42 TRIANDRIA DIGYNIA. 
About Cong, at the fubterraneous river, county 
of Galway—along a glen between Ballyleddy 
and Newtown-Kennedy, county of Down. Shady 
woods and mountains about Knappen, Glenarm, 
and low glens, county of Antrim. In woods and 
fhady glens this grafs furnifhes much leaves, and 
may be acceptable to cattle which retire to fhade 
in fummer during the fun’s meridian each day, 
but as a pafture or meadow grafs of no great 
value. P. June. July. 
§telojspen aonblaca. 
TRIsH. 
¢ Melvig fhér aonbhlatha. 
EnciisH.—One-flowered Melic-grafs. 
Ob. Roots fibrous. Stems from 1 to 14 feet. 
Leaves flat, rough underneath and on their edges. 
Sheaths about half the length of the leaves, with 
blunt fheath-fceales which affume different forms. 
Panicle wpright, few flowered; little fruit-ftalks 
pointing one way; lower ones in pairs. Calyx 
purple; valves nearly equal, fmooth, awnlefs, 
nerved, containing one fertile flower. 
caerulea. M, Panicle clofe: flowers upright, cylindrical. 
Common in boggy meadows and paftures. This 
grafs is common in moft bogs, but the harfhnefs 
of 
