12 
3. PAPA VERA CEiE. 
sharply doubly aristato-serrate , the teeth sphacelate and callous r 
tipped with a stiff bristly awn or macro, the midrib and principal 
nerves beneath hirtose or copiously f ringed or bearded with long 
bristles, the lower 1. more sinuate or lobed, attenuated at the 
base, the upper undivided sessile subamplexicaul not cordate ; st, 
smooth ; ped. more or less hirtose with erect or adpressed bristles , 
rarely quite smooth ; sep. copiously bristly upivards, the bristles 
erect or adpressed; caps, smooth top-shaped oval or ovate-ob- 
long scarcely glaucous. — DC. 1. 119 ; Deless. Ic. ii. t. 7. P. som- 
niferum a. Setigerum WB. ! i. 58, 59. — Herb. ann. PS. reg. 1 ; c. 
About the town and to the eastward in fields, waste ground and 
vineyards at the back of the beach, and in cornfields again 2 or 
3 miles to the westward, growing often intermixed with P. som- 
niferum L. Apr., May. — St. 2-3 feet high. FI. large, like those 
of P. somniferum L., but the pet. uniformly dull purple with a 
broad darker atropurpureous spot at their base. Stigma-disk 
9-10-rayed. Caps, more oblong than globular, and like the 
whole pi. scarcely (except in a dried state) glaucescent. This 
and the dark or lurid dull green of the foliage, the finely and 
regularly biserrate 1. with aristate teeth, and colour of the fl. 
give a peculiar aspect to the pi., distinguishing it to the eye at 
once from the nearly allied P. somniferum L. The two pi. in 
PS. grow continually intermixed, preserving mutually their 
distinctive characters ; but intermediate forms have not occurred, 
nor has P. setigerum been found in the Dezertas or Madeira. — A 
not uncommon var. of P. somniferum L. with bristly fl. -stalks, 
sometimes seen in English gardens, has perhaps been often 
taken for this pi. ; which has also been supposed to be merely 
the wild state of P. somniferum L., an idea to which the facts 
above related are opposed. 
2. Glaucium Toum. 
I 
Horned Poppy. 
1. G. COltNICULATUM (L.) Curt. Scarlet Horned Poppy. 
Hispid-pubescent; st. pilose; 1. all sinuate-pinnatifid oblong, 
the upper sessile and truncate at the base ; pods hispid-pilose. — 
DC. 1. 122 (var. a.); WB. i. 56, 57 (the Fuerte-venturan pi.) ; 
Koch 32. G. plianiceum ED. 1. 1433 ; Sm. E. Fl. iii. 7 ; Dab. 16. 
Chelidonium corniculatum L. Desf. i. 404. — Herb. ann. PS. reg. 
1 ; rr. W aste ground amongst cornfields and vineyards towards 
the S.W. end of the island, P ta de Malhado. Apr., May. — St. 
1-2 ft. high with remarkably rigid stiffly divaricated branches. 
Whole pi. pubescent or pilose rather than hispid, scarcely or 
not at all glaucous. E. furry with short crumpled cottony hairs. 
Fl. rather small. Pet. scarlet with a black patch at the base. 
Pod 0-8 in. long narrow, finely and rather closely erecto- 
