[2001] The Celtis Australis of Linnæus.
[2002] Supposed by some to be the holly. See B. xxv. c. 72.
[2003] He alludes to a variety of the cratægus.
[2004] The Cerasus vulgaris of modern botanists. It is said to have obtained its name from Cerasus, in Asia Minor, where Lucullus found it.
[2005] He must allude to what he has stated in B. xii. c. [3], for he has nowhere said that the cherry will not grow in Egypt. It is said that the cherry is not to be found in Egypt at the present day.
[2006] The griotte cherry of the French, the mazzard of the English.
[2007] A variety of the mazzard, Fée thinks.
[2008] Some take this for the Cerasus Juliana, the guignier of the French, our white heart; others, again, for the merisier, our morello.
[2009] It is most generally thought that this is the Cerasus avium of botanists, our morello, which is a very tender cherry.
[2010] Or “hard berry,” the Prunus bigarella of Linnæus, the red bigaroon.