632 
DIADELPHIA DECANDRIA. 
Class XVII. 
10560 tomentosum W. woolly £ 
10561 umbellatum W. umbel-floweredtL 
10562 biarticulatum W. two-jointed ss. 
10563 latifoliura Boxb. broad-leaved ml 
lOSe-t uncinatum Jacq. hooked Si. 
10565 lagocephalum Link, woolly-headed ^ 
10566 aparlnes Link. Bedstraw 4* 
10567 malacophyllum Link, soft-leaved ^ 
1056S gyrans 
10569 trigonum W. 
10570 canadense JV. 
10571 canescens W. 
10572 marilandicum TV. 
10573 obtusum W. 
10574 capitatum W. 
10575 tortuosum W. 
10576 viridiflorum W. 
10577 paniculatum W. 
10578 tuberosum W. 
10579 cuspidatum IF. 
10580 glutinosum W. 
10581 serotinum IV. en. 
10582 triflorum IV. 
10583 volubile W. 
10584. pictum W. 
10585 argenteum L. 
10586 fruticosum J-K. 
10587 senno'ides W. 
10588 alpmum W. 
10589 obscurum ^T. 
10590 tauricum W. 
10591 roseum if. K. 
10592 coronarium f-F. 
10593 flexuosum W. 
10594. humile fF. 
10595 muricatum W. 
10596 spinosissimum W. 
10597 Onobrychis JF. 
10598 saxatile W. 
10599 album W. 
10600 asc(§ndeiis Swz. 
8 ccerCileam Lindl. 
Moving-plant 
three-sided 
Canadian 
hoary 
Maryland 
obtuse 
headed 
twisted-podded 
groen-tiowered 
panicled 
tuberous 
sharp-pointed 
glutinous 
late-flowering 
three-flowered 
twining 
painted-leaved *t 
silver-leaved 
Siberian-shrub. 
Senna-like itt 
alpine 
creeping-rooted ^ 
Taurian 
Rose-colored 
Fr.Honeysucklej£ 
wave-podded 
dwarf ^ 
prickly-podded ^ 
thorny 
Saint-foin 
rock 
white 
ascending 
blue 
10601 grandiflurum Bieh. large-flowered 
10602 candidum Bieb. 
10603 Caput-galli W. 
10604 Crista-galli W. 
10605 crin'itum W. 
10561 
white 
Cock's-head 
Cock's-comb 
crook-podded 
I Al un 
□ un 
Bun 
pr 
□ un 
lAI un 
□ un 
[Z3 un 
EH cu 
I I un 
A un 
A un 
A un 
A un 
I 1 un 
□ un 
A un 
A pr 
□ un 
A un 
A un 
A un 
TS \ un 
A un 
i I un 
A un 
el 
I 1 un 
A el 
A el 
A pr 
A pr 
Q) sp 
O un 
A un 
Al un 
O un 
A ag 
A or 
A pr 
□ un 
l~l un 
A or 
A pr 
O pr 
O pr 
r~l un 
1| jn.jl 
3 ... 
3 
2 au 
2 
2 
jl 
2 jn.jl 
2 jn.jl 
3 jl.au 
1 jl.au 
6 jl.au 
2 jl.au 
lijl.0 
2 jl.au 
3 jl 
3 jl.au 
3 jl.s 
2 jl 
3 ... 
1| jl.au 
1| jl.au 
lijl.s 
2 jn.jl 
3 jl.s 
I jl.au 
4 jn.jl 
3 jl.au 
4 jn.jl 
i jl.au 
i jl.au 
4 jn.jl 
1 jlaii 
2 jl-au 
1| jn.jl 
1 jl.au 
1 jn.jl 
1 jn.au 
1 jn.au 
1| jn.au 
2 in.au 
1| jn.au 
§ my.jn 
1| jl.au 
1 jn.au 
4 jl.s 
10564 
Pu 
China 
1782. 
c 
1 D 
W 
E. Indies 
1801 ! 
1 n 
'•V 
Pu 
E. Indies 
isos! 
1 n 
Pu 
China 
1818. 
1 
l.p 
Pu 
I823! 
Y 
Brazil 
I824! 
CO 
Pu 
Mexico 
1823. 
Q 
n 1 
Pu 
Manilla 
1822. 
1 
p.l 
Pu 
E. Indies 
1775! 
s 
p.l 
Pu 
Jamaica 
1733. 
D 
s.l 
Pu 
N. Amer. 
1640. 
S.l 
W.pu N. Amer. 
1733! 
D 
s.l 
Pu 
N. Amer. 
1725. 
D 
s.l 
V 
N. Amer. 
I8O5! 
D 
s.l 
Pu 
Ceylon 
c 
s 1 
Pu 
Jamaica 
1781. 
C 
s.l 
G 
N. Amer. 
1787." 
D 
s.l 
Pu 
N. Amer. 
1781.' 
C 
s.l 
Pu 
E. Indies 
1806. 
D 
s.l 
V 
N. Amer. 
1806! 
D 
s.l 
Pu 
N. Amer. 
1805. 
D 
s.l 
V 
D S.1 
Pu 
India 
1796 
S 
s.l 
Pu 
N. Amer. 
1727. 
c 
s.l 
Pu 
E. Indies 
1788. 
c 
p.l 
Pa.pu Siberia 
1796. 
D 
s.l 
Pu 
Siberia 
1782. 
C 
s.l 
Pu 
1823. 
C 
CO 
Pu 
Siberia 
1798. 
D 
s.l 
Pu 
Alps ofEu.1640. 
D 
s.l 
Pa.pu Tauria 
1804. 
D 
s.l 
Pk 
Caucasus 
1803. 
S 
s.l 
Sc 
Italy 
1596. 
S 
CO 
Pu 
Asia 
1680. 
s 
s.l 
Pu 
Spain 
1640. 
D 
s.l 
Y 
Patagonia 1793. 
D 
s.l 
Pa.pu Spain 
1731. 
S 
s.l 
Pk 
Britain 
ch.pa. 
D 
s.l 
L.Y 
S. Europe 1790. 
D 
s.l 
W 
Hungary 1804. 
D 
s.l 
Pu 
Jamaica 
1818. 
C 
s.l 
B 
W. Indies 1818. 
C 
s.l 
Pu 
Tauria 
1821. 
D 
CO 
Pu 
Tauria 
1824. 
D 
CO 
F 
France 
1731. 
S 
s.l 
F 
S. Europe 1710. 
s 
s.i 
Pk 
E. Indies 
1780. 
c 
s.l 
Jac.schoe.3.t.297 
Bur. zeyl.t.50.f.2 
Bot. reg. 355 
Jac. schon. t.298 
Jac. ic. 3. t. 565 
Com.canad.t. 45 
Dil.el.t.l44.f.l71 
Bur.ind.t.54.f.l 
Slo. ja.l.t.ll6.f.2 
Plu.alm.t.308.f.5 
PI. man.t.432. f.6 
Bur. ind. t. 54.f 2 
Dil.el.t.l4af.l70 
Jac. ic. 3. t. 567 
Pall. it. 2. t. 9 
PaU. it. 3. t. 5 f.l 
Bot. reg. 808 
Bot. mag. 282 
Bot. mag. 996 
Sck.hand.2.t.207 
Jac. ic. 3. t. 568 
Plu. aim. t.50.f.2 
Eng. bot. 96 
All.ped.l.t.l9.f.l 
Pl.rar.hu.2.t.lll 
Bot. reg. 815 
Bieb cent.t.63 
Burm. ind. t. 53 
10576 
10577 
History, Use, Propagation, Culture, 
general, only make a faint and feeble attempt towards the middle of the day at exerting their extraordinary 
faculty. (Shaw.) 
This motion does not depend upon any external cause that we can trace, and we are not able to excite it by 
any art that we possess. It is not the action of the sun's rays, for this plant is fond of shade, and the leaves 
revolve well on rainy days, and during the night : exposed to too much wind or sun, it is quiet. Perhaps, 
says Linnffius, there may be some part in vegetables, as in animals, where the cause of motion resides. 
H. coronarium, Sulla, or Sainfoin d bouquets, Fr., is an esteemed border biennial, and some speculative 
agriculturists recommend it for cultivation as a field plant. In Calabria it grows wild in great luxuriance, 
near four feet high, affording excellent nourishment to horses and mules, both green and made into hay : 
but it does not well bear the spring in the north of Italy : we may presume, therefore, that it will scarcely bear 
our climate well enough to answer the purposes of husbandry. Osbeck mentions, that he saw it brought into 
Cadiz in great bundles, as food for cattle. 
H. Onobrychis, L'esparcet, Fr., Esparxette, Ger., and Cedrangolo, Ital., is a deep rooting perennial, with 
branching spreading stems, compound leaves, and shewy red flowers. It is a native of many parts of Europe, 
but never found but on dry warm chalky soils, where it is of great duration. It has been long cultivated in 
France, and in other parts of the continent, and as an agricultural plant, a good deal in England, in the chalky 
districts ; and its peculiar value is, that it may be grown on soils unfit for being constantly under tillage, and 
which would yield little undergrass. This is owing to the long and descending roots of the saint-foin, which 
will penetrate and thrive in the fissures of rocky and chalky understrata. Its herbage is said to be equally 
suited for pasturage or for hay, and eaten green it is not so apt to swell or hove cattle as the clovers or 
Itucern. Arthur Young says, that upon soils proper for this grass no farmer can sow too much of it, and in 
