"Well, mate, it's snug here by the logs
That's peppermint—burns like a match."
1880. G. Sutherland, `Tales of Goldfields,' p. 30:
"A woody gully filled with peppermint and stringy-bark trees."
1884. R. L. A. Davies, `Poems and Literary Remains,' p. 231:
"The peppermints rose like pillars, with funereal branches
hung,
Where the dirge for the dead is chanted,
And the mourning hymn is sung."
1888. D. Macdonald, `Gum Boughs,' p. 116:
"Down among the roots of a peppermint bush."
1889. J. H. Maiden, `Useful Native Plants,' 439:
"It [<i>Eucalyptus capitella</i>, Smith] is one of the numerous `peppermints' of New South Wales and Victoria, and is noteworthy as being the first eucalypt so called, at any rate in print."
<hw>Pepper, Native</hw>, i.q. <i>Climbing Pepper</i> (see above), <i>Piper Novae-Hollandiae</i>, Miq.