192 The Flora of Wiltshire. 
all the Districts. About a span in height, branched from the base, 
clothed with a white cottony down. 
2. G. sylvaticum, (Linn.) wood or Highland Cudweed. The 
specific name sylvaticum is apt to mislead, as it grows not unfre- 
quently in open fields. It is a frequent plant in Scotland in open 
mountainous pastures. G. rectum, Smith. Engl. Bott. 124. 
Reich. Icones, xvi. 58. 
Locality. In woods, thickets, and pastures. P, Fl. July, Sep- 
tember. Area, 1* 3. 4. 5. 
South Division. 
1. South-east District, Wood at Manningford. 
3. South-west District, “ Donhead,” Mr. James Hussey. 
North Division. 
4. North-west District, “Sandy corn-fields at Bromham,” Miss 
Meredith. 
5 North-east District, “ West Woods near Marlborough,” Flor. 
Marib. “Great Bedwyn,” Mr. William Bartlett. Perhaps more 
frequent in the county than the above area of distribution would 
indicate. . 
[ Doronicum Pardalianches, (Linn.) Great Leopard’s-bane. Engl. 
Bot. Suppl. 2654. I have observed this plant at the Sloperton end 
of Stockley-lane, Bromham (District 4). Probably an escape from 
the late Mr. Norris’s garden at Nonsuch House, who was in the 
habit of cultivating the rarer British plants. ] 
Senecio, (Liny.) Grounpsei Rac-wort. 
Linn. Cl. xix. Ord. ii. 
Name. From senez, (Lat.) an old man; in allusion to the naked 
receptacle which resembles a bald-head, or to the hoary-down as 
in Erigeron. 
1. 8. eulgaris, (Linn.) common Groundsel. Engl. Bot. t. 747. 
Locality. Cultivated and waste ground; everywhere. A. Fi. 
January, December. Area, 1. 2.3.4.5. In all the Districts. One 
of our most common weeds, in almost all soils and situations, rising 
from a few inches to a foot high. /’/owers yellow, as in all of our 
native species of the genus. 
