1040 HIERACIUM. [CLASS XIX, ORDER Ie 
“eke Stem with many leaves, many flowered. 
6. H. sylva'ticum, Sm. (Fig. 1223.) Wood Hawk-weed. Stem with 
several leaves branched upwards, and sub-corymbose, slightly hairy, 
and more or less downy beneath ; the involucre leaves ovate lanceo- 
late, or lanceolate, toothed, with the sharp teeth pointing upwards, 
somewhat hairy, the lower ones petiolated, the upper sessile; inyo- 
lucre with very short pubescence. 
English Botany, t. 2031—Hooker, British Flora, ed. 4. vol. i. p. 
294.—English Flora, vol. iii. p. 361.—Lindley, Synopsis, p. 159.— 
H. vulgatum, Fries—H. murorum, «. Smith FI. Brit. p. 830. 
B. maculatum. Leaves ovate lanceolate, with large teeth, and 
spotted with dark purple. 
Hooker, British Flora, ed. 4. vol. i. p. 294—H. maculatum.— 
English Botany, t. 2121.—Englisk Flora, vol. iii. p. 8360.—Lindley, 
Synopsis, p. 159. 
y- pictum. Leaves lanceolate, spotted and clouded with purple. — 
Hooker. 
HT, pictum, Schleich. 
fioot with long stout fibres. Stem erect, from one to two feet high, 
angular or striated, and somewhat hairy, leafy, branched above in a 
sub-corymbose manner. Leaves mostly numerous, ovate lanceolate, 
lanceolate, or oblong, somewhat hairy, toothed, or entire, and in 
B. maculatum and vy. pictum more or less spotted or clouded with 
purple, the lower leaves on longish footstalks, the upper sessile. In- 
florescence sub-corymbose. Flowers not very large, bright yellow. 
Florets linear, obtuse, cut at the end into fine slender teeth. Invo- 
lucre of lanceolate teeth, more or less clothed with downy pubescence, 
and often with black hairs intermixed with it. /ruit rather slender, 
angular, or striated. Pappus dirty white, rough, fragile. 
Habitat —Mountain woods, rocks, old walls, banks, &c.; frequent. 
B. y- not unfrequent in Scotland. 
Perennial; flowering in August. 
7. H. cerinthoi'des, Linn. (Fig. 1224.) Honeywort leaved Hawk-weed. 
Stem corymbose, hairy above, and involucre with glandular hairs; 
leaves a glaucous green, hairy, entire, or slightly toothed, the radical 
ones oblong lanceolate, or obovate acute, petiolated, the upper ovate 
lanceolate, sessile, semi-amplexicaul. 
English Botany, t. 2378.—English Flora, vol. iii. p. 365.—Hooker, 
British Flora, ed. 4. vol. i. p. 294.—Lindley, Synopsis, p. 160.— 
H, longifolium, Schleich. 
foot somewhat woody. Stem about two feet high, erect, stout, 
cylindrical, striated, leafy, nearly smooth. Leaves asomewhat glaucous 
green, more or less hairy, especially on the mid-rib and margins, the 
lower and radical ones ovate lanceolate, or oblong lanceolate, acute, 
tapering into a long footstalk, the upper ones narrower lanceolate, 
sessile, and partly embracing the stem, all entire, or slightly toothed. 
