418 DECANDRIA. PENTAGYNIA. Sedura. 



SE DUM. Cal. 5-cleft : bloss. none, or 5 petals : 



nectariferous scales 5, at the base of the ger- 



mens : caps. 5, distinct, like a legumen. 



( 1 ) heaves fiat. 

 Teleph'ium.S. Leaves flattish, serrated : corymbus leafy: stem upright. 



Var. 1. White-flowered. 



Kniph. A-Ludw. 20Q~Fuc!>s. 80Q-J. S. III. 681-Matth. 

 6s6~Clus. ii. 66. <?-Dod. 130. 1-Lob. obs. 2U-Ger. em, 

 519. Q-Pari. 726. 2-H. ox. xii. 10. row I. l-Ger. 4l6V 



More rarely met with than the following. 

 Var. 2. Purple-flowered. 



Curt. 21G-FI. dan. 686-Fuchs. S0l-Knij>6. 4-Clus. ii. 66. 

 l-Ger. 417. l-#. ox. xii. 10. row 1. 2-B/art<w. 191- 



Lon. ii. 24. 2-Trag. 373. 



Orpine Stonecrop. Pastures and hedges* [Sandy fields, SufF. 

 frequent. Mr. Woodward. Near Ashburne. Mr. Whately. 

 Fields about Robinson's End. Malvern Chace. Mr. Ballard. 

 Many hedges about Manchester. Mr. Caley. Crevices of the 

 rocks on Haugheraan Hill near Salop. Mr. Aikin. In a pasture 



] 



villo'sum. iS. Hairy 



(2) Leaves roundish, nearly cylindrical. 



both them and the 



leaf-stalks hairy : stem upright, somewhat branched 

 at the base. 



Fl. dan. 24-£. hot. 39i-Clus. ii 59. 3-Ger* cm. 5l6. 1 



Park. 734. 6-H. ox. xii. 8. 48-Prf. 42. 7. 



Stem smooth below, hairy and clammy above. Leaves fleshy 



,v £ - — r _ _ -_ — — — — — 



oblong, nearly flat above, hairy, the lower ones smooth. Fruit- 

 stalks hairy, clammy, solitary. Cal. hairy. Woodward. Stem 

 upright, from 3 to 5 inches high. Flowers flesh-coloured. 



Marsh Stonecrop. Moist mountainous meadows and pastures. 

 Moist rocks about Ingleborough Hill, Yorksh. and Hartside Hill, 

 near Gamblesby, Cumberland. Ray. Mr. Woodward. Hin- 

 kleham, near Settle, Scotland. [Carr End, Wensleydale, York- 



shire. Curt. Close by Weathercoat r _, „* ^ 



Woodward. A common plant on the banks of 



- - r 'Dr. 



Scotland 



Hope.] 



June, J 



* A decoction of the leaves in milk is a forcible diuretic. It has been 



given with success to cure the piles.— Cows, goats, sheep, and swine eat 

 it; horses refuse it. 





v 



