4 1. RANUNCULACES. 
only differs from No. 2 by having a hollow stem. I have ‘not 
seen the supposed T. calcareum from Ben Bulben.] 
3. T. flecuosum (R., Fries); st. zigzag striated branched solid 
leafy to the base, 1. 2—3-pinnate, Its. 3—5-cleft paler beneath, 
petioles with ascending branches having 3 keels beneath, fi. in an 
elongated erect patent panicle drooping, carp. narrowly oblong 
gibbous above within below without.— R. ii. 28.—St. often 3 feet 
high. Lower |. with rather close sheaths and broad Its. with 
blunt cuspidate lobes; upper narrower and more acutely lobed. 
—Cheddar, Som. Mr. Hort. P. VII. 
4. T.sazxatile(DC.); st. rather zigzag smooth but striated below 
the sheaths hollow leafy to the base, 1. 2—3-pinnate, Its. ternate 
3—5-cleft paler beneath, petioles vith rounded but furrowed above 
and keeled ascending branches, fi. in a branched oblong-pyramidal 
panicle drooping, carp. regularly oval.—R. ii. 34. T. Kochii 
Fries.—St. often 4 feet high. Li. broad, lobes blunt or on the 
upper 1. acute.—Cheddar, Som. and Brathray, Westm. Mr. Hort. 
E. 
5. T. majus (Jacq.); st. zigzag angular branched hollow, 1. 
4-pinnate, Its. ternate 3-cleft broad glaucous, petioles with angular 
branches springing at right-angles, fl. subumbellate drooping, carp. 
long fusiform oblique outer edge nearly straight, immer curved.— 
E. B. 611. R. im, 30.—St. 3—6 feet high. Lts. very broad, lobes 
acute ; uppermost often entire and ovate.—South of Scotland and 
north of England. P. VI. VII. E. S$ 
6. T. flavum (L.); st. erect furrowed, 1. bipinnate, Its. broadly 
obovate or wedge-shaped trifid, panicle compact corymbose, fi. 
erect, carp. short oval.—E. B. 367. R. i. 44.—L. rather paler 
beneath. Root creeping.—In wet fields. P. VI. VII. Common 
Meadow Rue. 
3. ANEMONE Linn. 
1. A. Pulsatilla (L.); fl. solitary erect, involucre sessile in 
deep linear segments, 1. doubly pinnate, leaflets pinnatifid, lobes 
linear, carp. with feathery tails—E. B. 51.—F'. violet-purple, 
externally silky. Involucre silky, close to the flower, but, by the 
elongation of the stalk, distant from the fruit.—Open calcareous 
pastures. P.VI.V. Pasque flower. 
2. A. nemorosa (L.); fl. solitary, sep. 6 elliptical, involucre of 
3 ternate or quinate stalked leaves with lobed and cut leaflets, 
1. similar, carp. pubescent keeled.—E. B. 355. R. iv. 47.—F). 
white or purplish. Beak about as long as the carp., not tailed. 
Root (rhizoma) horizontal. Sep. glabrous on both sides.—Groves 
and thickets; common. P.III.—V. Wood Anemone. 
[*3. A. apennina (L.); fl. solitary, sep. numerous lanceolate, 
