yellow, sometimes white. Linn. or < 
' Star Thistle. Star Knapweed. Barren meadows ad 
sides, [Yarmouth Denes, near the sea, with a white blossom, 
frequent. Mr. Woopwarp. Bethnal Green. Mr. Jones.’ Sands- 
end near Whitby, Yorkshire. Mr. Rosson. Road sides North 
of Bedford, common. Mr. Pirt.] | - A, July, Aug. 
729 
C. Flowers solitary : calyx thorned : branch-léaves decur- solstitia'lis. 
| 
rent, without thorns, spear-shaped ; root-leayes lyre- 
ing-cleft. “A 
E, bot, 243-—Kniph. 8-Dod. 734. 1~Ger. em. 1166. 2~Park, 
989. 4—Pet. 21. 12-Col. ecphr. 3i-Lob. adv. 372, and 
a tt, 12 Ys 
equal thorns ; the rest with awl-shaped thorns as long as the 
_ calyx, and armed on each side with lesser thorns. Blossoms yel- 
low. Linn. 
St. Barnaby’ Thistle, ot Knapweed. Cornfields and hedges. 
Not far from Cirencester, Gloucestershire, and Northfleet, Kent. 
In a field'‘at Arminghall near Norwich. Mr. Crows. Linn. Tr. 
ji. 236, A. July, Aug. 
NECESSARIA. 
CALEN’DULA. Recept. naked: down none: ca- 
lyw of many, nearly equal leaves : seeds of the 
centre, mostly membranaceous. 
C. Seeds boat-shaped, prickly, turned inwards ; the inner- arven’sis, 
ed together, the outermost upright, fur- 
nished with a tail. 
H. ox. vi. 4. 6-Tabern. 713—Ger. 603-F. B, iii. 103, 
Nearly allied to the C. officinalis. Leaves somewhat toothed, 
but heart-spear-shaped; not spatula-shaped. Linw es, the 
upper ones heart-shaped, lower ones strap-egg-shaped, all of 
