276 POPULAR FIELD BOTANY. 
Hetosciapium Reprens. Creeping Marshwort. The 
leaves of this species are broader, and the umbels have 
stalks, but in other respects it scarcely differs from the last. 
They are both found in watery places, the last particularly, 
in boggy meadows in Oxfordshire, Cambridgeshire, and 
Bedfordshire. 
PENTANDRIA. DIGYNIA. 
CALYCIFLORZ. APIACEA, 
BUPLEURUM. (Harw’s nar.) 
Generic Character. No calyx. Petals roundish. Jnvolucre 
longer than the small flower, divided into five rather large leaves. 
Burteurum Rorunpirotium. Common Hare’s-ear, or 
Thorow Wax. Not very common, but generally found on 
dry and chalky soils, growing in corn-fields. It js easily 
known by its singular leaves, which are quite round at the 
base, pointed at the top, and the main stalk piercing 
through the middle of each, or nearly so. The flowers are 
small and yellowish, the involucre being large, and divided 
into five distinct leaves, a little tinged with red. 
