4c6 DIADELPHIA DECANDRIA. 



of bread of the dry'd flowers of this and the 

 preceding plant reduced to powder. They call 

 the plant Chamhroch^ and efteem the bread made 

 of it to be very wholfome and nutritive. 



alpefire 5. TRIPOLI UM fpicis fubglobofis villofis terminali- 

 bus feffilibus, caule crec%, foliis lanceolatis fer- 

 rulatis. Sp. pi. 1082. (Rivin. t. 12. Jacquin. oh. 

 3. p. 14. /. 69) 



Mountain Clover. Jtjglis. 



At the foot of the highland mountains not unfre-; 

 quent, in moid or fhady places. %. VII. ' 



It differs trom T. prGtenfe, in having green T^/pwAf, 

 lanceolate at both ends, neither ftreaked with red 

 veins nor bearded -, in having longer leaves, more 

 nervous, fmooth on the upper fide, and rarely, 

 marked with any fpot or arch : the calyx flriatec 

 and fmooth, the dents only hairy : the heads oi; 

 flowers more oval, larger, and of a deeper pur' 

 pie, two of them frequently terminating th( 

 branch. 



arviufe 6. T. fpicis villofis ovalibus, dentibus calycinis fetaceij 

 villofls requalibus. Lin.fyft. nat. p. 503. 5/). />/ 

 1083. [Ger. em. 1192./. 3. Rivin, t. 15 Barrelier\ 

 ic. 901. 902. Moris, hift.f. 2. /. 13./. H. Black' 

 well t. 490. ) 

 Hire's-foot Trefoil. Jnglis. 

 Ln corn fields and dry barren pafl:ures not unfn 

 quenr, as under Salijhury craigs, &c. O. VI 



VIII. 



Tl 



