74 DIADELPHIA, DECANDRIA. 
Hares^-foot BulVs Clover. 
From ten to twelve inches high. Capituli reddish. Infields 
of Jersey in the greatest profusion, rendering them quite red 
at a distance. This plant is said to be medicinal, and it is 
brought to our markets for use in domestic medicine. It is 
’ found in cultivated grounds, and on the edges of open woods, 
every where. Flowers white, with red spots. Annual. July 
till September. 
agrarium. 5. T. crcct, subpubesceiit ; folioles lanceolate-cu- 
neate, obtuse, the intermediate sessile ; stipules 
lanceolate, acute ; spikes oval, imbricate ; vex- 
illum deflexed, persistent ; calicine teeth subu- 
late, glabrous, unequal. — Willd. 
T. aureum, Pollich. fl. palat. 708. 
T. strepens, Crantz. fl. aust. 411. m. 8. (Pursh.} 
Icon. Fl. Dan. 558. 
Large Hop4refoiL 
About twelve or fifteen inches high, with bright golden- 
yellow capituli. This elegant species I have only found along 
the course of the Schuylkill, west side, in woods. In the woods 
near Mantua and Powelton, abundant. Annual. June, August. 
procumbens. 6. T. procumbent; stem hairy, folioles obovate, 
emarginate, glabrous; stipules lanceolate-acu- 
minate, pubescent or ciliate ; capituli oval, im- 
bricate ; vexillum deflexed, persistent, furrow- 
ed. B. 
T. procumbens, Schreber. 
T. minus. Smith? 
Small Hop4refoiL 
Intermediate in size between No. 5, and No. 7 ; procumbent. 
Capituli pale straw-yellow, ovate ; stipules and stem very pu- 
bescent. In Jersey, on commons and in pastures; frequent. 
July, August. 
minimus. 7. T. semi-procumbent ; stem glabrous ; folioles 
long-cuneate, emarginate, denticulate, glabrous; 
stipules ovate-acuminate, peduncles filiform, ca- 
pituli nearly round, vexillum deflexed. B. 
Is this T. campestre, Muhl. Cat. ? 
