CHAP. 32.—THE SEVERAL KINDS OF CHICK-PEASE.

The chick-pea[1] is naturally salt,[2] for which reason it is apt to scorch the ground, and should only be sown after it has been steeped a day in water. This plant presents considerable differences in reference to size, colour,[3] form, and taste. One variety resembles in shape a ram's head, from which circumstance it has received the name of "arietinum;" there are both the white and the black arietinum. There is also the columbine chick-pea, by some known as the "pea of Venus;" it is white, round, and smooth, being smaller than the arietinum, and is employed in the observances of the night festivals or vigils. The chicheling vetch,[4] too, is a diminutive kind of chick-pea, unequal and angular, like[5] the pea. The chickpea that is the sweetest in flavour is the one that bears the closest resemblance to the fitch; the pod in the black and the red kinds is more firmly closed than in the white ones.

1. Cicer arietinum of the botanists.

2. "Gigni cum salsilagine." It abounds in India, and while blossoming, it distils a corrouive acid, which corrodes the shoes of those who tread upon it.

3. There are still the red and the white kinds, the large and the small.

4. Cicercula: the Lathyrus sativus of Linnæus. It is difficult to cook, and hard of digestion. See c. 26.

5. This must be said in reference to some of the pease when in a dried state.