644 POLYANBRXA. MONOGYNIA. Glaucium. 
Kniph. 3, first fig. — FI. Dan. 676 — Mill. 92. 2 — J. B. iii. 483 — Clus. ii. 203 
—Ger. Em. 1069. 2—Park. 617. 2. 
Leaves with five lobes. Lobes narrow, sharply jagged. Miller, who, 
during the cultivation of it for upwards of thirty years, could never per¬ 
ceive any alteration in it. 
Among the ruins of the Duke of Leeds’s seat at Wimbledon. 
(GLAU'CIUM^ Calyx two-leaved: Pod two or three-celled : 
Seeds dotted, imbedded in a spongy substance which 
fills the pod. E.) 
(G. mjte'um. Stem smooth: stem-leaves wavy: pod roughish, with 
minute tubercles. Sm. E.) 
(Hook. FI. Lond. 66. E.)— FI. Dan. 585 — E. JBot. 8 — Fuchs. 520 — J.B. iii. 
398 — Kniph. 4 — Trag. 123 — Clus. ii. 91. 1 — Dod. 448 — Lob. Obs. 141. 1, 
andlc. i. 270. 2— Ger. Em. 367. 1 — Ger. 294. 1 — Pet. 62. 7 — Matth. 1061 
— Lonic. i. 82 — H. Ox. iii. 14. l.f. 1— Park. 262. 1 and 2. 
Plant sea-green. Stem much branched, (spreading two or three feet long. 
Radical-leaves a span long, stalked, pinnatifid, lobed, cut, scabrous on 
the upper side. E.) Stem-leaves embracing the stem, deeply indented, 
rough above, smooth beneath. Branches forked. Fruit-stalks thick, 
slightly hairy, with one or two flowers. Calyx large, oval, hairy. Pe¬ 
tals large, egg-shaped, yellow. Pods very long, (often ten or twelve 
inches, E.) bent in various directions, terminated by an arrow-shaped 
summit. Woodw. 
Yellow Horned Poppy. (Irish: Gran Areain. Welsh: Llwydlas ; 
Pabi corniogmelyn. G. luteum. Ggertn. Willd. Sm. Hook. Grev. Chelid- 
onium. Glaucium. Linn. Lightf. Huds. With, early Editions. E.) Sandy 
sea-shores. Norfolk and Suffolk coast, particularly about Dunwich; 
and Cartmel sands and Roosebeck, Lancashire. Mr. Woodward. (Vent- 
ner. Isle of Wight; Hastings; near Beachey Head. Dr. Bostock. 
North Shore, Liverpool, near the mouth of the river Alt. Mr. Shepherd. 
Walney Isle. Mr. Atkinson. Sea coast, Teignmoth. Queen’s Ferry, 
near Edinburgh. On the Ballast Hills of Tyne and Wear. Mr. Winch. 
Sea Beach, Anglesey. Welsh Bot. Very abundant on the Kentish shores, 
particularly about Dover, &c. E.) A. July—Aug.t 
(G. phcenFcium. Stem hairy : stem-leaves pinnatifid, cut: pod rough 
with upright bristles. Sm. E.) 
Curt. Glaucium —(j E. Bot. 1433. E.)— Clus. ii. 91. 2 — Dod. 449. 1 — Lob. 
Obs. 141. 2, and Ic. i. 271. I—Ger. Em. 367. 2—Ger. 294. 2 — J. B. iii. 
399. 1. 
important purposes. (Salisbury assures us that it is an excellent remedy in icteric, and 
other obstructions of the viscera; and, if taken with perseverance, will greatly relieve the 
scurvy. It should be used fresh, as it loses part of its virtue in drying.—In Cochin-China 
the roots are esteemed for various medicinal purposes. A double-flowered variety is 
sometimes admitted into gardens. E.) 
* (So called from its glaucous or sea-green colour. E.) 
(This is a very showy flower, and Miller observes, if a few of the seeds are scattered 
about on rock-work, the plants will rise without trouble, and have a pretty effect; though 
too apt to spread in gardens. E.) 
