preventing the damps rifing in winter, which are often very hurtful to the plants, efpecially in great thaws, when the air is often too cold to be admitted into the houfe, to take off the damps; Under the floor, about one foot from the front, I would advife a flue of one foot in width, and two feet deep, to be carried the whole length of the houfe, which may be returned againft the back wall, and carried up in proper fun- nels adjoining to the tool-houfe, three times over each other, by which the fmoke may pafs off. The fire- place may be contrived at one end of the houfe, and the door at which the fuel is put in, as alfo the afh- grate, may be contrived to open into the tool-houfe, fo that it may be quite hid from the fight, and be in the dry, and the fuel may be laid in the fame Hied, whereby it will always be ready for ufe. I fuppofe many people will be furprifed to fee me di- rect the making of flues under a Green-houfe, which has been difufed fo long, and by moft people thought of ill confequence, as indeed they have often proved, when under the direction of unfkilful managers, who have though t it neceflary, whenever the weather was cold to make fires therein ; but however injurious flues may have been under luch management, yet when fkilfully looked after they will be found of very great fervice ; for though perhaps it may happen, that there will be no neceffity to make any fires in them for two or three years together, as when the winters prove mild there will not, yet in very hard winters they will be ex- tremely ufeful to keep out the froft, which cannot be effedted any other way, but with great trouble and difficulty. Withinfide of the windows, in front of the Green- houfe, you fhould have good ftrong fhutters, which fhould be made with hinges to fold back, that they may fall back quite clofe to the piers, that the rays of the fun may not be obftrudted thereby. Thefe fhutters need not be above an inch and a half thick, or little more when wrought, which if made to join clofe, will be fufficient to keep out our common froft j and when the weather is fo cold as to endanger the freezing in the houfe, it is but making a fire in the oven, which will effedtually prevent it ; and without this conveniency it will be very troublefome, as I have often feen, where perfons have been obliged to nail mats before their windows, or to fluff the hollow fpace between the fhutters, and the glafs with Straw, which when done, is commonly fuffered to remain till the froft goes away-, which if it fhould continue very long, the keeping the Green-houfe clofely fhut up, will prove very injurious to the plants ; and as it fre- quently happens, that we have an hour or two of the fun-fhine in the middle of the day, in continued frofts, which is of great fervice to plants, when they can en- joy the rays thereof through the glaftes, fo when there is nothing more to do than to open the fhutters, which may be performed in a very fhort time, and as foon fhut again when the fun is clouded, the plants may have the benefit thereof whenever it appears j whereas, where there is fo much trouble to uncover, and as much to cover again, it would take up the whole time in uncovering and fhutting them up, and thereby the advantage of the fun’s influence would be loft. Be-* fides, where there is fo much trouble required to keep out the froft, it will be a great chance if it be not negledled by the gardener, for if he be not as fond of preferving his plants, and as much in love with them ^s his mafter, this labour will be thought too great py him ; and if he takes the pains to cover the glafte^ up with mats, &c. he will not care to take them away again until the weather alters, fo that the plants will be fhut up clofe during the whole con- tinuance of the froft. There are fome people who commonly make ufe of pots filled with charcoal to fet in their Green-houfe in very fevere frofts, but this is very dangerous to the perfons who attend thefe fires, and I have fometimes known they have been almoft fuffocated therewith, and at the fame time they are very injurious to the 6 K plants 5 G R E plants 5 nor is the trouble of tending upon thefe fmall, and the many hazards to which the ufe of thefe fires is liable, have juftly brought them into difufe with all fkilful perfons; and as the contrivances of flues, and of the fires, are but fmall charges in their firft -ere&ing, they are much to be preferred to any other method for warming the air of the houfe. The wall on the back part of the houfe fhould be either laid over with ftucco, or plaftered with mortar, and white-wafhed, for otherwife the air in fevere froft will penetrate through the walls, efpecially when the froft is attended with a ftrong wind, which is often the cafe in moft fevere winters. There are fome per- fons who are at the ‘expence of wainfcotting their Green-houfes, but when this is done, it is proper to plafter the walls with lime and hair behind the wainf- cot, to keep out the cold ; and when they are lined with wainfcot, they fhould be painted white, as fhould the deling, and every part withinfide of the houfe ; for this refleds the rays of light in a much greater quantity than any other colour, and is of fignal fer- vice to plants, efpecially in the winter, when the houfe is pretty much clofed, and but a fmall fhare of light is admitted through the windows •, for at fuch times I have obferved, that in fome Green-houfes which have been painted black, or of a dark colour, the plants have caft moft of their leaves. Where green-houfes are built in fuch places as will not admit of rooms over them, or the perfon is un- willing to be at the expence of fuch buildings, there muft be care taken to keep out the froft from entering through the roof. To prevent which it will be very proper to have a thicknefs of Reeds, Heath, or Furz, laid between the deling and the tiles •, in the doing of which there muft be care taken in framing the joifts, fo as to fupport thefe, that their weight may not lie upon the ceiling, which might endanger it ; for thefe fhould be laid a foot thick at leaft, and as fmooth as pofiible, and fattened down well with laths to prevent their riling, and then covered over with a coat of lime and hair, which will keep out the air, and alfo prevent mice and other vermin from harbouring in them, which, if left uncovered, they would cer- tainly do. For want of this precaution there are many Green-houfes built, which will not keep out the froft in hard winters, and this is many times attributed to the glafles in front admitting the cold, when the fault is in the roof-, for where there is only the covering, either of tiles or Hates, over the cieling, every fevere froft will penetrate through them. In this Green-houfe you fhould have trufiels, which may be moved out and into the houfe, upon which you fhould fix rows of planks, fo as to place the pots or tubs of plants in regular rows one above another, whereby the heads of the plants may be fo fituated, as not to interfere with each other. The loweft row of plants, which fhould be the forwardeft towards the windows, fhould be placed about four feet therefrom, that there may be a convenient breadth left next the glafles to walk in front ; and the rows of plants fhould rife gradually from the firft, in fuch a manner that the heads of the fecond row fhould be entirely advanced above the firft, the ftetns only being hid thereby ; and at the back fide of the houfe there fnould be al- lowed a fpace of at leaft five feet, for the conveniency of watering the plants, as alfo to admit of a current of air round them, that the damps occafioned by the perfpiration of the plants, may be the better diflipated, which, by being pent in too clofelv, often occafions a mouldinefs upon the tender (hoots and leaves, and when the houfe is dole {hut up, this ftagnating rancid vapour is often very deftruftive to the plants; for which reafon alfo you fhould never croud them too dole to each other, nor fhould you ever place Sedums, Euphorbiums, Torch Thiftles, and other tender fuc- culent plants, amongft Oranges, Myrtles, and other Evergreen trees for, by an experiment which I made, anno 1729, I found that a Sedum placed in a Green- houfe among fuch trees, almoft daily increafed its weight, although there was no water given to it the G R E whole time ; which increafe of weight was owing to the moifture imbibed from the air, which, being re- plete with the rancid vapours perfpired from the other plants, occafioned the leaves to grow pale, and in a fhort time they decayed and dropped off ; which I have often obferved has been the cafe with many other fucculent plants, when placed in thofe houfes which were filled with many forts of Evergreen trees, that required to be frequently watered. Therefore, to avoid the inconvenience which attends the placing of plants of very different natures in the fame houfe, it will be very proper to have two wings added to the main Green-houfe, which, if placed in the manner exprefled in the annexed plan, will greatly add to the beauty of the building, and alfo colled a greater fhare of heat. In this plan the Green-houfe is placed exadly fronting the fouth, and one of the wings faces the fouth-eaft, and the other the fouth- weft ; fo that from the time of the fun’s firft appearance upon any part of the building, until it goes off at night, it is conftantly refieded from one part to the other, and the cold winds are alfo kept off from the front of the main Green-houfe hereby ; and in the area of this place you may contrive to place many of the moft tender exotic plants, which will bear to be expofed in the fummer feafon.; and in the fpring, before the weather will permit you to fet out the plants, the beds and borders of this area may be full of Anemonies, Ra- nunculufes, early Tulips, &c. which will be paft. flowering, and the roots fit to take out of the ground by the time you carry out the plants, which will render this place very agreeable duringthefpringfeafon, when the flowers are blown : and here you may walk and divert yourfelf in a fine day, when perhaps the air in moft other parts of the garden will be too cold for perfons not much ufed thereto, to take pleafure in being out of the houfe. In the center of this area may be contrived a fmall bafon for water, which will be very convenient for watering of plants, and add much to the beauty of the place ; befides the water being thus fituated, will be foftened by the heat which will be refledted from the glafles upon it, whereby it will be rendered much better tfian raw cold water for thefe tender plants. The two wings of the building fnould be contrived fo as to maintain plants of differing degrees of hardinefs, which muft be effedted by the fituation an^l extent of the fire-place, and the manner of condu&ing the flues, a particular account of which will be exhibited under the article of Stoves. But I would here obferve, that the wing facing the fouth-eaft fhould always be pre- ferred for the warmeft ftove, its fituation being fuch, as that the fun, upon its firft appearance in the morn- ing, fhines diredtly upon the glafles, which is of great fervice in warming the air of the houfe, and adding life to the plants, after having been {hut up during the long nights in the winter feafon. Thefe wings being in the draught annexed, allowed fixty feet in length, may be divided in the middle by partitions of glals, with glafs- doors to pafs from one to tire other. To each of thefe there fhould be a fire-place, with flues carried up againft the back wall, through which the fmoke fhould be made to pafs, as many times the length of the houfe, as the height will admit of the number of flues; for the longer the fmoke is in pafling, the more heat will be given to the houfe, with a lefs quantity of fuel, which is an article worth confidera- tion, efpecially where fuel is dear. By this contri- vance you may keep fuch plants as require the fame degree of heat in one part of the houfe, and thofe which will thrive in a much lefs warmth in the other part, but this will be more fully explained under the article of Stoves. The other wing of the houfe, facing the fouth-weft, may alfo be divided in the lame manner, and flues carried through both parts, which may be ufed ac- cording to the feafons, or the particular forts of plants which are placed therein; fo that here will be four di~ vifions in the wings,, each of which may be kept up to GRE to a different degree of warmth, which, together with the Green-houfe, will be fufficient to maintain plants from all the feverai countries of the world ; and with- out having thefe feverai degrees of warmth, it will be impoffible to preferve the various kinds of plants from the feverai parts of Africa and America, which are annually introduced into the Englifh gardens ; for when plants from different countries are placed in the fame houfe, fome are deftroyed for want of heat, while others are forced and fpoiled by too much of it; and this is often the cafe in many places, where there are large colleflions of plants. In the building thefe wings, if there are not fheds running behind them their whole length, the walls fhould not be lefs than three bricks thick; and if they are more, it will be better, becaufe where the walls are thin, and expofed to the open air, the cold will penetrate them, and when the fires are made, the heat will come out through the walls, fo that it will require a larger quantity of fuel, to maintain a proper tem- perature of warmth in the houfe. The back part of thefe houfes having Hoping roofs, which are covered either with tiles or Hates, fliould alfo be lined with Reeds, &c. under the covering, as is before directed for the Green-houfe, which will keep out the cold air, and fave a great expence of fuel ; for the clofer and better thefe houfes are built, and the glaffes of the Hope, as alfo in front, well guarded by Abutters, or Reeds in hard froft, the lelstuel will be required to warm the houfes ; fo that the firft expence in building thefe houfes properly, will be the cheapeft, when the after-expence of fires is taken into confideration. The Hoping glaffes of thefe houfes Ihould be made to Hide and take off, fo that they may be drawn down more or lefs in warm weather, to admit air to the plants ; and the upright glaffes in front may be fo con- trived, as that every other may open as doors upon hinges, and the alternate glaffes may be divided into two°; the upper part of each fhould be contrived fo as to be drawn down like faflies, fo that either of thefe may be ufed to admit air, in a greater or lefs propor- tion, according as there may be occafion. But befides the Conservatories here mentioned, it will be proper to have a deep hot-bed frame, fuch as is commonly ufed to raife large annuals in the fpring, into which may be fet pots of fuch plants as come from Carolina, Virginia, &c. while the plants are too fmall to plant in the open air, as alfo many other forts from Spain, &c. which require only to be fcreened from the violence of frofts, and ihould have as much free air as poffible in mild weather ; which can be no better effected than in one of thefe frames, where the glaffes may be taken off every day when the weather will per- mit, and put on every night ; and in hard frofts the glaffes may be covered with mats, Straw, Peas-haulm, or the like, fo as to prevent the froft from entering to the pots to freeze the roots of the plants, which is what will many times utterly deftroy them, though a flight froft pinching the leaves or fhoots, very feldom does them much harm ; if thefe pits are funk a foot or more, below the furface of the ground, they will be the better, provided the ground is dry, otherwife they muft be wholly above ground ; the Hides of this frame fliould be built with brick, with a curb of wood laid round on the top of the wall, into which the gutters, on which the glaffes Hide may be laid ; the back w r all of this frame may be four feet high, and two bricks and a half thick, the front one foot and a half ; the ' width of the infide of the frame about fix feet, and the length in proportion to the number of plants to be containd therein. GREWIA. Lin. Gen. Plant. 914. This genus of plants was conftituted by Dr. Linnaeus, who gave it this name in honour of Dr. Grew, F. R. S. who pub- Lfhed a curious book of the anatomy of plants. The Characters are, The flower hath a thick leathery empalement , compofed of five fpear-jhaped leaves , which are coloured , and fpread open. ' The flower hath five petals of the fame form , but fmaller , and are indented at their bafe , where is f iliated a fcaly ntciarium to each petal , which is thick and in- curved, inclining to the border , to which the fiyle is fixed % it hath many ftamina , which are briftiy , the length of the petals , terminated by roundifh fummits. In the center is fituated the roundijh germen , which is lengthened to a column , fupporting a fender fiyle , crowned by a four- cornered obtufe ftigma. The germen afterward becomes four-cornered berry with four cells , each inclofing one glo- bular feed. This genus of plants is ranged in the feventh fe&ion of Linnaeus’s twentieth clafs, which includes thofe plants whole flowers have many ftamina joined to the ftyle, forming a column of one body. The Species are, 1. Grewia [Occident alis) foliis fubovatis crenatis. Grewia with oval crenated leaves. Ulmi facie arbufcula, fEthi- opica, ramulis alatis, floribus purpurafcentibus. Hort, Amft. i.p. 165. tab. 85. Ethiopian Shrub with the ap- pearance of Elm , winged branches , and purplifh flowers. 2. Grewia ( Africanus ) foliis ovato-lanceolatis ferratis. Grewia with oval fpear-fhaped leaves which are flawed. The firft fort has been long preferved in many curious gardens, both in England and Holland, and is fi- gured by Dr. Plukenet, by the title of Ulmifolia ar- bor Africana baccifera, floribus purpureis; but by Dr. Boerhaave it was fuppofed to be one of Father Plumier’s American plants, intitled Guidonia Ulmi foliis, flore rofeo ; but the charaders of this do not at all agree with thofe of the Guidonia, that particular fpecies of this genus being in the royal garden at Paris, which is extremely different from this. It grows na- turally at the Cape of Good Hope, from whence I have received the feeds, which have fucceeded in the Chelfea garden. This will grow to the height of ten or twelve feet, and has a ftem and branches very like thofe of the fm all-leaved Elm, the bark being fmooth, and of the fame colour as that of Elm when young ; the leaves are alfo very like thofe of the Elm, and fall off in winter ; the flowers are produced fingly along the young branches from the wings of the leaves, which are of a bright purple colour ; thefe appear toward the end of July, and continue in Auguft, and the be- ginning of September, but are never fucceeded by fruit in this country. This may be propagated from cuttings or layers ; the cuttings fliould be taken off, and planted in April, before the buds fwell, for they do not fucceed well after; thefe cuttings fhould be planted in fmall pots filled with loamy earth, and the pots fliould be plunged into a moderate hot-bed of tanners bark, where, if they are duly watered, and in the heat of the day Ihaded from the fun, they will take good root in about two months, and may then be gradually in- ured to bear the open air, into which they fliould be removed in June, and placed in a flickered fituation, where they may remain till autumn, when they muft be removed into the green-houfe ; the beft time to lay down the layers of this plant is in the fpring, before the buds come out, and thefe will be rooted by the fame time the following year, when they may be cut off from the old plants, and planted each into a fe- parate pot filled with a foft loamy foil. The beft time to remove or tranfplant this plant is, either in the fpring, juft before the buds begin to fwell, or in autumn, when the leaves begin to drop % for in fummer, when the plants are in full leaf, it will be very improper to difturb them. In winter thefe plants fhould be placed in the green- houfe, for they are too tehder to live abroad in Eng- land ; but they fhould have as much free air as poffible in mild weather, for they only require to be protected from froft, and after their leaves are fallen, they will require very moderate watering ; but in fummer they fliould be conftantly watered three or four times a week in dry weather, and placed in a flickered fituation, with other hardy green-houfe plants, where they will add to the variety. The feeds of the fecond fort were lent me by Monf. Richard, gardener to the King of France at Mar- fellies. G R I feilles, which were brought from Senegal in Africa, by Monf. Adanfon •, this rifes in this country with a fhrubby ftalk five or fix feet high, fending out many lateral branches, which are covered with a brown hairy bark, and garnifhed with oval fpear-fhaped leaves, about two inches long, and one inch and a quarter broad in the middle, having feveral tranfverfe veins from the midrib to the fides, where they are fawed ; thefe are placed alternately on the branches, having very ftiort foot-ftalks, and continue in verdure through the year •, the plants are young, fo have not as yet flowered in England, therefore I can give no further account of them. This fort is tender, fo will not live through the win- ter in England, unlefs it is placed in a warm ftove ; nor do thofe plants thrive well, which are placed on fhelves in the dry ftove ^ therefore the only method to have them fucceed, is to place them in the bark- bed in the tan-ftove, where the plants have grown very well for fome years. In fummer thefe plants require a good fhare of free air to be admitted to them, and fttouid have water three or four times a week in warm weather •, but in winter they muft be fparingly watered, and require to be kept warm. G R I A S. Lin. Gen. 659. Anchovy Pear. The Characters are, I he empalement is cup-Jhaped , of one leaf cut into four equal fegments •, the flower has four leathery concave petals, and many briflly flamina which are inferted to the recep- tacle terminated by roundifh fummits , and a depreffed ger- men immerfed in the empalement , having no ftyle, crowned by a four-cornered crofs-Jhaped ftigma , which afterward becomes a flejhy berry, with a large nut having eight fur- rows, and one cell containing a large pointed feed. This genus of plants is ranged in the firft order of Linnaeus’s thirteenth clafs, intitled Polyandria Mono- gynia, the flower having many ftamina and one ftyle. We know but one Species of this genus, viz. 1. Grias ( Cauliflora ). Lin. Sp. 732. Anchovy Pear. Pal- mis affinis malus Perfica maxima, caudice non ramo- fa, foliis longiflimis, flore tetrapetalo pallide luteo, frudu ex arboris trunco prodeunte. Sloan. Hift. Jam. . 2. p. 122. This plant grows naturally in Jamaica, and in many other warm parts of America, where it rifes with a ftrait undivided ftem about twenty feet high, having a gray bark, marked with the veftigia of the fallen leaves ; the top of the ftem is garnilhed with leaves near two feet long and fix inches broad, fitting clofe without foot-ftalks ; thefe have one longitudinal mid- rib with feveral tranfverfe veins, and are of a lucid green ; the flowers come out from the ftem below the leaves, having no foot-ftalk, in fome places one, and in others they are in clufters, each having four thick yellow petals, and a great number of ftamina which are fixed to the empalement of the flower ; the ger- men is included in the empalement, which afterward becomes a large oval Plumb, including a large pointed nut. ' The fruit of this tree is by the Spaniards in the Weft- Indies pickled and fent to old Spain as prefents, who eat them as Mango’s, and fome fay the ripe fruit is eaten as a defart. The plant is propagated by planting of the ftones, which Ihould be put into the ground foon after the fruit is gathered, and the plants muft be conftantly kept in the bark-bed in the ftove, otherwife it will not thrive in this country. G R O N O V I A. Martyn. Cent. 4. Lin. Gen. Plant. 284. The name of this genus was given by the late Dr. Houfton, in honour of Dr. Gronovius, a learned ' botanift at Leyden. The Characters are. The flower hath a permanent empalement of one leaf, which is coloured, and cut to the middle into five fegments. It hath Jive fmall petals which are fixed to the cuts of the em- palement, and five hairy ftamina the length of the petals, which are inferted into the empalement, and are placed al- ternate with the petals , terminated by twin fummits which are ereht. The germen is fituated under the flower , fup- " 2 porting ' a Jlender ftyle which is longer them- the ftamina , crowned by an obtufe ftigma. The germen afterward be- comes a roundifh-coloured fruit with one cell, inclofmg one large roundifh feed. This genus of plants is ranged in the firft fedion of Linnaeus’s fifth clafs, intitled Pentandria Monogynia, which includes thole plants whofe flowers have five ftamina and one ftyle. We know but one Species of this genus, viz. Gronovia (1 Scandensf Llort. Cliff. 74. Gronovia fcan- dens lappacea, pampinea fronde. Houft. Climbing burry Gronovia . This plant was difeovered by the late Dr. Houftoun at La Vera Cruz, from whence he fent the feeds to Europe, which have fucceeded in many gardens. It is an annual plant, which fends forth many trailing branches like thofe of the Cucumber, which are clofely fet with broad green leaves, in fhape like thofe of the Vine ; but they are covered with fmall fpines on both ftdes, which fting like the Nettle: the branches have many tendrils or clafpers, by which they fallen themfelves to whatever plants they grow near, and will rife to the height of fix or eight feet ; the flowers are fmall, and of a greenilh yellow colour, fo make no great appearance. This being a very tender plant, muft be raifed on a hot-bed early in the fpring, and afterward placed in the bark-ftove, and treated in the fame way as the Momordica, with which management it will produce ripe feeds ; but this having neither ufe or beauty, is rarely cultivated but in botanic gardens for the fake of variety. GROSSULARIA. Raii Meth. Plant. 145. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 639. tab. 409. Ribes. Lin. Gen. Plant. 247. Goofeberry • in French, Grofelier. This and the Currant are by Tournefort placed in the fame genus, under the title of Groffularia •, they are alfo joined together by Dr. Linnseus, under the title of Ribes, for in their principal charaders they agree ; fo according to the fyftems of botany, they fhould be included in the fame genus j but this may not be quite fo proper in a body of gardening, for as thefe fruits have always paffed under different deno- minations, jfo if they are here joined together, it may occafion fome confufion among thofe who do not enter into the ftudy of botany. Mr. Ray has feparated thefe into different genera, and makes the difference of Goofeberry from the Currant, to confift in the firft having thorns on the branches, and the fruit growing Angle j whereas the latter hath fmooth branches, and the fruit growing in long bunches ; and although thefe differences may not be ftridly fcientific, yet it may be allowed fufficient to diftinguifh them among gardeners. The Characters are. The flower has a permanent entpalement of one leaf, cut into five fegments at the top, which is flwollen, concave , and coloured. It hath five [mall, obtufe, erehl petals , which rife from the border of the empalement •, and five awl-jhaped ftamina, which are inferted into the empale- ment, terminated by compreffed proftrate fummits. The germen is fituated below the flower, having a bifid ftyle crowned by an obtufe ftigma, and afterward becomes a glo- bular berry having a navel, with one cell, which is filled with roundifto compreffed feeds included in a pulp. This genus of plants is ranged by Dr. Linnseus in the firft fedion of his fifth clafs, intitled Pentandria Mo- nogynia, which contains thofe plants whofe flowers have five ftamina and one ftyle. The Species are, 1. Grossularia ( Reclinatum ) ramis reclinatis aculeatis, pedunculis triphyllis. Goofeberry with reclining branches . armed with fpines , and a three-leaved foot-ftalk. Grof- fularia fpinofa, frudu obfeure purpurafeente. J. B. 1. 48. Prickly Goofeberry with a dark purplifh fruit. 2. Grossularia (Hirfuta) • ramis aculeatis, baccis hirfutis. Goofeberry with prickly branches and hairy berries. Groffularia frudu maximo hifpido margaritarum fere colore. Raii Hift. 1484, Goofeberry with a very large rough fruity almofi of a pearl colour. ■ 3. Gaos- GRO 3. Grossularia (Uva Crifpa) ramis actileatis, ereftis, 5 baccis glabris. Goofeberry with ereft prickly branches ■, and fmooth berries. Groffularia fnnplici acino, vel fpi- nofa lylveftris. C. B. P. 455. Goofeberry with a fingle fruit , or wild prickly Goofeberry. 4. Grossularia ( Oxyacanthoia.es ) ramis undique acu- leatis. Goofeberry whofe branches are armed on all jtdes with pines. Groffularia oxyacanthas foliis amplionbus e finu Hudfonis. Pluk. Amalth. 212. Goofeberry with larger Hawthorn leaves from Hudfords Bay. 5. Grossularia ( Cynofbati ) aculeis fubaxillaribus, baccis aculeatis racemofis. Goofeberry with fpincs on the lower '■ part of the branches , and prickly berries growing in cluf- ters. Ribes aculeis fubaxillaribus, baccis aculeatis racemofis. Lin. Sp. Plant. 202. Currant with fpines on the lower part of the branches , and prickly berries growing in bunches. The forts which are here enumerated, are fuppofed to be diftinff fpecies ; but there are feveral other va- rieties which have been obtained from feeds, and are propagated for fale in the nurferies ; moft of thefe are titled from the perfons who raifed them, as Lamb’s Goofeberry, Hunt’s Goofeberry, Edwards’s Goofe- berry, &c. and as there are frequently new varieties obtained, it is needlefs to enumerate them here, there- fore I Ihall proceed to their culture. Thefe are propagated either by fuckers taken from the old plants, or by cuttings ; the latter of which I prefer to the former, becaufe thofe plants which are produced from fuckers are always more difpofed to ihoot out a greater number of fuckers from their roots, than fuch as are raifed from cuttings, which generally form much better roots. The beft feafon for planting thefe cuttings is in au- tumn, juft before their leaves begin to fall ; obferving always to take the handl'omeft fhoots, and from fuch branches as generally produce the greateft quantity of fruit j for if you take thofe which are produced from the ftem of the old plants (which are commonly very luxuriant) they will not be near fo fruitful as thofe taken from bearing branches: thefe cuttings ftiould be about fix or eight inches long, and muft be planted in a border of light earth,- expofed to the morning fun, about three inches deep, obferving to water them gently when the weather proves dry, to facilitate their taking root ; and in the fummer, when they have put out branches, you fhould rub off all the under Ihoots, leaving only the uppermoft or ftrongeft, which ftiould be trained upright, to form a regular ftem. In Oflober following thefe plants may be removed ; at which time you ftiould prepare an open fpot of frefli earth, which ftiould be well dug, and cleanfed from all noxious weeds, roots, &c. and being levelled, you fhould proceed to take up your plants, trimming their roots, and cutting off all lateral fide branches •, then plant them at three feet diftance row from ro w, and one foot afunder in the rows, obferving to place fome fhort flicks to the plants, in order to train their ftems upright and regular. In this place they may remain one or two years, being careful to keep them clear from weeds, as alfo to trim off all lateral fhoots which are produced below the head of the plant, fo that the ftem may be clear about a foot in height above the furface of the earth, which will be full enough ; and as the branches are produced commonly very irregular in the head, you muft cut out fuch of them as crofs each other, or thin them where they are too clofe, whereby the head of the plant will be open, and ca- pable of admitting the air freely into the middle, which is of great ufe to all kinds of fruits. After thefe plants have remained in this nurfery one or two years at moft, they will be fit to tranfplant to the places where they are defigned to remain for it is not fo well to let them grow in the nurferies too large which will occafion their roots to be woody, whereby the removing of them will not only hazard the growth of the plants, but fuch of them as may take very well will remain ftin^d for two or three years, before, they will be able to recov er their check. T he foil in which thefe plants thrive to the greateft advantage, is a rich light earth j though they will do very well upon middling foils, which are not too ftrong or moift, and in all ft- tuations; but where the fruit is cultivated, in order to procure it in the greateft perfedlion, they ftiould never be planted in the lhade of other trees,- but muft have a free open expofure. The diftance they ought to be planted is eight feet row from row, and fix feet afunder in the rows. The beft feafon for tranfplanting them is in October, when their leaves begin to decay , obferving, as was before directed, to prune their roots, and trim off all lateral fhoots, or fuch as-crofs each other, fhortening all long branches, fo as to make the head regular. In the pruning of thefe fhrubs moft people make ufe of garden-fhears, obferving only to cut the head round, as is pradtifed for Evergreens, &c. whereby the branches become fo much crowded, that what fruit is produced, never grows to half the ftze as it would do were the branches thinned, and pruned according to art ; which ftiould always be done with a priming- knife, fhortening the ftrong fhoots to about ten inches, and cutting out all thofe which grow irregular, thin- ning the fruit-bearing branches where they are too thick, obferving always to cut behind 4 leaf bud. With this management your fruit will be near twice as large as thofe which are produced upon fuch bufhes as are not thus pruned, and the fhrubs will continue in vi- gour much longer ; but you muft obferve to keep the ground clear from weeds, and dig it at leaft once a year ; and every other year you fhould beftow a little rotten dung upon it, which will greatly improve the fruit. It is a common pradtice with the gardeners near Lon- don, who have great quantities of thefe bufhes In order to fupply the markets, to prune them foon after Michaelmas, and then to dig up the ground between the rows, and plant it with Coleworts for fpring ufe, whereby their ground is employed all the winter, with- out prejudicing the Goofeberries ; and in hard winters thefe Coleworts often efcape, when thofe which are planted in an open expofure are all deftroyed ; and thefe are generally pulled up for ufe in February or March, fo that the ground is clear before the Goofe- berries come out in the fpring •, which is a piece of hufbandry well worth practifmg where ground is dear, or where perfons are confined for room. GROVES are the greateft ornaments to a garden, nor can a garden be complete which has not one or more of thele. In fmall gardens there is fcarce room to ad- mit of Groves of any extent, yet in thefe there ftiould be at leaft one contrived, which Ihould be as large as the ground will allow it and where thefe are fmall, there is more Ikill required in the difpofition, to give them the appearance of being larger than they really are. Groves have been in all ages held in great veneration: the ancient Romans had a fort of Groves near feveral of their temples, which were cqnfecrated to fome God, and were called luci by antiphrafis, a non lucendo, as being Ihady and dark •, and thefe were dedicated to holy ufes, being places of folitude and retirement, and were never to be violated with the ax. Thefe Groves are not only great ornaments to gar- dens, but are alfo the greateft relief againft the violent heats of the fun, affording lhade to walk under in the hotteft part of the day, when the other parts of the garden are ufelefs ; fo that every garden is defective which has not lhade. Groves are of two forts, viz. open and clofe Groves : open Groves are fuch as have large fhady trees, which Hand at fuch diftances, as that their branches may ap- proach fo near each other, as to prevent the rays of the fun from penetrating through them *, but as fuch trees are a long time in growing to a proper fize for affording a fhade, fo where new Groves are planted, the trees muff be placed clofer together, in order to have fhade as foon as poftible ; but in planting of thefe Groves, it is much the beft way to difpofe all the trees irregularly, which will give them a greater magnifi- cence, and alfo form a fhade fooner, than when the 6 L trees "254 G U A trees are planted in lines ; for when the fun dimes between the rows of trees, as it tnuft do feme part of the day in fummer, the walks between them will be expofed to the heat at fuch times, until the branches of thefe trees meet ; whereas in the irregular, planta- tions, the trees intervene, and obftrud the direct rays of the fun. W hen a perfon who is to lay out a garden, is fo happy as to meet with large full grown trees upon the fpot, they fhould remain inviolate, if poffible •, for it will be better to put up with many inconveniencies, than -to deftroy thefe, which will require an age to re- trieve ; fo that nothing but that of offending the ha- bitation, by being fo near as to occafion great damps or obftru&ing fine views, fhould tempt the cutting of them down. Moft of the Groves which have been planted either in England, or in thofe celebrated gardens of France, are only a few regular lines of trees ; many of which _ are avenues to the habitation, or lead to fonje build- ing, or objedfc ; but thefe do not appear fo grand, as thofe which have been made in woods where the trees have grown accidentally, and at irregular dis- tances ; and jvhere the trees have large fpreading heads, and afe left at fuch a diftance, as to permit the Grafs to grow under them, then they afford the greateft pleafure : for nothing is more noble than fine fpreading trees with large ftems, growing through Grafs, efpecially if the Grafs is well kept, and has a good verdure •, befides, moft of thefe planted Groves have generally a gravel-walk, made in aftrait line be- tween them, which greatly offends the fight of perfons who have true tafte : therefore whenever a gravel- walk is abfolutely necCffary to be carried through thefe Groves, it will be much better to twift it about, according as the trees naturally ftand, than to attempt regularity ; but dry walks under large trees are not fo ufeful as in open places, becaufe the dropping of the trees will render thefe walks ufelefs after rain, for a confiderable time. Clofe Groves have frequently large trees Handing in them, but the ground is filled under thefe with fhrubs, or under-wood ; fo that the walks which are made in them are private, and fereened from winds, whereby they are rendered agreeable for walking, at fuch times when the air is too violent or cold for walking in the more expofed parts of the garden. Thefe are often contrived fo as to bound the open Groves, and frequently to hide the walls, or other in- clofures of the garden ; and when they are properly laid out, with dry walks winding through them, and on the Tides of thefe fweet-fmelling fhrubs and flowers irregularly planted, they have a charming effedl ; for here a perfon may walk in private, fheltered from the inclemency of cold or violent winds, and enjoy the greater fweets of the vegetable kingdom : therefore where it can be admitted, if they are continued round the whole inclofure of the garden, there will be a much greater extent of walk ; and thefe fhrubs will appear the belt boundary, when there are not fine profpects to be gained. Thefe clofe Groves are by the French termed bof- quets, from the Italian word bofquetto, which fignifies a little wood, and in moft of the French gardens there are many of them planted ; but thefe are reduced to regular figures, as ovals, triangles, fquares, and ftars ; which have neither the beauty or ufe which thofe have that are made irregularly, and whole walks are not fhut up on each fide by hedges, which prevents the eye from feeing the quarters ; and thefe want the fragancy of the fhrubs and flowers, which are the great delight of thefe private walks : add to this, the keeping of the hedges in good order is attended with a great expence, which is a capital thing to be confidered in the making of gardens. ' GUAI ABARA. See Coccolobos. GUAJACANA. See Diospyros. GUAJACUM. Plum. Nov. Gen. 39. tab. 1 7. Lin. Gen. Plant. 465. Lignum Vitae, orPockwood. G U A The Characters are, The flower hath a concave empalement of one leaf, \ which is quinquefid. It hath five oblong , oval, concave petals, which are inferted in the. empalement and fpread open , and ten erebl ftamina inferted in the empalement , terminated by [mall fummits. The ftyle is long and fender the ger- men is oval and pointed , and the fiigma is Jingle and fender. The germen afterward becomes a berry which is roundijh , with an oblique point, and deeply furrowed, in- cloftng an oval hard feed. This genus of plants is ranged in the firft fection of Linnaeus s tenth clafs, mtitled Decandna Ivlonogynla, which includes thofe plants whofe flowers have ten ftamina and one ftyle. The Species are, 1. Guajacum ( Officinale ) foliolis bijugatis obtufis. Lin. Sp. Plant. 381. Guajacum with obtufie lobes placed by pairs. Guajacum flore casruleo, frudu fubrotundo. Plum. Nov. Gen. 391. Guajacum with a blue flower and a roundijh fruit. 2. Guajacum ( Sanffum ) foliolis multijugatis obtufis, Lin. Sp. Plant. 382. Guajacum with many pair of obtufe < lobes. Guajacum flore cseruleo fimbriato, frudu te- tragono. Plum. Nov. Gen. 391. Guajacum with a blue fringed flower , and a four-cornered fruit. 3. Guajacum (. Afrum ) foliolis multijugatis obtufis. Lin. Sp. Plant. 382. Guajacum with many pair of acute- pointed lobes. Guilandinoides. Hort. Cliff. 489. and the Afra arbor acacias fimilis, foliis myrti aculeatis fplendentibus. Boerh. Ind. alt. 2. p. 57. African-tree like the Acacia, with fhining, acute-pointed. Myrtle leaves. The firft fort is the common Lignum Vitae, or Gua- jacum, which is ufed in medicine, and grows naturally in moft of the iflands in the Weft-Indies, where it rifes to be a very large tree, having a hard, brittle, brown- ifh bark, not very thick ; the wood is firm, folid, and ponderous, appearing very refinous, of a blackifh yel- low colour within, and of a hot aromatic tafte ; the fmaller branches have an Afh-coloured bark, gar- nifhed with leaves, which are divided by pairs, each pair having two pair of fmall, oval, 'blunt leaves (or pinnae) of a ftiff confiftence, and a lucid green ; the flowers are produced in clufters at the end of the branches, compofed of five oval concave petals, of a fine blue colour ; in the center of thefe is fixed a ftyle with an oval germen, crowned by a flender ftig- ma ; and round this is fituated from ten to twenty ftamina, which are as long as the ftyle, terminated by fickle-fhaped fummits. Dr. Linnaeus fuppofes the flowers to have but ten ftamina, whereas they cer- tainly have near twenty. The bark and wood of this tree are much of the fame nature, only the wood is accounted hotter ; they are ufed in diet-drinks to purify and cleanfe the blood, and to caufe fweating ; they are efteemed good for the gout and dropfy, the king’s-evil, and particularly tor the French pox. The gum or refin, which is black, fhining, and brittle, and when powdered, of a green- ifh white colour, of an aromatic fmell, and poignant tafte, is fomewhat cathartic, and a good purge in rheumatic cafes, to the quantity of two fcruples mixed with the yolk of an egg, and given in a con- venient vehicle. The wood of this tree is fo hard as to break the tools in felling them, fo they are feldom cut down for fire- wood, being difficult to burn ; but the wood is of great ufe to the fugar-planters, for making of wheels and cogs for the fugar-mills, &c. It is aifo frequently brought to Europe, and wrought into bowls, and other utenfils are made of the wood. This tree can only be propagated by feeds, which muft be procured from the countries where it naturally grows ; thefe muft be freih, otherwife they will not grow ■, when they arrive, they fhould be fown in pots filled with light earth, and plunged into a good hot- bed : if the feeds are good, and the bed -in which they are plunged is of a proper temperature of heat, the plants will appear infix weeks or two months after; and in fix weeks will grow to be of ftrength enough more for for transplanting •, then they fhould be carefully taken out of the feed -pots, fo as to preferve their roots as entire as poffible, and each planted in feparate fmall pots filled with light earth, and plunged into a new hot-bed of tanners bark, where they muft be fhaded from the fun till they have taken frefn root •, then they muft be treated in the fame manner as other tender exotic plants from warm countries, admitting a large ifi are of free air to them when the weather is warm : they will require to be frequently refrefhed with water in warm weather, but it muft be given them with cau- tion, for too much wet will infallibly deftroy them. While the plants are young, they may be kept during the fummer feafon in a hot- bed of tanners bark un- der a frame ; but in the ' autumn they muft be re- moved into the bark-ftove, and plunged into the hot- bed of tan, where they fhould conftantly remain, and muft be treated in the fame manner as other tender plants, being careful not to give them too much wa- ter in the winter, when it is very prejudicial to them, and in fummer they fhould have a large ftiare of free air admitted to them every day. With this treatment the plants will thrive very well, but they are plants of flow growth in their own country, fo cannot be ex- pedted to make great progrefs in Europe. The fecond fort has many fmall leaves placed along the midrib by pairs, which are rounded and obtule at their ends, but narrow at their bafe : they are of the fame confidence with thofe of the former fort, but of a darker green colour ; the flowers are pro- duced in loofe bunches toward the end of the branches, which are of a fine blue colour, and their petals are fringed on their edges. This is called in fome of the iflands Baftard Lignum Vitae ; I received it from Antigua by that title. It requires the fame treatment as the firft fort, and is propagated by feeds in the fame way. I have alfo received fpecimens from the ifland of Barbuda of one, which feems different from either of thofe before-mentioned : the branches have the fame appearance with thofe of the firft fort, but the leaves are larger and indented at their extremities, and are placed all round the branches, on very fhort foot- ftalks •, the flowers were broken off, fo I cannot de- termine the difference between them, but by all ap- pearance they leem to be of the fame genus. The third fort has been long an inhabitant in fome of the curious gardens in England and Holland, but feldom produces flowers in Europe. This grows na- turally at the Cape of Good Hope, from whence the feeds were brought firft to Holland, where it paffed for a fpecies of Acacia, until it produced its flowers •, which, by the account given of them by the late Dr. Boerhaave, were of the butterfly kind; but whether Dr. Linnmus has feen the flowers or not, I cannot fay ; however, he has removed it from that clafs of plants, and has added it to this genus ; and as I have not yet feen the flowers, fo I do not know if it is rightly placed. The plants retain their leaves all the year, and will live in a good green-houfe in winter, but in fummer muft be placed abroad with other green-houfe plants. It is of flow growth, and is with difficulty propagated by layers. GUAJAVA. See Psidium. GUANABANUS. See Annona. GUAZUMA. See Theobroma. GUIDONIA. See Samvda. GUILikNDINA. Lin. Gen. Plant. 464. Bonduc. Plum. Nov. Gen. 25. tab. 39. The Nickar-tree. The Characters are. The empalement of the flower is of one leaf is bell-fhaped , and, cut at the top into five equal fegments : the flower has five concave fpear-fhaped petals which are equal , and fit clofe to the empalement , into which they are inferted. It hath ten awl -flo aped ftamina which are ere hi , and in- ferted in the empalement , being alternately fhorter than each other , and terminated by obtufe fummits. In the center is fituated an oblong germen , fupporting a flender jlyle the length of the ftamina , crowned by a fingle ftig- ma . The germen afterward becomes a rhomboid pod n with a convex future on the upper fide it is /welling and com - preffedj having one cell including oval hard feeds , which are fepar at ed by partitions. This genus of plants is ranged in the firft feblion of Linnaeus’s tenth clafs, in v/hich he includes the plants whole flowers have ten ftamina and one ftyie. The Species are, 1. Guilandina ( Bonduc ) acukata pinnis ovatis foliolis aculeis folitariis. Lin. Sp. 545. Prickly Guilandina with oval-winged leaves , whofe fmall leaves are armed with fingle fpines. Bonduc vuigare majus polyphyllum. Plum. Nov. Gen. 25. Common greater Bonduc , having many leaves , called yellow Nickar. 2. Guilandina ( Bonducella ) aculeata, pinnis oblongo- ovatis foliolis aculeis geminis. Lin. Sp. 545. Prickly Guilandina with oblong oval leaves , having fpines by pairs . Bonduc vuigare minus polyphyllum. Plum. Nov. Gen. 2 5. Smaller common Bonduc , or Nickar-tree having many leaves , called gray Nickar. 3. Guilandina ( Glabra ) inermis folks bipinnatis, foli- olis ovatis acutis alternis. Smooth Guilandina with dou- ble winged leaves , whofe fmall leaves are oval-pointed and alternate. 4. Guilandina ( Moringa ) inermis, foliis fubpinnatis, foliolis inferioribus ternatis. Flor. Zeyl. 155. Smooth Guilandina^ with winged leaves , whofe under fmall leaves are trifoliate. Moringa Zeylanica, foliorum pinnis pinnatis, flore majore, fruftu angulofo. Burm. Zeyl. 162. tab. 75. Morunga of Ceylon^ with double-winged leaves , a larger flower , and an angular fruit. 5. Guilandina fDioica ) inermis foliis bipinnatis bail apieeque fimpliciter pinnatis. Lin. Sp. 546. Guilandina with flmooth branches , doubly winged leaves , whofe bafe and tops are fingle winged. Bonduc Canadenfe poly- phyllum, non fpinofum, mas &fcemina. DuLIamel. Canada Nickar-tree having many leaves , which have no fpines , and are male and female in different plants. The firft and fecond forts grow naturally in moft of the iflands in the Weft-Indies, where they twine their ftalks about any neighbouring fupport, and rife to the height of twelve or fourteen feet. The leaves of the firft fort are near a foot and a half long, and are compofed of fix or fev^n pair of pinnae, or wings, each of which has as many pair of lobes, or fmall leaves fet along the midrib ; thefe are oval and en- tire ; the foot-ftalk or principal midrib of the leaf, is armed witff fhort, crooked, fingle thorns, which are placed irregularly ; the ftalks are clofely armed with, the like thorns, which are larger. The ftalks at firft grow erefl, but afterward they twine about the neigh- bouring trees or ffirubs, being too weak to ftand with- out fupport : the flowers come out in long fpikes from the wings of the ftalk •, they are compofed of five concave yellow petals, which are equal ; in the center is fituated the oblong germen, furrounded by ten ftamina. After the flower is paft, the germen becomes a broad thick pod, about three inches long and two broad, clofely armed with flender fpines, opening with two valves, each incloflngtwo hard feeds about the flze of children’s marbles, of a yellowifti colour. The fecond fort differs from the firft, in having much fmaller leaves, which are fet clofe together ; and below each pair of lobes are fituated two fhort ftiff crooked fpines, which are placed oppoflte ; the flow- ers are of a deeper yellow colour than thofe of the firft fort, and the feeds are of an Afti-colour. • The third fort was difeovered by the late Dr. Hou- ftoun at Campeachy, from whence he fent the dried famples to England, but there was no fruit on the trees at the time when he was there ; but he mentions that this fort had an upright ftem, which was of a large flze, dividing into many branches ; thefe are garnifhed with double winged leaves, which are fmooth the wings come out altenrnate, each leaf being compofed of four pair, but the lobes are placed oppoflte upon the middle rib ; they are oval, but end in a point, and are of a light green colour. The fourth fort grows naturally in the ifland of Ceylon, and in feveral places on the Malabar eoaft, from GUN from whence the feeds were brought to England. This in its native country rifes to the height of twenty- five or thirty feet, with a ftrong ftem, covered with a fmooth bark, which in the young branches is green, but on the older it is of an Afh-colour ^ the root grows knobbed, and very thick. This, when young, is fcraped and ufed by the inhabitants as Horfe-radifh is in Eu- rope, having much the fame fharp tafte •, the branches are garnifhed with decompounded winged leaves ; thofe which are fituated at the bafe have but three leaves, but above, the leaves are branched out into fe- veral divifions, which are again divided into fmaller, having each live or fix pair of oval lobes, terminated by an odd one ^ they are of a light green, and a little hoary on their under fide. The flowers are produced in loofe bunches from the fide of the branches •, they are compofed of an unequal number of petals, from five to ten •, they have ten fhort ftamina furrounding the germen, which afterward turns to a long taper pod, including feveral angular feeds, covered with a thin membrane. Thefe have a flavour like the root. Thefe four forts are natives of warm countries, fo will not live through the winter in England, unlefs they are placed in a warm ftove, and the pots plunged into the tan-bed. They are propagated by feeds, but thofe of the two firft forts are fo hard, that unlefs they are foaked two or three days in water before they are put into the ground, or placed under the pots in the tan-bed to foften their covers, they will remain years in the ground without vegetating : when the plants come up, they will be fit to tranfplant in a Ihort time ; then they Ihould be each tranfplanted into a lmall pot filled with light freffi earth, and plunged into a mo- derate hot-bed of tanners bark, fhading them till they have taken freffi root ; then they mull be treated in the fame manner as other tender exotic plants, giv- ing them a large {hare of air in warm weather, and but little water j and when the plants have ad- vanced to be too tall to remain in the frames, they muft be removed into the bark-ftove and plunged in- to the hot-bed, where they will make great progrefs, provided they have not too much water, efpecially during the winter feafon, for thefe plants are very im- patient of moifture in cold weather. The fourth fort requires the fame treatment as thofe before-mentioned, but the feeds will grow without be- ing fteeped in water ; and the plants are with diffi- culty fhifted from one pot to another, for their roots are large, fleffiy, and have but few fibres ; fo that un- lefs great care is taken, all the earth will fall away from them, which often caufes their ftalks to decay almoft to the root, and fometimes occafions the lofs of the plants. This plant muft be fparingly watered at all times, but particularly in cold weather, when moifture will caufe them to rot in a fhort time. The fifth fort grows naturally in Canada, from whence the plants were brought to Paris, where it has been fome years cultivated ; but about fourteen years paft, it was firft brought to England. This, in the country where it naturally grows, rifes with an erecft ftem to the height of thirty feet or more, dividing into many branches, which are covered with a bluiffi Affi-colour- ed bark very fmooth, and garniffied with large decom- pounded winged leaves which are of the oval ffiape, very fmooth and entire, but are ranged alternate on the midrib ■, thefe fall off in the autumn, and new ones come out late in the fpring. There are male and female of this fort indifferent plants j as thefe have not as yet flowered in any of the Englifh gardens, fo 1 can give no farther account of them nor of the fruit, having never feen any of them. This fort lives abroad in the open air, and is never hurt by froft. It is propagated by cutting off fome of the horizontal roots, which will caufe them to {hoot upward, fo it may be taken from the old root, and 'planted in pots, whereby the plant may be mul- tiplied, or by fuckers from the root. It requires a light foil, not too moift. Q U N D E LI A. Tourn. Cor. 51. tab. 586. Lin. Gen. Plant. 828. Hacub. Vaill Ac. Reg. Scien. 1718. This plant was fo named by Dr. Tourneforc, in ho- nour of Dr. Gundelfcheimer, who found it in his tra- vels in company with Dr. Tourneforc in the Levant. The Characters are, ' It hath an uniform tubulous flower, compofed of many hermaphrodite florets , which are incirded, by leaves . They have but one petal which is clofled at the bottom , but fat ells at the top , where it is flight ly cut into five fleg- ments : they have five floor t hairy ^jiamina, terminated by long cylindrical fummits. 'The oval germen is fituated at the bottom of the flower , crowned by j mall fcales , fluD- poriing a fender Jlyle which is longer than the petal, ter- minated by two revolving ftigmas. The germen afterward becomes a roundijh Jingle feed inclofled, in the common recep- tacle, which is conical, and the feeds are fleparated by a chaffy down . This genus of plants is by Tournefort referred to his twelfth clafs, which contains the herbs with flofcu- lous flowers. Dr. Linnaeus ranges it in the fifth flec- tion of his nineteenth clafs, intitled Syngenefia Poly- gam ia fegregata, which includes thofe plants whofe flowers have a common empalernent, and each of the florets are included in another. We have but one diftind Species of this genus at prefent in England, viz. Gundelia. Lin. Sp. Plant. 814. There is no Engliffi title to this plant, but there are two varieties of it mentioned by Tournefort, which are fuppofed to arife from the fame feeds, as they were found grow- ing promifcuoufly together. Thefe are, 1. Gundelia [T ourneflortii) Orientalis acanthi aculeati foliis, floribus intense purpureis, capite araneosa ianu- gine obfito. Tourn. Cor. 51. Eajlern Gundelia with prickly Bead s-breech leaves , deep purple flowers , and a head covered with a down like a cobweb. 2. Gundelia ( Glabro ) Orientalis, acanthi aculeati fo- lio, capite glabro. Tourn. Cor. 5s. Eajlern Gundelia 'with a prickly Bear 1 s-breech leaf, and a fmooth head. This plant was difeovered by Dr. Gundelfcheimer, in company with Tournefort, near Baibout in Arme- nia, but has fince been foundgrowing naturally in fe- veral places in the Levant, where it is generally found in dry ftrong land. The ftalks of this plant feldom rife more than a foot and a half high ; the under leaves are long, narrow, and fawed on their edges, their teeth ending in a fpine ; the other leaves are broader, which are irregularly flafhed to the midrib, and armed at the points with {harp prickles •, the ftalks divide upward into feveral branches, which are armed with leaves of the fame form, but are narrower ; and each is terminated by a conical head of flowers, refem- bling thofe of Fuller’s Thiftle, being furrounded at the bafe by a circle of long, narrow, prickly leaves : thefe heads are compofed of many hermaphrodite florets, which are {hut up in the fcales, each having an empalernent, and a germen with five ftamina furround- ing it •, but there are few of the feeds which ripen perfectly in each head, in the natural places of its growth. If rain happens at the time when the plants are in flower, the germen perifhes, which is the cafe with feveral other of thofe plants whofe flowers are colledted into heads. Thefe plants are propagated by feed, which ffiould be fown the beginning of March, in a warm dry bor- der of freffi, but lean earth, in the place where the plants are defigned to remain. When the plants come up, they muft be carefully cleared from weeds ; as they grow large, they ffiould be thinned, leaving the plants which are defigned to remain, about two feet afunder, thapthey may have room to fpread. After this there is no other culture required, but to keep them clear from weeds ; and if the froft ffiould prove fevere in winter, the plants fhould be covered with ftraw or Peas-haulm to protedl them, but this cover- ing muft be taken off in mild weather ^ in two years they will produce their flowers, when they will make a fine appearance amongft other hardy plants in the pleafure-garden. They flower in May, and the plants lofe their ftalks and leaves in autumn, but their roots will abide many years. GYP- GYP G Y P S OP. H Y LA. Lin. Gen. Plant, 498. We have no Englifh. title for this genus. The Chap-Acters are, The flower hath a permanent , angular , bell- (hoped em- palement , cut into jive ports at toe top. It hath jive oval blunt petals . , which fpread open , and ten awl jh aped fta- rnina, terminated, by toitndijh fummits. In the Lenten is fixated a globular gerfnen , J upper ting two /lender ftyles, crowned by Jingle jligmas. The germen afterward becomes a globular co.pju.le with one cell , opening with five valves , filled with /mail roundlfo feeds. This genus of plants is ranged in the fecond fedion of Linnaeus’s tenth clafs, which includes thofe plants whofe flowers have ten ftamina and two ftyles. The Species are, 1. GypsorHYLA ( Aggregdta ) folds mucronatis recurva- tis, floribus aggregates. Lin. Sp. Plant. 406. Gypfo- phyla with pointed recurved leaves , and flowers gathered in a head. Lychnis Hifpanica kali folio multiflora. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 338. Spanip Lychnis with a Glajf- wort leaf and many flowers. 2. Gypsophyla ( Faftigiata ) foliis lance'olato-lineari- bus, obfolete triquetris laevibus obtufis fecundis. Lin. Sp. Plant. 407. Gypfophyla with narrow fpear- paped leaves , having three blunt angles , and fimooth ob- tufie leaves in clufters. Saponaria caule fimpliri, foliis linearibus ex alls foliorum confertis teretibus. Hort. Cliff. 166. Sopewort with a Jingle ft'alk , very narrow leaves, coming out in clufters from the wings of the _ jtalks. 3. Gypsophyla {Profir at a) foliis. lanceolatis laevibus, caulibus diffufls, piftillis corolla campanulas longio- ribus. Lin. Sp. Plant. App. 1195- Gypfophyla with fimooth fp ear -fio aped leaves , dtjfufed ftalks , and the point al longer than the petal, which is bell-paped. 4. Gypsophyla (. Perfioliata ) foliis ovato-lanceolatis, fe- miamplexicaulibus . Lin. Sp. Plant. 408. Gypfophyla with oval fp ear -fio aped leaves, half embracing the ftalks. Lychnis Orientalis, faponarias folio & facie, flore par- vo & multiplici. Tourn. Cor. 24. Eaftern Lychnis with the leaf and appearance of Sopewort , having many fmall flowers. 5. Gypsophyla ( Paniculata ) foliis lanceolatis fcabris, floribus dioicis corollis revolutis. Lin. Sp. Plant. 407. Gypfophyla with rough , fipear-paped leaves , male and female in different plants, and the petals of the flowers recurved. . Alfine frutefeens caryophylli folio, flore parvo albo. Gerb. Shrubby Chickweed with a Clove Gillificwer leaf, and a fmall white flower. The firft fort grows naturally in the fouth of France, Spain, and Italy, upon the mountains. This hath a perennial root, from which arife many narrow leaves GY P ending in acute points, which are recurved ° the ftalks rife about a foot high, garnifhed with nar- rower leaves placed oppofite, and at fome of the joints there are fmaller leaves growing from the ftalks in clufters ; the upper part of the ftalk divides into fmaller branches, each being terminated by a clofe bunch of fmall white flowers. Thefe appear in July, and are fucceeded by fmall oval capfules, filled with fmall feeds. The fecond fort is fome what like the firft, but the leaves are much narrower, and alrnoft three-cor- nered •, they are placed in clufters, which come out from the fide of the ftalk; the bunches of the flowers are fmaller, and not fo clofely joined. This hath a perennial root, and grows naturally upon tL* Hel- vetian mountains. The third fort hatha perennial root, from which arife fmooth fpear-fttaped leaves in clufters ; the ftalks are near a foot long, but are proftrate on the ground ; the flowers have a purplifh call, and the ftamina are much longer than the petals of the flowers. This flowers in June and July, and the feeds ripen in autumn. The fourth fort grows naturally in the Levant, and alfo in Spain. It hath a ftrong, flefhy, fibrous root, which ftrikes deep in the ground, fending up feveral thick, flefhy ftalks, which rife near two feet high, garnifhed with oval fpear-fhaped leaves, which half embrace the ftalks with their bale ; the upper part of the ftalk divides into many fmaller branches, which are terminated with loofe bunches of fmall white flowers. Thefe open in July, and the feeds ripen in autumn. The fifth fort grows naturally in Siberia and Tartary, the feeds of it were fent me from Peterfburgh. This hath a perennial root, from which arife many branch- ing ftalks a foot and a half high, garnifhed with narrow fmooth-pointed leaves, fhaped like thofe of Gilliflowers •, at the top of the ftalks are produced loofe clufters of very fmall white flowers, which ap- pear at the fame time with the former forts, and the feeds ripen in the autumn. Thefe plants have no great beauty, fo are rarely cul- tivated but in botanic gardens for the fake of va- riety. They are propagated by feeds, which Ihould be Town in a bed of light earth, and when the plants are fit to remove, they may be tranfplanted into the places where they are defigned to remain, and will require no other culture but to keep them dean from weeds ; for the roots will continue feveral years, and annually pro- duce flowers and feeds. H. H JE M H iEMANTHUS. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 657. tab. 433. Lin. Gen. Plant. 394. Dracunculoi- des. Boerh. Ind. alt. 2. 226. [A jjwwO© 4 , of fly, a, blood, and^AvO© 4 , flos, a flower, i. e. Blood-flower,] The Characters are. The flower has a permanent empalement of fix leaves , which is large , and paped like an umbel. It hath one ere hi petal, which is cut into fix parts, having a port angular tube, end fix awl-paped ftamina , which are infer ted in the petal. H IE M but are longer , terminated by oblong proftrate fummits. The germen is fituated under the flower, fupporting a 'Jingle fyle the length of the ftamina, crowned by a fingle ftigrna. The germen afterward becomes a roundip berry with three cells , each containing one triangular feed . This genus of plants is ranged in the firft fe&ion of Linnaeus’/ fixth clafs, intitled Hexandria Monogynia, which includes the plants whofe flowers have fix fta~ mina and one ftyle. The 6 M H M M The Species are, i. H^manthus ( Cgccineus ) foliis- linguiformibus planis Isevibus.Prod.Leyd. 42. Blood-flower with plain, tongue- Jhaped , flmooth leaves. Haemanthus Africanus. H. L. Bat. African Blood-flower , or Cape 'Tulip. 1. TI/EManthus ( Carinatus ) folds longioribus carinatis. Blood-flower with longer keel-floaped leaves. 3, Haemanthus ( Puniceus ) toliis lanceolato ovatis un- dulatis creeds. Hort. Cliff. 127. Blood-flower with fp car - fhaped, waved , eredt leaves . Haemanthus colchici fo- lds perianthio herbaceo. Hort. Elth. 167. Blood-flower with Meadozv Saffron leaves , and an herbaceous involu- crum. Dracunculoides. Boerh. Ind. alt. 2.226. Baftard Dragon. The firft fort has been many years in feveral curious gardens in Europe, where it hath feldom flowered. This hath a large bulbous root, from which in the autumn comes out two broad flat leaves, of a flefhy confidence, fhaped like a tongue*, which turn back- ward on £ach fide, and lpread flat on the ground, fo have a Angular appearance all the winter ; and in the fpring thefe leaves decay, fo that from the end of May to the beginning of Auguft,they are deftitute of leaves: when thefe produce their flowers, it is always in the autumn, juft before the new leaves come out. In the books where this plant is figured, the flowers are re- prefented growing upon a ftrong upright foot-ftalk ; but all thofe which I have feen in flower, never have rifen more than two or three inches from the bulb, with a large clutter of bright red flowers, inclofed in a common leafy-coloured empalement; thefe were tubulous, with one petal cut into Ax parts, each having Ax long ftamina, Handing out beyond the petal, and in the center appears the germen fitting under the flower, fupporting a Angle ftvle, crowned with a ftig- ' ma. The germen never ripens to a feed in England, but decays with the flower, and then the green leaves grow and fpread on the ground. The fecond Art hath a large bulbous root like the firft, which fends out three or four leaves, that grow a foot long or more ; thefe are not flat like thofe of the other, but are hollowed like the keel of a boat, and ftancl more eredl than thofe of the former fort, but are not quite fo broad *, the flowers of this are like thofe of the firft, bu :re of a paler red •, this is cer- tainly different from the other. I received the roots of this from Dr. Van Royen, prcfeffor of botany at Leyden. The third fort hath roots compofed of many thick flefhy tubers, which join at the top, where they form a head, out of which arifes a flefhy fpotted ftaik, like that of the dragon, which fpread s out at the top into feveral fpear-fhaped leaves, which are waved on their edges. The ftalks grow about afoot high, and the leaves are fix or eight inches long, and two broad in the middle ; from the fide of this ftaik near the ground, breaks out a ftrong flefhy foot-ftalk, about fix or eight inches long, fuftaining at the top a large clufter of flowers, included in one common empale- rnent or covering, which is permanent ; the flowers are fhaped like thofe of the other forts, but are of a yellowifh red colour. Thefe appear in May, June, or July, and are fucceeded by berries which are of a beautiful red colour when ripe. The two firft forts are with difficulty propagated in Europe, for their roots put out offsets but fpanngly, fo the gardens in Holland are fupplied with them from the Cape of Good Hope, where they naturally grow, and produce feeds; the plants are too tender to thrive in this country in winter in the open air, therefore the roots muft be planted in pots filled with light loamy earth, and, in the winter, placed in a dry glafs- cafe, where, during that feafon, the leaves will be in full vigour, fo will make a pretty appearance, when intermixed y/ith other plants in the ftove ; and though they feldom flower here, yet are they worthy of a "place in every garden where there is conveni- ency of keeping them. The roots may be taken up when their leaves are decayed, and kept out of the ground till Auguft, when they fliould be new pot- h m-M ted, and may remain abroad till the end of Sep- tember, at which time they may be removed into the glafs-cafe ; and during the time they are growing, will require to have frequent waterings, but it muft not be given to them in large quantities. If a border is made either again ft the front of the green-houfe or ftoves, which may be contrived fo as to be covered with glaffes in winter, in which thefe roots, with the African Gladiolus’s, Ixia’s, For flan Cyclamens, &c. are planted in the full ground, they will flower more conftantly, and the foot- ftalks will rife much higher than thofe kept in pots. The third fort is alfo a native of the Cape of Good Hope, from whence it was firft brought to Holland, where it has been propagated and difperfed over Eu- rope ; this may be propagated by parting of the roots; the beft time for this Is in the fpring, before the plants put out new ftalks, which is alfo a right time to ifhift and new-pot them ; but as the roots do not multiply very fail in offsets, the beft way is to propagate them from feeds, which they ripen plentifully in England ; thefe fliould be fown loon after they are ripe, in pots filled with light earth, and kept in the ftove all the v/inter •, if thefe pots are plunged into the tan-bed in the bark-ftove, in the vacancies between the plants, the earth will be kept warm, and will not dry io faff, as when they are placed in a dry ftove, fo the feeds will be fooner prepared to vegetate ; in the fpring the pots may be taken out of the ftove, and plunged into a hot-bed, which will bring up the plants ; thefe muft have air admitted to them every day in itiiid weather, to prevent their drawing up weak •, and when they are fit to remove, they may be each planted in a fepa- rate fmall pot filled with light earth, and plunged into the hot-bed again, to promote their taking new root ; then they muft be gradually hardened, and afterward may be removed into the dry ftove, where they fliould conftantly remain, ctherwile the plants will not thrive and flower in this country. In the winter feafon they muft not have too much wet, for as their roots are flefhy and fucculent, fo they &re apt to rot with moifture. In the fummer they muft have a large fnare of air in warm weather, and require to be fre- quently watered, efpecially during the time of their flowering. HiEM ATOX YLUM. Lin. Gen. Plant. 417. Bloodwood, Logwood, or Campeachy Wood. The Characters are, The flower hath a permanent empalement , which is cut into five oval fegments. It hath five oval petals which are equal , and larger than the empalement , and ten awl- Jhaped ftamina , which are longer than the petals , termi- nated by fmall fummits. In the center is fituated an oblong oval germen , fupporting a Jingle ftyle , crovoned by a thick indented ftigma. The germen afterward becomes a com- preffed obtufe cap file , with one cel ning with two valves , containing two or three cl ■ rg Sidney -fhaped feeds . This genus of plants is ranged in the firft fe&ion of Linnaeus’s tenth dais, intitled Decandria Monogy- nia, which includes thofe plants whole dowers have ten ftamina and one ftyle. We have but one Species of this r mas, viz. ELematcxylum [Camp e chi anum). Hort. Cliff. 161. Logwood , Lignum Campechianum, fpecies quae- dam. Sloan. Cat. Jam 213. Campeachy Wood. This tree grows naturally in the Bay ot Campeachy, at Honduras, and other parts of the Spanifh Weft- Indies, where it riles from fixceen to twenty-four feet high. The items are generally crooked, and very deformed, and are feldom thicker than a man’s thigh. The branches come out on every fide ; they are crooked, irregular, and armed with ftrong thorns, garnifhed with winged leaves, compofed of three or four pair of lobes, which are obtufe, and indented at the top. The flowers come out in a racemus from the wings of the leaves, Handing erebt *, they are of a pale yellowifh colour, with a purple empalement, and are fucceeded by flat oblong pods, each containing two or three kidney-fhaped feeds. The HAL The wood of this tree is brought to Europe, where it is ufed for dyeing purples, and for the fineft blacks, fo is a valuable commodity ; but the Spaniards, who claim a right to the pofielTicn of tnole places where it naturally grows, are for excluding ail other countries from cutmg of the wood, which has occasioned m^ny diiputes with their neighbours, but particularly with the Eno-hfh j this it is to be hoped will joon be ovei, as there are fome of the planters in Jamaica, and the. other i (lands in America, belonging to the crown of Great-Britain, who have propagated this tree in fo great plenty, as to have hopes or {applying the de- mand for this wood in Britain in a very few years ; for the trees grow fo faft tnere, as to oe nt for ule in ten or twelve years years from iced •, and as they pioduce great plenty of feeds in the Britifh colonies, io thole feeds fcattering about, the plants come up in all the neighbouring lands, therefore will loon be like an in- digenous plant of the country. Some of the planters in Jamaica have inclofed their eftates with hedges formed of thefe trees, which are very ftrong and durable-, but where the hedges are cut, it will greatly retard the growth of the trees, fo that thofe who propofe to make an advantage by the pro- pagation of the wood, fxiould low the feeds upon lwampy lands, which may be unfit for growing . of fugar, and permit all their branches to remain, which will be of great ufe in augmenting the bulk of their Items and if, while the plants are young, they are kept clean from weeds, &c. it will be of great advan- tage in promoting of their growth. I have been cre- dibly informed by fome of the planters in Jamaica, that they have had fome plants of this fort upward ol ten feet high in three years, fo that it requires but lew years to raife a fupply of this wood, fufficient to an- Iwer all the demands for it. This plant is preferved in fome curious gardens in England, for the fake of variety. The feeds are fre quently brought from America, which, if frefh, rea- dily grow when fown upon a good hot-bed and if the plants are kept in a moderate hot-bed, they will grow to be upward of a foot high the fame year, and, while the plants are young, they are generally well furnifhed with leaves ; but afterward they make but little progrefs, and are frequently but thinly clothed with leaves. Thefe plants are very tender, fo fhould be conftantly kept in the bark-ftove, where, if they are duly watered, and the (love kept in a good degree of heat, the plants may be preferved very well. There are fome of thefe plants now in England, which are upward of fix feet high, and as thriving as thofe in their native foil. HALE SI A. Lin. Gen. Plant. 596. The Characters are. The ficwcr hath a f mall permanent empalement of one leaf, indented in four parts it hath a bell-fhaped fuelling flower of one petal , divided at the brim into flour lobes , and from twelve to fixteen fiamina , floorter than the petal , termi- nated by oblong erect fummits ; the germen is fituated be- low , is oblong , fupporting a fender ftyle longer than the petal , crowned by a fimple Jligma -, the germen afterward becomes an oblong nut , narrowed at both ends , having four angles, with two cells , inclofing a Jingle feed in each . This genus of plants is ranged in the firft fedion of Linnaeus’s eleventh clafs, intitled Dodecandria Mo- nogynia, the flower having twelve fcamina and one ftyle. The Species are, 1. Halesia ( Tetraptera ) foliis lanceolato-ovatis, peti- olis glandulofis. Lin. Sp. 636. Halefia with oval fpear- Jhaped leaves, whofe foot-fialks are glandulous. Frutex padi foliis ferratis, floribus monopetalus albis cam- paniformibus, frudu craflo tetragono. Catefb. Hift. Carol. 1. p. 64. 2. Halesia ( Dipt era ) foliis ovatis, petiolis Isvibus. Lin. Sp. 636. Halefla with oval leaves having flmooth foot-Jlalks. This genus of plants received its title from the late learned and reverend Dodor Hales, minifter of Teddington, near Hampton-Court. Both the -forts grew naturally in South-'C&rolina.; the firff on the banks of Santee river, where it frequently comes up with two or three (terns from the fame root, which rife from fifteen to twenty feet high, fending out branches toward their tops, gafnifhed with oval ipear- fhaped leaves, fawed on theiredges : the flowers are pro- duced on the fide of the branches in clutters, from two or three to fix or feven in each ; they are bell-fhaped, hanging downward, of one petal, white, which is indented in four parts at the brim ; thefe are fucceeded by oblong nuts, having four wings and four cells, each containing one oblong feed. The fecond fort hath much refemhlance fo the firft, the leaves are oval, and the (oot-ftaiks are ffflfooth # the fruit has but two angles. Thefe plants are propagated by feeds, when they can be procured frefh from the places of their natural growth. Thefe (hould be fown in pots as loon as the feeds arrive, plunging the pots into the ground, in a fituation where they may have only the morning fun. The feeds often remain a year in the ground,- therefore the earth in the pots fhould not be difturhed, until there is no probability of the feed growing. When the plants appear, they fhould be fereened from the fun, and frequently, but not too plentifully watered for while the plants are young, much moifture will rot their (banks. The following autumn, the pots fhould be placed in a common frame, where the plants may enjoy the free air in mild weather, and be fereened from froft. The fpring following, before the plants begin to (hoot, they (hould be each put into a feparate final! pot, plunging them in a frame, where, they fhould be (haded from fun •, and in' the fummer placed in a fhady fituation, fereening them in winter ; and the fpring following' they may be turned out of the pots, and planted in the full ground where they are defigned to remain. H A LI C A C A B U M; See Physalis. HALICACABUS PE RE GRIN A. SeeCAR- DIOSFERMITM. H A L I hi U S. See Atriplex. HAL LERI A. Lin. Gent. Plant. 679. Caprifolium. Boerh. Ind. alt 2. p. 226. African Fly Honey fickle. The Characters are, The flower hath a permanent empalement of one leaf, which is cut into three parts at the top, the upper feg- ment being much broader than the other. It hath one pe- tal of the grining kind. The bottom of the tube is romdifh. The chaps are fwollen and inflexed, the brini is ereli and oblique, cut into four fegments, the upper being longer than the others , and is blunt, with an indenture at the top the two Jide ones are floorter, and pointed, the lower is very floor t and acute. It hath four fiamina, which are briftly , two being longer than the other, terminated by twin fummits. In the bottom of the tube is fituated an oval germen , with a ftyle longer than the fiamina, crown- ed by a Jingle Jligma. The germen afterward becomes a roundijh berry with two cells , each containing one hard fend. This genus of plants is ranged in the fecond fedtion of Linnteus’s fourteenth clafs, intitled Didynamia An- giofpermia, which includes the plants with a ringent flower, which have two long and two (hotter (lamina, and the feeds are included in a capfule. We have but one Species of this genus, viz. Halleria ( Lucida ). Hort. Cliff. 323. This plant has its title from Dr. Haller, who was profeffor of botany at Gottingen, in Germany. Caprifolium Africanum folio pruni leviter ferrato, (lore ruberrimo, bacca ni- gra. Boerh, Ind. alt. 2. 226. African Fly Honey fuckle , with a Plumb leaf lightly fla wed, a very red flower, and a black berry. The Englifh name which I have here added, has been given to this plant by fome gardeners, who ob~ ferved that the fhape of the flower had fome refem- blance to that of the Upright, or Fly Honeyfuckle, and for want of an English name gave this to it ; or they might take it from the Latin name, by which it was called by Dr. Boerhaave, who made it a fpedes of Honeyfuckle. This H A M Thife plan-? grows to the height of fix or eight feet, having a woody ftem, which is well furnifhed with branches ; thefe have oval fawed leaves, which are placed oppofite, and continue green through the year; : the flowers come out fingly., and are of a red colour, but, being intermixed with the leaves, are not feen unlefs they are looked after, for they grow fcatteringly on the branches ; thefe come out in June, and the feeds ripen in September; the leaves are green in win- ter, fo the plants make a variety in the green-houfe during that feal'on. It may be propagated by cuttings, which, if planted in pots filled with light earth in June, and plunged into a gentle hot-bed, will foon take root ; thefe plants may be expofed in fummer, and will require plenty of wa- ter in that feafon ; in winter they mult be honied with Myrtles, and other hardy exotic plants, which re- quire a large fhare of air in mild weather. HAMAMELIS. Lin. Gen. Plant. 155. Trilopus. Mitch. Gen. 22. The Witch Hazel. The Characters are, It is male and female in different plants ; the male flowers have a four -leaved empalement , and four narrow ■petals , which are reflexed ; they have four narrow ftamina , which are fhorter than the petals , terminated by horned reflexed fummits. The female flowers have a four-leaved involu- crum , in which are four flowers ; thefe have a four-leaved empalement , which is coloured ; they have four narrow petals , which are reflexed , and four neftariums adhering to the petals. In the center is Jituated an oval hairy ger- tnen, fupporting two flyles , crowned by headed ftigmas. The germed, afterward becomes an oval capfule fitting in the involucrum , having two cells , each containing one hard , oblong , fmooth feed. This genus of plants is ranged in the fecond fedtion of Linnaeus’s fourth clafs, but properly belongs to the fecond fettion of his twenty-fecond clafs, which in- cludes thofe plants which have male and female flowers in different plants,' whofe female flowers have two ftyles. We have but one Species of this genus in the Englifh gardens at prefent, viz. Hamamelis ( Virginiana ). Flor. Virg. 139. The Witch Hazel. Piftachia Virginiana nigra, coryli foliis. Pluk. Aim. 296. Black Virginia Piftachia with Hazel leaves. This plant grows naturally in North America, from whence the feeds have been brought to Europe, and many of the plants have been raifed in the Englifh gardens, where they are propagated for fale by the nurfery gardeners. It hath a woody ftem, from two to three feet high, fending out many fiender branches, garnifhed with oval leaves, indented on their edges, having great refemblance to thofe of the Hazel Nut, placed alternately on the branches ; thefe fall away in autumn, and when the plants are deftitute of leaves, the flowers come out in clufters from the joints of the branches ; thefe fometimes appear the latter end of Gdtober, and often not till December, but are not fucceeded by feeds in this country. As the flowers of this fhrub make very little ap- pearance, fo it is only preferved in the gardens of the curious, more for the fake of variety than its beauty. This is propagated by laying down the young branches in autumn, which will take root in one year, provided they are duly watered in dry weather ; but many of the plants which are in the gardens, have been pro- duced from feeds which came from America ; thefe feeds always remain a whole year in the ground, fo they fhouid be fown in pots, which may be plunged into the ground in a fhady part of the garden, where they may remain all the fummer, and require no other care but to keep the pots clean from weeds, and in very dry weather to water them now and then ; in autumn the pots may be removed to a warmer fitua- tion, and plunged into the ground under a warm hedge ; and if the winter fhouid prove very fevere, they fhouid have fome light covering thrown over the pots, which will fecure the feeds from being deftroyed. H A S In the fpring the plants will come up, therefore as tBfe feafon grows warm, the pots may be removed where they may have the morning fun till eleven o’clock ; and if they are duly watered in dry weather, the plants will have made good progrefs by autumn, when they fhouid be tranfplanted, either into fmall pots, or in a nurfery-bed, where in one, or at molt two years time, they will be ftrong enough to plant where they are de- figned to remain ; they love a mailt foil, and a fhady fituation. HAMELLIA. Lin. Gen. 232. The Characters are, The empalement of the flower is fmall , permanent , and cut into five acute figments ; the flower is of one petal having a long tube , whofe brim is cut into five acute points ; it hath five awl-fhaped ftamina inferted to the middle of the petals terminated by linear fummits the length of the petal ; and an oval gerrnen , whofe lower point is conical fupporting a fender ftyle the length of the corolla , crowned by an ob- tufe linear ftigma : the gerrnen afterward becomes an oval furrowed berry , with five cells , filled with fmall comprejfed feeds. This genus of plants is ranged in the firft order of Linnaeus’s fifth clafs, intitled Pentandria Monogynia, the flower having five ftamina and one ftyle,: it is named in honour of Monfieur du HameidesMonceaux, member of the Academy of Sciences at Paris, and fellow of the Royal Society of London; a gentleman well known to the learned, by the many ufeful books he has publifhed. We know but one Species of this genus, viz. 1. Hamellia ( Patens ) racemis eredos. Jacq. Amer. 7 1 . Hamellia with ere hi fpikes of flowers. This plant grows naturally in Africa, and alfo in the warm parts of America : I received the feeds from Paris, which were brought from Senegal by Mr. Adanlon, with the title of Mortura on the paper ; and before that, received a drawing of the plant in flower, from the late Dr. Houftoun, who found ic growing naturally in America, where it has lince been found growing by Mr. Jacquin, who has figured it. It rifes with a ligneous ftalk five or fix feet high, fending out feverai eredt branches toward the top, garnifhed with oval woolly leaves, placed by threes round the branches, having red foot- italics ; the flow- ers terminate the branches in fiender fpikes ; they are tubulous, and cut at their brims into five fharp feg- ments, ftanding erebt, of a bright red colour : thele are not fucceeded by feeds in England. This plant is propagated by feeds, when they can be procured frefti from the countries where it grows na- turally : thefe fhouid be fown in fmall pots, and plunged into a moderate hot-bed : the plants gene- rally appear in about five or fix weeks after, and fhouid then be treated in the fame way as other plants from the fame countries ; giving them proper air in warm weather, and gently refrefbing them with wa- ter ; and when they are fit to tranfplant, they fhouid be each planted in a fmall pot, plunging them into the hot-bed again, where they fhouid oe ltiaded rrom the fun until they have taken new root, when they fhouid have air and riioifture according to the warmth of the feafon. In the autumn the plants muft be re- moved into the tan-ftove, plunging the pots into the bed, where they fhouid be always continued : this flowers in July and Auguft, when it makes a pretty appearance. As the feeds of this plant are feldom brought to England, fo the plant may be propagated by cut- tings, which if planted in fmall pots, plunged into a moderate hot-bed, and clofely covered with either bell or hand-glaffes, will put out roots in about nx weeks, and may then be treated in the fame way as the feedling plants. HARMALA, See Peganum. HASSEL QJL 7 1 S T I A. Lin. Gen, 341. The Characters are. It is an umbelliferous plant , whofe univerfal umbel is cotn- pofed of fix fpreading rays ; thefe are for the moft part double ; the greater involucrum has many fhort briftly 2 leaves ; HED H ED leaves ; the proper empaletnent is very finally and hath Jive indentures •, the general umbel is half radiated ■, the outer flowers are fruitful , but thofe in the dijk are barren ■, they have five petals , and five J, lender ftamina longer than the metals? terminated by roimdifh fummits : the turbinated gerrnen is fiiuated under the flower , fupporting two jlen- der recurved fiyles? crowned by obtufe Jligmas \ the germen afterward becomes an orbicular fruit , compofed of two feeds having borders. This genus of plants is ranged in the fecond or- der of Linnaeus’s fifth clafs, intitled Pentandria Digynia, the flowers haying five ftamina and two ftyles. It it named after Mr. Hafielquift, who was a pupil of Dr. Linmeus. 1. Hasselquistxa ( Adgyptiaca ). Amcen, Acad. 4. p. 370. Egyptian Hajfelquiftip. Paftinaca Orientalss, fo- lds eleganter incifis. Buxb. Cent. 3. p. 16. This plant is bennial, and being a native of warm countries, is with difficulty preferved in England - 3 for when the plants come up early in the fpring, they do not perfect their feeds the fame year : and thofe plants which arife in the autumn, feldom live through the winter * therefore the fureft method to procure good feeds in this country, is to fow the feeds in pots about the 'middle of Auguft, placing the pots where they may have the morning fun only, being careful to water them duly ; and as weeds wall come up in the pots to take them out, and where the plants are too clofe, thin them *, in Odober re- move the pots into a common frame, where they may enjoy the free air in mild weather, but be fcreened from froft : in the fpring following, if the plants are carefully turned out of the pots, and planted in the full ground, they will flower in June, and the feeds will ripen in Auguft. •HAWTHORN. See Mespilus. HAZEL. See Corylus. HED ERA. Lin. Gen. Plant. 249. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 612. tab. 384. The Ivy-tree. The Characters are. The flowers are difpofed in form of an umbel , having a fmall involucrum indented in many parts. The empale- ment is cut into five parts? and fits upon a germen. The flower hath five oblong petals , which fipread open, whofie points are incurved they have five awl-floaped ftamina? terminated by profir ate fummits ? which are cut into two at their bafie. The germen? which is fituated below the flower ? fupports a fhort ftyle ? crowned by a fingle ftigma. The germen afterward becomes a globular berry with one cell ? inclofing four or five large feeds , convex on one fide ? and angular on the other. This genus of plants is ranged in the firft fedion of Linnaeus’s fifth clafs, which includes thofe plants whofe flowers have five ftamina and but one ftyle. The Species are, 3. Hedera {Helix) foliis ovatis lobatifque. Flor. Lapp. 91. Ivy with oval lobed leaves. Hedera arborea. C. B. P. 305. Tree Ivy \ and the Hedera communis major. J. B. 2. hi. Great common Ivy. 2. Hedera {Qpinquefclia) foliis quinatis, ovatis, ferra- tis. Hort. Cliff. 74. Ivy with leaves compofed of five lobes ? which are flawed. Vitis quinquefolia Canaden- iis fcandens. Tourn. Inft. 613. Climbing Canada Vine with . five leaves ? commonly called Virginia Creeper. . The firft fort grows naturally in moll parts of England, where it meets with any neighbouring fupport. The ftalks will fatten to it, and rife to a very great height, fending out roots on every fide, which get into the joints of walls, or the bark of trees, and thereby are fupported ; or if there is no fupport near, the ftalks trail upon the ground, and take root all their length, fo that they clofely cover the furfaee, and are diffi- cult to eradicate ; for where any fmall parts of the ftalks are left,, they will foon fpread and multiply. While thefe are fixed to arty fupport, or trail upon the ground, their ftalks are (lender and flexible j but when they have reached to the top of their fupport, they fttorten and become woody, forming themfelves into large bulky heads, and their leaves are larger, more of an oval ftiape, and not divided into lobes like the lower leaves, that it hath a different appearance, which has occafioned forne to take them for diftinct fpecies. In the latter part of the laft century, when it was the faffiion to fill gardens with all forts of fheered Ever- greens, there were many of thefe plants trained into round heads, which were clipped into balls, or in form of a cone * and as thefe were fo hardy as not to be in- jured by weather, and would grow in any foil, fo they were then much efteemed •, but iince that unnatural tafte has been exploded, thefe plants are feldom ad- mitted into gardens, unlefs to cover walls, or run over grottos, &c. for which purpofe there is no plant fo well adapted. There are two varieties of this, one with filver-ftriped leaves, and the other with yellowiffi leaves on the top of the branches * thefe are preferved in feme gardens for the fake of variety. Thefe plants are eafily propagated by their trailing branches, which fend forth roots their whole length * which branches being cut off, and planted, will grow in almoft any foil or fituation, and may be trained up to Items, or fuffered to remain as climbers, to cover .walls, pales, &c. They may alfo be propagated by feeds, which ffioulcl be fown foon after they are ripe, which is in the begin- ning of April : if thefe are kept moift and loaded, they will grow the fame fpring, otherwife they will remain a year in the ground ; therefore few perfons trouble themfelves to propagate the plants in this way, the other being much more expeditious. While the ftalks of this plant trail, either on the ground or upon walls, or other fupport, they do not produce any flowers, which has occafioned its be- ing called fterile, or barren Ivy but when the branches get above their fupport, they produce flowers at the end of every ffioot ; thefe appear in September* and are fucceeded by berries, which turn black before they are ripe, and are formed into round bunches, which are called corymbi, and from thefe the epi- thet of corymbus, fo frequently ufed by botanifts, is taken. The leaves of this plant are frequently applied to iffues to keep them cool, and free from inflammations * they are alio ufed for curing of fcabs, fores, and feald heads. Mr. Boyle, in his Ulefulnefs of Expe- rimental Philofophy, commends a large dofe of the full ripe berries, as a remedy againft the plague ; but Schroder fays, they purge upward and down- ward. The gum of Ivy is cauftic, but is recom- mended by fome to take fpots and freckles out of the face. There is mention made of another fpecies of Ivy, which is titled Hedera Poetica, by Cafpar Bauhin * this grows in many of the iflands of the Archipelago, and produces yellow berries * but as I have not feen this plant, I cannot determine if it is a diftind fpe- cies. Dr. Linnaeus fuppofes it to be only a variety, though he has not leen the plant ; but Tournefort, who gathered it in the Levant, puts it down as a dif- ferent fort. The fecond fort grows naturally in all the northern parts of America •, it was firft brought to Europe from Canada, and has been long cultivated in the Engliffi gardens, chiefly to plant againft walls, or • high buildings to cover them, which thefe plants will do in a fhort time, for they will fhoot almoft twenty- feet high in one year, and will mount up to the top of the higheft building ; but as the leaves fall off in autumn, the plants make but an indifferent appear- ance in winter ; and as it is late before they come out in the fpring, they are not much efteemed, unlefs it is for fuch fituations, where better things will not thrive * for this plant will thrive in the midft of London, and is not injured by fmoke, or the clofenefs of the air, fo are very proper for fuch fituations. The ftalks of thefe plants put out roots, which fatten themfelves 6 N Z'i> EE BED Into the joints of the walls, whereby they are fup- ported. This may be propagated by cuttings, which if planted in autumn on a fhady border, will take root, and by the following autumn will be fit to plant where they are defigned to remain. ED ERA TERRESTRIS. See Glechoma. EDGES. Hedges are either planted to make fences round inclolures, or to part off and divide the feveral parts of a garden : when they are defigned as outward fences, they are planted either with Haw- thorn, Crabs, or Black Thorn, which is the Sloe •, but thofe Hedges which are planted in gardens, either to furround wildernefs quarters, or to fcreen the other parts of a garden from fight, are planted with various forts of plants, according to the fancy of the owner j feme preferring ever-green Hedges, in which cafe the Holly is belt, next the Yew, then Laurel, Lauruftinus, Phillyrea, &c. others, who make choice of the deciduous plants, prefer the Beach and Horn- beam, Englifh Elm, or the Alder, to any other ; I In all firft treat of thofe Hedges which are planted for outfide fences, and afterward briefly touch on the other. Thefe Hedges are moft commonly made of Quick, yet it will be proper, before planting, to confider the nature of the land, and what forts of plants will thrive beft in that foil, whether it be clay, gravel, fand,&c. likewife what thefoil is from whence the plants are to be taken •, for if the land they are taken from is much better than that in which they are to be planted, it will be more difficult to get them to grow. As for the fize, the fets ought to be about the bignefs of a goofe quill, and cut within about four or five inches of the ground ; they ffiould be frefh taken up, ftrait, fmooth, and well rooted. Thofe plants which are raifed in the nurfery, are to be preferred to all others, and if raifed on a fpot near the place, it will be beft. Secondly, If the Hedge has a ditch, it fhould be made fix feet wide at top, and one foot and a half at bottom, and three feet deep, that each fide may have a proper Hope j for when the banks are made too up- right, they are very fubjed to fall down after every froft or hard rain ; befides, if the ditches are made narrower, they are foon choked up in autumn by the falling leaves, and the growth of weeds, nor are they a fufficient fence, to the Hedge againft cattle, where they are narrower. Thirdly, If the bank be without a ditch, the fets Ihould be fet in two rows, almoft perpendicular, at the diftance of a foot from each other, in the quin- cunx order, fo that in effed they will be but fix inches afunder. Fourthly, The turf is to be laid with the Grafs fide downwards, on that fide of the ditch the bank is de- figned to be made, and forne of the beft mould ihould be laid upon it, to bed the Quick ; then the Quick is to be planted upon it a foot afunder, fo that the ends of the Quick may ftand upright. Fifthly, When the firft row of Quick is planted, it rnuft be covered with mould, and the turf laid upon it as before j fo that when the bank is a foot high, you may plant another row of fets againft the fpaces of the lower Quick, and cover them as the former was done *, and the bank is to be topped with the bot- tom of the ditch, and a dry, or dead Hedge laid on the other fide, to defend the under plantation from the cattle. In making of thefe dead Hedges, there fhould be flakes driven into the loofe earth, at about two feet and a half diftance, fo low as to reach the firm ground. Oak flakes are accounted the beft, and Black Thorn and Sallow the next j then let the frnall bufhes be laid at bottom, but not too thick, for that will caufe the bufhes to rot •, but the upper part of the Hedge fhould be laid with long bufhes to bind the flakes in with, by interweaving them. And, in order to render the Hedge yet ftronger, you H E D may edder it (as it is called,) i. e. bind the top of the flakes in with fome frnall long poles, or flicks on each, fide*, and when the eddering is finiilied, drive the flakes anew, becaufe the waving of the Hedge and eddering is apt to loofen the flakes. The Quick muft be confrantly kept weeded, and fe~ fcured from being cropped by the cattle, and in Fe~ bruary it will be proper to cut it within an inch of the ground, if it was not done before which will caufe it to fhoot ftrong, and help it much in the growth. When a Fledge is of about eight or nine years growth, it will be proper to plafli it , the beft time for this work is either in Oflober or February. When a Hedge is grown old, i. e. of about twenty or thirty years growth, and there are in it old Hubs as well as new fhoots, the old ftubs fhould be cut dop- ing off within two or three inches of the ground, and the beft and longeft of the middle fize fhould be left to lay down •, and fome of the ftrongeft, at the height of five or fix feet, according as you defign the height of the Hedge to be 6 may be left to ferve inftead of flakes, and frefh flakes fhould be put in thofe places where they are wanting-, the Hedge fhould be then thinned, fo as to leave on the ftubs only fuch fhoots as are defigned to be of ufe, that there may be room left to put a fpade in between them ; the ditch alfo fhould be cleanfed, and each fide of the Hopes kept as in a new ditch ; and where the earth is wafhed from the roots of the Quick, or is hollow, face it anew with fo much of the firft fpit of earth that is dug out of the ditch, as there is occafion for, and lay what is dug out at the fecond fpit, on the top of the bank ■, for if it be kid on the fide, or face of the bank, it will flip into the ditch again when wet comes, and alfo take a great deal of the bank along with it. In plafhing Quicks, there are two extremes to be avoided the firft is, laying it too low and too thick ; becaufe it makes the fap run all into the fhoots, and leaves the plafhes without nourifhment, which, with the thicknefs of the Hedge, kills them. Secondly, It muft not be laid too high, becaufe this draws all the fap into the plafhes, and fo caufes but frnall fhoots at the bottom, and makes the Hedge fo thin, that it will neither hinder the cattle from going through, nor from cropping of it. When the fhoot that is defigned to be plafhed is bent, give it a frnall cut with a bill, half through. Hoping a little downwards, and then weave it about the flakes j and when the whole is finifhed, trim off the frnall fu- perfluous branches that ftraggle too far out on both fides of the Hedge. If the ftubs are very old, cut them quite down, and fecure them with good dead Hedges on both fides, till the young fhoots are got up tall enough to piafh, and plant new fets in the void fpaces. In making a Hedge, if it be fet with Crab Stocks, it will be proper to leave one {landing uncut up at every thirty or forty feet, if the ground on both fides of the Hedge be your own ; which being done, they may be fo ordered, by pruning or flaking, that one may lean into one ground, and the other into ano- ther, &c. Thefe flocks fhould be pruned up every year, till they are brought out of the reach of the cattle, and then they may be grafted with the Red Streak, Gennet- moil, or what other kind of cyder Apple you pleafe. If the flocks be of Apple kernels, they may ftand un- grafted, for many of them will yield very good cyder fruit ; but then fuch flocks as are not grafted, will be longer before they bear ; and alfo when you do graft, you may be certain of your kind but if you find a very natural flock, which by leaf, fhoot, and bud, appears likely, you may try it, and fo you may have a new fine fruit ; and if you do not like it, you may graft it when you pleafe. As for the reft of the Hedge, when it has fhot four or five years, you may lay it to make a fence for the doing of which, take the following direc- tions : 3 Firft 5 > H E D Hrft, At every laying to lay down fome old plalhes ; or, if the Hedge be thin, young ones •, but they muft be fo laid, as to point with their ends to the ditch fide of the bank, the ends being kept low on the bank ; by being fo ordered, they will the better thicken the bottom of the Hedge, and keep up the earth of the bank. Secondly, To heighten the bank every time you lay earth on it, fo as to cover the layers, all but the ends, this earth will very much help the Quick ; and by heightening the banks, and deepening the ditch, you will render the fence the better. Thirdly, Not to cut the plafhes too much, but juft fo as they may bend down well ; nor to lay them too upright, as fome do, but to lay them near to a level •, for by fo doing, the fap will the better break out at feveral places, and not run fo much to the ends, as it will when they lie too much upon the (lope. If you have much wood to fpare, you may cut up great part of thofe that grow near the ditch, but then you ought to hang the bank with bufhes, to prevent cattle from cropping them the firft year ; thefe will ftioot ftrong, fecure the Hedge, keep up the bank, and thicken the bottom of the Hedge. Fourthly, Take care to lay the Hedge pretty thick, and turn the beard on the ditch fide •, but you muft not let the beard hang uncut (though it makes a good fhew at the firft making), but you muft cut off all the ftraggling boughs within half a foot of the Hedge on both fides, which will caufe it to fhoot ftrong at thefe places, and make the Hedge much the thicker. Fifthly, If the bank be high, make the Hedge fo low, that it may juft ferve for a fence the firft year, for it will foon grow higher; and the lower the Hedge is made, the falter the Quick will grow, and alfo will be the thicker at the bottom ; but care muft be taken to preferve it from cattle on the field fide for the two firft years that it is made. Sixthly, If you would have a good Hedge, or fence, you fhould new lay it once in fourteen or fifteen years, and conftantly root out Elder, Travellers Joy (which fome call Bull-bine), Briony, &c. and do not leave too many high ftandards, or pollards in it, though the Elm is one of the beft ; alfo no dead wood is to be left in the bottom of the Hedges, for that will choke the Quick ; but if there be a gap, the dead Hedge fhould be made at a diftance. The Crab is alfo frequently planted for Hedges, and if the plants are raifed from the kernels of the fmall wild Crab, they are much to be preferred to thofe which are raifed from kernels of all forts of Apples without diftin&ion ; becaufe the plants of the true fmall Crab never fhoot fo ftrong as thofe of the Apples, fo may be better kept within the proper compafs of a Hedge ; and as they have generally more thorns upon them, they are better guarded againft cattle, &c. than the other ; befides, the plants of the Crab will grow more equal than thofe which are raifed from the ker- nels of various kinds of Apples, for thefe always pro- duce a variety of plants, which differ from each other in their manner of growth, as much as in the fize and flavour of their fruits ; fo that Hedges made of thefe will not appear fo well, nor can be fo well managed as the other. Some perfons intermix Crab with the White Thorn in their Hedges, but this is not a good method ; for the plants of the Crab will grow much ftronger than thofe of the White Thorn, fo that the Hedge will not be of equal growth ; which is not near fo beautiful or ufeful, as when the plants of a Hedge keep pace in their growth. The Black Thorn, or Sloe, is alfo frequently planted for Hedges, and is a ftrong durable plant for that pur- pofe, efpecially as it is fo ftrongly armed with thorns, that cattle felaom care to brouze upon it but where this is planted, the beft way is to raife the plants from the ftones of the fruit ; for all thofe which are taken from the roots of old trees, fpawn, and put out fuckers in fuch plenty from their roots, as to fpread over, and fill the neighbouring ground to a confider- H E D able diftance on each fide of the Hedge ; and tilts plenty of fuckers drawing away the nourifhmentfrom the old plants of the Hedge, they never grow fo well as where there are few or no fuckers produced, which thofe plants which are propagated from the ftones fend not forth, or at leaft but fparingly, therefore may with little trouble be kept clear of them. The beft method of railing thefe Hedges is, to few the ftones in the place where theHedge is intended (where it can be conveniently done), for then the plants will make a much greater progrefs than thofe which are tranfplanted ; but the objection to this method will arife from the difficulty of fecuring the young plants from the cattle ; but this can have little force, when it muft be confidered, that if the Hedge is planted, it muft be fenced for fome years, to prevent the cattle from deftroying it ; therefore the fame fence will do for it when Town, nor will this require a fence much longer than the other. For the plants which Hand un- removed, will make a better fence in feven years, than that which is planted, though the plants Ihould be of three or four years growth when planted ; which is what I have feen two or three times, where the experi- ment has been tried. The ftones of this fruit fhould be fown early in January, if the weather will permit ; but when they are kept out of the ground longer, it will be proper to mix them with land, and keep them in a cool. place. The bufhes of the Black Thorn are by much the beft of any for making of dead Hedges, being of longer duration, and having many thorns, neither the cattle nor the Hedge-breakers, will care to meddle with them ; thefe bufhes are alfo the beft to be ufed for under ground drains, for the draining of land, for they will remain found a long time when the air is excluded from them. The Holly is fometimes planted for Hedges, and is a very durable ftrong fence ; but where it is expoled, there will be great difficulty to prevent its being deftroy- ed, otherwife it is by far the moft beautiful plant, and being an Evergreen, will afford much better ihelter to cattle in winter, than any other fort of Hedge-, and the leaves being armed with thorns, the cattle will not care to brouze upon it. Another objebtion to this plant is the flow growth, fo that Hedges planted with this plant, require to be fenced a much longer time than moft others. This is a reafon which muft be admitted, to prevent this being generally praflifed ; but in fuch grounds as lie contiguous to, or in fight of gentlemen’s houfes, thefe fort of Hedges will have an exceeding good effebt, efpecially when they are well kept, as they will appear beautiful at all feafons of the year ; and in the fpring of the year, when the fharp winds render it unpleafant to walk abroad in expofed places, thefe Hedges will afford good fhelter, as they will effedual- ly keep off the cold winds, if they are kept clofe' and thick. The fureft method of raffing thefe Hedges is, by fowing the berries in the place where they are to ftand ; but thefe berries fhould be buried in the ground one year before they are fown, by which method they will be prepared to grow the following fpring. The way of doing this is, to gather the berries about Chriftmas (which is the time they are ufually ripe,) and put them into large flower-pots, mixing fome land with them ; then dig holes in the ground, into which the pots muft be funk, covering them over with earth about ten inches thick ; in this place they may remain till the following Oftober, when they Ihould be taken up, and fown in the place where the Hedge is in- tended. The ground for this Hedge fhould be well trenched, and cleared from the roots of all bad weeds, bullies, trees, &c. Then two drills fhould be made at about a foot diftance from each other, and about two inches deep, into which the feeds fhould be flut- tered pretty clofe, left fome fhould fail ; for it is bet- ter to have too many plants come up, than to want, ! The reafon of my advffing two drills is, that the Hedge may be thick to the bottom, which in a Tin- gle row rarely happens, efpecially if there is not great- care taken of them in the beginning. When the plants come up, they muft be carefully weeded ; for ‘if the weeds I 1&3 HED weeds are permitted to grow among them, they will foon deftroy them, or weaken them fo much, that they will not recover their ftrength in a long time. This fhould be conftantly obferved, by every perfon who is deli rous to have good Hedges of either fort *, for when the weeds are fuffered to grow near the plants, they will not only rob them ot a great part of their nourifhment, but alfo prevent their putting out fhoots near the ground, which will occafion the bot- tom of the Hedge to be thin and naked. When thefe Holly Hedges are defigned to be kept very neat, they Ihould be fheered twice a year, in May and Auguft •, but if they are only defigned as fences, they need not be fheered oftener than once a year, which ihould be about the latter end of June, or the beginning of July ; and if this is well perform- ed, the Hedges may be kept very beautiful. The fences which are made to fecure thefe Hedges from cattle while they are young, fhould be contrived fo as to admit as much free air as poffible, which is abfolutely neceffary for the growth of the plants •, for when they are crowded on each fide with dead Hedges, the plants feldom thrive well. The beft fort offences for this purpofe, are thofe which are made with pofts and rails ; or inftead of rails, three ropes drawn from poft to poft, and holes made in the pofts to draw the ropes through - 5 this is the cheapeft fence of this kind, and will appear very handfome ; but if fheep are not admitted into the fields, there will be occafion for two ropes only, which will be enough to keep off larger cattle •, and if the ropes are painted over with a compofition of melted pitch, brown Spanifh colour, and oil, mixed well together, they will iaft found fe- veral years •, and thefe fort of fences never obftrud the air, and the place, at the fame time being open to view, the weeds will be better difcovered than when the fences are clofe. In the latter cafe, the Hedges are fometimes fuffered to be over-run with weeds, by their being excluded from the fight, fo are frequently forgotten, efpecially in moift weather, when the weeds grow more luxuriant. There are fome perfons who intermix Holly with the White Thorn in making their Hedges, which if rightly managed, will have a good effed, efpecially when young * but when this is pradifed, the Holly fhould be planted fo near, as that the Hedge may be entirely formed of it as it grows up, when the White Thorn ihould be quite rooted out ; for as thefe ad- vance, they will not keep pace in their growth, fo will not appear beautiful when intermixed. When a Hedge of Holly is intended to be made by plants, the ground fhould be well trenched, as was before advifed for the feeds ; and (unlefs the ground be very wet) the plants ihould be fet in Odober, but, in wet ground, March is preferable. The plants ihould not be taken from a better foil than that in •which they are to be planted ; for when it fo happens, the plants' are much longer before they recover this change, than thofe are which are taken from a leaner foil. If the plants have been before removed two or three times, they will have better roots, and will be in lefs danger of mifcarrying ; befides, they may be removed with balls of earth to their roots. When the froft comes on, if mulch be laid upon the ground near the roots of the plants, it will prevent the tender fibres, which may then have been put out, from being deftroyed by the cold. I would never ad- vife the planting of Hedges with Holly plants, of above five or fix years growth from the berries ; for when the plants are x older, if they take to grow, they are longer before they form a good Hedge, than plants which are much younger •, and if the plants have been twice before tranfplanted, they will more certainly grow. I fhali next treat of Hedges for ornaments in gardens : thefe are fometimes planted with Evergreens, efpe- cially if they are riot intended to grow very high * in •which cafe, they are planted with deciduous trees. Evergreen Hedges are planted with Holly, Yew, HED Laurel, Lauruftinus, Phillyrea, Alaternus, evergreen Oak, and fome others of lefs note. The Holly is preferable to any other, for the reafons before given. Next to this, moil: people prefer the Yew, on account of its growing very clofe •> for when thefe Hedges are well kept, they will be fo thick as that a bird cannot get through them •, but the dead colour of the Yew, renders thefe Hedges lefs agreeable. The Laurel is one of the moft beautiful greens of any of the ever- green trees, but then it (hoots fo luxuriant, as to render it difficult to keep the Hedges which are plant- ed with it, in tolerable fhape , befides* the leaves be- , ing very large, if the Hedge is clipped with (beers, the leaves will be cut through, which gives them a bad appearance ; therefore where there are Hedges of this kind, it will be the beft way to prune them with a knife, cutting the ihoots juft down to, a leaf. And although by this method the Hedge cannot be rendered fo even as when cut with fheers, yet it will bave a much better appearance than that of moft of the leaves being cut through and (tubbed, in the man- ner they muft be when fheered. The Lauruftinus is alfo a very fine plant for this pur- pofe, but the fame objection is to be made to this as hath been to the Laurel •, and as one of the great beau- ties of this plant is in its flowers, which are produced in the winter and fpring, fo when thefe are fheered, the flowers are generally cut off, by which their beau- ty is loft. Nor can this be avoided, where the Hedge is to be kept in clofe order, therefore this plant is not fo proper for the purpofe •, but in fuch places where walls or other fences are defigned to be hid, there is not any plant better adapted than this, provided it is rightly managed ; for the branches of this plant are (lender and pliable, fo may be trained up clofe to the fence, whereby it may be entirely covered ; and if, inftead of clipping thefe with fheers, they are pruned with a knife, they may be fo managed, as to have them full of flowers from the ground upward. This may be effefted by pruning them in April, when the flowers are going off, cutting out thofe fhoots that have flowered, or project too far from the fence j al- ways cutting clofe to the leaf, that no ftubs may be left : but thofe new fhoots of the fame fpring muft by no means be fhortened, becaufe the flowers are always produced at the extremity of the fhoots of the fame year ; therefore when thefe are topped, as they muft be by fheering, there can be few or no flowers upon thefe plants, except toward the top, where the fheers have not paffed. By this method of knife pruning, the leaves will alfo be preferved entire, and the Hedge may always be kept enough within compafs ; and fo thick, as fully to anfwer the purpofe of covering the fence ; and by the fhoots growing a little irregular, it will make a much better appearance than any fhorn Hedge whatever. The fmall leaved and the rough leaved Lauruftinus- are the beft forts for this purpofe, becaufe their branches grow clofer together than thofe of the fhin- ng leaved * they are alfo more hardy, and flower much 'better than the other, when growing in the open air. The True Phillyrea is the next beft plant for Hedges £ it is by the gardeners called the True Phillyrea, to dif- tinguiih it from the Alaternus, which they limply call the Phillyrea. The branches of this are ftrong, the leaves pretty large, and of a ftrong green colour. And as this is a plant of middling growth, the Hedges planted with this may be led up to the height of ten or twelve feet * and if thefe Hedges are kept narrow at the top, that there may not be too much width for the fnow to lodge upon them, they may be rendered very clofe and thick, and being a very good green, will make a fine appearance. The Alaternus was formerly much more cultivated in the Englifti gardens than at prefent. This was of- ten planted to form Hedges, but the branches, of this plant are too pliant for this purpofe, being frequently difplaced by ftrong winds, which render thefe Hedges unfightly ; they alfo (hoot very irregular and thin, fo H E D that the middle of the Hedge is frequently open and wide, and only the Tides of them can be kept tolerably clofe, and that muft be by often clipping them. If we add to this, ' their being frequently laid or broken down by fnow in the winter, it muft be deemed an improper plant for this purpofe. The Ilex * or evergreen Oak, is alfo planted for Hedges, and where thefe are defigned to grow pretty tall, it is a fit plant for the purpofe 5 becaufe it is a plant of large growth, efpecially the fort which is moft common in England *, for there are two forts of them which grow in the fouth of France and Italy, * - that are of much humbler growth, fo are better adopt- ed to this purpofe, efpecially where the Hedge is not intended to be high, but thefe are not at prefent com- mon here. When thefe Fledges are planted very young, and kept clofe trained from the beginning, they may be veiy clofe from the ground to the height of twenty feet or more ; but thefe muft always be kept narrower at the top than below, that there may not too much fnow lodge upon them in the winter, which is apt to break and diiplace the branches, whereby the Hedges will be rendered unlightly. There are alfo fame perfons who have planted the Pyracantha, or evergreen Thom, Juniper, Box, Ce- dar of Virginia, Bay, &c. as alfo the Halimus, or Sea Purllane, and the Furz, Rofemary, and ieveral other plants for Hedges •, but the five forts firft mentioned having very pliant branches, which will require to be fupported, and the three laft being often deftroyed by fevere froft, renders them unfit for this purpofe ; nor are there other forts of evergreen plants in the Eng- life gardens, which arefo well adapted for Hedges, as thofe before-mentioned, The deciduous trees, which are ufually planted to form Hedges in gardens, are the following forts. The Hornbeam is much efteemed for this purpofe, efpecially in fuch places where they ^.re not required to be very high, or not wanted to grow very faft ; for this plant, while young, doth not make fo great pro- grefs as many others •, but as it is of ilower growth, the Hedges may be kept neat with lels trouble than moft other plants will require •, and the branches naturally growing very clofe, they will make one of the clofeft Hedges of all the deciduous trees ; but as the leaves of this tree continue upon the branches all the winter, and until the buds in the fpring force them off, they have a bad appearance during the winter feafon. The Beech is alfo a very proper tree for this purpofe, having the fame good qualities as the Hornbeam ; but the leaves of this continue late in winter upon the branches, when they will have a bad appearance ; befides, the litter which is occafioned by their leaves gradually falling moft part of the winter, prevents the garden from being made clean a great while longer than if there are none of thefe trees planted. The fmall-leaved Englife Elm, is alfo a proper tree for tall Hedges if thefe are planted young, and kept clofely clipped from their firft fetting out, the Hedges may be trained up to the height of thirty or forty feet, and be very clofe and thick the whole height. But when thefe trees are planted for this purpofe, they fhould not be crowded fo clofe together as they ufually are by moft people ; by which method, when the trees have ftood fame years, if they have thriven well, their Items will approach fo near each other, as that few branches can be maintained below, wherphy the bottom of the Hedge will be naked •, therefore they fhould not be planted clofer together than feven or eight feet, or if they are ten feet it will be full better. And although at this diftance they will not form a clofe Hedge fo foon as when the trees are planted clofer to- gether* yet they will in a few years recompenfe for that, by their growing much clofer and better from the ground upward. The Dutch Elm was formerly in great efteem for Hedges, being quick of growth* and thriving in fuch foils as the Englife Elm would not grow ; but the wretched appearance which thefe Fledges made, after H E D they had been growing a few years, very juftly occa- fioned their being airnoft univerfally rooted out of gardens, for a more abominable plant was never in- troduced into gardens than this. The Lime-tree hath alfo been recommended for Hedges, and in feme of the old gardens there were many planted with this tree, which, for a few years after planting, made a tolerable appearance, efpecially when they grow upon a moift foil , but after they had ftood feme years, they grew very thin at bottom, and by being fheered at the top, they were rendered very ftubby and unlightly, their leaves growing very thinly upon the branches, and thefe frequently turning of a black difagreeable colour, and falling off very foon in the autumn, and fometimes in the hummer in dry fea- fons, has brought thefe trees fo much into difrepute, as that few perfons make ufe of them at prefent for this purpofe : nor fhould any of the very ftrong feooting trees be applied to this ufe f for the more they are cut, the ftronger they will fhoot, and of courfe will appear very unfightly •, befides, the often cutting of thefe Fledges occafions great trouble and expence, and frequent litters in gardens. The Alder is frequently planted for Hedges, and where the foil is moift, there is not any of the decidu- ous trees equal to it for this purpofe ; for the leaves are of a lively green, continuing frefh till late in the autumn ; and when they decay, their litter is foon over, for they all drop in a feort time. , There are, befides the trees before-mentioned, many of the flowering fhrubs which have been planted to form Hedges ; fuch as R.ofes, Honeyfuckles, Sweet- briar, &c. but thefe make a bad appearance, be- ing more difficult to train ; and if they are cut to keep them within compafs, their flowers, which are their greateft beauty, will be entirely deftroyed. But as thefe are but of low growth, they are not proper to plant where the Hedges are to be of any height. Although I have given thefe full directions for plant- ing and ordering of thefe Hedges for the pleaiure-gar- den, yet I am far from recommending them as orna- mental or uieful. But as there are numbers of perfons who may differ from me in their opinion, and therefore might think it a deficiency in my book, had I not given thefe inftruftions ; to avoid their reproach, I have inferted as much as I think will be neceflary for the obtaining thefe Hedges wherever they are defired, and at a lefs expence than the late method of planting them hath been generally attended with •, where it is not uncommon to fee four times the number of trees planted in thefe Hedges as would have been ne- ceffary, or that can remain long dole together with any beauty. But moft people who plant, are in too great a hurry to have their garden filled ; and there- fore frequently plant fo clofe, as that in three or four years (if their trees thrive) three-fourths of them will require to be taken away again, to make room' for thole which are left to grow ; and there are nor wanting perfons, who are ready enough to encourage this pradice, fince their own intereft is thereby pro- moted. The tafte in gardening having been greatly altered of late years for the better, thefe clipped Hedges have been almoft excluded ; and it is to be hoped, that a little time will entirely banifh them out of the Englife gardens, as it has already been done by the feorn Ever- greens, which, a few years fince, were efteemed the greateft beauties of gardens. The latter was intro- duced by the Dutch gardeners, and that of tali Hedges with treillage-work, was in imitation of the French gardens ; in home of which, the expence of the iron treiilage, to fupport the trees which corn- pofe their cabinets, pavillions, bowers, porticoes, and other pieces cf rural architecture, amounted to a very great fum. I have been informed this work, in one garden, has coft above twenty thoufand crowns ; and this only to train up trees in the diftor ted ihape of pi- 1 afters, niches, cornices, pediments, &c, when at the fame time, thefe can no longer retain the forms in- ''6 0 tended. 1 I MED tended, than they are kept clofely fhorn into them •, for no fooner do the trees begin to make frefh fhoots, but the whole frame is altered and inftead of carrying the fine finished appearance of a regular piece of ar- chitecture, it is grown into a rude unpolifhed form. This expenfive fort of work never has made much progrefs in England, but that part of the French tafte, in furrounding all the feveral divifions of gardens with tall clipped Hedges, making great alleys, forming the walks into ftars, and the like ftift performances, have too much obtained for fome years paft in England : and the taller thefe clipped Hedges were, the more they were admired •, though many times they fhut out from the view the fight of fome of the nobleft Oaks, and other timber trees, growing in the quarters, which are infinitely more pleafing to a perfon of true tafte, than all the ridiculous forms it is poffible for trees to be framed in by art. Befides, when the expence of keeping thefe Hedges, together with the great litter they occafion when clipped, is confidered, thefe, ad- ded to many other reafons which might be given, are fufficient to exclude them out of gardens •, where they can never be efteemed neceflary, but to fhut out from the view the fight of worfe objedts. HE D YPN O IS. See Hyoseris. HEDYSARUM. Lin. Gen. Plant. 793. Tourn. Inft, R. H. 401. tab. 225. French Honeysuckle. The Characters are, The flower hath a permanent empalement of one leaf cut into five fegments at the top. It is of the butterfly kind , having an oblong comprejfed fiandard , which is in- dented at the point and reflexed the wings are oblong and narrow , the keel is comprejfed , broader at the end , but convex at the bafle. It hath nine ftamina joined, and one (landing feparate , which arc terminated by roundijh com- prefjed flummits •, the ftamina are reflexed , having an angle or knee. In the center is Jituated a long narrow germen , fupporting an awl-Jhaped inflexcd ftyle, crowned by a Jingle Jligma. 'The germen afterward becomes a joint- ed pod which is compreffed, each joint being r oundifo, and inclofles a fingle kidney-floaped feed. This genus of plants is ranged in the third fedtion of Linnteus’s feventeenth clafs, intitled Diadelphia De- Candria, which includes thofe plants whofe flowers Have ten ftamina joined in two bodies. The Species are, 1. Hedysarum ( Coronarium ) foliis pinnatis, legumini- bus articulatis aculeatis, nudis, redtis, caule diffufo. Hort. Cliff. 365. French Honey fuckle with winged leaves , naked, prickly , jointed pods , and a difjufed ftalk. He- dyfarum clypeatum, flore fuaviter rubente. H. Eyft. French Honeyfuckle , with a delicate red flower. 2. Hedysarum flpinoflflimum) foliis pinnatis, legumi- nibus articulatis, aculeatis tomentofis, caule diffufo. Hort. Upfal. 231. French Honeyfuckle with winged leaves, jointed , prickly, woolly pods, and a difjufed ftalk. Eledyfarum clypeatum minus, flore purpureo. Raii Hift. Smaller French Honeyfuckle with a purple flower.. 3. Hedysarum ( Canadenfe ) foliis ftmplicibus ternatif- que, floribus racemofis. Hort. Cliff. 232. French Ho- neyfuckle with fingle and trifoliate leaves, and flowers in bunches. Hedyfarum triphyllum Canadenfe. Cornut. Three-leaved French Honeyfuckle of Canada. 4. Hedysarum ( flexuofum ) foliis pinnatis, leguminibus articulatis, aculeatis, flexuofis, caule diffufo. Lin. Sp. Plant. 750. French Floneyfuckle with winged leaves , jointed prickly pods which are waved , and a difjufed ftalk. Eledyfarum annuum, filiqua afpera undulata intorta. Tourn. Annual French Honeyfuckle, with a rough, •waved, writhed pod. 9. Hedysarum ( Diphyllum ) foliis binatis petiolatis, flo- ralibus feflilibus. Flor. Zeyl. 291. French Honeyfuckle with two leaves upon a foot-ftalk, fitting clofe to the jialks. Hedyfarum minus diphyllum, flore luteo. Sloan. Cat. 73. Smaller two-leaved French Honeyfuckle, with a yellow flower. 6. Hedysarum ( Purpureum ) foliis ternatis, foliolis ob- ovatis floribus paniculatis terminalibus, leguminibus intortis. French Honeyfuckle with trifoliate oval leaves, flowers growing in panicles at the ends of the ftalks , and H E D iniortedpods. Hedyfarum triphyllum fruticofum, flore purpureo, filiqua varie diftorta, Sloan. Cat. 73. Three- leaved forubby French Honeyfuckle , with a purple flower and a varioufly diftorted pod. 7. Hedysarum (Cane fens) foliis ternatis fubtus nervofis, caule glabro fruticofo floribus fpicatis terminalibus. Three-leaved forubby dwarf Honeyfuckle, wjth veins on the under fide, a fmooth forubby ftalk , with flowers growing in fpikes at the ends. Hedyfarum triphyllum frutico- fum fupinum, flore purpureo. Sloan. Cat. Three-' leaved forubby dwarf French Honeyfuckle, with a pur- ple flower. 8. Hedysarum (Sericeum) foliis ternatis, foliolis ovatis fub- tus fericeis, floribus fpicatis alaribus terminalibufque. Three-leaved French Honeyfuckle, with oval leaves fitting on their under fide , andfiozvers in fpikes from the fide and the end of the ftalks. Hedyfarum triphyllum frutef- cens, foliis fubrotundis & fubtus fericeis, flore pur- pureo. Houft. Three-leaved forubby French Honeyfuckle with roundijh leaves, which are ft Iky underneath, and a purple flower. 9. Hedysarum. ( Villofum ) foliis ternatis, cauiibus dif- fufis villofis, floribus fpicatis terminalibus, calycibus, villofiffimis. Three-leaved French Honeyfuckle , with djif- fufed ftalks which are hairy, flowers growing in fpikes at the ends of the branches, and very hairy empalements. Hedyfarum triphyllum humile, flore conglomerato calyce villofo. Elouft. Dwarf three-leaved French Ho- neyfuckle, with flowers growing in clufters, and a hairy cup. 10. Hedysarum ( Procumbens ) foliis ternatis cauiibus procumbentibus racemofis, floribus laxe fpicatis ter- minalibus, leguminibus contortis articulis quadrangu- laribus. Three-leaved French Honeyfuckle , with branch- ing trailing ftalks, flowers growing in loofe fpikes at the ends of the branches, and twifted pods with jj^uare joints, Hedyfarum triphyllum procumbens, foliis rotundio- ribus & minoribus, filiquis tenuibus & intortis. Houft. T railing three-leaved French Honeyfuckle , with fmaller and rounder leaves, and narrow contorted pods. 11. Hedysarum ( Intortum ) foliis ternatis, foliolis ob- cordatis, caule eredto triangulo villofo, racemis ter- minalibus, leguminibus articulatis incurvis. French Honeyfuckle, with trifoliate leaves whofe lobes are heart- jhaped, a triangular upright hairy ftalk , flowers grow- ing in long bunches at the ends of the branches , and and jointed incurved pods. Eledyfarum triphyllum, caule triangular!, foliis mucronatis, filiquis tenuibus intortis. Houft. Three-leaved French Honeyfuckle, with a triangular ftalk, pointed leaves, and a narrow con- torted pod. 12. Hedysarum ( Glabrum ) foliis ternatis obcordatis, caule paniculato, leguminibus monofpermis glabris. French Honeyfuckle with trifoliate heart-jhaped leaves , a pani ciliated Jtalk, and fmooth pods containing one feed. Eledyfarum triphyllum, annuum, eredtum, filiquis intortis, & ad extremitatem amplioribus. Houft. Three-leaved , annual, upright French Honeyfuckle , with contorted pods, which are broad at their extremity. 13. Hedysarum ( Scandens ) foliis ternatis, foliolis ob- verse-ovatis, caule volubili, fpica longiffima reflexa. Three-leaved French Honeyfuckle, with obverfe oval lobes, a twining ftalk, and a very long, reflexed fpike of flowers. Hedyfarum triphyllum Americanum fcandens, flore purpureo. Three-leaved, climbing , American French Ho- neyfuckle, with a purple flower. 14. Hedysarum ( Repens ) foliis ternatis obcordatis, cauiibus procumbentibus racemis lateralibus. Lin. Sp. 1056. Three-leaved French Honeyfuckle, with oval heart-jhaped leaves, trailing hairy ftalks, and flowers on the fide of the ftalks. Eledyfarum procumbens, tri- folii fragiferi folio. Hort. Elth. 172. Trailing French Honeyfuckle , with leaves like the Strawberry T refoil. 15. Hedysarum (Macnlatum) foliis fimplicibus ovatis obtufis. Hort. Cliff. 449. French Honeyfuckle, with oval, obtufe , fingle leaves. Hedyfarum humile, cap- paridis folio maculato. Hort. Elth. 1 70. Low French Honeyfuckle , with a fpotted Caper leaf . 16. Hedysarum ( Frutefcens ) foliis ternatis ovato-lan- ceolatis, fubtus villofis, caule frutefcente villofo. 3 Trifoliate t f H E D Trifoliate French Honeyfuckle , with oval fpear-Jhaped leaves, hairy on their under fide , and a Jhrubby hairy folk. Quere, Whether this be not the Hedyfarum foliis ternatis fub-ovatis fubtus villofis caule frutef- cente. Flor. Yirg. 174. Three-leaved French Honey- fuckle , with oval leaves and a Jhrubby . fialk . 27. Hedysarum ( Pedunculatum ) foliis ternatis, foliolo intermedia pediculo longiore, racemis alaribus ei eft is lonmffirnis. French Honeyfuckle with trifoliate leaves , the middle lobe funding on a longer foot-ftalk , and very long hunches of flowers coming from the fides of the ftalks. 1 8. Hedysarum (. Alhagi ) foliis fimplicibus lanceo- latis obtufis, caule fruticofo fpinofo. Lin. Sp. Plant. 745. French Honeyfuckle with fingle , fpear-Jhaped , ob- tufe leaves, and a prickly Jhrubby ftalk. Alhagi Mau- rorum. Rauwolf. 94* The Alhagi of the Moors. 19. Hedysarum [Triquetrum) folds fimplicibus cordato- oblongis integerrimis glabris. French Honeyfuckle with fingle, oblong, heart-Jhaped leaves, which we fmooth and entire. Onobrychis .Zeylanica aurantii folio. I et. Hort. Scic. 247, Cockjhead of Ceylon with an Orange- leaf. 20. Hedysarum ( Echaftaphyllum ) foliis fimplicibus ova- tis fubtus fericeis, petiolis muticis. Amoen. Acad. 5. p. 403. French Honeyfuckle with oval fingle leaves, filky on their under fide, and a fpiked foot-ftalk. Spar- tium fcandens, citri foliis, floribus albis ad nodes con- fertim nafeentibus. Plum. Sp. 19. 21. Hedysarum ( Gangeticum ) foliis fimplicibus ova- tis acuminatis, fpicis longiffimis nudis terminalibus. French Honeyfuckle with oval-pointed fingle leaves, and very long naked fpikes of flowers terminating the ftalks. An Hedyfarum foliis fimplicibus ovatis acutis bafi ftipulatis. Lin. Sp. 1052. The fir ft fort has been long cultivated in the Englilh gardens for ornament. This grows naturally in Italy •, there are two varieties of this, one with a bright red, and the other a white flower, which very rarely vary from one to the other •, but as there is no other dif- ference but in the colour of their flowers, fo they are fuppofed to be the fame fpecies. It is a biennial plant, which flowers the fecond year, and foon after the feeds are ripe, the roots ge- nerally perilh : this fends up feveral hollow fmooth ftalks two or three foot long, which branch out on each fide, garnifhed with winged leaves, compofed of five “or fix pair of oval lobes, terminated by an odd one ; the leaves .are placed alternate, and from their bafe comes out foot-ftalks which are five or fix inches long, fuftaining fpikes of beautiful red flowers ; thefe are fucceeded by compreffed jointed pods, which are very rough, Handing eredt •, in each of the joints is lodged one kidney-fhaped feed. This fort flowers in June and July, and the feeds ripen in September. The white is only a variety of this, and as fuch, is fornetimes preferved in gardens. They are propagated by fowing their feeds in April, in a bed of light frefh earth ; and when the plants come up, they Ihould be tranfplanted into other beds of the like earth, and in an open fituation, at about fix or eight inches d.iftance from each other, leaving a path between every four rows, to go between them to hoe, and clear them from weeds. In thefe beds they may remain until Michaelmas, then may be tranfplanted into the large borders of a parterre or pleafure-garden, allowing them at leaft three feet diftance from other plants, amongft which they Ihould be interfperfed, to continue the fucceffion of flowers j where'they will make a fine appearance when blown, efpecially the red fort, which produces very beautiful flowers. As thefe plants decay after they have perfected their feeds, fo there ihould annually be a freih fupply of plants raifed, where they are defired, for the old roots icldorn continue longer. They are very proper or- naments for large borders, or to fill up vacancies among Ihrubs, but they grow too large for fmall bor- ders, unlefs their ftalks are pruned off, leaving only two or three on each plant * which, if kept upright H E D with flicks, will prevent their hainging over other flowers. They are propagated for fupplying the markets with plants to adorn the London gardens and balconies, by the gardeners in the neighbour- hood of London. The fecond fort is an annual plant, which grows na- turally in Spain and Portugal ; the leaves of this are narrow'and oblong, four or five pair being placed along the midrib, with an odd one at the end •, the ftalks are terminated by fmall fpikes of purple flowers, which are fucceeded by fmall rough pods, fhaped like thofe of the former fort. This plant is preferved in botanic gardens for the lake of variety * 5 it is propa- gated by feeds, which Ihould be fown the beginning of April, in the place where the plants are to remain, and will require no other culture but to thin them where they are too near, and keep them clean from weeds. This flowers in July, and the feeds ripen in autumn. The third fort hath a perennial root, which will abide many years if planted in a dry foil. This is propagated by lowing the feeds in the manner directed for the former •, but when the plants are come up two inches high, they ihould be tranfplanted where they are to remain for good ; but if they are not too thick in the feed-bed, they may be buffered to remain there until the following autumn •, at which time they Ihould be carefully taken up, and tranfplanted into the borders where they are deflgned to Hand ; for their roots generally run down very deep, fo that it is not fafe to remove them often. This plant produces its flowers about the fame time of the year as the for- mer, and if the feafon proves favourable, perfects its feeds in autumn •, and the roots will abide in the open air very well, refilling the fevereft cold, pro- vided they are planted in a dry foil. The fourth fort 'is an annual plant, which grows na- turally in the Levant. This hath fome refemblance of the firft, but is much fmaller ; the ftalks arife near a foot high, and are garnifhed with winged leaves, compofed of two or three pair of oval lobes, terminated by an odd one ; the flowers come out in fpikes at the top of the ftalks, which are of a pale red intermixed, with a little blue. Thefe appear in July, and are fucceeded by jointed pods which are waved on both fides, forming an obtufe angle at each joint ; the feeds ripen in the autumn. This is propagated in the fame way as the fecond fort, and is equally hardy. The fifth fort grows naturally in both Indies ; the feeds of this were fent me from La Vera Cruz, by the late Dr. Houftoun. This is an annual plant, with a long tap root which runs deep in the ground, fend- ing out one or two ftalks, which rife about nine inches high, the lower part being garnifhed with oval leaves by pairs on each foot-ftalk; but the tipper part of the ftalk where the flowers come out, is garnifhed with fmall leaves, ending in acute points, fitting clofe to the ftalks, and at each of thefe is fituated a Angle, fmall, yellow flower, inclofed by the two leaves. Thefe make but little appearance, and are fucceeded by oblong pods, containing one kidney-fhaped feed. The fixth fort was fent me by the the late Dr. Houf- toun from La Vera Cruz, where he found it growing naturally, as it alio does in Jamaica. This is an annual plant, which rifes with a fhrubby ftalk upward of four feet high, dividing into feveral branches, which are garniihed with oblong oval leaves that are trifo- liate, Handing upon pretty long foot-ftalks, the mid- dle lobe Handing an inch beyond the other two ; the branches are terminated by long loofe panicles of purple flowers, which are fucceeded by narrow jointed pods which are twilled. Thefe plants flower in July, and their feeds ripen in autumn. The two laft mentioned are tender plants, fo their feeds muft be fown in the fpring upon a hot-bed *, and when the plants-are fit to remove, they Ihould be each planted in a feparate fmall pot, filled with light earth, and plunged into a hot-bed, keeping them fhaded from the fun till they have taken new root ; then I I H E D then they muft be treated in the fame way as other tender plants from hot countries, always keeping them in the ftove or glafs-cafe, otherwife they will not flower or produce feeds in England. The feventh fort grows naturally in Jamaica, from whence the feeds were fent me. by the late f)r. Houf- fcoun. This is a fhrubby plant, which riles about five feet high, and divides into feveral branches, which are garnifhed with trifoliate leaves which are oval, the middle lobe being much larger than the other two ; the ftalks are terminated by long fpikes of fmall pur- ple flowers, which are fucceeded by narrow pods, ftrait on one fide, but jointed on the other. The eighth fort was lent me from La Vera Cruz by the late Dr. Houftoun, who found it growing there na- turally. This rifes with a fhrubby ftalk fix or feven feet high, dividing into feveral branches, which are garnifhed with trifoliate oval leaves, filky and white on their under fide, but of a pale green on their up- per fide ; the flowers come out in long narrow fpikes from the wings, and at the end of the branches, fit- ting clofe to the ftalks ; they are fmall, of a bright purple colour, and are fucceeded by fiat, frnooth, jointed pods, about one inch long, each joint having one kidney-fhaped feed. The' two laft forts will continue two or three years, if the plants are placed in the bark-ftove. They are propagated by feeds, which muft be fown upon a hot- bed, and the plants treated in the fame manner as thofe juft before-mentioned •, and when they have obtained height, they fhould be removed into the bark-ftove, where they fhould conftantly remain, al- lowing them a large fhare of air in warm weather. Thefe plants leldom flower till the fecond year, when they will produce feeds which ripen in the au- tumn. The ninth fort is an annual plant, which grows na- turally at La VeraCruz, from whence it was fent me by the late Dr. Houftoun. This feldom rifes more than eight or nine inches high, fending out feveral branches from the root, which are difrufed atld hairy ; they are clofely garnifhed with fmall, oval, trifoliate leaves, a little hoary. The flowers grow in clofe Ihort fpikes ; they are purple, and have very hairy empalements. The tenth fort grows naturally in Jamaica. This hath ligneous trailing ftalks a foot and a half long, fending out feveral branches on each fide, which are garnifhed with fmall, round, trifoliate leaves, of a pale green colour •, the flowers are produced in very loofe fpikes at the ends of the branches ; they are fmall, and of a pale purplifh colour, fucceeded by narrow twitted pods which are jointed, each joint be- ing four cornered, containing a Angle, fmall, com- p re fifed feed. The ' two laft forts being annual, require the fame treatment as the fifth and fixth forts before-mentioned, with which management they will flower and ripen their feeds in this country. The eleventh fort is a fhrubby plant, which rifes with triangular ftalks five or fix. feet high, dividing into feveral branches, garnifhed with heart-fhaped trifo- liate leaves, ending in acute points ; the flowers are produced in very long fpikes at the end of the branches, v 7 hich are of a pale purple colour, and are fucceeded by narrow jointed pods which are varioufly twitted ; the feeds are fmall and compreffed. This plant grows naturally in Jamaica, from whence the feeds were fent me by the late Dr. Houftoun. It will continue three or four years, if the plants are treated in the fame manner directed for the feventh and eighth forts, and will perfed feeds in this country. The twelfth fort is annual, the feeds of it were fent me by the late Dr. Houftoun from Campeachy. This hath a pankulated ftalk, which rifes about two feet high, garnifhed with heart-fhaped trifoliate leaves ; the upper part of the ftalk branches out into panicles of flowers, which are of a pale purple, colour ; thefe are fucceeded by Emulated compreffed pods, which Land oblique to the ftalk, each containing one com- BED prefled kidney-fhaped feed. This fort is propagated by feeds, and requires theTame treatment as the- fifth and fixth forts. The thirteenth fort was fent me from La Vera Cruz, by the late Dr. Houftoun. This hath a twining ftalk, which gets round the trees and fhrubs which grow near it, and climbs to the height of ten or twelve feet, garnifhed with obverfe, oval, trifoliate leaves, {land- ing upon pretty long foot-ftalks ; the flowers are pro- duced in very long fpikes, which are reflexed : they are of a dark purple colour, and fit clofe to the ftalk. This is an abiding plant, which requires a ftove to preferve it in this country, fo the plants fhould be treated in the fame manner as the feventh and eighth forts. The fourteenth fort. is an annual plant, which grows naturally in both Indies. The feeds of this were fent me from the ITav'annah by the late Dr. Houftoun ; it hath trailing branches near a foot long, which are gar- nifhed with round trifoliate leaves, a little indented at the top, very like in fhape to thofe of the Strawberry Trefoil; the ftalks and under fide of the leaves are hairy ; the flowers are produced toward the end of the branches, fometimes Angle, and at other times two at a joint ; they are of a purple colour and fmall ; thefe are fucceeded by pods about- an inch long, which are ftrait on one fide, and jointed on the other. This flowers the end of July, and fometimes perfefls feeds here. The fifteenth fort is a low annual plant, having {len- der ftalks near a foot long, their lower part being gar- nifhed with Angle oval leaves, ftanding upon {len- der foot-ftalks ; their upper part is adorned with flowers, which come out by pairs above each other, to the end of the ftalk ; they are but fmall, and of a reddifh yellow colour; thefe are fucceeded by jointed narrow pods, which fit clofe to the ftalk, and are ftckle-fhaped. The two laft mentioned are annual plants, which require the fame culture as the fifth and fixth forts. The fixteenth fort was fent me by the late Dr. Dale, from South Carolina. This hath a perennial root, from which arife two or three fhrubby hairy ftalks near two feet high, branching out on every fide near the top, garnifhed with oval, fpear-fhaped, trifoliate leaves, which are hairy on their under fide, and ftand upon fhort foot-ftalks ; the flowers are produced at the end of the branches in fhort fpikes ; they are of a pur- plifh yellow colour, and fmall ; the ftalks of this fort decay every autumn, and new ones arife in the fpring. It is propagated by feeds, which fhould be fown upon a hot- bed in the fpring, and when the plants are fit to remove, they fhould be planted in feparate fmall pots filled with light earth, and plunged into a moderate hot-bed, obferving to fhade them until they have taken new root ; then they fhould have a large fhare of air admitted to them in warm weather, and in fummer they may be expofed to the open air, but in the autumn they muft be placed under a frame to fcreen them from froft ; the following fpring fome of thefe plants muft be fhaken out of the pots and planted in a warm border, where, if the fummer proves warm, they will flower, but thefe feldom perfed their feeds ; therefore two or three plants fhould be put into larger pots, and plunged into a moderate hot-bed, which will bring them early into flower ; fo that if the glafies are kept over them in bad weather, thefe will ri- pen their feeds in autumn, and the roots will continue fome years, if they are fcreened from froft in winter. The feventeenth fort was fent me with the laft, by the fame gentleman, from SouthCarolina. This hath a per- ennial root and an annual ftalk, which grows ered hairy , flawed , heart-Jhaped leaves embracing the Jialk. Turritis annua verna, purpurafcente flore. Tourn. Inft. 224. Annual vernal Dower Muftard y with a pur- plijh flower. The firft fort grows naturally in Italy •, this was for- merly in greater plenty in the Englith gardens than at prefent, having been longnegleded becaufe the flowers were -Angle, and made but little appearance ; how- ever, as the flowers have a very grateful fcent, fo the plant is worthy of a place in every good garden. This rifes with an upright ftalk a foot and a half high, gar- niflhed with fpear-lhaped leaves which fit clofe to the ftalk, and are flightly indented on their edges, ending in acute points : the flowers are produced in a loofe thyrfe on the top of the ftalks ; they are com- pofed of four petals, which are roundiffi and in- dented at their points, of a deep purple colour, and fmell very fweet, efpecially in the evening or in cloudy weather. It flowers in June, and the feeds ripen the latter end of Auguft. It is a biennial plant, fo that young plants fhould be raifed every year, to fup- ply the place of thofe which decay : if the feeds are permitted to fcatter, the plants will come up without trouble in the fpring •, and if the feeds are fown, the beft feafon for it is in the autumn ; becaufe thofe which are fown in the fpring often fail if the feafon proves dry, or will remain a long time in the ground before they vegetate. This plant fhould have a loamy un- dunged foil, in which it will thrive better than in rich land. There is a variety of this with double flowers, in fome of the gardens in France ; but that which we have in England, is a variety of the third fort with unfavoury flowers. The fecond fort has been generally fuppofed only a variety of the firft, differing in the colour of the flower, but is certainly a diftind fpecies *, the leaves of this are not fo long, but much broader than thofe of the firft, and th$ir borders are entire ; the flowers are not quite fo large, nor do they form fo good fpikes *, they are white, and have not fo fine a fcent as the firft. This is alfo a biennial plant, requiring the fame treat- ment as the firft. The third fort grows naturally in Hungary and Auf- tria. This rifes with an upright ftalk near two feet high, garnifhed with fpear-fhaped leaves, ending in acute points, and fharply indented on their edges ; they are of a dark green, and fit clofe to the ftalks - 3 4 HES the flowers grow in loofe fpikes on the top of the ftalks j in fome they are white, in others purple, and fometimes both colours ftriped in the fame flower 1 thefe have no odour, fo are not deferving of a place in gardens, but may be propagated in the fame man- ner as the two former. From this fort, the double white and purple Rock- ets have been accidentally obtained, which are much efteemed for the beauty of their flowers ; and if they had the agreeable odour of the Garden Rocket, they would be fome of the beft furniture for the borders of the flower-garden, but they are without fcent , how- ever, for the beauty of their flowers, they are by fome greatly efteemed, therefore I fhall here infert the beft method of propagating them yet known. Thefe plants are naturally biennial, fo the plants with Angle flowers rarely furvive the fecond year •, nor will thofe with double flowers continue much longer ; fo that unlefs young plants are annually raifed to fupply the place of the old ones, there will loon be a want of them, which is what few perfons are careful enough to obferve ; but thinking the roots to be perennial, trufi to their putting out offsets, or the plants re- maining after they have flowered •, and finding them decay, are apt to think their foil very improper for them, and are at a lofs to account for their decaying ; whereas, when the plants have flowered, they have finiflied their period, and feldom continue to flower a fecond time from the fame root ; though in poor land, they will often put out a few weak offsets, which may flower again, but feldom fo ftrong as the principal roots ; therefore thofe who are defirous to propagate thefe plants, fhould do it in the following manner-: There fliould be fome ftrong roots of each fort kept apart for this purpofe, which are not intended to flower when thefe have fhot up their flower-ftalks about fix inches high, they fliould be cut clofe to the bottom ; each of thefe may be divided in the middle to make two cuttings, which fhould be planted in a foft, gentle, loamy foil, to an eaft expofure, where they may have only the morning fun ; and thefe may be planted pretty near together, fo as to be covered with hand or bell-glaffes, which fhould be put over them after the cuttings have been well watered, and clofely fhut down, drawing the earth round the rim of the glaffes to exclude the air *, then the glaffes fhould be fhaded with mats every day when the fun is hot ; and if the cuttings are gently refrefhed with water once in feven or eight days, it will be fuffi- cient, for too much moifture will caufe them to rot : when thefe are watered, the glaffes fhould be clofely fhut down again as before •, with this management the cuttings will put out roots in five or fix weeks, and will begin to fhoot above ; then the glaffes fhould be gently raifed on one fide to admit the air to them, and fo gradually harden them to the open air, to prevent their drawing up weak. When thefe have made good roots, they fhould be carefully removed, and planted in an eaft border at about eight or nine, inches afunder, obferving to fhade and water them till they have taken new root ; after which they will re- quire no other care, but to keep them clean from weeds till the autumn, when they may be tranfplanted into the borders of the pleafure-garden, where they are defigned to flower. The roots which are thus cut down, will fend up more ftalks than before •, and when thefe are of a pro- per height, they may be cut off and treated in the fame way ; fo that if the roots are found, there may be two or three crops of thefe cuttings taken from them, and by fo doing, the old roots may be continued much longer than if they are permitted to flower •, and by this management, there may be always a fupply of good plants for the flower-garden. Thefe plants are very fubjed to canker and rot when they are planted in a light rich foil, but in poor ftrong ground, I have feen them thrive and flower in the ut- moft perfection, where the Items of flowers have been as large, and the flowers as fair as the fineft double Stock- l S cock-gilii flowers . Their feafon of flowering is in the beginning of' June, and I have frequently railed young plants from the ftalks alter the flowers have decayed, by cutting them in lengths, and planting them in the manner before directed ; but tnefe fel- dotn make fo good plants as the young cuttings, nor are they fo certain to grow, therefore the other are to be preferred. The fourth fort grows naturally in Hungary. This is much cultivated in the gardens abroad, for the great fragrancy of its flowers, which- in the evening is fo ftrong, as to perfume the air at a great dilcance, ejpe- cially where there are any number of the plants. The ladies in Germany are very fond of this plant, and clu- rino- the feafon of their (lowering, have the pots placed in their apartments every evening, that they may en- joy the fragrancy of their flowers ; for they have, but little beauty, being fmaller than thofe of the Garden Rocket, and of a pale colour, but the fcent of their flowers is much preferable to them ; though in the day-time, if the weather is clear, they have very little odour •, but when the fun leaves them, their fragrancy is expanded to a great diftance. To this fpecies it is fuppofed, that the title of Dame’s Violet was Hrft ap- plied. This fort is very rarely feen in the Englifn gardens : I fuppofe it has "been neglected, becaufe the flowers make no appearance. It is a biennial plant like the Garden Rocket, which is propagated by feeds in the fame manner; but the plants are not quite fo hardy, and are very fubjett to rot in winter, efpecially on a moift foil, or in rich land, where they are apt to grow very rank, fo are foon injured by wet and cold in the winter ; therefore the plants of this fort fliould be planted in a dry poor foil, and a warm fituation ; and if feme of them are planted in pots to be placed under a common frame in winter, where they may be fhel- tered from hard rains and froft, but enjoy the free air at all times when the weather is mild, it will be a fure way to preferve them. The leaves of this fort are much larger than thofe of the Garden Rocket, and of a paler green ; the ftalks are clofely fet with briftly hairs the flowers grow in loofe panicles at the top of the ftalk, and ap- pear about the fame time with the Garden Rocket. The feeds of the fifth fort were, fent me from Germany without any title, nor any account of the country from whence it came ; but as it was fent with the feeds of fome Siberian plants, I fuppofe this came from the fame country. This is a biennial plant, which rifes with a ftrong branching ftalk between two and three feet high, which is very hairy, garnilhed with oblong heart-fhaped leaves, ending in acute points, fitting dole to the ftalk ; they are four inches long, and one and a half broad at their bafe, gradually diminiftiing to the point, and are {lightly fawed on their edges ; the upper part of the ftalk divides into two or three branches, which are garnilhed with fmall leaves of the fame fhape with thofe below, and are terminated with loofe panicles of fingle, large, purple flowers of great fragrancy. This fort flowered the end of June 1757, but the great rains which fell in Auguft, rotted the plants before the feeds were ripe. The fixth fort grows naturally in the warm parts of Europe ; this is annual ; the ftalks rife about eight or nine inches high, branching out greatly on every fide in a confuted order •, they are garnilhed with fmall, narrow, indented leaves, and are terminated by clutters of fmall yellow flowers, which make no appearance. The feventh fort grows naturally in Sicily. This is an annual plant, which ieldom rifes more than fix inches high ; the ftalk branches toward the top into three or four fmaller, which are terminated by fmall white flowers ; the leaves are two inches long and one broad, cut almoft to the midrib on each fide, fo as to refemble a winged leaf. The eighth fort grows naturally in Africa. This is an annual plant with a very branching ftalk, which rifes about nine inches high, garnilhed with rough fpear-ihaped leaves fawed on their edges, and termi- nated by loofe panicles of fmall purple flowers, which appear in June and July ; thefe are fucceeded by long pods fitting clofe to the ftalks, and are filled with fmall feeds which ripen in September. Thefe three forts are rarely cultivated, except in bo- tanic gardens for the fake of variety. If the feeds of thefe are permitted to fcatter, the plants will come up without care, and only require to be kept clean from weeds ; or they may be fown either in the hiring or the autumn where they are to Hand, for they do not bear tranfplanting well. The ninth fort is an annual plant, which grows na- turally in the fouth of France. This fends out feveral heart-fhaped leaves from the root, which fpread on the ground ; they are fawed and hairy : the ftalk rifes nine inches high, branching toward the top, garnilhed with leaves of the fame fnape, which embrace the ftalks with their bafe ; the flowers are produced in loofe panicles at the end of the branches ; they are of a lively purple colour, and thofe plants which rife in the autumn, flower early in the fpring. If thefe feeds are fown in the autumn, they fucceed much bet- ter than in the fpring. HE U CHER A. Lin. Gen. Plant. 283. Sanicle. The Characters are, The flower is compofled ofl five narrow petals , which are infer ted in the border ofl the one-leaved empalement. It hath five ere A dwl-jhapedftamna , which are much longer than the empalement , terminated by roundijh flummits. It hath a rcmdiflj bifid germen , with two eretl ftyles the length of the ftamina , crowned by cbtufie ftthnas. The germen afterward turns to an oval-pcinted capfule with tzvo horns , which are reflex ed, halving two cells filled with very fmall feeds. This genus of plants is ranged in the fecond fedfion of Linnaeus’s fifth clafs, which includes thofe plants whofe flowers have five ftamina and two ftyles. We have but one Species of this genus, viz. Heuchera jAmericana.) Elort. Cliff. 82. Mitella Ameri- cana, fiore fquallide purpureo villofo. Boerh. Ind. alt. Mitella of America , with harry flowers of a dirty purple colour. This plant grows naturally in Virginia, but is hardy enough to thrive in the open air in England. It hath, a perennial root, which fends out many heart-fhaped oval leaves, which are indented into four or five lobes, and are crenated on their edges, of a lucid green, and fmooth ; from between thefe come out the foot-ftalks of the flower, which are naked, and rife afoot high, dividing at the top into a loofe pani- cle, fuftaining many fmall hairy flowers, of an obfo- lete purple colour. This flowers in May, and the feeds ripen in Auguft. It is propagated by parting the roots in autumn, and fhould be planted in a fhady fituation ; there is little beauty in this plant, but it is prelerved in fome gar- dens for the fake of variety. HIBISCUS. Lin. Gen. Plant. 756. Ketmia. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 99. tab. 26. Syrian Mallow. The Characters are, The flower has a double empalement , which is permanent the outer is compofled of eight or ten narrow leaves, the inner is Jhaped like a cup , and is ofl one leaf, cut at the brim into five acute points. It hath five heart-Jhaped petals, which join at their bafe into one. It hath many ftamina , which are joined to the ftyle, in form ofl a column , within the tube of the flower, but expand toward the top , and are terminated by kidney-Jhaped flummits. It has a round germen, with fender ftyles longer than the ftamina , crowned by roundijh ftigmas. The germen afterward turns to a capfule with five cells, opening in five parts, inclojing kidney-Jhaped feeds. This genus of plants is ranged in the third feftion of Linnams’s fixteenfh clafs, which includes thofe plants whofe flowers have many ftamina joined to the ftyles in one body, forming a column. The Species are, 1. Hibiscus ( Syriacus) folks cuneiformi-ovatis, fupeme incifo-dentatis, caule arboreo. Hort. Cliff 350, Hibifi 6 T cm H 1 B ms with wedge-Jhaped oval leaves , whofe upper parts are cut , indented , u/H d tree-like /talk. Ketmia Syrorum quibufdam. C. B. P. 3160 The Syrian Ketmia, commonly called Althea frutex. 2. Hibiscus (Sinenfis) foliis cordato-quinquangularis ob- folete ferratis, cauie arboreo, Hort. XJpfal. 205. Hi- bifcus with heart-Jhaped leaves, haying jive angles which arejlightly jawed, and a tree-like Jlalk. Ketmia finen- fis, fructu iu'brotundo. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 100. China Ketmia with a roundijh fruit, commonly called China Rofe. 3. Hibiscus (. Abelmofchus ) foliis fubpeltato-cordatis fep- temangularibus, ferratis hifpidis. Hort. Cliff. 34.9. Hibifcus with heart-Jhaped target leaves , having feven angles zvhicb are jawed, and jet with prickly hairs. Ketmia Americana hirfuta, flore flavo, & femine mof- chato. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 100. Hairy American Ket- mia with a yellow flower and mujky feed, commonly called Mufk. 4. Hibiscus ( Manihot ) foliis palmato-digitatis feptem- partitis. Hort. Cliff 350. Hibifcus with fingered leaves, which are divided into feven parts. Ketmia America- na, folio Papayas, flore magno flavefeente, fundo purpureo, frudtu eredto pyramidali hexagono, femine rotundulo fapore fatuo. Boerh. Ind. alt. 1. 272. Ame- rican Ketmia with a Papaw leaf, and a large yellow flower, having a purple bottom , a pyramidal, fix- cornered, eredl fruit, and round feeds of a flat tafte. 5. Hibiscus ( Tomentofus ) foliis cordatis angulatis ferra- tis tomentofis, cauie arboreo. Hibifcus with angular , heart-Jhaped, flawed, woolly leaves , and a tree-like Jlalk. Malva arboreo, folio oblongo acuminato veluto den- tato & leviter finuato, flore ex rubro flavefeente. Sloan. Cat. 95. Tree Mallow with oblong, acute-pointed, in- dented leaves, Jlightly fmmted , and a reddijh yellow flower. 6. Hibiscus ( T'iliaceus ) foliis cordatis fubrotundis in- divifis acuminatis crenatis, cauie arboreo. Prod. Leyd. 532. Hibifcus with entire heart-Jhaped leaves, and a tree- like Jlalk. Ketmia Indica tili^ folio. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 100. Indian Ketmia with a Lime-tree leaf. 7. Hibiscus ( Javanica ) foliis ovatis acuminatis ferratis glabris, cauie arboreo. Flor. Zeyl. 2 60. Hibifcus with oval-pointed, jawed, fmooth leaves, and a tree-like Jlalk. Alcea Javanica arborefeens, flore pleno rubicundo. Bryen. Cent. 12 1. tab. 56. Tree Vervain Mallow of Java, with a double red flower, called in India Shoe-flower. 8. Hieiscus ( Vitifolis ) foliis ferratis inferioribus ovatis indivifis, fuperioribus quinquepartitis, cauie aculeato. Prod. Leyd. 358. Hibifcus with flawed leaves, the lower oval and undivided, the upper divided into five parts, and a prickly Jlalk. Ketmia Indica vitis folio, mag- no flore. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 100. Indian Ketmia with a Vine leaf and large flower. 9. Hibiscus ( Sabdariffa ) foliis ferratis, inferioribus cor- datis, mediis tripartitis, fummis quinquepartitis, cauie aculeato. Hibifcus with flawed leaves, the lower ones being heart-floaped, the middle divided into three parts, the upper into Jive, and a prickly Jlalk. Ketmia fEgyp- tiaca vitis folio, parvo flore. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 100. Egyptian Ketmia with a Vine leaf and a fmall flower. 10. PIibiscus ( Gojjypifolius ) foliis quinquelobatis fer- ratis, cauie glabro. Hibifcus with flawed leaves divided into five lobes, and a fmooth Jlalk. Ketmia Indica, Goffyppii folio, acetofe fapore. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 100. Indian Ketmia with a Cotton leaf, and the tajle of Sorrel. 11. Hibiscus ( Ficulneus ) foliis quinquefido-palmatis, cauie aculeato. Hort. Cliff. 498. Hibifcus with hand- Jhaped five-pointed leaves, and a prickly Jlalk. Ketmia Zeylanica, fici folio, perianthio oblongo integro. Hort. Ekh. 190. tab. 1 57. Ketmia of Ceylon with a Fig leaf, and an oblong entire perianthium. 12. Hibiscus ( Surattenfls ) foliis quinquepartitis, lobis ovato-lanceolatis hirfutis crenatis, cauie fpinoflimo. Hibifcus with leaves divided into Jive lobes, which are oval, fpear-jhaped, hairy, and crenated, and a very prickly Jlalk. Ketmia Indica aculeata, foliis digitatis. Tourn. Inft. iOi. Prickly Indian Ketmia with hand-floaped leaves . H I B I 3 -. Hibiscus ( Cordifolius ) foliis cordatis hirfutis crena- tis, floribus lateralibus, cauie arboreo ramolo. Hibif- cus with heart-floaped , hairy, crenated leaves, flowers growing from the fide s of the branches , and a tree-like branching Jlalk. Ketmia Americana rrutefeens foliis fubrotundis crenatis hirfutis, flore luteo. Houft. Shrubby American Ketmia with roundijh, hairy , crenated leaves , and a yellow flower. 14. Hibiscus ( Bahamenfis ) foliis oblongo-cordatis Ha- bris, denticuiatis, fubtus incanis, floribus ampliflimis. Hibifcus with oblong, heart-floaped, fmooth, indented leaves* hoary on their under fide, and very large flowers. 15. Hibiscus ( Ficifolius ) foliis quinquepartito pedatis, calycibus inferioribus latere rumpentibus. Lin. Sp. Plant. 696. Hibifcus with leaves like a hand, divided into five parts, and the lower empalement torn fidezvays. Ketmia Brafilienfis, folio ficus, fruftu pyramidato ful- cato. Tourn. Inft. R, H. 100. Ketmia of the Brqfils with a Fig leaf, and a pyramidal furrowed fruit. 16. Hibiscus ( Pentacarpos ) foliis inferioribus cordatis angulatis, fuperioribus fubhaftatis, floribus fubnu- tantibus, piftillo cernuo. Lin. Sp. Plant. 697. Hibifcus with lower leaves heart-floaped and angular, the upper ones fomewhat fpear-Jloapcd , nodding flowers , and a re- curved piftil. Ketmia paluftris minor, folio angufto, flore parvo purpurafeente, fruftu depreffo pentago- na. Zannich. Venet. 155. tab. 91. Smaller Marflo Ket- mia with a narrow leaf, a fmall purpliflo flower , and a five-cornered deprejfed fruit. 1 7. Hibiscus ( Populneus ) foliis ovatis acuminatis ferra- tis, cauie fimpliciflimo, petiolis fioriferis. Hort. Up- fal. 205. Hibifcus with oval-pointed jawed leaves, a flngle Jlalk, and foot-ftalks having flowers. Ketmia Afri- cana Populi folio. Tourn. Inft. 100. African Ketmia with a Poplar leaf. 18. Hibiscus ( Paluftris ) cauie herbaceo fimpliciflimo, foliis ovatis fubtrilobis, fubtus tomentofis, floribus axillaribus. Lin. Sp. Plant. 693. Hibifcus with a flngle herbaceous Jlalk, oval leaves having three lobes, woolly on their under fide . Ketmia paluftris flore purpureo. Tourn. Inft. 100. Marflo Ketmia with a purple flower. 19. Hibiscus ( Trionum ) foliis tripartitis incifis, calyci- bus inflatis. Hort. Upfal. 206. Hibifcus with tripartite cut leaves, and a fwollen empalement. Ketmia veficaria vulgaris. Tourn. Inft. Common Bladder Ketmia , called Venice Mallow , or Flower of an hour. 20. Hibiscus ( Africana ) foliis tripartitis dentatis, lobis anguftioribus cauie hirfuto calycibus inflatis. Hibif- cus with tripartite indented leaves having narrower lobes , a hairy Jlalk, and fwollen empalement s. Ketmia vefi- caria Africana. Tourn. Inft. 101. African Bladder Ketmia. 21. Hibiscus ( Hifpidus ) foliis inferioribus trilobis, fum- mis quinque partitis obtufis crenatis calycibus infla- tis, cauie hifpido. Hibifcus with under leaves having three lobes, the upper being cut into Jive obtufe fegments , which are crenated, fwollen empalements, and a prickly Jlalk. 22. Hibiscus ( Malvavifcus ) foliis cordatis-crenatis, an- gulis lateralibus extimis parvis, cauie arboreo. Hort. Cliff. 349. Hibifcus with heart-Jhaped crenated leaves , whofe outward lateral angles are fmall, and a tree-like Jlalk. Malvavifcus arborefeens, flore miniato claufo. Hort. Elth. 210. tab. 170. Tree-like , vifeous, feeded Mallow, with a clofed fcarlet flower. The firft fort is commonly called Althsa frutex by the nurfery gardeners, who propagate the fhrubs for fale ; of this there are four or five varieties, which differ in the colour of their flowers ; the moft common hath pale purple flowers with dark bottoms ; another hath bright purple flowers with black bottoms, a third hath white flowers with purple bottoms ; a fourth va- riegated flowers with dark bottoms •, and a fifth pale yellow flowers with dark bottoms ^ but the laft is very rare at prefent in the Englifh gardens *, there are alfo two with variegated leaves, which are by fome much efteemed. This grows naturally in Syria, from whence it. has been introduced to the gardens, and is one of the great ornaments of the autumn feafon: it riles with a flmibby ftalk l I H I B ftalk to the height of fix or feven feet, fending out many ligneous branches, covered with a fmooth gray bark, garnifhed with oval fpear-fhaped leaves, whofe upper parts are frequently divided into three lobes, which are fawed ; thefe are placed alternately on the branches, Handing on fhort foot-ftalks. The flowers come out from the wings of the ftalks at every joint of the fame year’s fhoot ; they are large, and lhaped like thofe of the Mallow, having five large roundifh petals, which join at their bale, fpreading open at the top in fhape of an open bell : thefe appear in Auguft, and if the feafon is not too warm, there will be a fucceffion of flowers part of Sep- tember •, the early flowers are fucceeded by fhort cap- fules with five cells, filled with kidney-fhaped feeds ; but unlefs the feafon proves warm, they will not ripen in this country. It is propagated by feeds, which fiiould be fown in pots filled with light earth the latter end of March ; and if they are plunged into a gentle heat, it will greatly forward the growth of the feeds. When the plants are come up, they mu ft be inured to the open air, and in May the pots may be plunged into the ground, in a border expofed to the eaft, where they may have the morning fun : the reafon of my advifmg the pots to be plunged into the ground, is to prevent the earth from drying fo fail as it would do when the pots Hand on the furface, fo that the plants will not require fo much water in fummer •, thefe plants will require no other culture, but to keep them clean from weeds, and in very dry weather to refrefh them with water during the firfl fummer, but in autumn it will be proper to re- move the pots under a common frame to fcreen them from the froft ; or where there is not fuch con- veniency, they may be plunged clofe to a hedge, pale, or wall, to a good afped; and in fevere froft, they ihould be covered with mats, Straw, or other light covering ; for although thefe plants, when they have obtained ftrength, will refill the cold of our winters, yet the young plants, whofe fhoots are tender, are very often injured by the firfl; froft of autumn : fo that if they are not fcreened the firft year, they are often killed to the ground. Toward the latter end of March will be a good time to tranfplant thefe plants, at which time a fpot of light ground mult be prepared to re- ceive them, which lbould be divided into beds four feet broad, with paths of two feet broad between ; then the plants Ihould be ihaken out of the pots with the earth about them, and feparated with care, for their roots are very tender, and apt to break with little force thefe Ihould be planted at about nine inches afunder in the beds ; fo that if four rows are planted in each bed, there will be fix inches allowed between the outfide rows and the paths. The ground Ihould be gently doled about the roots to prevent the air penetrating to them ; and if a little old tan- ners bark, or mulch, is laid over the furface of the beds, it will prevent the earth from drying, and be of great ule to the plants ; during the following fum- mer they mult be kept clean from weeds, and if the following winter prove fevere, it will be prudent to cover the plants again in autumn, efpecially if they Ihoot late in the feafon, or the autumn proves cold and moift, for then the plants will be' in great dan- ger of having their tops killed : in thefe beds the plants may remain two years, by which time they will be fit to tranfplant where they are defigned to remain for if they are kept longer in the nurfery, they will not remove fo well. The bell time for tranfplanting thefe plants is the end of March, or the beginning of April, for they feldom begin to Ihoot till the end of April, or the beginning of May ; they Ihould have a light foil, not too wet, for in ilrong land their Hems grow mofiy, and they never thrive after. Thefe plants may alfo be propagated by cuttings, which, if planted the latter end of March, in pots fill- ed with light earth, and plunged into a gentle heat, will take root •, but the plants fo raifed, are not fo good as the feedlings. The feveral varieties may be H I B propagated by grafting upon each other, which is the common method of propagating the forts with ftriped leaves. The fecond fort grows naturally in India, from whence the French firft carried the feeds to their fet- tlements in the Weft-Indies ; and the inhabitants of the Britifh colonies there have been fupplied with the feeds from them, fo have given it the title of Martinico Rofe : of this there are the double and Angle flower- ing, which from the feeds of the double the Angle is frequently produced, but the feeds of the Angle fel- dom vary to the double. The flowers of thefe plants alter in their colour, for at their firft opening they are white, then they change to a bliifh Rofe colour, and as they decay they turn to a purple. In the Weft-In- dies, all thefe alterations happen the fame day, as I fuppofe the flowers in thofe hot countries are not of longer duration : but in England, where the flowers laft near a week in beauty, the changes are not fo fudden. This plant has a foft fpongy Item, which, by age, becomes ligneous and pithy. It riles to the height of twelve or fourteen feet, fending out branches on every fide toward the top, which are hairy, gar- nilhed with heart-lhaped leaves, cut into five acute angles on their borders, and are fiighriy fawed on their edges, of a lucid green on their upper fide, but pale below. Handing alternately upon pretty long foot- ftalks. The flowers are produced from the wings of the ftalk, like thofe of the firfl fort ; the lingle one is compofed of five large petals, which fpread open, and are firft v/hite, but afterward change in the man- ner before-mentioned ; thefe are fucceeded by fhort, thick, blunt capfules, which are very hairy, having five cells, which contain many fmall kidney- lhaped feeds, having a fine plume of fibrous down adhering to them. This fort is propagated by feeds, which muft be fown upon a hot-bed in the fpring, and when the plants are fit to remove, they Ihould be each planted in a feparate fmall pot filled with kitchen-garden earth, and plunged into a moderate hot-bed, where they muft be fhaded till they have taken new root - 3 then they muft be treated as other plants from warm countries, but not too tenderly, for thefe require a large Ihare of air in warm weather, otherwife they will draw up very weak : thefe plants Ihould not be quite expofed to the open air the firfl feafon, and the firft winter will require the warmth of a mode- rate ftove ; but as they get more ftrength, they may- be treated with lefs care, for they will bear the open air in fummer, in a warm fheltered fituation, and will live through the wiqter in a very good green-houfe, provided they have not too much wet ; but the plants thus hardily treated, will not make fo great progrefs, nor flower fo well as with a little additional warmth ; and if they are too tenderly managed, they will draw up weak, fo will be lefs likely to flower. This fort ufually flowers in England in November, fo that it keeps to the ufual time of flowering in its native country. The third fort grows naturally in the Weft-Indies, where it is commonly known by the title of Mufk ; the French cultivate great quantities of thefe plants in their American Iflands, the feeds of which are annu- ally fent to France in great quantities, fo that they certainly have fome way of rendering it ufeful, as it feems to be a coniiderable branch of trade. This rifes with an herbaceous ftalk about three or four feet high, fending out two or three fide branches, garnifhed with large leaves cut into fix or feven angles, which are acute, and fawed on their edges ; thefe Hand on long foot-ftalks, and are placed alternately. The ftalks and leaves of this are very hairy. The flowers come out from the wings of the ftalk upon pretty long foot- ftalks, which Hand ered ; they are large, of a fulphur colour, with dark purple bottoms, and are fucceeded by pyramidal five-cornered capfules, which open in five cells, filled with large kidney-fnaped feeds of a very mufky odour. This 301 I H I B This fort feldom lives more than one 'year in Eng- land, .but in its native country will laid two years. It is propagated by feeds, which, if fown on a good hot- bed in the fpring, and the plants afterward planted in pots filled with light earth, and plunged into a frefh hot-bed, treating them afterward in the fame way as the Amaranthus, they will flower in July, and their feeds will ripen in autumn. The fourth fort grows naturally in both the Indies 5 this rifes with an herbaceous fmooth ftalk three or four feet high, garni filed with leaves which are di- vided into feven fegments almoft to the bottom ; the middle fegment being four inches long and half an inch broad, the upper lateral fegments about three inches long and the fame breadth ; thefe are indented at their extremities, but the lower fegments are not much more than an inch long, and have foot-ibalks four inches long. The flowers are produced from the wings of the ftalks toward the top, Handing on ihort foot-ftalks ; they are compofed of five large fulphur- coloured petals, which, when open, fpread five inches wide ; they have a dark purple bottom, with a column of {lamina and ftyles rifing in the center, and are fucceeded by large, pyramidal, five-cornered, eredl feed-veffels, opening in five cells, which are filled with pretty large kidney- fliaped feeds, which have little fmell or tafte. It is propagated by feeds in the fame manner as the former fort, and if fo managed, will produce flowers and perfect feeds the fame feafon ; but the plants may be continued through the winter in a moderate warmth, though few perfons are at the trouble of preferving the plants after they have ri- pened their leeds, becaufe the young plants make a better appearance. The fifth fort grows naturally in the Weft-Indies, where it rifes with a woody ftalk feven or eight feet high, fending out many fide branches toward the top, which are covered with a whitifh bark, and garnifhed with angular heart-fhaped leaves, which are woolly ; they are about four inches long, and three broad to- ward their bafe, ending in acute points, and have fe- veral longitudinal veins. The flowers are produced from the wings of the ftalk upon long foot-ftalks ; they are compofed of five roundilh petals, which are joined at their bafe, but fpread open above, and are of a yellow colour, turning to a red as they decay •, thefe are fucceeded by large, obtufe, five-cornered, hairy feed-veffels, which open in five cells, filled with large kidney-fhaped feeds. This is propagated by feeds, which muft be fown upon a hot-bed in the fpring, and the plants after- ward treated in the fame way as the two laft men- tioned, during the firft fummer, but in the autumn they muft be plunged into the tan-bed in the ftove, where they fhould conftantly remain, and be treated in the fame way as other tender plants from the fame country, giving them but little water in winter ; the fecond year the plants will flower, but they have not as yet perfected feeds in England. The fixth fort grows naturally in both Indies ; this riles with a woody pithy ftem eight or ten feet high, dividing into feveral branches toward the top, which are covered with a woolly dowm, and garnifhed with round heart-fhaped leaves, ending in acute points ; they are of a lucid green on their upper fide, and hoary on their under, full of large veins, and are placed alternately on the ftalks. The flowers are pro- duced at the end of the branches in loofe fpikes ; they are of a whitifh yellow colour, and are fucceeded by ihort acuminated capfules, opening in five cells, filled with large kidney-fhaped feeds. This fort is propagated in the fame way, and the plants require the fame treatment as the fifth, and flower the fecond year, provided they are brought forward, otherwife they will not flower before the third or fourth feafon ; but they will bear the open air in fummer, in a warm fituation, though they will not make great progrefs there. The ferenth fort grows naturally on the coaft of H I B Malabar, from whence I received the plants; this rifes with a woody ftalk twelve or fourteen feet high, di- viding. into many fmall branches toward the top, which are garnished with oval fawed leaves, ending in acute points ; they are of a lucid green above, but are. pale on their under fide, and are placed without order. The flowers come out from the fide of the branches, at the wings of the leaves, on pretty long foot-ftalks ; they are compofed of many oblong roundifh petals of a red colour, which expand like the Rofe, the flowers being as large when fully blown, as the common red Rofe, and as double. This is a perennial plant, which is propagated by cuttings ; and the plants muft con- ftantly be kept in the ftove, giving them a iarge fhare of air in warm weather, -and but little water in win- ter. There is a variety of this with white flowers, but I have not feen any of the plants in the Englifh gar- dens -, nor have I feen the Angle flowering kind, for the inhabitants of India propagate that with double flowers by cuttings, which put out roots freely ; this they do for the fake of flowers, which the women of that country make life of to colour their hair and eye-brows black, which will not walh off : the Eng- lifh there ufe it for blacking of their fhoes, and from thence have titled it Shoe-flower. The eighth fort is an annual plant, which rifes with an upright ftalk feven or eight feet high ; the lower leaves are oval, ferrated, and entire, but the upper leaves are divided almoft to the foot-ftalk, into five fpear-fhaped fegments, like the fingers of a hand, Handing on very long foot-ftalks, which have thorns at their bafe, and are fharply fawed on their edges. The flowers come out from the wings of the ftaff • they are large, of a pale fulphur colour, with a .ark purple bottom, and are fucceeded by oval elimi- nated, prickly capfules, which open in five .is, filled with large kidney-fhaped feeds. This fort is propagated by feeds, which muft be fown upon a hot-bed, and the plants treated in the fame way as the third fort ; and w r hen they are grown too tall to ftand under the frames, they muft be placed in the ftove, where they will flower in Auguft, and the feeds will ripen in autumn. The ninth fort is near of kin to the eighth, but the ftalks do not grow fo tall ; the lower leaves are heart- fhaped and entire, the middle leaves are divided into three, and the upper into five fegments, almoft to the foot-ftalks ; they are fawed on their edges, and the ftalk is prickly. The flowers come out from the wings of the ftalks *, they are of a very pale fulphur colour, with dark bottoms, but not fo large as thofc of the laft. This is propagated by feeds in the fame way as the eighth, and the plants require the fame treatment. It flowers in July and Auguft, and the feeds ripen in autumn. The bark of both thefe plants is full of ftrong fibres, which I have been informed the inhabitants of the Malabar coaft prepare and make into a ftrong cord- age; and by what I have obferved, it may be wrought into fine ftrong thread of any fize, if properly manu- factured. The tenth fort grows naturally in the Weft-Indies, where the inhabitants ufe the green pods to add an acid tafte to their viands : there are two varieties of this, one with a light green, and the other a deep red pod, which always maintain their difference -, but as there is no other difference but that of the colour of their pods, they do not deferve feparate titles. This rifes with an herbaceous ftem about three feet high, fending out feveral lateral branches, which are gar- nifhed with fmooth leaves divided into five lobes. The flowers come out from the fide of the branches ; they are of a dirty white, with dark purple bot- toms, and are fucceeded by obtufe feed-veffels, di- vided into five cells, which are filled with kidney- fhaped feeds. This fort is propagated in the fame way as the third, and will flower and perfect feeds the fame year, fo is feldom preferved longer in England. * HI B The eleventh fort is a native of Ceylon ; this rifes with an herbaceous fbalk, which is prickly, from two to three foethigh, dividing upward into fmall branches, which are garnifhed with hand-fhaped leaves, divided into five fegments. The flowers come out from the wings of the leaves ; they are final! and white, with purple bottoms, and are fucceeded by fnort obtufe capfules with five cells, filled with kidney-fhaped feeds. The feeds of this fort were fent me by Dr. Breynius of Dantzick. This plant is annual, fo muff be treated in the fame way as the third. The twelfth fort is alfo annual with us •, this rifes with an herbaceous ftalk three feet high, clofely fet with prickly hairs, and divides into branches upward, gar- nifhed with hand-fhaped leaves, divided into five lobes, which are fpear-fhaped, ending in acute points ; they are hairy, and crenated on their edges, Handing upon very long foot-ftalks ; the flowers come out from the wings of the ftalk, and are very like thofe of the third ; this plant requires the fame culture as the third fort. The feeds of this were fent me by Dr. Jufiieu, from Paris. The thirteenth fort was difcovered' by the late Dr. Houftoun in the ifland of Cuba, from whence he fent me the feeds. This rifes with a woody ftalk twelve or fourteen feet high, fending out many lateral branches, garnifhed with hairy heart-fhaped leaves, crenated on their edges ; the flowers come out fingle from the wings of the leaves ; they are of a very bright yellow colour, but not fo large as either of the former forts, and are fucceeded by fhort cap- fules ending in acute points, divided into five cells, which are filled with kidney-fhaped feeds. This plant is tender, fo requires the fame treatment as the fifth, and other tender kinds, with which management it flowers and produces good feeds here. The fourteenth fort has a perennial root but an an- nual ftalk. The feeds of this were fent me from the Bahama Iflands, which fucceeded in the Chelfea gar- den, where the plants produced plenty of flowers, but did not ripen their feeds. This riles with ftve- ral ftalks from the root, which grow four feet high, garnifhed with oblong, heart-fhaped, fmooth ‘leaves, ending in acute points, of a light green on their upper fide, but hoary on their under, and are flightly indented on their edges, Handing upon long foot- ftalks ; the flowers are produced at the top of the ftalks ; they are very large, and of a light purple co- lour with dark bottoms, and are fucceeded by fhort capfules divided into five cells, filled with kidney- fhaped feeds. This is propagated by feeds, which mull; be fown on a moderate hot-bed in the fpring, and when the plants are fit to remove, they fhould be each planted in a fe- parate fmall pot, and plunged into a hot-bed, treating them in the fame way as the other tender forts, but al- lowing them a greater fhare of air in warm weather ; for thefe may be brought to ftand in the open air in fummer, but unlefs the feafon is very warm they will not flower there; for thofe which flowered in the Chel- fea garden, were plunged into atan-bed whofe heat was declining, under a deep frame, where they produced plenty of flowers, but they came too late to ripen feeds. The ftalks decay in the autumn, but if the pots are fheitered under a hot-bed frame and fecured from froft, they will continue feveral years, and put out new ftalks in the fpring. The fifteenth fort is very common in the Weft-Indies, where the inhabitants cultivate it for the pods or feed- veffels, which they gather green to put into theirfoups ; thefe, having a foft viicous juice, add a thicknefs to their foups, and renders them very palatable. It rifes Wii: h a fort herbaceous ftalk, from three to five feet high, dividing upward into many branches, garnifhed with hand-fhaped leaves, divided into five lobes ; the flowers are produced from the wings of the ftalk; they are of a pale fulphur colour with dark purple bottoms, but are Imaller than either of the other forts, and of very fhort duration, opening in the morning with the H I B rifing fun, but are faded long before noon in war’m weather. Thefe are fucceeded by capfules of very- different forms, in the different varieties ; in fomejhe capfules are not thicker than a man’s finger, and five or fix inches long ; in others they are very thick, and not more than two or three inches long; in fome plants they grow ereft, in others they are rather inclined ; and thefe varieties are conftant, for I have many years cultivated thefe plants, and have not found them vary. This fort is propagated by feeds in the fame way as the third, and the plants require the fame treat- ment, for they are too tender to thrive in the open air in this country ; I have often transplanted the plants into warm borders, after they have acquired proper ftrength, and have fometimes in very warm feafons had them thrive for a fhort time, but the firft cold or bad weather their leaves have all dropped off ; arid then they have decayed gradually, fo that they have but rarely flowered, and have never in the beft feafons perfe&ed their feeds ; therefore thofe who are in- clinable to cultivate thefe plants, muft conftantly fhel- ter them in bad weather. The fixteenth fort grows naturally near Venice, in moift land ; this hath a perennial root, and an annual ftalk, which rifes from three tofourfeethigh; the lower leaves are angular and heart-fhaped, but the upper are fpear-fhaped, and flightly indented on their edges ; the flowers are produced from the wings of the leaves, upon long foot-ftalks ; they are fmall, and of a purple colour with a dark bottom, and are fuc- ceeded by five-cornered compreffed capfules, filled with kidney-fhaped feeds. This fort is propagated by Feeds, which muft be fown on a hot-bed, and the plants fhould be treated in the fame way as the fourteenth fort, otherwife they will not flower ; for although the roots will live in the full ground here, yet the fummers are not warm. enough to bring them to flower. I have fome of the roots which have remained feven years, putting up many ftalks, which rife upward of three feet, and have the flower-buds formed on their tops ; but thefe appear fo late in the feafon, that they feldom have opened. The leventeenth fort grows naturally in North Ame- rica ; this hath a perennial root and an annual ftalk ; the roots of this fort will live in the full ground, but unleis the fummer is warm, the flowers feldom open. It nfes with fingle ftalks from the root, two feet high or more ; the leaves are oval and fawed, the flowers are large and purple. The eighteenth fort grows naturally in North Ame- rica, in moift ground. This hath a perennial root, and an annual ftalk like the former, which is herba- ceous and never branches ; the leaves are oval, with three lobes which are not deeply divided ; they are of a bright green on their upper fide, but woolly on their under ; the flowers are produced from the wings of the ftalk ; they are large, and of a bright purple co- lour. This fort, like the former, feldom flowers in the open air here, unlefs the fummer proves very warm, but the roots will live in the full ground, if they are planted in a fheitered fituation. The only way to have thefe plants flower in this country, is to keep tne roots in pots, and flicker them under a frame in winter, and in the fpring plunge them into a gentle hot-bed, which will caufe them to put out their ftalks early ; and when the ftalks are fo high as to resell the glaffes, the pots may be removed into a glafs-cafe ; where, if they are duly fupplied with wa- ter, and have plenty of air in hot weather, they will flower very well in July, and in warm feafons will ri- pen their feeds. 1 he nineteenth fort is an annual plant, which ptov/s naturally in fome parts of Italy, and has been" Ion. o' cultivated in the Enghfn gardens, by the title of Venice Malva. Gerard and Parkinfon title it Alcea v eneta, and Flos flora, or flower of an hour, from the fhort . duration of its dowers, which in hot wea- ther continue but few hours open : however, there As H 1 B Is k fuccefiion of flowers which open daily for' a co.v fiderable time, fo that a few. of thefe plants may be allowed a place in every curious garden. It rifes with a branching ftalk a foot and a half high, having many (hart fpines which are ibft, and do not appear unlefs clofely viewed : the leaves are divided into three lobes, which are deeply jagged ai- riioft to the midrib j thefe jags are oppofite, and the fegments are obtufe ; the flowers come out at the joints of the (talks upon pretty long toot- (talks, hav- ing a double empalement, the outer being compofed of ten long narrow leaves, which join at their bale ; the inner is of one thin leaf, fwollen like a bladder, cut into five acute fegments at the top, having many longitudinal purple ribs, and is hairy ; both thefe are permanent, and inclofe the capfule after the flower is paft. The flower is compofed of five obtufe petals, which fpread open at the top, the lower part forming an open bell-fhaped flower •, thefe have dark purple bottoms, but are of a pale fulphur colour above, having the ftamina and apices joined in a column in the center ; after the flower is paft, the germen turns to a blunt capiule opening in five cells, which are filled with finall kidney-ftiaped feeds. It flowers in June, July, and Auguft, and the feeds ripen about a month after. This fort is propagated by feeds, which fhouid be fown where the plants are ciefigned to re- main, for they do not bear tranfpianting well ; if the feeds are fown in autumn, the plants will come up early in the fpring, fo will flower in the fummer, and thefe which are fown early in the fpring will fucceed them *, fo that by fowing them at three different feafons, they may be continued in fucceffion till the froft flops them. Thefe require no other cul- ture but to keep them clean Tom weeds, and thin them where they are too clofe *, anddf the feeds are permitted to flatter, the plants will come up full as well as when fown, fo that it will maintain its fitua- tion unlefs it is weeded out. The twentieth fort grows naturally at the Cape of Good Hope ; this is alfo an annual plant which refem- bles the former, but the (talks grow more ered, are of a purplifh colour, and very hairy-, the leaves are compofed of three lobes, which are divided almoft to the foot-ftalk ; thefe are narrow, the middle lobe ftretching out more than twice the length of the two fide lobes, and they are but (lightly indented on their edges, whereas thole of the former are cut almoft to the midrib ; the flowers are larger, and .their colour deeper, than thofe of the other. The feeds of the twenty-fecond fort were fent me from the Cape of Good Hope, a few years paft. This is alfo an annual plant, having at firft fight fome re- femblance of the other forts before-mentioned ; but it rifes with ftrong hairy branching (talks, garnifhed with much broader leaves than either of the former, the lower being divided into three, and the upper into five obtufe lobes, which are crenated on their edges ; the flowers are large, but of a paler colour than thofe of the other. This has maintained the difference ten years, fo that there is no doubt of its being a diitindt fpecies. All thefe are as hardy as the nineteenth fort, fo may be treated in the fame way. The twenty-third fort grows naturally at Campeachy, from whence the late Dr. Houftoun lent me the feeds. This differs fo effentially from the other fpecies in its fruftification, as to deferve another title ; for all the other have dry capfutes with five cells, including many kidney-ftiaped feeds, but this hath a foft vif- cous berry, with a hard (hell inclofed, containing five roundifti feeds : it rifes with a (hrubby ftalk ten or twelve feet high, dividing into many branches, which are garnifhed with fmooth, heart-fhaped, angular leaves, which are crenated on their edges ; the flowers come out from the wings of the (talks fingly, (land- ing on- fliort foot-ftalks they are compofed of five oblong petals, which are twifted together and never expand •» they are of a fine fcarlet, and are fucceeded by roundifti berries of a fcarlet colour when ripe, in- 5 H I E clofing a hard (hell which opens in five cells, each containing a Tingle roundifti feed. This fort is generally propagated here by cuttings, becaufe the feeds do not often ripen here - 3 if the cut- tings are planted in pots filled with light earth, arid plunged into a gentle hot-bed, keeping the air from them, they will foon take root, and mould be gradu- ally inured to bear the open air. Thefe plants require a moderate ftove to preferve them through the winter; and if they are kept in warmth in fummer, they will flower, and fometimes ripen fruit, though they may- be placed abroad in a (Mitered fituation for two or three months in fummer, but the plants fo treated fei- dom flower fo well. HIERACIUM. Lin. Gen. Plant. Si 8. Tourn, Inft. R. H. 469. tab. 267. [of ‘ffpag, Gr. a hawk; fo called, becaufe hawks as well as eagles, have a ftrong and quick fight ; and it is reported, that if by reafon of the heat of the air, a film, grows over the eyes of this bird, then the parent let falls a drop of the juice of it in its eye, which takes it off; and that, in like manner, it is good to clear the human fight.} Hawk weed. The Characters are. It hath a flower compofed of many hermaphrodite florets* which are included in one common flealy empalement , whofe feales are narrow , and very unequal in their lenyth and pofition the florets are equal and uniform ■* they have one petal which is fhaped like a tongue , indented in five fegments at the point , placed imbricatim over each other % thefe have each five jhort hairy ftamina , terminated by cylindrical fummits. At the bottom of the petal -is fitu- ated the germen , fupporting a fender ftyle , crowned by two recurved fiigmas •, the germen afterward becomes a fioort four-cornered feed crowned with down , fitting in the empalement. This genus of plants is ranged in the firft Action of Linnseus’s nineteenth clafs, which includes the plants with a compound flower, compofed only of fruitful florets. There are a great number of fpecies of this genus* many of which grow naturally as weeds in England, and the others are fo in different countries, therefore! (hall only feledl thofe wihch are the moft beautiful, and beft worth cultivating from the number, which to enumerate, would fwell this work greatly beyond its bounds. 1. Hieracium ( Aurantiacum ) foliis integris caule fub- nudo fimplicifiimo piiofo corymbifero. Hort. Cliff. 388. Hawkweed with entire leaves* and a Jingle y hairy* naked ftalk , terminated by a corymbus of flowers. Hiera- cium hortenfe, floribus atro purpurafeentibus. C. B. P. 128. Garden Hawkweed with dark purple flowers. 2. Hieracium ( CerinthoidesJ foliis radicalibus obovatis denticulatis, caulinis oblongis femiamplexicaulibus. Prod. Ley, d. 124. Hawkweed with oval indented leaves at the root , thofe on the ftalks oblong , and half embracing them. Hieracium Pyrenaicum folio cerinthes. SchoL Bot. Pyrenian Hawkweed with a Honeywort leaf.- 3. Hieracium ( Blattaroides ) foliis lanceolatis amplexb caulibus dentatis, floribus folitariis, calycibus laxis. Hort. Cliff 387. Hawkweed with fpear-fh aped indented leaves embracing the ftalks , flowers growing fingly , and loofe empalements. Hieracium Pyrenaicum, blattarise folio minus hirfutum. Tourn. Inft. 472. Pyrenean Hawkweed with a Moth Mullein leaf , lefts hairy. 4. Hieracium ( Amplexicaule ) foliis amplexicaulibus cordatis fubdentatis, pedunculis unifloris hirfutis, caule ramofo. Hort. Cliff 387. Hawkweed with heart-fhaped* indented , hairy foot-ftalks* leaves embracing the ftalks bear- ing one flower , and a branching ftalk. Hieracium Pyre- naicum rotundifolium amplexicaule. Sc hoi. Bot. Py- renean Hawkweed , with round leaves embracing the ftalks. 5. Hieracium [fabauduni) caule eredto multifloro, fo- liis ovato-lanceolatis dentatis femiamplexicaulibus. Prod. Leyd. 124. Hawkweed with an ereli ftalk bear- ing many flowers , and oval fpear-fhaped leaves half embracing the ftalk. Hieracium fabauduni altiSImum, foliis latis brevibus, crebrius nafeentibus. Mor. Hilt. 3. p. 71, 6. Hie- I ' H I L 6. Hieracium njmlellatum) foliis , linearibtis fubden- tatis fparfis, floribus fubumbellatis. Flor. Lapp. 287. Hawkweed with linear indented leaves placed thinly, and flowers almoft in an umbel Hieracium fruticofum, an- guftifllmo incano folio. H. L. 316. The firft fort grows naturally in Syria ; this fends out from the root many oblong oval leaves, which are entire and hairy ; from between the leaves arife a Angle ftalk, little more than a foot high, cover- ed ^with hairs j the flowers are produced in a co- rynabus at the top ; they are of a dark red colour, compofed of many florets, which are fucceeded by oblong black feeds, crowned with a white down, which, when ripe, by the elafticity of the down, is drawn out of the empalement, and by the firft ftrong gale of wind, are wafted to a confiderable diftance. The flowers appear the beginning of June, and the feeds ripen in about five or fix weeks after, but there is frequently a fucceffion of flowers till the au- tumn. It is propagated by feeds, which fhould be fown on an eaft afpebted border in March ; and when the plants come up, they muft be kept clean from weeds, till they are ftrong enough to remove, which will be by the beginning of June ; then they fhould be tranf- planted to a fhady border of undunged ground, at fix inches diftance, obferving to water them if the wea- ther fhould prove dry, till they have taken new root ; after which, if they are kept clean from weeds, they will require no other culture : in the autumn they fhould be tranfplanted where they are defigned to re- main-, the following fummer they will flower and produce ripe feeds, and the roots will continue fome years, if they are not planted in a rich moift foil, which frequently occafions their rotting in winter. The fecond fort grows naturally on the Pyrenean mountains. It is a perennial plant, whofe lower leaves are oval, indented, and of a grayifh colour j thofe on the ftalks are fm after, but of the fame fhape and co- lour, and half embrace the ftalks with their bafe ; the flalks rife a foot high, branching out in feveral divi- fions, each being terminated by one yellow flower. This is propagated by feeds as the flrft: fort. The third fort grows on the Pyrenees ; this hath a perennial root, which fends up feveral eredt ftalks, garnilhed with fpear-fhaped leaves which are in- dented •, the flowers are produced from the wings of the ftalks, upon fhort foot-ftalks, each fuftaining one large yellow flower, having a loofe empalement ; this flowers in June-, it is propagated by parting of the roots in autumn, and will thrive in any fituation. The fourth fort rifes with a branching ftalk a foot and a half high, garnilhed with heart-fhaped leaves which are indented at their bafe, where they embrace the ftalks > each divifion of the branches terminate in a hairy foot-ftalk, fuftaining one large yellow flower, which appears in June, and the feeds ripen in the end of July. This is a perennial plant, which is propagated by feeds asrhe firft fort, and requires the fame treatment. The fifth fort grows naturally in Savoy ; the root of this is perennial, fending up feveral ereeft ftalks near two feet high, garnilhed with fhort, fpear-fhaped, in- dented leaves, half embracing the ftalk with their bafe ; the flowers are pretty large, of a deep yellow colour, terminating the ftalks ; it flowers in July. The fixth fort grows naturally in Holland ; it is a perennial plant, rifing with three or four flender ftalks, garnilhed with hoary linear leaves, and terminated by yellow flowers. This rarely produces feeds in Eng- land, fo is propagated by parting of the roots in au- tumn : but the fifth may be propagated either in the fame manner, or from feeds as the firft fort, as it pro- duces plenty of feeds here. MILLS have many ufes, of which I fhall only men- tion three or four. 1 ft, They ferve as fereens, to keep off the cold and nipping blafts of the northern and eaftern winds. 2dly, The long ridges and chains of lofty mountains, H I P being generally found £0 run from eaft to weft, ferve t# flop the evagation of thofe vapours toward the poles, without which they would all run from the hot courri tries, and leave them deftitute of rain. 3dly, They cohdenfe thofe vapours, like alembic heads into clouds -, and fo by a kind of external 'diftil- lation, give origin to fprings and rivers and by amaffing, cooling, and conftipating them, turn them into rain, and by that means render the fervid re- gions of the torrid zone habitable. 4thly, They ferve for the production of a great num- ber of vegetables and minerals, which are not found in other places. It hath been found by experience and calculation, that Hills, though they meafure twice as much as the plain ground they ftand upon, yet the produce of the one can be no more than the other *, and therefore, in purchafing land, the Hills ought not to be bought for more than their fuperficial meafure, i. e. to pay no more for two acres upon the fide of a Elill, than for one upon the plain, if the foil be equally rich. It is true, that thofe lands that are hilly and moun- tainous, are very different as to their valuable con- tents, from what are found in flat and plain ground, whether they be planted, fown, or built upon, as for example : Suppofe a Hill contains four equal fides, which meet in a point at top ; yet the contents of theft four fides can produce no more grain, or bear no more trees, than the plain ground on which the Hill ftands, or than the bafe of it ; and yet by the meafure of the fides, there may be double the number of acres, rods, and poles, which they meafure on the bafe or ground- plot. For as long as 11 plants preferve their bpright me- thod of growing, hilly ground can bear no more plan m in number than the plain at the bafe. Again, as to buildings on a H’k, the two fides of a Hill will bear r.o more than the fame number of houfes that can ftand in the line at the bafe. And as to rails, or park pafimg over a Hill, though, the meafure be near double over the Hjll to the line at the bottom, yet both may be incioied by thd fartie number of pales of the fame breadth. HIPPOCASTANUM. See Esculus; HIPPOCRATEA. Lin. Gen. Plant. . 54. Cda,’ Plum. Nov. Gen. 8. tab. 35. The Characters are. It hath a large, fpreading empalement of one leaf , cut at the top into five figments ■, the flower hath five oval pe- tals, which are indented at the points. It hath three awl-Jhaped fiamina, terminated by broad fummits , and an oval germen fituated below the petal, with a jlyle the length of the ftamina, crowned by an obtufi fligm a. ■The germen afterward becomes a heart-fhaped cap fide winged at the top , inclofmg five feeds. This genus of plants is ranged in the flrft feftion of Linnaeus’s third clafs, intitled Triandria Moncgynia, the flowers having three ftamina and one ftyle. , We have but one Species of this genus, viz., Hippocratea ( Volubilis .) Lin. Sp, 50. Plum. Gen. 8. Hippocratea with a triple roundifio fruit and a twining ftalk. Coa fcandens, frutftu trigemino fubrotundo. Plum. Nov. Gen. 8. Climbing Coa with a triple roundifh fruit. The feeds of this plant were fent me from Campeachy by Mr. Robert Millar, and feveral of the plants were railed in England, which continued two years in fe- veral gardens, but not one of them lived to flower ; they grew to the height of eight or ten feet, twining round flakes, but their ftalks were very flender, and decayed at the bottom, probably from their having too much wet. It is a very tender plant, fo muft be conftantly kept in the bark-bed in the ftove, and fhould have but lit- tle wet in winter. HIPPOCREPIS. Lin. Gen. Plant. 791. Fer- rum equintim. Tourn. Inft. 400. tab. 225. Horfe- ftioe Vetch j in French, Per de Cbeval. Th$. 3o5> ! I The Characters are, 7 ^ The empalement of the flower is permanent , of one leaf divided int o five parts, the two upper being joined. ‘The flower is of the butterfly kind ; the ftandard hath a nar- row bafe the length of the empalement , but is heart- . fhaped above ; the wings are oval , oblong , and blunt ; the keel is moon-floaped and comprejfled . It hath ten fla- mina , nine joined and one feparate , which Jl and ere hi, ter- minated by Jingle Jummits. It hath an oblong narrow ger- tnen , fitting on an awl-fhaped jlyle , crowned by a fingle ftigma. The germen afterward becomes a long , plain, com- pr fifed pod , which is c ut into many parts from the under fleam to the upper , p$tt forming a roundifh finus , tT/i? three-cornered joints connected to the upper fleam , £ 4. There needs only a competent weight of an ex- ternal fluid, to account for the fifing of water ih pumps, See. 5. It a body be placed under water, fo that its up- per mo ft furface lie parallel to the horizon, the direct p re fibre that it fuftains is no more than that of a co- lumn of water, whole bafe is the horizontal fuperficies of the body, and its heighth the perpendicular depth of the water. And if the water which leans on the body be contained in pipes which are open at both ends, the preffure of the water is to be eitimated by the weight of a pillar of water, the bafe of which is equal to the lower orifice of the pipe, and whole height is equal to a perpendicular, which reaches from thence to the top of the water, although the pipe fhould be much inclined any way, or though, it fhould be ever fo regularly ihaped, and much broader in fome other place than the bottom. 6. A body which is immerfed in a fluid, fuftains a natural preffure from the fluid, which alfo increafes as the body is placed deeper beneath the furface of the fluid. 7. The reafon why water afeends in fiphons, and by which it flows through them, may be explained from the external preffure of fome other fluid, with- out having recourfe to the abhorrence of a vacuum. 8. The moft folid body, which will fink by its own weight at the furface, yet if it be placed at a depth twenty times greater than that of its own thicknefs it will not fink, if its defeent be not affifted by the incumbent water. 9. If a body which is fpecifically lighter than a fluid, be immerfed in that fluid, it will rife with a force proportionable to the excefs of gravity in that fluid. 10. If a body which is heavier than a fluid be im- merfed, it will fink with a force that is proportiona- ble to the excefs of its gravity. 11. If any veffel be filled with water, or any other liquor, the furface of which is capable of being even, it will continue fo till difturbed by fome other exter- nal caufe. 12. When the fluids are prefled, they are preffed undiquaque, i. e. on all Aides. How far the knowledge of any of thefe properties of fluids may conduce to the philofophical improve- ment of gardening, and the bufinefs of vegetation, will be more clearly perceived when well confidered by the ingenious artift, than being fet forth by words, rf Y G R O M E TER. [u of moift, and ft gov, meafure, of pfyw, to meafure,] is a machine or inftrument contrived to {hew or meafure, the moiftnefs and drinefs of the air, according as it abounds with moift or dry vapours, and to meafure and eftimate the quantity of fuch moiftnefs and drinefs. There are divers kinds of Hygrometers ; for what- ever body either fvvells or fhrinks by drinefs or moi- fture, is capable of being formed into an Hygrome- ter ; fuch are the woods of moft kinds, particularly Afh, Deal, Poplar, &c. fuch alfo is a cord, cat- gut, &c. Stretch a hempen cord or fiddle-ftring along a wall, bringing it over a truckle or pully *, and to the other end tie a weight, unto which fit a ftyle or index ; on the fame wall fit a plate of metal, divided into any number of equal parts, and the Hygrometer is complete. For it is a matter of undoubted obfervation, that moifture fenfibly fhortens the length of cords and firings ; and that as the moifture evaporates, they re- turn to their former length, and the like may be laid of a fiddle-ftring. The weight therefore, in the prelent cafe, upon an increafe of the moifture of the air, will afeend, and upon a diminution of the fame will defeend. Hence, as the index will Chew the fpaces of afeent and defeent, and thole fpaces are equal to the increments and decrements of the length of the cord or gut, the inftrument will difeover whether the air be more or lefs humid now, than it was at another given time. The H Y O H Y M The ordinary contrivance with whip-corcl is one of the eafieft, for that will infallibly fhorten and lengthen as the air grows moifter and drier. Some recommend a cat-gut as the belt, which may be a yard in length fufpended, having a plumbet or piece of lead, with an index or pointer hanging at the lower end, by means of which the cat-gut will twill or untwift as the air dries or moiftens, and fhorten and lengthen fo as to raife and fink the plumbet with the index, and this index will point out the degree fought for. The weight of this lead or plumbet, fhould be about two ounces. Some perfons who approve a fine whip-cord inftead of cat-gut, ufe a greater weight of lead ; the twilling and untwifting of the cat gut or whip-cord, will make the lead with the index turn round, as well as rife and fall. The degrees may be made upon an open fcrew of brafs Within,' with which the plumbet and index has its motion. When you are provided with a barometer and Hy- grometer, compare the motions of the one with the other, in order to judge what proportion the rife or - fall of the quickfiiver in the barometer bears to the twilling of the cat-gut or whip-cord •, the degrees of which motion may be oblerved by the index or pointer of the Hygrometer ; and at the fame time both thefe mull be compared with the rifing and fall- ing of the fpirit in a thermometer, to know what de- gree of heat or cold attends every different change of w r eather. HYGROSCOPE [of Jypk, moilt, and o-y. 07 riw, to view or confider,] a machine the fame as the hygro- meter, and for the fame ufes. Thefe inllruments are of good ufe in conlervatories, for meafuring or Ihewing the dampnefs or drinefs of them in the winter feafon. HYMEN YE A. Lin. Gen. Plant. 512. Courbaril. Plum. Nov. Gen. 49. tab. 14. Locuft-tree. The Characters are, The outward involucrum of the flower is divided into two parts , the inward is of one leaf indented in five parts ; the fewer hath five petals , which are equal in fixe , and fpread open. It hath ten declining fiamina, which are fiecrt, terminated by oblong fummits. In the center is fuuated an oblong germen , fupporting a declining fiyle , crowned by an acute Jligma ; the germen afterward be- comes a large oblong pod , with a thick ligneous fhell , di- vided into fever al partitions tranfverfiy , in each of which is lodged one comprejfed large feed , furrounded with a fa- rinaceous pulp. This genus of plants is ranged in the firll fedlion of Linnaeuses tenth clafs, intitled Decandria Monogynia, which includes the plants whofe flowers have ten fta- mina and one flyle. We know but one Species of this genus, viz. Hvmen^a ( Courbaril .) Hort. Cliff. 484. Locufl-tree. Courbaril bifolia, flore pyramidato. Plum. Nov. Gen. 49. Two-leaved Courbaril with a pyramidal flower , com- monly called Locuft-tree in America. This is a very large fpreading tree in the Well-Indies, where it grows in great plenty : it hath a large Hem, covered with a ruffet bark, which divides into many fpreading branches, garnifhed with fmooth ftiff leaves, which Hand by pairs, their bafe joining at the foot- flalk, to which they Hand oblique, one fide being much broader than the other, the two outer fides being rounded, and their infide llrait, fo that they refemble a pair of Iheep-fhears ; they are pointed at the top, and Hand alternately on the llalk. The flowers are produced in loofe fpikes at the end of the branches, fome of the Ihort ligneous foot-llalks lup- porting two, and others three flowers, which are com- poled of five yellow petals ilriped with purple ; the petals are Ihort and fpread open ; the llamina are much longer, and of a purplilb colour •, thefe flowers are fucceeded by thick, fieffiy, brown pods, fhaped like thefe of the Garden Bean ; they are fix inches long, and two inches and a half broad, of a purplilb brown colour, and a ligneous confluence, with a large fu- ture on both edges; thefe contain three or four roundilh eompreflfed feeds, divided by tranfverfe par- titions. The wood of this tree is elleemed as good timber in the Well-Indies, and it yields a fine clear refin which is called gum anirne in the Ihops, which makes an excellent varnilb. It is eafily raifed from the feeds if they are frefh ; thefe mull be fown in pots, and plunged into a hot- bed of tanners bark : there fhould be but one feed put into each pot, or if there is more, when the plants appear, they Ihould be all drawn out to one foon after they come up, before their roots entangle, when it will be hazardous doing it ; for if great care is not taken, the plant intended to be left may be drawn out with the other. As the roots of this plant are but flender, fo they are very difficult to tranfplant ; for unlefs a ball of earth is preferved to their roots, they feldom furvive their removal, therefore they mull be feldom tranfpl anted from one pot to another. The plants mull conftantly remain in the tan-bed in the Hove, and ffiould be treated in the fame way with other tender plants of the fame country, giving but: little water to them, efpecially in the winter. When thefe plants firll appear, they make confiderable pro- grefs for two or three months, after which time they are at a Hand perhaps a whole year without ffiooting, being in their growth very like the Anacardium, or Cafhew Nut, fo is very difficult to preferve long in this country. HYOSCYAMUS. Tourn. Inlt. R. H. 1 1 7. tab. 42. Lin. Gen. Plant. 218. [of A, a fwine, and a Bean, q. d. Hog’s-bean,] Henbane; in French, Jufquaime. The Characters are, The flower has a cylindrical empalement of one leaf which is permanent , [welling at the bottom , and cut into five acute fegments at the top. It hath one funnelfhaped petal , with a floor t cylindrical tube , and an erect fpread- ing rim , cut into five obtufe parts , one being larger than the others ; it hath five, inclined ftamina , terminated by roundifh fummits. In the center is fituated a roundifh germen , fupporting a fender flyle , crowned by a round Jligma. The germen afterward becomes an oval obtufe capfule fitting in the empalement , divided in two cells by an intermediate partition , opening with a lid at the top , to let out the many fmall feeds which adhere to the partition. This genus of plants is ranged in the firll fedion of Linnaeus’s fifth clafs, intitled Pentandria Monogynia, in which he includes thofe plants whofe flowers have five llamina and one llyle. The Species are, 1. Hyoscyamus {Niger) foliis amplexicaulibus fmuatis, floribus feffilibus. Hort. Cliff. 56. Henbane with finu- ated leaves embracing the Jlalks , and feffile flowers. Hy- ofeyamus vulgaris, vel niger. C. B. P. Common Black Henbane. 2. Hyoscyamus {Major) foliis petiolatis, floribus pe- dunculatis terminalibus. Henbane with leaves having foot-Jlalks , and flowers with foot-ftalks terminating the branches. Hyofcyamus major, albo fimilis, umbilico floris atro-pupureo. T. Cor. Great Henbane like the white , but with a dark purple bottom to the flower. 3. Hyoscyamus {Albus) foliis petiolatis, floribus feffi- libus. Hort. Upfal. 56. Henbane with leaves having foot-ftalks , and flowers fitting clofe to the branches. Hy- ofcyamus major, albo fimilis, umbilico floris virenti. juffieu. Greater Henbane like the white , with a green bottom to the flower. 4. Hyoscyamus {Minor) foliis petiolatis, floribus fo- litariis lateralibus. Henbane with leaves having foot- ftalks , and flowers proceeding Jingly from the fides of the branches. Hyofcyamus minor albo fimilis, umbilico floris atro purpureo. Tourn. Cor. 5. Smaller Hen- bane like the white , with a dark purple bottom to the flower. 5. Hyoscyamus {Reticulatis) foliis caulinis petiolatis cordatis fmuatis aeutis, floribus integerrimis, corollis vemricofis. Lin. Sp. 257. Henbane with heart fhaped, 7 & flnuated s / y H Y 0 jhmated , acute leaves upon foot-ftalks , and ■ entire fwollen flowers. Hyofcyamus rubello (lore. C. B. P. Henbane with a reddifb coloured flower. 6. Hyos.cy.AMus ( Aureus ) foliis petiolati's erofo-denta- tis acutis, floribus pedunculatis frudibus pendulis, Lin. Sp. 257. Henbane with acute indented leaves found- ing on foot-ftalks^ the flower having foot-ftalks, and the fruit hanging. Hyofcyamus Cretictft luteus major. C. B. P. Greater yellow Henbane of Candia . 7. Hyoscyamus ( Pujillus ) foliis lanceolatis dentatis, flo- ralibus inferioribus binis, calycibus fpinofis. Hort. Upfal. 44. Henbane with fpear-fhaped indented leaves , and a prickly empalement. Hyofcyamus pufillus aureus Americanus, antirrhini foliis glabris. Pluk. Aim. 188. tab. 37. fob 5. Low, golden^ American Henbane , with a fmooth Snapdragon leaf. The firft of thefe forts is very common in England, growing upon the Tides of banks and old dunghills almoft every where. It is a biennial plant with long flefhy roots, which ftrike deep into the ground, fend- ing; out feveral large foft leaves, which are deeply fi afneci on their edges, and fpread on the ground ; the following fpring the ftalks come out, which rife about two feet high, garnifhed with leaves of the fame fhape, but fmaller, which embrace the ftalks with their bafe j the upper part of the (talk is gar- nifhed with flowers {landing on one fide in a double row, fitting clofe to the ftalks alternately ; thefe are of a dark purplifh colour with a black bottom, and are fucceeded by roundifn capfules, fitting within the em- palement thefe open with a lid at the top, and have two ceils filled with fmall irregular feeds. This is a very poifonous plant, and fhould be rooted out in all places where children are fuffered to come ; for in the year 1729, there were three children poifoned with eating the feeds of this plant, near Tottenham-court ; two of which flept two days and two nights before they could be awakened, and were with difficulty re- covered j but the third being older and ftronger, efcaped better. The roots of this plant are ufed for anodyne neck- laces to hang about children’s necks, being cut to pieces and ftrung like beads, to prevent fits and caufe an eafy breeding of their teeth, but they are very dan- gerous to ufe inwardly. For fome years paft there was a mixture of thefe roots brought over with Gentian, and ufed as fuch, which was attended with very bad effefts, as hath been mentioned under the article of Gentian, fo I {ball not repeat it here. The fecond fort grows naturally in the iflands of the Archipelago. This hath rounder leaves, which are obtufely fituated upon their borders, and Hand upon foot-ftalks •, the ftalks branch more than thofe of the firft, and the flowers grow in clufters toward the end of the branches, {landing upon {hort foot-ftalks ; they are of a pale yellow colour, with very dark purple bottoms. The third fort is much like the fecond, but the flowers are in larger bunches, fitting very clofe on the ends of the branches *, they are of a greeniffi yellow colour, with green bottoms. It grows naturally in the warm parts of Europe, and is the fort whofe feeds fhould be ufed in medicine, being the white Henbane of the {hops. The fourth fort was brought from the Levant by Dr. Tournefort. This hath a fmaller ftalk than ei- ther of the former, whole joints are further diftant ; the leaves are roundifh, and deeply indented in ob- tufe fegments, Handing upon pretty long foot-ftalks ; the flowers come out fingly from the fide of the ftalks, at a good diftance from each other •, they are of a yel- low colour with dark bottoms. The fifth fort grows naturally in Syria * this rifes with a branching ftalk two feet high, garniffied with long fpear-fhaped leaves having foot-ftalks ; the lower leaves are regularly cut on both Ikies into acute fegments which are oppofite, fo are fit aped like the. winged leaves, but the upper leaves are entire j the flowers grow at the end of the ftalks in bunches •, they are of a worn-out red colour, and lhaped like HYP thofe of the common fort, but their tubes are fwollen. All thefe are biennial plants, which perifh foon af- ter they have perfeded their feeds. They flower in June and July, and their feeds ripen in the autumn, which, if permitted to Latter, will produce plenty of the plants the following fpring ^ or if the feeds are fown at that feafon, they will fucceed much better than in the fpring ; for when they are fown in fpring, the plants feldom come up the fame year. They are all hardy except the fifth fort, and require no other cul- ture but to keep them clean from weeds, and thin the plants where they are too clofe. The fifth fort fhould have a warm fituation and a dry foil, in which it will live much better through the winter than in rich ground. The fixth fort grows naturally in Candia ; this is a perennial plant with weak ftalks, which require a fup- port *, the leaves are roundifh, and acutely indented on their edges, {landing upon pretty long foot-ftalks 5 the flowers come out at each joint of the ftalk ; they are large, of a bright yellow, with a dark purple bot- tom •, the ftyle of this fort is much longer than the petal. It flowers moft part of fummer, and fome- times ripens feeds in the autumn. If thefe feeds are fown in pots as foon as they are ripe, and placed under a hot-bed frame in winter, the plants will come up in the fpring ^ but if they are kept out of the ground till fpring, they rarely fucceed. This fort will continue feveral years, if they are kept in pots and fheltered in winter, for they will not live in the open air at that feafon, but it only requires to be proteded from froft ; therefore if thefe plants are placed under a common hot-bed in winter, where they may enjoy as much free air as poffible in mild weather, they will thrive better than when they are more tenderly treated. This fort may be eafily propagated by cut- tings, which, if planted in a ffiady border during any of the fummer months, will take root in a month or fix weeks, and may be afterward planted in pots, and treated like the old plants. HYPECOUM. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 230. tab. 115. Hypecoum j Lin. Gen. Plant. 1 57. We have no Engliffi name for this plant. The Characters are, The empalement of the flower is compofled of two fmall oval leaves , which are oppofite and erebl. The flower hath four petals ; the two outer which are oppofite , are breads and divided into three obtufle lobes ; the two ether which are alternate , are cut into three parts at their points. It hath four Jlamina fituated between the petals , which are terminated by oblong fummits. In the center is placed an oblong cylindrical germen , fupporting two fhort Jlyles , crowned by acute Jligma. The germen afterward be- comes a long , compreffed , jointed, pod , which is incurved, with one roundifh compreffed feed in each joint. This genus of plants is ranged in the fecond fedion of Linnseus’s fourth clafs, which contains the plants whofe flowers have four (lamina and two ftyles. The Species are, 1. Hypecoum ( Procumbent ) iiliquis arcuatis compreffis articulatis. Hort. Upfal. 31. Hypecoum with compreffed jointed pods bent inward. Hypecoum latiore folio. Tourn. Broad-leaved Hypecoum. 2. Hypecoum ( Pendulum ) filiquis cernuis teretibus cy- lyndricis. Hort. Upfal. 3 1 . Hypecoum with taper , cy- lindrical , nodding pods. Hypecoum tenuiore folio. Tourn. Narrow-leaved Hypecoum. 3. Hypecoum {Ere Slum) filiquis eredis teretibus toru- lofis. Elort. Upfal. 32. Hypecoum with taper , ereft, wreathed pods. Hypecoum filiquis eredis teretibus. Amm, Ruth. 58. Hypecoum with ere St taper pods. The firft fort hath many wing-pointed leaves of a grayiffi colour, which fpread near the ground, and (len- der branching ftalks, which lie proftrate on the fur- face of the ground •, thefe are naked below, and at the top are garniffied with two or three fmall leaves of the fame ffiape and colour with the under ones ; from between thefe leaves come out the foot-ftalks of the flower, each fuftaining one yellow flower with four petals. petals, and a pointal ftretched out beyond the petals, which afterward turns to a jointed compreffed pod about three inches long, which bends inward like a bow, having one roundilh compreffed feed in each joint. This flowers in June and July, and the feeds ripen in Auguft, The feconcl fort hath {lender {talks which Hand more ered, and the fegments of the leaves are longer and much narrower than thofe of the firft ; the flowers are fmaller, and come out at the divifion of the branches ; thefe are fucceeded by narrow taper pods, which hang; downward. It flowers and feeds at the ■ fame time with the firft. The third fort grows in the eaft ; Dr. Amman re- ceived the feeds from Dauria, and I received the feeds from Iftria, where it was found growing naturally. This hath much the appearance of the fecond fort in leaf and flower, but the pods grow ered, and are wreathed and twifted about. It flowers and feeds at the fame time with the others. Thefe plants are all of them annual, fo their feeds fhould be fown foon after they are ripe, otherwife itwill be a year before the plants will appear, on a bed of light freffi earth where they are to remain, for they feldom fucceed if they are tranfplanted. When the plants are come up, they fhould be carefully cleared from weeds ; and where the plants are too clofe, they muft be thinned, leaving them about fix or eight inches apart ; after this they will require no other cul- ture, but to keep them conftantly clear from weeds. In June thefe plants will flower, and their feeds will be ripe in Auguft. "When the feeds are fown in the fpring, and the feafon proves dry, the feeds will not grow the firft year ; but if the ground is kept clear from weeds and not difturbed, the plants will come up the following fpring. I have known the feeds of thefe plants re- main in the ground two years, and the plants have comh up the third fpring very well ; fo that it will be very proper to fow fome of the feeds in autumn, foon after they are ripe, in a warm border, where the plants may come up early the following fpring ; and thefe will be ftronger, and more likely to perfed feeds, than thofe fown in the fpring, by which method the kinds may be preferved. If the feeds of thefe plants are permitted to fcatter, the plants will come up the following fpring without any care ; and if they are treated in the fame way as the others, they will thrive equally ; but when the feeds are fown in the fpring, they fhould be taken out of the pods, and diverted of their fungous covering, which adheres clofe to them, fo prevents their grow- ing, till that is rotted and decayed. Thefe plants are feldom propagated but by thofe who are curious in botany, though for the fake of variety they may have a place in large gardens, becaufe they require very little trouble to cultivate them ; and as they take up but little room, fo they may be inter- mixed with other fmall annual plants in large borders, where they will make a pretty appearance. The juice of thefe plants is of a yellow colour, re- fembling that of Celandine, and is affirmed by fome eminent phyficians to have the fame effed as opium. HYPERICUM. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 254. tab. 13 1. Lin. Gen. Plant. 808. St. Johnfwort; in French, Millepertuis. The Characters are. The flower hath a permanent empalement , divided into five oval concave fegments it hath five oblong oval petals which fpread open , and a great number of hairy ftamina , which are joined at their bafe in three or five dijtinci bodies, terminated by fmall fummits. It hath in the cen- ter a roundijh germen , fupporting one , three , or five ftyles , the fame length of the ftamina , crowned by fingle fligmas. The germen afterward becomes a roundijh cap- fule , having the fame number of cells as there are ftyle$ in the flow er, which are filled with oblong feeds. This genus of plants is ranged in the third fedion of Linnaeus’s eighteenth clafs, intitled Polyadelphia Polygynia, which contains the plants whofe flowers have many ftamina joined in diftind bodies, and id veral ftyles. The Species, are, r. Hypericum ( Perfoliatim ) floribus trigynis, caule ancipiti, fo-liis obtufis pellucido-pundatis. Hort. Cliff. 383. St. Johnfwort with three ftyles to the flower ^ and obtufe leaves' having pellucid pundiures. Hyperi- cum vulgare. C. B. P. 279. Common St. Johnfwort . 2. Hypericum fftuadrangulum) floribus trigynis, caule quadrato herbaceo. Hort. Cliff. 3 So. St. Johnfwort with three ftyles to the flowers , and a fquare herbaceous ftalk. Hypericum Afcyron didum, caule quadran- gulo. J. B. 3. p. 382. St. Johnfwort with a fquare ftalk , commonly called St. Peterfwort. 3. Hypericum ( Hircinum ) floribus trigynis* ftamini- bus corolla longionbus, caule fruticofo ancipiti. Hort. Cliff. 331. St. Johnfwort with three fiyles to the flower , ftamina longer than the petals , and a fhrubby ftalk with two fides. Hypericum fcetidum fruteft cens. Tourn. 255. Stinking ftrrubby St. Johnfwort . 4. Hypericum floribus trigynis, calycibus obtufis, fta- minibus corolla Iongioribus caule fruticofo. Hort, Cliff. 381. St. johnfwort with three ftyles to the flower , obtufe empalement s , ftamina longer than the petals , and a fhrubby Jlalk.. Hypericum frutefcens Canarienfe multiflorum. Hort. Amft. 2. p. 135. Shrubby St . Johnfwort from the Canaries , having many flowers . 5. Hypericum ( Olympicum ) floribus trigynis, calyci- bus acutis, ftaminibus corolla brevioribus, caule fru- ticofo. Hort. Cliff. 380. St. Johnfwort with three ftyles to the flower , acute empalement s, ftamina floor ter than the petals , and a fhrubby ftalk . Hypericum Gri- entale, flore magno. T. Cor. 19. Eaftern St. Johnf- wort, with a large flower. 6. Hypericum {Inodor urn) floribus trigynis, calycibus obtufis, ftaminibus corolla Iongioribus, capfulis co~ loratis, caule fruticofo. St. Johnfwort with three ftyles to the flower , obtufe empalements, ftamina longer than the petals , coloured feed-vejfels , and a fhrubby ftalk. Hype- ricum Orientale, fcetido fimile, fed inodorum. Tourn, Cor. 19. Eaftern St. Johnfwort , like the ftinking kind, but without fmell. 7. Hypericum ( Afcyron ) floribus pentagynis, caule te- tragono herbaceo fimplici, foliis lasvibus integerrimis. Hort. Upfal. 236. St. Johnfwort with five ftyles to the flower , a fquare, fingle, herbaceous ftalk , and fmooth en- tire leaves. Afcyrum magno flore. C. B. P. 280. Tutfan with a large flower. 8. Hypericum (. Balearicum ) floribus pentagynis, caule fruticofo, foliis ramifque cicatrifatis. Lin. Sp. Plant, 783. St. Johnfwort with five ftyles to the flower, a fhrubby ftalk, and fcarified leaves and branches. Afcy- ron Balearicum, frutefcens, maximo flore luteo, foliis minoribus, fubtus verrucofis falvad. Boerh. Ind. alt. 1. 242. Shrubby Balearick St. Peterfwort with a large yellow .flower, and fmaller leaves war ted on- their under fide. 9. Hypericum ( Androfamum ) floribus trigynis pericar- piis baccatis, caule fruticofo ancipiti. Hort. Upfal. 2 37 ’ Sl Johnfwort with three fiyles to the flower, a fiefhy feed-vejfel, and a fhrubby ftalk with two fides . Androfasmum maximum -frutefcens. C. B. P. 280. Common Tutfan , or Park-leaves . 10. Hypericum ( Bartramium ) floribus pentagynis ca- lycibus obtufis, ftaminibus corolla aequantibus, caule eredo herbaceo. St. Johnfwort with five ftyles to the flower, obtufe empalements , ftamina equalling the petals , and an erect herbaceeus ftalk. 11. Hypericum ( Monogynum ) floribus monogynis, fta- minibus corolla Iongioribus, calycibus coloratis, caule fruticofo. St. johnfwort with one ftyk to the flowers , ftamina longer than the petals, coloured empalements , and a ftrrubby ftalk. There are fome other fpecies of this genus, which are preferved in botanic gardens for the fake of va- riety, but as they are feldom admitted into other gardens, I have not enumerated them here, left the work fhould fwell too large, The The fir ft and fecond forts are both very common plants, growing in the fields in moft parts of England ; the firft is ufed in medicine, but the fe- cond is of no ufe : thefe are rarely propagated in gar- dens, bitt I chufe to mention them, in order to in- troduce the other forts, which deferve a place in every good garden. The firft fort hath a perennial root, from which arife feveral round ftalks a foot and a half high, dividing into many fmall branches, which are garnifhed at each joint with two fmall oblong leaves, (landing oppofite, without foot-ftalks ; the branches alfo come out oppofite. The leaves have many pellucid fpots in them, which appear like fo many holes when held up againft the light. The flowers are numerous on the tops of the branches, (landing on (lender foot-ftalks ; they are compofed of five oval petals, of a yellow co- lour, with a great number of (lamina, not quite fo long as the petals, terminated by roundifti fummits. In the center is fituated a roundifh germen, fupporting three ftyles, crowned by Angle ftigmas. The germen afterward becomes an oblong angular capfule, with three cells, filled with fmall brown feeds. It flowers in June and July, and the feeds ripen in autumn. The root is perennial, fo wiil continue many years ■, and if the feeds are permitted to fcatter, the plants will come up in too great plenty, fo as to be very troublefome weeds. The leaves and flowers of this are ufed in medicine •, it is efteemed an excellent vul- nerary plant, and of great fervice in wounds, bruifes, and contufions : there is a compound oil made from this plant, which is of great ufe in the foregoing ac- cidents. From the (lamina of the flower is expreffed a red juice, which is fometimes ufed in colouring, but fades very foon. The fecond fort hath fquare ftalks, which rife about the fame height with the firft, but do not branch fo much. The leaves are fhorter and broader than thofe of the firft, and have no pellucid fpots. The flowers fit upon fhort foot-ftalks at the end of the branches, which are (haped like thofe of the other. This flowers and feeds at the fame time with the other, and will pro- pagate in as great plenty if the feeds are permitted to fcatter. The third fort grows naturally in Sicily, Spain, and Portugal -, this rifes with fhrubby ftalks about three feet high, fending out fmall branches at each joint oppofite, which are garnifhed with oblong oval leaves, placed by pairs, fitting clofe to the ftalks, which have a rank fmell like a goat. The flowers are pro- duced in clufters at the end of the branches ; they are compofed of five oval yellow petals, with a great number of ftamina ■which are longer than the petals, and three ftyles which are longer than the ftamina. The germen which fupports thefe, afterward becomes an oval capfule with three cells, filled with fmall feeds. It dowers in June, July, and Auguft, and the feeds ripen in autumn. The fourth fort grows naturally in the Canary Iflands, fo was formerly preferved in green-houfes during the winter .feafon, but is found to be hardy enough to re- fill the greateft cold of this country, fo is now culti- vated in the nurferies as a flowering fhrub ; this rifes with a fttrubby ftalk fix or feven feet high, dividing into branches upward, which are garnifhed with ob- long leaves, fet by pairs clofe to the branches. The leaves of this have alfo a ftrong odour, but not quite fo bad as the former. The flowers are produced at the end of the ftalks in clufters, and are very like thofe of the former fort, having a great number of ftamina which are longer than the petals ; this flowers at the fame time with the former, and perfects its feeds in autumn. Both thefe plants have a very ftrong odour like that of a goat ; fo that where the plants grow in large quantities, the fcent is carried by the wind to a great diftance ; or if the leaves are hand'ed, they emit the fame odour. Thefe two forts are propagated by fuckers, which are plentifully fent forth from the old plants. The bed ieafon for taking off the fuckers is in March, juft 3 before they begin to fnoot •, they fhould be planted in a light dry foil, in which they will endure the fevered cold of our climate very well. They may alfo be pro- pagated by cuttings, which ftiould be planted at the fame feafon j or by feeds, which mud be (own in Au- guft or September, which is as foon as they are ripe 5 for if they are kept till fpring, few of them will growl but as they multiply fo fail by fuckers, the other methods of propagating them are feldom prabtifed in England, i he fifth fort grows naturally on Mount Olympus, where it was difcovered by Sir George Wheeler, who fent the feeds to the Oxford garden ; this rifes with many upright ligneous ftalks about a foot high, gar- nished with fmall fpear-fliaped leaves, fitting clofe to the ftalks oppofite. The flowers are produced at the the top of the ftalks, three or four together ; they are compofed of five oblong petals, of a bright yellow colour, with a great number of ftamina, ° which are of unequal lengths, fome being longer, and others fhorter than the petals, terminated by fmall roundifh fummits. In the center is fituated an oval germen, fupporting three (lender ftyles, which are longer than the ftamina. The germen afterward becomes ajn oval capfule with three ceils, filled with fmall feeds. This flowers in July and Auguft, and in warm feafons ripens its feeds in autumn. This plant is ufually propagated by parting of the roots, becaufe the feeds feldom ripen in this country ; the bed time for doing of this is in September, that the plants may have time to get root before winter ; this will live in the open air, if it is planted in a warm fituation and a dry foil, but it will be proper to keep a plant or two in pots, to be flickered under a frame in winter, left in very fevere winters, thofe in the open air ftiould be deftroyed. If this is propagated by feeds, they (hould be fown foon after they are ripe, in pots filled with light earth, and placed under a frame in the winter, to (helter them from froft, and in the fpring the plants will appear ; when thefe are fit to remove, fome of them may be planted in a warm bor- der, and others in pots, and treated in the fame way as the old plants. The fixth fort rifes with a fhrubby ftalk feven or eight feet high, with a reddifh bark, and fends out many fmaller branches, garnifhed with oval heart- fhaped leaves, whofe baft fits clofe to the ftalks ; they are placed oppofite. The flowers are produced at the end of the ltalks in clufters they are fmaller than thofe of the third fort, and have obtufe em- palements. The ftamina are longer than the petals, and are of a deeper colour. The flowers are fucceed- ed by conical capfules of a purplifh red colour, hav- ing three cells, filled with fmall feeds. It flowers in May, June, and July, and the feeds ripen in autumn. This is now propagated in the nurferies as a flowering fhrub, and may be treated in the fame way as the third and fourth forts. The feventh fort was firft brought to England from Conftantinople, but has long been very common in the Englifti gardens, for the roots fpread and in- creafe very faft, where it is permitted to (land long unremoved. The ftalks of this are (lender, and in- cline downward ; they are garniflied with oval, fpear- fliaped, fmooth leaves, placed by pairs, fitting clofe to the ftalks. The flowers are produced at the end of the ftalks •, thefe are very large, and of a bright yel- low colour, with a great number of ftamina, which (land out beyond the petals y there are five ftyles in each flower, which are of the fame length with the ftamina. The flowers are fucceeded by pyramidal feed-veftels with five cells, containing many fmall feeds. It flowers in June and July. This plant is eafily propagated by parting of the root ; the bed time for this is in Qbtober, that the plants may be well eftabliftied before the drought of fpring, otherwift they will not produce many flowers. As this will grow under trees, fo it is a very proper plant to place under fhrubs and trees to cover the ground, where they will make a good appearance during the feafon of their flowering. The HYP The eighth fort grows naturally in the ifiahd of Mi- norca, from v/hence the feeds were fent to England, by Mr. Salvador, an apothecary at Barcelona, in the year 1718 ; this rifes with a llender fhrubby italk in this country about two feet high, but in its native foil rifes feven or eight feet high, fending out feveral weak branches of a reddiih colour, which are marked where the leaves have fallen off with a cicatrice. The leaves are fmall, oval, and waved on their edges, hav- ing'feveral fmall protuberances on their under fide, fit- ting clofe to the ftalks, half embracing them with their bafe. The flowers are produced at the top of the ftalks •, they are large, of a bright yellow colour, with a great number of ftamina, which are a little Ihorter than the petals •, thefe flowers have five ftyles, and are fucceeded by pyramidal capfules with five cells, which Jiave a ftrong fmell of turpentine, and are filled with fmall brown feeds : this plant has a fiiccefiion of flowers great part of the year, which renders it va- luable ; it is too tender to live through the winter in the open air in England, but requires no artificial heat : if the plants are placed in a dry airy glafs- cafe in winter, where they may be protected from froft, and enjoy a good lhare of frelh air in mild weather, they will thrive better than in a warmer fituation •, but they muft by no means be placed in a damp air, for their flioots foon grow mouldy and de- cay with damp, nor fhould the plants, have much water during the wintet ; but in fummer they fnould be expofed in the open air, and in warm weather they fhould be gently watered three times a week ; they fhould have a loofe fandy foil, not over rich. This is propagated by cuttings, which fhould be planted in June, in pots filled with light earth, and plunged into a very moderate hot-bed, whole heat is declining, {hading them from the fun in the heat of the day, and now and then refrefhing them with water ; thefe cuttings, fo managed, will put out roots in fix or feven weeks, when they fhould be carefully taken up, and each planted into a feparate fmall pot, placing them in the (hade till they have taken new root ; then they may be removed to a fheltered fituation, where they may remain till the froft comes, when they fhould be removed into fhelter. If thefe are propagated by feeds, they fnould be fown in autumn, in the fame way as is before directed for the fifth fort, and the plants treated in the fame man- ners as thofe raifed from cuttings. The ninth fort is the common Tutfan, or Park-leaves, which is ibmetimes ufed in medicine. It grows na- turally in woods in feveral parts of England, fo is not often admitted into gardens ; this hath a fhrubby ftalk, which rifes two feet high, fending out feme fmall branches toward the top •, thefe, and alfo the ftalks, are garniftied with oval heart-lhaped leaves, fit- ting clofe to them with their bafe, they are placed by pairs at every joint. The flowers are produced in fmall clufters at the end of the ftalk ; thefe are yellow, but fmaller than either of the forts here men- tioned ; they have many long ftamina, which ftand out beyond the flower, and three ftyles. The ger- men afterward turns to a roundilh fruit, covered with a moift pulp, which, when ripe, is black. The capfule has three cells, containing fmall feeds. It flowers in June, and the feeds are ripe in autumn. It hath a perennial root, and may be propagated by parting it in autumn •, it loves (hade and a ftrong foil. The tenth fort grows naturally in North America ^ this rifes with an upright herbaceous ftalk three feet and a half high, fending out feveral fmall branches upward, which come out oppofite, and are garniftied with oblong leaves placed oppofite, which half em- brace the ftalk with their bale. At the end of each ftalk is produced one pretty large yellow flower, with an obtufe empalement, having many ftamina, which are equal in length with the petals, and five ftvles which are fo clofely joined as to appear but one. The ftigmas are reflexed, which denote their number. This fort feldom ripens feeds here, fo is propagated by HYS parting the roots-. The beft time for this is in jfiL tumn j it fhould have a light foil and an open fitua- tion. The flowers appear the latter end of July, and in Auguft. The eleventh fort grows naturally in China, front whence the feeds were brought to the Right Hon. the Earl of Northumberland, and the plants were railed in his Lordfhip’s curious garden at Stanwick, and by his Lordfliip’s generofity the Chelfea garden was fur- nifhed with this plant. The root of this plant is compofed of many ligneous fibres, which ftrike deep in the ground •, from which arife feveral fhrubby ftalks near two feet high, co- vered with a purplifh bark, and garnilhed with ftifF ftnooth leaves about two inches long, and a quarter of an inch broad, placed by pairs, fitting clofe to the ftalk ; they are of a lucid green on their tipper fide, and gray on their under, having many tranfverfe veins running from the midrib to the border. The flowers are produced at the top of the ftalks, growing in fmall clufters, each ftanding upon a fhort diftinbt foot-ftalk ; thefe have an empalement of one leaf, di- vided into five obtufe figments almoft to the bottom, which is of a deep purple colour. The flower is com- pofed of five large obtufe petals, of a bright yellow colour •, thefe are concave, and in the center is fituated an oval germen ftipporting a Angle ftyle, crowned by- five (lender ftigmas, which bend on one fide ; the ftyle is attended by a great number of ftamina which are longer than the petals, and terminated by round- ifii fummits. This plant continues in flower great part of the year, which renders it the more valuable ; and if it is planted in a very warm fituation, it will live in the open air •, but thofe plants which ftand abroad will not flower in winter, as thofe do which are removed into {belter in autumn. It may be propagated by flips from the root, or by laying down of the branches ; if by flips, they ihould be planted in the fpring on a moderate hot-bed, which will forward their putting out new roots ; the layers ihould alfo be laid down at the fame time, which will have taken root by autumn, when they may be trans- planted into pots, and fheltered under a frame in win- ter ; and in the fpring, part of thefe may be planted in a warm border, and the others continued in pots to be fcreened in winter, left thofe in the open air fhould be killed. HYPERICUM FRUTEX. See Spiraea. HYPOCHiERIS, a fort of Hawkweed, of which there are two or three fpecies, which grow naturally in England the others are feldom admitted into gar- dens, therefore I fhall not enumerate them. HYPOPHYLLOSPERMOUS PLANTS [of uVo, under, cpvxxov, a leaf, and the laft fort are ufed in baths and fo- mentations. The ninth fort grows naturally in all the iflands of the Weft-Indies, where it is fometimes called wild • I B E •> . Cafiada, or Caffava, and at others Belly-ach Weed, the leaves of this plant being accounted a good re- medy for the dry belly-ach. This plant riles with a foft herbaceous ftalk to the height of three or four feet, covered with a purple bark, and at the joints have branching briftly hairs ri fin g in fmall bunches, not only upon the principal ftalk, but 'alfo on the branches, and the foot-ftalks of the leaves. The ftalk divides upward into two or three branches ; thefe are garniftied with leaves {landing on very long foot-ftalks, divided into five lobes which are oval, entire, and end in acute points. The flowers are pro- duced at the end of the branches, upon (lender naked foot-ftalks, in fmall umbels ; they arc fmall, of a dark purple colour, having male and female flowers in the fame umbel ; the female flowers are fucceeded by oblong tricapfular vefiels, fmooth, and covered with a dark (kin, when ripe j in each of the Cells is lodged one oblong brown feed. All thefe plants are natives of the warm parts of America, fo are too tender to thrive in the open air in England. The firft fort is cultivated in the Weft- Inches for food, where it is propagated by cutting the (talks into lengths of feven or eight inches, which, ' when planted, put out roots ; the method of doing this having been mentioned in various books, I (hall not repeat it here. The other forts are eafily propagated by feeds, which (hould be (own on a good hot-bed in the fpring, and when the plants are fit to remove, they (hould be each tranfplanted into a fmall pot filled with light earth, and then plunged into a frefh hot-bed of tanners bark, carefully {hading them till they have taken frefh root, after which they muft be treated in the fame manner as other tender plants from hot countries, admitting frefh air to them daily, in proportion to the warmth of the feafon •, but as many of the forts have fucculent ftalks, fome of which have a milky juice, they (hould have but little water given them, for they are (boa deftroyed by wet. The fourth fort is an annual plant, fo if the feeds are lbwn early in the fping, and the plants are brought forward, they will perfedt their feeds the fame year ; but the other forts are perennial, fo do not flower till the fecond or third year ; therefore the plants (hould be plunged into the tan-bed in the (love, where they (hould conftantly remain, giving them a large (hare of air in warm weather ; but in winter they muft be ten- derly treated, and in that feafon muft have very little water. With this management the plants will continue feveral years, and produce their flowers, and frequently perfect their feeds in England. IBERIS. Dillen. Nov. Gen. 6. Lin. Gen. Plant. 721. Thlafpidium. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 2,1 4. tab. 1 01. Sci- atica Crefs. The Characters are, The flower bath an empalement of four oval leaves , which fpread open , are hollowed and fall away. It hath four unequal petals , which are oval , obtufe , and fpread open , having oblong ere II tails , the two outer petals are longer than the other. It hath fix awlfhaped ereli ftamina , the two on the ftdes being fhorter than the reft , terminated by roundifh fumnits. In the center of the tube is fituated a round comprejfed germen, fapporting a fhort fingle flyle , crowned by an obtufe ftigma. The germen afterward becomes a roundifh, compreffed veffef having two cells , each containing one oval feed. This genus of plants is ranged in the firft feclion of Linnaeus’s fifteenth clafs, intitled Tetradynamia Si- liculofa, which includes thofe plants whole flowers have four long and two fhort ftamina, and the feeds grow in fhort pods. The Species are, 1. Iberis ( Semperflorens ) frutefeens, foliis cuneiformibus obtufis integerrimis. Lin. Hort. Cliff. 330. Shrubby Sciatica Crefs with entire , wedge-Jhaped , blunt leaves , commonly called the Tree Candy Tuft. Thlaipldiurn fruticofum, leuedii folio, femperfiorens. Tourn. Inft, 214. Shrubby Thlafpidium with a Gillifiower leaf always flowering . 7 D ,2. Iberis I B E 2- Iberis - (Sempervirms) frutefcens foliis linearibus acu- I tisintegernmis, Lin. Hart. Cliff. 330. Shrubby Sci- atica Crefs with narrow-pointed whole 'leaves , commonly called Perennial Candy Tuft. Thlafpi montanum, fem- per virens. C. B. P. 106. Evergreen Mountain Candy Tuft. 3. Leris (Umbellata ) herbacea foliis lanceolatis acumi- natis, inferioribus ferratis, fuperioribus integerrimis. Lin. Kart. Cliff. 330. Herbaceous Sciatica Crefs with fpear-jh aped pointed leaves , the under ones being flawed ., , but the upper entire , commonly called Candy Tuft. Thlaf- pi Creticum quibufdam, fore rubente & albo. J. B. 2. 924. True Cretan Treacle Mufiard with a red and white flower. 4. Iberis ( Odor at a ) foliis linearibus fuperne dilatatis ferratis. F lor. Leyd. 330. Sciatica Crefs with narrow leaves dilated at their top, and Jawed. Thlafpi umbel- latum Creticum, fore albo odoro, minus. C. B. P. 106. Small umbellated Treacle Mufiard of Crete with a white flweet flower. 5. Iberis ( Nudicaulis ) herbacea foliis finuatis, caule nudo fimplici. Lin. Hort. Cliff. 328. Sciatica Crefs with finuated leaves , and a fmgle naked ftalk. Naftur- tium peiraeum. Tab. Ic. 451. Rock Crefs. 6 . Iberis {Amaral) herbacea foliis lanceolatis acutis fub- dentatis, floribus racemofis. Lin. Hort. Upfal. 184. Sciatica Crefs with acute , fpear-Jhaped , indented leaves , and flowers growing in bunches. Thlafpi avenfe umbel- latum amarum. j. B. 2. 925. Bitter , umbellated , Field Treacle Mufiard. 7. Iberis ( Rotundifolia ) foliis fubrotundis crenatis. Royen. Lin. Sp. Plant. 49. Iberis with roundifh crenated leaves. Thlafpi Alpinum, folio rotundiore carnofo, florepur- puralcente. Tourn. Inft. 112. Alpine Treacle Mufiard with a rounder flteflby leaf j aud a purplifh flower. , 8. Iberis ( Lini folia ) frutefcens, foliis linearibus acutis, corymbis hemifphasricis. Shrubby Sciatica Crefs with narrow acute leaves , and hemiflpherical bunches of flowers. Thlafpi Lufitanicum umbellatum, gramineo folio, purpurafeente fore. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 213. Portu- gal^ umbellated , Treacle Mufiard , with a Grafs leaf and a purplifh t flower . The ftrft fort here mentioned is a low fhrubby plant, which feldom rifes aboye a foot and a half high, hav- ing many fender branches, which fpread on every ftde, and fall toward the ground if they are not fup- ported. Thefe branches are well furnifhed with leaves toward their extremity, which continue green all the year •, and in fummer the flowers are produced at the end of the fhoots, which are white, and grow in an umbel. Thefe flowers continue long in beauty, and are fucceeded by others, fo that the plants are rarely deftitute of flowers for near eight months, from the end of Auguft to the beginning of June, which ren- ders the plant valuable. This plant is fomewhat tender, therefore is generally preferved in green-houfes in winter, where, being placed among other low plants toward the front of the houfe, it makes an agreeable variety, as it continues flowering all the winter. But although it is commonly fo treated, yet in moderate winters this plant will live in the open air, if it be planted in a warm fitua- tion and on a dry foil j and if, in very hard froft, they are covered either with mats, Reeds, Straw, or Peas-haulm, they may be preferved very well’-, and thefe plants which grow in the full ground, will thrive better, and produce a greater number of flowers,, than thofe which are kept in pots * but the foil in which thefe are planted, fhould not be over rich, nor too wet, for in either of thefe they will grow too vigorous in fummer, fo will be in greater danger of fuffering by the froft in winter ; but when they grow on a gra- velly foil, or among lime rubbifh, their fnoots will be fhoit, ftrong, and" not fo replete with moifture, fo will better refill' the cold. This plant very rarely produces feeds in England, therefore, is only propagated by cuttings, which, if planted during any of the fummer months, and ihaded Rom the fun, and duly watered, will be rooted in two months, and may afterward be either planted | ■... v I B E in pots, or into the borders where they are defigned to ftand. 'there is a variety of this with variegated, leaves, which is preferved in feme of the gardens where per- fons delight in thefe ftriped-leaved plants.. This is not fo hardy as the plain fort, therefore mult be treated more tenderly in winter ; this is alfo inereafed by cuttings in the fame manner as the other. The fecond fort is a plant of humbler growth than the firft; this feldom rifes more than fix or eight inches high, nor do the branches grow woody, but are rather herbaceous ; the leaves of this plant conti- nue green through the year, and the flowers are of as long duration as thofe of the ftrft fort, which renders it valuable. This rarely produces feeds in England, but is propagated by flips, which in fummer °eafily take root, and the plants may be treated in the fame manner as hath been directed for the ftrft fort, and will thrive in the open air. The third fort is a low annual plant, the feeds of which were formerly fown to make edgings for bor- ders in the pleafure-garden, for which purpofe all the low annual flowers are very improper, becaufe they do not anfwer the intent, which is to prevent the earth of the borders falling into the walks, which thefe plants never can do ; and though they make a pretty appear- ance during their continuance in flower, which is fd- dom more than a fortnight or three weeks, yet after their flowers are paft they become very unfightly therefore all thefe forts of flowers fhould be fown. in fmall patches in the borders of the flower-gar- den, where, if they are properly mixed with other flowers, they will have a very good efted and bv fowing of them at three or four different feafons, there may be a fucceflion of them continued in flower till autumn. There are two different varieties of this third fort, one with red, and the other hath white flowers , but the white is not common in the gardens, but the feeds of the fixth fort are generally fold for it, and is feldom diftinguifhed but by thofe who are {killed in botany : this plant feldom rifes more than five or fix inches high, and if they have room will branch out on every fide, but when they are left too clofe, they draw each other up, and are weak : as theie do not bear tranf- planting well, fo the feeds fhould be fown thin in patches, and when the plants are grown pretty ftrona:, they fhould be thinned, leaving but fix or eight m in each patch to flower ; and by thus treating them, they will put out fide branches, and flower much ftronger, and continue longer in beauty than when they are left clofer together ; thefe plants will require no other culture but to keep them clean from/ weeds. The fourth fort feldom grows fo large as the third, and the flowers are much fmaller, but have an agree- able odour. It grows naturally in Helvetia, and is preferved in botanic gardens for variety. It is an- nual, and requires the fame treatment as the third. The fifth fort grows on fandy and rocky places in fe- veral parts of England, fo is rarely admitted into gar- dens. The leaves of this are fmall, and cut to the mid- rib into many jags ; thefe are fpread on the ground, and between them arife a naked foot-ftalk two or three inches long, fuftaining fmall umbels of white flowers. This is an annual plant, whole feeds fhould be fown in autumn where the plants are defigned to remain, and require no other care but to keep them clean from weeds. The fixth fort is very like the third, but differs in the fhape of the leaves. The flowers of this are white, fo may be fown to make a variety with the red. It requires the fame treatment. The feventh fort grows naturally on the Alps, from whence it was fent me : this is a perennial plant, which roots pretty deep in the ground. The lower leaves which rife from the root, are round, flefhy, and cre- nated on their edges. The ftalk rifes four or five inches high, and is garnifhed with fmall oblong leaves which half embrace the ftalks with their bale. The flowers terminate the ftalk in a round corn- pad- 1 C E V pact umbel ^ they are of a purple colour, and ap- pear in June, but are feldom fucceeded by feeds in England. It is propagated by feeds, which fhould be fown on a ihady border in autumn, and when the plants are ftrong enough to remove, they fhould be tranfplanted on a fhady border where they are defigned to remain, and will require no other care but to keep them clean from weeds. The eighth fort grows naturally in Spain and Portu- gal , this hath a great reiemblance of the fecond, but the ftalks do not fpread fo much ; they grow erect, about feven or eight inches high, are ligneous and pe- rennial. The leaves are very narrow, and feldom more than an inch long, ftanding thinly upon the ftalks, having no foot-ftalks. The flowers grow in hemifpherical umbels on the top of the italics, and are of a purple colour. It flowers in May and June, but feldom produces good feeds here. This fort may be propagated by cuttings, which fhould be treated In the fame way as is before di- rected for the firft fort ; and fome of the plants may be planted on a warm border in a dry foil, where they will endure the cold of our ordinary winters very well j but it will be proper to have two or three plants in pots, which may be fheltered under a frame in win- ter, to preferve the kind, if, by fevere froft, thofe in the open air fhould be deflroyed. IBISCUS. See Hibiscus. I C A C O. See Chyrsobalanus, ICE is a hard tranfparent body, formed from fome liquor congealed, or fixed. Ice is faid to be the natural ftate of water, which re- mains firm, and not liquid, when no external caufe a£ts upon it. The true caufe of the congelation of water into Ice, feems to be the introduction of frigorific particles into the pores or interfaces between the particles of -wa- ter, and by that means getting fo near them, as to be juft within the fpheres of one another’s attrac- tions, and then they muft cohere into one folid or firm body. It may be wondered why Ice goes to the top of the water, for one would imagine, that being colder than flowing water, it ought to be more condenfed, and confequently heavier ; but is to be confidered, that there are always fome bubbles of air interlperfed in Ice. It is certain, by the fvimming of Ice upon wa- ter, that it is fpecifically lighter than the water out of which it is made by freezing ; and it is as certain, that this lightnefs of Ice proceeds from thofe nu- merous bubbles that are produced in it by conge- lation. Water, when it is frozen into Ice, takes up more fpace than it did before it was congealed. It is vi- fible, that the dimenfions of water are increafed by freezing, its particles being, kept at fome diftance the one from the other, by the intervention of the frigorific matter. And, befides, there are many little volumes of air included at feveral diftances, both in the pores of the watery particles, and in the interfaces made by the fpherical figures. Now, by the infinuation of thefe chryftals, the volumes of air are driven out of the watery particles, and many of them uniting, form larger volumes ; thefe have thereby a greater force to expand themfelves than when they are difperfed, and fo both enlarge their dimenfions, and leffen the fpecific gravity of water thus congealed into Ice. It feems very probable, that cold, and freezing, and confequently Ice, are produced by fome fubftance of a faline nature floating in the air in that falts, and more eminently fome particular ones, when mixed with Ice or fnow, do wonderfully increafe the force and effects of cold. It is alfo vifible, that all faline bodies caufe a ftiff- nefs and frigidity in thofe bodies into which they enter. It is manifeft, by obferving falts by microfcopes, that the figures of fome falts, before they Ihoot into 4 1 G E maffes, are then double wedge-like particles, which have abundance of fnrface in refpecft to their folidity j and this is the reafon why they fw-itn in water, when once they are raffed in it, although they are Ipecifi- cally heavier, thefe fmall points of falts getting into the pores of the water, whereby they are, in fome meafure, fufpended in the winter, when the heat of the fun is not ordinarily ftrong enough to diffolve the falts into fluid, to break their points, and to keep them in perpetual motion *, which being Ids difturbed, are more at liberty to approach one another, and by ihoot ing into chryftals, of the form above-mentioned, do, by their extremities, infinuate themfelves into the pores of water, and by that means freeze it into a fo- lid form, called Ice. Monf. Mariotte, in his Ttfeatife of Hydroftatics, gives the fubfequent account of what happens to water in freezing, which he difcovered by the following expe- riment. Having filled a cylindric veffel, of about feven or eight inches high, and fix inches diameter, within two inches of the top, with cold water, he expofed it to the open air in a great froft, and obferved exactly the whole progrefs of the freezing of it. The firft congelation was in the upper furface of the water, in little long water fhoots, or laminae, which were jagged like a law, the water between them re- maining ftill unfrozen, though the reft of the furface was already frozen to the thicknefs of more than two lines ; he obferved that feveral bubbles of air were formed in the Ice, that began to fix on the bottom and Tides of the veffel, fome would rife up, and others remained entangled in the Ice, which made him ima- gine that thefe bubbles taking up more fpace in the water, than when their matter was, as it were, dif- folved in it, they pufhed up ,a little water through the hole at the top, after the fame manner that new wine works out at the bung-hole of a veffel when it begins to heat, and the little water that ouzed out at this little hole in the Ice, fpread ing itfelf upon the upper furface of the water, which was already frozen, became Ice alfo, and there began to form a hill of ' Ice ; and that hole continuing open, by reafon of the water which palled fucceffively through it, being pufhed up by the new bubbles which formed them- felves in the Ice, which continue to increafe about the hides and bottom of the veffel, he obferved that the upper furface of the water was frozen above an inch thick towards the edges of the veffel, and above an inch and a half round about the little hole, before the water that was contained in it, as in a pipe, became frozen, but at laft it was frozen * 3 then the middle of the water remaining unfrozen, and the water which was compreffed by the new bubbles, which formed themfelves for two or three hours, having no vent at the little hole, the Ice broke at once towards the top, by the fpring of the in- cluded air. In like manner the froft acls upon vegetables, by thefe frigorific particles entering the tender fhoots of plants, and infinuating between the pores of the fap, thereby increafing its bulk, fo that the tender veffels of the plants are torn, and thofe parts of the plants are foon killed ; and the greater the quantity of moifture is in vegetables, the more they are in danger of be- ing deftroyed, for we frequently fee many plants which grow on the top, and from the joints of walls, efcape the fevereft frofts, when thofe of the fame kinds are all deftroyed which were in the ground •, which is en- tirely owing to their veffels being ftronger and more compadl, and not fo replete with moifture : fo when the autumn proves cold and moift, whereby the vef- fels of plants are not properly hardened, and are re- plete with moifture, a fmall froft will do great mif- chief to them ; whereas when the autumn is dry and warm, the tender fhoots of trees and fhrubs are har- dened, and drained of their moifture, fo are not lia- ble to the like accidents. I C E-H O U S E is a building contrived to preferve ice for the ufe of affamily in the fummer feafon. Thefe Thefe are more generally ufed in warm countries, than in England,, but particularly in Italy, where the meaneft perfon who rents a hotife, is not without a a vault or cellar for keeping of ice ; but as the ufe of ice in England is much greater of late than it was formerly, io the number of Ice-houfes has been greatly increafed ; and although the mention of thefe- may, at iirft fight, feeni foreign to my 1 abject, yet if it is confidered, that thefe buildings are generally erefled in gardens, and as often put tinder the care of gardeners, it may not be amifs for me to give fome general directions for the choice of the fituation and itruCture of the building, as alfo for the management of the ice. In the choice of a fituation for an Ice-houfe, the prin- cipal regard fliould be, that of a dry fpot of ground, for wherever there is moifttire, the ice will melt ; therefore in all ftrong lands, which detain the wet, there cannot be too much care taken to make drains all round the building to carry off all moifture ; for when this is lodged near the building, it will occafion a damp there, which will always be prejudicial to the keeping of the ice. The next confideration muft be, to have the place fo elevated, that there may be defcent enough to carry off whatever wet may happen near the building, or from the ice melting ; alfo, that the place be as much expofed to the fun and air as poffible, and not placed under the drip, or in the (hade of trees, as hath been too often praftifed, under a falfe notion, that if it fliould be expofed to the fun, the ice will melt away in fummer, which never can be the cafe where there is fufficient care taken to exclude the outward air (which muft always be regarded in the building of thefe houfes) for the heat of the fun can never pene- trate through the double arches of the building, fo as to add any warmth to the air •, but when the build- ing is entirely open to the fun and wind, all damps and vapours will thereby be removed from about the building, which can never be kept too dry, or free from moift vapours. As to the figure of the building, that may be according to the fancy of the owner; but for the well into which the ice is to be put, a circular figure is the moft convenient *, the depth of the well, as alfo the diameter of it, muft be proportioned to the quantity of ice wanted, but it is always beft to have enough ; for when the houfe is well built, it will keep the ice for two or three years ; and there will be this advantage in having it large enough to contain ice for two years conlumption, that if a mild winter fliould happen, when there is not ice to be had, there will be a ftock to fupply the want. If the quantity wanting is not great, a well of fix feet diameter, and eight feet deep, will be large enough ; but for large confumption, it fhould not be lefs than nine or ten feet diameter, and as many deep : where the fituation is either dry chalk, gravel, or fand, the pit may be entirely below the furface of the ground ; but in ftrong loam, clay, or moift ground, it will be the beft way to raife it fo high above the furface, as that there may be no danger from the wet. At the bottom of the well there ffiould be a fpace left, about two feet deep, to receive any moifture which may drain from the ice, and a fmall under- ground drain fliould be laid from this, to carry off the wet ; over this fpace of two feet, fhould be placed a ftrong grate of wood, to let the moifture fall down, which may at any time happen, from melting of the Ice. The fides of this well muft be bricked up with a wall, at lead two bricks and a half thick ; but if it is yet thicker, it will be better, becaufe the thicker the walls are made, the lefs danger there will be of the well being affected by any external caufe. When the well is brought within three feet of the furface, there muft be another outer arch or wall begun, which muft be carried up to the' height of the top of the in- tended arch of the well ; and if there is a fecond arch turned over from this well, it will add to the good- nefs of the houfe ; but this muft be fubmitted to the perfon who builds, if he will be at the expence ; but if not, then the plate into which the roof is to be framed, muft be laid on this outer wall, which fliould be carried high enough above the inner arch, to ad- mit of a door-way in, to get out the ice. If the' build- ing is to be covered with Sates or tiles, there fhould be a thicknefs of Reeds laid under, to keep out the fun and external air ; if thefe Reeds are laid two feet thick, and plaftered over with lime and hair, there will be no danger of the heat getting through it. The external wall heed not be built circular, but of any other figure, either fquare, hexangular, or octan- gular ; and where this (lands much in fight may be fo contrived as to make it a good objed. I have feen an Ice-houfe built in fuch a manner as to have a hand- fome alcove feat in the front, and behind this feat was contrived a paffage to get out and put in the ice ; and by having the entrance behind, to the north aiped, a fmall paffage being next the feat, through which a perfon might enter to take out the ice, and a large door being contrived with a porch, wide enough for a fmall cart to back in, to (hoot down the ice upon the floor near the mouth of the well, where it may be well broken, before it is put down. The aperture of this mouth of the well need not be more than two feet and a half diameter, Which will be large enough to put down the ice, and if it was greater, It would be inconvenient ; there fliould be a ftone fitted to flop this aperture, which muft be clofed up as fecure as poffible, after the ice is put in, and all the vacant fpace above and between this and the outer door, mult be filled clofe with Barley Straw, to exclude the air ; fo the door to enter for taking out the ice fhould be on the oppoflte fide, immediately behind the alcove feat, as was before-mentioned ; and this door fliould be no larger than is abfolutely neeeffary for the coming at the ice, and muft be ftrong and clofe to exclude the air ; and at five or fix feet diftance from this another door fhould be contrived, which fhould be clofely fhut before the inner door is opened, whenever the ice is taken out. The building being finifhed, ffiould have time to dry before the ice is put into it ; for when the walls are green, the damp of them frequently melts the ice. At the bottom of the well, upon the wooden grate, fliould be laid fome fmall faggots ; and if upon thefe a layer of Reeds is placed imooth for the ice to lie upon, it will be better than Straw, which is com- monly ufed ; and in the choice of the ice, the thinner it is, the better it may be broken to powder ; for the fmaller it is broken, the better it will unite when put into the well : in putting of it in, there muft be care taken to ram it clofe, as alfo to allow a vacancy all round next the wall, of about two inches ; this is to give paffage to any moifture, which may be oc- cafioned by the melting of fome of the ice on the top, which, if pent up, will melt the ice downward ; when the ice is put into the well, if there is a little falt-petre mixed at every ten inches or a foot thick- nefs, it will caufe the ice to join more clofely into a folid mafs. The inftruftions here given, being care- fully obferved, will be fufficient to guide perfons wholly ignorant in thefe matters. JET D’EAU is a French word, which fignifies a fountain that calls up water to any conliderable height in the air. Monk Mariotte, in his Treatife of Hydroftatics, fays. That a jet d’Eau will never rife fo high as its referva- tory, but always falls fhort of it by a fpace which is in a fubduplicate ratio of that height ; and this he proves by feveral experiments •, that though Jets ought to rife to the height of the refervatories, yet the friftion of the fides of the ajutages, and the refiftance of the air, are the caufes that in jets that have very high refervatories, the height of the Jets does not come up to that of the refervatcry by a great deal. He adds, That if a greater branches out in many fmaller ones, or is diftributed through feveral Jets, the fquare of the diameter of the main pipe muft be pro- portioned I L E portioned to the fum of all the expences'of its branches; that if the refervatory be fifty-two high, and the ajutages half an inch in diameter, the pipe ought to be three inches in diameter. He fays, That the beauty of Jets of water con fills in their uniformity and tranfparency at the going out of the ajutage, and fpreading but very little, and that to the higheft part of the jet. That the word fort of ajutages are thofe that are cylindrical, for they .retard very much the height of the Jets, the conic retard it lefs ; but the beft way is, to bore the horizontal plane, which (huts the extre- mity of the pipe, or conduit, with a lmooth and po- li filed hole, taking care that the plate be perfectly plain, polifhed, and uniform. Thefe fpouts of water are fome of the greateft beau- ties of the Italian gardens, and are certainly better adapted for gardens in thofe warm countries, than they are for our climate, becaule, in the great heats of fum- mer, the fight of thefe water-fpouts is cooling and refrefhing to the imagination, and they certainly add a real coolnefs to the air ; but in cold countries they cool the air too much, therefore fhould not be erect- ed ; or if they are, they fhould be placed at fuch dif- tances from the habitation, as that the damp may no ways affedt it. Where thefe Jets are contrived, if there is* not a con- ftant fupply for a large column of water, they fhould by no means be made, for nothing can have a meaner * appearance, than thofe pitiful piffing fpouts, fo fre- quently to be feen in England, which perhaps have not a fupply of water to play above an hour or two ; therefore where there is not a natural body of water, to fupply thefe Jets, without the expence of railing it, there fliould never be any of thefe contrived in gardens. ILEX. Lin. Gen. Plant. 158. Aquifolium. Tourn. I nib R. H. 600. tab. 371. The Holly-tree; in French, Horn. The Characters are, ‘They have male , female , and hermaphrodite flowers on different plants. The male flowers have a fmall perma- nent empalcment of one leaf, which is indented in four parts-, they have hut one petal, which is cut into four fegments al- moft to the bottom ; they have four awl-floaped ftamina, which are Jhorter than the pet ad, and are terminated by fmall fumnuts. The female flowers have their empalements and petals the fame as the male, but have no fta?nina ; in their center is placed the roundiflo germen , having four ob- tufe ftigmas fitting on it. The germen afterward becomes a roundiflo berry with four cells, each containing a Jingle hard, feed. This genus of plants is ranged in the third fedlion of Linnaeus’s fourth clafs, intitled Tetrandria Tetra- gynia, which includes thofe plants whofe flowers have four ftamina and four ftyles ; but according to his own fyftem, it fhould be placed in the third fedlion of his twenty-fecond clafs, with thofe plants which have male and hermaphrodite flowers on different plants. The Species are, 1. Ilex {Aquifolium) foliis oblongo-ovatis, undulatis, lpinis acutis. Holly-tree with oblong leaves which are waved, and have acute Mines. Ilex aculeata baccifera. C. B. P. 42 5. Prickly berry-bearing Ilex ; and the Aqui- folium five agrifolium vulgo. J. B. 1. 114. The com- mon Holly. 2. Ilex ( Echinata ) foliis ovatis, undulatis, marginibus aculeatis, paginis fuperne fpinofis. Holly with oval waved leaves, whofe borders are armed with ftrong thorns , and their upper furface prickly. Aquifolium echinata folii fuperfice. Cornut. Canad. 180. Holly-tree whofe upper furface of the leaves are prickly, commonly called Hedge-hog Holly. 3. Ilex ( Caroliniana ) foliis ovato-lanceolatis ferratis. Hort. Cliff. 40. Holly with oval, fpear-fhaped, fawed leaves. Aquifolium Carolinienfe, foliis dentatis, baccis rubris. Catelb. Carol. 1. p. 31. Carolina Holly with undented leaves and red berries , commonly called Dahoon Holly. I L E There are feveral varieties of the common Holly with variegated leaves, which are propagated by the nur- fery gardeners for fale, and fome years pail were in very great efteem, but at prefent are but little regard- ed, the old tafte of filling gardens with (horn Ever- greens being pretty well abolilhed ; however, in the difpofition of the clumps or other plantations of Ever- green trees and fhrubs, a few of the moft lively co- lours may be admitted, which 'will have a good ef- fect in the winter feafon, if they are properly difpofed. As the different variegations of the leaves of Hollies, are by the nurfery gardeners diftinjguifhed by different titles, fo I (hall here mention the moft beautiful of them, by the names they are generally known : Painted Lady Holly, Britifti Holly, Bradley’s beft Holly, Phyllis, or Cream Holly, Milkmaid Holly, Pritchet’s beft Holly, Gold-edged Hedge-hog Holly, Cheyney’s Holly, Glory of the W eft Holly, Broad- erick’s Holly, Partridge’s Holly, Herefordlhire white Holly, Blind’s Cream Holly, LongftafPs Holly, Eales’s Holly, Silver-edged Hedge-hog Holly. All thefe varieties are propagated by budding or grafting them upon (locks of the common green Holly : there is alfo a variety of the common Holly with lmooth leaves, but this is frequently found intermixed with the prickly-leaved on the fame tree, and often on the fame branch, there are both forts of leaves. The common Holly grows naturally in woods and forefts in many parts of England, where it riles from twenty to thirty feet high, and fometimes more, but their ordinary height is not above twenty-five feet. The ftem by age becomes large, and is covered with a grayifh fmooth bark ; and thofe trees which are not lopped or browzed by cattle, are commonly furnifhed with branches the greateft part of their length, fo form a fort of cone ; the branches are garnifhed with oblong oval leaves about three inches long, and one and a half broad, of a lucid green on their upper furface, but are pale on their under, having a ftrong midrib : the edges are indented and waved, with (harp thorns terminating each of the points, fo that fome of the thorns are railed upward and others are bent down- ward, and being very ftiff, renders them troublefome to handle. The leaves are placed alternate on every fide of the branches, and from the bafe of their foot- ftalks come out the flowers in clufters, (landing on very fliort foot-ftalks ; each of thefe fuftain five, fix, or more flowers. In fome plants I have obferved the flowers were wholly male, and produced no berries ; in others I have obferved female and hermaphrodite flowers, but upon fome large old trees growing on Windfor foreft, I hav$ obferved all three upon the fame trees. The flowers are of a dirty white, and appear in May ; they are fucceeded by roundifh ber- ries, which turn to a beautiful red about Michael- mas, but continue on the trees if they are not de- ftroyed, till after Chriftmas before they fall away. The fecond fort grows naturally in Canada, from whence it was brought to Europe. The leaves of this fort are not fo long as thofe of the common Hol- ly, and their edges are armed with ftronger thorns (landing clofer together ; the upper furface of the leaves is fet very clofe with (hort prickles, from whence the gardeners have given it the title of Hedge-hog Holly. This fort is ufually propagated in the nurferies, by budding or grafting it upon the common Holly ; but I have railed it from the ber- ries, and found the plants to be the fame as thofe from v/hence the feeds were taken, fo make no doubt of its being a diftindt fpecies. There are two varieties of this with variegated leaves, one of which is yellow, and the other white. There is alfo a variety of the common Holly with yellow berries, which is alfo accidental, and is generally found on thofe plants which have variegated leaves, and but feldom on plain Hollies. The common Holly is a very beautiful tree in win- ter, therefore deferves a place in all plantations of 7 E Erergreen I L E I L L Evergreen trees and ftirubs, where its Aiming leaves and red berries make a fine variety ; and if a few of the bell variegated kinds are properly intermixed, they will enliven the fcene. The Holly was alfo for- merly planted for hedges, and is a very proper plant for that purpofe ; but then it fhould not be clipped with iheafs, becaufe when the leaves are cut through the middle, they are rendered unfightly, fo they fhould be cut with a knife clofe to the leaf ; and although in this method they are not iborn fo even as with fhears, yet they will have a much better appearance, and may be made as clofe and fecure as by any other method generally pracftifed. The Holly is propagated by feeds, which never come up the firft year, but lie in the ground as the Haws do ; therefore the berries fhould be buried in the ground in a large pot or tub one year, and then tak- en up and fown in the autumn upon a bed expofed only to the morning fun ; the following fpring the plants will appear, which muft be kept clean from weeds ; and if the fpring fhould prove dry, it will be of great fervice to the plants if they are watered once a week ; but they muft not have it oftener, nor in too great quantity, for too much moifture is very injurious to thefe plants when young. In this feed- bed the plants may remain two years, and then fhould be tranfplanted in the autumn, into beds at about fix inches diftance each way, where they may ftand two years longer, during which time they muft be conftantly kept clean from weeds •, and if the plants have thriven well, they will be ftrongenough to tranfplant where they are defigned to remain ; for when they are tranfplanted at that age, there will be lefs danger of their failing, and they will grow to a larger fize than thofe which are removed when they are much larger-, but if the ground is not ready to receive them at that time, they fhould be tranfplanted into a nurfery in rows at two feet diftance, and one foot afunder in the rows, in which place the plants may remain two years longer ; and if they are de- figned to be grafted or budded with any of the va- riegated kinds, that fhould be performed after the plants have grown one year in this nurfery ; but the plants fo budded or grafted fhould continue two years after in the nurfery, that they may make good fhoots before they are removed ; though the plain ones fhould not ftand longer than two years in the nur- fery, becaufe when they are older, they do not tranf- plant fo well. The beft time for removing of Hol- lies is in the autumn, efpecially in dry land but where the foil is cold or moift, they may be tranf- planted with great fafety in the fpring if the plants are not too old, or if they have not flood long unre- rnoved, there is great odds of their dying when re- moved. The Baboon Holly grows naturally in Carolina, from whence the feeds were fent by the late Mr. Mark Catefby, who found the trees growing on a fwamp at a diftance from Charles-town, but it hath fince been diicovered in fome other countries in North America. This riles with an upright branching item to the height of eighteen or twenty feet the bark of the old Items is of a brown colour, but that of the branches or younger ftalks is green and fmooth, garnifhed with fpear-fhaped leaves, which are more than four inches long, and one and a quarter broad in the broadeft part, of a light green and thick confidence the up- per part of the leaves are fawed on their edges, each ferrature ending in a fmall fharp fpine ; they ftand al- ternately on every fide the branches, upon very fhort foot-ftalks. The flowers come out in thick clufters from the fide of the ftalks ; they are white, and fhaped like thofe of the common Holly, but are fmaller ; the female and hermaphrodite flowers are fucceeded by fmall roundifh berries in its native country, which make a fine appearance in winter, but they have not as yet produced fruit in England, fo far as I can learn. Dr. Linmeus fuppofes this plant and the evergreen Canine to be the fame, but they are undoubtedly dif- tin£l plants : he may probably have been led into this miftake, by receiving feeds of this fort mixed together with the berries of Caffine from America, which I have more than once done but whoever fees the two plants growing, cannot doubt of their being different. This fort is tender while young, fo requires protec- tion in the winter till the plants are grown ftrong and woody, when they may be planted in the full ground in a warm fituation, where they will endure the cold of our ordinary winters pretty well ; but in fevere froft they fhould be protected, other wife the cold will de- ftroy them. This fort is propagated from feeds, in like manner as the common fort the feeds of it will lie as long in the ground, fo the berries fhould be buried in the ground a year, and then taken up and fown in pots filled with light earth, and placed under a frame in winter; in the fpring the pots fhould be plunged into a hot-bed, which will bring up the plants ; thefe muft be preferved in the pots while young, and flickered in winter under a common frame tili they have obtained ftrength, when in the fpring they may be turned out of the pots and planted in the full ground, in a warm fituation. From the bark of the common Holly is made the bird-lime, and the wood is made into hones for fet- ting of razors. The wood is very white, and takes a fine polifh, fo is very proper for feveral kinds of furniture. I have feen a floor of a room laid in com- partments with Holly and Mahogany, which had % very pretty effect. ILLECEBRU M. Lin. Gen. 291. Corrigiola. Dill. Gen. p. 169. Paronychia. Tourn. Xnft. 281. The Characters are, It hath a five-cornered coloured empale merit of five leaves , which is permanent , hut has no petals it hath five fen- der Jiamina within the empalement , terminated by fimple fiummits , and an oval germen with a fhort Jlyle , crowned by an obtufie ftigrna. "The empalement afterward becomes a roundifh capfule with five angles , having one cell , con- taining one large feed ; which is pointed on every fide. This genus of plants is ranged in the firft lection of Linnseus’s fifth clafs, in'titled Pentandria Monogynia, the flowers having five ftamina and one ftyle. The Species are, 1. Illecebrum ( Suffruticofum ) fioribus lateralibus folita- riis, caulibus fuffruticofus. Lin. Sp. 298. Illecebrum with an under-fhrub fitalk , having Jingle flowers on the files. Paronychia Hifpanica fruticofa, myrti folio. Tourn. Inft. 508. 2. Illecebrum ( Paronychia ) fioribus brabteis nitidis ob- valaris, caulibus procumbentibus. Lin. Sp. 299. Il- lecebrum with neat brattea inclofeng the flowers , and trailing fialks. Paronychia Hifpanica. Clnf. Hilt. 2. P- i8 3 - 3. Illecebrum ( Capitatum ) fioribus brabteis nitidis oc- cultantibus capitula terminalia, caulibus erebtis, foliis ciliatis. Lin. Sp. 299. 'Illecebrum with neat Irraliea terminating the ereli ftalks , and filvery leaves. Parony- chia Narbonenfis erebta. Tourn. Inft. 508. 4. Illecebrum ( Achyrantha ) caulibus repentibus pilofis, foliis ovatis mucronatis oppofito minore, capitulis lub- globofis fubfpinofis. Lin. Sp. 299. Illecebrum with creeping ftalks , fmall oval-pointed leaves placed oppofite , almoft globular heads of flowers , having fmall [pirns. Achyrantha repens, foliis bliti pallidi. Hurt. Eith. 8. tab. 7. 5. Illecebrum ( Polygonoides ) caulibus repentibus hirris, foliis lato-lanceolatis petiolatis, capitulis orbicularis nudis. Lin. Sp. 300. Illecebrum with hairy creeping ftalks , broad fpear-Jhaped leaves on foot -ftalks, and orbi- cular naked heads of flowers . Amaranthoides humlie Curaftavicum, foliis polygoni. Herm. Farad. 17. 6. Illecebrum ( Vermiculaium ) caulibus repentibus gla- bris foliis, fubteretibus carnofis, capitulis oblongis glabris terminalibus. Lin. Sp. 300. Illecebrum with fmooth creeping ftalks, almoft taper flefiiy leaves, and ob- long fmooth heads terminating the branches. Amaran- thoides humile Cura&vicum, cepese foliis lucidis, ca- pitulis. Herm, Parad. 15. Tffe I M P The three fi'rft forts grow n . rurally in Spain,- Portu- gal, and the fouth of France ; the firft has ligneous Salks about a foot high, garnifhed with fmall leaves like thofe of Knot-grafs ; the flowers come out fingl.y on the fide of the Falks, which make little appear- ance, fo is feldom preferved in garden. The fecond and third forts have trailing ftalks near two feet long, which fpread on the ground, gar- niilied with leaves like thofe of the firft fort ; the heads of dowers come out from the joints of the ftalk, having neat filvery braftea furrounding them, which make a pretty appearance. Their flowers appear in June, and there is generally a iucceflion of them for at kail two months and when the autumn proves warm, they will ripen their feeds the beginning of October. Thefe three forts may be propagated by feeds, which fhould be fown on a bed of light earth the beginning of April ; the plants will come up in May, when they ihould be kept clean from weeds till the plants are fit to remove ; then the plants Ihould be carefully tak- en up, planting fome of each fort in fmall pots, and the other into a warm dry border, obferving to wa- ter and fliade them until they have taken new root ; after which, thofe which are planted in the full ground will require no other culture but to keep them clean from weeds; for in the ordinary winters of England, they will live in the open air : but as thefe plants are fometimes killed in fevere winters, therefore I advife fome plants to be planted in pots, which may be placed in a common frame in winter, where they may enjoy the open air in mild weather, but be fcreened from froft. As the feeds of thefe plants do not conftantly ripen in England, fo they may be propagated by cuttings, which, if carefully taken off in May or June, and ’ planted in a fhady border, will in two months put out roots •, then in moift weather they may be tranf- planted, and afterward treated as the old plants. The other three forts are natives of the warm parts of America ; the fourth fort grows naturally at Beunos Ayres ; the fifth and fixth, in many of the iflands in the Weft-Indies. Thefe have creeping ftalks, which fend out roots from the joints, which fallen to the ground in their native foil, whereby they fpread to a great diftance ; and in this country, when the pots are plunged into a tan-bed, they will multiply as fall, by taking root in tan, or any of the other pots of plants which are near them. The flowers of the fourth fort make little appear- ance, therefore the plant is rarely propagated, except in botanic gardens for variety •, but thofe of the fifth and fixth fort have dry heads of flowers, refembling thofe of the Amaranthoides, under which genus they were formerly ranged. Thefe three forts are tender, fo will not thrive in the onen air in England •, therefore their feeds fhould be fown on a hot-bed in the fpnng, at the fame time as the Amaranthus, Gomphrena, and other tender plants; and afterward, if they are plunged into the tan-bed in the ftove, their branches will put out roots, whereby they may be propagated in plenty. I M P A T I E N S. Rivin. Ord. 4. Lin. Gen. Plant. 899. Balfamina. Tourn. Inft. R. FI. 418. tab. 235. Female Balfamine ; in French, Balfamine. The Characters are. The flower has a two-leaved fmall empalement , which is coloured , and placed on the fide of the petals. It hath five petals which are unequal^ and jhaped like a lip- fiower ; the petals are roundijh , the upper is ered, flight ly cut at the point into three parts , where it is jkarp-pointed , forming the upper lip ; the two lower petals are broad , cbtufe , irregular , and refiexed ; thefe conftitate the lower lip ; the intermediate pair are alike , and are placed oppo- Jite , joining at their bafe. It hath a nedarium in the bottom of the flower , jhaped like a hood or cowl , which is oblique to th-e mouthy rifmg on the cutfide , whofe bafe ends in a tail or [pur. It hath five floor t Jlamina which are narrow toward their bafe , and incurved , terminated by j I M P flummits , which join at the top round the jlamina , but are divided at their bafe . In the bottom is jituated an oval fharp-pointed germen , having no Jlyle , but a fingle ftigma Jhorter than the flummits . The germen afterward becomes a cap fule with one 0?//, opening with an elafiicity in five valves , which twift fpirally , and contain federal roundijh jeeds fixed to a column. This genus of plants is ranged in the fifth fiction of Linnaeus’s nineteenth clafs, which includes thofe plants which have fingle flowers in the empalement, whofe fiamina vary in number and fituation. The Species are, 1. Impatiens ( Noli t anger e ) pedunculis multifloris fo- litariis, foliis ovatis, geniculis caulinus tumentibus. Flor. Suec. 722. Impatiens with foot-fialks flujlaining many fingle flowers , oval leaves , and ftalks having flwelling joints. Balfamina lutea, five, Noli me tan- gere. C. B. P. 306. Yellow Balfamine, or Touch me not. 2. Impatiens ( Balfamina ) pedunculis unifloris aggre- gate, foliis lanceolatis, neltaris fioribus brevioribus. Hort. Upfal. 276. Impatiens with foot-ftalks flujlaining fingle flowers , which arife in dujlers , fpear-jhaped leaves , and nedariums which are jhorter than the flower. Bal- famina feemina. C. B. P. 306. The female Balfamine. 3. Impatiens ( Triflora ) pedunculis trifloris folitariis, foliis angufto-lanceoiatis. Flor. Zeyl. 315. Impatiens with three flowers on a foot -ftalk, and narrow fpear- jhaped leaves. Balfamina ereCla, fc. fgemina, Perficm angufto folio Zeylanica. Herrn. Par. Bat. 105. Upright s or female Balfamine of Ceylon, with a narrow Beach leaf. There are feveral other fpecies- of this genus, which grow naturally in India, which are plants of little beauty, fo have not been introduced into the Englifh gardens ; the forts here mentioned, are all I have yet feen growing here, except one tall fort from North America. The firft fort grows naturally in feveral parts of Weftmoreland and Yorkfhire, but is frequently in- troduced into gardens by way of curiofity. It is an annual plant, which rifes about a foot and a half high, witfi an upright fucculent ftalk, whofe joints are fwollen, garnifhed with oval fmooth leaves, which Hand alternate on every fide the ftalk. The flowers come out from the wings of the ftalks upon long flender foot-ftalks, which branch into leveral other ftnaller, each fuftaining one yellow flower, compofed of five petals, which in front are fhaped like the lip or grinning flowers, but at their bafe have a nelta- rium with a long tail like the flowers of Indian Grefs ; thefe are lucceeded by taper pods, which, when ripe, burft open upon being touched, and twift fpirally like a ferew, calling out the feeds with great elaf- ticity. If the feeds of this plant are permitted to flatter, they generally fucceed better than when they are fown ; for unlefs they are fown in the autumn foon after they are ripe, they very rarely grow. The plants require no care but to keep them clean from weeds, and thin them where they are too clofe. It flowers in June, and the feeds ripen about a month or five weeks after ; this delights in a fhady fituation and a moift foil. The fecond fort is the female Balfamine, of which there are feveral varieties ; the common fort has been long an inhabitant in the Englifh gardens, of this there is the white, the red, and ftriped flowered, and like- wife the fingle and double flowering, with variegated flowers of two colours. Thefe forts are fo hardy as to rife in the full ground ; and where the feeds flat- ter, the plants will come up the following fpring ; but fuch felf-fown plants do not come to flower fo early as thofe which are raifed upon a hot-bed ; how- ever, they generally are ftronger plants, and continue much longer in the autumn in flower than the others, fo are an ornament to the garden, when there is a greater fcarcity of flowers. This fort rifes a foot and a half high, dividing into many fucculent branches, which are garnifhed with long, fpear-fh aped, (awed leaves. The flowers come out from the joints of the ftalks, upon flender foot- ftalks i M P ftalks about an inch long, each fuftaining a fingle flower 5 but there are two, three, or four, of thefe foot-ftalks arifmg from the fame joint. The flowers are compofed of five large unequal petals, which are fhaped like thole of the former fort, but are larger, and fpread open much wider *, there are white, pur- ple, and red of this fort, as alfo fingle and double flowers. If the feeds of thefe are fown on a moderate hot-bed in the fpring, the plants will flower in June ; but thofe which are fown in the full ground, will not flower before the middle of July ; and thefe will continue flowering till the froft puts a flop to them in the autumn. There are two other varieties of this, if not diftinft fpecies ; one of them grows naturally in the Eaft, and the other in the Weft-Indies ; that which comes from theEaft-Indies, by the title of Immortal Eagle Flower, is a moft beautiful plant; the flowers are double, much larger than thofe of the common fort ; they are fcarlet and white variegated, and purple and white in others ; and the plants producing many flowers, render them very valuable ; and if the feeds of thefe are carefully faved, the kinds may always be preferved ; but I have railed fome plants from foreign feeds, whofe flowers were fo very double as to lofe their male parts, fo did not produce any feeds. The feeds of thefe plants fnould be fown on a mode- rate hot-bed in the fpring, and when the plants are come up about an inch high, they fhould be tranf- planted on another moderate hot-bed at about four inches diftance each way, obferving to fhade them from the fun till they have taken new root; after which they fhould hayeT'k large fhare of free air admitted to them, at all times when the weather is favourable, to prevent their drawing up tall and weak : they will require to be often refrefhed with water, but it fhould not be given to them in too great plenty ; for as their Items are very fucculent, fo they are apt to rot with much moifture. When the plants are grown fo large as to touch each other, they fhould be carefully taken up with balls of earth to their roots, and each planted into a feparate pot filled with light rich earth, and plunged into a very moderate hod-bed under a deep frame, to admit the plants to grow, fhading them from the fun until they have taken frefh root ; then they fhould have a large fhare of air ad- mitted to them everyday, and by degrees hardened, fo as to bear the open air, into which part of the plants may be removed in July, placing them in a warm fheltered fituation; where, if the feafon proves favour- able, they will flower and make a fine appearance ; but it will be proper to keep part of the plants either in a glafs-cafe or a deep frame, in order to get good feeds, becaufe thofe in the open air will not ripen their feeds unlefs the fummer proves very warm ; and the plants in fhelter muft have a good fhare of free air every day, otherwife they will grow pale and fickly ; nor fhould they have too much of the fun in the middle of the day, in very hot weather, for that occafions their leaves hanging and their re- quiring water, which is often very hurtful ; therefore if the glaffes are fhaded in the middle of the day for three or four hours, the plants will thrive better, and continue longer in beauty than when they are expofed to the great heat. Thofe who are curious to preferve thefe plants in perfection, pull off all the fingle and plain coloured flowers from the plants which they pre- ferve for feeds, leaving only thofe flowers which are double and of good colours ; where this is carefully done, they may be continued without the leaft dege- neracy conftantly. The fort which grows in the Weft-Indies, is there called Cockfpur. This hath fingle flowers as large as the laft-mentioned fort, but I never faw any of them more than half double, and only with white and red ftripes : the plants are very apt to grow to a very large fize before they produce any flowers, fo that it is late in the autumn before they begin to flower ; and fome- times in bad feafons they will fcarce have any flowers, I M P and but rarely ripen their feeds here, fo that few oer- fons care to cultivate this fort, especially if they ’can have the other. The third fort here mentioned grows naturally in Cey- lon, and in many parts of India ; this hath very nar- row fpear-fhaped leaves, which are fawed on their edges ; the foot-ftalks fuftain each three flowers, which ... are fmalier than thofe of the common fort, fo are not worthy of a place in gardens, except for the fake of variety. This is a tender plant, and requires the fame treatment as the Immortal Eagle Flower. IMPERATORIA. Lin. Gen. Plant. 321. Ton rn, Inft. R. 1 1 . 316. tab. 168. Mafterwort ; in French, Imperatoire. The Characters are. It hath an umbellate d flower ; the principal umbel is plain , and compofed of many fmalier ; the greater um- bel has no involucrum , but the fmall ones have , which are compofed of many narrow leaves , almoft as long as the umbel ; the principal umbel is uniform ; the flowers have five heart-fhaped petals , which are equal and in- flexed. T hey have five hairy Jlamina , terminated by roundijh fibmmits. The gerrnen is Jilmted under the pe- tals , , fupporting two reflexed ftyles , crowned by obtufe ftig- mas. The gerrnen afterward becomes a roundijh com- preffed fruit divided in two parts , containing two oval- bordered feeds. This genus of plants is ranged in the fecond fedtion of Linnteus’s fifth clafs, intitled Pentandria Digynia, which contains the plants whofe flowers have five fta- mina and two ftyles. We have but one Species of this genus, viz. Imperatoria ( Ofiruthium .) Hort. Cliff. 103. Mafter- wort. Imperatoria major. C. B. P. 1 56. Greater Mafterwort ; and the Aftrantia of Dodonaeus. Pempt. 320. Mafterwort , or falfe Peilitory of Spain. This plant grows naturally on the Auftrian and Sty- rian Alps, and upon other mountainous places in Italy ; the root is as thick as a man’s thumb, running ob- liquely in the ground ; it is fiefhy, aromatic, and has a ftrong acrid tafte, biting the tongue and mouth like Peilitory of Spain ; the leaves arife immediately from the root ; they have foot-ftalks feven or eight inches long, dividing into three very fhort ones at the top, each fuftaining a trilobate leaf, indented on the border ; the foot-ftalks are deeply channelled, and when broken emit a rank odour. The fiower-ftalks rife about two feet high, and divide into two or three branches, each being terminated by a pretty large um- bel of white flowers, whofe petals are fplk ; thefe are fucceeded by oval compreffed feeds, fomewhat like thofe of Dill, but larger. It flowers in J une, and the feeds ripen in Auguft. This plant is cultivated iu gardens to fupply the markets. It may be propagated either by feeds, or by parting the roots : if you would propagate it by feeds;' they fliould be fown in autumn foon after they are ripe, on a bed or border, in a fhacly fitua- tion y obferving not to fow the feeds t too thick, nor fnould they be covered too deep. In the fpring the plants will appear, when they fhould be carefully weeded ; and if the feafon fhould prove very dry, they fliould be now and then refrefhed v/ith water, which will greatly promote their growth. Toward the be- ginning of May, if you find the plants come up too clofe together, you lhould prepare a moift fhadv bor- der (and thin the plants carefully, leaving them about fix inches afunder ;) and plant thofe which you draw up into the border about the fame diftance apart every way, being careful to water them duly, if the feafon fliould prove dry, until they have taken root ; after which time, thefe plants (as alfo thofe remaining in the feed-beds) will require no other culture but to keep them clear from weeds ; which may be eafily ef- fefted, by hoeing the ground between the plants now and then in dry weather, which will deftroy the weeds ; and by thus ftirring the ground, will be of great ferviceto the plants. The following autumn thefe plants fhould be tranfplanted where they are defigned to remain, which fhould be in a rich moift foil and a fhady fitu- 4 ation ; 1 I N D ration ; where they will thrive much better than if too much expofed to the fun, or in a dry foil, for they delight in filade and moifture ; fo that where thefe are wanting the plants will require a conftant fupply of water in dry weather, otherwife they will thrive but ilowly. The diftance which thefe plants fhould be placed, not be lefs than two feet every way, for where they like their fit nation, they will fpread and in- creafe much- When thefe plants are rooted, they will require no other culture but to keep them clear from weeds ; and in the fpring, before they fhoot, the ground fhould be every year gently dug between the plants ; in doing of which, great care fhould be had not to cut or bruife their roots. Thefe plants, with this management, will continue feveral years, and will produce feeds in plenty. If you would propagate thefe plants by offsets, their roots fhould be parted at Michaelmas, and planted in a fhady fituation, at the fame diffance as has been di- rected for the feedling plants, obferving to water them until they have taken root, after which time they muff be managed as the feedlings. The roots of this plant are ufed in medicine, and are greatly reccommended for their virtue in contagious diftempers, or the bites of venomous creatures ; they are alexipharmic and fudorific ; by fome they are re- commended for choiics and afthmas, for the cramp, and all cold difeafes of the nerves. INARCHING is a method of grafting, which is commonly called grafting by approach. This method of grafting is ufed when the ffock you intend to graft on, and the tree from which you would take the graft ftand fo near (or can be brought fo near) that they may be joined together. The method of performing it is as follows : take the branch you would Inarch, and having fitted it to that part of the ffock where you intend to join it, pare away the rind and wood on one fide about three inches in length. After the fame manner cut the ffock or branch in the place where the graft is to be united, fo that the rind of both may join equally together, at leaft on one fide, that the fap may meet ; then cut a little tongue upwards in the graft, and make a notch or flit in the ffock down- ward to admit it ; fo that when they are joined, the tongues will prevent their flipping, and the graft will more clofely unite with the ffock. Having thus placed them exactly together, you muff tie them with fome bafs, or other foft bandage •, then cover the place with grafting clay, to prevent the air from entering to dry the wound, or the wet from getting in to rot the ftock : you fhould alfo fix a ftake into the ground to which that part of the ffock, as alfo the graft fhould be fattened, to prevent the wind from breaking them afunder, which is often the cafe when this precaution is not obferved. In this manner they are to remain about four months, in which time they will be fufficiently united, and the graft may then be cut from the mother tree, ob- ferving to Hope it off clofe to the ftock •, and if at this time you cover the joined parts with freflh grafting clay, it will be of great fervice to the graft. This operation is always performed in April or May, that the graft may unite with the ftock before the fucceeding winter, and is commonly pradtifed upon Oranges, Myrtles, Jafmines, Walnuts, Firs, Pines, and feveral other trees, which will not fucceed fo well by common grafting or budding. But although I have mentioned Orange-trees among the reft, yet I would by no means advife this practice where the trees are defigned to grow large, which, in this method, they rarely ever will do ; and it is chiefly pradifed upon thofe trees only as a curioflty, to have a young plant with fruit upon it, in a year or two from feed 1 , by Inarching a bearing branch into a young ftock, whereby it is effedted, yet thefe plants are feldom long lived. I N DJ G O F E R A. Lin. Gen. 83 9 . Indigo. The Characters are, The empalcmem is of one leaf fphading almoft flat , and cut into five figments ; the flower is of the butterfly kind , I N D having a roundijh fpreadmg ftandard, which is indented at the -point and refiexed : the wings are oblong , obtufe , and their under borders fpreading ; the keel is obtufe , fpreading , and acute-pointed. It hath ten ftamina digejied in a cylinder whofe points afiend , terminated by roundijh fummits , and a cylindrical ger men, fupp orbing a fhort fiyle , crowned by an obtufe ftigma. The germen afterward be- comes a long taper pod , inclofing kidney fhaped feeds. This genus of plants is ranged in the third fedtion of Linnaeus's feventeenth clafs, intided Diadelphia De- candria, from the flowers having ten ftarnina formed in two bodies. The Species are, 1. Indigofera ( Tinlloria ) leguminibus arcuatis incanis, racemis folio brevioribus. Flor. Zeyl. 273. Indigo with hoary arched pods , and the bunches of flowers Jhcrter than the leaves. Anil five Indigo Americana, liliquis in falcula: modum contortis. Acad. R. Scien. 1718. Guatemala Indigo . 2. Indigofera ( Sujfruticcfa ) leguminibus arcuatis In- canis, caule fruticofa. Indigo with a Jhrubby flalfi and hoary arched pods.' Colutea affinis fruticofa argentea, floribus fpicatis e viride purpureis, filiquis falcatis. Sloan. Cat. Jam. 1.42. 3. Indigofera ( Caroliniana ) leguminibus teretibus, fo~ liolis quinis fpicis longiffimis fparfis, radice perenne. Indigo with taper pods , leaves with five lobes , long loofi fpikes of flowers , and. a perennial root . . 4. Indigofera ( Indica ) leguminibus pendulis lanatis comprefils, foliis pinnatis. Indigo with woolly , com- prejfid , hanging pods , and winged leaves. 5. Indigofera ( Glabra ) leguminibus glabris teretibus, foliolis trifoliatis. Indigo with finooth taper pods, and tri- foliate leaves. The firft and fifth forts are annual plants with us ; the feeds of thefe muft be fown on a hot-bed eaily in the fpring of the year, and when the plants are come up two inches high, th?y fhould be transplanted into fmall pots filled with good frefti earth, and the pots plunged into a hot-bed of tanners bark ; when the plants have obtained fome ftrength, they muff have a great fhare of free air, by railing the glades in the day time ; and in June they may be expofed more to the open air, by which time they will begin to pro- duce their flowers, which will be fucceeded by pods in a fhort time after, and in Auguft their feeds will be perfected, if the plants are brought forward in the fpring. The fecond fort grows to the height of five or fix feet, and will abide two or three years, if it is preierved in a very warm ftove in winter •, this produces fpikes of flowers from the wings of the leaves on the tides of the Items of the plant, and fometimes will perfedr its feeds in England. This muft be raifed in a hot-bed, as was directed for the two former, but muft not be wholly expofed to the open air, even in the hottefi: weather. The fourth fort is fuppofed to be promifeboufiy ufed to make the Indigo, but the firft is the common fort which is cultivated in the Engfifh plantations in America ; but I have been affured by a perfon of great credit, that he. has made as good Indigo from the fecond fort, as any that was produced in our plan- tations ; and this being a much larger plant, will af- ford a greater quantity from the fame compafs of ground, than any one of the other fpecies, - efpecially if cut before the ftalks grow ligneous ; and this fort will grow on poorer land, f° may be cultivated in fuch places where the firft fort will not thrive fo well, by which means great improvements may be made with this plant in our American plantations. There are fome other forts of this plant which are natives of India, from which this commodity is made; two of which, viz. the fourth and fifth forts I have had growing in the garden at Chelfea, both which are very- different in their leaves and pods from either of the American forts which have been cultivated. I have alfo received feeds from India of the third fort, which, is the fame fpecies of Indigo which grows naturally in South Carolina, and which was greatly ffteemed • 7 F fome I N D feme years ago by the Indigo planters of that country. For the beauty of the commodity which it produced •, • but the plants being (lender and thinly garniilied with leaves, which were final!, they did not furnifli a quantity of Indigo in proportion to their bulk, fo of late this fort has not been, much cultivated there ; though the account which I received with the feeds was, that it was what the beft Indigo of India was made from. The whole procefs in making the Indigo being ex- actly defcribed by Pere Labat in his voyages, I thought it would not be unacceptable to the Englifh reader, to tranilate his account in this place, which is as follows : There was formerly a great deal of Indigo made in the pariih of Macauba : there is not a ftream nor river in it, where one does not meet with Indigo works, that is, backs or vats of (tone- work well ce- mented, in which the plant that yields the dye is put to digeft : there are ufually three of thefe vats one above another, in the manner of a cafcade ; fo that the fecond, which is lower than the bottom of the firft, may receive the liquor contained in the firft, when the holes which are made in the bottom of the firft are unftopped ; and that the third may in its turn receive what was in the fecond. The firft, largeft, and higheft of thefe vats is called the fteeper or rot ; it is ulually made twenty feet long, twelve or fifteen feet wide, and three or four feet deep. The fecond is called the battery, it is almoft half as fmall again as the firft : and the third, which is much lefs than the fecond, is called the devilling. The names of the two firft perfedly agree with their ufes, for the plant is laid to fteep in the firft, where it ferments, is macerated, and becomes like rotten dung : after that the falts and fubftance of the leaf and rind are diffufed in the water by the fermentation, which the heat and ripenefs of the plant has excited in it. It is in the fecond that they agitate and beat this water, impregnated and loaded with the falts of the plant, till having collefted, re-united, and, as it were, coagulated them with one another, they form the particles which compofe the dye. As for the name of the third, I do not fee how it agrees with it, unlefs it be becaufe this vat is deeper coloured than the others ; for the Indigo already formed remaining in it, confequently dyes and co- lours it much deeper than the others. To which I fhould add, that it is only at St. Domingo that they make ufe of this name. In the Windward Iflands they call this laft vat the fettler, and this name fuits it perfectly well, becaufe it is in this, that the Indigo begun in the fteeper, and perfected in the battery unites, grows into a mafs, feparates itlelffrom the particles of water which remained in it, leaves them at top, and fettles at the bottom of the vat ; whence it is taken out to be put into little bags, and then into the boxes, as I fhall mention hereafter. Nothing ought to be omitted in the building and making thefe vats fubftantial ; the ftrength of the fer- mentation is fo great, that unlefs the ftone-work and plafter be very well done, and the mortar carefully chofen and wrought, they crack; and a very mo- derate crack is fufficient to let out a vat of Indigo, and caufe a confiderable lofs to the owner. When this misfortune happens, the following is an eafy and infallible remedy, which I can anfwer for, as having experienced it. Take fome fea {hells of any kind whatever, pound them without burning them, powder them, and fift them through a fine fieve. Take an equal quantity of quick lime and lift it ; mix thefe together with water enough to make a ftiff mortar, and as quick as you can, ftop the cracks of your vats with it. This mixture incorpo- rates, fticks, and dries in a moment, and immediately prevents the matter’s running out of the vat. Every body does, or fhould know, that Indigo is a dye ufed to dye wool, filk, cloths, and fluffs, blue : the Spaniards call it Anilo : the fineft they make, i. e. in New Spain, comes from Guatimala, which makes I N D a great many people call it barely Giiatimalo. It is made alfo in the Kail-Indies, particularly in the do- minions of the Great Mogul, the kingdom of Go!- conda, and other places thereabouts, as Mr. Tavernier relates in his voyages. This fort is in. Europe oftener called India than Indigo or Anil, people taking for its proper name the name of the place it was made at. Some authors, and among others. Father du Tertre of our order, having fancied that the Indigo which comes from the Eaft-Indies is more beautiful, finer, and dearer, than that which comes from the Weft- Indies, which they call flat Indigo, while they call that from the Eaft barely India. They would have lpoken more properly, if they had called the flatter round India ; for, by their leave, all the difference between the two Indias, or Indigos, is, that that made in the Eaft-Indies is fit aped like half eggs, and that of the Weft like cakes ; tor as for goodneJs and beauty, the one will not be- a whit fuperior to the other, if both are wrought with equal care and fi- delity. The fhape of the Oriental Indigo obliges the mer- chants who would carry it into Europe to pound it, that they may put the more into the chefts, or barrels they put it up in. It is certain, that being thus pounded, its grain having been broken under the peftle, ground, and reduced to powder, makes it finer than the Weft-Indian Indigo-, which coming in cakes juft as it was dried, {hews its nr air? entire, and confequently muft appear coarfer ; but what Is that to the intrinfic goodnefs of the commodity ; I main- tain it is the fame in both, though there feems to be a difference. To be convinced of this truth, take a lump of fu- gar equally white throughout, break it in two, pound one part of it, and reduce it to powder ; this will look finer and whiter than that which is whole, which, proceeds only from this, that the grain of the one has been feparated and divided into a greater number of parts, which, though very fmall, and almoft inlen- fible, yet have a greater number of furfaces, and con- {equently reflect more ligh ; whereas the other re- maining entire, prefenting ro the fight only a large grain, which has but little lurface, of courfe reflects lefs light, and by a neceffary confequence muft ap- pear leis white ; which is the fame as appearing left beautiful, fince the beauty of fugar confifts in its whitenefs. Methinks we may reafon in the fame manner upon Indigo, and lay, that casteris paribus, the Weft-Indian Indigo is as beautiful as the Eaft- Indian, when they are both wrought alike. I think I ftiould add, that the American Indigo is beuer for ufe than the other; for who does not fee, that there is no pounding this dye, without the moft fubtle parts being difiipated in the air, as Mr. Ta- vernier allows f And who can doubt that thefe parts are the beft, and thofe that go fartheft when it is ufed ? I grant that the Indigo which comes from the Eaft- Indies, is dearer than that which is made in the Weft- Indies ; the reafon is plain, it comes farther, runs greater rifles ; and thofe who bring it would not find their account in felling it, at the fame price with that which comes from a much nearer place ; but that does not at all prove it to be more beautiful, or better. Indigo is compofed of the fait and fubftance of the leaves and rind of a plant of the fame name ; fo that one may fay, it is a diffolution or digeftion of the plant, caufed by the fermentation it has excited in the water it was laid to fteep in. I know iome writers pretend, that the fubftance of the leaves does not pro- duce the Indigo, which (as they would have it) is only a vifeous tin&ure, or colour, which the fermen- tation of the plant diffufes in the water : but before I take their words for it, I defire they would tell me what becomes of the fubftance of the plant; for when it is taken out of the fteeper, it is certain, that it has no longer the fame weight, confidence, nor colour, it had before. The leaves, which were very plump. plump, and very full of juice, are light, flabby, and withered, and look more like dung than any thing elfe, which makes them frequently give the name of rot to the fteeper. If then we no longer find in the leaves, and the reft of the plant, the fame fubftance that was obfervable in it before it was laid to fteep, is it not moft natural to believe, that it is the fame fubftance and faks, which, being freed from their in- clofures, and diffufed in the water, have thickened it, and by their union or coagulation have formed that blue mafs which they call Indigo, fo ufeful in painting and dyeing ? The culture.] This plant requires a good rich level foil, not too dry ; it greatly robs and impoverifties the ground where it grows, and muft be alone. There cannot be too much care taken to keep it clean, and to hinder herbs of any kind whatever from growing near it. They weed and cleanfe the ground where they intend to plant the Indigo feed, five times over. I fhould think they fhould call it fowing, but the term of planting is confecrated in our ifles, and I do not think I ought for the fake of a word to fall out with our planters, who delerve our efteem upon a thoufand accounts, though they have got a habit of murdering the French language. They fometimes carry their neatnefs to luch a pitch, that they fweep the piece of ground as they do a room. After that they make the holes wherein the feeds are to be put for this purpofe •, the flaves, or others, who are to wo k at it, range themfelves in the fame line, at the top of the piece of ground ; and going backwards they make little drills the breadth of their hoe, of the depth of two or three inches, at about a foot diftance every way, and as much as poflible in a ftrait line. When they are come to the end of the ground, each furnifhes himfelf with a little bag of feeds, and re- turning that way they came, they put eleven or thirteen feeds into each of the holes they have made. A relick of fuperftition has taught them that the number muft be odd. I by no means approve of this practice, but I fhall take care not to endeavour to fhew them the ufeleffnefs and folly of it, being fa- tisfied I fhall only lofe my time and labour. This work is the moft toilfome of any in the manu- facture of Indigo ; for thofe who plant it muft be al- ways ftooping, without rifing up, till the planting of the whole length of the piece is ended ; fo that when that is large, which almoft always happens, they are obliged to remain two hours, and often more, in this pofture. When they come to the top of the piece, they go back again, and cover the holes where they have put the feed in, by th rafting in with their feet the earth they.had taken out ot them, and fo the feed is covered with about two inches of earth. The culture of this plant may be rendered very eafy, provided the inhabitants of our colonies in America could be brought to make ufe of the drill plough ; for with this inftrument two perfons and a horfe or mule will fow more land with Indigo in one day, than twenty perfons can perform in the fame time, in the method now praCtiled ; for the plough makes the drill, and the hopper which is fixed to the plough follows, and fcatters the feeds at equal diftances in the drills ; and another inftrument behind the hopper covers in the drills, whereby the whole operation is performed at the fame time, and with great eafe. In- deed the ufe of this machine muft be underftood by the perfons who are to perform it, otherwife they will do it in a bad manner, but a little pra&ice will bring any perfon to the right ufe of it. As the Indigo is fown in rows, a hoeing plough may be made of a proper dimenfion, in order to clean the ground between the rows •, with this contrivance it may be performed in much lefs time than in the me- thod now praCtifed. But in doing of this, I would advife the ftirring of the ground, foon after the Indigo plants are come up, before the weeds have got much ftrength, at which time they are foon deftroyed ; and by. ftirring of the ground the plants will be greatly encouraged ; and the ftrongeft and moft thriving plants will always make the belt Indigo. What Le Bat fays of cutting the plants before they are too old, in order to have the Indigo of a better colour, is certainly right. Therefore as foon as the flowers begin to appear, it fhould be cut - 5 for if it ftands much longer the Items of the plants will grow hard and ftringy, and the lower leaves will change to a yellowifh colour, which will render the Indigo lefs valuable *, as will alfo the plants being too cloie together, which will occafion their bottom leaves to decay for want of free air : the fame will happen if weeds are fuffered to grow among the plants. There- fore there muft be great regard to their being kept always clean. Though all feafons are good for the planting of In- digo, yet care muft be taken not to put it in the ground in a dry time : it is true, the feed may keep a whole month in the ground, without being fpoiled j but when it is planted fo, one runs the rifk of having it eaten up by vermin, or carried away by the wind, or choked by the weeds that fpring up with it ; fo that the prudent planters never run the rifk of planting it dry, i. e. at a time when they do not probably expetft rain in two or three days after the planting is ended : they chufe therefore, ufually, a moift feafon, which promifes rain, and then they are fure of feeing the plant fpring up in three or four days after its being planted. Notwithftanding all the care that has been taken in clearing the ground where the feeds have been planted, the planter muft not be carelefs when the Indigo is got above ground ; becaufe the goodnefs of the foil, joined to the moifture and warmth of the climate, and the plentiful dews that fall every night, makes a prodigious quantity of weeds fpring up, which would choke and abfolutely fpoil the Indigo, if extreme care was not taken to weed them up as foon as they appear, and to keep the plant extraordinary neat ; and very often the weeds are partly the caufe of the breeding of a kind of caterpillars, which de- vour all the leaves in a fhort time. From the time of the plants rifing above ground, to its perfect maturity, is but two months, and then it is fit to cut : if one was to ftay longer it would blofiom, its leaves would grow drier and harder, and confe- quently they would yield lefs fubftance, and the co • lour would not be near fo beautiful. After this firft cutting, the new branches and leaves which the plant produces may be cut about every fix weeks, provided the feafon be rainy, and that care be taken not to cut it in a time of drought, becaufe then we fhould infallibly lofe the plant, or, as they call it there, the Choupues, and be obliged to plant again ; but all things being rightly managed, the plant may laft two years ; after which it muft be plucked up, and new ones planted. When the plant is ripe, which is known by the leaves, which grow brittle and lefs fupple, they cut it fome inches from the ground. They ufe for the cutting of it great crooked knives made like fickles. Some planters make it into bundles like double bottles of hay, that a negro may eafily carry them to the fteeper ; but moft people put it into large pieces of coarfe cloth, which they tie by the four corners ; and this is more convenient, theplantis lefs handled and fqueezed, and the fmall are carried away as fafely as the great •, and befides the work goes on quicker this way, than in making bottles *, and as time is precious every where, and efpecially in America, there cannot be too much care taken not to lofe any. Eighteen or twenty packets of plants, each about the fize of two bottles of hay, are fufficient to fill a fteeper of the afore-mentioned fize. When it is filled with water, fo that it covers the plants, they put pieces of wood on the top, that the plants may not rife above the water (much after the manner as they do upon the Grapes that are put into the prefs) and let all ferment. According as.the heat is greater or Ids, or the plant more or lefs ripe, the fermencsCon is raifed 1'ooner or later. I N D later, foraetinies in fix, eight, or ten hours ; and- fometim.es one is obliged to wait eighteen or twenty hours, but very feldom longer. Then the effeCt of the fermentation vifibly appears, the water heats, and boils up on all iides, as the Grapes do in the vat ; <■ and the water which at firft was clear, infenfibly grows thick, and becomes of a blue, inclining to a Violet colour. Then without meddling at all with the plants, they open the cocks, which are at the bottom of the flee per, and let all this water, loaded with the falts and fubftance of the plant, which were freed by the fermentation, run into the battery ; and while they throw away as ufelefs, and aim oil rotten, the plants that were in the deeper, and clean it, that it may be filled with frefh, they beat the water, which they have Jet out of the deeper into the battery. They formerly tiled for this purpofe a battledoor wheel, whole axle was placed upon the middle of the vat, and which they turned by two handles that were at the end of the fame axle. Since that, in the room of battledoors, they have put little bottomlefs boxes, and afterwards others, whofe bottoms were bored full of holes : at prefent they ufe a kind of pretty large pails, fattened to ftrong poles, placed upon chande- liers, by means of which, the negroes violently and continually raife, beat, and ftir the water, till the fairs and other parts of the fubftance of the plant are united, and diffidently, as it were, coagulated to in- corporate. The hitting this minute exa&ly ftiews the (kill of him who overfees the making of the Indigo •, for if he makes them leave off beating a little too foon, the grain not yet formed, remains difperfed in the water, ■without finking and gathering together at the bottom of the vat, and is loft with the water, when they are obliged to let it out, which is a great lofs to the owffer •, or if when it is formed they continue to beat, they ’ diiTolve it, and the fame inconvenience follows. This minute then mu ft be nicked, and when it is found, they muft leave off beating and let the matter reft. To find this minute, they make ufe of a little filver cup, defigned for this ufe alone ; they fill it with this water, while the negroes beat it, and according as they obferve that the feces fink to the bottom of the cup, or remain difperfed in the water, they ceafe, or continue beating*. The General Dictionary printed at Trevoux, relates very ferioufly, upon the credit of father Plunder a minim, that the Indigo-maker having taking up fome of the water of this battery in his cup, fpfts in it ; and that if the Indigo be formed, the faeces immediately fink to the bottom of the cup, and that then he makes them leave off beating, if not, he makes them con- tinue it. This is not the only incident in which people have impofed upon father Plumier’s credulity and fimplicity. I have been a witnefs of it upon other occafions. When they have left off beating they let the matter reft, the feces fink to the bottom of the vat, and gather together like a kind of mud ; and the water freed from all the falts it was impregnated with, fwims above it, and grows clear. Then they open the cocks, which are placed in the battery at different diftances from the bottom, and let this water run away ; and when they come to the furface of the fas- ces, they open the cocks of the bottom, that the feces may all fall into the devilling or fettler. There they let it fettle a little while longer, after which they put it into linen bags, fifteen or eighteen inches long, made with a point, where it perfectly purges itfelf from the reft of the water, which remained among its particles. When that is done, they fpread it in little boxes three or four feet long, two feet broad, and about three inches deep, and expofe it to the air to dry it perfeddy. They obferve not to expofe it to the fun, becaufe it would ftarve the colour in drying it ; and they take a great deal of care to keep it from the rain, becaufe that would diffolve and utterly fpoil it. I N D It fometimes happens that the caterpillars get among the Indigo , and if they are let alone ever io little a while they eat all the leaves, and often the very nnd and ends of the branches, and kill the flocks ; it is but loft time to endeavour to deftroy them, or hinder them from ravaging a whole piece, by. popping them with a ditch. The fureft way is to cut down the In- digo with all fpeed, let its age be what it will, and to throw both plants and caterpillars together into the fteeper ; there they burft, and part with what they had devoured, and the Indigo is not the lefs beau- tiful for it. It is true, when the plant is not come to its perfect maturity, it yields much lefs ; but many experiments have taught us, that the colour it yields is much more beautiful ; fo that what is loft one way is gained another. I would not wait for fo perfeCt a ripenefs before I cut the plant. Perhaps all the fecret of thole, whofe In- digo is fo much extolled beyond ours, lies only in cutting the plant when it yields the livelieft colour. I have experienced that in leaving fome cochineal flies upon fome Indian Figs, which were too ripe, inftead of being red, they grew of a filemot colour, like the fruit they fed upon. The fame thing might happen in Indigo ; and what I here propofe is not a ground- lefs doubt, fince it is backed by the experiment I have juft related; which plainly proves, that the fame plant, cut at different ages, produces colours different in beauty. I would not venture to give this advice to men wedded to their intereft, who value the quan- tity rather than the quality of their commodity 5 but I believe I have nothing to fear from our iflanders, who are generous and magnificent, fometimes even beyond their abilities : I adv/fe them therefore to make different trials, as to the foil, the feafon, the age of the plant, the water they fteep it in, the point of dif- folution, &c. and I am fure, that with a little time, labour, and patience, they will make Indigo that will equal, and even excel, the moft boafted Indigo of foreign countries. The planters of St. Domingo know that in 1701 their coarfe fugar was very bad, and was not made without infinite trouble ; and at prefent every body allows, that by their labour, affiduity, and enquiries, it is grown much more efteemed than that of the Windward Iflands : why may not the fame be hoped for in Indigo ? Mr. Pomet, author of the General Hiftory of Drugs, fays in his firft part, chap. 10. That the Indians of the village of Sarquefle, near Amadabat, ufe only the leaves of the Indigo, and throw away the plant and branches; and that it is from thence the moft efteemed Indigo comes. I am pretty much of his opinion ; for we fee, that thofe who take the pains to ftrip off the Grapes from the branches, before they put them into the vat, and throw away the ftalks entirely, make much the belt wine ; becaufe the ftalks always contain an acid, which mixes with the juice of the Grape in the treading and preffmg them both together ; and for the fame reafon, the ftalks of the Indigo plant muft contain a liquid much lefs perfeCt in colour than that of the leaves : but one ought to have the leifure and patience of the Indians to undertake ftich a work, and have work- men as cheap as they are in that country, fuppofing the faCt true, as Mr. Pomet delivers it from the re- lation of Mr. T avernier. Though I am a great friend to thole experiments which may carry our manufactures to a greater per- fection, yet i dare not propofe this, becaufe of the expence they muft be at, who would try it ; and be- caufe the profit arifing from it would not perhaps quit coft : however, I have here given the method of the Indians of Sarqueffe, that I may have no reafon to re- proach myfelf with having omitted a thing which may be of fome ufe to my country. Good Indigo ought to be fo light, as to fwim upon water ; the more it finks the more it is to be fufpefted of being mixed with earth, afhes, or powdered Hate. Its colour ought to be a deep blue, inclining to a Violet, brilliant, lively, and bright: it ought to be more I N D more beautiful within than without, and look (hinhig, and as it were filvered. If it is too heavy in proportion to its bulk, it ought to be fufpeded, and its quality examined into ; for as it often bears a conliderable price, it is fit that thofe who buy it, fhould be acquainted with the frauds that may be committed in it. The firft is the beating the plant too much in the deeper, that the leaves and rind of it may be entirely coniumed. It is certain that the quantity of the mat- ter is very confiderably increafed by this diffolution, but the Indigo is a great deal the lefs beautiful for it ; it is blackifh, thick, heavy, and fitter to be thrown away than ufed. The fecond is the mixing afhes, earth, or a certain brown (hining fand (which is pretty commonly found in the bays by the fea-fide) and efpecially powdered flate, with the feces, as they fall into the devilling, and Ibirring all well together, that it may incorporate, and the fraud not appear : and this fraud is much more eafily committed in the powdered Indigo, than in that which is in cakes ; becaufe it is very difficult for thofe heterogeneous bodies to unite fo well together, as not to make in many places, as it were, beds of a different matter ; and then, by breaking the piece of Indigo, they are eafily perceived. The two following expedients may be made ufe of, in order to know the goodnefs or badnefs of Indigo. The firft is to diflolve a bit of it in a glafs of water. If it is pure and well made, it it will entirely diftblve ; but if it is adulterated, the foreign matter will fink to the bottom of the glafs. The fecond is to burn it. The good Indigo will burn all away, whereas the afhes, earth, fand, and flate, remain after the true Indigo is confumed. In 1694, Indigo was fold at the Windward Iflands, from three livres ten fols, to four livres per pound, according to its beauty, and the number of veffels to be freighted with it. I have known it fince at a much lower price j however, the planter would not fail of making a very confiderable profit of it, though he Ihould fell it for no more than forty fols per pound, becaufe this commodity requires fewer utenfils and lefs. charges than a fugar-work. Since the cultivation of Indigo was introduced in South Carolina, great quantities of that ufeful dye has been brought from thence to England •, and it may be hoped that the encouragement granted by parliament to the planters, will enable them to profecute this branch of commerce with fuch fuccefs, as to be a great national benefit, and of equal advantage to that colony : but as yet the planters have not arrived to fo much perfection in the making of it as could be wifhed ; for mold of the Indigo which I have feen of the produce of that country, has been fo hard as to render it difficult to diflolve, occafioned by their pour- ing a quantity of lime-water into the vat, in order to make the feces of the plant fubfide. I have alfo been informed by letters from many of the planters, that after the fermentation of the plant in the vat, it comes out again almoft entire, being but in a very fmall proportion leflened, either in bulk or weight. This may probably be owing, in great part, to their culture of the plant, as alfo from their vats not being large enough to contain a fufficient quantity of the herb, to make the fermentation ftrong enough to diffolve it ; or from the vats being built in the open air, whereby the fermentation may be impeded, by the cooler breezes of the evening air : for in the iflands where the belt Indigo is made, their vats are all built under cover, where their heat is much greater than that in Carolina, therefore this requires the attention of the planters of Indigo. As to the culture of the plant, by all the information I have been able to procure from thence, they commit a great error in fowing their feeds too thick, whereby the plants are drawn up with (lender fterns, which are not fufficiently garnifhed with leaves ; nor are the leaves fo large and fucculent as they would naturally I N O grow, were the plants allowed a greater (hare of room* fo that the (talks confift of little elfe but ftrong vef- fels which are not diffolvable by the fermentation, and it is only the upper parts of the plant which are fur- nifhed with leaves, like young; trees growing clofe to- gether which are drawn up with (lender (terns, having no lateral branches, nor leaves, but at their tops therefore it is not to be fuppofed, a great quantity of In- digo can be produced from plants 1b managed ; for it is a common obfervation of the cultivators of Woad, that when their plants fpire, and have narrow thin leaves, they produce but little of the dye-, fo that they make choice of rich ftrong land for fowing the feeds of this plant, and are careful to thin them* that they may have room to fpread, and produce large fucculent leaves, from which they always reap the greateft profit. If the planters of Indigo in America would but imitate the cultivators of Woad in this par- ticular, they would certainly find their advantage in fo doing-. Another thing in which they err is, letting the plant (land too long before they cut it, fuppofing from the height of the plant to procure a great quantity of the dye ; but in this they are greatly miftaken, for the older the plant is before it is cut, the drier and firmer will be the (talks , therefore but little of the plant will be diifolved by fermentation, nor will the feces of the old plants be near fo beautiful as that of the young. Therefore it is' to be wiflied, that they would try fome few experiments in the culture and manage- ment of the plants, by fowing thin, and keeping the plants pferfedly clean from weeds as alfo to cut them while young and full of juice, and hereby they will be better informed how to improve it to the greateft ad- vantage. But as labour is dear in that country, fo many perfons probably objeft to the expence of culti- vating the Indigo in this method , therefore, to avoid this, I have before propofed fowing the feeds with a drill plough, whereby the firft expence will be greatly leflened, and the feeds more equally fown , and by the ufe of the hoe plough, ten acres may be kept clean from weeds with as fmall expence, as one when ma- naged by the hand hoe *, and by ftirring of the ground often, and earthing up the plants, they would grow much ftronger, be lefs liable of being deftroyed by- flies, and have larger and more fucculent (talks and leaves. INGA. See Mimosa. INOCULATING, or Budding. This is com- monly praCtifed upon all forts of (tone fruit, in parti- cular, fuch as Peaches, Nectarines, Cherries, Plums, &c. as alfo Oranges and Jafmines, and is preferable to any fort of grafting for moft forts of fruit. The me- thod of performing it is as follows : you muft be pro- vided with a (harp penknife, having a flat haft (the ufe of which is to raile the bark of the ftock, to ad- mit the bud) and fome found bafs mat, which ffiould be foaked in water to increafe its (Length* and make it more pliable ; then having taken off the cuttings from the trees you would propagate, you fhould choofe a fmooth part of the ftock about five or fix inches above the furface of the ground, if defigned for dwarfs, and for half ftandards at three feet , but for ftandards, they (hould be budded fix or more feet above ground ; then with your knife make an hori- zontal cut crofs the rind of the ftock, and from the middle of that cut make a flit downwards about two inches in length, fo that it may be in the form of a T ; but you muft be careful not to cut too deep, left you wound the ftock : then having cut off the leaf from the bud, leaving the foot-ftalk remaining, you (hould make a crofs cut about half an inch below'the eye, and with your knife flit off the bud, with part of the wood to it, in form of an efcutcheon : this done, you muft with your knife pull off that part of the wood which was taken with the bud, obferving whether the eye of the bud be left to it, or not (for all thofe buds which lofe their eyes in (tripping, (hould be thrown away, being good for nothing) then having gently raifed the bark of the ftock where thtf croft ii> 7 G ’ eifion Hi I N U tifion was made, with the flat haft of your penknife clear to the wood, you fhould thruft the bud therein, obferving to place it fmooth between the rind and the wood of the flock, cutting off any part of the rind belonging to the bud, which may be too long for the flit made in the ftock ; and fo having exactly fitted the bud to the ftock, you muft tie them clofely round with oafs mat, beginning at the under part of the flit, and fo proceed to the top, taking care that you do not bind round the eye of the bud, which fhould be left open. When your buds have been inoculated three weeks or a month, you will fee which of them have taken ; thofe of them which appear flirivelled and black, be- ing dead, but thofe which remain frelh and plump, you may depend are joined ; and at this time you fhould loofen the bandage, which, if not done in time, will pinch the ftock, and greatly injure, if not deftroy, the bud. The March following you muft cut off the ftock about three inches above the bud, doping it that the wet may pafs off, and not enter the ftock ; to this part of the, ftock left above the bud, it is very proper to fallen the fhoot which proceeds from the bud, aafi* would be in danger of being blown out, if not pre- vented ; but this muft continue no longer than one year, after which it muft be cut off clofe above the bud, that the ftock may be covered thereby. The time for Inoculating is, from the middle of June until the middle of Auguft, according to the forwardnefs of the feafon, and the particular forts of trees to be propagated; but the time may be eafily known, by trying the buds, whether they will come off well from the wood. However, the moft ge- neral rule is, when you obferve the buds formed at the extremity of the fame year’s fhoots, which Is a flgn of their having finifhed their fpring growth. The ftrft fort commonly inoculated is the Apricot, and the laffc the Orange-tree, which fhould never be done until the middle of Auguft ; and in doing of this work, you fhould always make choice of cloudy weather ; for if it be done in the middle of the day, in very hot weather, the fhoots will perfpire fo fail, as to leave the buds deftitute of moifture ; nor fhould yon take off the cuttings from the trees long before they are ufed ; but if you are obliged to fetch your cut- tings from fome diftance, as it often happens, you fhould then be provided with a tin box or cafe, hav- ing a focket about ten inches long, and a cover to the top, which muft have five or fix holes ; in this focket you fhould put as much water as will fill it about two or three inches high, and place your cuttings therein in an upright pofition, fo that that part which was cut from the tree may be fet in the water, and fo fallen down the cover to keep out the air ; and the holes in the cover will be fufficient to let the perfpi- ration of thefe branches pafs off, which, if pent in, would be very hurtful to them ; you muft alfo be careful to carry it upright, that the water may not reach to the buds ; for it is a very wrong pradlice in thofe who throw their cuttings all over in water, which fo faturates the buds with moifture, that they have no attractive force left to imbibe the fap of the ftock, whereby they very often mifcarry. But before I leave this head, I beg leave to obferve, that though it is the ordinary pradtice to diveft the bud of that part of the wood which was taken' from the fhoot with it yet, in many forts of tender trees. It is beft to preferve a little wood to the bud, with- out which they often mifcarry. The not obferving this, has occanoned fome people to imagine, that fome forts of trees are not to be propagated by Inoculation ; whereas, if they had performed it in this method, they might have fucceeded, as I have feveral times experienced. I N T Y B U S. See Cxchorium. INULA. Lin. Gen. Plant. 860. Enula. Caefalp. He- lenium. Raii Meth. 33. After. Tourn. Infc. R. H. 481. tab. 274. Elecampane. I N U ■ The Characters are. It hath a radiated compound flower , with an imbricated empdement , compofed of loofe , fpreading , fmall leaves , the outer being the broadeft, The dijk , or middle of the flower , is compofed of hermaphrodite florets , and, the bor - . der, or ray of the female half florets , jlretched out like v a tongue. The hermaphrodite florets are funnel-fhapea ?, erects and cut into five fegments at the top ; thefe have five fhort fender flamina , terminated by cylindrical fiurn- mits , which coalefce at the top : they have one long ger- tnen , crowned with down, Jiipporting a fender ftyle the length of the flamina , crowned by an upright bifid ftig- ma. The female half florets have a narrow entire tongue , no flamina , but a long crowned ger men with a hairy ftyle, and an upright fligma. The germen in both flowers be- come a fmgle, narrow, four-cornered feed , crowned with a down , fitting on a naked receptacle. This genus of plants is ranged in the fecond fedlion of Linnaeus’s nineteenth clafs, intitled Syngenefia Polygamia fuperflua, which includes the plants with a compound flower, made up of hermaphrodite florets in the difk, and female half florets for the rays, which are fruitful. The Species are, 1. Inula (’ Helenium ) foliis amplexicaulibus ovatis, ru~ gofis, fubtus tomentofus, calycum fquamis ovatis. Amoen. Acad. i.p. 410. Elecampane with oval rough leaves , which embrace the ftalks , woolly on their under fide , and the fcales of the empalement oval. After omnium maximus, Helenium di&us. Tourn. Inft. 483. The great eft Starwort, called Elecampane. 2. Inula {Odor a) foliis amplexicaulibus dentatis hirfu- tiflimis radicalibus ovatis, caulinus lanceolatis cauie paucifloro. Lin. Sp. Plant. 1236. Inula with hairy in- dented leaves embracing the ftalks , thofe at the bottom oval , but thofe on the ftalks fpear-fhaped , which have but few flowers. After luteus radice odora. C. B. P. 266. Yellow Starwort with a flweet root. 3. Inula ( Salicina ) foliis feflilibus lanceolatis recurvis ferrato-fcabris, floribus inferioribus altioribus, ramis fub-angulatis. Amoen. Acad. 1. p. 410. Inula with fpear-fhaped , recurved , rough , fawed leaves , fitting clofe to the ftalks , and the under flowers growing taller than the upper , and angular branches. After montanus lu- teus, falicis glabro folio. C. B. P. 266. Yellow Moun- tain Starwort with a fmooth Willow leaf. 4. Inula ( Germanica ) foliis feflilibus lanceolatis recur- vis, fcabris, floribus fubfafciculatis. Lin. Sp. Plant. 883. Inula with fpear-fhaped recurved leaves fitting clofe to the ftalks , which are rough , and flowers growing in clufters. After Thuringiacus altifiimus latifolius, montanus, flore luteo parvo. Haller. Jen. 181. Talleji broad-leaved Mountain Starwort of Thuringia , with a fmall yellow flower. 5. Inula ( Crithmoides ) foliis linearibus carnofis tricuf- pidatis. Lin. Sp. Plant. 883. Inula with narrow flefloy leaves ending in three points. After maritimus flavus crithmum chryfanthemum di&us. Raii Syn. Ed. 3. p. 174. Yellow maritime Starwort, called Golden Sam- phire. 6. Inula {Montana) foliis lanceolatis hirfutis integerri- mis, cauie unifloro calyce brevi imbricato. Lin. Sp. Plant. 124. Inula with hairy, fpear-fhaped, entire leaves , one flower on a ftalk, having a fljori ficaly cup. After montanus luteo magno flore. C. B. P. 267. Moun- tain Starwort with a large yellow flower. 7. Inula {Oculis Chrifti) foliis amplexicaulibus oblongis, integerrimis hirfutis, cauie pilofo, corymbofo. Lin. Sp. Plant. 1237. Inula with oblong, entire , hairy leaves, and flowers growing in a corymbus. Conyza Pannonica lanuginofa. C. B. P. 265. Hungarian woolly Fleahane. 8. Inula {Brit arnica) foliis amplexicaulibus lanceola- tis, diftinbtis ferratis, fubtus villofis, cauie ramofo villofo erebto. Flor. Suec. 756. Inula with fpear- fioaped fawed leaves embracing the ftalk , hairy on their under fide , and an ereli branching ftalk. After paluftris luteus, folio longiore lanuginofo. Tourn. Inft. 483. Yellow Marfih Starwort with a longer woolly leaf. 9. Inula INU 9. Inula (. Hirta ) foliis feffilibus knceolatis, recurvatis, fubferrato-fcabris, floribus inferioribus, altioribus, caule teretiufculo fubpilofc. Lin. Sp. 12 39. Inula with fpear-fhaped , recurved , rough leaves, fitting clofe to the folks, and the lower flowers rifling above the other. Af- ter luteus, falicis folio hirfuto. C. B. P. 266. Yellow After with a hairy Willow leaf 10. Inula ( Bifrons ) foliis oblongis decurrentibus den- ticulatis, floribus congeftis terminalibus fubfeflilibus. Lin. Sp. 1236. Inula with oblong indented leaves run- ning along the flalks, and flowers in ctufters terminating th ft a Iks f Conyza Pyrenaica, foliis primulas veris. Par. Bat. 127. 11. Inula iSquarofa) foliis ovalibus Isevibus reticulato- venofls fubcrenatis, calyciSus fquarrofis. Lin. Sp. 1 240. Inula with fmooth oval leaves and netted veins, with rough empalements to the flowers. After Conyzoides odora- tus luteus. Tourn. Inft. 483. j2. Inula ( Canarienflis ) foliis linearibus carnofls tricnl- pidatis, caule fruticofo. Inula with narrow , flejhy, three-pointed leaves , and a fhrubby ftalk. After Cana- rienfis frutefcens, folio tridentato craffa. Hort. Ghelf. 2 6. Shrubby Canary Starwort with a thick leaf, ending in three points. 13. Inula ( Saturejaoides ) foliis linearibus hirfutis op- ~pofitis, pedunculatis nudis unifloris. Inula with narrow hairy flalks placed oppofite, and naked foot-ftalks, having cne 'flower. After faturejas foliis conjugatis & pilofis, flole futeo. Houft. MSS. Starwort with hairy Savoury leaves growing by pairs, and a yellow flower. 14. Inula ( Mariana ) caule eredto hifpido, foliis lan- ceolatis afperis, floribus alaribus folitariis feflllibus, terminalibus umbellatis. Inula with an erehl prickly ftalk, fpear-flsaped rough leaves, flowers proceeding fingly from thefldes of the flalks , fitting clofe , and terminating in an umbel. After luteus Marianus Saligneis brevio- ribus foliis hirfutis pubefeentibus, ftimmo caule ra- mofus. Pluk. Mant. 30. Yellow Starwort of 'Maryland, with Jhorter, fallow , hairy leaves, and the top of the ftalk branching. 15. Inula {Fruticofo) foliis lanceolatis acutis, fubtus trinerviis, fquamis calycinis acutis caule fruticofa. Inula with fpear-fhaped acute leaves, having three veins cn their under fide, the feales of the empalement floarp- pointed, and a fhrubby ftalk. The firft fort grows naturally in feveral parts of Eng- land, but it is alfo cultivated in gardens for the fake of the roots, which are ufed in medicine, and are ac- counted carminative, fudorific, and alexipharmic, of great fervice in fhortnefs of breath, coughs, fluffing of the lungs, and infedtious diftempers. This hath a perennial root, which is thick, branching, and of a ftrong odour. The lower leaves are a foot long, and four inches broad in the middle, rough on their upper fide, but downy on their under. The ftalks rife about three feet high, and divide toward the top into feveral fmaller branches, garniffied with oblong oval leaves, which are indented on their edges, and end in acute points. The flowers terminate the ftalks, each branch ending with one large, yellow, radiated flower, fitting in a fcaly empalement, whofe feales are oval, and placed like the feales on fiffi over each other. The flowers are fucceeded by narrow four-cornered feeds crowned with down. It flowers in June and July, and the feeds ripen the latter end of Auguft. This fort may be propagated by feeds, which fhould be fown in autumn foon after they are ripe ; for if they are kept till the fpring, they feldom grow ; but where they are permitted to fcatter, the plants will corne up the following fpring without any care, and may be either tranfplanted the following autumn ; or if they are defigned to remain, they fhould be hoed out to the diftance of ten inches, or a foot each way, and conftantly kept clean from weeds ■, thefe roots will be fit for ufe the fecond year. But molt people propagate the plant by offsets, which. If carefully taken from the old roots, with a bud, or eye, to each, will take root very eafily •, the beft time for this is the autumn, as foon as the leaves begin to I N U decay thefe fhould be planted in rows about a foot afunder, and nine or ten inches diftance in the rows % the fpring following the ground muft be kept clean from weeds, and if in autumn it is flightly dug, it will promote the growth of the roots \ thefe will be fit for ufe after two years growth, but the roots will abide many years, if they are permitted to ftand •, how- ever, the young roots are preferable to thofe which are old and ftringy. It loves a gentle loamy foil, not too dry. The fecond fort hath a perennial root, from which arife feveral ftalks, about two feet high* The leaves at bottom are oval, indented, and hairy ; thofe above embrace the ftalks with their bafe. The ftalks are divided into feveral branches, garnifhed with a few fcattering yellow flowers. The root has a very fweet odour when broken. It flowers in July, but rarely ripens feeds here. The third fort hath a perennial root, from which arifes many fpear-fhaped leaves, which are fmooth and recurved. The ftalks rife near two feet high 5 they are angular, and branch at the top into feveral foot-ftalks, each fuftaining one yellow radiated flower. It flowers in June, July, and Auguft, and the feeds ripen in September. The fourth fort riles with an upright ftalk between three and four feet high, with fpear-fhaped leaves, which are turned backward, indented on their edges, and rough on their upper fide. The flowers are col- lected in clofe bunches on the upper part of the ftalks 5 they are fmall and yellow. It grows on the Alps, and other mountainous parts of Europe. It flowers in June, and the feeds ripen in autumn. The fifth fort grows naturally on the fea-coafts in ma- ny parts of England. I have feen it growing plenti- fully near Sheernefs, in the ifle of Sheepy, in Kent ; this rifes with an upright ftalk a foot and a half high, garniffied with fleffiy fucculent leaves, which come out in duffers, and are about an inch and a quarter long, and one eighth of an inch broad, ending in three points. The flowers come out at the top of the ftalks in fmall umbels ^ they are yellow, and have a border of rays •, this flowers in J uly, and the feeds ripen in autumn. The younger branches of this plant are frequently fold in the London markets for Samphire •, but this is a great abufe, becaufe this plant has none of the warm aromatic tafte of the true Samphire. The fixth fort grows naturally in Germany ; this rifes with upright ftalks a foot and a half high, garniffied with fpear-fhaped leaves which are covered with foft hairs, and are entire. The ftalks each fupport one large yellow flower, which appears in July, but rarely ripens feeds here. The feventh fort hath a perennial root and an annual ftalk ; this grows naturally in Hungary. The leaves are oblong and hairy the ftalks branch at the top in form of a corymbus. The flowers are fmall, yellow, and are in clofe clufters thefe appear in July, but feldom perfect feeds in England. The eighth fort grows naturally in Auftria, Bohemia, and other parts of Germany ; it hath a perennial root, and an annual ftalk which rifes near two feet high, garniffied with fpear-fhaped woolly leaves, which are fawed, and clofely embrace the ftalks with their bafe. The upper part of the ftalk divides into two or three eredt branches, or foot-ftalks, each fuftaining one pretty large deep yellow flower ; thefe are in beauty in July, but feldom ripen feeds here. The ninth fort grows naturally in the fouth of France, Spain, and Italy ; this hath a perennial root, from whence arife feveral ftalks about one foot high J the lower leaves are fpear-fhaped and prickly ; the upper half embrace the ftalks, which divide into feveral branches, each being terminated by one yellow flower, which appears in July, but feldom perfects feeds here. The tenth fort rifes about a foot high, dividing into many branches, which are garnished by oval hairy leaves, which half embrace the ftalks with their bafe each' \ I I N U each of the branches is terminated by one large yellow flower, whofe empalement is compofed of oval fcales. It flowers in July and Auguft, but never perfeds feeds in this country. The eleventh fort grows naturally in Hungary; this rifes with Angle upright ftalks near two feet high, garnifhed with oval fpear-fhaped leaves, which are llightly indented on the edges, and fit clofe to the ftalks, which are hairy, and divide in form of a co- rymbus at the top. The flowers are pretty large, of a pale yellow colour* and appear in July, but are not fucceeded by feeds in this country. The twelfth fort grows naturally in the Canary Iflands ; this rifes with feveral fhrubby ftalks near four feet high, Which divide into fmaller branches, garnifhed with clufters of narrow flefhy leaves, which are di- vided into three fegments at their points. The flowers come out on the fide of the branches at the top of the ftalks ; they are fmall, and of a pale yellow co- lour, appearing in Auguft. The fecond, third, fourth, fixth, feventh, eighth, and ninth forts are abiding plants, which will thrive and flower in the open air in England ; they may be all propagated by parting of their roots. The beft time for doing of this is in autumn, at which time the plants may be removed ; thefe may be intermixed with other flowering plants in the borders of large gardens, where they will make an agreeable variety during their continuance in flower. As thefe roots multiply pretty faft, they fhould be allowed room to fpread, therefore fhould not be planted nearer than two feet from other plants ; and if they are re- moved every third year, it will be often enough, pro- vided the ground between them is dug every winter, and, in fnmmer, if they are kept clean from weeds, they will require no other care. As fome of thefe forts produce good feeds in England, they may be propagated by fowing of the feeds in the autumn, on a border of light earth expofed to the eaft, where the morning fun only is admitted ; and in the fpring, when the plants appear, they fhould be kept clean from weeds till they are fit to remove, when they fhould be tranfplanted on a fhady border, fix inches afunder, obferving to fhade and water them till they have taken new root ; and during the fummer feafon they fhould be kept clean from weeds, and in autumn they may be tranfplanted into the borders where they are to remain. The tenth fort grows naturally iii the fouth of France, and on the Pyrenean mountains. This hath a thick fibrous root, which is perennial, fending out many oblong indented leaves, whofe bafe runs along the ftalks from one joint to another : from the root arife three or four ftalks about two feet high, which divide each into three or four fmall branches, which are ter- minated by clufters of fmall yellow flowers, fitting clofe between the fmall leaves ; thefe appear in June and July, and are fucceeded by narrow feeds, crowned with down, which ripen in the autumn. It is propagated by feeds, which fhould be fown on a bed of light earth early in the fpring ; in May the plants will appear, which fhould be kept clean from weeds till they are fit to tranfplant, when they fhould be planted in an eaft border, at about fix inches dif- tance each way, watering and fhading them till they have taken new root ; after which they will require no other culture but to keep them clean from weeds till the autumn, when they fhould be planted where they are defigned to remain. The eleventh fort grows naturally near Montpelier, and alio in Italy ; this hath a fibrous root, from which arife two or three ered ftalks about two feet high, garnifhed with ftnooth oval leaves placed alternate, fitting clofe to the ftalks the veins of the leaves are flender, and formed like - net-work. The ftalks are terminated by one yellow flower inclofed in a rough fcaly empalement, and at the two joints of the ftalk immediately under the flower, come out fmall foot- ftalks, with fmaller flowers than thofe on the top. This plant feldom continues above two or three years, ] OH therefore young plants fhould be raifed from feeds to fucceed them. The feeds may be fown at the fame time, and in the fame manner as is directed for the tenth fort, and the plants afterward treated in the fame way. The fifth fort grows naturally in the fait marfhes in feveral parts of England, which are flowed by the tides, therefore is feldom admitted into gardens. The roots of this are perennial, but the ftalks decay in autumn ; and if any one has curioftty to keep a plant or two of it in their gardens, they may tranfplant it in- to a fhady border from the place of its natural growth, and, by keeping it moift in dry weather, it will thrive pretty well, but the ftalks will not rife fo high, nor will the leaves be near fo flefhy as in the fait marlines. The twelfth fort will not live abroad in the open air in England, during the winter feafon, fo muft be re- moved into fhelter in autumn, but fhould have as much free air as poffible at all times, when the wea- ther is mild, otherwife it is apt to draw up weak. In cold weather the plants muft have very little water, for their ftalks and leaves being fucculent, they are very apt to rot with too much wet ; in fummer they fhould be placed abroad with other hardy exotic plants in a fheltered fituation, where they will add to the va- riety, though they are plants of no great beauty, and feldom flower in England, unlefs the fummer is very warm. This is eafily propagated by cuttings, any time in fummer, which, if planted in a fhady border, will take root in a fhort time. The thirteenth fort w r as difcovered by the late Dr, Houftoun, growing naturally at La Vera Cruz ; this rifes with a fnrubby ftalk about two feet high, divid- ing into many fmaller branches, which are hairy, and garnifhed with narrow ftiff leaves placed oppofite, without foot-ftalks ; from the edges of thefe arife long hairs, which are ftiff, and come out by pairs ; at the end of the branches arife the naked foot-ftalks, which are four or five inches long, fuftaining one fmall, yel- low, radiated flower. This is propagated by cuttings during the fummer feafon, which muft planted on a bed of light earth, and fhaded till they have taken root •, after which the plants muft be treated in the fame manner as other hardy exotics, fheltering them from froft in winter. The fourteenth fort was fent me from Maryland, where it grows naturally •, this rifes with a ftrong ftalk about a foot and a half high, which is pretty clofely fet with prickly hairs, and garnifhed with rough fpear-fhaped leaves, about three inches long, and near one inch broad in the middle : toward the upper part of the ftalk there are fingle flowers coming from the wings at each joint, and the ftalk is terminated by a clufter of fmall yellow flowers, dif- pofed in form of an umbel. This plant flowers here in Auguft, but has not as yet perfe&ed feeds in England. The fifteenth fort was difcovered growing naturally at Carthagena, by the late Dr. Houftoun *, this rifes with a fhrubby ftalk to the height of ten or twelve feet, divided into feveral ligneous branches, garnifhed with fpear-fhaped leaves five inches long, and one inch and a half broad in the middle, and fmooth on their upper fide, but on their under have three longitu- dinal veins. The flowers are produced at the end of the branches, having very large fcaly empalements ; they are as large asafmallSun-flower,of apaleyellow colour. This plant is too tender to live in the open air in England, fo muft be conftantly kept in the bark-ftove. It is propagated by feeds, which muft be procured from the country where it naturally grows, for it does not produce any here ; thefe muft be fown upon a hot-bed, and when the plants are fit to remove, they fhould be each planted into a fmall pot filled with light earth, and plunged into a frefh hot-bed, treating them in the fame manner as other tender plants from the fame country. jOHNSONIA. Dale. Callicarpa. Lin. Gen. Plant. 12 7. Spondylococus. Mitch. 20. This plant was fo titled by the late Dr. Dale, of South Carolina, in memory of Dr. Johnlbn, who publifhed an edition of Gerard’s Herbal, corrected and much improved. 3 The JON The Characters are, The flower hath an empalement of one leaf \ cut at the brim into four Jhort fegments , which are erect. It hath one petal , which is tubulous , and divided into four parts at the brim , which fpread open. It hath four Jlender fmn- mits , which are longer than the petal , terminated by ob- long yellow fummits. In the center is fituated a roundifh germen , fupporting a Jlender ftyle , crowned by a thick ob- tufefligma. The germen afterward becomes a flnooth glo- bular-berry., inciting four hard oblong feeds. Dr. Linnaeus ranges this genus of plants in the firft fedtion of his fourth clafs, mtitled Tetrandria Mono- gynia, which includes the plants whofe flowers have four ftamina and one ftyle. As the feeds of this plant were lent me from Carolina by the late Dr. Dale with this title, in the year 1739, and with them the cha- rafters of the genus, which was before it was men- tioned by Dr. Linnaeus, I have continued it under the Dodlor’s title. We have but one Species of this genus, viz. Johnsonia ( Americana ) floribus verticillatis feflilibus, foliis ovato lanceolatis oppofitis, caule fruticofo. Dale. Shrubby Johnfonia with oval fpear-Jhaped leaves placed op- pofite , and flowers growing in whorls fitting clofe to the flalks. Callicarpa. Adt. Upfal. 1741. Mr. Catefby, in his Hiftory of Carolina, has figured it under the following title, Frutex baccifer verticillatus, foliis fca- bris latis dentatis & conjugatis, baccis purpureis dense congeftis, voi. ii. p. 47. This Ihrub grows plentifully in the woods near Charles-town, in South Carolina. It riles from four to fix feet high, lending out many branches from the root, which are woolly when young, like thofe of the Wayfaring-tree, garnillied with oval lpear-lhaped leaves placed oppofite, Landing on Ihort foot-ftalks ; they are about three inches long, and one inch and a quarter broad in the middle, growing narrow at both ends, and a little indented on their edges, their furface rough, and a little hoary. The flowers come out in whorls round the Italics, fitting very clofe to the branches at the foot-ftalks of the leaves ; they are fmall, tubulous, cut into four obtufe fegments at the top, which expand, and are of a deep purple colour ; thefe are fucceeded by foft fucculent berries, which turn firft to a bright red colour, but afterward change to a deep purple when ripe, and inclofe four hard ob- long feeds. The feeds of this plant were fent me by Mr. Catefby, from Carolina, in 1724-, and many of the plants were then raifed in feveral curious gardens in England ; moft, if not all all of them were afterward planted in the open air, where they ftourifhed very well for fome years, and feveral of the plants produced flowers in the Chelfea garden for four or five years, but thefe were not fucceeded by fruit ; and in the fevere froft in 1740, they were moft of them deftroyed, as were alfo the young plants which were raifed from Dr. Dale’s feeds the year before, which were only fhelter- ed under a frame ; fo that until the Dodfor fent a frefh fupply of feeds in 1 744, there were l'carce any of the plants living in the Englifh gardens •, but fince then, there has been quantities of the feeds brought to England. This plant rifes eafily from feeds, if they are fown in a moderate hot-bed •, the belt way is to fow the feeds in pots, and plunge them into a tan-bed of a moderate •warmth ; ai)d when the plants come up, and have ob- tained fome ftrength, they fhould be gradually inured to the open air, into which they fhould be removed in June, and placed in a fheltered fituation, where they may remain till autumn •, during which time they mult be kept clear from weeds, and gently re- frefhed with water in dry weather ; but as thele young plants are tender, they fhould be placed under a frame before the early froft comes on ; for a froft in au- tumn will kill the tender part of their fhoots, which often caufes their ftalks to decay moft part of their length before the fpring. During the v r inter feafon they fhould be lereened from froft, but in mild wea- ther they muft enjoy the free air, otherwife their fhoots will turn mouldy and decay. The following fpring, juft before the plants fhoot. they fhould be carefully I P 0 turned out of the pots, fo as not to break their roots I and part of them may be planted in fmall pots filled with light earth, and the others into a nurfery-bed in a warm fituation, at about four or five inches afun- der *, thole in the pots fhould be plunged into a mo- derate hot-bed, which will forward their taking root* but afterward muft be hardened to bear the open air as before ; thefe plants in the pots fhould be fhel- tered under a frame in winter for three or four years, till they have obtained ftrength; then they may be turned out of the pots* and planted in a warm fitu- ation, where they will live in the open air in common winters ; but in fevere froft they are in danger of be- ing killed, if they are not fheltered ; therefore the furface of the ground about their roots fhould be co- vered with old tan to keep out the froft, and their tops covered with Straw, Peas-haulm, or Fern, which will protedt them. Thofe plants in the beds fhould alfo be covered with mats, or Straw, in frofty weather, and after they halve obtained ftrength, they may be tranfplanted into a warm fituation, and treated every winter in, the fame manner as the other. The leaves of this fhrub were often ufed by Dr. Dale, in dropfical cafes, with very good fuccefs. A particular account of the virtues of this, and many other plants of Carolina, was fent me with dried l'am- ples of each, by the Doctor, during the laft war ; but as the fhips were taken in their paffage, they were all loft, and the Dodtor dying Icon after, I could never recover them. J O N T H L A S P I. See Clypeola. JQNQJLJIL. See Narcissus. IPOMOEA. Lin. Gen. Plant. 199. Quamoclit. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 116. tab. 39. Quamoclit , or Scar- let Convolvulus. The Characters are, The flower hath a fmall permanent empalement , cut into five parts at the top. The petal is funnel-jhapcd , having a long cylindrical tube , whofe brim is five-pointed , fpread- ing open flat. It hath five awl-Jhaped ftamina , nearly the length of the petal , terminated by roundifh fummits. In the bottom of the tube is fituated a round germen , fupport- ing a Jlender ftyle , crowned by a rouMifh ftigma. The germen afterward becomes a roundiflo capfule with three cells , inclofing three oblong feeds. This genus of plants is ranged in the firft feftion of Linnaeus’s fifth clafs, mtitled Pentandria Monogynia, which includes thofe plants whofe flowers have five ftamina and one ftyle. The Species are, 1. Ipomoea ( Quamoclit ) foliis pinnatifidis linearibus, floribus fubfolitariis. Hort. Cliff. 60. Ipomoea with very narrow many-pointed leaves , and folitary flowers . Quamoclit foliis tenuiterincifis&pennatis. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 1 1 6. Quamoclit with narrow , cut, winged leaves . 2. Ipomoea ( Coccinea ) foliis cordatis acuminatis, baft angulatis, pedunculis multifloris. Hort. Upfal. 39. Ipomoea with heart-Jhaped pointed leaves , angular at the bafe , and many flowers on a ftalk. Quamoclit Ame- ricana folio heder$ flore coccineo. Com. Rar. Plant. 2 1 . American Quamoclit with an Ivy leaf and a fear let flower , commonly called Scarlet Convolvulus. 3. Ipomoea ( Solanifolia ) foliis cordatis acutis Integerri- mis, floribus folitaris. Prod. Leyd. 430. Ipomoea with acute , heart-Jhaped , entire leaves 5 and folitary flowers , Quamoclit Americana folani folio, flore rofeo. Plum. Cat. 3. American Quamoclit with a Night (hade leaf, and 1 a Rofe-coloured flower. 4. Ipomoea ( Violacea ) foliis cordatis integerrimis, flori- bus confertis corollis indivifis. Sauv. Monfp. 114. Ipomoea with heart-Jhaped entire leaves , flowers growing in clufters , and undivided petals. Quamoclit foliis am- pliffimis cordiformibus. Plum. Cat. 4. Quamoclit with large heart-Jhaped leaves. 5. Ipomoea ( Tuber of a ) foliis palmatis, lobis feptenis lanceolatis integerrimis pedunculis trifloris. Hort. Up- fal. 39. Ipomoea with hand floaped leaves, ccmpofed of [even fpear-Jhaped entire lobes , and foot-ftalks having three flowers. Convolvulus major heptaphylius, flore ful- phureo odorato. Sloan. Cat. 55. Greater f even-leaved 7 H Bind, \ I P o Bindweed with a yellow fweet flpwerfl called Spanijh Ar- bour Vine. 6. Ipomoea {Triloba) foliis trilobis eordatis, pedunculis trifloris. Lin. Sp. Plant. 161. Ipomea with heart - fihaped leaves having three lobes , and three flowers on a foot-ftalk. Convolvulus pentaphyllos minor, flore pur- pureo. Sloan. Cat. 55. Smaller five-leaved Bindweed with a purple flower. 7. Ipomoea ( Hepaiicafolia ) foliis palmatis, floribus ag- gregates. Plon Zeyl. 79. Ipomoea with hand-Jhaped leaves , and flowers growing in clufters. Volubilis Zey- lanica pes tigrinus dida. Hort. Elth. 318. Volubilis of Ceylon , called Tyger' s-fioot. 8. Ipomoea ( Digit at a ) foliis digitalis glabris floribus fdTilibus, caule laevi. Lin. Sp. Plant. 162. Ipomoea with fimcoth hand-Jbaped leaves , whofie lobes fit clofie , and a fmqoth ftalk. Convolvulus quinquefolius glaber Americanus. Pluk. Aim. 116. Smooth five-leaved Ame- rican Bindweed, The firft fort grows naturally in both Indies ; in the Weft-Indies it is called Sweet-William, and by fome Indian Pink. It rifes with a twining ftalk feven or eight feet high, fending out many {lender twining branches, which twift about any neighbouring plants for fupport ; the leaves are winged, being cOmpofed of feveral pair of very fine narrow lobes, not thicker than fine flowing thread ; they are about an inch long, of a deep green, and fometimes are by pairs oppofite, and at others they are alternate ; the flowers come out fingly from the fide of the ftalks, {landing upon flender foot-ftalks about one inch long •, they are fun- nel-lhaped, having a tube an incbftong, which is nar- row at bottom, but gradually widens to the top, which fpreads open flat, with five corners or angles : they are of a moft beautiful fcarlet colour, fo make a fine appearance. This is an annual plant in England, but whether it is fo in its native place I cannot tell ; for as the feeds fall to the ground, fo there is a fucceflion of young plants, which continue flowering great part of the year. This is a tender plant, fo will not thrive in the open air in England; it is propagated by feeds, which fhould be flown on a hot-bed in the fpring •, and as the plants will foon appear, they ftiould be each tranf- planted into a fmall pot filled with light earth, before they twine about each other, for then it will be difficult to difen gage them without breaking their tops. When they are potted, they ftiould be plunged into a new hot-bed, and flicks placed down by each plant for their ftalks to twine about ; after they have taken new root, they ftiould have a good ftiare of air in warm wea- ther to prevent their drawing up weak ; and when they are advanced too high to remain under the frame, they ftiould be removed into the tan-bed in the ftove, where they ftiould have fupport, for their branches will extend to a confiderable height. They will begin to flower in June, and there will be a fucceflion of flowers till the end of September, and the feeds will ripen well in this fituation every autumn. The fecond fort grows naturally in Carolina and the Bahama I {lands ; this is alfo an annual plant in Eng- land, but is not fo tender as the former. It hath a twining ftalk, which rifes fix or eight feet high, gar- niflied with heart-ftiaped leaves ending in acute points, which are divided into angles at their bafe ; the flowers come out from the fide of the branches, upon flender foot-ftalks, which fupport three or four flowers of the fame form and fize as the former, but are not fo deep coloured. There is a variety of this with Orange-coloured flowers, but they do not differ in any other reipecl. If the feeds of this fort are flown on a hot-bed in the fpring, and when the plants come up, if they are gradually hardened, and after- ward tranfplanted into a warm border, in favourable feafons they will flower and produce good feeds ; but moft people raife the plants on a very gentle hot-bed, ' and transplant them afterward into another ; by which method they are brought forward, fo will perfect!: their feeds earlier. The third fort is like the fecond, but the leaves have \ IPO no angles, and the flowers are of a Rofe ' colour, : each foot-ftalk fuftaining one flower. This may be treated | in the fame manner as the fecond fort. The fourth fort grows naturally in the Weft-Indies ? where it twines about any neighbouring fupport, sAd rifes ten or twelve feet high, garniftied with large heart-ftiaped entire leaves : the flowers come out from the fide of the branches upon flender foot-ftalks, in clufters ; they are of a blue colour, and their brims are not angular as in the former Aperies, but entire. This fort is propagated by feeds, which fhould be fown on a hot-bed in the fpring, and the plants af- terward treated in the fame way as is before direfted for the firft fort, for it is too tender to thrive in the open air here. The fifth fort is cultivated in moft of the iflands in the Weft-Indies, but is fuppofed to have been intro- duced there from the Spanifh Main. Thefe plants rife to a very great height, and fend out many branches, fo are planted to cover arbours for fhade in the iflands, from whence it had the appellation of Spanifli Arbour Vine. The ftalks of this plant are covered with a pur- ple bark ; they twine about any neighbouring fup- port, fending out many fide branches, fo that one plant will cover an arbour of fifty feet long. The leaves are divided into feven lobes almoft to the bot- tom ; the flowers come out from the fide of the ftalks; they are large, funnel-ftiaped, of a bright yellow colour, and fmell very fweet ; thefe are fuc- ceeded by large round ifh capfules with three cells, containing one large feed in each, which are of a dark colour. This is a perennial plant, but too tender to thrive in the open air in England ; the feeds of this muft be fown upon a hot-bed in the fpring, and when the plants come up, they muft be tranfplanted into fepa- rate pots, and plunged into a frelh hot-bed ; but as they will foon grow too tall to ftand under a frame, they fhould be removed into the bark-ftove, where they muft be fupported, otherwife they will twine about all the neighbouring plants. As thefe plants extend their {hoots to a very great length, they re- quire a tall ftove, where they may have room to grow, without which they will never produce any flowers. I have had thefe plants feveral years, but have only feen one flower produced from them ; for they grow fo very large before they begin to have flowers, as that few of the ftoves in England have height enough for their growth. The fixth fort grows naturally in moft of the iflands in the Weft-Indies ; this hath a twining ftalk, which rifes ten or twelve feet high, garniftied with leaves divided into three lobes, which are heart-fhaped ; the foot-ftalks arife from the fide of the ftalks, each fuf- taining three purple flowers. This is alfo tender, fo the plants muft be raifed on a hot-bed in the fpring, and afterward planted in feparate pots, plunging them into another, hot-bed, where they may remain till they reach the glades, when they fhould be removed into a glafs-cafe where they may have room, and be fcreen- ed from the cold, but fnould have a large fhare of free air admitted to them in warm weather ; with this treatment the plants will flower and produce ripe feeds. The feventh fort grows naturally in India ; this rifes with a twining hairy ftalk four or five feet high, gar- nifhed with hand-ftiaped leaves which are hairy, and divided at the bottom into feveral lobes ; the flowers come out in clufters, inclofed in a five-cornered invo- lucrum ; they are of a purplifh colour, but fmall, and open only in the evening, fo make no figure. This is propagated by feeds, and requires the fame treat- ment as the fixth fort. The eighth fort grov/s naturally in the Weft-Indies ; this hath a frnooth twining ftalk which rifes four or five feet high, garniftied with hand-fhaped leaves having five lobes, which fit clofe to the ftalks ; the flowers come out from the fide of the ftalks upon Abort foot-ftalks, which fuftain two or three purple flowers ; thefe are fuceeeded by round tricapfular feed- vefiels ; in each cell there is one brown feed. This This fort requires the fame treatment as the two for- mer, with which it will produce flowers and perfect its feeds in England. I R E S I N E. Lin. Gen. 1 1 13. Amaranthus, Sloan. Cat. Jam. 49. The Characters are. It hath male and female flowers on different plants ; the male flowers have an empalement compofed of two neat fmall leaves, and five erett, fmall, fpear-Jbaped petals, and five nett aril fituated between the five erett ftamina, which are terminated by roundifh fimmits ; the female flowers on the other plants, have the like empalement and corolla as the male , with an oval germen but no ftyle , crowned by two roundifh ftigma ; the empalement, afterward becomes an oval capfule , incloflng woolly feeds. This genus is ranged in the fifth order of Linnsus’s twenty-fecond clals of plants, intitled Dioecia Pen- tandria, from their having male and female flowers on different plants, and the male flowers having five ftamina. We know but one Species of this genus, viz. Jresine ( Celofmdes .) Lin.Sp. 1456= Amaranthus panicula fiavicante gracili holofericea. Sloan. Cat. Jam. 49. Amar ambus with /lender yellowiflj panicles of filky flowers. This plant grows naturally in Jamaica, and moft of the other iflands in the Weft-Indies, from whence I have received the feeds. It is perennial ; the ftalks are weak, 10 require fupport ; they rife ten or twelve feet high, having large knots at each joint, garnifhed with oval, fpear-fhaped, fmooth leaves. The ftalks are very diffufed, branching out on every fide •, the flowers are produced on the top, in flender loofe pa- nicles, covered with a filky down, of a pale yellow colour; thefe appear in July and Auguft, and in warm feafons the feeds will ripen in the autumn. It is propagated by feeds, which fhould be fown upon a hot-bed in the fpring, and the plants fhould be af- terward treated in the fame manner as hath been di- rected for the tender forts of Amaranthus, till they are grown too tall to remain in the frame, when they fhould be removed to the bark-ftove, plunging the pots into the tan-bed, and fupporting the branches of the plants with a trellis to prevent their falling on other plants ; in this fltuation they will produce flowers and feeds the fecond year, but the plants may be con- tinued three or four years longer. IRIS. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 358. tab. 186, 187, 188. Lin. Gen. Plant. 57. Flower-de-luce; in French, Fiambe. The Characters are. The flowers are inclofed in fpatha {or floeaths ) which are permanent ; the flowers are divided into fix parts-, the three outer petals are oblong, obtufe, and reflexed , the three inner are erett , and end in acute points ; thefe all join at their bafe : they have three awl-Jhaped ftamina, which lie upon the reflexed petals, and are terminated by oblong depreffed fimmits. Under the flower is fituated an oblong germen, fupporting a flender ftyle , crowned by a large three-pointed ftigma ; the germen afterward becomes an oblong angular capfule with three cells, filled with large feeds. This genus of plants is ranged in the firft feftion of Linnaeus’s third clafs, intitled Triandria Monogynia, which contains thofe plants whofe flowers have three ftamina and one ftyle. The Species are, 1. Iris [Ffeudoacorus ) corollis imberbibus, petalis inte- rioribus ftigmate minoribus, foliis enflformibus. Hort. Cliff. Iris with an unbearded flower, the inner petals /nailer than the ftigma , and flword-fhaped leaves. Iris paluftris lute a. Tabern. Icon. 643. Fellow Marjh Flower-de-luce , 2. Iris ( Squalens ) corollis barbatis, caule foliis longiore mukifloro. Hort. Cliff. 18. Iris with bearded flowers, and the ftalks longer than the leaves , having many flowers. This is the Iris vulgaris Germanica five fylveftris. C. B. P. 30. Common German, or wild Flower-de-luce. 3. Iris .( Aphylla ) corollis barbatis, fcapo nudo longitu- dine foliorum. mukifloro. Prod. Leyd. 17. Iris with a bearded flower, and a naked ft alk the length of the leaves , with many flowers. Iris latifolia, caule aphyllo. C. B, P. 32. Broad-leaved Flower-de-luce , whofe ftalks are without leaves. 4. Iris ( Variegata ) corollis barbatis; caule fubfoliofo longitudine foliorum mukifloro. 'Prod. Leyd. 17. Iris with a bearded flower, and a leafy ft alk the length of- the leaves , with many flowers. Iris latifolia pannonica, co- lore multiplici. C. B. P. 31. Broad-leaved Hungarian Flower-de-luce of many colours. 5. Iris ( Sujiana ) corollis barbatis, caule foliis longiore unifloro. Hort. Cliff. 18. Iris with a bearded flower^ and a ft alk longer than the leaves, having one flower. Iris Sufiana, fiore maximo ex-albo nigricante. C. B. P. 31. Flower-de-luce with a very large flower of a black and white colour, commonly called Chalcedonian Iris. 6 . Iris ( Biflora ) corollis barbatis, caule foliis breviore trifloro. Hort. Upfal. 17. Iris with a beardej flower, and a ft alk fhorter than the leaves, with three flowers. Iris humiiis major, faturate purpurea biflora. Tourn. Inft. 361 . Greater Dwarf Flower-de-luce of a darkpurpk colour , and having two flowers on each ftalk. 7. Iris ( Pumila ) corollis barbatis, caule foliis breviore unifloro. Lin. Sp. Plant. 38. Iris with a bearded flower , and a ftalk floor ter than the leaves , with one flower. Iris humiiis minor, flore purpurea. Tourn. Inft. 361, Smaller Dwarf Flower-de-luce with a purple flower. 8. Iris ( Germanica ) corollis barbatis, caule foliis longi- ore mukifloro, floribus inferioribus pedimculads. Lin, Sp. 55. Iris with a bearded flower, a ftalk longer than the leaves with many flowers, and the lower flowers on foot-ftalks. Iris Afiatica caerulea polyanthos. C. B, F, Blue Aflatic Flower-de-luce with many flowers , called greater Dalmatian Iris, 9. Iris ( Orientals ) corollis barbatis, germinibus trigonis* foliis enflformibus longiffimis caule foliis longiore bi- floro. Pluk. 1 54. Iris with a bearded flower , a three- cornered germen , very long flword-fhaped leaves, and a, ftalk longer than the leaves , with two flowers . 10. Iris ( Graminea ) corollis imberbibus, germinibus fexangularibus, caule ancipiti, foliis linearibus. Hort, Cliff. 19. Iris with flowers having no beards, a fix-cor- nered germen, a ftalk having flowers on both Jides , and narrow leaves. Iris anguftifolia prunum redolens mi- nor. C. B. P. 33. Smaller narrow-leaved Flower-de-luce fmelling like Plums. 11. Iris ( Maritima ) corollis imberbibus, caule foliis breviore trifloro, foliis lineari-enfiformibus. Iris whofe flowers are not bearded, the ftalk fhorter than the leaves , having three flowers, and narrow flword-fhaped leaves. Iris anguftifolia maritima major. C. B. P. 33. Greater narrow-leaved maritime Flower-de-luce. 12. Iris ( Anguftifolia ) corollis imberbibus, caule foliis aequalibus mukifloro, fpatha majoribus ereftis. Iris whofe flowers have no beards , the ftalks equal in length with the leaves, having many flowers which are larger and more erett than the fpatha. Iris anguftifolia, ma- ritima minor. C. B. P. Smaller narrow-leaved maritime Flower- de-luce. 13. Iris ( Bicolor ) corollis imberbibus, caule foliis lon- giore mukifloro, germinibus fexangularibus, foliis li- nearibus. Iris whofe flowers have no beards, the ftalks longer than the leaves, with many flowers, a fix-cornered germen , and very narrow leaves. Iris anguftifolia, bi~ color. C. B. P. 33. 'Narrow-leaved Flower-de-luce with two colours. 14. His ( Spuria ) corollis imberbibus, germinibus fex- angularibus, caule tereti, foliis fublinearibus. Hort. Cliff. 19. Iris whofe flowers have no beards, with a fix- cornered germen, a taper ftalk, and very narrow leaves. Iris pratenfis anguftifolia, folio foetido. C. B. P. 32. Narrow-leaved Meadow Flower-de-luce , with a J. linking leaf. 15. Iris ( Sativa ) corollis imberbibus, fpatha bifolia* caule foliofo longitudine foliorum, pedunculis lon- gioribus. Iris with flowers having no beards, a J heath containing two leaves , a leafy ftalk the length of the leaves , , and longer foot-ftalks to the flowers. Iris fativa lutea. C. B. P. 32. Fellow Garden Fhiver-de-luce. 16. Iris {Pitta) corollis imberbibus, caule longitudine foliorum mukifloro, foliis enflformibus. Ids Faith .art j unbearded flower, a ftalk the length of the leaves, with many o I R l . many flowers, and fword-jhaped leaves. Iris humilis minor, flare pifto. Tourn. Inft. 362. Lefler Dwarf Flower-de-luce with a painted' flower. 17. Iris (Verna) coroliis imberbibus, caule unifloro fo- liis breviore, radice fibrosa. Flor. Virg. 10. Iris with cm tinbearded flower , a, ftalk Jhorter than the leaves , with one flower , and a fibrous root. Iris Virginiana pumila five chamaeiris verna anguftifolia, flore purpuro-cse- ruleo odorato. Pluk. Aim. 196. Dwarf Spring Vir- ginia Flower-de-luce , ' with a narrow leaf j and a purple blue fweet fmelling flower. 1 8. Iris (Verftcolor) coroliis imberbibus, germinibus fub- trigonis, caule tereti, foliis enfiformibus. Lin. Sp. Plant. 39. Iris with an unbearded flower , a three-cor- nered germen, a taper flalk, and fwordfloaped leaves. Iris Americana verficolor ftylo crenato. Dill. Hort. Ekh. 188. Party-coloured American Flower- de-luce , with a crenated ftyle. 19. Iris (. Fcetidifflma ) coroliis imberbibus petalis interi- oribtis patentiffimis, caule uniangulato foliis enfifor- mibus. Hort. Cliff. 19. Iris with an unbearded flower, the inner petals fpreading, a flalk with one angle, and flword- fhaped leaves. Iris fcetidiffima, feu Xyris. Tourn. Inft. 360. Mcfl Jlhiking Flower-de-luce , or Xyris, called Stinking Gladwyn. 20. Iris \Sibmcd) coroliis imberbibus, germinibus tri- gonis, caule tereti, foliis linearibus. Lin. Hort. Cliff. 1 9. Iris with an unbearded flower , a three-cornered ger- men , a taper flalk, and narrow leaves. Iris pratenfis, anguftifolia non foetida altior. C. B. P. 32. Fatter narrow-leaved Meadow Flower-de-luce, not Jlinking. 21; Iris ( Fuberofa ) coroliis imberbibus, foliis tetragonis. Yir. Cliff. 6. Iris with an unbearded flower and four- cornered leaves. Hermodactylus folio quadrangulo. Tourn. Cor. po. Hermodadtyle with a four-cornered leaf. 22. Iris (. Florentine. 1) coroliis barhatis, caule foliis altiore fubbifloro floribus feffilibus. Lin. Sp. 55. Iris with a bearded corolla , ftalks tatter than the leaves , having two fejfile flowers. Iris alba Florentina. C. B. P. 31. White Florentine Iris. 23. Iris ( Sambucina ) coroliis barbatis, caule foliis altiore multifloro, petalis deflexis plants, erebtis emarginatis. Lin. Sp. 55. Iris with a bearded corolla, ftalks tatter than the leaves , having many flowers whofe petals are de- ftexed, and the upright are indented. Iris latifolia Ger- manica, fambuci odore. C. B. P. 31. The firft fort grows naturally in ditches and {landing waters in moft parts of England ; this is titled in the Pharmacopeia, Acorus adultermus, cr Pfeudo acorus. Baftard Accrus. The roots of this are pretty thick, fiefhy, and fpread every way near the furface of the ground ; the leaves are lword-fhaped, very long, of a deep green colour, and not fo (tiff as thofe of the Garden Iris ; the ftalks rife from two to three feet high, toward the top of which grow three or four flowers one above another, which gradually fucceed each other •, they are fhaped like the ordinary Flower- de-luce, but the three inner petals are lefs than the ftigmas, fo they want the three upright petals which are termed ftandards. Thefe appear in June, and are fucceeded by large three-cornered capfules, containing three rows of flat feeds. This fort is not cultivated in gardens, but being an officinal plant, it is here mentioned to introduce the other. The fecond fort grows naturally in Germany, but has been long cultivated in the Englifh gardens for or- nament •, the roots of this are very thick, flefhy, and divided into joints, fpreading juft under the furface of the ground ; they are of a brownifh colour on their outfide, but white within •, the leaves arife in duffers, embracing each other at their bale, but fpread af tinder upward in form of wings they are a foot and a half long, and two inches broad, having (harp edges, ending in points like fwqrds ; the ftalks between thefe, which are a little longer than the leaves, having at each joint one leaf without a foot-ftalk ; thefe diminifh in their lize upward 5 the ftalks divide into three branches, each of which produce two or three flowers one above another at diftances, each inclofed in a 1 R f (heath; they have three large Violet- colon red petals which turn backward, and are called falls ; thefe have beards near an inch long on their midrib toward their bafe, and have a fhort arched petal which cover the beard, with three broad erect petals of the fame co- lour, called ftandards ; the (lamina lie upon the re- flexed petals. Under each flower is fituated an ob- long germen, which turns to a large three-cornered caplule with three cells, filled with large comprefied feeds. This flowers in June, and the feeds ripen in Augufl. There is a variety of this with blue ftandards and purple falls, which is titled Iris hortenfis latifolia, by Cafpar Bauhin ; and one with pale purple ftandards, another with white, and a third with a fmaller flower, but thefe are accidental varieties which have come from feeds. The third fort has broader leaves than the laft, the ftalks have no leaves upon them, and are equal in length with the leaves ; they have three or four large bright purple flowers, which (land above each other, having purplifh (heaths or hoods ; the three bending petals or falls are ftriped with white, from the bafe to the end of the beard ; the flowers are fucceeded by large blunt triangular capfules with three cells, filled with comprefied feeds. It flowers the latter end of May, and the feeds ripen the beginning of Auguft. The fourth fort grows naturally in Hungary; the leaves of this are like thofe of the fecond lbrt, but are of a darker green ; the ftalks rife as tall as the leaves, and toward the bottom are garnifhed with ope leaf at each joint, whofe bafe embrace the ftalks ; the upper part is naked, and branches into three, each having two or three flowers above one another ; the three upright petals or ftandards are yellow, and the bending petals or falls are variegated with purple (tripes. This flowers in June, but is rarely fucceeded by feeds in England. The fifth fort grows naturally near Conftantinople, and in other parts of the eaft. The leaves of this fort are not fo broad as thofe of the fecond, and are of a grayifti colour ; the (talks rife two feet and a half high, fupporting one very large flower; the three upright petals are almoft as broad as a hand, but very- thin, of mixed black and white (tripes; the three bending petals or falls are of a darker colour, from whence fome gardeners have called it the Mourning Iris. This flowers the latter end of May, or the be- ginning of June, but never has any feeds in England. The fixth fort hath broad leaves like thofe of the fe- cond fort, but (horter; the (talks rife nine or ten inches high, branching into two or three at the top, each fuftaining two deep purple flowers. This flowers in May, but is not fucceeded by feeds in England. The feventh fort hath narrower and (horter leaves than the former ; the (talks are (horter than the leaves, and fupport one flower on the top, of a light purple colour. This flowers the beginning of May, but rarely produces feeds in this country. There are two or three varieties of this, which differ in the colour of their flowers. The eighth fort hath the larged leaves of any of the Flower-de-luce, they are of a grayifh colour and fpread wide, embracing each other at their bafe, where they are purplifti. The ftalks rife near four feet high, and divide into feveral branches, each fupporting three or four flowers above each other at diftances, covered with a thin (heath ; the three bending petals or falls, are of a faint purple inclining to blue, with purple veins running lengthways ; the beard is yellow, and the three erebt petals or ftandards are of a bright blue, with fome faint purple ftripes, the flowers have an agreeable feent. They appear the latter end of June, but are feldom fucceeded by feeds in England. The feeds of the ninth fort were brought from Car- niola, by the Right Rev. Dr. Pocock, Bifnop of Offory, who found the plants growing there naturally: thefe v/ere fown in the Cheifea garden, where they fucceeded very well, and the plants have been fince communicated to many curious gardens in Eurore. This plant hath a thick fiefhy root, divided into many knots or tubers, which ipread and multiply in the ground •, thefe fend out many ftrong, thick, fiefhy fi- bres, which ftrike deep in the earth, putting out fe- veral fmaller fibres from their fides. From thefe roots arife clu iters of fiat fword-fhaped leaves of a deep green colour, which are more than three feet Ions, and little more than one inch broad in the broadeit part, ending in points 5 thefe leaves are connected to- gether at their bafe into feveral heads or bundles, wrapping over each other •, and between thefe arife the flower-ftalks, which grow four feet high and are jointed, having very long fpathae or fheaths at each of the upper joints, which include the flowers. Thefe Talks generally fuftain two flowers, one coming out of each fheath or fpatha ; thefe are permanent, and when the flowers are pad', clofely cover the feed-veffel. The flowers are divided into nine leaves, three of thefe Hand erect, which are white, and fix turn down, which are joined together at their bafe, the lower ipreading out into a broad, obtufe, reflexed fall, having a beard which is of a bright yellow colour ; the upper fegment is arched over the lower, ib as to form a fort of lip, which is refiexed backward ; under thefe is fituated an oblong three-cornered germen, which af- terward becomes an oblong, fwollen, three-cornered feed-veffel, ending in a long point, which opens into three longitudinal cells, in which the feeds are ranged; thefe are angular and comprefifed. This plant flowers the latter end of June, or the beginning of July, and the feeds ripen in the autumn. It is very hardy, and thrives well in the open air without any protection. The leaves decay to the root in the autumn, and new ones arife in the fpring. The roots aifo propagate very faft, when they are in a light moifl foil, lb that it may foon be had in plenty, without waiting for plants from feeds. The tenth fort grows naturally in Auftria ; this hath narrow, fiat, Grafs-like leaves, about a foot long, of a light green colour ; between thefe arife the italics about fix inches high, having two narrow green leaves, which are much longer than the {talks ; thefe ftalks fuftain two or three flowers, which are fmaller than any of the former fpecies ; the petals have no beards, but have a broad yellow line adorned with purple ftripes ; the three falls are of a light purple colour ftriped with blue, and have a convex ridge running longitudinally, the other are of a reddilh purple va- riegated with violet; they have a fcent like frefh Plums. It flowers in July, and is fucceeded by feed- veflels which are fliort, having three borders or wings running lengthways, opening in three cells, which are filled with angular feeds, which ripen in September. The eleventh fort grows naturally near the fea, in the fouth of France, and in Italy. This hath narrow fword-ihaped leaves, little more than a foot long, of a deep green colour ; the ftalks do not rife fo tall as the leaves; they fuftain at the top two or three flowers which Hand near together; they are of a bright purple colour with very deep falls, and the three itandards are blue ; the bending petals have no beards, but inftead of that white broad ftripes through the middle. This flowers in July, and the feeds ripen in September. The twelfth fort hath narrower leaves than the former, but of the fame deep green colour; the ftalks do not rife higher than the leaves, and fupport two or three flowers, which have long permanent empalements Handing* ered, which cover the feed-veffel till the feeds are ripe ; the flowers are fmaller, and of a paler colour than thofe of the eleventh fort. The thirteenth fort has very narrow, long, Grafs-like leaves, of a light green ; the ftalks rife two feet and a half high, fuftaining three or four flowers above each other, which have blue falls, and purple Itandards ftriped with pale blue lines. This flowers in July, and the feeds ripen at Michaelmas. The fourteenth fort grows naturally in Germany ; this hath leaves like thofe of the eleventh fort, which, when broken, have a difagreeable fcent; but this is accidental, and not common to all the plants ; the ftalks of this are taper, and rife a little above the leaves, and fuftain three or four flowers one above another, which have light blue ftandards, and purple variegated falls without beards; inftead of which, they have a broad white line in the middle; thefe are fuc- ceeded by fhort thick capfules, which have ficarco anv angles, opening in three cells, which are filled 1 with angular feeds, it flowers in July, and the feeds ripen in September. The fifteenth fort has narrower leaves than thofe of the lecond, of a pale green colour, and not fo ft.iff 5 the ftalks are equal in height with the leaves, and branch out on both fides with long foot -ftalks, each fuftaining one pretty large yellow flower, inclofed in a long two-leaved fheath ; at each joint where the foot- ftalks come out there is a Angle leaf, which em- braces the ftalks with their bafe. This flowers in June, but rarely produces feeds in this country. There are two varieties of this fort, one with a ful- phur-coloured, and the other with a variegated flower, which are fuppofed to be only varieties which have been accidentally produced from feeds. The fixteenth fort hath broad fword-fnaped leaves about eight inches long ; the ftalks rife about the fame height with the leaves, and divide into two or three foot-ftalks, each fuftaining two or three flowers one above another, which have yellow ftandards, and the falls are variegated with dark ftripes. This flowers in June, but does not produce feeds here. The feventeenth fort grows naturally in North Ame- rica ; this hath tufted fibrous roots, from which arife many Grafs-like leaves about nine inches long ; from between thefe come out the ftalks, which are Jborter than the leaves, fupporting one purple flower with blue ftandards. This fort flowers in May, but feldom produces feeds in England. The eighteenth fort grows alfo in North America ; this hath narrow {word Tr aped leaves about a foot , long, of a light green colour ; the ftalks rife a little above the leaves, they are taper, and fupport two or three flowers one above another ; the ftandards are of a light blue, and the falls are purple variegated, with a broad white line inftead of a beard through the middle.. The germen, which is fituated under the Tower, is three-cornered below, but taper toward the top. This flowers in June, and often produces feeds here. The nineteenth fort grows naturally in moift places in many parts of England, fo is feldom admitted into gardens. This hath thick tufted fibrous roots ; the leaves are of a Grafs-green, fword-ihaped, and when broken emit a ftrong odour, not much unlike that of hot roaft beef at the firft fcent, but if fmelt too clofe, becomes difagreeable. It is generally called flunking Gladwyn in England ;. the ftalks rife about the fame height with the leaves, fuppordng two {mall flowers, of a purple colour, variegated. It flowers in June, and the feeds ripen in autumn. The twentieth fort grows naturally in Auftria and Bohemia; this hath narrow fword-ihaped leaves near a foot and a half long, of a dark green colour ; the fiower-ftalks rife above the leaves, and iupport two or three flowers with light blue ftandards, and deep blue falls, with a broad ftripe of white, inftead of the beard. This flowers in July, and the feeds ripen in September. There are feveral varieties of thefe flag or fwqrd-leaved Irifes, which chiefly differ in the colour of their flow- ers, fo are not to be regarded as diftinct fpecies ; thofe which are here enumerated are fuppofed to be fpe- cificaily Gifteient, great part of them I have cultivated by feeds, and found them conftantly produce the fame as the parent plants. • All thefe forts are generally propagated by parting of their roots, which moft of them multiply faft enough. The beft time to remove and part the roots is in autumn, that they may get good root before the fpring, otherwise they will not flower ftrona the fol- lowing fummer. All thofe forts which fpread much' 1 I S A I S A ■ at their roots fhould be tranfplanted every other year, to keep them within bounds, otherwife they will fpread fo much as to become troublefome, efpecially if they are planted near other flowers •, indeed, the large growing kinds are moft of them too fpreading for the flower-garden, fo are only fit to fill up the fpaces between trees and fhrubs in large plantations, where they will have a good effedt during the time of their flowering. The fifth, fixth, feventb, tenth, eleventh, fixteenth, feventeenth and eighteenth forts, grow in lefs com- pafs, fo may be admitted into the large borders, or in dumps of flowers in the pleafure-garden, where they will add to the variety. The fifth fort fhould have a warmer fituation, being a little tender, but all the other forts will grow in almoft any foil or fituation ; thefe may all be propagated by feeds, which fhould be fown fbon after they are ripe, then the plants will come up the following fpring ■, but if the feeds are fown in the fpring, they will lie a year in the ground before they vegetate : when the plants come up they muff be kept dean from weeds, and the following au- tumn fhould be tranfplanted into beds at ten inches or a foot diftance, where they may remain till they flower, which will be the fecond fummer after trans- planting ; but as moft of the forts are fo eafily pro- pagated by their roots, few people care to wait for feedling plants, unlefs of thofe forts which are fcarce. The twenty-firft fort grows naturally in the iflands of the Archipelago •, this hath a tuberous knobbed root, from which arife five or fix long, narrow, four-cor- nered leaves, between which arife the ftalk, which fupports one flower, fhaped like thofe of the Iris, but fmall, and of a dark purple colour. This flowers in April, but does not produce feeds in England. It is propagated by the roots, which fend out offsets •, thefe may be taken up and tranfplanted when their leaves decay, but fhould not be kept too long out of the ground. If thefe are planted in a deep loofe foil, the roots will run down, and be loft in a few years where they are not difturbed, fo they fhould be annually tranfplanted, and have a fhallow foil ; they are hardy in refpedb to cold, and require no farther care but to keep them clean from weeds. The twenty-fecond fort grows naturally in the warm parts of Europe, but is hardy enough to thrive in the open air in England ; the leaves of this fort are broad, of a pale green colour ; the flower-ftalks rife taller • than the leaves, fupporting one or two white flowers which fit clofe to the ftalks. The roots of this are ufed in medicine, and is ufnally called Sweet Iris. The twenty-third fort hath broad leaves, of a deeper preen than thofe of the laft fort. The ftalks rife much above the leaves, each having four or five flowers, which have a yellow ground, variegated with dark brown ftripes, and have a fcent like Elder ; the two forts flower the latter end of May, or beginning of June. They are fo hardy as to thrive as well as the fecond fort in the open air in this country, and may be pro- pagated by parting of their roots, or by feeds, in the fame way as is dire&ed for that fort. IRIS bulbofa. 1 c v rnron r I- See XlPHIUM. 1 R I S Perfica. j I S A T I S. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 21 1. tab. 100. Lin. Gen. Plant. 738. Woad; in French, P aft el. The Characters are, ’The empalement of the flower is compofed of four oval co- loured leaves , which fpread open and fall away . The flower hath four oblong petals, placed in form of a crofs , which are narrow at their bafe , but broad and obtufe at their ends. It hath fix ftamina, four of which are as long as the petals , the other two are Jhorter ; thefe are ter- minated by oblong lateral fiummits. It has an oblong com- prefified germen , the length of the two ftoorter ftamina , crowned by an obtufe ftigma. The germen becomes an ob- long comprejfed pod with one cell , opening with two valves , inciofing one oval comprejfed feed in the center. This genus of plants is ranged in the fecond feftion of Linnaeus’s fifteenth dafs, intitled Tetfl adynamia Siliquofa, which - includes the plants whofe flowers have four long and two (barter ftamina, and their feeds in pods. The Species are, 1. Isatis ( Tindtoria ) foliis radicalibus oblon go-ovatis obtufis integerrimis, caulinis fagittatis fiiiculis oblon- gis. - Wood with oblong , oval, blunt , entire leaves at bottom , but thofe on the ftalks arrow-pointed , and oblong pods . Ifatis fativa vel latifolia. C. B. P. 113. Broad- leaved cultivated Woad . 2. Isatis ( Dalmatica ) foliis radicalibus lanceolatis cre- natis, caulinis lineari-fagittatis, fiiiculis breVioribus emarginatis. IVoad with fpear-Jhaped lower leaves which are ftightly crenated, thofe on the ftalks very narrow and arrow-pointed, and Jhorter indented pods. Ifatis Dal- matica major. Bobart. Greater IVoad of Dalmatia. 3. Isatis ( Lufitanica ) foliis radicalibus crenatis, caulinis fagittatis, pedunculis fubtomentofis. Lin. Sp. 93 d. Wo ad with crenated lower leaves, thofe on the ftalks hal- bert-Jhaped , and the foot-fialks of the flowers woolly. Ifatis fylveftris, minor Lufitanica. H. L. App. Smaller wild Portugal IVoad. 4. Isatis (TEgyptiaca) foliis omnibus dentatis. Lin. Sp, 937. Woad whofe leaves are all indented. The firft fort is cultivated in feveral parts of England for the purpofes of dyeing, this being ufed as a foun- dation for many of the dark colours. This is a commodity well worth propagating in all places where the land is fuitable for it, which muft be a pretty ftrong foil, but not too moift. The plant is biennial, in which it differs from the third and fourth fort, which are annual. The lower leaves of this are of an oblong oval figure, and pretty thick confiftence, when growing in a proper foil; they are narrow at their bafe, but broad above, and end in obtufe roundifh points, entire on their edges, and of a lucid green. The ftalks rife near four feet high, dividing into feveral branches, garnilhed with arrow-fhaped leaves, fitting clofe to the ftalks ; the ends of the branches are terminated by fmall yellow flowers, in very clofe clufters, which are compofed of four fmall petals, placed in form of a crofs ; thefe are fucceeded by pods fhaped like a bird’s tongue, half an inch long, and one eighth of an inch broad, which when ripe turn black, and open with two valves, having one cell, in which is fituated a Angle feed. It flowers in July, and the feeds ripen the beginning of September. The third fort has been fuppofed to be the fame fpe- cies as the firft, only differing by culture ; but I have propagated both forts more than forty years, and have not found either of them alter; there, are alfo very efifential differences between the two plants, particu- larly in the fhape of the under leaves, which in the wild fort are narrow and fpear-fnaped, and thofe on the ftalks are not more than half the breadth of thofe of the cultivated Woad. The ftalks do not branch fo much, and the pods are narrower than thofe of the other fort, nor do the roots abide fo long, for they generally die the fame year. The fecond fort grows naturally in Dalmatia; this is a biennial plant; the lower leaves are fpear-fh aped, and crenated on their edges, but thofe on the ftalks are very narrow and arrow-pointed. The ftalks branch more than thofe of the firft fort, and rife higher. The flowers are larger, and of a brighter yellow colour. The feed-veffels are fhorter, and broader at their ends, which are indented. Thefe plants all flower in July, and their feeds ripen in September. The fourth fort grows naturally in Egypt, and is an annual plant, which is too tender to thrive in the open air in England, therefore the feeds fhould be fown on a hot-bed in the fpring ; and when the plants are fit to remove they muft be tranfplanted on a frefh hot- bed to bring them forward, but as foon as they have taken new root, they fhould have a large fhare of frefh air admitted to them daily, to prevent their being drawn up weak. In this bed they may remain five or fix weeks, by which time they will be fit to transplant into pots,, which fhould be carefully performed, not to X to let the earth fall from their roots ; the pots fiiould 0o, be plunged into a moderate hot-bed, giving the plants plenty of air at all times when the weather will permit, and fupporting their ftalks, which will otherwife trail on the ground •, with this management the plants will flower in June, and ripen their feeds in September. The three . laft forts are not cultivated for ufe, fo are only preferved in botanic gardens for the fake of variety *, thefecond and third forts are propagated by feeds, which ftrould be fown in autumn ; and when the plants come up, they muft be thinned, leaving them fix inches apart ; afterward they muft be kept clean from weeds : the fummer following they will flower and produce ripe feeds, after which thefe forts foon decay ; the roots of the firft fort will live another year. The flrft fort which is propagated for ufe, is fown upon frefti land which is in good heart, for which the cultivators of Woad pay a large rent ; they generally chufe to have their land fituated near great towns, where there is plenty of drefling, but they never ftay long on the fame fpot, for the beft ground will not admit of being fown with Woad more than twice for if it is oftener repeated, the crop feldom pays the charges of culture, &c. Thole who cultivate this commodity, have gangs of people, who have been bred to this employment, fo that whole families travel about from place to place, wherever their principal fixes on land for the purpofe ; but thefe people go on in one track, juft as their pre- decefiors taught them ; nor have their principals de- viated much from the practice of their anceftors, fo that there is a large field for improvement, if any of the cultivators of Woad were perfons of genius, and could be prevailed on to introduce the garden cul- ture fo far as it may be adapted to this plant ; this I know from experience, having made numbers of trials in the culture of this plant, therefore I lhall in- fert them here for the benefit of thofe who may have ingenuity enough to ftrike out of the old beaten track. As the goodnefs of Woad confifts in the fize and fatnefs of the leaves, the only method to obtain this, is by fowing the feed upon ground at a proper feafon, and allow the plants proper room to grow, as alfo to keep them clean from weeds ; which, if permitted to to grow, will rob the plants of their nourifhment. The method pra&ifed by fome of the moft fldiful kitchen-gardeners in the culture of Spinach, would be a great improvement to this plant, for fome of them have improved the round-leaved Spinach fo much by culture, as to have the leaves more than fix times the fize they were formerly •, and their fatnels has been in the fame proportion, upon the fame land, which has been effected by thinning of the plants when young, and keeping the ground conftantly clean from weeds ; but to return to the culture of Woad. After having made choice of a proper fpot of land, which ihould not be too light and fandy, nor over ftiff and moift, but rather a gentle hazel loam, whofe parts will eafily feparate : the next is to plough this up juft before winter, laying it in narrow high ridges, that the froft may penetrate through the ridges, to mellow and foften the clods ; then in the fpring plough it again croffway, laying it again in narrow ridges •, after it has lain fome time in this manner, and the weeds begin to grow, it fnould be well harrowed to deftroy them this fhould be twice repeated while the weeds are young, and if there are any roots of large perennial weeds, they muft be harrowed out, and car- ried off the ground. In June the ground fiiould be a third time ploughed, when the furrows fhould be nar- row, and the ground ftirred as deep as the plough will go, that the parts may be as well feparated as poflible ; and when the weeds appear again, the ground fiiould be well harrowed to deftroy them. Toward the end of July, or the beginning of Auguft, it fhould be ploughed the laft time, when the land fiiould be laid liiiooth, and when there is a profpedt of ihowers, the I S A ground muft be harrowed to receive the feeds, which fhould be fown either in rows with the drill plough/ or in brcad-caft, after the common method -, but it will be proper to fteep the feeds one night in water before they are fown, which will prepare them for vegetation : if the feeds are fown in drills with a plough, they will be covered by an inftrument fixed to the plough for that purpofe ; but thofe which are fown broad-caft in the common way, muft be well harrowed in. If the feeds are good and the feafon favourable, the plants will appear in a fortnight, and in a month or five weeks after will be fit to hoe ; for the fooner this is performed when the plants are diftinguifhable, the better they will thrive, and the weeds being then young, will be foon deftroyed. The method of hoe- ing thefe plants is the fame as for Turneps, with this difference only, that thefe plants need not be thinned fo much ; for at the firft hoeing, if they are feparated to the diftance of three or four inches, and at the laft to fix inches, it will be fpace enough for the growth of the plants ; if this is carefully performed, and in dry weather, moft of the weeds will be deftroyed : but as fome of them may efcape in this operation, and young weeds will arife, fo the ground fhould be a fecond time hoed in October, always chufing a dry time for this work ; at this fecond operation, the plants fhould be Tingled out to the diftance they are to re- main. After this the ground will be clean from weeds till the fpring, when young weeds will come up, there- fore about a fortnight in April will be a good time to hoe the ground again, when the weeds will be young, fo may be performed in lefs than half the time it would require if the weeds were permitted to grow large, and the fun and wind will much fooner kill them this hoeing will alfo ftir the furface of the ground, and greatly promote the growth of the plants $ if it is performed in dry weather, the ground will be clean till the firft crop of Woad is gathered, after which it muft be again well cleaned •, if this is carefully repeated, after the gathering of each crop, the land will always lie clean, and the plants will thrive the better. The expence of the firft hoe- ing will be about fix {killings per acre ; and for the after-hoeingshalf that price will be fufficient, provided they are performed when the weeds are young ; for if they are buffered to grow large, it will require more labour, nor can it be fo well performed •, therefore it is not only the beft hufbandry to do this work foon, but it will be found the cheapeft method ; for the fame number of men will hoe a fiekftof ten acres three times, when it is performed while the weeds are young, as is required to hoe it twice only, becaufe the weeds have longer time to grow between the operations. If the land in which the feed is fown, fhould have been in culture before for ether crops, fo not in good heart, it will require drefling before it is fov/n, in which cafe rotten liable dung is preferable to any other ; but this fhould not be laid on till the laft ploughing before the feeds are fown, and not fpread but as the land is ploughed, that the fun may not exhale the goodneis of it, which in fummer is foon loft, when fpread on the ground. The quantity fhould not be lefs than twenty loads to each acre, which will keep the ground in heart till the crop of Woad is fpent. The time for gathering the crop is according to the feafon, but it Ihould be performed as foon as the leaves are fully grown, while they are perfectly green , for when they begin to change pale, great part of their goodneis is over ; for the quantity will be lels, and the quality greatly diminilhed. If the land is good, and the crop well hufbanded, it will produce three or four gatherings, but the two firft are the beft •<, thefe are commonly mixed together in the manufacturing of it, but the after-crops are al- ways kept feparate 5 for if thefe are mixed with the other, the whole will be of little value. The two firft crops will fell from twenty-five to thirty pounds a ton ; but the latter will not bring ipore than feven or eight pounds, and fometimes not fo much. 4 An An acre of land will produce a ton of Woad, and in good feafons near a ton and a half. "When the, planters intend to fave the feeds, they cut three crops of the leaves, and then let the plants Hand till the next year for feed ; but if only one crop is cut, and that only of the outer leaves, letting all the mid- dle leaves ftand to nourifh the ftalks, the plants will grow ftronger, and produce a much greater quantity of feeds. Thefe feeds are often kept two years, but it is al- ways bell to fow new feeds when they can be obtained. The feeds ripen in Auguft • when the pods turn to a dark colour, the feeds fhould be gathered ; it is beft done by reaping the ftalks in the fame manner as Wheat, fp reading the ftalks in rows upon the ground, and in four or five days the feeds will be fit to threfli out, provided the weather is dry ; for if it lies long, the pods will open and let out the feeds. There are fame of the Woad planters who feed down the leaves in winter with flieep, which is a very bad method ; for all plants which are to remain for a fu- ture crop, Ihould never be eaten by cattle, for that greatly weakens the plants ; therefore thofe who eat down their Wheat in winter with flieep are equally blameable. ISOPYRUM. Lin. Gen. Plant. 621. Helleborus. Amman. The Characters are. The flower has no empalement. It hath five equal oval pe- tals, which fall off, and five fioort tububulous nediarn, fituated within the petals, divided at their brim into three lobes, . the middle one being the largefi. It hath a great number of jhort hairy ftamina , terminated by Jingle fiummits , apd fever at oval germen , with fmgle ftyles of the fame length , crowned by an obtufe fiigma the length of the ftamina. The germen afterward become fo many re- curved cap files with one cell , filled with fnrall feeds. This genus of plants is ranged in the feventh feftion of Linn^us’s thirteenth clafs, intitled Polyandria Po- lygynia, which includes thole plants whofe flowers have many ftamina and ftyles. The Species are, 1. Isopyrum ( Fumaroides ) ftipulis fubulatis, petalis acu- tis. Hort. Qpfal. 157. Ifopyrum with awl-Jhaped fti- pulw, and acute petals. Helleborus fumarias foliis. Amman. Ruth. 57. tab. 12. Hellebore with Fumitory leaves. 2. Isopyrum [Thalidlr oides) ftipulis ovatis, petalis o’b- tufis. Lin. Sp. Plant. 557. Ifopyrum with oval ftipuR, and obtufe petals. Ranunculus nemoroflus, thaliftri fo- lio. C. B. P. 178. Wood Crowsfoot with a Meadow Rue leaf. 3. Isopyrum ( Aquilegioides ) ftipulis obfoletis. Lin. Sp. Plant. 557. Ifopyrum With cbfolete Jiipule. Aquilegia montana, flore parvo, thaliftri folio.' C B. P. 144. Mountain Columbine with a fmall flower , and Meadow Rue Leaf ’. The firft fort grows naturally in Siberia, from whence the feeds were lent to the Imperial garden at Peterf- burgh, and the late Dr. Amman, profeffor of botany there, fent me part of the feeds ; this is an annual plant, which feldom rifes more than three or four inches high. The leaves are Ihaped like thofe of Fumitory ; they are fmall, and of a gray colour. The stalk is naked to the top, where there is a circle of leaves juft under the flowers. The flowers are fmall, of an herbaceous colour on their outfide, but yellow within, having five acute petals, and as many honey glands, with a great number of ftamina which are fhorter than the petals, and feveral reflexed moon- fhaped germen, having fo many Angle ftyles, crowned by obtufe ftigraas. The flowers are fucceeded by many recurved feed-veffels with one cell, filled with fmall ftiining black feeds. It flowers the beginning of April, and the feeds ripen in May, then the plants decay. The feeds of this plant fhould be fown in a fliady border foon after they are ripe, for when they are kept long out of the ground, they feldom grow the firft year ; therefore when the feeds are permitted to fcatter, they fucceed better than thofe which are fown, and the plants will require no other care but to keep thern clean, from weeds ; as there is no 'great beauty m this plant, fo a fmall patch, or two of them in any fhady part of the garden, by way of variety A will be fufficient. The fecond and third forts were fent me from Verona, near which place they grow naturally. The fecond fort hath leaves very like thofe of the fmalleft Mea- dovv Rue. j he ftalks rife four or five indies: high, (Im- porting a few fmall white flowers, - with obtufe petals,, containing many fmall, feeds. It flowers tfie latter end ot March, and the feeds ripen In . May, The third fort hath leaves like the fecond . - - — — , ~ 4t a little larger, and of a greener colour. The ftalks, rife about fix inches high, fupporting two or three fmall '.white flowers, fhaped like thofe of the fecond fort ; thefe are fucceeded by 'recurved feed-veffels, filled with fmall feeds. It flowers in April, and the feeds ripen in June. Both thefe plants delight in a moift fh-ady fkuation they are propagated by feeds in the fame way as. the firft fort, but thefe will live, two or three years. ISORA. See Helicteres. I T E A. Lin. Gen. Plant. 243. Fior. Virg. 143. Di- conangia. Mitch. Gen. 5. The Characters are, The empalement of the flower is final ! , permanent , and crept , ending in five acute points. The flower has five petals, which are inferted in the empalement. . It hath five awl-flhaped ftamina inferted in the empalement , which are as long as the petals, terminated by round iff fiummits , and an oval germen fupporting a cylindrical ftyle , which is permanent , , crowned by an obtufe fiigma. The germen afterward becomes a long oval cap fide , with the ftyle -at the top , having one cell filled with fmall feeds. This genus of plants is ranged in the firft feftion of Linnaeus’S fifth clafs, intitled Pentandria Monogynia, which includes thofe plants whofe flowers have’ five ftamina and one ftyle. We have but one Species of this genus, viz. Itea ( Virginica .) Flor. Virg. 143. Wt have no English title for this plant, This fhrub grows in moift foils in feveral parts of North America, where it rifes to the height of fix or feven feet, fending out many branches from the ground upward, garnifbed with fpear-Oiaped leaves placed alternately, (lightly fawed on their edges, which are reflexed, veined, and of a light green. At the extremity of the fame year’s (hoots, in the month of July, are produced fine (pikes of white flowers, three or four inches long, erect • and v/hen thefe fltrubs are in vigour, they will be entirely covered .with thefe fpikes of flowers, fo that they make a fine appearance at their feafon of flowering. This fhrub is now pretty-common in England ; but the garden where I have Teen it in the greateft vigour, is that of his late Grace the Duke of ArgyJe, at Whitton, near Hounflow, where the foil agrees fo well with this plant, that it thrives and .flowers there as well as in its native country. This fhrub will live in the open air in England, the cold never injuring it, but it will npt thrive upon dry gravelly ground, being very apt to die in fetch places in the feimmer feafon. It is propagated by layers, which, if laid down in the autumn, will put out roots fo as to be fit to remove by the following autumn; v/hen they may be tranfplanted into. a nirriery, or to the place where they are to remain. This fhrub flowers at a feafon when there are few others in beauty. fo it is the more valuable on that acount. IV A. Lin. Gen. 1059. Tarconanthus. Vail. Aft. Par. I 7 I 9- The Characters are, It hath male and female flowers in the fame plant ; the flowers have a roundijh permanent empalement , including feveral florets, which are convex ; the male flowers have one petal, which is funnel- ficape a , and indented in five parts at the brim •, thefe are fituated in the clijk ; they have five brijlly ftamina, terminated by ere 8 - fiimmis, approach- jug ing each other the female half florets have neither petal or Jlamina •, they have an oblong germen fupporting two hair-like flyles , crowned with acute fligmas. 'The im- palement afterward becomes the capfule , including one naked feed . This genus of plants is ranged in the fifth fecnon of Linnaeus's twenty-firft clafs, intitled Moncecia Pen- tandria, from the plants having male and female flo- rets, and the male florets having five ftamina. The Species are; 1. Iva {Annua) foliis lanceolato-ovatis, caule herbaceo. Hort. Upfal. 285. Ivy with oval fpear-Jhaped leaves and an herbaceous flalk. .Tarconanthus foliis cordatis ferratis trinervis. Prod. Leyd. 538. 2 . Iva {Frutef certs) foliis lanceolatis, caule fruticofo. Amcen. Acad. 3. p. 25. Iva with fpear-Jhaped leaves and a Jhrubby flalk. Agerato affinis, PerUviana fru- tefcens. Pluk. Alrri. ii. The firft fort grows naturally in many parts of the Weft-Indies ; it is an annual plant, with an her- baceous ftalk, which rifes from two to three feet high, fending out feveral branches from the fides, which are garnifhed with Oval fpear-fhaped leaves, having three deep longitudinal veins, and are fawed on their edges 5 the ftalks arid branches are terrhi- nated by fmall clufters of pale blue flowers, which appear in July, and are fucceeded by feeds which ri- pen in the autumn. This is propagated by feeds, which fliduld be fowri in the fpring upon a moderate hot-foed : and wheri the plants are fit to remove, they ftiould be tranfplanted bn another hot-bed to bring them forward, treating them in the fame way as is dire&ed for Impatiens, with which management the plants will fibber and perfeft their feeds. The fecorid fort has been long an inhabitant of the Englifh gardens, where it has been known by the ti- tle of Jefuits Bark-tree. It hath {lender ligneous branches which rife eight or ten feet high, garnilhed with fpear-fhaped fawed leaves ; the branches (in warm feafons) are terminated by fmall clufters of flowers, of a pale purple colour, which appear the latter end of Auguft, but are* not fucceeded by feeds in England. . This fhrub was fome years paft pfeferved in green- houfes, being fuppofed too tender to live through the winter in the open air ; but late trials have m&de it appear, that the ordinary winters in England feldom hurt it, provided it is planted in a dry foil and a fhel- tered fituation. It is propagated in the nUrfery-gar- dens about London for fale, and if the branches are layed into the ground in the fpring, they will put out roots in fix months \ or if cuttings are planted iri a fiiady border iri May, they will take root. JUDAICA ARBOR. See Cercis. JUGLANS. Lin. Gen. Plant. 950; Nux. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 581. tab. 346. Walnut j in French* Noi- fetier. The Characters are, It hath rria'le and female flowers at feparate diJlanceS on the fame tree. The male flowers are difpofed in an oblong rope , or katkin , which is cylindrical and imbricated , with Jpaces between the fcales each fcale has one flower , with one petal fixed in the outer center , toward the outflde of the fcale. The petal is divided into fix equal parts ; in the center is fituated many Jho'rt ftamina, terminated by erebl acute fummits. The female flowers grow in fmall clufters , fitting clofe to the branches * ihefe have a floor t, erect, four- pointed empalement , fitting on the germen , and an acute eredt petal , divided into four parts. Under the empale- ment Jits a large oval germen, fupporting two Jhort flyles, crowned by large reflexed fligmas. The germen afterward becomes a large oval dry berry, with one cell, inclofing a large oval nut with netted furrows, whofe kernel hath four lobes, which are varioufly furrowed. This genus of plants is ranged in the eighth fefbion of Linnseus’s twenty-firft clafs, intitled Moncecia Po- lyandria, including thofe plants which have male and female flowers on the fame plant, and the male flowers have many ftamina. JUG ; The Species dre, 1. Juglans ( Pwgia ) foliolis oval 1 bus glabris fubferraq tis fubsequalibus. Hort.. Cliff. 449. Walnut with oval fmall leaves or lobes, which arefmooth, fawed, and equal Nux juglans five Regia vulgaris. C. B. P„, 417,, Com- mon Walnut. , - . . , 2. Juglans {Nigra) foliolis quindenis lanceolatis fetria* tis, exterioribus minoribus gemmulis. fuper axillari- bus. Lin. Sp. 1415. Walnut-tree with fpear-floaped lobes which are Jharply fawed, the middle being the largeft . Nux juglans Yirginiana nigra. H. L. 452. Black Virginia Walnut . . 3. Juglans {OUonga) foliolis cordato-lariceolatis I;n- ferne nervoiis, pediculis foliorum pubefcentibus. Walnut with heart fpear-Jhaped lobes , having many veins on their under fide , and downy foot-ftalks to the leaves 4 Juglans nigra, fruftu oblongo profundiffime infculptO; Cat. Hort. Chelf. Black Virginia Walnut , with an oblong fruit very deeply furrowed. - . 4. Juglans {Alba) foliolis lanceolatis ferratis, exterio- ribus latioribus. Lin. Sp. Plant. 997. Walnut with fpear-Jhaped fawed lobes, the outer being the broad eft,, Nux juglans alba Yirginienfis. Park. Theat, 1414, White Virginia Walnut called Hickery Nut. 5. Juglans {Glabra) foliolis cuneiformibus ferratis, ex- terioribus majoribus. Walnut With wedge-Jhaped lobes which are fawed , the outer being the largeft. Juglans alba fruftu minori cortice glabra. Clayt. Flor, Virg, • White Walnut with a f mailer fruit, and a fmooth bark. 6 . Juglans {Ovata) foliolis lanceolatis ferratis glabris fubtequalibus. Walnut with ‘fmooth, fpear-Jhaped, Jawed lobes, which are equal. Juglans alba frudtu ovato compreflb, nucleo dulce, cortice fquamofo. Clayt. Flor. Virg. White Walnut with an oval comprejfed fruit „ a fwee't kernel, and a fcaly bark, commonly called Shag- bark in America . There ate feveral varieties of the common Walnut, which are diftingUifhed by the followihg titles : the large Walnut, the thin fhelled Walnut, the French Walnut, the late ripe Walnut, and the double Wal- nut 5 but thefe do all of them vary when raifed by the feed; fo that the nuts from the fame tree will pro- duce plarits whofe fruit will differ • therefore there can be no dependence upon the trees which are raifed ’from nuts, till they have produced fruit-, fo that thofe perfons who plant the trees for their fruit, fhould make choice of them in the nurferies when they have their fruit upon them, otherwife they may be deceived, by having fuch as they would not fchufe. The fecond fort is commonly called Black Virginia Walnut i this grows to a large fizein North America. The leaves of this fort are compofed of five or fix pair of fpear-fhaped lobes, which end in acute points,, and are fawed on their edges ; the lower pair of lobes are the leaft, the other gradually increafe in their fize to the top, where the pair at the top* and the fmgle lobe which terminates the leaf, are fmaller ; thefe leaves, when bruifed, emit a ftrong aromatic flavour, as do alfo the outer cover of the nuts, which are rough, arid rounder than thofe of the common Wal- nut. The fhell of the nut is very hard and thick, and the kernel fmall, but very fweet. The third fort grows naturally in North America, where the trees grow to a large fize. The leaves of this fort are compofed of feven or eight pair of long heart-fhaped lobes* broad at their bafe, where they are divided into two round ears, but terminate in acute points * they are rougher, and of a deeper green than thofe of the fecond fort, and have nothing of the aro- matic feent which they have. The fruit is very long. The fhell is deeply furrowed, arid \s very hard. The kernel is fmall, but well flavoured. The fourth fort is very common in moft parts of North America, where it is called Hickery Nut. The leaves of this fort are compofed of tv/o or three pair of oblong lobes, terminated by an odd one * thefe are of a light green, and fawed on their edges / the lower pair of lobes are the fmalleft, .and the upper the largeft. The fruit is ihaped like the common Wal- 7 & nut j J U G nut •, but the lliell is not furrowed, and is of a light colour. The .fifth fort is not fo large as the fourth. The leaves are composed of two pair of lobes, terminated by, an odd .one , thefe are narrow at their bafe, but broad and rounded at their ends , they are fawed on their edges, and are of a light green. The nuts are fmall, have , a fmooth fhell, and are very hard and white. The fixth fort grows naturally in North America, where it rifes to a middling ftature. The leaves of this fort are compofed of three pair of fmooth fp'ear- fhaped lobes, of a dark green colour, fawed oh their edges, and ending in acute points. The fruit is oval, the fhell white, hard, and fmooth ; the kernel fmall, but very fweet. The young fhoots of the tree are covered with a very fmooth brownifh bark, but the Items and older branches have a rough fcaly bark, from whence it had the appellation of Shagbark, in America, The common Walnut is propagated in many parts of England for the fruit, and formerly the trees were propagated for their wood, which was in very great efteem, till the quantity of Mahogany, and other ufeful woods which have been of late years imported into England, have alm'oft baniihed the ufe of Walnut. Thefe trees are propagated by planting their nuts, which, as was before obferved, feldom produce the fame fort of fruit as are fown •, fo that the only way . to have the defired fort, is to fow the nuts of the beft kinds ; and if this is done in a nurfery, the trees fhould be tranfplanted out when they have had three or four years growth, to the place where they are defigned to remain ; for thefe trees do not bear tranfplanting when they are of a large fize, therefore there may be a good number of the trees planted, which need not be put at more than fix feet apart, which will be diftance enough for them to grow till they produce fruit ; when thofe whofe fruit are of the defired kind may remain, and the others cut up, to allow them room to grow •, by this method a fuf- ficient number of the trees may be generally found among them to remain, which will thrive and fiourifh greatly when they have room ; but as many people do not care to wait fo long for the fruit, fo the next beft method is to make choice of fome young trees in the nurferies, when they have their fruit upon them; but though thefe trees will grow and bear fruit, yet they will never be fo large or fo long lived, as thofe which are planted young. All the forts of Walnuts which are propagated for timber, fhould be fown in the places where they are to remain for the roots of thefe trees always incline downward, which being flopped or broken, prevent their afpiring upward, fo that they afterwards divari- cate into branches, and become low fpreading trees •, but fuch 'as are propagated for fruit, are greatly mended by tranfplanting ; for hereby they are ren- dered more fruitful, and their fruit are generally larger and fairer ; it being a common obfervation, that downright roots greatly encourage the luxuriant growth of timber in all forts of trees but fuch trees as have their roots fpreading near the furface of the ground, are always the moft fruitful and beft fla- voured. The nuts fhould be preferved In their outer covers in dry fand until February, when they fhould be plant- ed in lines, at the diftance you intend them to re- main i but in the rows they may be placed pretty dole, for fear the nqts fhould mifcarry ; and the young trees, where they are too thick, may be re- moved, after they have grown two or three years, leaving the remainder at the diftance they are to ftand. In tranfplanting thefe trees, you fhould ob- , ferve never to'" prune either their roots or large branches, both which are very injurious to them ; nor. fhould you be too bufy in lopping or pruning the branches -of thefe trees w hen grown to a large JUG fize, for it often caufes -them to decay ;, but when there is a neceftky for cutting any of their branches off, it fhould be done early in September (for at that feafon the trees are not fo fubjedt to bleed) that the wound may heal over before the cold inereafes ; the branches fhould always be e'ut-. off quite daft, to the trunk, othefiwife the flump which is. left will decay, and rot the body of the tree. The beft feafon for tranfplanting thefe trees is as foon as the leaves begin to decay, at which time if they are carefully taken up, and their branches pre- ferved ‘entire, there will 'be little danger of their iuc- ceeding, although they are eight or ten years old, as I have feveral times experienced ; though, as was be- fore obferved, thefe trees will not grow fo large, or continue fo long, as thofe which are removed young. This tree delights in a firm, rich, loamy foil, or fuch as is inclinable to chalk or marl ; and will thrive very well in flony ground, and on chalky hills, as may be feen by thofe large plantations near Leather- head, Godftone, and Carfhakon in Surry, where are great numbers of thefe trees planted upon the downs, which annually produce large quantities of fruit, to the great advantage of their owners ; one of which I have been told, farms the fruit of his trees, to thofe who fupply the markets, for 30 1. per annum. The diftance thefe trees fhould be placed, ought not to be lefs than forty feet, efpecially if regard be had to their fruit ; though when they are only defigned for timber, if they ftand much nearer, it promotes their upright growth. The black Virginia Walnut is much more inclinable to grow upright than the common fort, and the wood being generally of a more beautiful grain, renders it preferable to that, and better worth cultivating. I have feen fome of this wood which hath been beautifully veined with black and white, which, when polifhed, has appeared at a diftance, like veined marble. This wood is greatly efteemed by the cabinet-makers for inlaying, as alfo for bedfteads, ftools, tables, and cabinets ; and is one of the moft durable woods for thofe ptirpofes of Englifh growth, being lefs liable to be infefled with infefls than moft other kinds (which may pro- ceed from its extraordinary bitternefs ft but it is not proper for buildings of ftrength, it being of a brittle nature, and exceeding fubjeft to break very fhort, though it commonly gives notice thereof, by its crack- ing fome time before it breaks. The general opinion is, that the beating of this fruit improves the trees, which I do not believe, fince in the doing of this, the younger branches are generally broken and deftroyed ; but as it would be exceeding troublefome to gather it by hand, fo in beating it off, great care fhould be taken that it be not done with violence, for the reafon before affigned. In order to preferve the fruit, it fhould remain upon the trees till it is thorough ripe, when it fhould be beaten, down, and laid in heaps for two or three days ; af- ter which they fhould be fpread abroad, when, in a little time, their hulks will eafily part from the fhells-, then you muft dry them well in the fun, and lay them up in a dry place, where mice or other vermin cannot come to them, in which place they will remain good for four or five months ; but there are fome perfons who put their Walnuts into an oven gentry heated, where they let them remain four or five hours to dry, and then put them up In oil jars, or any other clofe veffel, mixing them with dry fand, by which method they will keep good fix months. The putting of them in the oven is to dry the germ, and prevent their fprouting •, but if the oven be too hot it will caufe them to fhrink, there- fore great care muft be had to that. All the other forts are propagated in the fame way, but as few of the forts produce fruit in England, fo their nuts muft be procured from North America ; which fhould be gathered when fully ripe, and put up in dry fand, to preferve them in their p adage to Eng- land : when they arrive here, the fooner they are planted the greater chance there will be of their foe- feeding ; J u N ceeding ; when the plants come up, they fhould be kept clean from weeds j and if they flioot late in the autumn, and their tops are full of fap, they fhould be covered with mats, or fome other light covering, to prevent the early frofts from pinching their tender fhoots, which often caufes them to die down a con- iiderable length before the fpring •, but if they are fcreened from thefe early frofts, the fhoots will be- come firmer and better able to refill the cold. Some of thefe forts are tender while young, fo require a little care for the two firft winters, but afterward will be hardy enough to refill the greatell cold of this country. The black Virginia Walnut is full as hardy as the common fort : there are fome large trees of this kind in the Chelfea garden, which have produced great quantities of fruit upward of forty years •, the nuts have generally ripened fo well there as to grow, but their kernels are fmall, fo are of little value. The trees all require the fame culture as the com- mon Walnut, but they grow bell in a foft loamy foil not too dry, and where there is a depth of foil for their roots to run down. The Hickery, when young, is very tough and pliable, fo the flicks of it are much efteemed ; but the wood when grown large is very brittle, fo not of any great ufe. The black Virginia Walnut is the moll valuable wood of all the forts ; fome of the trees are beautifully veined, and will take a good polifh, but others have very little beauty, which is the cafe of many other forts of wood. JUJUBE. See Ziziphus. JULIANS, or R O C K E T S. See Hesperis. JULY FLOWER. See Dianthus. J UNCUS. Tourn. Xnft. R. H. 246. tab. 127. Lin. Gen. Plant. 3 96. Rufh ; in French, Jonc. The Characters are, It hath a chaff opening with two valves, an empalement with fix oblong pointed little leaves which are perma- nent •, the flower hath no petals , but the coloured em- palement is by fome taken for petals. It hath fix ffort hairy ftamina , terminated by oblong erelt fummits , and a three-cornered pointed germen , with a Jhort fender ftyle , crowned by three long , hairy , fender fiigrnas , which are re- flexed. The germen afterward becomes a clofe three-cor- nered capjule with one cell , opening with three valves , in- clofing roundijh feeds. This genus of plants is ranged in the firfl fedtion of Linnaeus’s flxth clafs, intitled Hexandria Monogynia, ■which contains the plants whofe flowers have fix {la- mina and one ftyle. The Species are, j, Juncus (. Acutus ) culmo fubnudo tereti mucronato, panicula terminali, involucro diphyllo fpinofo. Lin. Sp. Plant. 325. Rufh with a naked , taper, pointed folk, terminated by a panicle, and a prickly two-leaved involu- crum. Jhncus acutus, capitulis forghi. C. B. P. 11. Prickly large Sea Rufh. 2. Juncus ( Filiformis ) culmo nudo, apice membrana- ceo incurvo, panicula laterali. Lin. Sp. Plant. 326. Rufh with a naked fialk, an incurved membranacous apex , and a lateral panicle. Juncus acutus, panicula fparfa. C. B. P. Common hard Ruff. 3. Juncus ( Effufus ) culmo nudo ftri£lo, panicula late- rali. Flor. Leyd. 44. Ruff with a naked clofe fialk, and a lateral panicle. Juncus kevis, panicula fparsa, major. C. B. P. Larger common foft Ruff, with a fpreading panicle. 4. Juncus ( Conglomerates ) culmo nudo flridto, capitulo laterali. Prod. Leyd. 44. Ruff with a clofe naked fialk and lateral heads. Juncus lasvis, panicula non fparsa. C. B. P. Soft Ruff with a more compact panicle. There are many other fpecies of this genus, fome of which grow naturally in England, and are very trou- biefome weeds in many places, fo are not worthy of being enumerated here •, and thofe which are here mentioned, is only to point out a method of deflroy- ing them. The firft and fecond forts grow on the fea-- (hares, where they are frequently watered by the fait water. Thefe two forts are planted with great oare on the. _ J u N banks of the fea in Holland-, in order to prevent the water from waffling away the earth ; ' which ' being very loofe, would be in danger of removing every tide, if it were not for the roots of thefe Ruffles, which fallen themfeives very deep in the ground, and mat themfelves near the furface, fo as to hold- the earth clofely together. Therefore, whenever the roots of thefe Rufhes aredeftroyed, the inhabitants immediately repair them to prevent farther damage. In the furn- mer time, when the Rulhes are fully grown, the in- habitants cut them, and tie them up into bundles, which are dried, and afterward carried into the lar- ger towns and cities, where they are wrought into bafkets, and feveral other ufeful things, which are frequently fent into England. Thefe forts do not grow fo ftrong in England, as they do on the Maefe, and fome other places in Holland, where I have feen them upw r ard of four feet high. The third and fourth forts grow on moift, ftrong, un- cultivated lands in moll parts of England, and con- fume the herbage where they are fullered to remain. The bell method of deftroying thefe Rufhes is, to fork them up clean by the roots in July, and after having let them lie a fortnight or three weeks to dry, to lay them in heaps, and burn them gently ^ and the allies which thefe afford, will be good manure for the land ; but in order to prevent their growing again, and to make the paflure good, the land ihould be drained, otherwife there will be no deftroying thefe Rufhes entirely ; but after it is well drained, if the roots are annually drawn up, and the ground kept duly rolled, they may be fubdued. JUNIPER U S. Tourn. Ml. R. H. 588. tab. 36 r. Lin. Gen. Plant. 1005. Juniper , in French, Genevrier . The Characters are. It hath male and female flowers in different plants , and fometimes at feparate difiances on the fame plant. The male flowers grow on a conical katkin •, the flowers are placed by threes , two of them faflened along the common- tail oppofite , terminated by a fingle one the feales are broad, ffort, lying over each other, and fixed to the co- lumn by a very ffort foot -fialk. The flower has no petal , but three ftamina in the male flower which are joined in one body below, having three diftinH Jummits , adhering to the feales of the lateral flowers. The female flowers have a fmall three-pointed empalement fitting upon the germen, which is permanent they have three ftiff, acute , permanent petals \ the germen fitting below the empalement , fupports three Jingle ftyle s, crowned by fligmas. The ger- men afterward becomes a roundijh berry , inclofing three ftony feeds, which are oblong and angular on one fide, but / convex on the other. This genus of plants is ranged in the twelfth fedtion of Linngeus’s twenty-fecond clafs, intitled Dioecia Mo- nodelphia, which includes thofe plants which have male and female flowers in different plants, whofe fta- mina are joined in one body. The Species are, 1. Juniperus ( Communis ) foliis ternis patentibus mu- cronatis bacca longioribus. Lin. Sp. Plant. 1040. Ju- niper with fpreading fharp-pointed leaves placed by threes. Juniperis vulgaris fruticofa. C. B. P. 488. The com- mon Engliflo Juniper. 2. Juniperis ( Suecia ) foliis ternis patentibus, acutiori- bus, ramis eredlioribus, bacca longioribus. Juniper with longer and more acute-pointed leaves placed by threes , erelt branches , and longer berries. Juniperis vulgaris arbor. C. B. P. 488. The Tree , or Swediff Juniper. 3. Juniperus (JVirginiana ) foliis ternis omnibus paten- tibus. Juniper with leaves placed by threes , which are all of them fpreading. Juniperus Virginiana. H. L. Fo- lio ubique juniperino. Boerh. I rid. Cedar of Virginia - , or red Cedar. 4. Juniperus ( CaroUnianq ) foliis ternis bafi adnatis, ju~ nioribus imbricatis, fenioribus patulis. Hort. Cliff. 464. Juniper with leaves placed by threes adhering at their bafe, the young ones lying over each other, and the old ones fpreading. Juniperus Virginiana, foliis infe- rioribus juniperinis, fuperioribus fabinam, vel cypref- fum referentibus, Boerh. Ind. Carolina Cedar , 5- Juki- J U N 5= Juniperus ( Bermudiana ) foliis inferiorlbus terms, luperioribus quadrifariam imbricatis. Juniper with fpreading under leaves -placed by threes , and the upper by fours , which lie clofe over each other . Juniperis Ber- mudiana. H, L. Cedar of Bermudas . ©„ Juniper is ( ThurifeYa ) foliis quadrifariam imbricatis acutis. Lin, Sp. 1471, Juniper with awUJhaped acute leaves- placed by fours, lying over each other . juniper us major bacca caerulea. C: B. P. Greater Juniper with blue berries . 7, Juniperus ( Phoenicia ) foliis terms obliteratis imbri- caiis obtufis. Lin. Sp. 1471. Juniper with leaves placed by threes , which are obliterate , obtufe , and lying over each other. Cedrus folio cuprefli major, fruftu flave- fcente. C. B. P. Greater Cedar with a Cyprefs leaf and yellowijh fruit. Z. Juniperus ( Lycia ) foliis teriiis undique imbricatis ovatis obtufis. Flor. Leyd. 90. Juniper with oval blunt leaves , which every where lie over each other. Ce- drus folio cuprefli media, majoribus baccis. C. B. P. 488. Middle Cedar , with a Cyprefs leaf and larger berries. 9. Juniperus ( Barbadenfis ) foliis omnibus quadrifariam imbricatis junioribus ovatis fenioribus acutis. Prod. Leyd. 90. Juniper with all the leaves placed by fours , lying over each other , the young being oval , the older acute. Juniperus maxima cuprefli folio minimo, cor- tice exteriore in tenues philyras fpiralis du&ili. Sloan. Cat. Jam. 128. Great eft Juniper with the leaf Cyprefs leaf, and the outer bark fplitting off in thin dublile pieces, commonly called Jamaica Berry-bearing Cedar . 10. Juniperus ( Sabina ) foliis oppolitis ere&is decur- rentibus, ramis patulis. Juniper with oppoftte, erebl, running leaves , and fpreading branches. Sabina folio ta- marifei. C. B. P. 487. Savin with a Tamarifk leaf, or common Savin. 31. Juniperus ( Lufitanica ) foliis oppofitis patulis de~ currentibus, ramis ere&ioribus. Juniper with oppoftte fpreading leaves, which run over each other, and more \ 'erebl branches. Sabina folio cuprefli. C. B. P. 487. Savin with a Cyprefs leaf, commonly called Berry-bearing Savin. 12. Juniperus ( Oxycedrus ) foliis undique imbricatis ob- tufis, ramis teretibus. Juniper with obtufe leaves every- where lying over each other , and taper branches. Juni- perus major, bacca rufefeente. C. B. P. 489. Greater Juniper with a brownijh berry. 13. Juniperus (Hifpanica) foliis quadrifariam imbrica- tis acutis. Prod. Leyd. 90. Juniper with acute leaves lying over each other , placed four ways. Cedrus Hifpa- nica procerior, frudu maximo nigro. Tourn. Inft. 588. 'Taller Spanijh Cedar , with a very large black fruit. The firfb fort grows naturally upon chalky lands In many parts of England. This is a low fhrub, fel- dom riling more than three feet high, fending out jmany fpreading branches, which incline on every fide, covered with a brown bark, and garnilhed with nar- row awl-fhaped leaves ending in acute points, which are placed by threes round the branches, pointing outward •, thefe are of a grayifh colour, and conti- nue through the year •, the male flowers fometimes are fltuated on the fame plant with the female, but at diftances, at other times they are upon diftind plants : the female flowers are fucceeded by round- lih berries, which are firft green, but when ripe, are Of a dark purple colour. The berries ripen in the autumn. ^ The wood, the berries, and the gum, are ufed in medicine *, the gum is titled Sandaracha. q[*he fecond fort is known in the gardens by the ti- tle of Swedifn Juniper : this is by many fuppofed to be only a variety of the firft, but is undoubtedly a diftind fpecies, for I have many years raifed both Ions from the feeds, and have never found them al- ter. This fort rifes to the height of ten or twelve feet, the branches grow more ered, the leaves are narrower, and end in more acute points : they are placed farther afurider on the branches, and the ber- ries are longer. It grows naturally in Sweden, Den- mark, and Norway. J U N The third fort grows naturally in moft pans of North America, where it is called red Cedar, to diftin- guifti it from a fort of Cyprefs, which is called white Cedar there. Of this there are two, if not three va- rieties, befides the fpecies here enumerated one of which has leaves in every part, like thofe of the Sa- vin, and upon- being rubbed, emit a very ftrong un- grateful odour : this is commonly diftinguifhed in America, by the title of Savin-tree. There is ano- ther with leaves very like thofe of Cyprefs, but as thefe generally arife from the fame feeds when they are fent from America, fo they may be fuppofed to be only feminal variations. The lower leaves of the fourth fort are like thofe bf the Swedifh Juniper, but the upper leaves are like thofe of the Cyprefs ; and this difference is conftant, if the feeds are carefully gathered from the fame tree ; but as moft of thofe people who fend over thefe feeds, are not very careffil to diftinguiih the difference, fo it often happens that the feeds of two or three forts are mixed together, which has given occafion to peo- ple to imagine them but one Ipedes ° 9 but all the leaves of the third are like thole of the Juniper, fo the gar- deners call this the red Virginia Cedar •, and the fourth they call Carolina Cedar, though all the forts grow naturally in Virginia. The fifth fort is the Bermudas Cedar, whofe wood has a very ftrong odour,- and was formerly in great efteem for wainfootting of rooms, and alfo for fur- niture ; but the odour being too powerful for manv perfons, has rendered it lefs valuable, and at pre- font there is riot much of it imported into Eng- land. Thefe plants, while young, have acute-pointed leaves, which fpread open, and are placed by threes round the branches •, but as the trees advance, fo their leaves alter, and the branches are four-cornered y the leaves are very fhort, and placed by fours round the branches, lying over each other like the fcales of filh •, the berries are produced toward the end of the branches j thefe are of a dark red colour, inclining to purple. As there are few of thefe trees of any great fize in England, fo I have not had an oppor- tunity of examining their flowers, therefore do not know if they have male and female flowers on the fame plant, or if they are on different plants % for although I have received very fine fpecimens from Bermudas, yet they are all with fruit on them almoft fully grown, and not one with male flowers-, and as thefe trees areeommonlydeftroyedinEnglandwheneverthere happens a fevere winter, where they are not flickered, fo we have little hopes of feeing them in flower here. The flxth fort grows naturally in Iftria, from whence I received the berries, which have fucceeded with me in the Chelfea garden. This hath fpreading branches, growing thinly, which are garnilhed with acute- pointed leaves, placed by fours round the branches y they are of a deep green, and not very clofe to each, other, but grow horizontally, pointing outward ; the berries are much larger than thofe of the common Juniper, and are blue when ripe. The feventh fort grows naturally in Portugal, from whence I have frequently received the berries. This fort grows with its branches in a pyramidical form \ the lower ones are garnilhed with fhort, acute-pointed, grayifh leaves, placed by threes round the branches,' pointing outward 5 but thofe on the upper branches are of a dark green, lying over each other like the fcales of filh, but end in acute points. The male flowers are produced at the extremity of the branches j they are fltuated in a loofe, fcaly, conical katkin, ftanding upon a fhort foot-ftalk ereft ; the fruit is produced fometimes upon the fame tree, at diftances from the flowers, and at other times they are upon feparate trees ; the berries of this are of a pale yellow when ripe, and about the fize of thofe of the common Juniper. The eighth fort grows naturally in Spain and Italy, from both which countries I have received it. The branches of this fort grow ereft, and are covered with a reddifh brown bark 5 the leaves are final!, obtufe, and and lie over each other like the fcales of fifn , the male flowers grow at the extremity of the branches in a conical katkin, and the fruit grows; Engle from the lide of the branches below the katkins, on the fame branch ; the berries are large, oval, and, when ripe, are brown. The ninth fort grows naturally in Jamaica, and alfo in the. other iflands of the Weft-Indies, where it riles to be one of the largeft timber trees in thofe coun- tries ; the wood is frequently fetched from thence by the inhabitants of North America, for building of fhips. This fort is generally confounded with the Ber- mudas Cedar, and taken for the fame, but the fpeci- mens of it which were font me by the late Dr. Houf- toun, prove them to be different trees ; for the branches of this fpread very wide, the leaves are extremely fmall, and are everywhere lying imbricatim over each other ; the bark is rugged, and fplits oft' in firings, and is of a very dark colour ; the berries are fmallerthan thofe of the Bermudas Cedar, and are of a light brown colour when ripe : this fort is male and female in different trees. The tenth fort is the common Savin ; this grows na- turally in Italy, Spain, and the Levant, upon the mountains where it is cold. It fends out its branches horizontally, fo feldom rifes more than three or four feet high, but fpreads to a confiderabie diftance every way ; the branches are garnifhed with very fnort acute- pointed leaves placed oppofite, which run over each other along the branches, whole ends point upward. This fort very rarely produces either flower or feed in the gardens ; I have frequently examined old plants which have been handing more than fifty years, and have not more than three times found any male flowers upon them, and but once have feen any ber- ries, which were upon a feparate tree from the flowers ; thefe berries were fmaller than thofe of the common Juniper, but of the fame colour, and were a little compreffed ; the whole plant has a very rank ftrong odour when touched. The leaves of this fhrub are much ufed by the farriers for horfes when they have worms ; and Mr. Ray commends the juice of it mixed j with milk, and fweetened with fugar, as an excellent medicine for children who are troubled with worms. The leaves beaten into a cataplafm with hog’s-lard, will cure children’s fcabby heads. The eleventh fort has, by many, been fuppofed to be only an accidental variety of the former, but there is a a manifeft difference between them •, for the branches of this grow more ereft than thofe of the eleventh fort, the leaves are fhorter, and end in acute points which fpread outward. This fort will rife to the height of feven or eight feet, and produces great quantities of berries. I have propagated this fort from feeds, but have never found it vary. It has been diftinguiflhed by moft of the old botanifts, by the title of Berry-bearing Savin. It grows natu- rally on the Alps, from whence I have received the berries. The twelfth fort grows naturally in Spain, Portugal, and the fouth of France, where it rifes ten or twelve feet high, fending out branches the whole length of the ftem, which are garnifhed with fmall obtufe leaves, lying over each other like the fcales of fifh • the branches are fmall and taper, having no angles or corners, as moft of the others have ; the male flowers are fituated at the end of the branches in conical fcaly katkins, and the berries grow below from the fide of the fame branches. Thefe are larger than thofe of the common Juniper, and when ripe are brown. The thirteenth fort grows naturally in Spain and Portugal, where it rifes from twenty-five to thirty feet high, fending out many branches which form a fort of pyramid •, the branches are garnifhed with acute-pointed leaves, which lie over each other four ways, fo as to make the branches four-cornered ; the berries of this fort are very large, and black when ripe. Theie plants are all propagated by fowing their feeds, the beft feafon for which is as foon as they are ripe, if they can then be procured for when they are kept until fpring before they are fown, they will not come up until the fecoftd year. The ground in which, the feeds of the hardy forts are fown, fhould be frefli and light, but it fnould not be dunged : it fhould be well dug and levelled very even •, then fow your feeds thereon pretty thick, and lift forne earth over them about half an inch thick this bed will require no farther care than only to keep it clear from . weeds, and toward the middle or latter end of April, you. will find fome of your plants appear above ground, though, perhaps, the greateft part of them may lie till the fpring following before they come up ; therefore you fhould carefully clear the beds from weeds, and in very dry weather refrefh them with fome water, which will greatly promote the growth of thofe plants which are up, and alfo caufe the other feeds to vegetate ; but if the bed in which thefe feeds are fown is much expofed to the fun, it fliould be fhaded with mats in the day ; for when the plants come firft up, they will not bear too much heat. In this bed they fhould remain till the fecond autumn, when you mu..: prepare fome beds to tranfplant them into, which ihpuld alfo be of light, frefh, undunged foil ; and having well dug and cleanfed the ground from all noxious weeds and roots, you fhould make it level ; and then in the beginning of October, which is the proper feafon for removing thefe plants, you fhould raife up theyoung plants with a trowel, preferr- ing as much earth as. poflible to. their roots, and plant them into beds about five or fix inches afunder each way, giving them fome water to fettle the earth to their roots •, and if it fhould prove very dry weather, you may lay a little mulch upon the furface of the ground round their roots, which will be of great fer- vice to the plants. But as many of the feeds will be yet left in the ground where they are fown, fo the beds fliould not be difturbed too much in taking up the plants ; for I have known a bed fown with theie berries, which has fupplied plants for three years drawing, fome of the berries having lain fo long in the ground before they fprouted ; therefore the fur- face of the beds fnould be kept level, and conftantly clean from weeds. The plants may remain two years in thefe beds, ob- ferving to keep them clear from weeds ; in the fpring you fhould ftir the ground gently between them, that their roots may with greater eafe ftrike into it ; after which time they fliould be tranfplanted, either into a nurfery, at the diftance of three feet row from row, and eighteen inches afunder in the rows, or into the places where they are to remain for good. The beft feafon to tranfplant them (as I before obferved) is in the beginning of Gcftober, when you fliould take them up carefully, to preferve a ball of earth to their roots ; and when planted, their roots fliould be mulched ; all which, if carefully at- tended to, as alfo obferving to refrefh them with water in very dry weather until they have taken new root, will preferve them from the danger of not growing-, and they being extreme hardy in refpedfc to cold, will defy the fevereft of our winters to in- jure them, provided they are not planted in a moift or rich foil. In order to have thefe trees afpire in height, their under branches fhould be taken off, efpecially where they are inclined to grow ftrong, but they muff not be kept too clofely pruned, 'which would retard their growth ; for all thefe Evergreen trees do more or lefs abound with a refmous juice, which in hot weather is very apt to flow out from fueh places as are wounded •, fo that it will not bo abvifeable to take off too many branches at once, which would make, fo many wounds, from which their fap in hot weather would flow in fuch plenty, as to render the trees v/eak and unhealthy. The two forts of Virginian Cedars grow to a much greater height than the former, and in, their native country afford excellent timber for many ufesg but with us there are very few which are above twenty- 7 L five J u N five or thirty feet high, though there is no doubt of their growing larger ; for they thrive very faft after the three firft years, and refift the fharpeft froft of our climate exceeding well, and are very apt to grow ftrait and regular, provided they are not fuffered to fhoot out too much at bottom. Thefe plants are alfo propagated by feeds, which muft be procured from Virginia or Carolina (for they rarely produce ripe feeds in England) and fown as was direded for the other junipers •, but as this feed can- not be procured in England till fpring, fo when fown st that feafon, it remains in the ground until the fuc- ceeding fpring before the plants appear •, therefore you muft obferve to keep the beds clear from weeds, and not fuffer the feeds to be difturbed, which is often the fault of fome impatient people, who think, becaufe the plants do not rife the firft year, that they will ne- ver come up, and fo dig up the ground again, where- by their feeds are buried ; but if they are let remain, they feidom fail to grow, though fometimes it is two years after fowing before they come up. When the plants come up they muft be carefully weeded, and in dry weather fhould be refrefhed with water, which will greatly forward their growth ; and the autumn following they fhould have a little rotten tan laid be- tween them, to keep out the froft. In this bed the plants may remain till they have had two years growth, then they fhould be tranfplanted into other beds, as was directed before for the other forts, obferving to preferve a ball of earth to their roots ; and after they are planted, if the feafon proves dry, they muft be carefully watered, and the furface of the ground co- vered with mulch, to prevent the fun and wind from entering the earth to dry their fibres ; but they fhould not be too much watered, which often proves inju- rious to thefe trees, by rotting their tender fibres foon after they are emitted, whereby the plants have been often deftroyed. In thefe beds they may remain two years, obferving to keep them clear from weeds ; and in winter you fhould lay a little frefh mulch upon the furface of the ground round their roots, which will prevent the froft from penetrating to them, and effectually preferve them •, for while the plants are fo young, they are lia- ble to be injured by hard frofts, when too much expofed thereto; but when they have attained a greater ftrength, they will refift the fevereft of our cold. After two years, they fhould either be removed into a nurfery (as was directed for the common Juniper) or tranfplanted where they are defigned to remain, ob- ferving always to take them up carefully, otherwife they are fubjeCt to fail upon tranfplanting ; as alfo to # mulch the ground, and water them as was before di- rected, until they have taken root ; after which they will require no farther care, than only to keep the ground clear about their roots, and to prune up their fide branches to make them afpire in height. The foil in which you plant thefe trees fnould be frefh and light, but muft not be dunged, efpeciaily at the time when they are planted ; for dung is very hurtful to them, if it be not quite rotted to mould; therefore the mulch which is laid upon the furface of the ground fhould not be dung, but rather fome old tanners bark or fea-coal "afhes, which will prevent the froft from penetrating deep in the ground. Thefe trees being thus managed, will in a few years rife to a confiderable ftature, and by the variety of their evergreen leaves and manner of growth, will greatly add to the beauty of all plantations, if rightly difpofed, which indeed is what we feidom obferve in any of the Englifh gardens or wilderneffes ; for there are few people who confider the different growths of the feveral trees with which they compofe fuch plan- tations, fo as to place the , tailed: growing trees the backwardeft from fight, and the next degree to fuc- ceed them, and fo gradually diminifhing till we come to the common Juniper, and othersof the famegrowth, whereby all the trees will be feen, and the gradual de- I J U N clivity of their tops will appear like a verdant dope, and be much more agreeable to the fight, as alfo more advantageous to the growth of the trees, than to place fhrubs of humble growth near fuch plants as will grow to the firft magnitude, whereby the fhrub is hid from fight, and will be over-fhadowed and deftroyed ; nor can the diftance which each tree requires, be fo juftly proportioned any other way ; for in this diftn- bution, the largeft trees being feparated by themfelves, may be placed at a due diftance ; and then thofe of a middling growth fucceeding, may be accordingly al- lowed fufficient room ; and the finaller, which are next the fight, being placed much clofer, will hide the naked ftems of the larger trees, and have an agreeable effed to the fight. The timber of thefe trees is of excellent ufe in Ame- rica, for building of veffels, wainfcotting houfes, and for making many forts of utenfils, it abounding with a bitter refin, which prevents its being deftroyed by vermin, but itis very brittle, therefore not fo proper for ftubborn ufes ; but however, by increafing the num- ber of our timber trees, we fhall find many advan- tages, befides the pleafure their variety affords ; for we may hereby have trees of very different kinds, which are adapted to grow in various foils and ficu- tions, whereby we fhall never want proper trees for all the different forts of foils in England, if proper care be taken in their choice ; which would be a great im- provement to many parts of this kingdom, which now lie unplanted, becaufe the owner, perhaps, find that neither Oaks nor Elms will thrive there, and conle- quently concludes, that no otherfort of tree will, which is a great miftake ; for if we confider how different the ftrudture of trees are (being defigned by the wife Au- thor and contriver of all things, to grow on different foils and flotations) and only obferve what forts are adapted for growing on dry barren mountains, and what are defigned for the lower and richer valleys, we need never be at a lofs for proper trees for all forts' of ground. The Bermudas Cedar being a native of that ifland, and alfo of the Bahama Iflands, is much tenderer than either of the former forts, except that of Jamaica, fo is not likely to thrive well in this country ; for although many of thefe plants have lived feveral years in the open air in England, yet whenever a fevere winter happens, it either kills them, or fo much defaces them, that they do not recover their verdure in a year or two after. Thefe plants are propagated by feeds in the fame manner as the former, with only this difference, that thefe fhould be fown in pots or tubs of earth, that they may be removed into ftielter in the winter time, otherwife the young plants are often hurt by hard frofts ; but they will require no more care than only to be placed under a common hot-bed frame, where the glaffes may be conftantly kept oft’ in mild wea- ther, when they cannot have too much free air, and only covered in hard frofts. Thefe feeds conftantly remain in the ground until the fecond year before they come up, therefore the earth in the pots fhould not be difturbed ; and in the fummer time they fhould be placed in the fhade, to prevent the earth from drying too faft ; and in very dry weather they fhould be often watered, but do not give too much water to them at once, which would rot the feeds. The fpring following, when the young plants come up, they muft be carefully cleared from weeds, and in dry weather refrefhed with water ; but fnould ftand, during the fummer feafon, in a place defended from ftrong winds ; and in winter muft be placed under frames, where they may be covered in hard frofty weather, but muft have open air when the weather is mild. In April following you fhould tranfplant them each into a fingle halfpenny pot filled with frefh light earth, being careful to raife them up with a ball of earth to their roots ; and when they are planted, you fiiould water them, to fettle the earth to their roots ; then place the pots in a warm fituation, where they may be defended from fun and wind : but if you will bellow a moderate hot- bed to plunge the pots in, it will greatly promote their taking new root ; however, you muft carefully defend them from the great heat of the fun, which is injurious to them when frefh re- moved ; but when they have taken root, you may ex- pofe them by degrees to the open air. If you fuffer the pots to remain plunged all the fummer, it will preferve the earth therein from drying fo fait as it would do, if they were fet upon the ground. In Odober you fhould again remove thefe plants into fhelter, or elle plunge their pots into the ground un- der a warm hedge, where they may be protected from the cold north and eaft winds ; and in the fpring fol- lowing you muft Ihift the plants into pots a fize larger, taking away fome of the earth from the outfide of the ball, and adding fome frelh, which will promote their growth ; and fo continue to manage them as was be- fore directed, until you plant them out in the places where they are deligned to remain ; which fhould not be done till they are four or five years old, by which time they will be ftrong enough to bear the cold of our common winters. The reafon for my direding thefe plants to be pre- ferved in pots until they are planted put for good is, becaufe they are difficult to tranfplant, and being tender will require fome fhelter while young ; and whoever obferves the method here laid down, will find the plants fo managed to gain two years growth in fix, from thofe raifed in the open air, and be in lefs danger of being deftroyed ; and as the trouble and expence in raifing them this way is not great, fo it is worth pradifing, fince in a few years the trees will recompenfe the trouble. The timber of this tree is of a reddifli colour, and very fweet, and is commonly known in England by the name of Cedar Wood ; though there are divers forts of wood called by that name, which come from very different trees, efpecially in the Weft-Indies, where there are feveral trees of vaftly different ap- pearances and genera, which have that appellation : it is this wood which is ufed for pencils, as alfo to wainfcot rooms, and make ftair-cafes, it enduring longer found than moft other forts of timber, which, perhaps, may be owing to fome extreme bitter tafte in the refill, with which the tree abounds ; for it is very remarkable, that the worms do not eat the bot- toms of the veflels built with this wood, as they do thofe built with Oak ; fo that the vefiels built with Cedar are much preferable to thofe built with any other fort of timber, for the ufe of the Weft-India feas, but they are not fit for fhips of war, the wood being fo brittle as to fplit to pieces with a cannon ball. The Jamaica Juniper is more impatient of cold dian the Bermudas, fo will not live through the winter in the open air in England, and the plants muft be pre- ferved in pots and houfed in the winter ; this is pro- pagated by feeds, in the fame way as the Bermudas Cedar ; but if the pots are plunged into a moderate hot-bed the fecond fpring after the feeds are fown, it will bring up the plants fooner, and they will have more time to get ftrength before winter. All the other forts are hardy enough to live in the open air, fo are very well worth propagating, as they will add to the variety of Evergreen plantations ; fome of the forts will rife to a very confiderable height, fo may prove to be ufeful timber, and may be adapted to luch foils as will not fuit many other trees. The common Savin fhould not be negledted, becaufe it is To very hardy as never to be injured by the fevereft froft ; and as this fpreads its branches near the ground, fo if the plants are placed on the borders of woods, they will have a good effect in winter, by fcreening the nakednefs of the ground from fight. All thefe forts are propagated by their feeds, which may be fown in the fame way as the common Juniper, aiyd the plants afterward fo managed; and moft of the forts may be propagated by cuttings, which, if planted in autumn in a ffiady border will take root ; but thofe plants which are raifed from cuttings will never grow fo upright, nor to fo large a fize as the plants which are raifed from feeds j fo that when thefe carl be procured, it is much the better method, but the other is frequently p raft i fed on thofe forts which do not perfedt their feeds in England. As feveral of thefe forts grow to the height of eighteen or twenty feet, the procuring as many of the forts as can be gotten from the countries of their growth, will be adding to the variety of our Evergreen plantations, which cannot be too much propagated in England, where, in general, our winters are temperate enough for them to thrive to advantage ; and as the forts which are a little more tender than the others obtain ftrength, they will be in lefs danger of differing by fevere winters, as we find by many other plants, which were fo tender as not to live in the open air at firft, but now defy the fevereft cold of our climate . J U S S I JE A. Lin. Gen. Plant. 47S. The Characters are. It hath a fmall permanent empale merit, divided Into five fegnients at the top, fitting upon the germen. "The flower has five roundijh [presiding petals, and ten Jhort fender flamina, terminated by roundijh furnmits. The oblong ger- men fupports a Jlender ftyle, crowned by a flat filigma , marked with five ftripes. The germen afterward becomes a thick oblong capfule, crowned by the empalement , which opens lengthways , and is filled with fmall feeds . This genus of plants is ranged in the firft fedlion of Linn$us’s tenth clafs, intitled Decandria Monogynia, which includes the plants whofe flowers have ten fta- mina and one ftyle. The Species are, 1. Jussizea ( Suffmticofa ) ere&a villofa, floribus tetrape- talis, decandriis feffiiibus. Lin. Sp. Plant. 555. Up- tight hairy Jufifiiaa, with flowers fitting clofie to the flalks f having four petals and ten flamina. Lyfimachia Indica non pappofa, fiore luteo minimo, filiquis caryophyl- lum aromaticum ^mulantibus. H. L. 396. Indian Primrofe with a very fmall yellow flower, and pods re- fembling Cloves. 2. Jussi/EA (Pubefcens) villofa, caule erecto ramofo, fio- ribus pentapetalis, decandriis feffiiibus. Hairy Jnjfiaa with an eredl branching ftalk , flowers having five petals, and ten flamina which fit clofie to the ftalk. Lyfimachia lutea eredta, non pappofa major, folds hirfutis, frudhi caryophylloide. Sloan. Cat. Jam. 85. Telbw upright larger Tree-Primrofe with hairy leaves , and a fruit like Cloves. 3. JussiiEA ( Eredla ) erecta glabra, floribus tetrapetalis odlandris feffiiibus. Flor. Zeyl. 170. Smooth upright JuJjicea with four petals, and eight flamina to the flowers, which Jit clofie to the ftalk. Lyfimachia lutea non pap- pofa, eredta, foliis glabris, fructu caryophylloide. Sloan. Cat. Jam. 8 5. Tellow upright Tree-Primrofe with fimooth leaves, and a fruit like Cloves. 4. Jussizea ( Onagra ) caule eredla ramofo glabro, flori- bus tetrapetalis oftandris feffiiibus, foliis lanceolatis. Juflitea with an upright , branching, frnooth ftalk, flowers having four petals, and eight flamina fitting clofie to the ftalk, and fpear-Jhaped leaves. Onagra foliis perficarise amplioribus, parvo fiore luteo. Plum. Cat. 7. Tree- Primrofe with a large Arfefmart leaf, and a fmall yellow flower. 5. Jussi/ea ( Hirfiuta ) caule erefito fimplici hirfuto, fo-- liis lanceolatis, floribus pentapetalis decandris feffiiibus. Jujffiua with a Jingle, upright , hairy ftalk, fpear-Jhaped leaves, and flowers which have five petals, and ten [la- mina flitting clofie to the ftalk. Onagra erecta, caule ru- bro hirfuto, foliis oblongis, fiore magno luteo. Houft. MSS. Upright Primrofe with a hairy leaf of a reddifib colour , oblong leaves, and a large yellow flower. The firft fort grows naturally at Campeachy, from whence the feeds were fent me by the late Mr. Robert Millar ; this rifes with afhruhby ftalk near three feet high, fending out feveral fide branches, which are gar- niffied with oblong hairy leaves placed alternate. The flowers come out from the fide of the (talks kingly, having ffiort foot-ftalks ; they have four fmall yellow petals with eight ftamina thefe fit upon the germen, which afterward becomes an oblong feed-veffel, crown- ed by the four-leaved empalement, and has a great re- femblance J U s J u femblance to Cloves. This plant flowers in July and Auguft, and the feeds ripen in Oftober. The fecond fort 'grows naturally in Jamaica. The feeds of this were fent me by the late Dr. Houftoun ; this rifes with a hairy branching ftalk two feet high, and is garniihed with narrow fpear-fhaped leaves, placed alternate. The flowers come out toward the end of the branches fingly from the wings of the leaves, fitting clofe to the ftalk ; they are cdmpofed of five pretty large yellow petals, and ten ftamina ; thefe fit upon a long germen, which afterward be- comes the feed-veffel, crowned by the empalement ; thefe are. filled with final! feeds. It flowers and feeds about the fame time with the laft. The third fort grows naturally in Jamaica, from whence the feeds were fent me with thofe of the former fort •, this rifes with a fmooth erect ftalk three feet high, garnifhed with long, narrow, fmooth, fpear- fhaped leaves. The flowers are large and yellow, fitting clofe to the ftalk •, thefe are fucceeded "by long feed-veffels, fhaped like thofe of the other forts. It flowers and feeds at the fame time with the former. The fourth fort was fent me from Carthagena by the late Dr. Houftoun ; this hath a branching fmooth ftalk near three feet high, garnifhed with fpear- fhaped leaves, {landing upon fhort foot-ftalks. The flowers are fmall, yellow, and are compofed of four petals and eight ftamina *, thefe fit very clofe to the ftalk, and are fucceeded by feed-veffels, fhaped like thofe of the former forts. The fifth fort was fent me from La Vera Cruz, by the late Dr. Houftoun •, this rifes with fingle upright red ftalks three feet high, which are hairy and chan- nelled. The leaves are fpear-fhaped, and placed al- ternate on the ftalks. Handing nearer .together than in any of the other forts. The flowers come out from the wings of the leaves, toward the top of the ftalk •, they are compofed of five large yellow petals, and ten ftamina fitting clofe to the ftalks, and are fucceeded by feed-veffels which are one inch long, and fhaped like thofe of the former forts. The firft, fecond, and fourth forts are annual plants, at leaft they are fo in England ; for if the plants are raifed early in the fpring, they will flower in July, and ripen their feed the beginning of Oftoher and thofe plants which are raifed later in the fpring, cannot be preferved through the winter, though they are placed in a warm ftove; nor do their ftalks ever grow ligneous, or fhew any figns of their being perennial in their native country. The third and fifth forts have continued through the winter in the bark-ftove, but thofe have been fuch plants as did not flower and feed the firft year ; for after they had perfe&ed feeds, the following fummer the plants decayed. All thefe forts are propagated by feeds, which fhould be fown early in the fpring, in pots filled with a foft loamy foil, and plunged into a moderate hot-bed ; but as thefe feeds often lie a whole year in the ground before they vegetate, the earth muft be kept moift, and the glades of the hot-bed fhaded in the heat of the day, by this method the feeds may be brought foon to vegetate ; when the plants come up, and are fir to remove, they fhould be each planted into a fmall feparate pot, filled with light loamy earth, and plunged into a hot-bed of tanners bark, where they fhould be fhaded from the fun till they have taken new root ; after which they fhould have free air ad- mitted to them every day, in proportion to the warmth of the feafon ; they muft alfo be frequently refrefhed with water, but it muft not be given to them in too great plenty : when the roots of the plants have filled thefe fmall pots, the plants fhould be removed into others a fize larger and if the plants are too tall to ftand under the frames of the hot-bed, they fhould be removed into the bark-ftove, where they may remain to flower and perfe<5t their feeds ^ for when the plants rife early in the fpring, and are brought forward in hot- beds, all the forts will flower and perfedt their s feeds the fame year, which is better than to have them to keep through the winter. JU STIC I A. Houft. Nov. Gen. Lin. Gen. Plant. 27. Adhatoda. Tourn. Lift. K:*H. 175. tab. 79, This plant was fo named by the late Dr. Houftoun, in ho- nour of James juftice, Efqj a great lover ajkh en- courager of gardening and botany. The Characters are, The empalement of the flower is fmall , and divided into five acute fegments at the top. The flower hath one petal , which is divided into two lips almoft to. the bottom , which are entire. 1 'he upper lip is raifed archways , and the under is reft.exed. It hath two awl-jhaped ftamina fit u at ed under the upper Up , terminated by erect fummils which are bifid at their bafle. It hath an oblong germen , flap- porting a fender ftyle which is longer . than the petal , crowned by a fingle ftigma. The germen afterward be- comes an oblong capfule with two cells , divided by a par- tition . , which is contrary to the two valves , which open with an elafticity , and. cafl oat the rounMjh feeds. This genus of plants is ranged in the firft fedlion of Linnaeus’s fecond clafs, intitled Diandria Monogynia, which includes thofe plants whole flowers have two ftamina and one ftyle. To this genus of Dr. Houf- toun’ s is joined the Adhatoda of Tournefort, but there is a diftinction in their flowers •, the two lips of Jutti- cia are entire, but the upper lip of Adhatoda is in- dented at the end, and the under is divided into three parts •, and in the capfule of Jufticia there are feldom more than two feeds, but in Adhatoda feveral. The Species are, 1. Justicia {Scorpioides) foliis oblongo-ovatis birfutis, fefiilibus, floribus fpicatis alaribus, caule fruticofo. Jufticia with oblong , oval, hairy leaves fitting clofe to the ftalks , and flowers growing in Jpikes proceeding from the fide of the ftalks , which are fhrubby. Jufticia fru- tefeens, floribus fpicatis majoribus, uno verfu difpo- fitis. Houft. MSS. Shrubby Jufticia with larger flowers growing in j pikes , which are ranged on one fide. 2. Justicia (. Sgxangularis ) caule erecto ramofo hexan- gulari, foliis ovatis oppofkis, bracteis cuneiformibus confertis. Jufticia with an erect branching ftalk , having fix angles , oval leaves placed oppojite , and wedge-Jhapcd fmall leaves ( or bradlea) groining in clufters. Jufticia an- nua hexangulari caule, foliis Circteae conjugates, Acre miniato. Houft. MSS. Annual Jufticia with an hex angu- lar ftalk , Enchanters Night/hade leaves fet by pairs , and a carmine flower . 3. Justicia [Fruticofo) foliis ovato-lanceolatis, pedicu- latis, hirfutis, braefteis cordatis acuminatis, caule fru- ticofo. Jufticia with oval fpear-ftoaped leaves growing on foot-ftalks , heart-Jhaped acute-pointed braHem, 'and a fhrubby ftalk. Jufticia frutefeens & hirfuta, foliis ob- longis pediculis longiflimis, flore rubro. Houft. MSS. Shrubby and hairy Jufticia with oblong leaves growing on very long foot-ftalks , and a red flower. 4. Justicia ( Adhatoda ) arborea, foliis lanceolato-ovatis, bradteis ovatis perfiftentibus, corollarum galea con- cava. Flor. Zeyl. 1 6. Tree-Jufticia with oval fp ear -Jh aped leaves , oval permanent bradtea, and a concave helmet to the flower. Adhatoda Zeylanenfium. H. L. 6.4.2. Ad- hatoda of Ceylon , commonly called Malabar Nut. 5. Justicia ( Hyjfopifolia ) fruticofa, foliis lanceolatis in- tegerrimis, pedunculis trifloris ancipitibus, br adders calyce brevioribus. Lin. Sp. Plant. 1 5. Shrubby Jufticia with entire fpear-fhaped leaves , foot-ftalks having three flowers placed different ways , and a bradiea floor ter than the empalement. Adhatoda Indies, folio faligno, flore albo. Boerh. Ind. alt. 1. 239. Indian Adhatoda with a Willow leaf and white flower , commonly called Snap- tree. 6. Justicia ( Spinofa ) fpinofa, foliis oblongo-ovatis emar- ginatis, caule fruticofo ramofo. Prickly Jufticia with oblong oval leaves indented at their edges , and a fhrubby branching ftalk. Adhatoda Antegoana, Lycii facie, fpinofa. Petiv. Prickly Adhatoda of Antigua , with the appearance of Boxthorn. 7. Justicia {Arborea) arborea, foliis lanceolato-ovatis fefiilibus, fubtus tomentofis, fiorii}Us fpicatis congeftis terminalibus. Tree-Jufticia with'- fpear-fhaped oval leaves, woolly 4 JUS woolly on their under fide , fitting clofie to the fivalks , with l pikes of flowers growing in clufters at the ends of the ’ branches . Adhatoda arborea, foliis oblongis, fubtus villofis, fioribus fpicatis albis. Houd. Three- Adhatoda with oblong leaves , hairy on their under fide , and fipikes of white flowers. 3. Jtjsticia ( Ecbolhm ) arborea, foliis lanceolate ovatis, bradeeis ovatis deciduis mucronatis, corollarum galea refiexa. Flor. Zeyl. 17. Tree-JuJHcia with fpear-Jhaped oval leaves , oval-pointed bradtea which fall off, and a reflexed helmet to the flowers. Adhatoda (pica longiffi • ma, flore refiexo. Burman. Zeyl. 7, tab. 4. f. 1. Ad- hatoda with a very long fpike , and a reflexed flower. The firlt fort was difcovered growing naturally at La /era Cruz, by the late Dr. Houftoun, who lent the feeds to England ; this rifes with a fhrubby brittle italic five or iix feet high, fending out many branches, which are garnifhed with oblong oval leaves, two inches long, and one inch broad, which are hairy and placed oppofite •, from the wings of the leaves come out the (pikes of (lowers, which are reflexed like a fcorp ion’s tail. The flowers are large, of a carmine colour, and ranged on one fide of the fpike •, thefe are fucceeded by (hort pods about half an inch long. The fecond fort was difcovered by the fame gentle- man, in the fame country; this is. an annual plant with an upright (talk, having fix angles, which rifes two or three feet high, dividing into many branches, garnifhed with oval leaves placed oppofite, an inch and a half long, and one inch broad ; they are fmooth, as are alfo the (talks. At each joint come out cluders of fmall wedge-fhaped leaves, which are by Dr. Lin- nams termed brabte^, and long before the fcalks de- cay, mod of the larger leaves fall off, fo there are only thefe fmall leaves remaining. The fiow'ers are pro- duced in fmall (pikes at the fide of the branches, fitting very clofe among the leaves ; they are of a beautiful carmine colour, and have but one petal, which has two lips. The upper lip is arched, bending over the lower, which is alfo a little reflexed, but both are entire. The flowers are fucceeded by fhort wedge-fhaped capfules, opening lengthways, inclofing two fmall oval feeds. The third fort was difcovered by the fame gentleman at Campeachy •, this rifes with a hairy fhrubby (talk four or five feet high, dividing into feveral branches, garnifhed with oval, fpear-fhaped, hairy leaves, four inches long, and two inches and a half broad, (landing upon foot-dalles which are above an inch long, placed oppofite. At the bale of the foot-dalks come out a cluder of fmall heart-fhaped leaves, ending in acute points, which are termed bradles. The flowers come out in loofe clufters from the wings of the ftalks, to- ward the end of the branches ; they are of a pale red colour, and fhaped like thoie of the former fort. Thefe plants are propagated by feeds, which fhould be fown early in the fpring, in fmall pots filled with frefh. light earth, and plunged into a moderate hot- bed of tanners bark, obferving to water the earth gently as it appears dry. The feeds of thefe plants frequently lie a year in the ground, fo that the pots rr.uft not be difturbed, if the plants do not come up the fame year ; but in the -winter fhould be kept in the dove, and the fpring following plunged into a frefh hot-hed, which will bring up the plants if the feeds were good. When the plants begin to appear, the glaffes of the hot-bed fhould be railed every day, when the weather is warm, to admit frefh air to them. The plants mud alfo be frequently watered in warm weather-, but water fhould not be given in large quantities while. the plants are young, becaufe they are then very tender, and lubjedt to rot at the bottom of their ftems, with much moifture. "When the plants are about two inches high, they fhould be carefully taken up, and each transplanted Into a feparate fmall pot filled with frefh light earth, and then plunged into the hot-bed again, being careful to water and fhade them until they have taken new root ; after which time they fhould have air admitted to. them every 'day, in proportion to the warmth of JUS the feafon, and fhould be duly watered every two or three days in hot weather. As the plants advance in their growth, they fhould be drifted into larger pots, for if their roots are too much confined, the plants will not make any confide- rable progrefs ; but they fhould not be over potted; for that will be of worfe confequence than the other ; becaufe when they are planted in very large pots, they will ftarve and decay, without producing any flowers. They are too tender to endure the open air in this country, therefore they fhould always remain in the hot-bed, being careful to let them have a due pro- portion of air in hot weather; and the annual fort fhould be brought forward as fad as poffible in the fpring, that the plants may flower early, otherwife they will not produce good feeds in England. The firft and third forts fhould remain in the hot-bed during the dimmer feafon (provided there is room under the glaffes, without being fcorched ;) but at Michaelmas they fhould be removed into the dove, and plunged into the bark-bed, where they mud; re- main during the winter feafon, obferving to keep them warm, as alfo to water them gently once or twice a week, according as they fhall require. The following dimmer thefe plants will flower, and abide feveral years, but they rarely produce good feeds in Europe. The fourth fort grows naturally in the ifland of Cey- lon, but has been long in the Englifh gardens, where it is commonly known at prelent by the title of Ma- labar Nut ; but was formerly called Beetle Nut, and was by fome fuppofed to be the tree of which the Chinele chew the leaves and nuts : this, though a native of fo warm a country, is hardy enough to live in a good green-houfe in England, without any ar- tificial heat. It rifes here with a ftrong woody ftalk to the height of twelve or fourteen feet, fending out many fpreading branches, which are garnifhed with fpear-diaped oval leaves more than fix inches long, and three inches broad, placed oppofite. The flowers are produced on fhort fpikes at the end of the branches, which are white, with fome dark fpots % ,thefe appear in July, but are not fucceeded by any feeds in England. This fort may be propagated by cuttings, which, if planted in pots in June or July, and plunged into a very moderate hot-bed, will take root; but they mud be every day fereened from the fun, and if the external air is excluded from them, they will fucceed better than when it is admitted to them. It may alfo be propagated by laying down their young branches, which will take root in the tubs or pots in one year 3 then the young plants fhould be; put each Into, a fe- parate pot, filled with loft loamy earth, and placed in the (hade till they have taken new nxp when they may be placed in a iheltered ficuation during the dimmer, but in winter they mud be houfed, and treated in the fame way as Orange-trees, with only this difference, that thefe require more water. The fifth fort grows naturally in India ; this rifes with a fhrubby ftalk from three to four feet high, fending out branches on every fide from the bottom, fo as to form a kind of pyramid ; thefe are covered with a white bark, and garnifhed with fpear-fhaped entire leaves, near two inches long, and one third of an inch broad ; they are fmooth, ftiff, and of a deep green, (landing oppofite. At the bafe of the foot-dalks comer out clufters of fmaller leaves, of the fame fhape and texture. The flowers come out upon fhorf foot-dalks from the fide of the branches, each foot-ftalk fup- porting one or two white flowers, having long etn- palements ; thefe are fucceeded by oblong feed-veffels, which, when ripe, cad out their feeds with an elaf- ticity, from whence it had the title of Snap-tree. This is propagated by cuttings during any of the dimmer months ; they fhould be planted in pots filled with light loamy earth, and plunged into a moderate hot-bed, and (haded from the fun, and now and then gently refrefhed with water, and not too much air admitted to them. In about two months the cuttings will have taken root, then they mud be gradually 7 M inured f I X I I X I ihured to bear the open air, into which they fhould be removed, placing them in a flickered fituation, where they may ftay till autumn •, but if they get root pretty early in the fummer, it will be proper to fe- parate them each into a fmgle fmall pot, letting them in the fh'ade till they have taken new root, after which they may be placed as before dire&ed ; but when it is late in the feafon before they take root, it will be better to let them remain in the fame pots till the fol- lowing fpring. In winter thefe plants mull be placed in a warm green-houfe, or in a moderately warm ftove, for they are impatient of cold and damp, nor will they thrive in too much warmth ; they will often require water in winter, but during ' that feafon it muft be given them moderately •, in fummer they muft be removed into the open air, but fhould have a warm flickered fituation, and in warm weather they muft have plenty of water. This plant flowers at different feafpns, but never produces fruit here. The fixth fort grows naturally in Jamaica, from whence the late Dr. Houftoun fent it to England ; this riles with many fhrubby fender ftalks about five feet high, fending out branches on every fide from the root upward, which grow erect, and are covered with a whitifh bark, garnifhed with fmall, oblong, oval leaves, coming out on each fide the ftalk op- pofite, and under the leaves are placed at every joint two fnarp thorns like thofe of the Berberry •, the Bow- ers come out fingly from the wings of the leaves, they are fmall, and of a pale red colour, fhaped like thofe of the other forts. The feventh fort was found by the late Dr. Houftoun, growing naturally at Carnpeachy. This riles with a ftrong woody ftem twenty feet high, dividing into many crooked irregular branches, covered with a light brown bark, garnifhed with fpear-fhaped oval leaves, near four inches long and two broad, which are co- vered with a foft down on their under fide. The flowers grow in fpikes from the end of the branches, three, tour, or five of thefe fpikes arifing from the fame point, the middle fpike being near three inches long, and the others about half that length. The flowers are fmall and white, but fhaped like thofe of the other fpecies. The eighth fort grows naturally at Malabar and in Ceylon ; this riles in its native foil with a ftrong woody ftem ten or twelve feet high, dividing into many branches, which are garnifhed with fpear-fhaped oval leaves five inches long, and two and a half broad, of a lucid green, placed oppofite. The flowers grow in very long fpikes from the end of the branches, they are of a greenifti colour with a fhade of blue •, the helmet of the flower is reflexed. Thefe three forts are propagated by feeds in the fame manner as the three firft, and the plants muft be treated in the fame way, efpecialiy while they are young but afterward the eighth fort may be more hardily treated, when they have gotten ftrength. This fort may alfo be propagated by cuttings, in the fame ’ manner as the fifth fort ; and when the plants are two or three years old, they will thrive in a moderate de- gree of warmth in winter, and in the fummer they may be placed abroad for two months in the warmeft feafon of the year ; but they fhould have a warm fhel- tered fituation, and when the nights begin to grow cold, they muft be removed into the ftove, but they muft have free air admitted to them at all times when the weather is warm. The other two forts ihould conftantly remain in the bark-ftove, and require the fame treatment as other tender plants from the warmeft countries. IX I A. Lm. Gen. Plant. 54. Sifyrinchium. Com. Hort. Am ft. The Characters are, It hath oblong permanent fpatha {or Jh eat hs) which incloje the get men \ the flower has Jin oblong Jhear-ftaped petals which are equal , and three avol-jhaped jiamina which are porter than the petals , filiated at equal difiances ? termi- nated li fmgle fummils. It hath an oval three-cornered ' gerrnsn fitmted below the power? fupporting a fmgle Jlyle which is the length of the ftamina ? crowned by a thick trifid fiigma ■? the germen afterward becomes an oval three- cornered cap file with three cells ? filled with rcundfij feeds. Phis genus of plants is ranged in the firft fed ion of Lihnteus’s third clafs, intitled Triandria Monogynia, which includes thofe plants whole flowers have three ftamina and one ftyle. The Species are, 1. Ixi a ( Chincnfts ) foliis enfiformibus, floribus remotis panicula dichotoma, floribus pedunculatis. Hort. Up- fal. 1 6. Ixi a with fw or 'd- ft aped leaves? and fewer s ' funding remote in forked panicles upon foot -ftalks. Bennudiana iridis folio majori flore croceo, eleganter punctata. Krauf. Hort. 25. tab. 25. Bermudiana with a larger Iris leaf? and a Saffron-coloured flower? which is beauti- fully /potted. 2. Ixi a ( Africana ) floribus capitatis, fpathis lacerh. Lin. Sp Plant. 36. Ixia with flowers growing in heads ? having ragged jheaths. Bermudiana Capenfis, capitulis : anu- ginofis. ret. Hort. Sicc. 242. Bermudiana from the Cape of Good Hope , with woolly heads. 3. Ixia ( Still ariis ) foliis gladiolatis, nervous, hirfutis, floribus fpicatis terminaiibus. Icon. tab. 1 55. fig 1. Ixia with f wor d-paped? hairy ? veined leaves , and flowers growing in Jpik.es at the ends cf the ftalks . 4. cxi a ( Polyftacia ) foliis linean-gladiolatis, floribus ala- ribus & terminaiibus. Icon. tab. 155. fig. 2. Ixia with narrow /word- ft aped leaves ? and flowers proceeding from the fides and lops of the /talk. 5. Ixia ( Crocata ) foliis gladiolatis glabris, floribus co- rymbofis terminaiibus. Icon. tab. 1 56. Ixia with jmooth fpear fhaped leaves , and flowers growing in a corymbus terminating the ftalk. Sifyrinchium Africanum maius, flore luteo macula notato. Olden. Greater African Sify- rinchium with a yellow Jpotted flower. 6 . Ixia ( Bulbifera ) f.diis lineari-giadiolatis, floribus al- ternis, caule bulbifero. Ixia with narrow fw- r d-paped leaves? flowers placed alternate ? and ftalks bear eng bulbs. 7. Ixia ( Sparfa ) foliis gladiolatis, floribus diitantibus. Ixia with flwon aiftant. 8 . Ixia ( Flexuofa ) foliis lineari-giadiolatis, floribus fpi- catis feflilibus terminaiibus. Ixia, with narrow jword- ftaped leaves ? and fefljile flowers growing in fpikes at the top of the ftalk. The firft fort grows naturally in India, where the ftalks rife to the height of five or fix feet, but in England they are feldom more than half that height. It hath a pretty thick flefhy root, divided in knots or joints of a yellowifh colour, fending out many fibres; the ftalk is pretty thick, fmooth, and jointed, gar- niflied with fword-ftiaped leaves a foot long and one inch broad, with feveral longitudinal furrows em- bracing the ftalks with their bafe, ending in acute points ; the upper part of the ftalk divaricates into two fmaller, with a foct-ftalk arifing between them, which fupports one flower •, the fmaller branches di- varicate again in the fame manner into foot-ftalks, which are two inches long, each fuftaining one flower. At each of thefe joints is a fpathaor fheath embracing . the ftalk, which at the lower joints are three inches long, but the upper are not more than one inch, ending in acute points which are permanent; the flowers are compofed of fix equal petals, of a yellow colour within, and variegated with dark red fpots; the outfide is of an Orange colour. Thefe appear in July and Auguft, and in warm feafons are fucceede by feeds. This fort may be propagated either by feeds or part- ing of the roots : if by feeds they fhould be fov/n in pots, and plunged into a moderate hot-bed, which will bring up the plants much fooner than when they are fown in the full ground ; when the plants are fit to remove, they fhould be each planted in a fmall fe- parate pot filled with light earth, and if they are placed under a frame till they have taken good root in the pots, it will greatly forward their growth afterward they may be placed in the open air in a flickered fi- tuation, where they may remain till the autumn, when. they -paped leaves , and flowers growing I X I they muft be placed under a frame to fcreen them from fro d ; and in the fpring molt of the plants may be turned out of the pots and planted in a warm border, where they will abide through the common winters very well, but in fevere frofts they are often killed, unlefs they are covered with tan, or other covering to keep out the froft; therefore a few of the plants may be kept inkpots, and fheitered under a frame in winter. The ftalks and leaves of this plant decay to the root in autumn, fo that if the furface of the ground about the roots is covered two or three inches thick with tan, it will fee u re them from the danger of froft •, and in the fpring, before the roots Ihoot, will be the beft time to remove and part the roots •, but this fhould not be done oftener than every third year, for when they are often parted they will be weak, and will not dower fo well. The fecond fort grows naturally at the Cape of Good Hope ; this is a low plant, which rarely rifes more than three or four inches high; the leaves are narrow and veined, the flowers are fmall, growing in a downy head on the top of the ftalk, but they make little appearance, fo are only kept for the fake of variety. The third fort I raifed from feeds, which were fent me from the Cape of Good Hope. This hath a round bulbous root a little comprened, covered with a red fkin, from which arife five or fix fword-fhaped leaves about three or four inches long, hairy, and with fe- veral longitutinal furrows ; thefe embrace each other at their bale, but fpread afunder at the top •, between thefe come out the flower-ftalk, which rifes fix or eight inches high, is naked to the top, and terminated by a duller of flowers, each having a fpatha or hood, which dries and is permanent ; the flowers are of a deep blue colour, and appear in May ; thefe are fuc- ceeded by roundilh three-cornered feed-veffels with three cells, filled with roundilh. feeds which ripen in July, then the leaves and ftalks decay. The fourth fort was raifed from feeds in the Chelfea garden, which came with thofe of the former fort. This hath a fmall round bulbous root, from which arife four or five narrow, long, fword-fhaped leaves, fix or feven inches long ; between thefe come out a very (lender round ftalk about ten inches long, from the fide of which there comes out one or two clullers of flowers, Handing upon fhort foot-flalks, and at the top of the ftalk the flowers grow in a loofe 'fpike ; they' are of a pure white, and fhaped like thofe of the other fpecies. Thefe appear in May, and the feeds ripen in July. The feeds of the fifth fort were fent me from the Cape of Good Hope ; this has an oval bulbous root which is a little corrrpreffed, from which come up three or four narrow, thin, fword-fhaped leaves, near a foot long •, the flower-ftalk rifes a little above the leaves, it is very (lender, naked, and terminated by a round >rlufter of flowers, each having a fpatha or hood ; they are compofed of fix pretty large oblong petals which are concave, and of a deep yellow colour, each having a large black fpot at the bafe. This flowers early in May, and the feeds ripen the latter end of Jftne. The fixth fort hath narrow fpear-fhaped leaves about fix or (even inches long ; the ftalk rifes near a foot and a half high, garmfhed with one leaf at each of the lower joints, of the fame fhape with the other, fbut fmaller •, thefe embrace the ftalk with their bafe, and (land erect ; the upper part of the ftalk is adorned ■with flowers, compofed of fix oblong oval petals of a fulphur colour, which are placed alternate on the ftalk, which is bent at each joint where the flowers (land ; the flowers have three fhort (lamina which are joined at their bafe, terminated by long, flat, ereft fummits ; xhe gerhnen is fituated under the flower, fupporting a long (lender ftyle, crowned by a trifid ftigma ; the german afterward becomes a roundifh capfule with three cells, filled with roundilh fmall feeds. The (talks at each of the lower joints thruft cut fmall bulbs, which, if planted, will grow and product • flowers. The feventh forthath (horterand broader leaves than the former ; the ftalk is (lender and furrowed, and at each of the lower joints is garnilhed with one leaf of the fame ihape, embracing the ftalk with their bafe * the flowers come out toward the top of the ftalk, at two or three inches di (lance, each ftalk fupporting two or three fulphur-coloured flowers, which are each compofed of fix fpear-fhaped petals an inch and a half long, equal in their iize and regular in pofition ; they have a (hort permanent empalement, cut into two long and two (hotter acute fegments ; thefe are fucceeded by round capfules with three cells, filled with round feeds. This fort flowers in March, and the feeds ripen about two months after. 1 he eighth fort hath very fmall, round, bulbous roots, from which arife three or four long, (lender, Grafs- like leaves, of a dark green colour; between thefe come out the ftalk, which is very (lender and round, riling a foot and a half high ; at the top the flowers are collected in a fpike fitting clofe to the ftalk, each having a thin, dry, permanent fpatha or (heath, which covers the capfule after the flower is fallen. Tiie flov/- ers are of a pure white, and (haped like thofe of the other fpecies, but are (mailer; they are fucceeded by (mall round feed-veffels with three cells, each con- taining two or three round feeds. It flowers the latter end or May, and the feeds ripen in July. 1 here are feme other varieties of this genus, which have flowered in the Chelfea garden, differing only in the colour of their flowers, fo are not fuppofed to be diftmdl fpecies ; one of which is purple on the out- flde, and wmte within ; another has white flowers, with a blue ftripe on the outfide of each petal, and a third has white flowers with yellow bottoms. Thefe have already flowered in the Chelfea garden, where there are many more, which have been fince raifed from feeds, whofe flowers have not as yet appeared ; and at the Cape of Good Hope, where thefe plants grow naturally, there are more than thirty varieties mentioned in a catalogue of Dr. Herman’s. The roots of moft, if not all thefe forts, are frequently eaten by the inhabitants at the Cape of Good Hope, who greatly efteem them. All the forts multiply very fall by offsets, fo that when once obtained, there will be no occafion to raife them from feeds ; for the roots put out offsets in great plenty, moft of which will floveerthe following feafon, whereas thofe from feeds are three or four years be- fore they flower. Thefe plants will not live through the winter in the full ground in England, fo fhould be planted in fmall pots filled with light earth, and placed under a frame in winter, where they rpay be protedled from froft, but in mild weather fhould enjoy the free air; but during the winter they muft be guarded from mice, who are very fond of thefe roots, and if not prevented will devour them. IXORA. Lin. Gen. 13 1. Jafminum. Burman. The Characters are. It hath a fmall 'permanent emp dement cut into four feg- ments ; the flower has one funnel-fhaped petal, having a flender tube , cut into flour fegments at the top. It hath feur floort ft amina fituated in the divificns of the petal , ter- minated by oblong fummits, and a rcufidifh germen fituated at the bottom of the involucrum, fupporting a fender ftyle the length of the tube , crowned by a bifid, ftigma ; the mer- men afterward becomes a berry with two cells , containing two convex angular feeds. This genus of plants is ranged in the firft order of Linnaeus’s fourth clafs, intitled Tetrandria Monogy- nia, the flowers having four ftamina and one ftyle. The Species are, 1. Ixora ( Coccinea ) foliis ovatis -femiamplexicaulibus, ftoribus fafciculatis. Fior. Zeyl. 22. Ixora with oval haves half embracing the ftalks , and flowers growing in bunches. Jafminum Xndicum lauri folio, inodorum umbellatunV ftoribus coccineis. Pluk. Phyt. tab. 50. f. 2. ' a. Ixora Ixora (Alba) foliis ovatq-Ianceolatis, floribus fafcicu- latis. Lin. Sp. 160. Ixora with oval fp ear -Jh aped leaves , and flowers growing in bunches. Jafminum Indicum, lauri folio, inodorum, floribus albicantibus & fchetti album. Pluk. Phyt. 109. £2. 3. Ixora (Americana) foliis tern is lanceolato-ovatis, fio- ribus thyrfoideis. Amcen. Acad. 5. p. 393. Ixora with oval fpear-fhaped leaves placed by threes , and flowers in a loofe flpike. Pavetta foliis oblongo-ovatis oppofitis, fti- pulis fetaceis. Brown. Jam. tab. 6. f. 2. The firft fort grows naturally in India, where it rifes with a woody italic five or fix feet high, fending out many (lender branches covered with abrovvnbark, gar- nifhed with oval leaves, placed fometimes oppofite, and at others there are three or four at each joint. The flowers terminate the branches in clufters ; they have very long fender tubes, are cut into four oval fegments at the top, and are of a deep red colour. The fecond fort grows aifo in India •, this hath a woody ftalk rifing fix or feven feet high, fending out weak branches, garnifhed with oval fpear-fhaped leaves placed oppofite, fitting clofe to the branch •, the flow- ers terminate the branches in fmall clufters •, they have long {lender tubes, divided into four fegments at the top, and are white, without fcent. The third fort grows naturally in Jamaica, and fome other iflands in the Weft-Indies, -where it is called Wild Jafrnine. This rifes with a flirubby ftalk four or five feet high, fending out (lender branches op- pofite, which are garnifhed with oval fpear-fhaped leaves placed oppofite, which are fix inches long, and two inches and a half broad, having fhort foot-ftalks » the flowers are produced at the end of the branches in a loofe fpike, they are white, and have a fcent like Jafrnine. Thefe plants are propagated by feeds, v/hen they can be procured from the countries where they grow na- turally, for they do not perfect any feeds in England. They fhould be fown in fmall pots as foon as they ar- rive, and plunged into a hot-bed ; if they arrive in autumn or winter, the pots may be plunged in the tan-bed in the ftove, between the other pots of plants, fo will take up little room •, but v/hen they arrive in the fpring, it will be beft to plunge them in a tan- bed under frames •, the feeds will fornetimes come up in about fix weeks, if they are quite frefh •, otherwise they will lie in the ground four or five months, and fometimes a whole year, therefore the earth fhould not be thrown out of the pots till there is no hopes of their growing •, v/hen the plants come up, and are fit to remove, they fhould be each planted in a fepa- rate fmall pot, filled with light earth, and afterward treated in the manner diretfted for the Coffee-tree. They may alfo be increafed by cuttings during the fummer months, and planted in fmall pots plunged into a moderate hot-bed, covering them clofe either with bell or hand-glafles to exclude the external air, fhading them carefully from the fun during the heat of the day, until they have put out good roots, when they fhould be parted, and each put into a feparate pot, treating them as the feedling plants. K A L ALI. See Salsola. KALMIA. Lin. Gen. Plant. 482. Cha- macrhododendros. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 604. tab. 373. The Characters are, The flower has a fmall permanent empalenient cut into five parts , and one petal cut into five fegments , which flpread open and are roundijh. It hath ten fiamina the length of the petal, which decline in the middle , terminated by oval flummits. In the center is fituated a roundijh germen , flup- porting a fender ftyle as long as the petal , crowned by an obtufle ftigma. The germen afterward becomes am oval or globular capflule with five cells , filled with very fmall feeds. This genus of plants is ranged in the firft fedtion of Linnaeus’s tenth clafs, intitled Decandria Monogynia, which includes thofe plants whofe flowers have ten ftamina and one ftyle. The Species are, 1. Kalmia ( Latifolia ) foliis ovatis, corymbis terminali- bus. Amcen. Acad. 3. p. 19. Kalmia with oval leaves , and flowers growing in bunches terminating the branches. Chamsedaphne foliis tini, floribus bullatis umbellatis. Catefb. Carol. 2. p. 98. tab. 98. Dwarf Laurel with a Tinus leaf , and ftudded flowers growing in umbels , com- monly called Ivy-tree in America. 2. Kalmia ( 'Angufti folia ) foliis lanceolatis corymbus la- teralibiK. Lin. Gen. Nov. 1079. Kalmia with fpear- fhaped leaves , and flowers growing in round bunches on the (Ues of the ftalk. Chamredaphne fempervirens, foliis K A L oblongis anguftis, foliorum fafciculis oppofitis. Catefb. Carol. 3. p. 17. Evergreen Dwarf Laurel, with oblong narrow leaves growing in bunches , which are placed oppofite. The firft fort grows naturally upon rocks and in barren foils in Virginia and Penfylvania, where it rifes with a branching ftalk to the height of ten or twelve feet, garnifhed with very ftiff leaves, which are two inches long and one broad, of a lucid green on their upper fide, but of a pale green on their under; they have fhort foot-ftalks, and ftand without order round the branches ; between thefe the buds are formed for thenext year’s flowers, at theextremityof the branches; thefe budsfwell during the autumn and fpring months, till the beginning of June, when the flowers burft out from their empalements, forming a round bunch (or corymbus) fitting very clofe to the branch ; they are of a pale falufh colour, the outfide of the petal is of a Peach colour. The flower has but one petal, whofe bafe is tubulous, but is cut into five roundifli feg- ments, ftudded with purple fpots, which are promi- nent ; after the flowers are paft, the germen in the center becomes an oval capfule, crowned by the per- manent ftyle, having five cells, which are full of very fmall feeds. This fhrub in its native foil continues flowering great part of the fummer, and is one of the greateft ornaments to the country •, but as yet it is not fo well naturalized to our climate as could be wifhed, though the plants are not injured by the cold, and fome of them have flowered feveral years paft in the Chelfea garden. In K A R In the country where this fhrub grows tiaturaily, it fends cut plenty of fuckers irom the roots, fo that they form thickets which are almoft im pa (Table ; but here they have not as yet produced any fuckers, nor do the feeds come to maturity, fo that the plants are not very common in England ; for the feeds which are lent from America lie in the ground a whole year be- fore the plants appear, and afterward they make very Tow progrefs, which has difcouraged moil people from attempting to raile the plants in that method. The only perfon who has fucceeded well in the railing of thefe, is Mr. James Gordon of Mile End, who has a good number of the plants which have arifen from feeds. The fecond fort is a native of the fame country with the fir ft, where it riles from three to fix feet high, dividing into fmall ligneous branches which are very clofe, covered with a dark gray bark, garnilhed with ltiff leaves about two inches long and half an inch broad, cf a lucid green, placed without order upon the branches, Handing upon fender faot-ftalks ; the flow- ers grow in loofe bunches on the fide of the branches, upon flender foot-fcalks j they are of one petal, having a Ihort tube, but fpread open at the top, where they are cut into five angles : the fiowers are of a bright red colour when they firfi: open, but afterward fade to a blulh or Peach bloom colour •, thefe are fucceeded by roundilli compreffed feed-veflfels crowned by the per- manent ftyle, divided into five cells, which are filled with fmall roundilli feeds. This fhrub flowers great part of fummer in its native country, but is not yet fo well naturalized to this country as to do the like. The leaves of this elegant plant are fuppofed to have a noxious quality, deftroying fheep and oxen when they feed upon them, yet the deer eat them with impunity. Both thefe forts multiply by their creeping roots in their native foil, and at Whitton, where they have flood unremoved a coafiderable time, they put out fuckers in pretty great plenty ; and as thefe plants which come from luckers, are much more likely to produce others than thofe which are raifed from feeds, and will flower much fooner, fo the plants fhouid not be removed, but encouraged to fpread their roots and fend out fuckers. KARAT AS, the Penguin or wild Ananas. The Characters are, It hath a tubuloas bell-Jhaped flower , which is divided into three parts at the mouth , from whofe empalement where the germen is ftuated arifes the point al , fixed like a nail in the hinder part of the fower, attended by fix floor t flamina ; the germen afterward becomes a flefiyy almofi conical fruit , which is divided by membranes into three cells , that are full of oblong feeds. There is but one fort of this plant at prefent known in England, which is, Ivaratas ( Penguin ) foliis ciliato fpinofis mucronatis, ra- cemo terminal!. The wild Ananas or Penguin. Father Plunder has made a great miftake in the figure and delcription of the characters of this plant, and the Caraguata; for he has joined the flower of the Cara- guata to the fruit of the Karatas, and vice versa ; this has led many perfons into miftakes, who have joined the Bromelia and Ananas to this, making them all of the fame genus, whereas by their characters they fnould be feparated. This plant is very common in the Well-Indies, where the juice of its fruit is often put into punch, being of a fharp acid flavour. There is alio a wine made of the juice of this fruit which is very ftrong, but it will not keep good very long, fo is only for prefent ufe. This wine is very intoxicating and heats the blood, therefore fhouid be drank very fparingly. In England this plant is preferred as a curiofity, for the fruit feldom arrives to any degree of perfedion in this country, though it has often produced fruit in the gardens, which fometimes has ripened pretty well; but if it were to ripen as thoroughly here as in its native country, it would be little valued on account K JE M of its great autarky,- which will often take the fkin off from the mouths and throats of thofe people who eat it incautiouily. This plant- is propagated by feeds, for though there are often fuckers lent forth from the old plants, yet they come cut from between the leaves, and are" fo long, {lender, and ill-fhapen, that if they are planted they feldom make regular plants. Thefe feeds fhouid be fown early in the fpring, in fmall pots filled with light rich earth, and plunged into a hot-bed of tan- ners bark. When the plants are ftrong enough to tranfplant, they fhouid be carefully taken up, and each planted into a feparate pot filled with light rich earth, and plunged into the hot-bed again, obferving to re- frefh them frequently with water, until they have taken new root, after which time they fhouid have air and water in proportion to the warmth of the feafon. In this bed the plants may remain till Michaelmas, at which time they fhouid be removed into the ftove, and plunged into the bark-bed, where they fnould be treated in the fame manner as the Ananas. Thefe plants will not produce their fruit in England until they are three or four years old, fo they fhouid be fhifted into larger pots, as the plants advance in their growth ; for if their roots are too much confined, they will make but little progrefs. They fhouid alio be placed at a pretty great dillance from each other, for their leaves will be three or four feet long, which turning downward occupy a large fpace. The leaves of this plant are ftrongly armed with crooked fpines, which renders it very troublefome to iliif c or handle the plants ; for the fpines catch hold of whatever approaches them by their crooked form, being fome bent one v/ay, and others the reverfe, fo that they catch both ways, and tear the fkin or clothes of the perfons who handle them, where there is not the greateft care taken of them. The fruit of this plant is produced in cluflers, growing upon a ftalk about three feet high, and having ge- nerally a tuft of leaves growing on the top, fo has, "at firfi fight, the appearance of a Fine Apple ; but, when clofer viewed, they will be found to be a clufler of oblong fruit, each being about the fize of a finger. A KATKIN is an aggregate of fummits, hanging down in form of a rope, or Cat’s tail, as in the Sallow, Hazel, Birch, &c. and is called in Latin iulus. KfEMPFERIA. L.in. Gen. Plant. 7. The Characters are. It hath a fingle fpatha ( or Jheath ) of one leaf ; the flower hath one petal with a long fender tube, divided into fix parts above ; three of them are alternately fpear-Jhaped and equal, the other are oval , and at bottom cut into two feg~ ments which are vertically heart- jhaped. It hath bat one fa- men, which is membranaceous , oval, and indented, terminated by a linear fummit , faflened to it all the length , fcarcely emerging out of. the tube of the petal. It hath a round germen fupporting a fiyle the length of the tube, crowned by an obtufe fligma ; the germen afterward becomes a roundif: three-cornered capjule with three cells , filled with feeds. This genus of plants is ranged in the firfi fe&ion of Linnaeus’s firfi: clafs, intitled Monandria Monogynia, which includes thofe plants whofe fiowers have one ftamen and one ftyle. The Species are, I- ^ V ^ MPFERIA ( G along a) foliis ovatis feffilibus. Flor. Zeyl. 8. Ktempferia with oval leaves fitting clofe to the root. Katsjuli Kelengu. Hort. Mai. and the'Wanhom. Kaempf. Amcen. 901. Galangale. 2. K^mpferia ( Rotunda ) foliis lanceolatis petiolatis, Flor. Zeyl. 9. Kampferia with fpear-Jhaped leaves having foot-folks. Zedoaria rotunda. C. B. P. Round Ze do ary, Thefe plants are both natives of the Eaft-Indies, where their roots are greatly ufed in medicine as fudorific and carminative. The firfi fort hath much the feent of green Ginger, when frefh taken out of the ground; the roots are divided into feverai fiefhy tubers, which are fometimes jointed, and grow about four or five inches long; the leaves are oval, about four inches lono- 7 N ' and and two broad ; thefe are without foot-ftalks, growing dole to the root, and feem as if fet on by pairs, fpreading open each way •, and from between thefe leaves the flowers are produced fingly, having no foot-ftalks, but are clofely embraced by the leaves •, the flowers are white, having a bright purple bottom. Thefe are not fueceeded by any fruit in England. The lecond fort hath roots fomewhat like thole of the firft, but are Ihorter, growing in large clutters, covered with an Afh-coloured Ikin, but within are white; from the roots arife the leaves, which fold over each other at their bale ; they are fix or eight inches long, and three broad in the middle, gradually ending in acute points ; the flowers arife immediately from the roots, each having a lpatha (or fheath) at bottom cut into two iegments, which clofely embrace the foot-ftalk ; thefe have fix petals, the three lower which decline downward are long and narrow, the two upper are divided fo deeply as to appear like a flower with four petals, and the fide petal is bifid ; they are of mixed colours, blue, purple, white and red, having a fragrant odour: they flower in July and Auguft, but do not produce feeds in England. Thefe plants being natives of hot countries, wall not bear the open air in England, fo requires a warm ftove to preferve them through the winter ; but as their leaves decay in the autumn, fo the plants fhould not have too much wet while they are in an inactive ftate. If the plants are placed in the bark-ftove, and treated in the fame manner as is directed for the Ginger, they will thrive, and produce plenty of flowers every fummer. They are both propagated by parting of their roots ; the belt time for this is in the fp ring, juft before they begin to put cut their leaves KETMIA. See Hibiscus. KIGGEL ARIA. Tin. Gen. Plant. 1001. Lauras. Sterb. We have no Englifn title for this plant. The Characters are, It hath male and hermaphrodite flowers fituated on different trees ; the male flowers have an empalement of one leaf , cut into five concave figments, and five concave petals * which are longer than the empalement , flu aped like a pitcher ; each of the petals have a honey gland faflened to their bafle , which have three ohtufi lobes and are coloured , faflened to the tails of the petals ; they have ten flmallfia- mina , terminated by oblong fummits. "The hermaphrodite flowers have empalement s and petals like the male , but few of them have ftamina. In the center is fituated a roundifh germen , flupporting five ftyles , crowned by obtufe ftigmas. The germen afterward becomes a rough globular fruit with a thick cover , having one cell , filled with angular feeds. This genus of plants is ranged in the ninth fedtion of Linnaeus’s twenty-fecond clafs, intitled Dioecia De- candria ; but it fhould be removed to his twenty-third clafs, as the hermaphrodite flowers are fruitful, tho’ they are fituated upon diftinct plants, whofe male flowers have ten ftamina. We have but one Species of this genus, viz. K-IGgelAria ( Africana .) Hort. Clift. 462. fol. 20. Euony- mo-affinis Aithiopica fempervirens, fructu globofo fca- bro, folks falicis rigidis ferratis. H. L. 139. An Ethiopian Evergreen plant refimbling the Spindle-tree , with a rough globular fruit , and jiff flawed Willow leaves. This plant grows naturally at the Cape of Good Hope, where it rifes to be a tree of middling ftature ; but as it will not live in the open air here, they cannot be expected to grow to a great magnitude in England. There are plants of it in the Chelfea garden upward of ten feet high, with ftrong woody Items and pretty laro-e heads ; the branches have a fmooth bark, which is firft green, but afterward changes to a purplifh co- lour the leaves are about three inches long and one broad, of a light green colour, and iawed on their edges, Landing upon fhort foot-ftalks alternately. The flowers come out in duffers from the fide of the branches, and hang downward ; they are of an herba- ceous white colour, and appear in May, at which time the plants are thinly garnifhed with leaves, for moft of the old leaves drop juft before the ne w ones ap- pear. The male flowers fall away loon after their farina is fhed, butthe hermaphrodite flowers are fueceeded by globular fruit about the flze of common red Cherries ; the cover of thefe is very rough, and of a thick con- fluence, opening in five valves at the top, having one cell filled with final! angular feeds. Thefe fruit have grown to their full fize in the Chelfea garden, but the feeds have rarely come to maturity here. Thefe plants were not very common in Europe fome years paft, being very difficult to propagate, unlds by feeds, which fome plants both in Holland and England have lately produced, fo that they are now much more plenty than they were in both countries ; for when any of the young branches are laid down, they are two years before they put out roots, and fcarce one in five will then have any roots ; nor do the cuttings fucceed better, for not one in twenty of them will take root, when planted with the utmoft care : the belt time to plant the cuttings is in the fpring, juft before the plants begin tofheot; thefe fhould be planted in pots filled with a loft loamy earth, and plunged into a very moderate hot-bed, covering them clofe with a glafs, to exclude the air from them, and flbade them every day from the fun ; they ftiould have very little water after their firft planting. If any of them grow, they ftiould be planted into feparate Jmall pots, filled with loamy earth, and may be ex- pofed to the air in a fheltered fituation till autumn, when they mult be removed into the green-houfe, and treated in the fame manner as Orange-trees. KITCHE N-G ARDEN. A good Kitchen-garden is almoft as necefiary to a country feat, as a kitchen to the houfe ; for without one, there is no way of being fupplied with a great part of necefiary food; the markets in the country being but poorly furnifhed with efculent herbs, and thofe only upon the market days, which are feldom oftener than once a week ; fo that unlefs a perfon has a garden of his own, there will be no fuch thing as procuring them freffi, in which their goodnefs confifts ; nor can any variety of thefe be had in the country markets ; therefore whoever propofes to refide in the country, fhould be careful to make choice of a proper fpot of ground for this purpofe; and the fooner that is made and planted, the produce of it will be earlier in perfection ; for , fruit-trees and Afparagus require three years to grow, before any produce can be expedited from, them ; fo that the later the garden is made, the longer it will be before a fupply of thefe things can be had for the table. And although the ufefulnefs of this garden is acknowledged by almoft every one, yet there are few who make a proper choice of foil and fituation for fuch a garden ; the modern tafte, which is, perhaps, carried to as extravagant lengths, in laying open and throwing every obftruction down, as the former cuft tom of inclofing within walls was ridiculous ; fo that now one frequently fees the Kitchen-garden removed to a very great diftance from the houfe and offices, which is attended with great inconveniencies ; and often fituated on a very bad foil, fometimes too moift, and at others without water, fo that there is a great expence in building walls and making the garden, where there can be little hopes of fuccefs. Nor will a Kitchen-garden be well attended to, when it is fo fituated as to be out of fight of the poffeffor, efpecially if the gardener has not a love and value for it, or if it lies at a great diftance from his habitation, or the other parts of the garden ; for when it fo hap- pens, a great part of the labourer’s time will be loft in going from one part to the other: therefore, be- fore the general plan of the pleafu re- garden is fettled, a proper piece of ground ftiould be chofen for this purpole, and the plan fo adapted, as that the Kitchen- garden may not become offenfive to the fight, which may be effected by proper plantations of fihrubs to foreen the walls ; and through thefe ffirubs may be contrived contrived fome winding walks to leaci to the Kitchen- garden, which will have as good an e fleet as tnoie which are now commonly made in gardens for pleaiure only. In the choice of the fituation, if it does not ohftrudl the view of better objects, or fhut out any material proipedt, there can be no objeCton to the placing it at a reafonable diftance from the houfe or offices •, for as particular things may be wanted for the kitchen, which were not thought of at the time when directions were given to the gardener what to bring in 5 fo if the garden is fituated at a great diftance from the houfe, it will be found very inconvenient to fend thither as often as things are wanting : therefore it fhould be contrived as near the (tables as poftible, for the conveniency of carrying the dung thithei •, which, if at a great diftance, will add to the expence of the garden. . - As to the figure of the ground, that is of no great moment, fince in the diftnbution or the quarteis all irregularities may be hid *, though if you are at full liberty, an exad fquare or an oblong, is preferable to any other figure. The great thing to be confidered is, to make choice of a good foil, °not too wet, nor over dry, but of a middling quality ; nor ftiould it be too ftrong or ftub- born, but of a pliable nature, and eafy to work $ and if the place where you intend to make the Kitchen- garden ftiould not be level, but high in one part and low in another, I would by no means advife the le- velling it •, for by this fituation you will have an ad- vantage which could not be obtained on a perfedl le- vel, which is, the having one part dry ground for early crops, and the low part for late crops, whereby the kitchen may be the better fupplied throughout the feafon with the various forts of herbs, roots, &c. And in very dry feafons, when in the upper part of the garden the crop will greatly luffer with drought, then the lower part will fucceed, and fo vice versa •, but I would by no means dired the chuftng a very low moift fpot of ground for this pur- pol'e for although in fuch foils garden-herbs are commonly more vigorous and large in the dimmer feafon, yet they are feldom fo weft tailed or whole- fome as thofe which grow upon a moderate foil ; and efpecially fince in this garden your choice fruits fhould be planted, it would be wrong to have a very wet foil. This garden fiiould be fully expofed to the fun, and by no means overfhadowed with trees, buildings, &c. which are very injurious to your kitchen plants and fruit-trees ; but if it be defended from the north wind by a diftant plantation, it will greatly preferve your early crops in the fpring ; as alfo from the ftrong fouth-weft winds, which are very hurtful in autumn to fruit and garden-herbs. But thefe plantations fhould not be too near nor very large ; for I have generally found where Kitchen-gardens are placed near woods or large plantations, they have been much more troubled with blights in the fpring, than thofe which have been more expofed. The quantity of ground neceftary for aKitchen-garden muft be proportioned to the largenefs of the (arnily, or the quantity of herbs defired : for a fmall family, one acre of ground may be fufficient ; but for a large family, there fhould not be lefs than three or four acres ; becaufe, when the ground is regularly laid out, and planted with eipaliers of fruit-trees, as will here- after be directed, this quantity will be found little enough, notwithftanding what fome perfons havefaid on this head. This ground muft be walled round, and if it can be conveniently contrived, fo as to plant both fides of the walls which have good afpefts, it will be a great ad- dition to the quantity of wall fruit and thofe flips of ground which are without fide of the walls, will be very ufeful for planting of Goofeberries, Currants, Strawberries, and fome forts of kitchen plants, fo that they may be rendered equally ufeful with any of the quarters within the walls •, but thefe flips ftiould not be too narrow, left the hedge, pale, or plantation of flirubs* which inclofe them, ftiould (hade the bor- ders where the fruit-trees (land : the lead width of thefe flips fhould be twenty-five or thirty feet, but if they are double that, it will be yet better, and the flips will be more ufeful, and the fruit-trees will have a larger fcope of good ground for their roots to run. Thefe walls fhould be built about twelve feet higfq which will be a fufficient height for any fort of fruit. If the foil where you intend to place yourKitchen-gar- den be very ftrong, then you fhould plough or dig it three or four times before you plant any thing therein 5 and if you throw it up in ridges to receive the rroft in winter, it will be of great fervice to meliorate and loofen its parts. , The manure which is moft proper for fticH foils, is fea-coal afhes, and the cleanfing of ftreets or ditches, which will render it light much fooner than any other dung or manure ■, and the greater the quantity of allies the better, efpecially if the ground be cold ; and where thefe allies are not to be obtained in plenty, fea-fand is a very proper dreffing, where it can be eafily procured, or rotten wood, or the parts' of ve- getables rotted are very good ; all which will greatly loofen the foil, and caufe it to be not only eafier to work, but alfo more advantageous for the growth of plants. But, on the contrary, if your foil be light and warm, you fhould manure it with rotten neats dung, which is much preferable to any other dreffing for hot foils ; but if you ufe horfe dung, it muft be well rotted, otherwife it will burn up the crops upon the find hot dry weather. , , , The foil of this garden ftiould be at lead two feet deep, but if deeper it will be ftill better, otherwife there will not be depth enough of foil for many forts of efculent roots, as Carrots, Parfneps, Beets, &c. which run down pretty deep in the ground, and moft other forts of efculent plants delight in a deep foil ; and many plants, whofe roots appear fhort, yet if their fibres by which they receive their nourifhment are traced, they will be found to extend to a conft- derable depth in the ground ; fo that when thefe are flopped by meeting with gravel, chalk, clay, &c. the plants will foon fhew it by their colour and dinted growth. You fhould alfo endeavour to have a fupply of wa- ter in the different parts of the garden, which, if pof- fible, fhould be contained in large bafons or refervoirs, where it may be expofed to the open air and fun, that it may be loftened thereby •, for fuch water as is taken out of wells, &c. juft as it is ufed, is by no means proper for any fort of plants. In the diftribution of this garden, after having built the walls, you fhould lay out banks or borders under them, which fhould be at lead eight or ten feet broad, whereby the roots of the fruit-trees will have greater liberty than in fuch places where the borders are not above three or four feet wide •, and upon thefe banks you may fow many forts of early crops, if expofed to the fouth ; and upon thofe expofed to the north, you may have fome late crops ; but I would by no means advife the planting any fort of deep rooting plants too near the fruit-trees, efpecially Peas and Beans ^ tho 5 for the advantage of the walls, to preferve them in winter, and to bring them forward in the fpring, the gardeners in general are too apt to make ufe of thofe borders, which are near the beft afpebled walls, to the great prejudice of their fruit-trees ; but for thefe pur- pofes it is much better to have fome Reed-hedges fixed in fome of the warmed quarters, under which you fhould fow and plant early Peas, Beans, &c. where they will thrive as well as if planted under a wall, and hereby your fruit-trees will be entirely freed from fuch. tro.ubiefome plants. Then you fhould proceed to dividing the ground out into quarters, which muft be proportioned to the larger nefs of the garden ; but I would advife never to make them too fmall, whereby your ground will be loft in walks ; and the quarters being inclofed by eipaliers of fruit-trees the plants therein will draw up flender^ K I T. and never arrive to half the fize as they would do in a more open expoiure. i he walks of this garden fhouid, be alio proportioned to the fize of the ground, which in a fmall garden fliould be four feet, but in a large one fix ; and on eacli fide of the walk fhouid be allowed a border five - "or fix feet wide between the dpalier and the walk, whereby the diftance between the efpaliers /will be greater, and the borders being kept conftantly worked and manured, will be of great advantage to the roots of the trees ; and in thefe borders may be Town feme fmall fal lad, or any other herbs, which do not con- tinue long or root deep, fo that the ground will not be loft. The breadth of thefe middle walks which I have here affigned them, may by many peribns be thought too great •, but my reafon for this is to allow proper room between the efpaliers, that they may not fliade each other, or their roots interfere and rob each other of their nourifhment : but where the walks are not re- quiredof this breadth, it is only enlarging of the bor- ders on each fide, and fo reducing the walks to the breadth defired. But the walks of thefe gardens fhould.not be gravelled, for as there will conftantly be occafion to wheel ma- nure, water, &c. upon them, they would foon be de- faced, and rendered unfightly •, nor fhouid they be laid with turf; for in green walks, when they are wheeled upon or much trodden, the turf is loon de- ftroyed, and thofe places where they are much ufed, become very unfightly alfo ; therefore the belt walks for a Kitchen-garden are thofe which are laid with a binding land ; but where the foil is ftrong and apt to detain the wet, there fhouid be forne narrow under ground drains made by the fide of the walks, to carry off the wet, otherwife there will be no ufing of the walks in bad weather ; and where the ground is very wet, and the water is detained by the ftiffnefs of the foil, if fome lime-rubbifh, flints, chalk, or any fuch material as can be procured with the lead: expence, and is laid at the bottom of thefe walks ; or if neither of thefe can be had, a bed of Heath or Furze fhouid be laid, and the coat of fand laid over it ; the fand will be kept drier, and the walks will be found and good in allfeafons. Thefe fand-walks when they are well laid, are by much the eafieft kept of any ; for when either weeds or Mcfs begin to grow, it is but feuffling them over with a Dutch hoe in dry weather, and raking them over a day or two after, and they will be as clean as when firft laid. The beft figure for the quarters- to be difpofed into, is a fquare or an oblong,- where the ground is adapted to fuch a figure ; otherwife they may be triangular, or of any other fhape, which will be moll advantageous to the ground. When the garden is laid out in the fhape intended, if the foil is ftrong, and fubiect to detain the moifture, or is naturally wet, there fhouid always be under- ground drains made, to carry off the wet from every quarter of the garden,- for otherwife moil forts of kitchen plants will fuffer greatly by moifture in winter; and if the roots of the fruit-trees get into the wet, they will never produce good fruit, fo that there cannot be too much care taken to let off all fuperfious moifture from the Kitchen-garden. Thefe quarters fhouid be conftantly kept clear from weeds, and when any part of the ground is unoccu- pied, it fhouid always be trenched up into ridges, that it may fweeten and imbibe the nitrous particles of the air, which is of great advantage to all forts of land, and the ground will then be ready to lay down when- ever it is wanted. The ground in thefe quarters fhouid not be fown or planted with the fame crop two years together, but the crops fhouid be annually changed, whereby they will prove much better than when they conftantly grow upon the, fame fpot. Indeed the kitchen-gardeners near London, where the land is dear, are often obliged to put the lame crop upon the ground for two or three years together ; but then they dig and manure K N A their land io well every year, as to render it alrnoft new ; though notwkhftanding all this, it is conftantly obferved, that frefh land always produces the belt crops. In one of thefe quarters, which is fituated neareft to the (tables, and beft defended from the cold winds ; or if either of the flips, without the garden wall, which is well expofed to the fun, lies convenient, and is of a proper width, that fhouid be preferred for a place to make hot-beds for early Cucumbers, Melons, &c. The reafons for my giving the preference to one of thele flips, is, firft, there will be no dirt or litter carried over the walks of the Kitchen-garden in winter and fpring, when the weather is generally wet, fo that the walks will be rendered unfightly ; ieconclly, the view of the hot-beds will be excluded from fight ; and laftly, the convenience of carrying the dung into thefe flips, for by making of a gate in the hedge, or pale, wide enough for a fmall cart to enter, it may be done with much lefs trouble than that of barrowing it thro 5 the garden ; and where there can be a flip long enough to contain a fufficient number of beds for two or three years, it will be of great ufe ; becaufe by the (hitting of the beds annually, they will fucceed much better than when they are continued for a number of years on the fame ipot of ground ; and as it will be abfo- lutely neceffary to fence this Melon-ground round with a Reed-hedge, it may be fo contrived as to move away in pannels ; and then that hedge which was on the upper fide the firft year, being carried down to a proper diftance below that which was the lower hedp-e, and which may remain, there will be no occafion°to remove more than one of the crofs hedges in a year; therefore I am perfuaded, whoever will make trial of this method, will find it the moft eligible. The moft important points of general culture confift in well digging and manuring the foil, and giving a proper diftance to each planC according to their dif- rent growths (which is conftantly exhibited in their feveral articles in this book) as alfo in keeping them clear from weeds ; for if weeds aae permitted to grow until their feeds are ripe, they will fhed upon the ground, and fill it fo as not to be gotten out again in feveral years. You fhouid alfo obferve to keep your dunghills always clear from weeds, for it will be to litte purpofe to keep the garden clean, if this is not obferved ; for the leeds falling among the dung, will be brought into the garden, v/hereby there will be a conftant fupply of weeds yearly introduced, to the no fmall damage of your plants, and a perpetual labour occafioned to extirpate them again. Another thing which is abfolutely neceffary to be obferved, is, to car- ry off all the refufe leaves of Cabbages, the (talks of Beans and haulm of Peafe, as foon as they are done with, for the ill feent which moft people complain of in the Kitchen-gardens, is wholly occafioned by thefe things being buffered to rot upon the ground ; there- fore when the Cabbages are cut, all leaves fhouid be carried out of the garden while they are frefh, at which time they may be very ufeful for feeding of hogs, or other animals, and this will always keep the garden neat and free from ill (cents. As for all other neceffary direftions, they will be found in the articles of the feveral forts of kitchen plants, which renders it needlefs to be repeated in this place. KLEINI A. See Cacalia. K N A U T I A. Lin. Gen. Plant. 109. Lychni-Scabiofa. Boerh. Ind. 1. 13 1. This name was applied to this plant by Dr. Linnaeus, in honour of the memory of Dr. Chriftian Knaut, who publifhed a method of clafting plants. The Characters are, It hath a 'fmgle oblong empalement , containing feveral flofi- cular flowers , which are ranged fo as to appear regular , but each irregular , having ttibes the length of the empale- ment , but are cut at the brim into four irregular fegments , the cuter being the biggeft ; it hath four fiamina the length of the tube , inferted in the receptacle , terminated by oblong incumbent fummits ; and a germen under the petal , fupporting a fender ftyle., crowned by a thick bifid fiigma , which / & K N A which afterward becomes a four-cornered feed with a hairy apex. This genus of plants is ranged in the firft fedtion of Linnaeus’s fourth clafs, intitled Tetrandria Monogy- nia, the flowers having four ftamina and one ftyle. The Species are, 1. Knautia {Orient alls) foliis omnibus pinnatifidis, co- rollls calyce longioribus. Lin. Sp. App. 1679. Knau- tia with all the leaves wing- pointed, and the petal longer than the empalement. Lychni-fcabiofa, fiore rubro, annua. Boerh. Ind. alt. 2. Knautia (Propontica) foliis fuperioribus lanceolatis indivifis, corollis calyce aequalibus. Lin. Sp. App. 1666. Knautia whofe upper leaves are fpear-fhaped and whole , and the petal of the flower equal to the empale- ment. Scabiofa Orientalis viilofa, fiore fuaverubente, fruciu pulchro oblongo. Tourn. Cor. 35. Thefe plants are natives of the Eaft, they are both annual ; the firft has been long cultivated in the Eng- liftt gardens-, this rifeswithan eretft branching ftalk four feet high, garni ftied with wing-pointed leaves ; the branches are terminated by Angle foot-ftalks, each flip- porting one flower, having a tubular empalement cut into four fegrnents at the top, and each contain four flo- rets of a bright red colour, cut into four unequal feg- ments, the outer being much larger than the other ; thefe have four ftamina the length of the tube of the pe- tal, terminated by oblong fummits and the flowers are fucceeded by oblong four-cornered feeds, which, when ripe, foon fall out of the cup if they are not ga- thered. The fecond fort differs from the firft in its upper leaves being whole, and the petal of the flower being equal to the cup. The lower leaves of this are fawed on their edges, and terminate in acute points. Thefe plants propagate eafily ; if their feeds are permitted to fcatter in the autumn, the plants will come up foon after ; and if fome of thefe are planted in the borders of the pleafure-garden, or among low fhrubs near the walks in Qbtober, the plants will live through the winter, and flower in June ; fo their feeds will ripen the end of July or beginning of Au- guft, therefore require no other culture but to keep them clean from weeds. KNIGHTS CROSS, or SCARLET CROSS, is the Scarlet Lychnis. See Lychnis. LAB ABIATE FLOWERS are fuch as have lips, or more properly a labiated flower, is - an irregular monopetalous flower, divided into two lips ; the upper is called the creft, the un- der the beard fometimes the creft is wanting, and then the ftyle and chives fupply its place, as in the Ground Pihe, Scordium, Bugula, &c. but the greateft part have two lips, which, in fome fpecies the upper lip is turned upwards, as the Ground Ivy, &c. but molt ufuafly the upper lip is convex above, and turns the hollow part down to the lower lip, and fo repre- len ts a kind of helmet, or monk’s hood, from whence thefe are called galeate, cucullate, and galericulate flowers, in which form are moft of the verticillate plants. LABLAB. See Phaseolus. LABRUM VENERIS. See Dipsacus. LABRUSCA. See Vitis. LABURNUM. SeeCYTisus. LABI RINTH [Aafqpi/0© j ,] a winding, mazy, and intricate turning to and fro, through a wildernefs or a wood. ' The defign of a Labyrinth is, to caufe an intricate and difficult labour to find out the center, and the aim is, to make the walks fo intricate, that a perfon may lofe himfelf in them, and meet with as great a number of flops and difappointments as is poffible, they being the moft valuable that are moft intricate. As to the contrivance of them, it will not be poffible to give directions in words, there are feveral plans and deflgns in books of gardening ; they are rarely met with but in great and noble gardens, as Hampton- court, &c. There are two ways of making them, the firft is with Angle hedges ; this method has been pradtifed in Eng- land. Thefe, indeed, may be beft, where there is but a fm.all ipot of ground to be allowed for the making LAC them, but where there is ground enough, the double are moft eligible. Double ones, or thofe that are made with doubls hedges of a confiderable thicknefs of wood between hedge and hedge, are approved as much better than Angle ones, as is the manner of making them in France, and other places, of all which, that of Ver- failles is allowed by all to be the nobleft of its kind in the world. It is an error in Labyrinths in making them too nar- row, for by that means the hedges muft be kept clofe clipped whereas, if the walks are made wider, ac- cording to the foreign practice, they will not ftand in fo much need of it. The walks are made with gravel, and the hedges are ufually fet with Hornbeams ; the pallifades ought to be ten, twelve, or fourteen feet high ; the Hornbeam ffiould be kept cut, and the walks rolled. LACRYMA JOBI [fo called, becaufe the feed of it refembles a tear, or drop.] Job’s Tears. See Coix. LAC TIFEROUS P LAN T S are fuch as abound with a milky juice, as the Euphorbia, Sonchus, Lac- tuca, &c. LACTUCA. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 473. tab. 267. Lin. Gen. Plant. 814. [fo called from lac, Lat. milk, becaufe the leaves, ftalks, flower, and branch, being broken, plentifully emit a milk, or white milky juice, quickly turning yellow and bitterilh.] Lettuce 5 in French, Laitue. The Characters are, The flowers are compofed of feveral hermaphrodite florets, inclofled in one flcaly oblong empalement ; thefe lie over each other like the flcales of fifh. The florets have one petals which is ftretched cut on one fide like a tongue , and is flightly indented at the end in three or four parts % thefe have each five fhort hairy ftamina ; ' the oval germen flip- 7 Q ports \ tU LAC ■ports a /tender ftyle, crowned by two reflexed fligmas , and afterward becomes one oblong pointed feed , crowned with a Jingle down., fitting in the ficaly empalement. This genus of plants is ranged in the firft: Section of Linnaeus’s nineteenth clafs, intitied Syngenefia Polyga- mia aequalis, which includes thofe plants whofe flowers are compofed of all hermaphrodite, or fruitful florets, and have their ftamina and ftyle connected. It would be befide my purpofe to mention in this place the feveral forts of Lettuce that are to be found in botanic writers, many of which are plants of little ufe, and are never cultivated but in botanic gardens for variety •, fome of them are found wild in many parts of England. I fhall therefore pafs over thofe, and only mention the feveral varieties which are cul- tivated in the kitchen-garden for ufe : i . Common or Garden Lettuce. 2. Cabbage Lettuce. 3. Cilicia Let- tuce. 4. Dutch Brown Lettuce. 5. Aleppo Lettuce. 6. Imperial Lettuce. 7. Green Capuchin Lettuce. 8. Verfailles, or Upright White Cos Lettuce. 9. Black Cos. 10. Red Capuchin Lettuce. 11. Roman Let- tuce. 12. Prince Lettuce. 13. Royal Lettuce. 14. Egyptian Cos Lettuce. The firft of thefe forts is commonly fown for cutting very young, to mix with other Small fallad herbs, and is only different from the fecond fort, in being a de- generacy therefrom, or otherwife the fecond is an im- provement by frequent cultivation from the firft •, for if the feeds are faved from fuch plants of the fecond fort as did not cabbage clofely, the plants produced from that feed will degenerate to the firft fort, which is by the gardeners called Lapped Lettuce, to diftin- guifti it from the other, which they call Cabbage Let- tuce. The feeds of the firft, which are commonly faved from any of the plants, without having regard to their goodnefs, are generally fold at a very cheap rate (efpecially in dry feafons, when thefe plants al- ways produce the greateft quantity of feeds,) though fometimes this feed is fold in the feed-fhops, and by perfons who make a trade of felling feeds, for the Cabbage Lettuce, which is often the occafion of peo- ples being difappointed in their crop •, fo that this fort Ihould never be cultivated but to be cut up very young, for which purpofe this is the only good fort, and may be fown any time of the year, obferving only in hot weather to fow it in fhady borders ; and in the fpring and autumn upon warm borders, but in win- ter itlhould be fown under glaffes, otherwife it is Sub- ject to be deftroyed by fevere frofts. 'The Cabbage Lettuce may alfo be fown at different times of the year, in order to have a continuation of it through the whole feafon. The firft crop is gene- rally fown in February, which fhould be upon a warm fpot of ground, and when the plants are come up, they fhould be thinned out to the diftance of ten inches each way, which may be done by hoeing them out, as is praCtifed for Turneps, Carrots, Onions, &c. provided you have no occafion for the fuperfluous plants, otherwife they may be drawn up, and trans- planted into another fpot of good ground at the fame diftance, which, if done before the plants are too large, they will Succeed very well, though they will not be fo large as thofe which are left upon the fpot where they were fown, but they will come Some- what later, which will be of Service where people do not continue Sowing every fortnight or three weeks in Summer. You muft alfo obServe in Sowing the Succeeding crops, as the feafon advances, to chufe a fhady moift Situ- ation, but not under the drip of trees, otherwife, in the heat of Summer they will run up to feed before they cabbage. In the beginning of Auguft you fhould fow the laft crop, which is to ftand over winter ; the feeds fhould be fown thin upon a good light foil, in a warm Situation, and when the plants are come up they muft be hoed out, fo as they may ftand Singly, and cut down all the weeds to clear them. In the be- ginning of October they fhould be tranfplanted into warm borders, where, if the winter is not very fevere, they will Stand very well •, but in order to be Sure of L A C a crop, it will be advifeable to plant a few upon a bed pretty clofe together, where they may be arched over with hoops, and in fevere frofts they fhould be co- vered with mats and Straw, or Peas-haulm, to Secure them from being deftroyed •, and in the Spring of the year they may be tranfplanted out into a warm rich foil, at the diftance before-mentioned but Still thole which grew under the wall, if they efcaped the win- ter, and were Suffered to remain, will cabbage Sooner than thofe which are removed again ; but you muft ob- ferve not to place them too clofe to the wall, which would occafion their growing up tall, and prevent their being large or hard. In order to Save good feeds of this kind, you fhould look over your Lettuces when they are in perfection, and fuch of them as are very hard, and grow low, fnould have flicks thruft into the ground, by the Sides of as many of them as you intend for feed, to mark them from the reft ; and you fhould carefully pull ud all the reft from amongft them as foon as they begin to run up, if any happen to be left, left when they are run up to flower, they Should, by the intermixing their farina with the good ones, degenerate the feeds. It may be fome perfons may object, that fuppofe fome bad ones Should happen to be left among them (for feeds to fow for fmall fallads,) yet the good ones being marked, the feeds need not be mixed, and fo no danger can enfue from thence ; but notwithstanding ever So much care be taken to keep the Seeds Sepa- rate, yet, whether from the intermixing of the farina during the time of their being in flower, or what other caufe, I cannot fay, but it hath been frequently ob- served, that where good and bad plants have been left for feed upon the fame fpot, the feeds of the good plants which were carefully faved Separately, have very much degenerated, and proved worfe than fuch as have Seeded by themfelves. The Seeds fhould always be Saved either from thofe which flood through the winter, or thofe which were fown early in the Spring, for the late ones very Seldom perfeCt their feeds. The Cilicia, Imperial, Royal, Black, White, and Up- right Cos Lettuces may be fown at the following times ; the firft feafon for Sowing thefe feeds is at the latter end of February, or the beginning of March, upon a moderate hot-bed, or on a warm light foil in a Shel- tered Situation ; and when the plants are come up and are fit to tranfplant, thofe which were fown on the hot-bed fhould be planted on another warm bed about four inches afunder, row from row, and two inches diftance in the rows, obferving to fnade them from the fun till they have taken new root ; after which they Should have a larger fhare of air ad- mitted to them daily, to prevent their drawing up weak ; but if the feafon proves favourable, they fhould be tranfplanted the beginning of April to the place where they are to remain, allowing them Sixteen inches room every way, for thefe large forts muft not be planted too near each other thole which were fown in the full ground will be later before they come up, fo fhould be either hoed out, or trans- planted into another fpot of ground (as was directed for thofe fown on the hot-bed allowing them as much room) efpecially if the foil be good ; after they have taken new root, you muft carefully keep them clear from weeds, which is the only culture they will require, except the Black Cos Lettuce, which fhould be tied up when they are full grown (in the manner as was directed for blanching of Endive,) to whiten their inner leaves, and render them crifp, otherwife they are Seldom good for much, rarely cab- baging without this affiftance. When your Lettuces are in perfection, you fh’ould look over them, and mark as many of the heft of them as you intend for feed (in the fame manner as was before dire&ed for the common Cabbage Lettuce,) being very careful not to Suffer any ordinary ones to feed°amongft them, as was before obferved, which would prove more injurious to thefe forts than to the common, as being more inclinable to degenerate with us, if they are not carefully faved. You LAC You may alfo continue thefe forts through the whole feafon of Lettuce, by lowing . them in April, May, and June, obferving, (as was before directed) to fow the late crops in a" fhady fituation, otherwife they will run up to feed before they grow to any fize ; but in the middle of September you may fow of thefe forts, to abide the winter which plants fnould be tranfplanted either under glaffes, or into a bed, which fhould be arched over with hoops, in order to be covered in the winter, otherwife in hard winters they are often de- ftroyed ; but you muft conftanly let thefe plants have as much free air as pofiible, when the weather is mild, only covering them in hard rains or frofty weather ; for if they are kept too clofely covered in winter, they will be fubjeft to a mouldinefs, which foon rots them. In the fpring thefe plants fhould be planted out into a rich light foil, allowing them at lead; fixteen inches diftance each way •, for if they are planted too dole, they are very fubjeft to grow tall, but feldom cab- bage well •, and from this crop, if they fucceed well, it will be proper to fave your feeds j though you fhould alfo fave from that. crop fown on the hot-bed in the fpring, becaule fometimes it happens, that the iirft may fail by a wet feafon, when the plants are full in flower, and the fecond crop may fucceed, by having a more favourable feafon afterwards ; and if they fhould both fucceed, there will be no harm in that, fince the feeds will grow very well when two years old, and if well faved, at three, but this will not always happen. The moft valuable of all the forts of Lettuce in Eng- land, are the Egyptian Green Cos, and the Verfailles, or White Cols, and the Cilicia, though fome people are very fond of the Royal and Imperial Lettuces, but they feldom fell fo well in the London markets as the other, nor are fo generally efteemed. Indeed of late years, fince the White Cos has been commonly cultivated, it has obtained the preference of all the other forts, until the Egyptian Green Cos was intro- duced, which is fo much fweeter and tenderer than the White Cos, that it is by all good judges efteemed the beft fort of Lettuce yet known. This fort will endure the cold of our ordinary winters full as well as the White Cos •, but at the feafon of its cabbaging, if there happens to be much wet, this being very tender, is very fubjeft to rot. The Brown Dutch and Green Capuchin Lettuces are very hardy, and may be fowh at the fame feafons as was direfted for the common Cabbage Lettuce, and are very proper to plant under a wall, or hedge, to fland the winter, where many times thefe will abide, when moft of the other forts are deftroyed, and there- fore they will prove very acceptable at a time when few other forts are to be had •, they will alfo endure more heat and drought than moft other forts of Let- tuce, which renders them very proper for late fowing ; for it very often happens, in very hot weather, that the other forts of Lettuce will run up to feed in a few days after they are cabbaged, whereas thefe will abide near a fortnight in good order, elpecially if care be taken to cut the forwarded: firft, leaving thofe that are not fo hard cabbaged to be laft. If fome plants of thefe two laft forts are planted under frames, on a moderate hot-bed in Oftober, they will be fit for ufe in April, which will prove acceptable to thofe who are lovers of Lettuce, and being covered by glafles, v/ill render them tender. In faving of thefe feeds, the fame care fhould be taken to preferve only fuch as are very large and well cabbaged, otherwife the feeds will degenerate, and be good for little. The Red Capuchin, Roman, and Prince Lettuces are pretty varieties, and cabbage very early, for which reafon a few of them may be prelerved, as may alfo fome of the Aleppo, for the beauty of its fpotted leaves though very few people care for either of thefe forts at table, when the other more valuable ones are to be obtained ^ but in a fcarcity, thefe may fupply the place pretty well, and thefe forts are very proper for foups. The feeds of thefe muft alfo be faved from L A M fuch as cabbage beft, otherwife they will degenerate, and be good for little. In faving feeds of all thefe forts of Lettuce, you fhould obferve never to let two forts ftand near each other, for by their farina mixing, they will both vary from their original, and partake of each other ; and there fhould be a flake fixed down by the fide of each, to which the ftem fhould be faftened, to prevent their being broken, or blown out of the ground by wind, to which the Cilicia, Cos, and the other large growing Lettuces, are very fubjeft when they are in flower. You muft alfo obferve to cut fuch branches of the large growing Lettuce as ripen firft, and not wait to have the feed of the whole plant ripe together, which, never happens ; but, on the contrary, fome branches will be ripe a fortnight or three weeks before others j and when you cut them, they muft be fpread upon a coarfe cloth in a dry place, that the feeds may dry, after which you fhould beat them out, and dry them again, and then preferve them for ufe, being careful to hang them up where mice and other vermin can- not come at them •, for if they do, they will foon eat them up. LACTUCA AG NINI. See Valerianella. LADY’s SLIPPER. See Cypripedium. LADY’s SMOCK. See Cardamin. L A G CE C I A, Baftard Cumin. The Characters are, It hath many flowers collected into a head , which have one common empalement , compofed of eight indented leaves , hut the flmple empalement to each flower hath five leaves , which are very narrow and pinnated , ending in many hair-like points. 'The flower confifts of five horned petals, which are floorter than the empalement •, at the bottom of each flower is fituated the germen , fupporting a ftyle crowned by a fimple ftigma , attended by five ftamina, which are long and narrow •, the germen afterward changes to an oval feed , crowned with the empalement . There is but one Species of this plant, viz. Lagoecia ( Cuminoides .) Lin. Hort. Cliff. Baflard , or Wild Cumin. We have no other Englifh name for this plant, nor is this a very proper one, but as it has been titled by fome of the antient botanifts Cuminum fylveftre, i. e. Wild Cumin, and by Dr. Tournefort it is made a diftind genus, by the title of Cuminoides, it may be ftyled Wild, or Baftard Cumin. This is an annual plant, which grows about a foot high. The leaves refemble thofe of the Honey wort. The flowers, which are of a greenifh yellow colour, are collected in lpherical heads at the extremity of the ftalks ; but there being little beauty in the plant, it is rarely cultivated, except in botanic gardens. It grows plentifully about Aix, in Provence, as alfo in moft of the iflands of the Archipelago. It is annual, and perifhes foon after the feeds are ripe. The feeds of this plant fhould be fown in autumn on a warm , border, foon after they are ripe ; or if they are per- mitted to fcatter, the plants will come up, and re- quire no other care but to clear them from weeds. When the feeds are fown in the fpring, they com- monly remain in the ground a year before they grow, and fometimes I have known them to lie two or three years in the ground, fo that if the plants do not come up the firft year, the ground fhould not be difturbed. LAGOPUS. See Trifolium. LAMINATED fignifies platted. Thofe things are faid to be laminated, whofe contexture difcovers fuch a difpofition as that of plates lying over one another, or the fcales of fifh. LAMIUM. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 183. tab. 89, Lin. Gen. Plant. 636. Dead Nettle, or Archangel. The Characters are, The flower hath a permanent empalement of one leaf, which is tubulous , and cut into five equal figments at the top , which end in beards. The flower is of the lip kind ; it hath one petal , with a jhort cylindrical tube, fwollen at the chaps and comprejjed ; the upper lip is arched , roundijh , obtufle , and entire the under is Jhort , heart-Jhaped, re- flexed, and indented at the end. It hath four awl-Jhaped L A M ..ftamim joined to the upper lip, two of which are longer than the other , terminated by oblong hairy fummits . It hath a four-cornered germen , fupporting a fender ftyle Jituated with the fiamina , and crowned by an acute two- pointed fligma ; the germen afterward become four three- cornered feeds, fitting in the open empalement. This genus of plants is ranged in the firft feftion of Linnaeus’s fourteenth ciafs, intitled Didynamia Gym- nofpermia, in which he ranges thofe plants whofe flowers have two long and two fhorter ftamina, and are fucceeded by naked feeds fitting in the empale- ment. The Species are, 1. Lamium ( Purpureum ) foliis cordatis obtufis petiola- tis. Hort. Cliff. 314. Dead Nettle with heart-Jhaped obtufie leaves funding on foot-folks. Lamium purpu- reum fcetidum, folio fubrotundo, five Galeopfis Di- ofcoridis. C. B. P. Purple finking Archangel , or Dead Nettle, or the Galeopfis of Diofcorides with a roundifh leaf. 2. Lamium {Album) foliis cordatis acuminatis ferratis petiolatis. Hort. Cliff. 314. Dead Nettle with pointed heart-Jhaped leaves , which are fawed , and have foot- falks. Lamium album, non foetens, folio oblongo. C. B. P. White Archangel or Dead Nettle which does not ftink , with an oblong leaf. 3. Lamium ( Garganicum ) foils cordatis pubefcentibus, corollis fauce infiata, tubo redto dente utrinque gemi- no. Lin. Sp. 808. Dead Nettle with heart-Jhaped hairy leaves , and the chaps of the flower inflated , indented with two teeth. Lamium garganicum fubincanum, fiore purpurafcente, cum labio fuperiore crenato. Micheli. Hoary Dead Nettle with a purplifh flower , whofe upper lip is crenated. 4. Lamium ( Mofchatum ) foliis cordatis obtufis glabris, floral ibus feffihbus, calycibus profunde incifis. Dead Nettle with heart-Jhaped , obtufe , fmooth leaves , the upper fitting clofe to the folks , and empalements deeply cut. La- mium Orientale, nunc mofchatum, nunc foetidum, magno flore. Tourn. Cor. Eafiern Dead Nettle , fome- times fweet-fcented and fometimes finking , with a large flower. 5. Lamium ( Melijflefolium ) foliis cordatis nervofis fer- ratis, petiolis longioribus, caule eredto. Dead Nettle with heart-Jhaped veined leaves which are fawed , and longer foot-folks with an erect flalk. Lamium mon- tanum meliffae folio. C. B. P. 231.. Icon. PL 158. Mountain Dead Nettle with a Balm leaf. There are leveral other fpecies of this genus, as alfo forne varieties of it, but as molt of them are weeds, I have paffed them over, for there are few who care to admit them into their gardens. The firft fort grows naturally in moil parts of Eng- land, under hedges and by the fide of highways •, it is alfo a troublefome weed in gardens, but as it ftands in moft of the difpenfaries as a medicinal plant, I have chofen to infert it. This is an annual plant, whofe ftalks feldom rife more than four or five inches high •, the under leaves are heart-fhaped, blunt, and ftand upon pretty long foot-ftalks, but the upper leaves fit nearer to the ftalks ; the flowers come out in whorls on the upper part of the ftalk t they are of a pale purple colour, and are fucceeded by four naked feeds fitting in the empalement •, after the feeds are ripe the plant decays. It flowers in the middle of March, when the autumnal felf-fown plants appear ; thefe are fucceeded by others, which continue in fuc- ceflion all the fummer. The fecond fort is commonly called Archangel *, this is alfo ufed in medicine, for which reafon I have enu- merated it here. The roots of this are perennial, and creep much in the ground, fo is difficult to extir- pate, where it happens to grow under buffies and hedges; for the roots intermix with thofe of the bullies, and every fmall piece of them grow and fpread. The ftalks of this rife much higher than thofe of the laft, the flowers are larger, white, and grow in whorls round the ftalks •, thefe continue in fucceffion moft part of the fummer. The third fort grows naturally upon the mountains L A N in Italy ; this hath a perennial creeping root, from which arife many thick fquare ftalks a foot high, gar- niffied with heart-fhaped leaves which are hairy" placed oppofite, Handing upon pretty long foot-ftalks ; the Bowers come out in whorls at the upper joints of the ftalk, they are large, and of a pale purplifh co- lour ; thefe continue in fucceffion moft part of the fummer, and the flowers are fucceeded by feeds which ripen about fix weeks after. This .may be propa- gated by feeds, but as the roots fpread greatly in the ground, fo when once it is obtained, it will propagate faft enough without culture. The fourth fort grows naturally in the Archipela- go ; this is an annual plant, which, if permitted to Icatter its feeds, the plants will come up and thrive better than when fown by the hand. The plants come up in the autumn, and during the. winter their leaves make a pretty appearance, for they are marked with white fomewhat like thofe of the autumnal Cy- clamen ; the ftalks rife eight or nine inches high, and are garnifhed with fmooth heart-fhaped leaves placed oppofite ; thefe in dry weather have a mufky fcent, but in wet weather are fetid ; the flowers are white, Handing in whorls round the ftalks. They ap- pear in April, and the. feeds ripen in June, then the plants decay ; this requires no culture, but to keep the plants clear from weeds. The fifth fort grows naturally in Portugal •, this hath a perennial root and an annual ftalk, which rifes a foot and a half high ; it is ftrong, fquare, and grows ered ; the leaves are large, heart-fhaped, and much veined *, they are deeply fawed on their edges, and are placed oppofite. The x flowers come out in whorls round the ftalks at every joint ; they are very large, and of a deep purple colour ; thofe on the lower part of the ftalks appear the beginning of May, which are fucceeded by others above, fo that there is a continu- ance of flowers almoft two months on the fame ftalks. This plant very rarely produces good feeds in Eng- land, nor do the roots propagate very faft, fo that it is not common here. The belt time to remove and part thefe roots is in Oc- tober, but they mult not be tranfplanted oftener than every third year if they are required to flower ftrongly ; for the great beauty of this plant confifts in the number of ftalks, which are always proportional to the fize of the plants ; for fmall plants will put out one or two ftalks only, whereas the larger ones v/ill have eight or ten. The roots are hardy, and will thrive belt: in a loft loamy foil. LAMPS AN A. See Lapsana. LAND. Its improvement. 1. By inclofing. Inclofing of Lands, and dividing the fame into feve- ral fields, for pafture or tillage, is one of the prin- cipal ways of improvement ; firft, by afcertaining to every man his juft property, and thereby preventing an infinity of trefpaffes and injuries, thatLands in com- mon are fubjedt unto, befide the difadvantage of be- ing obliged to keep the fame feafons with the other people who have Land in the fame field ; fo that the lowing, fallowing, and tilling the ground, milft be equally performed by all the landholders ; and when there happens a flothful negligent perfon, who has Land intermixed with others, it is one of the greateft nuifances imaginable. Secondly, it being of itfelf a very great improvement ; for where Land is pro- perly inclofed, efpecially in open countries, and the hedge-rows planted with timber trees, &c. itpreferves the Land warm, and defends and flickers it from the violent cold nipping winds, which, in fevere winters, deftroy much of the corn, pulfe, or whatever grows on the open field or champain grounds. And where it is laid down for pafture, it yields much more Grafs than the open fields, and the Grafs will begin to grow much fooner in the fpring. The hedges and trees will afford fhelter for the cattle from the cold winds in winter, as alfo fhade for them in the great heats of fummer. And thefe hedges afford the di- ligent hufbandman plenty of fuel, as plough-boor, cart- 4r LAN LAN cart-boot, &c. And where they are carefully planted and prelerved, furnifti him with timber and alfo mail for his fwine ; or where the hedge-rows are planted with fruit-trees, there will be a fupply of fruit for cy- der, perry, &c. which in moft parts of England are of no fmall advantage to the hufbandman. By this method of inclofing, there is alfo much more employment for the poor, and is therefore a good re- medy againft beggary •, for in thole open countries, where there are great downs, commons, heaths, and waftes, there is nothing but poverty and idlenefs to be been amongft the generality of their inhabitants. It is very obfervable of late years, how much advan- tage the inclofing of the Land in Worcefterfhire, and fome other counties at a diftance from London, has been to the inhabitants : for before this method was introduced amongft them, the Lands for the moft part lay in commons, &c. Upon which the poorer fort of people built themfelves cottages with mud walls, where they contented themfelves with a cow or two, and fome fwine ; and thole of them who were more induftrious than the reft, travelled to the neighbour- hood of London every fpring, where they were em- ployed in the gardens and fields for the fummer feafon ; and in autumn they returned to their native countries, wherb they lived in winter upon what money they had laved in fummer. But fince they have converted their waftes and commons into inclofures, there are but few of the inhabitants of thole countries, who come to London for work, in comparifon to the numbers that formerly came ; fo that moft of the labourers, who come to London for employment, are either Welch, or inhabitants of fome more diftant counties, or from Ireland, where this improvement hath not as yet been introduced. The advantages of inclofing Land are now fo gene- rally known, that there is no occafion for me to enu- merate them here ; fince the improvements which have been made of late years in feveral parts of Eng- land, and the increafe of rent that is every where made by thofe who inclofe, are fufficient arguments to en- force the practice, and render it general ; more efpe- cially in the north, where it is moft negle&ed, be- caufe it would greatly fhelter the Lands, and render them much warmer than they now are. In inclofing of Land, regard Ihould be had to the nature of the foil, and what it is intended for, be- caufe Corn Land Ihould not be divided into fmall par- cels ; for befides the lofs of ground in hedges, &c. the Corn doth feldom thrive fo well in fmall inclo- fures, as in more open fields, efpecially where the trees are large in the hedge-rows. The Grafs alfo in paftures is not fo fweet near hedges, or under the drip of trees, as in an open expofure fo that where the inclofures are made too fmall, or the Land over- planted with trees, the herbage will not be near fo good, nor in fo great plenty, as in larger fields ; therefore, before a perfon begins to inclofe, he fhould well confider how he may do it to the greateft advan- tage •, as for inftance, it is always necelfary to have fome fmaller inclofures near the habitation, for the flicker of cattle, and the conveniency of fliifting them from one field to another, as the feafon of the year may require j and hereby the habitation, barns, {ta- bles, and outhoufes, will be better defended from ftrong winds, which often do great damage to thofe that are expofed to their fury. Thefe fmall inclofures may be of feveral dimeniions, fome of them three, four, fix, or eight acres in extent ; but the larger di- vifions for Corn fhould not contain lefs than twenty or thirty acres or more, according to the fize of the farm, or the fituation of it. 'The ufual method of inclofing Land is, with a ditch and bank fet with quick. But in rnarfh Land, where there is plenty of water, they content themfelves with only a ditch, by the fides of which they ufually plant Sallows or Poplars, which being of quick growth, in a few years afford {hade to the cattle •, and when they are lopped, produce a confiderable profit to their own- ers. In fome counties the divifion of their Lands is by dry Walls made of fiat ftones, laid regularly one upon another, and laying the top courfe of ftones in day, to keep them together, the" weight of which fe- cures the under ones. But in fome parts of Suffex and Hampftiire, they often lay the foundation of their banks with fiat ftones, which is of a confiderable breadth at bottom ; upon which they raife the bank of earth, and plant the hedge on the top, which in a few years makes a ftrong durable fence, efpecially if they are planted with Holly, as fome of thofe in Suf- fex are. In marfhes and open paftures, where there are no hedges, the ditches are generally made fix feet wide at the top, efpecially thofe which are on the fide of highways or commons ; but the common ditches about inclofures are feldom more than three feet and a half wide at top, and one foot and a half at bottom, and two feet deep, that the fides may have a good Hope, and not be too upright, as they are frequently made about London, fo that they are continually waffling down with great rains. In thefe narrow bot- tomed ditches, the cattle cannot ftand to turn them- felves, fo as to crop the quick ; but where the ditches are made wider, they fliould be proportionally deeper : as for inftance, if the ditch is made five feet broad, it muft be three feet deep -, and if fix feet broad, three feet and a half deep, and lo in proportion. The method of inclofing Lands, by raifing high banks of earth, on the fide of which the quick is planted (as is too much practifed in many places near London) is intolerable, for it is not only unfightly, but very expenfive ; becaufe thefe banks are continu- ally waffling down, fo that they mi lift be repaired every year at leaft, if not oftener, otherwise the earth will be in a few years waihed from the roots of the quick, and for want of proper nourifhment, the hedge will foon decay, which is the cafe with the greateft number of the hedges about London : be- lides, it is a very uncertain way of planting quick on the fide of a fteep bank, where all the moifture runs off ; fo that if the fpring Ihould prove dry after it is planted, there is a great hazard whether half the plants will grow, and thofe that take feldom make much progrefs •, whereas thofe planted on the plain furface, where they enjoy the advantages of fun and moifture, will in four years make a better fence than one of thefe bank hedges will in eight or ten, and will continue good much longer than the other. Therefore I advife, that the banks on which the hedges are to be planted, fliould not be raifed more than one foot above the furface of the ground, where the Land is dry, and in wet Land not more than two feet, which will be enough. I fliall now mention the moft proper plants for mak- ing of fences for the different foils and fituations, fo as to aniwer the expectation of the planter : and firft, the white Thom is efteemed the beft for fencing, and will grow upon almoft any foil and in any fituation, but it fucceeds beft on a hazle loam. Of this there are three or four varieties, which differ in the breadth of their leaves and the fize of their Haws, but that fort with the fmalleft leaves and Haws will make the clofeft fence. For it is very certain, that the branches of all forts of trees are produced at a diftance, in propor- tion to the fize of their leaves i fo that Yews, and other Evergreen trees with fmall leaves, will always make a clofer hedge than other trees whofe leaves are larger. Therefore, for the clofeft hedge, the fmalleft Haws ihould be chofen •, but where the moft vigorous {hooters are required, for the advantage of lopping,, there the largeft Haws Ihould be preferred. But as thefe hedges are ufually planted from a nurfery, where the Haws are promifeuoufly fown, it is very common to fee two or three forts planted in the fame hedge which may be eafily diftinguiftied, when they have obtained ftrength, by the difference of their growth. Indeed, where a perfon is curious in raifing of his own quick, it is worth while to gather the Haws fepa- rately, and fow them apart ; and each fort ihould be planted in a feparate hedge, which will render the 7 hedges iAt ' LAN hedges more equal in their growth. If thefe Haws are Town in the places where they are defigned to re- main for a fence, they will make a much greater pro- gress in a few years, than thofe which are tranfplanted •, but as the feeds remain a whole year in the ground be- fore the plants appear, few people care to pra&ife this method •, however, thofe who are defirous to raife their hedges this way, fhould bury the Haws, by put- ting them in pots foon after they are ripe, and bury- ing the pots two feet deep in the ground, where they may remain one year, then take them up and fow them •, by this preparation the plants will come up the following fpring ; but before they are fown, the Haws fhould be bruifed with hands, and their outer coverings waffied off, whereby the feeds may be fown at a more regular diftance ; for as moll of the Flaws inclofe four or five feeds, fo if they are fown entire there will be as many plants arife in a duller, which if permitted to Hand, will prevent each other’s growth ; and in drawing out the fuperfluous plants, there will be great danger of injuring thofe which are to remain. The next to the white Thorn is the black Thorn, which, though not fo generally efteemed as the white, yet it will make an excellent fence, where proper care is taken in the planting and after management of it ; and the loppings of this hedge make much the bell bufhes for draining of Land, and are of longer dura- tion for dead hedges than thofe of any other fort of tree, and are very proper to mend gaps in fences ; for their branches being befet with fharp thorns, the cattle are not fo apt to crop them as the white Thorn, and fome other forts. Thefe hedges are alfo better, if the ftones of the Plumbs are fown on the ipot where they are to remain, than where the plants are taken from a nurfery •, if thefe are fown in the au- tumn foon after the fruit is ripe, the plants will come up the fpring following. The Crab will alfo make a ftrong durable fence ; this may be raifed by lowing the kernels in the place where the hedge is defigned •, but then there fhould be great care taken of the plants while they are young, to keep them clear from weeds, as alfo to guard them from cattle. When thefe flocks have obtained ftrength, fome of them may be grafted with Apples for cyder, where the fence is not expoled to a public road ; but thefe grafts fhould not be nearer than thirty-five or forty feet, left they fpoil the hedge, by their heads overgrowing and dripping on it. The Holly is alfo an excellent plant for evergreen hedges, and would claim the preference to either of the former, were it not for the flownefs of its growth while young, and the difficulty of tranfplanting the plants when grown to a moderate fize. This will grow belt in cold ftony Lands, where, if once it takes well, the hedges may be rendered fo clofe and thick, as to keep out ail forts of animals, and will grow to a con- fiderable height, and is of long duration. Thefe hedges may be raifed, by fowing the berries, either in the place where they are defigned to remain, or by planting young plants of three or four years growth ; but as the berries continue in the ground an entire year before the plants appear, few perfons care to wait fo long ; therefore the ufual method is, to plant the hedges with plants of the before-mentioned age. But where this is praflifed, they fhould be tranfplant- ed, either early in the autumn, or deferred till toward the end of March ; then the furface of the ground fhould be covered with mulch near their roots after they are planted, to keep the earth moift ; and if the feafon fhould prove dry, the plants fhould be wa- tered at leaft once a week, until they have taken root, otherwife they will be in danger of mifcarrying ; for which reafon the autumnal planting is generally pre- ferred to the fpring, efpecially in dry grounds. The Alder will alfo make a good hedge, when planted on a moift foil, or on the fide of rivers, or large ditches ; and will preferve the bank from being waffied away, where there are running ftreams ; for they fpread pretty much at bottom, and fend forth fuckers from L A N their roots in great plenty ; but thefe hedges mould be fheared at leaft once a year, in order to make them thick. Thefe Alder hedges are very ornamental, when they are well kept in large gardens ; and as they will thrive beft on wet fwampy Lands, where many other plants will not live, they fhould be fele&ed for fuch fituations. Of late years the Furz has been much propagated for hed ges in feveral parts of England, and indeed will make a good fence on poor, fandy, or gravelly foils, where few other plants will grow. The beft method of raffing thefe hedges is, to fow the feed about the latter end of March, or the beginning of April, in the place where the hedge is defigned j for the plants will not bear to be tranfplanted, unlefs it be done while they are young, and then there is great hazard of their taking. The ground where the feeds are to be fown fhould be well cleanfed of weeds, and the furface made light ; then there fhould be two or three drills made (according to the width which the hedge is intended) about half an inch deep, into which the feeds fhould be fcattered pretty thick •, and then the drills fhould be filled up with the head of a rake, to cover the feeds. This work fhould be performed in dry weather, for if much wet falls foon after the feeds are fown, it is apt to burft them. When the plants are come up, they fhould be kept clear from weeds, that they may fpread and grow thick at bottom ; and if thefe hedges are fecured from cattle broufing on them, and are cut every fpring juft before they begin to fhoot, they will make an exceeding clofe fence •, but where they are defigned to be cut for fuel, then the beft way is to let them fpread in width ■; and when they are two years old, to cut them down in the fpring, juft before they begin to fhoot, within two or three inches of the ground, which will caufe them to fend forth a num- ber of ffioots from each root, and thereby increafe the width of the hedge j and by fo doing, the plants will not run up tall and weak, and be in danger of be- ing weighed down by great falls of fnow. Thefe hedges when they are well grown, may be cut down every third or fourth year for fuel ; wherefore if there is a treble row of Furz fown, at about -three feet apart, they may be cut down alternately, fo that there will be a fence always remaining. But this is only recom- mended for fuch fandy Lands as lett for a final! rent, and where fuel is lcarce. The beft fort of Furz; for this purpofe is the greater kind, commonly called the French Furz, which will grow to eight or ten feet high, and is not apt to fpread fo much as the or- dinary finall fort. Elder is fometimes planted for hedges, being very quick of growth fo that if fticks or truncheons about four or five feet long be thruft into a bank flopewife each way, fo as to crofs each other, and thereby form, a fort of chequer work, it will make a fence for fnel- ter in one year. But as this is a vigorous growing plant, it will never form a clofe fence ; and the young ffioots being very foft and pithy, are foon broken by cattle or boys in their fport. Befides, where they are fuffered to bear berries, and thefe are fcattered over the neighbouring Land, they will come up the following fpring, and become very troublefome. Where thefe hedges are planted, they may be cut down every third year near the ground ; and thefe flakes (when divefted of their bark, fo as to prevent their growing) will laft longer in the ground, to fup- port Vines or any other plants, which do not require tall ftakes, than any other fort of tree yet known.. And where the trees are fuffered to grow to any con- fiderable fize, the wood is as hard as Box, and there- fore very ufeful for turners and in fir urgent makers. The beft feafon for planting thefe truncheons isffoon after Michaelmas, beeaufe the plants fhoot very early in the fpring. Of late years there have been many hedges, and other plantations, made of the white ber- ried Elder, for the fake of their fruit to make wine 5 which, if rightly made, hath the flavour of Frontiniae wine, and is by fome perfons mixed with white wines,, and vended for it. / There LAN There are fome other plants which have been recom- mended for fences, but thole here enumerated are the moil ufeful forts for fuch purpofe's •, wherefore I fhall pais over the others, as not worthy of the care of the hufbandman. And as to the farther directions for planting and preferring of hedges, with inftrubtions for plafhing or laying them, the reader is defired to turn to the articles of Fences and Hedges, where there are particular directions for thefe works exhi- bited, which I fhall not here repeat. The draining of Land is alfo another great improve- ment to it for though meadows and paflures, which are capable of being overflowed, produce a greater quantity of herbage than dry Land, yet where the wet lies too long upon the ground, the Grafs will be four and extremely coarfe ; and where there is not care taken in time to drain this Land, it will produce little Grafs, and foon be overun with Rufhes and Flags, fo as to be of fmall value. The land which is molt lia- able to this, is cold fliff clays where the water cannot penetrate, but is contained as in a difh ; fo that the wet which it receives in winter, continues till the heat of the fun exhales the greateft part of it. The belt method for draining of thefe Lands is, to cut leveral drains acrofs the Land, in thofe places where the water is fubjebt to lodge •, and from thefe crofs drains to make a convenient number of other drains, to carry off the water to either ponds or ri- vers in the lower p'arts of the Land. Thefe drains need not be made very large, unlefs the ground be very low, and fo fituated as not to be near any river to which the water may be conveyed ; in which cafe there fhould be large ditches dug at proper diftances, in the loweft part of the ground, to contain the water ; and the earth which comes out of the ditches fhould be equally fpread on the Land, to raife the furface. But where the water can be conveniently carried off, the bell method is, to make under ground drains at proper diflances, which may empty themfelves into large ditches, which are defigned to carry off the water. Thefe fort of drains are the molt convenient, and as they are hid from the fight do not incommode the Land, nor is there any ground loft where thefe are made. The ufual method of making thefe drains, is to dig trenches, and fill the bottoms with ftones, bricks, Rufhes, or bufhes, which are covered over with the earth which was dug out of the trenches ; but this is not the beft method, becaufe the water has not a free paffage through thefe drains, fo that whenever there is a flood, thefe drains are often flopped by the foil which the water frequently brings down with it. The beft method I have yet obferved to make thefe drains, is to dig trenches to a proper depth for carry-* ing off the water, which for the principal drains fhould be three feet wide at their top, and doped down for two feet and a half depth, where there fhould be a fmall ledge or bank left on each fide, upon which the crofs flakes or bearers fhould be laid, and below thefe banks there fhould be an open drain left, at leaft one foot deep, and ten or eleven inches wide, that there may be room for the water to pafs through. Thefe larger drains fhould be at convenient dis- tances, and fmaller drains of about feven or eight inches wide at top, and the hollow under the bufhes eight or nine inches deep, fhould be cut acrofs the ground, which fhould difcharge the water into thefe larger drains. The number and fituation of them muft be in proportion to the wetnefs of the Land ; and the depth of the earth above the bufhes, muft alfo be proportioned to the intended ufe of the Land ; for if it is arable Land to be ploughed, it muft not be ffial- lower than fourteen inches, that there may be fuffi- cient depth for the plough, without difturbing the bufhes ; but for pafture Land, one foot deep will be full enough ; for when the bufhes lie too deep in ftrong Land, they will have little effebt, the ground above will bind fo hard as to detain the wet on the furface. When the drains are dug, there fhould be prepared a quantity of good brufh wood, the larger flicks fhould be cut out to pieces of about fixteen or eighteen inches in length, which fhould be laid acrofs upon the two fide banks of the drain, at about four inches diflance j then cover thefe flicks with the fmaller brufh wood, Furz, Broom, Heath, or any other kind of brufh, laying it lengthwife pretty clofe •, on the top of thefe may be laid Rufhes, Flags, &c. and then the earth laid on to cover the whole. Thefe fort of drains will continue good for a great number of years, and are never liable to the inconveniencies of the other, for the water will find an eafy paffage through them ; and where there is plenty of brufh wood, they are made at an eafy expence ; but in places where wood is fcarce, it would be chargeable to make them : however, in this cafe, it would be a great advantage to thefe Lands, to plant a fufficient number of cuttings of Willow, or the black Poplar, on fome of the moift places, which would furnifh brufh wood for thefe pur- pofes in four or five years ; and as the expence of planting thefe cuttings is trifling, there cannot be a greater advantage to an eftate which wants draining, than to prablife this method, which is in every perfon’s power, fince there is little expence attending it. In countries where there is plenty of ftone, that is the beft material for making thefe under ground drains j for when thefe are properly made, they will never want repairing. The beft time of the year for making thefe drains is about Michaelmas, before the heavy rains of au- tumn fall, becaufe at this feafon the Land is ufuaily dry, fo that the drains may be dug to a proper depth 5 for when the ground is wet, it will be very difficult to dig to any depth, becaufe the water will drain in wherever there is an opening in the ground. When thefe drains are made, and the water carried off the Land, it will be proper to pare off the Ruffies* Flags, &c. which may be laid in heaps in proper places to rot, and will afford a good manure for the land. The ground muft alfo be ploughed to deftroy the roots of noxious weeds, and if it be laid fallow for one feafon, and ploughed two or three times, it will greatly mend the Land. The Rufhes and Flags which were pared off the ground when rotten, fhould be fpread over the furface, and the Grafs-feed fown thereon, which will greatly forward the Grafs, fo that it may foon be brought to a good turf ; which Land thus mended, has been lett for four times the rent it was fet at before. There are fome perfons, who, after they have pared off the Flags, Rufhes, &c. from their Land, lay them in fmall heaps, and burn them in dry weather, then fpread the affies on the Land to improve it, which is a good method, where a perfon is in hafle to have Grafs again ; but where the ground can be fallowed one year, it will loofcn the foil, and more effebtually deftroy the roots of all noxious weeds ; and the Rufhes, &c. when rotted, will afford a much larger quantity of manure for the Land than when it is burnt : be- tides, this can only be prablifed in the fummer fea- fon, when the weather is very dry ; for if there fhould fall much rain, the fires will go out, and it will be impracticable to burn it. But where the method of burning is _ prablifed, the heaps fhould not be too great, and it fhould burn very ilowly ; which will ren- der the affies a much better manure, than when the fire is too violent, or the heaps too large ; for in this cafe, the inner part will be over-burnt before the fire reaches the outfide of the heap. As the draining of cold wet Lands is a great im- provement to them, fo the floating or watering of dry looie Land is not a lefs advantage to them. This may be eafily effebled where there are rivers, or re- fervoirs of w r ater, which are fituated above the level of the ground defigned to be floated, by under ground drains (made after the manner of thofe before directed for draining of Land,) through which the water may be conveyed at proper feafons, and let out on the ground : in order to this, there muft be good fluices made at the heads of the drains, fo that the water may never get out, but at fuch times as is required ; for LAN "for if this be not taken care of, the water, inftead of improving the Land, will greatly damage it. But where the Land lies fo high, as that there is no water in the neighbourhood lying above its level, it will be more expenfive *, becaufe in l'uch cafe, the wa- ter muft be raifed by machines, from refervoirs or Lrearns which lie below it. The moft common engine ufed for this purpofe is the Perfian wheel (which, be- ing well defcribed and figured in Woolridge’s Art of Hufbandry, is needlefs for me hereto repeat.) Yet notwithstanding the expence of raifing the water, it has been found greatly advantageous in many parts of England, to drown the Lands, for the profit has many times more than doubled the charge. The time for drowning of Land, is ufually from November till the end of April ; but though this is the general practice, yet I cannot approve of it for many reafons. The firft is, that by the wet lying continu- ally on the ground in winter, the roots of the finer lort of Grafs are rotted and deftroyed ; and by letting on the water, at the feafon when the feeds of Docks, and other bad weeds, which commonly grow by ri- ver tides, are falling, thefe feeds are carried upon the Land, where they remain and grow, and fill the ground with bad weeds, which is commonly the cafe with moft of the water meadows in England, the Grafs in ge- neral being deftroyed ; fo that Rufhes, Docks, and other trumpery, make up the burden of thefe Lands : but if thefe meadows were judicioufiy managed, and never floated till March or April, the quantity of fweet good Grafs would be thereby greatly increafed, and the beautiful verdure of the meadows preferved : but there is little hope of convincing thofe perfons by any arguments, who are fo much wedded to their own pre- judices, as to fliut their eyes and ears againft experi- ments or reafon. Where the Land is very hot and dry, and it lieth convenient to be watered at a fmall expence, it fhould be repeated every week in dry hot weather, which will prove a great advantage to the Land. But whenever this is done, there fhould no cattle be admitted while it is wet, for they will poach, and fpoil the turf. Another great improvement of Land, is byTburning of it, which, for four, heathy, and rulhy Land, be it either hot or cold, wet or dry, is a very great im- provement ; fo that fuch Lands will, in two or three years after burning, yield more, exclufive of the charges, than the inheritance was worth before ; but this is not to be pradtifed on rich fertile Land ; for as the fire deftroys the acid juice, which occafions fteri- lity in the poor Land, fo it will in like manner con- fume th*e good juices of the richer Land, and thereby impoveriih it, fo that it hath been with great reafon difufed in deep rich countries. The ufual method of burning Land is, to pare off the turf with a breaft plough, turning it over as it is cut, that it may dry the better. And if it proves hot dry weather when this work is done, then it needs no more turning ; but if rain fhould fall, it muft be turn- ed, and the turfs fet a little hollow, that they may dry the better ; and when they are thorough dry, they may be laid on fmall heaps, about half a cart load on a heap, or lefs, for the fmaller the heaps are, pro- vided there is quantity enough to make a good fire, fo as to confume the whole to afhes, it is the better •, if the turf be full of fibrous roots, or hath much Mofs or Fern on it, it will burn without any addi- tional fuel ; but if it hath not, the heaps fhould be railed on fmall bundles of Heath, Fern, Gorze, &c. which will fet the whole on fire ; yet there fhould be no more of thefe things applied, than what is neceftary to kindle the fire, becaufe the flower the turf con- fumes, the better wiil be the afhes. When the turf is wholly confumed, the afhes fhould be equally Mat- tered over the ground in a calm day, left the wind fhould drive it in heaps. Then the Land fhould be gently ploughed, and the feeds fown thereon ; for if the ground is ploughed too deep, the afhes will be buried too low for the roots of the Grafs or Corn to reach them for a confiderable time * nor fhould the LAN afhes lie too near the furface, becaufe then the roots will reach them too foon, and the ftrengch of the afhes will be fpent to nourifb only the blade, fo that the Corn will grow too rank in winter ^ and when the roots in the fpring ftrike down lower, they will meet with a poorer foil, nor will the ftalks and ears have fo much advantage from the improvement, as the ufelefs blade. But when care is taken in this parti- cular, it is wonderful what fuccefs it hath ; for by this method the pooreft plains, and four heathy Lands, have been rendered as fertile as almoft any good cultivated ground whatever. It is alfo a very great improvement, where Land is overgrown with Broom, Furz, &c. to ftub them up by the roots, and when they are dry, lay them on heaps, and cover them with the parings of the earth, and burn them, and fpread the afhes over the ground. By this method vaft tracts of Land, which at prefent produce little or nothing to their owners, might be made good at a fmall expence, fo as to become good eftates to the proprietors. There are feveral other methods of improving Land befide thofe here mentioned, as by planting of wood, or adapting the feveral forts of plants to the particular foils with which they agree ; but as moft of thefe things are treated pf under the fe- veral articles where thefe plants are mentioned, I fhall forbear to repeat them in this place, but fhall beg leave to offer a few general hints on the prefent fituaticn of the Lands in England, which may probably excite lome abler hand to undertake a fuller and more complete difquifition of this fubjeft. For fome years paft, the quantity of Corn raifed in England, has greatly exceeded the confumption, fo that great quantities of Corn have been exported, by which great fums of money have been brought into England •, but this was accidental for had not the crops failed in the neighbouring countries, there would have been no demand for the produce of England, fo that the quantity here grown muft have reduced the price fo low, as to have almoft ruined the farming intereft ; nor is it poffible to contrive any fcheme, in a country circumftanced as this, whereby the public may not, at times, fuffer from the extravagant price, which, in a lcarcity, this commodity may be raifed to •, or, on the other hand, the farmers are fometimes almoft undone by the low price which it is often reduced to in times of plenty ; and furely there can be no one thing more worthy of the lerious attention of every per- fon, who has the leaft regard for the public wel- fare, than this, of always making fuch provision of Corn, againft accidental fcarcities, as that the inhabi- tants may never be diftrefled for want of the ficaff of life, or the price be fo high, as that the com- mon people cannot purchafe it. If I am not greatly miftaken, there has been, within the fpace of three or four years, fuch a difproportion in the price of Corn, as can hardly be conceived, and this within the memory of numbers of perfons ; the time I mean is between 1705 and 1709, in the compafs of which, time the peck loaf of fine bread was rifen from fourteen pence to four fhillings and twopence • the low price of this commodity was as detrimental to the farmers, as the extravagant price was afterward to the' public, neither of which would have fo fe- verely felt the effects, had there been public grana- ries where the Corn might have been depofited, and this purchafed from the farmer, at a price by which he might live, at the public expence, and fold out again at an eafy rate in times of fcarcity •, but I fear this is not an age for encouraging any fcheme for public utility, when in every thing of this kind, however beneficial it may be to the country, and though propofed as fuch to the pub- lic, if it meets with any reception, it is with a view to turn it to private intereft ; the pra&ice of turning all things into private jobs, has fo much prevailed of late years, as to have almoft extinguifaed every fociai virtue ; 4 L A N virtue ; but I fear I may have incurred. the cenfureof many for this digteffion but, be it as it will, I could not omit it, when it fo properly came in my way ; and as it is from a fmcere love and regard to my country, that I have mentioned this, fo it may be hoped, that if any harfh expreffion has been ufed, it will be forgiven. But to return to my 1 abject •, as the quan- tity" of Land now in tillage is very great in England, from the deftrufition of woods, the ploughing up of downs, the inclofmg of commons, &c. fo that, unlefs there happens a failure in the crops of Corn in great part of England, the markets muft be fo low, as that the farmer will always find it difficult to fupport his family, and pay his rent ; the firft muft be done, let the landlord fare as he will, for the farmers know, that when the farms are occupied by the landlords, few of them can make the produce of the Land and pay then* expence, lo that the whale rent of the farm * is often funk, beftde the trouble and fatigue of managing the farms •, and it is greatly to be feared, from the prefent condition of the farmers in general, that many landlords will be obliged to undertake this difagreeable affair, which will be the more fo, as their Lands will be left without ftock, and the foil exhaufted, and overgrown with weeds, which will require fome years to put into proper condition, and will be attended with great expence. The extraordinary price which Corn bore fome years fince, tempted the farmers to break up the downs in many parts of England ; and the landlords v/ere brought to comply with the requeft of the farmer, for the fake of a little advance of the rent, not confidering the future confequence of it ; fo that hereby, great extents of downs have been ruined, and not likely to be recovered again ; for the foil in many places was not more than four br five inches deep, upon beds of flint or chalk, which, in ploughing, were turned up on the furface, and the little foil which covered them, was in a few years fo much exhaufted, as not to produce the quan- tity of grain which was fown upon them ; and as there was no probability of procuring dreffing for the Lands, the farmers have been obliged to throw them up, which now lie wafte, and appear like quarries of flints, or beds of chalk, without Grafs, or almoft any other plant growing upon them. By this paf- fion for ploughing, the farmers have lefiened their ftock of cattle, and, of confequence, their quantity of manure has been lefiened in proportion, fo that they have either been obliged to purchafe dreffing at a great expence, or deftroy their Lands of their ve- getative quality : by the former method, when grain bears a low price, the farmer is ruined, and by the latter, every one muft know what will be the con- fequence to both tenant and landlord •, therefore it is a matter of great concern to the proprietors of Lands, to fee that no more ground in their farms is kept in tillage, than the tenant can fupply with dreffing, fo as to maintain the Land in heart ; and that a proper ftock of cattle be kept up, in pro- portion to the fize of the farms, which cannot be done where there is not a proportion of pafture kept to that of the arable Land in each farm. There are many perfons, who, by a miftake in the article of inclofmg Lands, are likely to fall into a great error, by fup- pofing, that the inclofing of commons will be a great advantage to their eftates, and perhaps there may be tenants on their eftates, who may encourage the gentlemen fo to do, from a prefent intereft of their own •, but wherever this has been done, the eftates have foon fallen in their rents, much lower than the addition made by inclofing the commons, which muft always be the cafe ; for if there is not common pafture, where the farmers can turn out their cattle in hum- mer, it cannot be fuppofed they can keep up a ftock of live cattle upon their inclofed pafture ; fo that, al- though the dividing and inclofing the Lands in the common fields would be a very great benefit, yet the deftroying of pafture commons would on the other extreme be a national difadvantage and lofs. There L A N are many other particulars, which might be here enumerated, to fhew the caufe of the low condition of the farmers in general but thefe few hints may probably lead fome perfons of abler heads to the con- fideration of this affair,, io i fha.ll not enlarge upon them here. LANIGEROUS TREES are fuch as bear a woolly or downy fubftance, as is commonly contained in the katkins of Willows, &c. LANTAN A. Lin. Gen. Plant. 683. Camara. Plum. Nov. Gen. 32. tab. 2. American Viburnum, or Ca- mara. The Characters are, The empalement of the f ewer is cut into four fegments. The flower is monopet aims, of an irregular fhape , having a cylindrical tube , which extends beyond the empalement , and is flpread open at the brim , where it is divided into five fegments. In the center of the flower is ftuated the pointal , fupporting a crooked ftigma , attended by four jlamina , two being longer than the other. The pointal afterward changes to a roundifh fruit , opening into two cells , and inclofmg a roundifh feed. This genus of plants is ranged in the fecond feclion of Linnaeus's fourteenth ciafs, intitled Didynamia Angiofpermia, which includes thofe plants whofe flowers have two long and two ffiarter ftamina, and the feeds are inclofed in the capfule. The Species are, 1. Lantana ( Aculeata ) foliis oppofitis, caule aculeato ramofo, floribus capitato-umbellatis. Lin, Sp. 874. Lantana with leaves growing cppof.te , a branching prickly fialk , and umbellated flowers growing in heads. Vibur- num Americanum odoratum, urticae foliis latioribus fpinofum, floribus miniatis. Pluk. Aim. 285. tab. 223. Sweet prickly American Viburnum , with broad Net- tle leaves , and carmine flowers. 2. Lantana ( [Tnerma ) caule inermi, foliis lanceo- latis dentatis alternis, floribus corymbolis. Lanta- na with a fmooth fialk , flpear-floaped indented leaves placed alternate , and flowers growing in round bunches . Periclymenum rectum, falvise foliis majoribus ob- longis, mucronatis, fubtus villofis, alternatim fitis, flore & frufitu minoribus. Sloan. Cat. Jam. 164. Up- right Hoyieyfluckle with larger , oblongs acute-pointed Sage leaves , which are hairy on their under fide , placed alter- nate , and a frnaller flower and fruit. 3. Lantana (. Lanuginofa ) caule ramofo lanuginofo, fo- liis orbiculatis crenatis oppofitis, floribus capitatis. Lantana with a hairy branching fialk , round crenated leaves placed oppofite , and flowers collected in heads. Periclymenum refit urn, falviae folio rugofo minore, fubrotundo. Cat. Jam. 164. Upright Honey fuckle with a flmaller rough roundifh leaf. 4. Lantana ( Trifolia ) foliis terms, caule inermi fpicis oblongis imbricatis. Lin. Sp. Plant. 873. Lantana with leaves placed by threes round the fialk, without [pines, and oblong imbricated J pikes of flowers. Ca- mara trifolia, purpurafeente flore. Plum. Nov. Gen. 32. Three-leaved Camara, with a purplijh flower. 5. Lantana ( Urticafolia ) caule aculeato, foliis oblongo- cordatis ferratis oppofitis, floribus corymbofis. Lantana with a prickly fialk, oblong, h ear t-Jh aped flawed, leaves , and flowers growing in a corymbus. Periclymenum rec- tum urticas folio hirfuto majore, flore fiavo. Sloan. Cat. Jam. 163. Upright Honeyfuckle with a larger Net- tle leaf, and a yellow flower. 6 . Lantana ( Camara ) caule inermi, foliis ovato-lan- ceolatis, ferratis, rugofis, floribus capitatis lanuginofis. Lantana with a fmooth fialk, oval \ fpear-Jhaped, rough , fazved leaves , and flowers growing in woolly heads. Pe- riclymenum refit um, falviae folio rugofo, majore, fub- rotundo & bullato. Sloan. Cat. Jam. 163. Upright Honeyfuckle with a large, rough. Sage leaf, which is roundifh and ftudded. 7. Lantana ( Bulla t a ) foliis oblongo-ovatis acumina- tis ferratis rugofis alternis, floribus capitatis. Lantana with oblong, oval-pointed , flawed leaves , which are rough, placed alternate , and flowers growing hi heads. Pericly- menum refit um, falvise folio rugofo, minore, bullato, 7 Of. flore Bore albo. Sloan. Cat. 163. Upright Honeyfuckle with a j mailer rough Sage leaf, which is Jludded , and a white flower. 8. Lantana ( Alba ) caule inermi, foiiis ovatis ferratis, floribus capitatis alaribus feffilibus. Lantana with a flmooth Jlalk , oval flawed leaves , and flowers growing in heads proceeding from the wings of the leaves , fitting clofle to the fltalks. Camara foiiis urticas, floribus mmoribus albis, ex alis foliorum prodeuntibus. Houft. Camara with a Nettle leaf , and fmaller white flowers proceeding from the wings of the leaves. 9. Lantana {Annua) foiiis quaternis, caule afpero, fpi- cis oblongis. Four-leaved Lantana with a rough ftalk , and oblong fpikes of flowers. Periclymenum re&um hu- milius, folio rugofo majore, flore purpureo, frudu oblongo, efculento purpureo. Sloan. Cat Jam. 164. Lower upright Honeyfuckle with a larger rough leaf ', a purple flower , and an oblong , purple , efculent fruit. 10. Lantana ( Anguftifolia ) caule inermi, foiiis ovato- lanceolatis oppofitis, floribus capitatis pedunculis lon- gifiimis. Lantana with a flmooth ftalk , oval ftp ear -flo aped leaves placed oppojite , flowers collected in heads , and very long foot-ftalks. Periclymenum re£tu m, falvias folio rugofo, longo & anguftiffimo. Sloan. Cat. 164. Up- right Honeyfuckle with a rough Sage leaf \ which is long and narrow. 11. Lantana (. Africana ) foiiis alternis feffilibus, floribus folitariis. Hort. Cliff. 320. Lantana with alternate leaves fitting clofle to the ftalks , and flowers growing flngly. Jaf- minum Africanum, illicis folio, flore folitario ex fo- liorum alis proveniente albo. Com. Plant. Rar. 6, tab. 6. African Jafmine with an Ilex leaf, and a folitary white flower coming from the wing of the leaves. 12. Lantana ( Salvifolia ) foiiis oppofitis feffilibus, flo- ribus racemofls. Lin. Sp. 875. Lantana with leaves placed oppofite clofle to the ftalks, and flowers in a racemus. Frutex Africanus, foiiis conjugatis falvias anguftis, flo- ribus hirfutis. Herm. Afr. 10. The firft fort is pretty common in thofe Engliffi gar- dens, where there are colledions of exotic plants ; this grows naturally in Jamaica, and moft of the other iflands in the Weft-Indies, where it is called wild Sage, as are feveral of the other forts which are not dif- tinguiffied by the inhabitants. It rifes with a woody ftalk five or fix feet high, fending out many branches, which have four angles, armed with (hort crooked fpines. Lhe leaves are placed oppofite ; they are oval, fpear-ffiaped, about an inch and a half long, and three quarters of an inch broad, hairy, and ftand upon fhort foot-ftalks ; toward the end of the branches the flowers come out from the wings of the italics* two foot-ftalks ariflng from the fame joint, one on each fide ; they are near two inches long, and are ter- minated by roundifh heads of flowers, thofe which are on the outflde and form the border, are firft: of a bright red, or fcarlet colour •, thefe change to a deep purple before they fall. Thofe flowers which are in the center are of a bright yellow, but after fome time fade to an Orange colour. The flowers are fucceeded by roundifh berries, which, when ripe, turn black, having a pulpy covering over a Angle hard feed. This plant in the Weft-Indies continues to flower moft part of the year* but in England they begin to flower in June, and continue in fucceffion till near Chriftmas, and the early flowers are fucceeded by ripe feeds. The fecond fort grows naturally in Jamaica * this rifes with a (lender, fmooth, ffirubby ftalk, about four feet high, dividing into many fmall quadrangular branches which grow ere£t, garnifhed with fpear-fhaped leaves about two inches long, and one inch broad, indented on their edges, and hoary on their under fide, (landing alternate upon iliort foot-ftalks. Toward the end of the branches the foot-ftalks of the flowers arife al- ternately from the wings of the leaves * thefe are very (lender, and fupport fmall heads of pale purple flow- ers, which are fucceeded by fmall purple berries, each having one feed. This flowers at the fame time with the former fort. The feeds of this fort were firft fent me by the late Dr. Houftoun, from La Vera Cruz, but I have fince received them from Ja- maica. The third fort was fent me from La Vera Cruz, by the late Dr. Houftoun * this rifes with afhrubby ftalk about three feet high, dividing into feveral upright branches. The leaves are oblong, and flawed on their edges, (landing oppofite, on the lower part of the branches, but toward the upper part they are placed by threes round the branches. The foot-ftalks of the flowers come out from the wings of the leaves * they are near three inches long, fuftaining an oblong jpike of purple flowers, which come out from imbricated fcales, which end in acute points. The flowers are fucceeded by pretty large purple berries. This flow- ers at the fame time with the former forts. The feeds of the fourth fort were fent me from the Havanna, by the late Dr. Houftoun * this rifes with a fhrubby ftalk about three feet high, covered with a gray bark, which is woolly. It divides into branches by pairs, which are garnifhed with round leaves, in- dented on their edges, whofe upper furface is corru- gated and rough, like thole of Sage * they are placed oppofite, (landing upon (hort foot-ftalks. At the end of the branches arife the foot-ftalks of the flowers, which are (hort, and fuftain a globular head of purple flowers * thefe are fucceeded by pretty large purple berries containing one feed. This flowers at the fame time with the former forts. There is a variety of this with white flowers, whole leaves are not quite fo round, nor are they crenated on their edges * but I fufpedt they both come from the fame feeds, fo I have not enumerated it as a dif- tindl fpecies. The fifth fort was fent me from La Vera Cruz, by the late Dr. Houftoun * this rifes with a woody branching ftalk four or five feet high, garniffied with oblong heart-fhaped leaves, which are la wed on their edges, and end in acute points. At the end of the branches the flowers come out in round bunches, (landing upon (lender upright foot-ftalks, about one inch long. The flowers are yellow, and grow in loofer bunches or heads than thofe of the former forts, but flowers at the fame time. The fixth fort rifes with a woody branching ftalk five or fix feet high, covered with a dark brown bark. The branches are more divided than thofe of the other forts, and are much more ligneous. The leaves are two inches and a half long, and one inch and a quarter broad, deeply fawed on their edges, and their upper furface very rough, and many of them cloflely fet with white prominent fpots as if ftudded * thefe are placed alternately on the branches. The flowers come out from the wings of the ftalk, (landing upon pretty long foot-ftalks * they are white, and are col- lected in fmall woolly heads. This flowers about the fame time with the former forts. The feventh fort rifes with a branching ffirubby ftalk about four feet high, covered with a dark brown bark, and garniffied with fmall, oblong, oval leaves, ending in acute points * they are an inch long, and half an inch broad, very much veined on their upper fide, (landing alternately pretty clofe to the branches. The flowers come out at the end of the branches upon (hort foot-ftalks, in clofe fmall heads •, thefe are white, . and make but little appearance. It flowers at the fame time with the former. The eighth fort was fent me by the late Dr. Houftoun, from Campeachy * this hath a (lender fhrubby ftalk which rifes three or four feet high, dividing into many (lender, fmooth, fquare branches, which are garnifhed with fmall, oval, fawed leaves placed oppofite * from the wings of the ftalk, at every joint, come out the flowers; they are fmall, white, and are collected in clofe heads ; thefe come out by pairs, and fit clofe to the branches. This flowers at the fame time with the former. The ninth fort is annual ; this was firft fent me by the late Dr, Houftoun from La Vera Cruz, bur I have fince received the feeds from the north fide of the ifland of Jamaica ; it rifes with a ftrong, upright, rough LAN rough ftalk near three feet high, dividing toward the top into two or three eredl branches, which are gar- nifced with oblong, oval, fawed leaves, ending in acute points-, they are placed by fours at each joint, and are a little woolly on their under fide. The flower-ftaiks arife by pairs, and fometimes three come out at the fame joint ; they are from two to three inches long, and fuftain a thick fpike of large purple flowers, which are fucceeded by large purple berries that are very fucculent, and are frequently eaten by the inhabitants. This fort flowers in July, pro- vided the plants are railed early in the fpring and brought forward, and the feeds will ripen in autumn, foon after which the plants decay. The tenth fort grows naturally in Jamaica, from whence the late Dr. Houftoun fent me the feeds this rifes with a {lender, fmooth, branching ftalk three feet high. The branches are garnifhed with oval fpear- Ihaped leaves two inches long, and one inch broad ; they are crenated on their edges, and rough on their . upper fide. Handing by pairs oppofite, upon very fhort foot-ftalks, having an agreeable odour. The flowers come out from the wings of the ftalk, upon very long foot-ftalks ; they are placed oppofite the whole length of the young branches, fuftaining fmall round heads of white flowers ; thefe appear at the fame time with the other forts, but rarely produce feeds in England. Thefe plants are all of them eafily propagated by cuttings except the ninth, which is an annual plant, fo can only be propagated by feeds. They may alfo be propagated by feeds, which feveral of the forts produce in England, and the others may be eafily pro- cured from the Weft-Indies, where there are a greater variety of thefe plants growing naturally, than are at prefen t known in Europe -, they are all of them called Wild Sage, by the inhabitants of the Britifh Iflands, "Tut they do not diftinguifh the forts. Thefe feeds ftiould be fown in pots filled with light earth, and plunged into a hot-bed of tan ; the reafon for my advifing them to be fown inpots, is, becaufe the feeds frequently remain long in the ground before they vegetate ; therefore if the plants fhould not come up the fame year, the pots ftiould be placed in the ftove in winter, and the following fpring plunged into a new hot-bed, which will bring up the plants. When thefe are fit to remove they ftiould be each planted in a fmall pot, and plunged into another hot-bed, obferving to ftade them till they have taken new root ; then they ftould have air admitted to them every day, in proportion to the warmth of the feafon, to prevent their being drawn up with weak ftalks ; afterward they muft be treated in the fame manner as other plants from the fame country, till they have obtained ftrength ; then they may be removed into an airy glafs-cafe, or a dry ftove, where they may have a large ft are of air in warm weather, but protected from the cold. This is neceffary for the young plants, which ftould not the firft year be expoled to the open air, but afterward they may be placed abroad in the warmeft part of fummer, and in winter placed upon Hands in the dry ftove, where they will continue long in flower, and many of the forts will ripen their feeds ; but in win- ter they ftould be fparingly watered, for much moif- ture will rot their roots. If they are propagated by cuttings, the bell time for planting them is in July, after the plants have been expofed to the open air for about a month, by which time the ftoots will be hardened fo as to be out of danger of rotting with a little moifture. Thefe cut- tings ftould be planted in fmall pots filled with light earth, and plunged into a moderate hot-bed ; and if they are fcreened from the violence of the fun in the middle of the day, they will be rooted in about fix weeks time, when they muft be hardened gradually to bear the open air, and afterward treated as the old plants. The. eleventh fort has been longin theEnglift gardens, and is commonly called the Ilex-leaved Jafmine. This fort rifes with a ftrubby ftalk five or fix feet high, fending out many irregular branches, which are clofely garnifhed with thin oval leaves ending in points, and fawed on their edges, which embrace the branches with their bafe, and from the bofom of each leaf comes out one folitary white flower, which is cut at the top into five parts, and at firft fight has the appearance of a Jafmine flower ; but when clofer viewed, the tube will be found curved in the fame manner with thofe which Dr. Linnteus titles ringent flowers. The flowers are not fucceeded by feeds in England, but the plants are eafily propagated by cuttings, which, if planted upon an old hot-bed any time in July, and covered with a bell or hand-glafs, and (haded from the fun, will put out roots in a month or five weeks ; then they may be planted in pots, and placed in the ftade till they have taken frefh root ; after which they may be removed to a Iheltered fituation, where they may remain till the frofts come on. This plant was brought from the Cape of Good Hope, fo is not very tender, therefore may be preferved in a good green- houfe in winter ; but during that feafon it muft have a large (hare of air in mild weather, otherwife it is apt to grow mouldy, and this will caufe the tender - branches to decay. In the fummer feafon it may be. expofed in the open air, with other green-houfe plants, in a fheltered fituation, where it will add to the va- riety ; and although the flowers are fmall, and are r produced fingly from between the leaves, fo do not make any great appearance ; yet as there is a fuc- ceflion of thefe flowers moft part of the year, and the leaves continuing green throughout the year, it is rendered worthy of a place in every colleftion of plants. The daft fort is a native of Africa; this rifes with a ftrubby four-cornered ftalk eight or ten feet high, covered with a pale loole bark, fending out many fide branches, garnifhed with rough leaves five or fix inches long, whofe bafe embrace the ftalks, but they end with ftarp points, and are downy on their under fide the branches are terminated by loofe fpikes of pale purple flowers, covered with a meally down; thefe appear in fummer, but are rarely fucceeded by feeds in England. This is propagated by cuttings in the fame manner as the eleventh fort, and the plants require the fame treatment. LANUGINOUS, fignifies downy, or to be covered with a foft down, as a Quince. LAPATHUM. See Rumex. LA PS AN A. Lin. Gen. Plant. 8 23. Lampfana & Rhagadiolus. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 479. tab. 272. Nip- plewort. The Characters are. The flower is compofed of feveral hermaphrodite florets , which are included in one common imbricated empalement . The florets have one petal , which is tubulous and firetched out at the top , in floape of a tongue ; thefe have each five floor t hairy ftamina , terminated by cylindrical fummits which co ale flee. The ger men is fltuated at the bottom of the floret, fupporting a fender ftyle , crowned by a reflexed bifid ftig- ma ; the germen afterward becomes an oblong three-cor- nered feed , fltuated in the fleale of the empalement. This genus of plants is ranged in the firft feftion of Linnaeus’s nineteenth clafs, intitled Syngenefia Poly- gamia JEqualis, in which he ranges thofe plants with hermaphrodite flowers which are fruitful, whofe fta- mina and ftyle are connected together ; and to this genus he has joined the Rhagadiolus and Zacintha of Tournefqrt, making them only fpecies of the fame genus. The Species are, 1. Laps ana ( Communis ) calycibus fru£i;us angulatis, pe~ dunculis tenuibus ramofiffimis. Hort. Cliff. 384. Nip- plewort with angular empalement s to the fruit , and very narrow branching foot-ftalks. Lampfana. Dod. p. 675. Common Nipplewort. 2. Lapsana ( Rhagadiolus ) calycibus frudbus undique pa- tentibus, radiis fubulatis, foliis lyratis. Hort. Upfal. 245. Nipplewort with empalement s to the fruit fpreading open every way , awl-Jhaped rays , and fpear-Jhaped undi- vided L A R vided leaves. Rhagadiolus alter. Csefalp. 511. Another Rhavcdiolus. 3, Lapsana. ( Larnpfanafoliis ) calycibus fruftiis undique patentibus, radiis fubulatis, foliis lyratis. Hort. XJpfal. 245. Nipplewort with empalements to the fruit fpreadintg open every way , awl-fhaped rays , and iMrpfoaped leaves . Rhagadiolus Lamplanae foliis. Tourn. Cor. 36. Rha- gadiolus with a Nipplewort leaf. 4. Lapsana ( Zacintha ) calycibus fru&us torulofis de- prefiis o'btufis leffilibus. Lin. Sp. Plant. 81 1. Nipple- wort with a deprefjed knotted empalement which is obtufe , and Jits clofe to the branches. Zacintha five cichonum verrucarium. Tourn. Inft. 476. Zacintha , or war ted Cichory. The firft fort is a common weed', which grows by the fide of foot-paths and hedges in moft parts of Eng- land, fo is not permitted to have room in gardens. The fecond and third forts grow naturally in Portu- gal, from whence I have received their feeds. Thefe are annual plants, of no beauty or ufe, but are pre- ferred in botanic gardens for the fake of variety. If the feeds of thefe are permitted to lcat ter, the plants will come up without trouble, and two or three of them will be enough to leave to keep the forts. The fourth fort grows naturally in Italy ; this is alio an annual plant, of neither ufe or beauty, but is like the others kept for variety. If the feeds of this fort feat ter in the autumn, the plants will come up better than if fown in the fpring. The plants require no culture, but will thrive like weeds. LARIX. Tourn. Inft. R. PI. 586. tab. 353. Pinus. Lin. Gen. Plant. 956. The Larch-tree; in French, Melefe. The Characters are. It hath male and female flowers growing feparate on the fame tree, it he male flowers are difpofed in a fcaly katkin ; thefe have no petal , but a great number of fiamina which are connected in a column below , but are feparated at their ‘ points , and are terminated by crept fummits. The female flowers are diflpofed in a conical Jhape , having no petals •, thefe are placed by pairs under each fcale , having a fmall germen , fupporting an awl-fhaped ftyle , crowned by a Jingle jiigma. The germen afterward becomes a nut with a mem- braneous wing , inclofed in the feales of the cones. This genus of plants is ranged in the ninth fedlion of Linnaeus’s twenty-firft clals, intitled Moncecia Mo- nodelphia, the fame tree having male and female flowers in different parts, and the ftamina of the male flowers are united in one clufter. Dr. Linnaeus has joined this genus, and the Abies of Tournefort, to the genus of Pinus, which, according to his fyftem, may very well be brought together ; but as Tournefort and all former botanifts have feparated them by the form of their leaves, thofe of the Abies coming- out Angle from the branches, thofe of the Pine coming out by two, three, or five out of each (heath, and thofe of this genus arifing in clufters in the bottom, but are fpread above like a painter’s pencil; fo thefe diftindtions being pretty generally known by gardeners, I have chofen to continue them under their former feparate titles to prevent confufion. The Species are, 1. Larix ( Decidua ) foliis deciduis, conis ovatis obtufis. Larch-tree with deciduous leaves , and oval obtufe cones. Larix folio deciduo, conifera. J. B. 1. p. 265. Com- mon Cone-bearing Larch-tree. 2. Larix ( Chinenfis ) foliis deciduis, conis mucronatis fquamis acutis. Larch-tree with deciduous leaves , and. pointed cones having acute feales. 3. Larix ( Cedrus ) foliis acutis perennantibus, conis ob- tufis. Larch-tree with acute evergreen leaves and obtufe cones. Cedrus conifera, foliis laricis. C. B. P. 490. Cone-bearing Cedar with a Larch-tree leaf , or the Cedar of Lebanus. The firft fort grows naturally upon the Alps and Apennines, and of late years has been very much propagated in England. This tree is of quick growth, and will rife to the height of fifty feet ; the branches are (lender, and their ends generally hang downward. Thefe are garnifhed with long narrow leaves, which L A II arife in clufters from one point, and fpread open above like the hairs of a painter’s brufh ; they are of a light green, and fall away in autumn like other deciduous trees. In the month of April the male flowers ap- pear, which are difpofed in form of fmall cones ; the female flowers are collected into oval obtufe cones, which in fome fpecies have bright purple tops, and in others they are white : thefe differences are acciden- tal, for I have found the feeds taken from either of thefe varieties, will produce plants of both forts ; the cones are about one inch long, obtufe at their points, and the feales lie over each other, and are fmooth ; under each fcale there is generally lodged two feeds which have wings. There are two other varieties of this tree, one of which ' is a native of America, and the other of Siberia ; the latter requires a colder climate than England, for they, are very apt to die in fummer here, efpecially if they are planted on a dry foil. The cones of this fort which have been brought to England, feem to be in general larper than thofe of the common kind ; but there is 1b little difference between the trees in their charac- teriftic notes, as not to be diftinguifhed as different fpecies, though by the growth of the trees there is a remarkable difference. The cones of the fecond fort were fentffrom China, to the Right Hon. the Earl of Northumberland, who was fo good as to communicate fome of the feeds to me, which were fown in the Chelfea garden. where they fucceeded, as they alfo did in his Lordfbip’s garden at Stanwick. The cones of this fort were much larger than thofe of the common fort, and ended in acute points ; the feales were prominent like thole of the Scotch Fine, and had fo little refemblance to thole of the Larch, as that every one who faw them, imagined they were a fort of Find ; they were titled, Fir good to keep up banks. As thefe plants make but little progreis the firft year, fo they wer e weak, and in the autumn calling off their leaves, they were luppofed to be dead, and moft of the plants were thereby loft ; but thofe which efcaped, after- ward fhot their brandies out horizontally, fpreading clofe to the ground, and by their prelent appearance, feem to be a fhrub which never will rife upright. This fort is fo hardy, as to thrive in the open air without any protedlion. The common Larch is now very plenty in moft of the nurferies in England, and of late years there has been great numbers of the trees planted ; but thofe which have been planted in the worft foil and in bad fttua- tions, have thriven the belt ; for where trees of equal fize have been planted in good garden earth at the fame time, the others on the cold ftiff land, have in twelve years been twice the height of thofe planted in good ground ; which is an encouragement to plant thefe trees, fince they will thrive in the moft expofed fltuations, provided they are planted in clumps near each other, and not Angle trees ; nor fhould the plants which are planted in very open expofed places be taken from warm nurferies, but rather raifed as near to the fpot where they are to remain as poffible ; nor fhould the plants be more than three or four years growth when planted, where they are defigned to grow large ; for though trees of greater fize will remoye very well, and grow feveral years as well as if they ftf had not been tranfplanted ; yet after twenty or thirty years growth they will frequently fail, where the young planted trees have continued very vigorous. Thefe trees are raifed from feeds, which moft years ripen well in England : the cones fhould be gathered about the end of November, and kept in a dry place till the fpring, when they fhould be fpread on a cloth and expofed to the fun/ or laid before a fire, which will caufe the feales of the cones to open and emit their feeds. Thefe feeds fhould be fown on a border expofed to the eaft, where the morning fun only comes on it ; or if they are fown on a bed more expofed to the fun, they fhould be fereened with mats from the fun in the middle of the day ; for when the plants firft appear above ground, they are very impatient of heat ; LAR and when the bed is much expofed to the fen, the furface of the ground will dry fo faft, as to require to have water very often, which frequently rots the tender ftems of the plants ; which will be prevented by pro- perly fhading them while young, and afterward they will be in no danger. Thefe young plants Ihould be conftantly kept clean from weeds, and if they have made good progrefs, they may be tranfplanted the following autumn, otherwife they may remain in the feed-bed another year, efpecially if the plants are not too clofe together. When they are tranfplanted, it fnould be performed in the autumn as foon as their leaves decay •, they may be planted in beds at about fix inches afunder each way, which will be diftance enough for the growth of the plants the two following years, by which time they will be lit to tranfplant where they are to remain. When the young trees are planted out for good, they need not be more than eight or ten feet diftant from each other, always planting them clofer on expofed fituations, than where they are more defended ; after the trees are planted, they will require no other care but to keep them clean from weeds for three or four years till the trees have obtained ftrength, when they will over-top the weeds and prevent their growth ; but the ground between thefe trees Ihould not be dug, for that I have found has greatly flopped their growth. The Siberian Larch is of flow growth in this country, for when the fpring is mild, the trees will begin to Ihoot in February, or early in March ; and there are frequently fharp frofts after, whereby thefe fhoots are often killed, and this flops the growth of the trees. Likewife when they are planted on a v/arm dry foil, they are frequently killed by drought in the fummer ; therefore this is a very improper tree for this country, iinlefs for fome cold, moift, peaty land, where they may probably thrive, and in fuch fituations few other trees will grow. The American or black Larch, thrives pretty well upon moift land, but on dry ground will make but little progrefs. A few of thefe trees by way of variety, may be allowed to have place in every collection of trees defigned for pleafure ; but for profit, the common Larch is to be preferred to any other fpecies. In Switzerland, where thefe trees abound, and they have a fcarcity of other wood, they build mofl of their houfes with it ; and great part of their furniture is alfo made of the wood, fome of which is white, and fome red, but the latter is mofl efteemed. The rednefs of the wood is by fome fuppofed to be from the age of the trees, and not from any difference be- tween them, but is rather owing to the quantity of turpentine contained in them. They frequently cut out the boards into fhingles of a foot fquare, with which they cover their houfes, inftead of tiles or other covering j thefe are at firft very white, but after they have been two or three years expofed, become as black as charcoal ; and all the joints are flopped by the re- fm, which the fun draws out from the pores of the wood, which is hardened by the air, and becomes a fmooth fliining varnilh, which renders the houfes fo covered impenetrable to either wind or rain •, but as this is very combuftible, the magiftrates have made an order of police, that the houfes fo covered Ihould be built at a diftance from each other to prevent lire, which has often done great damage in villages. In mofl countries where this wood is in plenty, it is preferred to all the kinds of Fir for every purpofe • and in many places there are lliips built of this wood, which they fay are durable •, therefore this may be a very proper tree for planting upon fome of the cold barren hills in many parts of England, which at pre- fent produce nothing to their proprietors, and in one age may be large eftates to their pofterity, and a na- tional advantage •, which might be effected without a great expence, where the buflnefs is properly con- dufted. The beft method for doing this, would be by making fmall nurferies on or near the place where the plan- L A R tation is intended to be made, 'in thofe nurferies the feeds Ihould be fown ; and if there are any poor cot- tagers there, thefe may be employed in railing of the plants, keeping of them clean, and afterward in tranf- planting them. This will leffen the number of indi- gent poor, and by employing them in this fort of hulbandry, they may be brought to have a love and regard for trees of their own planting, fo will not be tempted to deftroy them themfelves, or fuffer others to do it ^ and as the feafon for planting happens at a time of year when the farmers have little employment for their labourers, fo the finding them ufeful em- ployment this way, will be of infinitely more advan- tage than the giving them alms from theparifti; and the children may be taught to weed and keep the young plants clean in fummer, whereby, they may be rendered ufeful, and kept from being burdenfome to the parilhes. From the Larch-tree is extracted the Venice turpen- tine, which the inhabitants of the valley of St. Martin near Lucern, make a confiderable merchandize of. They collect this by boring holes in the trunk of the trees, at about two or three feet from the ground, into which they fix narrow troughs about twenty inches long ; the end of thefe are hollowed like a ladle, and in the middle is a fmall hole bored for the turpentine to run into a receiver, which is placed below it ; as the' turpentine runs from the trees, it paffes along the Hoping gutter or trough to the ladle, and from thence runs through the holes into the receiver. The people who gather this vifit the trees morning and evening, from the end of May to September, to collect the tur- pentine from out of the receivers. The third fort is the Cedarof Libanus, which is a tree, of great antiquity ; and what is remarkable, this tree is not found as a native in any other part of the world, fo far as hath come to our knowledge. The cones of this tree are frequently brought from the Levant, which, if preferved entire, will preferve their feeds good for feveral years. The time of their ripening is commonly in the fpring, and fo confe- quently are near one year old before we receive them, for which they are not the worfe, but rather the better ; the cones having difcharged a great part of their refin by lying, and the feeds are much eafier to get out of them than fuch as are frefti taken from th® tree. The beft way to get the feeds out is to fplit the cones, by driving a lharp piece of iron through the center lengthways, which will fplit the cone ; then you may pull the feeds out with your fingers, which you will find are fattened to a thin leafy fubftance called wings, as are thofe of the Fir-tree : but before the feeds are taken out, it will be proper to put the cones in water for twenty-four or thirty hours, which will render them eafier to fplit, fo that the feeds may be taken out with greater fafety ; for there will require care in the doing of it, otherwife many of the feeds will be fpoiled, as they are very tender, and will bruife where there is any force employed to get them out. Thefe feeds Ihould be fown in boxes or pots of light frefti earth, and treated as was directed for the Firs (to which I refer the reader) but only fhall obferve, that thefe require more lhade in fummer while young than the Firs, and Ihould be frequently refreftied with water. When the plants come up they tnuft be guarded from the birds, otherwife they will pick off their tops, as they do of the young Firs where they are not guarded j they mutt alfo be conftantly kept clean from weeds, and not placed under the drip of trees. The plants may remain in thefe boxes or pots in which they were fown till the following fpring, but it will be proper to place them under a frame in winter, or cover them with mats j for while they are young they are in dan- ger of lofing their tops, if they are pinched by froft, for the young plants often Ihoot late in the autumn. In the fpring, before the plants begin to Ihoot, they Ihould be carefully taken up and tranfplanted into beds at about four inches diftance, doling the earth 7 R gently^ L A R gently to their roots ; thefe beds fnould be arched over with hoops, and covered with mats in the heat of the day, to ffiade the plants from the fun till they have taken new root ; and if the nights prove frofty, it will be proper to keep the mats over them in the night, but in cloudy or moift weather they muft be always open. After the plants are well rooted, they will re- quire no other care but to keep them clean from weeds, tmlefs the feafon fnould prove very dry, in which cafe it will be proper to give them fome water once or twice a ■week -, but it muft be but in fmall quantities, for too much wet is often very injurious to them fo that it will be better to fcreen them from the fun in hot weather, to prevent the earth from drying too faft, or cover the furface of the ground with mofs to keep it cool, than to water the plants often. In thefe beds the plants may hand two years, then they fnould be either tranfplanted to the places where they are defigned to remain, or to a nurfery where they may grow two years more ; but the younger thefe plants are when they are planted out for good, the better the trees will thrive, and the longer they will continue, When thefe plants begin to flioot ftrong, you will generally find the leading (hoot incline to one fide ; therefore, if you intend to have them ftrait, you mult fiippoit them with (takes,- obferving to keep the leader always clofe tied up, until you have got them to the height you defign them, otherwife their branches will extend on every fide, and prevent their growing tall. Thefe trees are by many people kept in pyramids, and (beared as Yews, &c. in which form they lofe their greateft beauty ; for the extenfion of the branches is very fingular in this tree, their (hoots for the moil part are declining, and thereby (hewing their upper furface, which is conftantly clothed with green leaves in fo regular a manner, as to appear at fomediftance like a green carpet and thefe waving about with the wind, make one of the mod; agreeable profpedts that can be to terminate a villa, efpecially if planted on a rifing ground. It is matter of furprife to me, that this tree hath not been more cultivated in England formerly, for till ■within a few years pad, there were but few here ; fince it would be a great ornament to barren bleak mountains, where few other trees will grow fo well, it being a native of the coldeft parts of Mount Li- banus, where the fnow continues great part of the year. And from the obfervations I have made of thofe now growing in England, I find they thrive bed on the pooreft foil ; for fuch of them as have been planted in a ftrong, rich, loamy earth, have made but a poor progrefs, in comparifon to fuch as have grown upon a ftony meagre foil. And that thefe trees are of quick growth, is evident from four of them now growing in the phyftc garden at Chelfea, which (as I have been credibly -informed) were planted there in the year 1682, and at that time were not above three feet high ; two of which trees are at this time (viz. 1 766) upwards of twelve feet and a half in girt, at two feet above ground, and their branches extend more than twenty feet on every fide their trunks which branches (though they are produced twelve or fourteen feet above the furface) do at every termination hang very near the ground, and thereby afford a goodly (hade in the hotteft feafon of the year. The foil in which thefe trees are planted, is a lean hungry fand mixed with gravel, the furface of which is fcarcely two feet deep before a hard rocky gravel appears. Thefe trees ftand at four corners of a pond, which is bricked up within two feet of their trunks, fo that their roots have no room to fpread on one fide, and confequently are cramped in their growth ; but whether their (landing fo near the water may not have been advantageous to them, I cannot fay, but fure I am, if their roots had had full fcope in the ground, they would have made a greater progrels. I have alfo obierved, that lopping or cutting of thefe trees is very injurious to them (more, perhaps, than to any etljer of the refinous trees) in retarding their growth ; L A R for two of the four trees above-mentioned, being un- advifedly planted nearagreen-houfe, when they began to grow large had their branches lopped, to let the rays of the fun into the houfe, whereby they have been fo much checked, as at prefect they are little more than half the fize of the other two. Thefe trees have all of them produced, for feveral years, large quantities of katkins (or male dowers,) though there are but three of them which have as yet produced cones -, nor is it above thirty-five years that thefe have ripened their cones, fo as to perfeft the feed ; but now the feeds which fall out of the cones on the ground near them, produce plants in plenty, which come up naturally without care : and fince we find that they are fo far naturalized to our country as to produce ripe feeds, we need not fear being loon fupplied with enough, without depending on thofe cones which are brought from the Levant as there are many trees of this kind in England, which already do, and abundance more which in a few years muft certainly bear : but I find they are more fubjed to produce and ripen their cones in hard winters than in mild ones; which is a plain indication, that they will fucceed, even in the coldeft parts of Scotland, where, as well as in England, they might be propa- gated to great advantage. W hat we find mentioned in feripture of the lofty Ce- dars, can be no ways applicable to the ftature of this tree ; fince, from the experience we have of thofe now growing in England, as alfo from the teftimony of feveral travellers, who have vifited thofe few re- maining trees on Mount Libanus, they are not inclined to grow very lofty, but, on the contrary, extend their branches very far ; to which the allufion made by the Pfalmift agrees very well, when he is deferibing the flouriftung (late of a people, and fays, They (hall fpread their branches like the Cedar-tree. Rauwolf,. in his Travels, fays, there were not at that time (i. e. anno 1 574) upon Mount Libanus more than 26 trees remaining, 24 of which ftood in a circle; and the other two, which ftood at a fmall diftance, had their branches almoft confumed with age ; nor could he find any younger trees coming up to fucceed them, though he looked about diligently for fome. Thefe trees (he fays) were growing at the foot of a fmall hill, on the top of the mountains, and amongft the fnow. Thefe having very large branches, commonly bend the tree to one fide, but are extended to a great length, and in fo delicate and pleafant order, as if they were trimmed and made even with great diligence, by which they are eafily diftinguffhed at a great diftance from Fir-trees. The leaves (continues he) are very like to thofe of the Larch-tree, growing clofe together in little bunches upon fmall brown (hoots. Maundrel in his Travels, fays, there were butfixteen. large trees remaining when he vifited the mountains, fome of which were of a prodigious bulk, but that there were many more young trees of a (mailer fize ; he meafured one of the largell, and found it to be 12 yards 6 inches in girt, and yet found, and 37 yards in, the fpread of its boughs. At about five or fix yards from the ground it was divided into five limbs, each of which was equal to a great tree. What Maundrel hath related, was confirmed to me by a worthy gen- tleman of my acquaintance, who was there in the year 1720, with this difference only, viz, in the dimenfions of the branches of the larged tree, which he affured me he meafured, and found to be twenty-two yards diameter. Now, whether Mr. Maundrel meant thirty- fevenyards in circumference of the fpreading branches, or the diameter of them, cannot be determined by his expreffions, yet either of them well agrees with my friend’s account. Monfieur Le Brun reckons about 35 or 36 trees re- maining upon Mount Libanus when he was there, and would perfuade ns it was not eafy to reckon their numbers (as is reported of our Stonehenge on Salisbury Plain.) He alfo fays, their cones do fome of them grow dependent. Which is abundantly confuted by the above-mentioned travellers, as alfo from our own experience* LAS experience, for all the cones grow upon the upper part of the branches, and Hand ereft, having a ftrong, woody, central ftyle, by which it is firmly annexed to the branch, fo as with difficulty to be taken cff •, which central ftyle remains upon the branches after the cone is fallen to pieces, fo that they never drop off whole, as the Pines do. The wood of this famous tree is accounted proof againft all putrefaction of animal bodies ; the faw- duft of it is thought to be one of the fecrets ufed by thofe mountebanks, who pretend to have the em- balming myftery. This wood is alio faid to yield an oil, which is famous for preferring books and writings •, and the wood is thought by my Lord Ba- con, to continue above a thoufand years found. It is alfo recorded, that in the temple of Apollo at Utica, there was found timber of near two thou- fand years old. And the ftatue of the goddefs, in the famous Ephefian temple, was faid to be of this material alfo, as was molt of the timber work of that glorious ftru&ure. * This fort of timber is very dry and fubjedt to fplit, nor does it well endure to be fattened with nails, from which it ufually fhrinks, therefore pins of the fame wood are much preferable. LARKSPUR. See Delphinium. LASERPITIUM. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 324. tab. 172. Lin. Gen. Plant. 306. Laferwort. The Characters are. It hath an umbellated flower, compofed of many J, mall umbels •, both the fmall and principal umbels have a many- leaved involucrum. T he general umbel is uniform \ the flowers have five equal petals , whofe points are heart- Jhaped and inflexed •, they have five jlamina which are as long as the petals , terminated by fingle fummits ; the round- iflj germen is fitnated under the flower , fupporting two thick acuminated ftyles , crowned by obtufe fpreading Jiig- mas. The germen afterward becomes an oblong fruit with eight longitudinal wings or membranes , refembling the fliers of a water-mill ; the fruit divides into two parts, each containing one feed. This genus of plants is ranged by Dr. Linnaeus's in the fecond fedtion of his fifth clafs, intitled Pentan- dria Digynia, which includes thofe plants whofe flowers have five ftamina and two ftyles. The Species are, 1. Laserpitium ( Commune ) foliolis oblongo-cordatis, incifo-ferratis. Laferwort with oblong heart-Jhaped lobes , which are cut like a flaw. Laferpitium foliis latioribus lobatis.Mor. Umbel. 29. Laferwort with broader leaves, having lobes. 2. Laserpitium ( Latifolium ) foliolis-cordatis incifo- ferratis. Hort. Cliff. 96. Laferwort with heart-f japed lobes cut like a flaw. Laferpitium foliis amplioribus, femine crifpo. Inft. R. H. 324. Laferwort with large leaves and curled feeds. 3. Laserpitium (. Paludapifolium ) foliolis ovatis obtufis acute ferratis. Laferwort with oval obtufe lobes Jharply flawed. Laferpitium humilius, paludapii fo- lio, fiore albo. Inft. R. H. Lower Laferwort, with a Smallage leaf and a white flower. 4. Laserpitium (G alii cum) foliolis cuneiformibus fur- catis. Lin. Sp. Plant. 248. Laferwort with wedge- fhaped forked\ lobes. Laferpitium Gallicum. 156. C. B. P. French Laferwort. 5. Laserpitium (. Anguftifolium ) foliolis lanceolatis in- tegerrimis feffilibus. Hort. Cliff. 96. Laferwort with fpear-Jhaped entire leaves fitting clofe to the branches . Laferpitium anguftiffimo & oblongo folio. Inft. R. H. 324. Laferwort with a very narrow oblong leaf. 6 . Laserpitium ( Selinoides ) foliolis trifidis acutis. La- ferwort with acute trifid lobes . Laferpitium felinoides, femine crifpo. Inft. R. LL Laferwort refembling fweet Smallage, with a curled feed. 7. Laserpitium ( Trilobum ) foliolis trilobis incifis. Lin. Sp. 357. Laferwort with trifid leaves. Libanotis la- tifolia aquilegiae folio. C. B. P. 157. 8. Laserpitium ( 'Prutenicum ) foliolis lanceolatis inte- gerrimis extirnis coalitis. Laferwort with fpear-fhaped entire lobes , whofe cuter ones coaelefce . Laferpitium LAS daucoides jbrutenicum wifcofo femine. Breyn. Cent? 1 67. 9. Laserpitium (. Hktredanoides ) foliolis lineari-ianceo- latis venofo-ftriatis diftinctis Amoenit. Acad. 4 ^ . p. 310. Laferwort with linear fpear-f japed leaves, which are diftinh and veined. Laferpitium exoticum, lobis anguftiffimis integris. Pluk. Phyt. tab. 96. f. 2. 10. Laserpitium {Siler) foliolis ovato-lanceolatis inte- gerrimis petiolatis. Hort. Cliff. 96. Laferwort with oval , fpear-f japed, entire, leaves, having foot-fialks. Siler Montanum. Mor. Hift. 3. p. 276. 11. Laserpitium (Chironium) foliolis oblique cordatis, petiolis hirfutis. Lin. Sp. 358. Laferwort with oblique heart-Jhaped lobes , having hairy foot-fialks. Panax He- racleum. Mor. Hift. 3. p. 315. Herculuis All-heal. 12. Laserpitium {Ferulaceum) foliolis linearibus. Lin. Sp. 358. Laferwort with linear leaves. Cachrys Orien- talis, ferulas folio tenuiore, fruftu alato piano. Tourn. Cor. 23. There are fome other varieties, if not diftind: fpe- cies of this plant ; fome of which have been put down as diftind fpecies, which differ only in the co- lour of their flowers, therefore fhould not be regarded as fuch •, but the number of fpecies has been greatly leffened by fome late writers, who have erred as much in leffening, as thofe before them had done in multi- plying of the fpecies : which miftake they may have fallen into by fowing of the feeds near old plants of the fame genus, or on ground where fome of thefe forts have grown, fo that their feeds have been icat- tered and buried in the ground, where they will re- main two or three years, and afterward grow ; fo that unlefs their feeds are fown at a diftance from any of the other fpecies, there will commonly fome other fpecies come up, whereby people have been often con- fufed in diftinguiffiing thefe plants *, nay, I have fre- quently obferved the feeds of one fpecies fall, and the plants come up on the head of another plant which grew near it ; and this young plant, if not timely rooted out, has gotten the better of the old plant, and deftroyed it ; therefore where there is not great care taken to prevent this, the different forts cannot be preferved in gardens where the fpecies grow near each other. Thefe plants grow naturally in the fouth of France, in Italy, and Germany, and are preferved in botanic gardens for the fake of variety •, but as they have no great beauty, fo are feldom cultivated in other gar- dens : they require much room, for their roots ex- tend far every way, and the leaves of many forts will fpread three feet, when the plants are ftrong ; their flower-ftalks rife four or five feet high, and their umbels of flowers are very large ; they have all of them perennial roots but annual ftalks. They flower in June, and the feeds ripen in September. It is generally fuppofed, that the Silphium of the an- tients was procured from one fpecies of this genus, but from which of them we are at prefent ignorant. All the fpecies, if wounded, drop a very acrid juice, which turns to a refinous gummy fubftance, very acri- monious. This was externally applied by the antients to take av/ay black and blue fpots that came by bruifes and blows, as alfo to take away excrefcences j it was alfo by fome of the antients prefcribed in in- ternal medicines, but others have cautioned people not to make ufe of it this way, from the effeds which they mention to have feen produced from the violence of its acrimony. All thefe plants are extreme hardy, except the laft, which requires a warmer fituation, otherwife will be killed in fharp winters ; the other forts will thrive in moll foils and fituations •, they are propagated by feed, which if fown in autumn, the plants will come up the following fpring •, but when they are fown in the fpring, the feeds commonly remain in the ground a whole year. The plants fhould be tranfplanted the following autumn where they are defigned to remain, for they fend out long deep roots, which are fre- quently broken by tranfplanting if tjiey are large 5 when the plants are removed, they fhould be planted ' three l '•A>. L A T three feet afunder, for they grow very large they de- cay to the ground every autumn, and come up again the following fpring, but the roots will continue ma- ny years, and require no other culture but to clear them from weeds, and to dig between the roots every fpring. LATHYRUS. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 394. tab. 216, 217. Lin. Gen. Plant. 781. Chichling Vetch; in French, Gejfe , The Characters are, The flower has a b ell- fh aped empalement of one leaf cut into five parts at the top , the two upper being fhort , and the under longer . The flower is of the butterfly kind. The ftandard is heart-fhaped , large , and reflexed at the point. The wings are oblong and blunt ; the keel is half round , the fize of the wings. It hath ten flamina , nine of them joined , and one feparate , crowned by roundijh fummits. It hath an oblong , narrow * comprejfed germen, fupporting a rifling ftyle , which is flat, and the upper part broad , with an acute point , crowned by a hairy fligma. The germen afterward becomes a long comprejfed pod , ending in a point , having two valves , and filled with roundijh feeds. This genus of plants is ranged in the third fe&ion of Linnaeus’s feventeenth clafs, intitled Diadelphia De- candria which includes thofe plants whofe flowers have ten ftamina formed in two bodies. The Species are, 1. Lathyrus ( Sativus ) pedunculis unifloris, cirrhis di- phyllis, leguminibus ovatis compreffis dorfo bimar- ginatis. Hort. Cliff. 367. Chichling Vetch with one flower upon a foot-ftalk , tendrils having two leaves , and oval comprejfed pods with two borders on their back part. Lathyrus annuus, flore ca;ruleo, Ochri filiqua. H. L. Annual Chichling Vetch with a blue flower , and a pod like Ochrus. 1. Lathyrus {Cicero) pedunculis unifloris, cirrhis di- phyllis, leguminibus ovatis compreffis, dorfo canali- cuiatis. Lin. Sp. Plant. 730. Chichling Vetch with one flower upon a foot-ftalk , two-leaved tendrils , and an oval comprejfed pod a little channelled on the back. Lathyrus fativus flore purpureo. C. B. P. 344. Cultivated Chich- ling Vetch with a purple flower. 3. Lathyrus ( Setifolius ). pedunculis unifloris, cirrhis diphyllis, foliolis fetaceo-linearibus. Lin. Sp. 1031. Chichling Vetch with one flower upon a foot-ftalk, a two- leaved tendril, and linear briftly lobes. Lathyrus foliis anguftis, floribus fingularibus coccineis. Seg. PI. Veron. Chichling Vetch , with narrow leaves and fingle fcarlet flowers. 4. Lathyrus (. Parifienfus :) pedunculis unifloris, cirrhis polyphyllis, ftipulis lanceolatis. Hort. Cliff. 368. Chichling Vetch with one flower upon a foot-ftalk , a many-leaved tendril, and fpear-fhaped ftipuU. Clyme- num Pariflenfe flore caeruleo. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 396. Chichling Vetch of Paris with a blue flower. 5. Lathyrus ( Hifpanicus ) pedunculis bifloris, cirrhis polyphyllis, foliolis alternis. Hort. Cliff. Chichling Vetch with two flowers upon a foot-ftalk, a many- leaved tendril, and the lobes placed alternate. Clyme- num Hifpanicum, flore vario filiqua articulata. Tourn. Inft. R. H. 296. Spanijh Chichling Vetch, with a variable flower and jointed pod. 6. Lathyrus ( Odoratus ) pedunculis bifloris, cirrhis diphyllis, foliis ovato-oblongis, leguminibus hirfutis. Hort. Cliff. 368. Chichling Vetch with two flowers on a foot-ftalk , a two-leaved tendril, oblong oval leaves , and hairy pods. Lathyrus diftoplatyphyllos hirfutus, mollis, magno & peramasno flore odore. Hort. Cath. The jweet-feented Pea. 7. Lathyrus ( Hirfuta ) pedunculis bifloris, cirrhis di- phyllis, foliolis lineari-lanceolatis, leguminibus hir- futis, feminibus fcabris. Flor. Leyd. Prod. 363. Chichling Vetch with two flowers on a foot-ftalk, a two- leaved tendril, narrow fpear-fhaped lobes, hairy pods, and rough feeds. Lathyrus anguftifolius filiqua hir- futa. C. B. P. Narrow-leaved Chichling V etch with a hairy, pod . 8. Lythyrus ( Tingitanus ) pedunculis bifloris, cirrhis diphyllis foliolis alternis lanceolatis. Flor. Leyd. L A T Prod. 263. Chichling Vetch with two flowers on a foot-ftalk, a two-leaved tendril, and fpear-fhaped alter- nate leaves . Lathyrus Tingitanus filiquis orobi flore ample ruberrimo. Mar. Hift. 2. 55. Chichling Fetch of Tangier , with a bitter Vetch pod, and a large red flower. 9. Lathyrus {Annuus) pedunculis bifloris, cirrhis di- phyllis, foliolis enfiformibus, leguminibus glabris, ftipulis bipartitis. Amcen. Acad. 3. p. 417. Chick- ling Vetch with two flowers on a foot-ftalk, a two-leaved tendril, fword-fhaped lobes , fmooth pods , and a bifid fit- pula. Lathyrus luteus latifolius, Bot. Monfp. Yellow broad-leaved Chichling Vetch. 10. Lathyrus ( Tuberofus ) pedunculis multifloris, cir- rhis diphyllis, foliolis ovalibus, internodis nudis. Hort. Cliff. 367. Chichling Vetch with many flowers on a foot- ftalk, a two-leaved tendril, oval leaves , and naked be- tween the joints. Lathyrus arvenfis repens tuberofus. C. B. P. 344. Creeping Field Chichling Vetch with a tuberous root. 11. Lathyrus (. Pratenjis ) pedunculis multifloris, cir- rhis diphyllis, foliolis lanceolatis cirrhis fimpliciffi- mis. Hort. Cliff. 367. Chichling Vetch with many flowers on a foot-ftalk , a two-leaved tendril, fpear- fhaped leaves , and fingle tendrils. Lathyrus luteus fyl- veftris dumetorum. J. B. 2. p. 304. Yellow wild Chichling Vetch of the woods. 12. Lathyrus ( Heterophyllus ) pedunculis multifloris, cirrhis diphyllis tetraphyllifque, foliolis lanceolatis. It. W. Goth. 75. Chichling Vetch with many flowers on a foot-ftalk, a two-leaved, and fometimes four-leaved ten- dril, and fpear-fhaped leaves. Lathyrus major Narbo- nenfis anguftifolius. J. B. 2. 304. Greater Chichling Vetch of Narbonne with narrow leaves. 13. Lathyrus ( Latifolius ) pedunculis multifloris, cir- rhis diphyllis, foliolis lanceolatis, internodiis membra- naceis. Hort. Cliff. 367. Chichling Vetch with many flowers on a foot-ftalk, a two-leaved tendril , fpear-fhaped leaves, and a membranaceous ftalk between the joints. Lathyrus latifolius. C. B. P. 344. Broad-leaved Chich- ling Vetch, commonly called Everlafiing Pea. 14. Lathyrus ( Magnoflore ) pedunculis multifloris, cirrhis diphyllis foliolis ovato-lanceolatis, internodiis membranaceis, Chichling Vetch with many flowers on a foot-ftalk , a two-leaved tendril , oval fpear-fhaped leaves, and a membranaceous ftalk between the joints. Lathy- rus latifolius minor flore majore. Boerh. Inch alt. 2, p. 42. Smaller broad-leaved Chichling Vetch with a larger flower, or large, red , flowering, Everlafiing Pea. 1 5. Lathyrus ( Piftformis ) pedunculis multifloris, cir- rhis polyphyllis, ftipulis ovatis, baft acutis. Hort. Upfal. 217. Chichling Vetch with many flowers on a foot-Jialk , a many-leaved tendril, and oval flipule acute at the bafle. 1 6. Lathyrus (Nijfolia) pedunculis unifloris, foliis flmplicibus ftipulis fubulatis. Lin. Sp. Plant. 729. Chichling Vetch with one flower on a foot-ftalk , jingle leaves , and awl-jhaped ftipula. Niftblia vulgaris. Tourn. Inft. 65b. Crimfon Grafs Vetch. 17. Lathyrus {Amphicarpos) pedunculis unifloris calyce longioribus, cirrhis diphyllis fimpliciffimis fubtus ve- nofls. Chichling Vetch with fingle flowers upon a foot- 1 ftalk, which are longer than the empalement, and a two- leaved fingle tendril. 18. Lathyrus ( Aphaca ) pedunculis unifloris, cirrhis aphyllis, ftipulis fagitto-cordatis. Lin. Sp. 1029. Chichling Vetch with one flower on each foot-ftalk, a ten- dril without leaves, and a heart arrow-fhaped flipula. Aphacha. Lob. Ic. 2. p. 7 °. 19. Lathyrus {Americana) pedunculis bifloris, foliis reniformibus fimpliciffimis fubtus venofis. Chichling Vetch with two flowers upon a foot-ftalk, and kidney - ft: aped fingle leaves, which are veined on their under fide. Niffolia Americana procumbens, folio rotundo, flore luteo. Houft. MSS. Trailing American Nijfolia, with a round leaf and a yellow flower. The firft fort grows naturally in France, Spain, and Italy ; this is an annual plant, with a climbing ftalk about two feet high. The leaves come out at each joint, alternate ; they are compofed of two long narro w lobes, L A T lobes, with a tendril or clafper riling between, which fallens to any fupport near. The flowers come fm o-l y upon foot-ftalks at each joint ; they are blue, and lliaped like thole of the Pea-, thefe are fuc- ceeded by oval compreffed pods, with a double mem- brane or wing running longitudinally on the back. This flowers in June and July, and the feeds ripen in September. It is feldom cultivated, uniefs in bo- tanic gardens for the fake of variety. The iecond fort is cultivated in fome countries for the feeds, which are ufed for feeding of poultry ; this grows wild in Italy and Spain. It does not rife fo high as the firft fort. The leaves are longer, the pods^re near twice the length of thofe, and are chan- nelled on their back fide ; this is cultivated in the fame manner as Vetches or i ares. The third fort was lent me from Verona, where it grows naturally this is an annual plant, which feldom riles more than fix or eight inches high. The two lobes of the leaves are fmall, and end with clafpers. The flowers are of a bright fcarlet, and are fuc- ceeded by taper pods, filled with roundiih. feeds. This is only kept for variety in feme botanic gardens. The fourth fort grows naturally about Paris this is an annual plant, with a (lender Italic about one foot high, garnilhed with leaves, compofed of feveral nar- row lobes placed alternate along the midrib, which end in clafpers. The flowers come out fingly upon pretty long foot-ftalks they are blue, and about the flze of thofe of the common Tare. It grows naturally in fome parts of England, particularly on Windfor foreft, in moift meadows, and has often a variable flower. The fifth fort grows naturally in Spain and Italy ; it is an annual plant, with a climbing ftalk which riles near three feet high, garnilhed with leaves compofed of feveral lobes, which are fpear-lhaped, placed alter- nately along the midrib, which is terminated by very long clafpers. The foot-ftalks of the flowers are five or fix inches long, upon which Hand two flowers one above the other, lliaped like thofe of the Pea. The ftandard, which is large, is of a bright red colour, but the keel and wings are white. The flowers are fucceeded by pretty long jointed pods, filled with roundifh feeds. This flowers in June and July, and the feeds ripen in autumn. The lixth fort is commonly known by the title of Sweet Pea -, this grows naturally in Ceylon, but is hardy enough to thrive in the open air in England. It is an annual plant with a climbing ftalk, which rifes from three to four feet high, garnilhed with leaves compofed of two large oval lobes, whofe midrib is terminated by long clafpers. The foot-ftalks come out at the joints they are about fix inches long, and fuftain two large flowers with dark purple ftandard s ; the keel and wings are of a light blue colour. The flowers have a ftrong fweet odour, and are fucceeded by oblong inflated pods, which are hairy, containing four or five roundifh feeds in each. There are tv/o other varieties of this fort, one of which has a Pink-coloured ftandard with a white keel, and the wings of a pale blufh colour -, this is com- monly called Painted Lady Pea. The flowers of the other are all white, which are the only differences between them. The feventh fort grows naturally in Effex. I have found it in places which were fpread over with Bram- bles, near Hockerel ; this hath a perennial root, fend- ing out three or four weak ftalks, which are near two feet long, garnilhed with leaves compofed of two oblong lobes, whofe midrib is terminated by clafpers. The foot-ftalks are about four inches long, and fuftain two purple flowers, which are fucceeded by rough hairy pods, little more than an inch long, containing three or four roundifh feeds. This fort is very rarely preferved in gardens. The eighth fort was originally brought from Tangier to England; this is an annual plant, whofe ftalk rifes four or five feet high, garnilhed with leaves com- pofed of two oval veined lobes, whofe midrib ends L A T with clafpers. The foot-ftalks are fhort, and fuftain two large flowers with purple ftandards, whofe Wings and keel are of a bright red ; thefe are fucceeded by long jointed pods, containing feveral roundiih feeds. This is fometimes titled by the gardeners Scarlet Lupine. The ninth fort is an annual plant, which grows naturally about Montpelier. I have alio received the feeds from Siberia •, this rifes with a climbing ftalk five or fix feet high, which has two mem- branes, or wings, running along from joint to joint. The leaves are compofed of two long narrow lobes, whofe midrib ends with clafpers. The flowers ftand upon long foot-ftalks, each fuftaining two pale yellow flowers, which are fucceeded by long taper pods, containing feveral roundifh feeds. The tenth fort grows naturally amongft the Corn in the South of France, and in Italy, but is cultivated in the Dutch gardens for the roots, which are there fold in the markets, and are commonly eaten : this hath an irregular tuberous root about as big as thofe of the Pignut, covered with a brown {kin thefe (hoot up feveral weak trailing ftalks, garnilhed with leaves compofed of two oval lobes, ending with clafpers. The foot-ftalks of the flowers are weak, about three inches long, each fuftaining two deep red flowers, which are feldom fucceeded by pods, but the roots increafe plentifully in the ground. This fort will grow in mod foils, but will 1 thrive belt on light ground. The eleventh fort grows naturally on the banks and under thickets in moft parts of England ; this hath a perennial creeping root, whereby it propagates fo fait as to be a very troublefome weed, fo fhould not be admitted into gardens. The twelfth fort grows naturally by, the fide of hedges, and in thickets, in feveral parts of England ; this hath a perennial creeping root, which fends out many climbing ftalks which rife rive or fix feet high, gar- nilhed with leaves, which have fometimes two, and at others four long narrow lobes, terminated by claf- pers. The foot-ftalks fuftain feveral fmall flowers with pale ftandards, whofe wings and keels are blue ; thefe are fucceeded by long taper pods, containing fe- veral roundiih feeds. It flowers in June and July, and the feeds ripen in autumn. The thirteenth fort has been found growing naturally in feveral parts of England, but is frequently culti- vated in gardens for ornament, therefore it is doubt- ful if it is a native here ; this hath a perennial root, from which arife feveral thick climbing ftalks from fix to eight feet high, which have membranaceous wings on each fide between the joints. The leaves are compofed of two fpear-lhaped lobes, and the midrib' is terminated by clafpers. The foot-ftalks are eight or nine inches long, and fuftain feveral large red flowers, which are fucceeded by long taper pods, con- taining feveral roundiih feeds. It flowers in June, July, and Auguft, and the feeds ripen in autumn, foon after which the ftalks die to the root, and new ones arife in the fpring, from whence it is called Ever- lafting Pea. The fourteenth fort differs from the laft in- the ftalks, being much fhorter and- ftronger. The leaves are broader, and of a deeper green. The flowers are much larger, and of a brighter red colour, fo make a better appearance ; thefe differences are lafting from feeds, for I have raifed many plants from feeds within forty years paft, and have always found them them to be the fame as the parent plant. The fifteenth fort grows naturally in Siberia this hath a perennial root and an annual ftalk, which is garnilhed with leaves, compofed of fix or eight pair of oblong acute lobes. The flowers are blue, and many of them ftand upon each foot-ftalk ; thefe are fucceeded by pods, fhaped like thofe of the Pea. It flowers in June, and the feeds ripen in Auguft. The fixteenth fort grows naturally in moift mea- dows in many parts of England ; this rifes with an up- right ftalk one foot high, which is garnilhed with 7 $ long* LAV long, narrow, Angle leaves at each joint. The foot- (talks of the flowers come out from the joints toward the upper part of the (talk ■, they are (lender, about three inches long, fame having but one, and others have two bright red flowers on their tops.. It flowers in May and June, and the feeds ripen in autumn. This is rarely kept in gardens. The feventeenth fort grows naturally in Syria y this is an annual plant with a trailing ftallc, garnifhed with leaves compofed of two lobes, whofe midrib is terminated by a (ingle tendril. T. he foot-ftalk fup- ports one flower of a pale purple colour, and when the flowers decay, the gernjen is thruft into the ground, where the pods are formed, and the feeds ripen. The eighteenth fort was difcovered by the late Dr. Houftoun, growing naturally at La, Vera Cruz in New Spain * this is annual plant, with a trailing ftalk a foot long, garnifhed with a Angle kidney-fhaped ■leaf at each joint. The flowers grow two together upon very (hort foot-ftalks ; they are (mall, and of a deep yellow colour •, thefe are fucceeded by fhort taper pods, including three or four fmall roundifti feeds. This fort is tender, fo the feeds fhould be fown up- on a hot-bed in the fpring, and when the plants are fit to remove, they fhould be each planted into a fmall pot filled with light earth, and plunged into a tan-bed, where they fhould conftantly remain, treating them in the lame manner as otnei tender plants from warm countries •, if they are brought ror- ward in the fpring, they will flower in July, and their feeds will ripen in autumn. Several of the other forts are preferred in curious gardens for the variety of their flowers, feme. of which make a fine appearance, and continue long in flower. Thefe may all be propagated by {owing. their feeds, either in fpring or autumn *, but thofe which are fowed in autumn fhould have a light foil and a warm fttua- ation, where the plants will abide the wintei, and come to flower early the following fpring, and their feeds will ripen m July ■, but thofe which are fown in the fpring fhould have an open expofure, and be planted upon almoft any foil, if not too wet, for they are not tender plants, noi do they leejuire much culture : thefe forts fhould all of them be fown where they are defigned to remain, for they feldom fucceed when they are tranfplanted, unlefs m is done while the plants are young ; fo that where they are fown for ornament, there fhould be four or five feeds fown in a fmall patch, in different parts of the bor- ders of the flower-garden ; and when the plants come up, they fhould be carefully kept clear from weeds •, but when they are grown two or three inches high, there fhould be fome flicks put down by them to fupport them, otherwife they will trail on the ground, or on whatever plants ftand near them, and become tmfightly. . . r . , The fixth fort, with the two varieties of it, are de- ferving room in every good garaen for the beauty and odour of their flowers ; and the eighth fort is by fome cultivated for the colour of the flowers •, but there are few of the other forts worthy of room in wardens, except the thirteenth and fourteenth forts, which, if they are planted in a proper fituation, and are rightly trained, will make a fine appearance. PAT lit O LI O U S trees and plants are fuch as nave broad leaves. LAVATflR-A. Tourn. Aft. Gal. 1700. tab. 3. " Dill. Gen. 10. Lin. Gen. Plant. 752. The Characters are, The flower has a double empalement *, the outer is of one leaf, port, cbtufe , and trifid j the inner is of one leaf, and quinquefid ; they are both permanent. The flower hath five petals, which are joined at their bafie, plain, and Spread oDen above. It has many ft amina, which are joined in a column below, but above are loofe •, they are infer ted in the fietal, and terminated by kidney -jo aped fiurnmts. It has an orbicular germen , fiuf porting a fhort cylindrical ft fie, crowned by many brjftly ftigmas. The empalement “afterward becomes a fruit with fever al capfuls, covered LAV s , . V\ in front by a hollow Jhield , each capfule having one kid- ney-fhaped feed. This genus of plants is by Dr. Linnaeus ranged in the fifth order of his fixteenth dais, mtitltd Mo.nodd.phia Polyandria, which includes thofe plants whofe flowers . have many ftamina joined in a column. The Species are, 1. Lavatera (Alth