[2301] Pesse or Epicéa of the French; Fichte or Rothtanne of the Germans.
[2302] Theater of Plants, 1640. 1542.
[2303] Compleat English Physician, 1693. 1031.
[2304] Hist. des Drogues, Paris, 1694. part i. 287.
[2305] Chabræus in his Stirpium Sciagraphia (1666) remarks that he had seen the Pesse (P. Abies L.) in great plenty “in Burgundicis montibus,” yet makes no particular allusion to its yielding resin.
[2306] Pharm. Journ. ix. (1876) 164; also in Hanbury’s Science Papers, pp. 46 to 53.
[2307] Oesterreichischer Ausstellungs-Bericht, x. (Wien, 1868) 471.
[2308] I spent several days in the localities in 1873.—F. A. F.
[2309] Traité des Arbres, etc. i. (1775) 12.
[2310] Collected by myself.—F. A. F.