22 
CUUCIFERJE. 
5. C. amara (L.); 1. pinnate, leaflets of the lower 1. roundish- 
ovate, of the upper 1. oblong, all angular, pet. 3 times as long as 
the calyx erect, stam. nearly as long as the petals, st. angular. — 
E. B. 1000. R. 4305. — Fl. large white. Anthers purple. Style 
long, s.ender. Stigma small. St. rooting below. — Moist mea- 
dows near streams, rare. P. V. VI. 
[C bellidifolia (L.) which has simple entire 1. has been er- 
roneously considered as a native of Britain. No station for it is 
known. ' E. B. 2355.] 
8- Dicntaria Linn. 
1. D. bulbifera (L.) ; st. simple, 1. alternate, lower 1. pinnate, 
upper 1. simple, axils of the 1. producing bulbs. — E. B. 309- jR. 
4318. — Rhizoma thick, creeping, with fleshy toothlike knobs. 
St. 1 — 15 foot high. Leaflets lanceolate, serrated or entire. Fl. 
large, rose-coloured or purple. — Woods and shady places, rare. 
Tonbridge Wells, &c. P. V. VI. Coralwort. E. 
Tribe II. Sisymbrece. 
9. Hesperis Linn. 
fl. H. matronalis (L.) ; st. erect branched above, 1. ovate- 
lanceolate acuminate toothed, pedicels about as long as the calyx, 
pet. obovate obtuse with an apiculus, pods erect from a patent 
pedicel terete torulose.— E. B. 731. R. 4378 and 4377 ?.— Fl. 
lilac, " fragrant," large and handsome. H. inodora does not 
appear to differ from the cultivated plant more than would be 
caused by difference of situation. — Hilly pastures, very rare. B. 
V. VI. Dame's Violet. 
[Malcolmia maritima (R. Br.), which has a terete pod and a 
conical stigma of 2 connate acute lobes, is said to have been found 
wild, escaped from cultivation?, in Kent.] 
10. Sisymbrium Linn. 
i. S. officinale (Scop.); pods subulate adpressed to the stem 
pubescent, 1. runcinate-pinnatifid with 2 or 3 pairs of oblong 
dentate lobes and a large hastate terminal lobe. — E. B. 735. 
R. 4401. — St. 1 — 2 feet high with divaricated branches, upper 
part leafless. Fl. small, pale yellow. Pods on very short 
adpressed stalks, solitary. — Common. A. VI. VII. Hedge 
Mustard. 
[*2. S. polyceratium (L.) ; pods subulate spreading sessile ax- 
illary about 3 together, 1. lanceolate repando-dentate or sub- 
hastate. — .R.4403. — St. leafy throughout, branched, "prostrate." 
Fl. small. — In the outskirts of Bury St. Edmonds but certainly 
an escape from cultivation. A. VII. VIII.] E. 
