CRASSULACEiE. 51 



Mr. J. G. Baker, who obtained the root from Skybarrow Craig-, 

 Westmoreland. 



Narrow-leaved Orpine, 



French, Orpin Fevier. German, Gehirgs Fetthenne. 



Section II.— CEP/EA. Koch. 



Annual or biennial. Uootstock none or slender. Stem soli- 

 tary, simple or branched, without creeping or procumbent barren 

 shoots at the base. Leaves flat or swollen. 



SPECIES III.— SEDUM VILLOSUM. Linn. 

 Plate DXXVIII. 



Biennial. Elowering-stems simple or branched, without barren 

 shoots. Barren shoots only on plants of the year, erect, terminating 

 in a rosette. Leaves oblong-linear, thickened, semicylindrical, 

 not spurred at the base. Elowers white, in an irregular forked 

 corymbose cyme with imperfectly scorpioid branches. Petals ovate- 

 acute. Whole plant glandular-pubescent. 



In damp places, particularly by roadsides, in hilly districts in 

 the North of England and Scotland ; very common in all the upland 

 districts of the latter country. 



England, Scotland. Biennial. Summer and 

 Autumn. 



Elowering-stems 3 to 6 inches high. Leaves scattered on the 

 flowering-stem, ^ to ^ inch long, flattish above, convex beneath, 

 not produced at the base. Elowers few, terminating the stem and 

 branches, J inch across, white tinged with pale purple. Sepals 

 ovate, blunt. Petals twice or thrice as long as the calyx. EoUicles 

 abruptly truncate with a rather short straight beak, ^ inch long, 

 purple. Whole j)lant pale yellowish - green, often tinged with 

 purple. 



Peadily distinguishable from all the other British species of 

 Sedum, except S. dasyphyllum, by being covered with short glan- 

 dular hairs. 



This species produces the first year barren shoots with a rosette 

 of leaves at the apex ; in the second season these shoots grow out 

 into flowering-stems, and perish in the autumn. 



Sairy Stone-crop. 



French, Sedum Vein. German, Drusenhaarige Fetthenne. 



