620 
CAMPANULA glomerata; g dahurica. 
The clustered Bell-flower of Dauria. 
—— 
PENTANDRIA MONOGYNIA. 
Nat. ord. CAMPANULACEE. Jussieu gen. 163. Div. I. Antherae dis- 
tinct. 
CAMPANULACEÆ. Brown prod. 1. 559. Sect. I. Corolla mo- 
nopetala regularis. Anthere libera. 
CAMPANULA. Supra vol. 1. fol. 56. 
Div. Foliis scabris. 
C. glomerata, caule angulato simplici glabriusculo, foliis scabris oblongo- 
lanceolatis cordatis sessilibus, capitulo glomerato. Willd. sp. pl. 1.903. 
Campanula glomerata. Linn. sp. pl. ed. 2. 1.235. Mill. diet. ed. 8. n. 7. 
ngl. bot. 90. Hort. Kew. ed. 2. 1. 349. : 
Campanula caule simplici, aspera, -foliis amplexicaulibus, floribus capitatis. 
Hall. helv. n. 685. 
Trachelium alpinum, floribus conglomeratis, foliis asarinæ rigidis et hirsutis. 
Herm. par. 235. t. 235. 
Rapunculus sylvaticus cæruleus, umbellatus. Trag. ic. 8. u. 2. et Barrel. 
ic. 5923. n. 111. 
(8) dahurica: flore speciosiore. Fischer; (ipso dictitante. ) 
Campanula cephalotes. Fischer; (ipso monente. ) 
Campanula speciosa. Hornem. hort. hafn. 2. 957; (in addend.). Romer 
et Schultes syst. veg. 5. 126. Link enum. hort. berol. alt. 1. 215; (nec 
Ramond, que est CAMPANULA longifolia. Lapeyr. flor. pyren. et Persoon 
syn. 1. 192; monente cel. Fischer ). 
Drawn at the Nursery of Messrs. Colvill, in the King's 
* Road, where the seed from which the plant was raised had 
been obtained from the Berlin garden, but originally came 
from the Gorenki garden at Moscow. Dr. Fischer, who is at 
present on a visit to this country from Moscow, assures us, 
that our plant is his CampanuLa cephalotes, as well as the 
speciosa of the authors we have quoted; but that he has 
since convinced himself, by the inspection of numerous 
varieties of CaMPANULA glomerata, in various regions of 
Europe, that it ought not to be separated from that 
species, from which it differs only in the greater beauty of 
the flowers. We ourselves had intended to have published 
it by the title speciosa, under which it has already appeared, 
but we yield our opinion with implicit confidence to 
the authority of the able botanist we have mentioned, who 
besides has had much better opportunities of forming 
a correct judgment on the subject than we have had. 
