20 
V. FUMAKIACEiE. 
[ Corydalis. 
Fields; rare. Kent, Essex, Cambridgeshire, &c. We have now 
reason to believe that the English plant is the same as Loiseleur’s; but 
we still entertain doubts of its being truly -distinct from the next, the 
only essential difference, if that be constant, being in the greater 
length of the pedicel. 
4. F . parvifiura Lam. ( least- flowered F .) ; sepals very minute, 
fruit obovate-globose slightly pointed or blunt, pedicel as long 
as the bract, segments of the leaves linear channelled glaucous. 
— a. dowers rose-coloured, E. B. t. 590. — j3 . flowers white 
tipped with dark purple. F. parviflora DC. 
Fields ; rare. 0. 6 — 9. — The more common of these two var§. 
is that with white flowers. 
5. F. micrantha Lag. ( small-flowered F.) ; sepals peltate orbi- 
cular somewhat cordate at the base inciso-dentate at the margin 
concave at the back about twice shorter than the corolla and 
one and a half or twice broader, fruit globose subapiculate, 
pedicels shorter than the bracts, segments of the leaves narrow 
linear grooved. Hook. Ic. Pl. t. 363. E. B. S. t. 2876. 
About Edinburgh, and in several other localities in the east of Scot- 
land. Dover, Guildford, and New Burnham (Norfolk), in England. 
©. 6. — 9. 
2. Corydalis Be Cand. Corydalis. 
Pet. 4, one of them gibbous or spurred at the base. Ovary 
many-ovuled. Pod. 2-valved, compressed, many seeded. Seeds 
with a crest. — Named from KopvSaXt'c, the Greek name for the 
Fumitory , with which the present genus was, till lately, united. 
1. C.* s6lida Hook, (solid-rooted C.) ; stem simple erect with 
a scale beneath the lower leaf, leaves 3 — 4 biternate their seg- 
ments cuneate or oblong, and as well as the braeteas cut, root 
tuberous solid, style persistent. Fumaria L. : E. B. t. 1471. 
Groves and thickets. At Kendal (an old garden). Wickham, 
Hampshire (perhaps wild); and near Birmingham. 7). 4,5. — 
Flowers large, purplish. Leaves glaucous. Seeds with a crest, in germi- 
nation showing only one ovate cotyledon. 
2. C.* lutea DC. ( yellow C .) ; stem angular erect, leaves 
bipinnate, segments broadly cuneate cut or trifid, braeteas 
minute, style deciduous, pods nearly cylindrical shorter than 
the pedicels, root fibrous. Fumaria L. : E. B. t. 588. 
On old walls in many places, but only where it had escaped from 
cultivation. 11. 5 — 8. — Flowers yellow. Seeds with a concave 
crest, in germination with two lanceolate cotyledons. 
3. C. clavicidata DC. ( white climbing C .) ; stem much branched 
climbing, leaves pinnate, pinnse stalked ternate or pedate, seg- 
