HEXANDRIA— MONOGYNIA. Juncus. IGl 



bractea, aggregate, with roundish branches of unequal length, 

 nearly upright, cymose. Calyx-leaves awl-shaped, pale brown 

 with a darker keel. Stamens 6, with long, bright yellow, anthers. 

 Caps, acutely triangular, elliptical, with a sharp point, scarcely 

 so long as the 3 shortest, internal, leaves of the cahjx. 



Mr. Bicheno has adopted my suggestion in Engl. Bot., in taking the 

 supposed leaves, of this and its allies, for barren stems, which 

 can scarcely be disputed. In the last-mentioned work, p. G65. 

 L 4 from the bottom, effusus is misprinted for conglovieratus. 



Many synonyms and figures of early authors, quoted by Linneeus 

 for his J. injiexus, which I believe to be a nonentity, probably 

 belong to our glaucus; but they give a wrong idea of its position. 

 I have in vain sought for any thing that could answer to J. injiexus, 

 either in a state of nature, in gardens, or in old collections. 



4. J. conglomeratus . Common Rush. 



Stem naked, straight. Panicle dense, globular, far below 

 the summit. Capsule abrupt. Stamens three. 



J. conglomeratus. Linn. Sp. P/. 464. Willd. v.2.205. H. Br. 376. 



Engl. Bot. V. 12. t. 835. Bicheno Tr. of L. Sac. v. 12. 302. Hook. 



Scot. 105. Ehrh. Calam. 65. Leers 86. t. 13./. 1 . " Ft. Dan. 



t. 1094." 

 J. n. 1312. Hall. Hist. v. 2. 167. 



J. Isevis vulgaris, panicula compactiore. Raii Syn. 432. 

 J. laevis, panicula conglomerata. Scheitchz. Agr. 343. 

 J. Isevis, panicula non sparsa. Baiih. Pin. 12. Theatr.\S3. Moris. 



r.3.231. sect.S. t. 10./. 7. 

 J. IfEvis. Dalech. Hist. 984./. 

 J. Matthioli. Bauh. Hist. v. 2. 520. f. 

 Juncus. Matth. Valgr. v. 2. 383./ Camer. Epit. 780./ 



In pastures, and by road-sides, in moist situations, common. 



Perennial. July. 



Root creeping, horizontal. Stems about 2 feet high, quite erect, 

 all generally fertile, grass-green, striated, acute, but not pun- 

 gent ; sheathed at the bottom with close, brown, obtuse scales. 

 Panicle more than half way up the stem, bursting from a small, 

 membranous-edged fissure, without a bractea, corymbose, very 

 dense, mostly globular. Calyx-leaves pointed ; the inner ones 

 most membranous, with 2 ribs. Stain, always 3 only. Caps. 

 ovate, strongly triangular, obtuse, with a small point, purplish- 

 brown, polished, about the length of the calyx. 



The stems are more soft and pliant than any of the foregoing, full 

 of a snow-white highly compressible pith, which serves for rush- 

 lights, or watch-candles ; as the entire stems do for mats, chair- 

 bottoms, and many similar uses, in common with the next spe- 

 cies. They both probably served for strewing floors in England, 

 as mentioned bv Shakspear and Sir Thomas More, about the 



VOL. II. M 



