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fiyn. Diofcoridis Lohelioy G. 198. Irio five Eryft- |- 
mum vulgare^ Hedge Muftard. The ftalk I 
rifes a foot and a half, or two feet high, generally 
branching out on every fide : The lower leaves are 
long and narrow, cut into feveral jagged fegments, 
and fomewhat hairy : The leaves which grow on the 
llalks have fewer fegments ; the upper, many times, . 
but three, appearing like the head of a halbert : The - 
flowers are very fmall, yellow, grow in long fpikes, ,r 
and blow fucceflively : The cods are fhort, and lye. d 
clofe to the ftalk. 
Erysimum. The flowers are yellow, the pods 
long, and fmaller than thofe of Eruca Spuria, 
The fpecies are : ‘ 
1. Myagro affinis plant a' filiquis longis^ R. 298. 
Camelina^ G. 213. Camelina five Myagrum .alterum 
amarum^ P.867. Myagrum filiqua langa^ C. 109. 1' 
Treacle Worm-feed. 'Htdx AJhburn^ in the pe^ i: 
of Derbyjhire *, and in the corn-fields about Elden, ^ 
The ftalk is about a cubit, or two cubits high, Angle, 
channeird,'a little hairy, and divided into feveral : 
branches : The leaves are an inch broad, and two or 
three inches long, gradually dilate from a narrow bot- 
tom, and end in a point : The cods are about an inch 
long, fquare, and ftand on pedicles, fticking out from 
the ftalk. ” Mr SCournefort makes this a Turritis. 
2. Eryfimum latifolium Neapolitanum^ R. 298, P. 
834. latifolium majus glahriim^ C. loi. Smoother 
broad-leav’d Hedge Muftard. This hath fmall 
yellow flowers, and is much lefs and lower than the 
common Hedge Muftard ; but the cods are much 
longer, and ftand at a greater diftance from the 
ftalk. 
5. Eryfimum [ophia diblum, Sophia chirurgerum, 
R. 298, G. 910, P. 830. Nafturtium Jylveftre 
tenuiffime divifum^ C. 105. Flix-weed. In wafte 
places. The ftalks rife about two feet high : The 
Slaves are neatly divided, and refemble thofe o ^ 
Rom an 
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