Page:Enquiry into plants (Volume 1).pdf/267

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ENQUIRY INTO PLANTS, III. xi. 4–xii. 1
 

one 'ash' (manna-ash), the other 'horse-ash[1]' (ash). The 'horse-ash' is a larger and more spreading[2] tree, wherefore it is of less compact appearance. It is naturally a tree of the plains and rough, while the other belongs to the mountains and is smooth[3]; the one which grows on the mountains is fair-coloured smooth hard and stunted, while that of the plains is colourless spreading and rough. (In general one may say of trees that grow in the plain and on themountain respectively, that the latter are of fair colour hard and smooth,[4] as beech elm and the rest; while those of the plain are more spreading, of less good colour and inferior, except the pear apple[5] and wild pear, according to the people of Mount Olympus. These when they grow in the plain are better both in fruit and in wood; for on the mountain they are rough spinous and much branched, in the plain smoother larger and with sweeter and fleshier fruit. However the trees of the plain are always of larger size.)

Of cornelian cherry, cornel, 'cedars,' medlar, thorns, sorb.

XII. Of the cornelian cherry there is a 'male' and a 'female' kind (cornel), and the latter bears a corresponding name. Both have a leaf like that of the almond, but oilier and thicker; the bark is fibrous and thin, the stem is not very thick, but it puts out side-branches like the chaste-tree, those of the 'female' tree, which is more shrubby, being fewer. Both kinds have branches like those of the chaste-tree,

  1. cf. Plin., l.c., and Index.
  2. μεῖζον δὲ καὶ μανότερον conj. W. from G; μ. δὲ καὶ μανότερα MVU (? μανότερον); μείζων δὲ καὶ μακροτέρα Ald.H.
  3. καὶ τραχύ … λεῖον conj. Sch.; καὶ λεῖον … τραχὺ Ald.
  4. λεῖα conj. Mold,; λευκὰ Ald.G.
  5. μηλέας conj. Scal., cf. 3. 3. 2; μελίας UMAld.H.
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