| 1 | Viola Martia simplex. Single March Violets. |
| 2 | Viola Martia multiplex. Double March Violets. |
| 3 | Viola flammea siue tricolor. Ordinary garden Pansies or Harts ease. |
| 4 | Viola flammea lutea magna. Great yellow Pansies. |
| 5 | Viola tricolor duplex. Double Pansies or Harts eases. |
| 6 | Epimedium. Barrenwort. |
| 7 | Papauer sativum flore pleno. Double garden Poppies. |
| 8 | Papauer sativum flore pleno laciniata. Double feathered Poppies. |
| 9 | Nigella Hispanica flore amplo. Spanish Nigella or Fenell flower. |
| 10 | Nigella multiplex cærulea. Double blew Nigella or Fenell flower. |
| 11 | Nigella duplex flore albo. Double white Nigella. |
| 12 | Ptarmica flore pleno. Double wilde Pelletory. |
1. Papauer multiplex album. Double white Poppies.
The double white Poppy hath diuers broade, and long whitish greene leaues, giuing milke (as all the rest of the plant aboue ground doth, wheresoeuer it is broken) very much rent or torne in on the sides, and notched or indented besides, compassing at the bottome of them a hard round brittle whitish greene stalke, branched towards the toppe, bearing one faire large great flower on the head of euery branch, which before it breaketh out, is contained within a thin skinne, and being blowne open is very thick of leaues, and double, somewhat iagged at the ends, and of a white colour, in the middle whereof standeth a round head or bowle, with a striped crowne on the heade of it, very like a starre, compassed about with some threds, wherein when it is ripe, is contained small, round, white seede, disposed into seuerall cels: the roote is hard wooddy, and long, perishing euery yeare, and must bee new sowne euery Spring, if they doe not spring of their own sowing, which if it doe, the flowers are seldome so faire and double as they that are sowne in the Spring: the whole plant is of a strong heady smell.
2. Papauer multiplex rubescens. Double red or blush Poppies.
This other kind of double Poppy differeth not in any other thing from the former, but only in the colour of the flowers, which are of a bright red, tending to a blush colour, parted, paned or striped in many places with white, and exceedingly more iagged then the former, almost like a feather at the ends, the bottomes of all the leaues being white: the seede hereof is white as the former, which is not so in any other Poppie, that beareth not a full white flower.
3. Papauer multiplex nigrum siue purpureum. Double purple or murry Poppies.
This kinde varyeth both in flowers and seede, although neyther in leaues or any other thing from the first: the flowers are thicke and double, and some what iagged at the ends, in some more, in some lesse, eyther red or blush, or purplish red, more or lesse, or of a sad murrey or tawney, with browne, or blacke, or tawny bottomes: the seede is eyther of a grayish blew colour, or in others more blackish.
4. Papauer Rhæas flore multiplici. The double red field Poppie.
This double Poppie is like the wilde or fielde Poppie, which is well knowne to all to haue longer, narrower, and more iagged greene leaues then the former, the stalkes more hairy, and the flower of a deepe yellowish red colour, knowne to all. Now this differeth in nothing from it, but in the doublenesse of the flower, which is very thicke and double, but not so large as the former. This riseth of seede in the like manner as they doe, and so to bee preserued.