Lancastri- 
en’se . 
MONADELPHIA. DECANDRIA. Geranium. 
Var. 2, eaves larger, paler, and more deeply divided. Ray. 
x ete 64, 10, 
Banks of the Devil’s Ditch. Ray, Retuan, and the left 
side of Dallingham Gap going from Canvass-hall. Ray 
G. Leaves circular, with 5 or 7 divisions; segments 3- 
cleft : fruit-stalks with a joint : stem upr ight. 
Dill. elth. 136. 1638—Pet. 64. 11. 
rs white, with reddish veins. Ray. Leaves smaller 
and more re haly divided than in G. sanguineum; the flowers 
smaller ; it ‘grows upright, whilst the G, Be creeps upon 
the ground. Mr. Arxinson. G. sazguineum @ Linn. y Huns. G. 
hzmatodes Tancastriens, flore eleganter striato, Dill. Ray ; who 
remarks that it does not change when cultivated, that it is 2 
smaller nti more bumble dae than the G. a 
le af W fal Ls Lani _— the bank in a sandy soil. 
3] 3 P. 
y, Aug. 
(2) Petals aoe = sania 3; fruit-stalks 2-flowered. 
ENNIAL. 
pyrena'icum. 
G. Petals 2-lobed: leaves circular, lower ones with 5; 
upper with 3 lobes; lobes blunt, 3-cleft. 
Cprt. eo bet. 405—Ger. the 1679, 
longer than the leaves. Floral-leaves pointed, 4 to a9 fruit- 
ba mi 
which are rather silky than hairy, the hairs ying close. M. 
AFZELI 
Mo. mney Cranesbill. Meadows and pastures. On the banks 
of the river between Bingley and Keighley, Yorsk, near Enfield, 
about Brompton, Chelsea, andin thedry part of the pasturage 
in Battersea Fields, [Near Oxford. Mr. Woopwarp,] 
