HEXANDRIA— MONOGYNIA. Allium. 137 



In cornfields, and their borders. 



At Black Notley, Essex. Ray. In several parts of Westmoreland, 

 and near Bristol. Huds. At Fincham, Norfolk. Rev. R. Forby. 

 Near York. .Sir Thomas Frankland, Bart. 



Perennial. July. 



Bulb ovate or roundish. Stem 2 or 3 feet high, slender, leafy in 

 the lower part. Leaves much narrower than the last, hollow, 

 semicylindrical, minutely rough all over ; ribbed at the back ; 

 channelled, or nearly flat, on the upper side. Bracteas dilated 

 and concave at the base ; each suddenly contracted into a long, 

 slender, acute, nearly cylindrical point. Umbel, with its bulbs 

 andjlowers, very much like the foregoing. The whole plant has 

 an unpleasant scent of garlick, and is a very troublesome weed, 

 difficult of extirpation, though not of common occurrence. 



5. A. vincalc. Crow Garlick. 



Umbel spherical, bearing bulbs. Leaves C5'lindrical, smooth. 

 Three alternate stamens deeply three-cleft. 



A. vineale. Linn. Sp. PL 428. Willd. v. 2. 73. Fl. Br. 359. Engl. 

 Bot. V. 28. t. 1 974. Hook. Scot. 101. 



A. n. 1221. Hall.Hist.v.2.\06. 



A. staminibus altern^ trifidis, foliis fistulosis, capita bulbifero 

 sphserico, radice multiplici. Hall. All. II. 7i. 4. Opusc. 338. 



A. sylvestre. Rail Syn. 369. Ger.Em.iyO.f. 



A. sylvestre primum. Fuchs. Hist. 737. f. 



A. sylvestre tenuifolium. Lob. Ic. 156./. 



A. campestre juncifolium capitatum purpurascens majus, et minus. 

 Bauh. Pin. 74. Rudb. Elys. v. 2. 153./. 1 1, bad j 12, better. 



In dry pastures, cornfields, and waste ground, among ruins, espe- 

 cially on a chalky or gravelly soil. 



Perennial. July. 



Bulb small, ovate, white. Stem slender, 2 feet high, leafy, round, 

 striated. Leaves long and tapering, hollow, fading before the 

 Jlowers expand. Umbel small, with many crowded, ovate, acute, 

 greenish bulbs, generally viviparous before they fall, and more 

 numerous than ihejloiver -stalks, which are erect, purplish, swelled 

 at the top. Fl. small, pale rose-coloured with green keels. Stam. 

 longer than the petals, 3 of them with capillary, spreading, late- 

 ral segments, very conspicuous, and at once distinguishing this 

 species from the two last. Germen somewhat pyramidal, obtuse, 

 with 3 lateral protuberances. Style very short. Caps, mostly 

 abortive. 



*** Stalk radical, naked, 



6. A. ursinum. Broad-leaved Garlick. Ramsons. 

 Stalk naked, semicylindrical. Leaves elliptic-lanceolate, 



stalked. L^mbel level-topped. Stamens simple. 



