4 1, EANTJNCULACEJB. 



tipped with the hooked style.— -E. B. 262. R. iii. 26.— St. 3—6 

 in. high, quite smooth. L. mostly radical, upon long stalks, 

 twice teroate.-— High^ parts of mountains. P. VT. VII. E. S. I, 



2. T. minus (L.) ; st. striate branched leafless but sheathed at 

 the base, stip. with spreading auricles, 1. 2 — 3-pinnate, Its. ter- 

 nate 3-oleft glaucous, petioles with angular ascending branches, 

 fl. drooping, anth. apiculate, carp, fusiform 8 ribbed subcom- 

 pressed ventricose below externally. — St. 1 — Ij ft. high, usually 

 ■solid; sheaths at its base rather lax. Fl.' greenish yellow (as 

 are those of 8p. 3 and 4).^ — a. T. dunense (Dum.) ; fr.-branches 

 often horizontal or deolinino;, pan. usually broad and short. — 

 p. T. montanum (Wallr.) ; fr.-branches erect-patent, pan. much 

 narrower than in var. a. — Sand-hills. /3. Stony pastures. P. 

 VI. VII. E. S. I. 



3. T. mdjus (Sm.) ; st. leafy to the base branched, 1. 2 — 3-pin- 

 nate, Its. 3 — 5-cleft, fl. drooping, anth. apiculate, pan. with 

 patent or reclinate branches. — a. T. collinum (Wallr.) ; petioles 

 with divaricate branches, stip. with refloxed auricles, carp, nar- 

 rowly elliptical. St. often 3 — 4 feet high, solid, striate. (My 

 T. saxatile appears to be a smaller form. T. flexuosum R. not 

 Bernh.) — /3. T. Kochii (Fr.) ; petioles with patent branches, stip. 

 with horizontal auricles, carp, ovoid. E. B. 611. St. often 4 ft. 

 high, hollow, striate only below the joinings. — a. Damp bushy 

 and stony places. (3. Lake District. P. VII. VIII. E. S. I. 



4. T.fldvuni (L.) ; st. erect furrowed, 1. bipinnate. Its. broadly 

 obovate or wedgeshaped trifid, panicle compact corymbose, fl. 

 erect, anth. not apiculate, carp, ovoid. — L. rather paler beneath. 

 Boot-stock creeping. — a. T. sphcerocarpum (Lej.) ; pan. rather 

 close, carp, ovoid. JJ. iii. 4639. — /3. T. riparium (Jord.) ; pan. 

 usually lax with ascending branches, carp, ovoid. — y. T. Mori- 

 sonii (Gm.) ; pan. interrupted with erect-patent branches, carp, 

 elliptic. iJ. iii. 4640.— In wet fields. P. VII. VIII. Commore 

 Meadow-Rue. E. S. I. 



3. Anemo'nb Linn. 



1. A. Pulsatilla (L.) ; fl. solitary erect, involucre sessile in 

 deep linear segments, 1. doubly pinnate, leaflets pinnatifid with 

 linear lobes, carp, unth feathery tails. — E. B. 51. — Fl. bell- 

 shaped, violet^purple, externally silky; stalk 5 — 8 in. high. 

 Inv. silliy, close to the flower, but distant from the fruit. — 

 Open calcareous pastures, rare. P. IV. V. Basque fl<iwer. E. 



2. A. nemordsa (L.) ; fl. solitary, sep. 6 oblong spreading, 

 inv. of 3 temate or quinate stalked leaves with lobed and cut 

 leaflets, 1. similar, carp, pubescent keeled not tailed. — E. B. 366. 

 JR. iv. 47. — Fl. white or purplish ; stalk 4—8 in. high. Beak 



