HEXANDRIA— MONOGYNIA. Juncub. 159 



summit. Bractea spinous. Capsule twice as long as tlie 

 calyx, roundish, with a blunt point. 



J. acutus; Linn. Sp. PI. 463. MWd. v. 2. 204. Fl. Br. 374. £//o-?. 

 Bot. 1J.23. t. 1G14. Bicheno Tr. of L. Sue. v. 12. 297. Lain 

 Diet. V. 3. 264. 



J. acutus, capitulis Sorghi. Bauh. Pin. 1 1. Prodr. 21./. Theatr. 

 1 73. /. Rail Stjn. 43 1 . Scheuchz. Agr. 338. 



J. pungenSjSive J. acutus capitulis Sorghi. Bauh. Hist. v. 2. 520./, 

 bad. Moris, v. 3. 232. sect. S. t. 10. /. 15, good. 



J. maritimus, Sorghi panicula utriculata. Barrel. Ic. t,203.f.2. 



On the .sea coast, in deep sand. 



On the coast of Merionethshire, plentifully. Raij. At Brancaster, 

 Norfolk. Mr. Crowe. HolUer, Lancashire. Mr. Woodward. In- 

 stow, Devonshire ; and on Braunston Burrows, plentifully. 

 Bishop of Carlisle. In the county of Wicklow, Ireland. Dr. Wade. 



Perennial. Juli;. 



Root fibrous, densely tufted, running deep into the sand. Stems 3 

 or 4 feet high, (in Ireland 7 or 8 feet, according to Dr. Wade,) 

 erect, straight, simple, round, smooth, leafless, stiff and very 

 strong, with a sharp rigid point, turned somewhat aside by the 

 panicle, and rising a little above it. Leaves none, though the 

 barren stems have been taken for such. Panicle compound, and 

 repeatedly subdivided, from a lateral sheathing cleft, near the 

 top of each stem, corymbose, many- flowered 5 its branches 

 smooth, obtusely compressed. Bractea resembling the point of 

 the stem, which embraces it at the bottom, but smaller, and 

 more spreading ; inner ones several, still smaller, tapering, with 

 membranous points. Fl. partly capitate. Three inner calyx- 

 leaves obtuse. Stam. broad and short. Style scarcely any. Caps. 

 broadly ovate, hard, brown, sharp pointed, with 3 blunt angles, 

 and in the upper part as many intermediate depressions ; its 

 lower half invested with the withered calyx. Seeds ovate, pellu- 

 cid ; tunic unilateral, elongated at each end. 

 I readily concur with Mr. Bicheno in considering the inflorescence 

 as lateral in all this tribe of Jimci ; which is justified by analogy, 

 though it may seem paradoxical, in this species and the next. 

 Nor is the question without difficulty, as all who ever thought 

 on the subject have long ago perceived. 



2. J. maritimus. Lesser Sharp Sea Rush. 



Stem naked, sharp-pointed. Panicle proliferous, near the 

 erect summit. Bractea spinous. Capsule oblong, the 

 length of the calyx. 



J. maritimus. Fl. Br. 375. Engl. Bot. v. 24. t. 1725. Bicheno Tr. 



of L. Soc. V. 12. 299. Galp. Camp. 28. Layn. Diet. v. 3. 264. 

 J. acutus /3. Linn. Sp. PI. 464. Willd. v. 2. 205. Iluds. 148. 



//7//J.346. Hull7o. 



