[2061] Silliman’s Journ. of Science, ii. (1820) 302.
[2062] For a full account of the formation of the glands, see Trécul, Annales des Sciences Nat., Bot., i. (1854) 299. An abstract may be found in Méhu’s Etude du Houblon et du Lupulin, Montpellier, 1867.
[2063] On the word elm, Dr. Prior remarks that it is nearly identical in all the Germanic and Scandinavian dialects, yet does not find its root in any of them, but is an adaptation of the Latin Ulmus.—Popular Names of British Plants, ed. 2. 1870. 71.
[2064] Leechdoms, Wortcunning and Starcraft of Early England, edited by Rev. O. Cockayne, ii. (1865) pp. 53. 67. 79. 99. 127 and p. xii.—In the Anglo-Saxon recipes, both Elm and Wych Elm are named in the Welsh “Meddygon Myddfai” ([see Appendix]). Elmwydd or Ilwyf and “Ulmus romanus,” Ilwyf Rhufain, are met with.
[2065] Schübeler, Pflanzenwelt Norwegens, 1873-75, p. 216.
[2066] Gmelin, Chemistry, xvii. (1866) 458.
[2067] Fig. in Bentley and Trimen’s Med. Plants, part 34 (1878).
[2068] Mat. Med. Americ., Erlangæ, 1787. 32.
[2069] Proceedings of the American Pharmaceutical Association for 1873, xxi. 435.
[2070] Fig. in Bentley and Trimen’s Med. Plants, part 24 (1877).