Page:The history of silk, cotton, linen, wool, and other fibrous substances 2.djvu/232

 *tris and Althæa Officinalis among the officinal plants, which he found in Cephalonia. (Travels in Greece, p. 543, 4to.). The Althæa Officinalis, or Marsh Mallow, is called by the Greek authors [Greek: Althaia], by the Latin, Hibiscus. Theophrastus says, that it went also under the name of wild mallow. Whilst the Common Mallow, though highly esteemed for its medicinal virtues, was principally regarded as a substantial article of food; the Marsh Mallow, on the contrary, seems to have been rarely used except as an article of the Materia Medica ; and, as its peculiar properties were likely to be more matured in the wild than cultivated state, it does not appear to have been grown in gardens. Theophrastus describes it by comparing it with the Common Mallow, and mentions its application, both internally and externally, as a medicine. Dioscorides (l. iii. c. 139.) gives similar details. Besides mentioning the proper name of the plant in Greek and in Latin, he calls it, "a kind of wild mallow." Palladius (l. xi. p. 184. Bip.) explains "Hibiscus" to be the same as "Althæa." See also Pliny, l. xx. c. 14. ''ed. Bip. Virgil alludes to the use of it as fodder for goats, and as a material for weaving baskets''. The Hemp-leaved Mallow, Althæa Cannabina, is once mentioned by Dioscorides (lib. iii. c. 141.). Giving an account of hemp, he distinguishes between the cultivated and the wild. He says of the wild hemp, that the Romans called it Cannabis Terminalis. After mentioning the medical properties of the plant, Dioscorides says, that its bark was useful for making ropes. The truth of this observation will be apparent to every botanist. The plants belonging to the natural order Malva-*