I 



PENTANDRIA— MONOGYNIA. Viola. S05 



short, blunt, yellowish spur. Calyx-leaves lanceolate, pointed. 

 Capsule shorter and rounder than in canina. 

 This little plant, long ago communicated by the late Mr. Crowe, 

 is not uncommon, though usually neglected as a variety of the 

 V. canina. It has remained unchanged, and of the same hum- 

 ble stature, perfectly shrubby, for above 12 years, in a common 

 garden ; and seems entitled to rank as a species, under the sy- 

 nonym of Dillenius, though his figure by no means represents 

 the true nature of the stem, nor does it exhibit any of the parts 

 most material for specific discrimination. I have already ad- 

 verted to this Violet in Reess Cydopcedia under the canina, n, 

 26. 



7. V. tricolor. Pansy Violet. Heart's-ease. 



Stem angular, diffuse, divided. Leaves oblong, deeply 

 crenate. Stipulas lyrate, pinnatifid. Bracteas obsolete. 



V. tricolor. Linn. Sp. PI. 132G. JVilld. r. 1 . 1 1 68. Fl. Br. 248. 



Engl. Bot. V. 18. t. 1287. Curt. Lond. fasc. 1. t. 65. Woodv. 



suppl. t. 252. Hook. Scot. 77. Fl. Dan. t. 623. Raii Syn. 365. 



Ger.Em. 854./. Biv. Pentap. Irr. t. 122. Renealm. ,^pec. 144. 



t. 140. Ehrh. PL Of. 2/8. 

 V. n. 568. Hall. Hist. V.]. 244. 

 Herba Trinitatis. Fuclis. Hist. 802. t. 803. 

 Jacea, sive Flos Trinitatis. Matth. Falgr.v.2.b24.f. Camer.Epit 



912./. 

 Garden Pansie. Pet. H. Brit. t. 2,7. f. 8. 

 (S. Viola arvensis. Sibth. 34. Sym. Syn. 61. 

 V. n. 569. Hall. Hist. v. 1.244. 

 V. bicolor arvensis. Raii Syn. 366. 

 V. bicolor. Riv. Pentap. Irr. t. \22. Ehrh. PL Off. 359. 

 V, tricolor petraea. Ger. £m.854./. 



Jacea altera. Matth. Falgr. v. 2. 525. f. Camer. Epit. 913./. 

 Corn Pansie. PeL H. Brit. t. 37. f. 9. 



In cultivated fields. 



Annual, May — September. 



Root fibrous, small. Stems 1 or more, weak, decumbent, a span 

 long, scarcely branched, except at the very bottom, leafy, angu- 

 lar, often zigzag, downy chiefly on one side. Leaves alternate, 

 stalked, ovate-oblong, deeply crenate, ribbed, a little downy ; 

 the lower ones often heart-shaped, especially in the variety /3. 

 Stipulas all deeply pinnatifid, with narrow tongue-shaped, or 

 linear, segments ; the terminal one very large, ovate, or elliptic- 

 oblong, crenate. Flower-stalks axillary, solitary, longer than the 

 leaves, firm, with a pair of minute close bracteas near the sum- 

 mit. Calyx-leaves lanceolate, acute, smooth or downy, mostly 

 fringed, especially at the base, where they are much and un- 

 equally dilated. Petals very variable in size and colour, gene- 



VOL. I. X 



