ent as all the rest, and fenaats 1z inch fr rom bove it; in 
a vigorous plant bent almost Back to back; in consequence of 
hich, when med 0 » they form an acut 
ri 
angle with the stalk, Sod wighe'len lead ds who had not seen the 
plant growing, to suppose they grew in the same plane with the 
rest. Lobes semi-elliptical. Woopwarp. Whole p/ant hairy. 
Wood Polypody. Clefts of rocks in moist and shady places 
and woods, in Yorkshire, Westmoreland, Devonshire, and the 
Lowlands of Scotland. [Barrowfield Wood near Kendal, by 
the fall of Lodore near Derwent Water, and in aye Sonds i in 
the North, Mr. Woopwarp. } P, June—Oct. 
P, Leafits _strap-spear-shaped ; segments very entire, Oreop’teris. 
bluntis 
: clusters of capsules : at the edges. 
Fil, dan. 1121—Bolt..2 
Stem smooth, with 2 furrows; 10 to iy ick high or more. 
Wings, the upper and lower ones alternate; segments sei 
speat-shaped, ots either entire, or finely serrated. ‘The 2 o 
3 lower pair of Pie good shorter, and the lowest pal 
often pointin wp Dickson observes, that the 
fructifications are arp th at = aoe of the lobes, both in the 
ten ait in om more advanced state, and that they never be- 
come co 
Poly po ivan montanum. V ogler. fs Sas ee Huds. Light 
Bolt. Heath Polypody. Woods at ard, Mr. Tre 
DALE, who observes that the leaves ve a pote ragrecabl e Kad 
patois woods uear Darlington, never on cade hills in that neigh- 
uthood, Mr. Rosson. aw d Foot’s W 2, near 
somewhat marshy ground, never on dry hills, as rhe Dickson 
alledges, Mr. Brown. ] P. July—Oct, 
(3) Leaves winged ; wings deeply wing-cleft. 
iF sears almost. doubly winged: leafits strap-spear- Fi/lix-mas, 
shaped: lobes blunt, finely serrated : stem and mid- 
ribs chaffy. 
Dicks. b. s.-Kniph. 6-Woodv. 49-Bully 183-Tourn. 310 ta 
312-Bolt. 24—Ger. 969. 1~Fuchs. 595~F. B. iii. 738- 
Dod. 462. 1—Blackw, 323~Gars. 271-H. ox. xiv. 3. 6+ 
Matth. 1290-Cam. epit. 991—Park. 1036—Lob, obs. 4735 
L, repr. im ice 1. $12, 1, and Ger, ems 112386 
