182 
sxxviii. u 3i belli ferje. [ Tordylium . 
somewhat palmate, petals unequal, fruit glabrous nearly or- 
bicular. — a. lobes of leaflets broad. E. B. t. 939. — /3. leaves 
more deeply cut, lobes narrower. 11. angustifolium Sm. 
FI. Br. 
Hedges, pastures, and bushy places, frequent. g. 7. — A tall 
rank weed, 4 — 5 ft. high. Leaves coarsely serrate, sheaths inflated. 
Flowers white or reddish. Carpels with 2 vittce on the suture. 
28. Tordylium Linn. Hart-wort. (Tab. II. f. 28.) 
Fruit flat, with a broad thick crenate or waved border. 
Carpels with indistinct ribs, 3 dorsal and 2 distant marginal 
ones, with 1 or 3 vittce in the interstices. Pet. radiant. — Name: 
the roplvXtov of the Greeks. 
1. T. * officinale L. (small H .) ; 2 outer petals of the flowers 
of the ray each with one very large lobe, partial involucres 
setaceous as long as the umbels, fruit with the thickened border 
beautifully crenate and glabrous. E. B. t. 2440. 
Near London (?) : Ray and Petiver. ©. 6, 7. — Hairy, 1 foot 
high. Leaflets few, ovate, lobed, and notched, upper ones confluent. 
Flowers beautiful, with the outer large lobes of the petals white. 
Fruit rough on the surface, and having a very thick, pale, deeply 
notched or almost beaded border. Vittce several between the ribs, 
and on the suture. 
2. T. maximum L. ( great IF) ; 2 outer petals of the flowers 
of the ray each with 2 equal lobes, involucres linear shorter 
than the umbel, fruit with the thickened border scarcely 
notched and as well as the disk rough with adpressed bristles. 
E. B. t. 1173. 
Rare ; in waste ground about London, Oxford, and Eton. Be- 
tween Twickenham and Isleworth. ©. 6, 7. — Much taller than 
the last, and with a greater number of more lanceolate leaflets. In- 
volucre very short. Petals all comparatively small, rose-coloured. 
Vittce solitary between the ribs, 2 on the suture. 
D. Fruit globose, not prickly. (Carpels scarcely separating.) 
Albumen solid. (Gen. 29.) 
29. Coriandrum Linn. Coriander. (Tab. II. f. 29.) 
Fruit globose. Carpels closely cohering, the ribs obsolete, 
broad ; interstices prominent, slender, without vittce. Petals 
obcordate with an inflected point ; outer ones radiant. (In- 
volucre 0 ; partial on one side.) — Name : from icopie, a bug; in 
allusion to the intolerably fetid smell of the bruised foliage. 
1. C. *sativum L. ( common C.) : E. B. t. 67. 
Fields and waste places, about Ipswich and in Essex, &c. ©. 6. 
— This is the only true species of the genus, and is well known as a 
