PENTAND. MONOG. 75 



3. C. lati folia (spreading Bell-flower], leaves ovato-lanceolate 

 scabrous toothed, stem quite simple rounded, flowers solitary 

 peduncled erect, calyx glabrous, fruit drooping. Lightf. p. 14 1 . 

 E. B. t. 302. 



HAB. Sides of rivulets at the foot of mountains in shady places, not 

 unfrequent j as at Cartland rocks, near Lanark, at Taymouth her- 

 mitage, and by the falls of Moness, near Taymouth, Lightf. Col- 

 lington and Rosslyn woods, Maugh. Not unfrequent near Edinb. 

 and in Kinross-shire, in woods, Mr. Arnott. Banks of the Clyde 

 at Daldowie and Kenmuir (with white fl., Mr. Murray} j and 

 woods at Crossbasket and Cambuslang, Hopk. 



Two to three feet high. Cal. serrated. Cor. very large. 



4. C. rapunculoides (creeping Bell-flower), leaves cordato- lan- 

 ceolate scabrous crenate, stem branched, flowers solitary se- 

 cund drooping axillary forming a spike, segments of the cal. 

 patent. E. B. t. 1369. 



HAB. Woods rare, Blair, Dr. Skrimshire in E. Bot. Corn-fields 2 

 m. N. W. from Kirkcaldy, Mr. Chalmers: considered there a trouble- 

 some weed by the farmer on whose land it grows. Fl. July, Aug. 



I/. 



Two feet high. Leaves narrower upwards. Flowers large. Cal. en- 

 tire, rough. 



5. C. Trachelium (Nettle-leaved Bell-floiver) , stem angular, 

 leaves petiolate cordato-lanceolate acutely serrated hispid as 

 well as the cal., peduncles few-flowered axillary. Light/'. 

 p. 142. E.B.t.12. 



HAB. Shady places, but not common, Lightf. On the old walls of 



Mugdoch Castle, Hopk. Fl. July, Aug. 2/ . 

 Leaves much like those of the Nettle, whence its English name. 



6. C. glomerata (clustered Bell-flower}, stem angular simple 

 nearly smooth, leaves scabrous crenate oblongo-lanceolate, 

 radical leaves petiolate, cauline ones semiamplexicaul, flowers 

 sessile mostly in a terminal cluster. Lightf. p. 142. E. B. 

 t. 90. 



HAB. Dry mountainous pastures, but not very common, Lightf. 

 Hills behind Petticur, Fifeshire, Mr, P. Neill. Links near Gos- 

 ford, Maugh. Firth of Forth and along the coast, Mr. Arnott. 

 Montrose and Arbroath, Mr. Stewart. 



From 3 or 4 inches to a foot high. Flowers rather large, upright. 



7. C. hederacea (Ivy-leaved Bell-flower}, stem lax filiform, 

 leaves all cordate angulato-dentate glabrous. E. B. t. 73. 



HAB. Moist shady places. First discovered by Dr. Brown near the 

 shores of the Clyde 2 or 300 yards to the westward of Clough 

 lighthouse, Renfrewshire. Ardgowan, the seat of Sir Michael 

 Shaw Stewart, on the lawns, Mr. A. Edgar, and Mr. Murray. 

 Abundant in the immediate neighbourhood of Greenock, Mr. W. 

 M'Dermaid. Fl. July, Aug. I/. 



A very slender and elegant plant, growing in lax tufts. Peduncles 

 long, mostly terminal. Flowers half an inch long, at first drooping, 

 pale purplish blue. 





