agrarium, 
procumbens. 
minimus. 
DIADELPHIA, DECANDRIA. 
Hares’-foot. Bull’s Clover. 
From ten to twelve inches high. Capituli reddish. In fields 
of Jersey in the greatest profusion, rendering them quite red 
at a distance. This plant is said to be medicinal, and it is 
brought to our markets for use in domestic medicine. It is 
found in cultivated grounds, and on the edges of open woods, 
every where. Flowers white, with red spots. Annual. July 
till September. 
5. 'T. erect, subpubescent ; folioles lanceolate-cu- 
neate, obtuse, the intermediate sessile ; stipules 
lanceolate, acute; spikes oval, imbricate ; vex- 
illum deflexed, persistent; calicine teeth subu- 
late, glabrous, unequal.— Willd. 
T. aureum, Pollich. fl. palat. 708. 
T. strepens, Crantz. fl. aust. 411. m. 8. (Pursh.) 
Icon. Fl. Dan. 558. 
~ 
Large Hop-trefoil. 
About twelve or fifteen inches high, with bright golden- 
yellow capituli. This elegant species I have only found along 
the course of the Schuylkill, west side, in woods. In the woods 
near Mantua and Powelton, abundant. Annual. June, August. 
6. T. procumbent; stem hairy, folioles obovate, 
emarginate, glabrous; stipules lanceolate-acu- 
minate, pubescent or ciliate ; capituli oval, im- 
bricate ; vexillum deflexed, persistent, furrow- 
ed. b. 
‘I’. procumbens, Schreber. 
T. minus, Smith? 
Small Hop-trefoil. 
Intermediate in size between No. 5, and No. 7; procumbent. 
Capituli pale straw-yellow, ovate; stipules and stem very pu- 
bescent. In Jersey, on commons and in pastures; frequent. 
July, August. 
7. T. semi-procumbent; stem glabrous; folioles 
long-cuneate, emarginate, denticulate, glabrous; 
stipules ovate-acuminate, peduncles filiform, ca- 
pituli nearly round, vexillum deflexed. B. 
Is this T, campestre, Muhl. Cat.? 
