4IO DIADELPHIA DECANDRIA. 



1088. (Moris, hi ft. f. 2, t. i^- f. i ^2. minus, 

 adhafin. Fig. Raj. Synops. p. 330. /. 14. /. 3) 



Procumbent Trefoil. Jnglis. 



In paftnres frequent, "U. VI. VII. 



The ftalks are generally procumbent when young, 

 but afterwards become more cre6t, often a foot 

 long, and but little branched : the leaves are 

 fmall, heart-lhap'd, and finely ferrated, but not 

 ftriated : the fpikes are lax, and contain from 

 ten to fixteen flowers, which are fmaller than 

 thofe of the preceding. 



Scopoli, in his Flor. Carniolica, n, 931, feems to 

 think this only a variety of the T. agrarium, and 

 indeed it differs but little from it. 



jiliforme II TRIFOLIUM fpicis fubimbricatis, vexillis de- 

 flexis perfiftentibus, calycibus pedicellatis, cauli- 

 bus procumbentibus. Sp. fl. 1088. [Raj. Syn. p. 

 331. M4./. 4) 



Slender-ftalk'd Trefoil. Jnglis. 

 In dry fandy foils, and upon ant hills, but not very 

 common. G. VI. 



The ftalks are about four or five inches loqg, very 

 fine and llender, and generally procumbent : the 

 leaves are ftriated and emarginatcd : the pedun- 

 cles are fcarcely bigger than a horfe-hair, but 

 longer than the leaves, and fuftain from three 

 to five fmall yellow flowers, the f^/)'r^j of which, 

 during fruditication, are much more evidently 



fupported 



