211) ENGLISH BOTANY. 



inches long, witli the lamina; f to 1 inch across ; the leaflets similar 

 to those of O. acetosella. Stipules ^ inch long, adnate to the 

 leafstalk abrupt at the apex, fringed with hairs. Peduncles when 

 mature 1^ to 3 inches long. Bracts 3 or 4, very narrow. Pedicels 

 Avhen in fruit equal to or a little shorter than the capsule. 

 Flowers f inch across, bright yellow. Sepals oval-lanceolate, with 

 adpressed hairs. Petals oblong-oblanceolate. Capsule three to five 

 times as long as the sepals, from -| to f inch long, with 5 prominent 

 angles. Seeds reddish-brown, obovate-oval, flat, with very deep 

 transverse ridges. Plant light, rather greyish-green, more or less 

 tliickly jiubescent except the leaves which are generally glabrous 

 when full grown, but when young covered with a tangled web of 

 short white hairs. 



Frocumhent Yellow JFoocl SoiTcl. 



French, Oxalide Connie. German, Gehornter SauerMee, 



SPECIES III.— OX AL IS STRICT A. Linn. 



Plate CCCXII. 



JReich. Ic. Fl. Germ, et Helv. Vol. V. Oxal. Tab. CXCIX. Fig. 4895. 

 O. europea, Joi'd. in Billot's Arch, de la Fl. de Fr. et d'AUeni. p. 309 ; and Billot, 

 Aunot. p. 20. 



Plant emitting subterraneous stolons. Stem erect, slightly 

 branched at the base ; stem and branches erect or ascending. 

 Leaves all on the stem, with the footstalks slightly enlarged at the 

 base, but without evident stipules ; lamina trifoliate. Peduncles 

 axillary, 2- to 8-flowered. Bracts lanceolate-linear. Petals twice 

 as long as the calyx. Fruit pedicels erect or ascending. Capsule 

 nearly glabrous, cylindrical-prismatic, pyramidal at the apex, 

 each cell with numerous transversely-ribbed seeds. Stem, 

 peduncles, pedicels, and leafstalks with a few distant hairs ; 

 sepals and laminae of leaves quite glabrous. 



In cultivated ground, llather rare, and certainly introduced, but 

 naturalized as a weed in gardens and fields at Penzance, Cornwall ; 

 near Bideford and Ilsington, Devon ; Yarmouth, Isle of Wight ; 

 Cucktield, Sussex; Conglcton, Cheshire; "Weybridgc, Surrey; and 

 several other counties in the South and West of England. 



England. Annual or Perennial. Summer, Autumn. 



Oxalis stricta closely resembles O. corniculata ; but while the 

 latter is truly annual, or Avhen springing from seed late in the 

 year in mild winters biennial, O. stricta is, properly speaking, a 

 perennial, though in severe winters it is frequently killed off, so as 



