346 DODECANDRIA— TRIGYNIA. Reseda. 



1. K. Eupatoria. Common Agrimony. 



Stem-leaves pinnate ; leaflets elliptic-oblong ; terminal one 

 stalked. Calyx encompassed with bristles. Spikes 

 elongated. 



A. Eupatoria. Linn. Sp. PI. 643. Willd. v. 2. 875. Fl. Br. 511. 

 Engl. Bot. V. 19. t. 1335. Curt. Lond.fasc. 5. t. 32. Mart. Rust. 

 t.37. Woodv.supplt. 258. Hook. Scot. 147. FL Dan. t. 588. 

 Bull. Fr. t. 229. 



A. n. 991 . Hall. Hist. v. 1 . 423. 



Agrimonia. RaiiSyn. 202. Ger. Em.7l2.f. 



A. sive Eupatorium. Dod. Pempt. 27./. 28. 



Eupatorium. Matth. Valgr. v. 2.362. f. Cainer.Epit.756.f. Fuchs. 

 Hist. 243. f. 244. Ic. 136./. 



E. Grsecoium, Agrimonia officinarum. Lob. Ic. 692. f. 



In bushy places, by road sides, and about the borders of fields. 



Perennial. June, July. 



Root tapering, reddish, branched at the summit, not creeping ; its 

 flavour very astringent. Herb deep green, covered with soft 

 silky hairs, and when slightly bruised exhaling a peculiar, but 

 grateful, aromatic scent. Stem about 2 feet high, scarcely 

 branched. Leaves alternate, a span long, of several pair of 

 coarsely serrated leaflets, with various small intermediate ones j 

 the terminal leaflet more or less stalked, the size of the former. 

 Stipulas of the upper leaves rounded, palmate. Fl. very nu- 

 merous, yellow, in a dense tapering spike, with lobed bracteas, 

 Cal. of the fruit encircled with a thick whorl of hooked prickles, 

 which attach themselves to any thing that comes in their way, 

 like burs. 



The herb is slightly bitter, aromatic and astringent, evincing a 

 tonic property, for which it has always been noted, and which 

 has procured it a place in several British-Herb teas. 



I 



DODECANDRIA TRIGYNIA. 

 248. RESEDA. Rocket. 



Linn. Gen. 242. Juss. 245. Fl. Br. 512. Tourn.t. 238. Lam. 



t.AlQ. G£ertn.t.76._ 

 Luteola, also Sesamoides. Toiirn. t. 238. 



