The vegetable system. 
red ; the Leaves are of a fine frefii green ; the Flowers are large, 
and of a golden yellow. The indentings of the Leaves are deepeft 
toward the ground. 
6. U M B R E L L A ’ D S E G G R O M. 
Plate 17. Fig. 2. Mountain Ragwort. 
CharasSter of the Species. Othonna integrifolia. 
The Leaves are undivided : the Flowers grow at the top 
like an Umbrella. 
This alfo is an Englilh Plant; a Perennial, native of our high 
grounds, and flowers in Auguft. It is a foot high, upright, robuft, 
and fimple in the Stalk : the Leaves are broad and lanced ; of a 
greyifii green, and naturally undivided, except for here and there a 
flight dent. The Flowers are of a faint yellow. At the head of the 
Stalk, where the Footfialks of the Flowers rife, there is a kind of 
thready mantle 
P lants. 
It has in this a flrange alliance with the umbrella’d 
7. WHITE -HAIR’D S E G G R O M. 
Plate 17. Fig. 3. 
Charafler of the Species. Othonna helenitis. 
The Leaves are lightly covered on each fide with long, 
diftant, white hairs. 
Fig. 3. a. 
This is a Perennial, native of France and of the remote Siberia. It 
is half a yard high, with an undivided Stalk. The Leaves are oblong, 
lanced, and are moil delicately and minutely fawed along the edge. 
The Flowers are yellow, and blow in July. One crowns the Stalk, 
and a kind of Umbel rifes round it. The Flowers fucceed one ano- 
ther ; the fimple one at the head opening firfl. 
VoL II. Y 
8. PIN- 
