SYNGENESIA— POLYGAM.-iEQU. Hieraciuiu. 357 



creeping, elongated. Stalk nearly smooth, loosely co- 

 rymbose. Calyx bristly. 



H. dubium. Linn. Sp. PI. 1 125. fVilld. v. 3. 1563. fi. Br. 828. 



Engl. Bot.v.33.t. 2332. Tr. of Linn. Soc. v. 9. 226. Huds.344. 



With. 684. 

 H. Auricula. Fl. Dan. t. 1111. 

 H. n.53. Hall. Hist. v. 1.22. 



Pilosella major prima. Tabern. Kreuterb. 507 . f. /c. 196./. 

 Pilosella. Tillands Ic. 14./. bad; copied from Tabernsemontanus. 



On mountains, in rather moist situations, rare. 



OnFairfieldmountain,nearRydall, Westmoreland. Huds. Brought 

 from the north of England. Mr. Woodward. Sent from Scotland 

 to the Cambridge garden. Mr. James Donn. Gathered in Scot- 

 land by Mr. G. Don. Hooker. 



Perennial. July. 



Larger than the last, but of a similar habit, though the herbage is 

 far less hairy, and there is no cottony down about the plant, 

 except a small quantity on the Jlower-stalks, The leaves are 

 glaucous underneath, tapering, and fringed with coarse hairs, at 

 the base. Stalks solitary, beset with scattered glandular hairs, 

 and bearings or 4 corymbose, or imperfectly umbellate,^owjers, 

 whose partial stalks, like the calyx, are downy, with short black 

 glandular bristles interspersed. Cor. smaller than the preceding, 

 lemon-coloured on both sides. Seed-down rough. There are 

 several scattered, small, lanceolate hracteas, with membranous 

 edges, about the partial ^ower-s^a/A-s. 



f4. H. Auricula. Orange Mouse-ear Hawkweed. 



Leaves lanceolate, acute, nearly entire, coarsely liairy; 



green on both sides. Scions scarcely so long as the 



leaves. Stalk downy and hairy, corymbose. Calyx 



shaggy. 

 H. Auricula. Linn. Sp. PL 1 126. Willd. v. 3. 1564. Huds. 344 ? 



FL Br. 829. Engl BoL v. 33. t. 2368. Tr. of Linn. Soc. v.d. 230. 



Comp. ed.4. 131. 

 H. dubium. FL Dan. t. 1044. 

 H. n. 52. HalL Hist. v.\. 22^. 



In mountainous situations. 



On Dalehead, not far from Grass-mere, Westmoreland, but spa- 

 ringly. Hudson. 



Perennial. July. 



The most uncertain plant perhaps in our whole British catalogue, 

 whose place in the English Flora depends on Mr. Hudson's au- 

 thority alone, for no other person has met with any thing in 

 Britain answering to his description, which is as follows. 



" Root abrupt, with numerous simple radicles. Scioris creeping. 



