4 1. EAJrUNCTTLACB^. 



tipped with the hooked style.— ^. S. 262. R. iii. 26.— St. 3—6 

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

 twice ternate. — Higher parts of mountains. P. VI. ^TI. E. S. I. 



2. T. minus (L.) ; st. striate branched fea^mbut sheathed at 

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

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

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

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

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

 are those of Sp. 3 and 4).— a ;2 &• -branches often horizontal 

 or declining, pan. usually broad and short. T. dunense Dum. ? 

 — /3. T. montanum (Wallr.) ; fr. -branches erect-patent, pan. 

 much narrower than in var. a.— Sand-hills. 0. Stony pastures. 



P. VI. vn. E. S. I. 



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

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

 patent or reclinate branches.— a. T.flexuosum (Bernh.) ; petioles 

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

 rowly elliptical. St. often 3 — 4 feet high, solid, striate.— -|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. VH. Vni. E. S. 1. 



4. T. saxat'ile (Schleich.) ; st. angular but scarcely striate 

 leafy to the base, stip. with reflexed auricles, 1. 2 — 3-pinnate, 

 Its. 3 — 7-cleft paler beneath, petioles with patent branches,,;^. 

 erect, pan. ivith ascending straight branches, carp, ovoid. — R. iii. 

 f. 4632. — St. 2 — 3 feet high, rather slender, very slightly 

 branched. — May be a form of T. majus. — Stony places. P. VI. 



vn. E. 



5. T.fldvum (L.) ; st. erect fuiTOwed, 1. bipinnate, Its. broadly 

 obovate or wedgshaped trifid, panicle compact corymbose, fl. 

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

 Root-stock creeping. — q. T. sphtsrocarpum (Lej.) ; pan. rather 

 close, carp, ovoid. R. 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. R. iii. 4640.— In wet fields. P. VH. Vm. Common 

 Meadow-Rue. E. S. I. 



3. Anemo'nb Linn. 



1. A. Pulsatil'la (L.) ; fl. solitary erect, involucre sessile in 

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

 linear lobes, carp, with feathery taik. — E. B. 51. — Fl. bell- 

 shaped, violet-pui'ple, externally silky; stalk 5 — 8 in. high. 



