SYNGENESIA— POLYG.-SUPERF. Anthemis. 457 



ward. Staffordshire ; Mr. Pitt. Withering. On Blackheath, 

 and on Hounslow heath in abundance ; also near Lowestoft 

 Suffolk, and in several parts of Norfolk, 



Perennial. August, September. 



The roots are strong, with long fibres. Stems in a wild state pros- 

 trate, in gardens more upright, a span long, branched, leafy, 

 hollow, round, furrowed, downy. Leaves doubly pinnate, with 

 narrow linear segments, not truly thread-shaped or cylindrical, 

 but rather flat or channelled above, convex beneath ; 'all acute, 

 often bristle-pointed, a little hairy. Ft. terminal, solitary, ra- 

 ther larger than a Daisy, with a convex yellow disk, and nume- 

 rous, white, spreading or reflexed, rays. The scales of the re- 

 ceptacle do not appear till the florets of the disk are turned to 

 one side, and the innermost are gradually narrowest ; all thin 

 and membranous, not sharp. Cat. with shining membranous- 

 bordered scales, rather downy. Becept. obtusely conical. Seeds 

 very obscurely bordered at the summit. 



Varieties with double^oM^er*, whose yellow tubular florets are, en- 

 tirely or partially, transformed into white ligulate ones, are com- 

 mon in gardens; the discoid variety, destitute of rays, is more 

 rare. The latter perhaps ought to be preferred for medical use- 

 the double white flowers being now acknowledged to be weaker 

 than those in a natural state. Every part of the plant is in- 

 tensely bitter, and gratefully aromatic, especially the flowers, 

 whose stomachic and tonic powers are justly celebrated. 



3, A. arve?isis. Corn Chamomile. 



Receptacle conical ; scales lanceolate, acute, keeled, pro- 

 minent. Seeds crowned with a quadrangular border. 

 Leaves doubly pinnatifid, hairy ; segments parallel. 



A. arvensis. Linn. Sp. PL 1261. Willd. u. 3. 2 1 80. Ft. Br. 905. 



Engl. Bot. V. 9. t. 602. Mart. Rust. t. 73. Hook. Scot. 247. 

 Chamsemelum n. 103. Hall. Hist. v. 1. 44. 

 Ch. inodorum. Dill, in Raii Syn. 185. Bauh. Pin. 135 ? 

 White Ox-eye. Peiiv. H. Brit. t.l9.f.8. 



In cultivated fields, as well as waste ground, chiefly on a gravelly 

 soil. 



About London, towards Peckham and Eltham. Sherard. At Wal- 

 thamstow. Mr. B. M. Forster. In various parts of Norfolk oc- 

 casionally. Mr. Crowe. 



Annual, or Biennial. June, July. 



Root tapering, rather small. Stem erect, much branched, leafy, 

 hollow, many-flowered, hoary with fine soft shaggy hairs, often 

 purplish, from 12 to 18 inches high. Lecwes sessile, doubly and 

 regularly pinnatifid, hairy, of a greyish green ; their segments 

 uniform, parallel and equal, lanceolate rather tlian linear, acute, 

 each tipped with a small bristle ; dotted at the back ; when dry 



