A greene forest, or A naturall historie vvherein may bee seene first the most sufferaigne vertues in all the whole kinde of stones & mettals: next of plants, as of herbes, trees, [and] shrubs, lastly of brute beastes, foules, fishes, creeping wormes [and] serpents, and that alphabetically: so that a table shall not neede. Compiled by Iohn Maplet, M. of Arte, and student in Cambridge: entending hereby yt God might especially be glorified: and the people furdered. Anno 1567.

About this Item

Title
A greene forest, or A naturall historie vvherein may bee seene first the most sufferaigne vertues in all the whole kinde of stones & mettals: next of plants, as of herbes, trees, [and] shrubs, lastly of brute beastes, foules, fishes, creeping wormes [and] serpents, and that alphabetically: so that a table shall not neede. Compiled by Iohn Maplet, M. of Arte, and student in Cambridge: entending hereby yt God might especially be glorified: and the people furdered. Anno 1567.
Author
Maplet, John, d. 1592.
Publication
Imprinted at London :: By Henry Denham,
[1567 (3 June)]
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Subject terms
Natural history -- Pre-Linnean works.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A06860.0001.001
Cite this Item
"A greene forest, or A naturall historie vvherein may bee seene first the most sufferaigne vertues in all the whole kinde of stones & mettals: next of plants, as of herbes, trees, [and] shrubs, lastly of brute beastes, foules, fishes, creeping wormes [and] serpents, and that alphabetically: so that a table shall not neede. Compiled by Iohn Maplet, M. of Arte, and student in Cambridge: entending hereby yt God might especially be glorified: and the people furdered. Anno 1567." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A06860.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 8, 2024.

Pages

Of the Apple tree.

THe Apple tree is of good sounde bodie, of wrinckled barck, and in outward Cote ve∣ry full of knots. In flowers at the spring time verie beautifull, in swéetenesse of fruite in the Autumne almost not comparable, in fruit and encrease verie wonderfull, and vnder this one name it hath infinite kindes. Plinie sayth, that vnlesse it be often cropped, and rid of superflu∣ous and troublesome boughes, it will soone war barraine, and leaue off fruit bearing. The same Author sayth also, that the fruites hereof must be gathered in faire weather, vnlesse that

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they being laid vp with outward plentie of ac∣cidentall and airie humor, doe by and by rot: he monisheth also that they be gathered before they be full ripe, for their better goodnesse than being preserued.

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