The Teint is a Grape of a deeper or darker colour, whose iuice is of so deepe a colour, that it serueth to colour other wine.
The Bursarobe is a faire sweete white Grape of much esteeme about Paris.
The Alligant is a verie sweete Grape, giuing so deep and liuely a coloured red wine, that no other whatsoeuer is comparable to it, and therefore vsually called Spaniards blood.
The blew or blacke Grape of Orleans is another blacke Grape, giuing a darke coloured sweete wine much commended in those parts.
The Grape without stones is also a kinde by it selfe, and groweth naturally neere Ascalon, as Brochard affirmeth, the wine whereof is redde, and of a good taste.
The Virginia Vine, whereof I must needes make mention among other Vines, beareth small Grapes without any great store of iuice therein, and the stone within it bigger then in any other Grape: naturally it runneth on the ground, and beareth little.
| 1 | Vuæ nigræ minores. The small blacke Grape. |
| 2 | Vuæ cæruleæ maiores. The great blew Grape. |
| 3 | Vuæ Moschatellinæ. The Muscadine Grape. |
| 4 | Vuæ Burletenses. The Burlet Grape. |
| 5 | Vuæ insolatæ. The Ray sins of the sunne Grape. |
| 6 | Ficus. The Figge Tree. |
The Vse of Vines, Grapes, and other parts that come of them.
The greene leaues of the Vine are cooling and binding, and therefore good to put among other herbes that make gargles and lotions for sore mouthes.