TETRADYNAMIA. SILIQUOSA. Brassica. 
BRAS’SICA. Calyx upright, close: glands, 1 be- 
tween each shorter stamen and the pistil, and 
1 between each pair of longer stamens and: 
the calyx: seeds globular. 
B, Leaves heart-shaped, embracing the stem, smooth ; 
root-leaves rough, very entire: pods 4-corner 
Linn. All the leaves smooth.* Syst. Veg. PoLLicH, 
Jacq. austr. 282-Kniph. Brassica campestris~F. B. ii. 835 
4—Clus. ii. 127. 1—Dod. 626. 2—Lob, bs. R15; 3, and it: 
i, 3906. 2.—Ger. em, 536. 2—Park. 580. 0-H, OX. iii. Qe 
19 and 20-Pet. 45. 5-Ger. 430. 2-F. B. ii. 835. 3. 
Petals white, Linx. Too nearly allied to the B. campestris. 
Huns. Stem-Jeaves egg-shaped, blunt at the end, heart-shaped 
at the base, smooth, sea-green, very entire. Petals white, with 
atinge of straw-colour. Fruit-stalks expanding. Pods 3 or & 
inches long, the lower abies wide, Specimen from Mr. 
Curtis’s garden. Woopw 
Brassica campestris perf frre albo. R. Syn. 293. Huds, 
i. Brassica Turrita. Perfoliate Cabbage. C 
fields and cliffs on the sea pions on Harwich, and Bardsey near 
Orford, Suffolk. Ray. Cornfields near Godtione and Marsh. 
Sussex. Huns. A. June. 
579 
orienta’lis, 
B, Root and stem slender: stem-leaves uniform, heart- campes ‘tris. 
shaped, sitting. 
Jacq. austr. 282, is referred to by Hudson, and F/. dan. 550, 
by Linnzus, but Jacquin considers his as a new species, 
which he calls B. austriaca, observing, that the angles at 
the base of the leaves are rounded, and not pointed, as in 
the fig. of the Fl. dan. He adds too, that the flowers 
are not in bunches as represented in that figure, but in 
broad-topped spikes, a few flowering at a time.Sr. Mr. 
Woodward suspects the reference to FJ. dan. observing, 
that Mr. Hudson does not cite it. (Ger. em. 536. 2, 
referred to by Hudson, is the same as C/us. ii, 127. ly 
which deh refers to B. orientalis. Ff. B. ii. 835. 4 
is also B. orientalis.) 
Reotleaves | lyre-shaped, somewhat rough with hairs; stem 
veave Smooth, Blossoms has Linn. Reot-leaves oblong, 
_ These contradictions render it probable that the a given in = 
Burj ues: 224 supposed he B. sventallg of Tourn, cor. an 
Mopiman species, are distinct, Dr. Sto 
22 2. 
