60 
(2) The seed-heads of other relatives of the 
Dandelion, e.g., Groundsel, Coltsfoot, &c. 
CLOCKS AND WATCHES. Dandelion, Taraxa- 
cum officinale (Wells). 
CLoG WEED. Mr. T. W. Cowan gives me thiS 
as a Somersetshire name for the Cow-Parsnip> 
Heracleum Sphondylium, and tells me that it is 
a shortened form of Keyc-logge, i.e., Keck-lock 
(A.S. leac) or Kex-plant (Prior). 
Cior Bur. (1) Burdock, Arctium majus. 
(2) Mr. T. W. Cowan gives me this as a local 
name for the Agrimony, Agrimonia Eupatoria. 
See COCKLE-BUR. 
CLotTe. Yellow Water Lily, Nymphea lutea. 
(East Somerset and Dorset.) 
CLOTHES BRUSH. Wild Teasel, Dipsacus 
sylvestris (S.W. Wilts). 
CLOTHES Precs. (1) Early Purple Orchis, Orchis 
miuscula (Beadford-on-Tone and Asheott). 
(2) A correspondent at Netherbury (Dorset) 
gives it as a local name for the Foxglove, Digitalis 
purpurea, 
CLoup BERRY. (1) A general name for the 
Mountain Raspberry, Rubus Chamemorvs, so 
called, Gerard says, because they grow on the 
summits of mountains, *‘ where the cloudes are 
lower then the tops of the same all winter long, 
whereupon the people of the countrie haue 
called them Cloud-berries.”’ Mr. T. W. Cowan 
suggests that possibly they get their name from 
old English clud=a cliff. This plant does not 
grow in Somerset, and the name is given in some 
parts of that county and of Dorset, to 
(2) the Dewberry, Rvbus cawsivs, which Dr. 
Watson says has no right to the name. 
CLOVE GILAWFUR (or GILLIFLOWER). Clove 
pink, Carnation, Dianthus Caryophyllvs. See 
GILAWFER and GILLIFLOWER. 
CLOVER Drvin. The Dodder, Cuscuta. 
CLuTcCH. Knot-grass, Polygonum aviculare 
known also in West Somerset as TACKER-GRASS 
TUCKER-GRASS, and MAN-TIBE. 
CLy, or CLYDE. Goose-grass or Cleavers. 
Galium Aparine (West Scmerset and Devon). 
CLy-BuRS. The little hooked seed pods of the 
Goosegrass, aS above. 
CLYDER, CLYDERN, or CLYTHER. A name used, 
throughout a great part of the four counties, for 
the Goosegrass, as above. 
CoacH AND Horses. Monkshood, Aconitum 
Napellus (Sherborne). Compare CHARIOT AND 
HLoRSES. 
SoAcH Horsxes. Mr. F. T. Elworthy gives this 
as a West Somerset name for the common Pansy, 
Viola tricolor (cultivated) or V. arvensis (wild). 
