HEM 
rous flowers, furely agree beft with the former. We ob- 
ferve alfo fome ambi uity in PORE S figure of the flava, 
es have no doubt of his {pecie 
» H. fulva, Tawny Day- tly. Linn. Sp. Pl. 462. Curt, 
pg - 64. Redout. sate 16. (Lilium nen bulbofum 
phertiesum. 5 Ger. Em. 98. beaver linear, keeled. Three 
ner ferment mts of the corolla obtufe, waved ; their. ribs 
eanchad at the margin. - Suppofed by. Linneus to be a na- 
cH _Itis an old and very hardy inhabitant of our 
leaves are rather broad, of a fine gre 
particularly pale and delicate in the {pring. Capfules {carce- 
y ever ripened in England, but the roots form large fatt-en- 
crealing tufts, calculated for la arge gardens or thrubberies, 
efyeially where the foil is rather moitt. 
rehend a great miftake in the report of this {pe- 
cies Teear ever cha anged to flava ; fee T'r, of the Linn. Soc. 
¥. 
en, 
oO 
fiers BOEARL My in if ardening, comprehends plants 
perennial Kinds, of which 
the fpecies peacipally shat are, the zelloy, t Hay -lily 
poppeecolanied day-lily (H. fi 
cies has a Nanisty. ae faalie 
and ee narrow leaves, which are of a 
als oe oe colour, and OES bell-fhaped yellow 
flow 
Method of Bice are tee hardy plants are increafed 
with little diffic 
need of no other fort of cultivation but that of Keeping 
them quite free from weeds, and letting Hem have fufficient 
room for their roots to extend themfelves 
- The firtt {pecies is alfo capable of ae Suiltipled by the 
feeds, which theuld be put into the ground in the autumn, 
” the a {pring the young plants prefent themfelves, 
al aye came deic Guede ering im the courfe of two 
a iy nature. . : eee of their ci iz, ane, the aod 
i eipec ially the latter 
Mic aad gar- 
ee ia which. the ey afford th derable. i and 
ect. 
“HEMERODROML, compounded ag Sutexs day, and 
Souo.s courfe, &c.among th cients, were centinels, or 
8, appointed for the fecurity and prefervation a cities, 
and other places. 
‘They eat out of the city every morning, as foon as the 
gates w ,» and kept all day patrolling round the 
lace s fametine, ‘alfo, Tagesas: farther excurfions j into the 
country, to fee t € were no enemies lying in ‘wait to 
: fu pa thein ing 
: nt ROI ee oe 
¥e ope Oy and then delivered their packets, or difpatche 
Kae fret man, who run his day, and fo on, ee 
uriers, they 
other from day to aps yet did it from {pace to fpace, and 
SEMEN TROPE isi 
HEMERO in Anti meafi of “I 
aah the fame with the choenix, zit J met em 
fort of couriers, who only tra- 
HEM 
It was fo called from its holding one day's food, 
he word is compounded of Nitex, a dey, and nee 
de stixl 
. HEMI, a word ufed in the compotion. af divers terms, 
It fignities the fame with femi or demi, vi alf; being ax 
abbreviature of guscv- » hemifys, which Sscnifies the fame. The 
Greeks retren ched. the latt fyllable of the word ¥ msbvsy it 
$3 and, after their ex cample, 
ms a fo too, in moft-of the compounds borrow a tien 
Hemt, a Greek w ord much ufed in Mfuf uficy implying fal 
See Sear ih Dem. 
HEMIANDRA, in Batony, from syasuz, ny ball and 
aman, becaufe fhe anthers have only one perfeét or poli 
ferous lobe own. Prodr. Nov. Holl. v, 1, 502 ~ -Claf 
and order, deen Gymnofpermia. Nat. Ord. Fert 
late, Linn. J, abiatea, Jui 
“it, Ch. Calyx com prefled, two-lipped; the upper lip 
notre 5 3 the lower ‘cee half way down, Corolla two. 
lipped ; the upper lip flat and cloven ; 3 lower in three deep 
fegments,. the middle one cloven. Stamens afcendit g 
Anthers each with one a oe lobe. Brewin. 
1. H. pungens, the only f{pecies. Found by Mr, Brown 
on the fouth coalt of Nees Holla nd. A humble decum- 
bent jLrub, with oppolite, entire, ribbed, pointed ' aves. 
#lawers axillary, folitary, their ftalks with a pair of braéteas 
at the top. Lips of the ca/yv ribbed, their Jegineets pointed, 
Corolla white, itained or dotted with pur 
OA, (nub xgor, balf-gr 4) fo called be- 
quite green in the natural order to 
which this ois belongs, is stil coloured on the infide, 
- Nov, Holl, 409.—Clafs and order, 
Pentandria’ Digynia: . Nat: Ord. Slaten Lies Ariph ts y 
ull... Chenopode wh. 
» Eff. Ch. Calyx inferior, deeply five-cleft, coloured on the 
infide ; unchanged in the fruit. Stamen ns. five or fewer, 
united at the bafe. Seed compreffed, enclofed in a men- 
|, sending cover.. Embryo femi-lunar.. Radicle inferior, 
ce 
ane Stamens a B: racteas but half the 
eae ee af Pag ca Native of the fea-fhore, on the fouth 
coalt.of New _ blland, and in Van Diemen’s land. 
2. Hi: diandra. i two. Bracteas but little fhorter 
dos the calyx.—Tound on the fea-fhore, on the fouth coatt 
and. 
- Thefe are thrubby plants, with alternate, femi-cy Jindrical 
bectocs: Flowers axillary, . folitary, feflile, with a pair of 
weenie to each. The, genus is much allied to Polycne# 
“HEMICRANIA, in Medicine; from %uscv, half, and 
xpeiuery the cran nia Or fell, tignifies that form of head-ache 
which ‘is confined bo one fide of th ede d. 
which conilitute 
sh ae di Silsate 3 ; 
pot aa agues She the head. emicrania is. thus 
{ 
morhus cujus precipuum in dolor 
eit in alterutro capitis latere potifi umad relating (i 
juxta. oculos, ifque vebemeus, faepe BeOS: ( 
Method. Clafs 7. Gen. 136 - 
One of the common forms. of bemicrania isthe attack ats 
