SYNGENESIA—POLYGAMIA-.EQU. Cnicus. 391 



Acanthium montanum. Ibid. 1446,/; worse. 



Jacea lutea Clusii. Ibid. \ 474. f-, good. Name erroneous. 



Fryar's Thistle. Petiv. H.Brit, t. 21./. 8. 



In waste mountainous ground, and by road sides, on a limestone or 

 chalky soil. 



In the counties of Worcester, Huntingdon and Cornwall. With. 

 In a gravel pit at North Pickenham, Norfolk. Rev. Mr. Watts. 

 Oxfordshire. Sibth. Cambridgeshire. Relh. ('ommon in Bed- 

 fordshire. Abbot, in Hampshire. Mr. Rayer. Between Stam- 

 ford and Grantham plentifully 3 also about the zigzag walk 

 at Matlock bath. 



Biennial. August. 



A large and conspicuous plant, not easily overlooked. Root tap- 

 shaped. Stem 3 feet high, with numerous wide-spreading 

 branches, leafy, round, strongly furrowed, slightly hairy, full of 

 pith. Leaves sessile, not decurrent -, covered with close bris- 

 tles on the upper side, and with cottony down at the back ; their 

 lobes each tipped with a strong spine, and spreading alternately 

 in two directions, afford a singular and striking character. Fl. 

 numerous, very large, purple, solitary at the end of each branch, 

 with a smaller leaf or two close underneath. Cat. often about 

 3 inches in diameter, globose, or rather depressed, the purplish 

 tips of its scales projecting out of the mass of cottony wool, 

 which envelopes the whole calyx like a dense cobweb. Seeds 

 'obovate, polished, with a feathery down. The radical leaves 

 are frequently 2 feet in length, and their lobes are disposed in 

 double ranks with singular exactness. Fl. occasionally white. 



6. C. tuberosum. Tuberous Plume-thistle. 



Leaves deeply pinnalifid, lobed, fringed with prickles ; 

 lower ones on long stalks. Stem almost single-flower- 

 ed, without wings or prickles. Calyx-scales minutely 

 spinous, nearly smooth. Root creeping, tuberous. 



C. tubcrosus. WilUl. Sp. PL v. 3. ICSO. Comp. ed. 4. 134. Engl. 



Bot. V. 36. t. 2.') 62 3 omitting the reference to Gerarde. 

 Carduus tuberosus. Linn. Sp. PI. 1 154. 

 C. bulbosus monspcUiensium. Lob. Advcrs. o7\. f. Ic. v. 2. 10./ 



Bauh.lIist.v.S.p. 1.43./ 

 C, pratensis asphodeli radicc, latifolius. Bauh. Pin. 377. 

 Cirsium n. 177. Hall. Hist. v. 1. 76. 

 C. latioribus foliis viridibus laciniatis, radicibus asphodeli. Moris. 



r. 3. 151. sect. 7. /. 29./ 27. 

 Cirsio quinto congener. Clus. Hist. v. 2. 149./ 

 Acanthus sylvcstris alter. Dalcch. Hist. 1114./, 



In thickets on the downs of Wiltshire. 



In a truly wild thicket of brusli-wood, called (ircat Hidge, on the 



