LULEAN LAPLAND. 277 



lover takes all his relations along with him, 

 each carrying meat and brandy. Being 

 arrived at — (this sentence is left unfinished 

 in the manuscript.) 



July 5. 



I continued my journey to Hyttan, and 



in my way passed a marshy place, such as 



the Laplanders call murki. Close to the 



borders of it grew the least Thalictrum 



(T. alpinum), with four pale petals, and 



twelve stamens with lonp' anthers, their 



filaments purple. In another part grew an 



Anclrosace with two drooping flowers. It 



had five stamens; one capitate pistil; an 



ovate fruit of one cell ; a five-cleft calyx, 



and a swelling (corolla of one) petal. It 



is therefore not a good Androsace. (This 



was unquestionably Primula mtegrifolia, 



see Fl. Lapp, eel, 2. 52, which Linnseus, in 



that work, seems to have confounded with 



P. farinoHa. Speakmg of the latter he says, 



'' This Fi'wmla, the splendid crimson of 



whose flowers attracts the eyes of all who 



