SYNGENESIA— POLYGAM.-^QU. Arctium. 381 



FL axillary, either sessile or stalked, generally globose, with 

 little or no wooUiness about the calux ; in y encompassed with 

 a few small leaves ; in S said to be rather ovate, not larger than 

 filberds. Florets, with their anthers and stigmas, purple. The 

 calyx, when in seed, easily breaks from its stalk, and is well 

 known by the name of a Bur, sticking to the coats of animals, 

 and the hair or clothing of young rustics, which can hardly be 

 cleared of such incumbrances without breaking the scales 

 asunder and scattering the seeds. 

 The surface of the herbage leaves a slightly viscid, very bitter, 

 exudation on the fingers. The plant itself, a very cumbrous 

 weed,- is removed, the first year of its growtii, by stubbing, like 

 other things comprehended by fiirmers under the name of docks^ 

 and paid for accordingly to the weeder. 



2. A. Bardana. Woolly-headed Burdock. 



Leaves stalked, heart- shaped, nearly entire and even, with- 

 out prickles. Calyx when in seed cottony. 



A. Bardana. Willd. Sp. PI. v. 3. 1632. Comp. ed. 4. 133. Engl. 



Bot.v. 35. t.2478. 

 A. Lappa. Linn. Sp. PI. 1143/3. FI. Dan. t. 642. 

 Arction raontanum, et Lappa minor Galeni. Lob. Ic. 587 -f. 

 Lappa n. 161, a. Hall. Hist. v. 1. 70. 

 L. tomentosa. Allion. Pedem. v. 1. 144. DeCnnd. v. 4.77. 

 L. major montana, capitulis tomentosis. Raii Syn. 197. 

 Personata, sive Lappa major, altera. Matth. Falgr. v. 2. 498./. 



Dalech. Hist. 1055./. 

 Personalia. Fuchs. Hist.72./. Ic. 41./. 

 Great Woolly-headed Burdock. Petiv. H. Brit. t. 23./. 5. 

 /S. Lappa major montana, capitulis minoribus, rotundioribus et 



magis tomentosis. Raii Syn. \d7. 

 Personata altera, cum capitulis villosis. Bauh. Hist. r. 3. 571./. 

 Small Woolly-headed Burdock. Petiv. H.Brit, t. 23./. 4. 

 '/. Lappa major ex omni parte minor, capitulis parvis, elegant^r 



reticulatis. Pluk. Almag. 205. Raii Syn. \97. 

 Cobweb-headed Burdock. Petiv. H. Brit. t. 23./. 6. 



In waste ground, by way sides, and among rubbish, common. 



/S. On mountains in the north of England. 



Biennial. July, August. 



Like the foregoing in size and habit, but the leaves are less undu- 

 lated, more downy beneath. Stem of a dull red. Cal. globose ; 

 in /3 smaller and more depressed ; in all the varieties the scales 

 are interwoven with dense, white, cottony down. 



Professor Willdenow declares that he has often raised this second 

 species from seed, and found it constant. In deference to his 

 authority, I have distinguished these two species, enimierating 

 the reputed varieties of each, that botanists, who wish to pur- 



