164 COMPOSITE. \Hkmcium. 



heart-shaped bases; calyx rough with prominent hairs. Br. Fl. 

 1. p. 345. E. Fl. v. iii. p. 333. E. Bot. t. 1094. 



Moist woods, marshes, and rocky places, not unfrcquent in various 

 parts of the country. Fl. Aug. % . — Readily known by its smooth 

 stems and leaves, amplexicaul stem-leaves with spreading teeth, and by 

 the long black hairs on the calyx. 



7. H. molle, Jacq. Soft-leaved Ilawkwced. Stem angular, 

 leafy, tubular, downy, corymbose; leaves lanceolate, slightly 

 toothed, hairy, clasping the stem; lower ones stalked, elliptical 

 and obtuse. Br. Ft. 1. p. 845. E. Fl. v. iii. p. 364. E. But. 

 t. 2210. 



Moi^t rocks on Magillycuddy's Reeks and other mountains in Kerry, 

 1805. Rocks near the river Sullane, County of Cork ; Mr. J. Drum- 

 mond. A specimen in the herbarium of Doctor Robert Graves, was 

 found by him at the Devil's Glen, County of Wicklow. Fl. July, 

 Aug. If.. — Plant one foot high or upwards, remarkable for its obtuse 

 radical leaves, which taper gradually into a long footstalk. Scaljs of 

 the involucre with a few, black, glandular hairs. 



8. H. prenanthoides, Vill. Rough-bordered HuwJtiveed. Stem 

 erect, leafy, simply hairy; panicle corymbose, with hispid 

 and glandular stalks ; leaves oblong, cordate, and amplexi- 

 caul at the base, upper ones gradually smaller and ovato- 

 cordate, acuminate, all glaucous beneath and remotely toothed. 

 Br. Fl. Up. 346. E. Fl. v. iii. p. 368. E. Bot. t. 2285. 



On moist rocks near the Dargle. In several Glens near Belfast ; Mr. 

 Templeton. Fl. Aug. %. — Three or four feet high. Lower leaves 

 elliptic-oblong, upper heart-shaped. Flower-stalks glandular and cot- 

 tony. 



9. H. sabaudum, Sm. Shrubby broad-leaved Hawhiveed. 

 Stem erect, copiously leafy, many-flowered ; leaves ovato-lan- 

 ceolate, sharply toothed, rough-edged, somewhat clasping, 

 hairy beneath. Br. Fl. 1. p. 346. E. Fl. v. iii. p. 367. E. 

 Bot. t. 349. 



_ Woods and coppices, in dry rocky places. Plentiful in Ross Island, 

 Killarney, and in the woods at Glengariff, where the late Miss Hutching 

 found a variety with spotted leaves. County of D :rrv ; Mr. Temple- 

 ton and Mr. D. Moore. Fl. Aug., Sept. If.— Stems' of a woody tex- 

 ture, two or three feet high, erect, wand-like, roundish, furrowed, rough 

 to the touch. Leaves rough. Flowers numerous, yellow, in com- 

 pound downy panicles, in small weak plants often solitary. 



10. H. timbellatwn, Linn. Narrow-leaved Hawkweed. Stem 

 erect, simple, very leafy ; leaves linear-lanceolate, subglabrous, 

 slightly toothed ; flowers subumbellate ; peduncles downy; in- 

 volucres glabrous. Br. Fl. 1. p. 346. E. Fl. v. iii. p. 269. E. 

 Bot. t. 1771. 



Woods and groves in stony and rocky places. In the Devil's Glen 

 and other places in the County of Wicklow. Rocks on Benyevena ; 

 Mr. D. Moore. Fl. Aug., Sept. If.— Of a more slender habit than 

 the last. Stems two feet high or upwards, almost smooth. Leaves 



