646 POLYANDRIA. MONOGYNIA. Papavek. 
Branches and fruit-stalks channelled, with strong hairs pointing upwards. 
Capsules roundish-oval, furrowed like a melon. Stigma with radii an¬ 
swering to the furrows. Woodw. Petals small, dark scarlet. Filaments 
deep purple. Anthers pleasant blue. Relh. ( Stem slender, branched, 
leaty, twelve to eighteen inches high, rough, with hairs laid flat. 
Branches single flowered, naked. Calyx armed with brown bristles. E.) 
Round-rough-headed Poppy. Corn-fields. Near Norwich. Mr. Pitch- 
ford. At Wells, Norfolk. Mr. Crowe. About Durham. Mr. Robson. 
(At Darent, near Dartford. Mr. Lewin. Near Fulwell and Sunderland. 
Mr. Winch. Malton corn-fields, Yorkshire. Teesdale. Around Rams¬ 
gate. Mr. Gerard E. Smith. E.) A. June—July. 
P. argemo'ne. Capsule club-shaped, ribbed, bristly: stem leafy, 
many-flowered: (leavesdoublypinnatifid. E.) 
(E. Bot. 643. E .)—Fl. Dan. 867— Curt. 313 —J. B. iii. 396. 2— Lob. Ohs. 
144. 2, and Ic. i. 276. 2 — Ger. Em. 373. 2 — H. Ox. iii. 14. 10 — Pet. 52. 6 
—Ger. 300. 2. 
Root-leaves with a broad mid-rib, set with three or four pair of wings and 
an odd one, each of which is cloved into three. Petals inversely egg- 
shaped, dull scarlet, with a black spot towards the base, white before the 
calyx opens. Germen inversely conical. Summit , rays five to eight. 
Capsule cells as many as rays on the summit; bristles strong, white, 
pointing upwards. (In general habit resembling P. hyhridum , but the 
segments of the leaves broader. It sometimes appears with a double 
flower. Curtis remarks that it is often overlooked from the extreme 
fugacity of its petals, which rarely continue expanded six hours. E.) 
(Starved maritime specimens may occasionally be observed extremely 
diminutive, bearing only one flower, and usually more hirsute; as at 
Roosebeck. Mr. Atkinson. Between Abergele and Conway. Mr. Griffith. 
By the sea side at Weymouth. E.) From such originated P. mariiimum. 
With. E.) 
Long-rough-iieaded Poppy. (Welsh: Drewg Hirben-gwrychog. E.) 
Corn-fields. A. June—July. 
(P. nubicau'le. Capsule obovate, hispid: scape with one flower 
naked, hispid: leaves villoso-hispid, pinnatifid, attenuated into a 
petiole longer than the leaf. 
Hook. FI. Lond. 214 — FI. Dan. 41 — Sims, Bot. Mag. 1633 — Kniph. 10. 
Stem none, or obsolete. Leaves all radical, numerous, petiolated, entirely 
villoso-hispid, pinnatifid, with the lacinise entire or cut, petiole longer 
than the leaf. Scape four to six inches high, simple, rounded, hairy, the 
hairs horizontal, rusty brown, bearing a single flower at the extremity. 
Calyx of two leaves, the leafits oval, concave, externally clothed with 
brown, patent, hairs. Bloss. of four yellow, roundish, patent, petals- 
Stamens numerous, yellow, longer than the pistil. Anthers subtetrago- 
nous. Germen oval, hispid. Stigma sessile. 
Naked-stalked Yellow Poppy. Gathered by Prof. Giesecke of Dublin 
among rocky glens in the hills at Achilhead, Ireland. 
Hook. FI. Lond. E.) 
(2) Capsules smooth. 
P. RHiB'As. Capsules smooth, nearly globular: stigma many-rayed: 
