50 PENTANDRIA— DIGYNIA. Myrrhis. 



spotted. Leaves twice or thrice pinnate, sharply cut, 

 rather hairy. Ufiibeh terminal, stalked, numerous, with 

 many general, as w^ell as partial, rays ; scarcely ever any 

 general bracteas, but numerous spreading 'partial ones, 

 which are in some degree membranous, lanceolate, and 

 pointed. FL white. Fr. tawny, or blackish. 



1. M. odorata. Sweet Cicely. 



Seeds with very sharp, prominent angles, roughish towards 



the summit. 

 M. odorata. Scop. Cam. v. 1 . 207. Roth Germ. v.\.\22.v.2. pA. 



314. Hofm. Umb.v. 1.29. 

 M. n. 753.' Hall. Hist. v. 1.330. 

 Myrrhis. Dod. Pempf. 701. f. Lob. Ic. 734./. Matth. Valgr. v. 2. 



512./. Camer.Epit.S9S J. 

 M. magno semine longo sulcato. Bauh. Hist. v. 3. p. 2. 77. f. 



Moris, r.3.301. sect. 9. t.\0.f.\. 

 Scandix odorata. Linn. Sp. PI, 368. WiUd.v.l. 1449. Ft. Br. 323. 



Engl. Bof. V. 10. t. 697. Light/. 160. Jacq. Austr. app. t. 37. 



Ehrh. PL Off. 423. 

 Chaerophyllum odoratum. Hook. Scot. 93. 

 Cerefolium magnum, sive Myrrhis. Ger. Em. 1039./. 

 Odorata. Riv. Pentap. Irr. t. 57. 



In mountainous pastures. 



In meadows betwixt Morton and Rushforth, in the west riding of 

 Yorkshire, certainly a native. Dr. Richardson. Herb. Buddl. 

 Near Leeds pretty common, and certainly wild. Rev. Mr. Wood. 

 Abundant by the sides of rivulets in Wensley-dale, Yorkshire. 

 Mr. IV. Brunton. Behind a farm house, about a mile west of 

 Hafod, Cardiganshire, Frequent, as Hudson remarks, in West- 

 moreland, Cumberland, and Lancashire ; and, as Lightfoot and 

 others have noticed, in the lowlands of Scotland ; but generally 

 near houses. It does not appear why Ray and Dillenius did not 

 admit this plant as a native. 



Perennial. May. 



Root tapering, fleshy, sweet and aromatic, like the whole of the 

 herb. Stem 2 or 3 feet high, round, leafy, sleek, but striated, 

 hollow, like the footstalks. Leaves triply compound, with pin- 

 natifid, acute, serrated, slightly hairy leaflets, of a bright green j 

 the radical leaves on long cylindrical footstalks; the rest with 

 very short, dilated, ribbed, membranous-edged ones, so as to be 

 almost sessile. Umbels terminal, of numerous downy rays, both 

 general and partial. Bracteas partial only, lanceolate, tapering, 

 whitish, membranous, finely fringed. Ft. numerous, pure white j 

 many of the middlemost with stamens only, nor any thing of the 

 pistil but the large globular bases of the styles ; several in the 

 circumference fertile, and slightly radiant. Stam. in both. 



