THALAMTFLOEJB. 7 



OKD. V. FUMARIACEJE. 

 FUMARIA. FUMITORY. 



1. P. officinalis (common F.) In dry fields and by road- 

 sides. A delicate plant, of a pale green colour, varying much 

 both in size and appearance. Leaves smooth and very much di- 

 vided, generally 3-lobed ; lobes varying in shape from linear to 

 oblong. Flowers red, small. Nuts very blunt. Meadfoot cliffs, 

 etc. (E. B. t, 589.) A. T.-IX. 



2. P. capreolata (rampant F.) In cornfields, gardens, 

 hedges, and roadsides. A large luxuriant form, very variable, 

 much bolder in all its parts than the last, often spreading out to 

 the length of 2 feet or more. Flowers whitish or pale red. Nuts 

 nearly globular. Babbicombe. Teignmouth. (E. B. t. 943.) 

 A. vi.-ix. 



CORYDALIS. CORYDALIS. 



1. C. lutea (yellow C.) In stony places and on old walls. 

 Stem angular, erect, 6 or 8 inches high. Leaves delicate, almost 

 transparent, pale green, divided into a great number of ovate or 

 wedge-shaped segments. Flowers in short racemes, pale yellow. 

 Pod about a fourth of an inch long. Cockington, on old walls. 

 Shiphay. (Fumaria, E. B. t. 588.) P. v.-vm. 



2. C. claviculata (ivhite climbing C.) In stony and bushy 

 places. Plant with slender much-branched stems 1 or 2 feet long. 

 Leafstalks ending at the terminal leaf in a delicate tendril, whicli 

 enables the plant to climb among stones and bushes ; leaves much 

 divided into small oblong- toothed segments. Flowers small and 

 cream-coloured. Meadfoot cliffs. Home Chase, etc. Fumaria y 

 Linn. (E. B. t. 103.) P. vi. vn. 



ORD. VI. 

 STJBOED. I. PL'EUEORHIZ^. 



TEIBE I. AEABIDE^:. 

 CHEIRANTHUS. WALLFLOWER. 



C. Cheiri (common W.) On old walls and waste places. A 

 etiff, hardy plant, with a woody-looking stem. Leaves numerous, 



