496 POLYANDRIA. POLYGYNIA. Ranunculus. 
Rowstil-lenvied Water Crowfoot. Celery-leaved Crowfoot. — 
A. Ma 
Shallow waters. ay, June.* 
a’cris. R, ae expanding: fruit-stalks cblindsiealé leaves with 
divisions, and many clefts, the uppermost strap- Se 
inca 
Cart.-E. bot. 659.-Waode, 246-Wale.-F. B. iii. 416- 
Blackaw. 31.2 and e~Dod. 426, 1-Lob. obs. 379. 2; and 
ic. i, 665, 1~Park. 328. 2=Pet. 38. 3-H. ox. iv. 28.16. 
Stem with hairs laid to. Cal. hairy, coloured. Leaves hairy, 
segments black or deep e at the points ; stem-deaves sitting, 
but sheathing the joints. Leaf: stalks hairy. Fruit-stalks not 
furrowed. Bloss. yellow. 
Battie Flower, Batter Cups. Meadows and Figg very 
P, June » july.t 
Var. 2. Fruit-stalks flatted; flowers small. 
Pool dam at Edgbaston ; the end of June. 
(3} Leaves dissected and divided uniform. 
parviflo’rus. R. Seeds rough with tubercles ending in hooked points: 
leaves heart-shaped, hairy, lobed or toothed: stem a 
rostrate, 
ae eed | 8 Tae 
E. bot. 120—Ray 12. 1, at tps 326~—H., OX. iv. aie 21~Pet. 38. te 
9§—Pluk. 55.1 
Whole plant srailisig close on the ground, Root-leaves on very" 
long leaf-stalks, kidney, or heart-shaped, toothed. Stem leaves 
kidney-shaped ; upper ones sitting, simple or with 3 divisions, 
all the leaves extremely soft to the touch like the nose of a horse. 
pic; small, yellow. Seeds flatted; the hooked prickles very _ 
min 
Small. flowered Crowfoot. Corn fields and meadows, in a 
gravelly soil. Near Camberwell; and Greenstreet Green not fat 
from Dartford, Kent. [ Malvern Hill, Wescueealiies, Mr. 
ALLARD.—Near Norwich. Mr. Pircurorp.—and Worcester. 
Sr.—St. Vincent’s Rocks. Mr. Swaynz.—Lymington and Lul- 
worth Cove, Dorsetshire. plentiful. ] A, May, June: | 
hedera’ceus, R. Leaves roundish, 3-lobed, very entire: stem creeping. 
he whole plant is very Corrosive; and beggars are said to use it te 
ulcerate their feet, which they expose in that seed to excite compassion 
—Goats eat it. Cow s, horses, and sheep re 
and goats eat it, Cows, horses, and swine refuse 
pace sad | horses leave this plant untouched, oe a their aia ree 
are,—It is very acrid, and easily blisters the skin, 
