776 TETRADYNAMIA. S1LIQU0SA. Gheieanthus. 
(E. orientate. Leaves elliptic-heart-shaped, blunt, embracing the 
stem, smooth: root-leaves inversely-egg-shaped, entire: pods 
quadrangular. E.) 
Jacq. Austr. 282— Kniph. Brassica campestris — (E. Bot. 1804. E.)— J. B. 
ii. 835. 4— Clus. ii. 127. 1— Dud. 626. 2 — Lob. Obs. 215. 3, and Ic. i. 396. 
2 — Ger. Em. 536. 2 — Park. 580. 9 — H. Ox. iii. 2. 19 and 20— Pet. 45. 5 
—Ger. 430. 2— J. B. ii. 835. 3. 
(Whole herb smooth and glaucous, one to two feet high; leaves rather 
thick, not strictly perfoliate. E.) Stem-leaves egg-shaped, blunt at the 
end, heart-shaped at the base, very entire. Petals white, with a tinge of 
straw-colour. Fruit-stalks expanding. Pods three or four inches long, 
the lower standing wide. Woodw. 
(Hare’s-ear Hedge-mustard. E. orientate . Br. in Ait. Sm. E. perfo- 
liatum. De Cand. Brassica orientalis. Linn. Jacq. With. Willd. FI. 
Brit. E.) B. campestris perfoliata , Jlore albo. R. Syn. 293. Huds. Ed. i. 
B. Turrita. Wigg. Corn-fields and cliffs on the sea-coast, near Har¬ 
wich, and Bardsey, near Orford, Suffolk. Ray. Corn-fields near God- 
stone, and Marshfield, Sussex. Hudson. (On the Ballast Hills of the 
Tyne and Wear. Mr. Winch. E.) A. June. 
CIIEIHAN'THUS.* * Ger men with a glandular tooth on each 
side: Calyx closed* two of its leafits tumid at the base : 
Seeds flat. 
(C. fruticulo'sus. Leaves spear-shaped, acute, (with a dense hoari¬ 
ness underneath: E.) branches angular : stem shrubby. 
(Hook. FI. Lond. 147— E. Bot. 1934. E.) — Barr. Ic. t. 1228. 
(Plant one foot high. Leaves stalked, crowded, mostly very entire; the 
lowermost with slight serratures. Petals notched. Calyx sometimes 
tinged with purple. Style short. Stigma notched at the end. Seeds 
not winged. It differs from C. Cheiri of the gardens in having leaves 
more acute, and white underneath; smaller Jlowers of a pure yellow 
colour, never exhibiting rust-coloured or blood-coloured blotches. FI. 
Brit. May be distinguished also, as Mr. Crowe has remarked, by the 
petals being recurved, and rather stiff; not flaccid and loosely hanging 
down, as do those of C. Cheiri, (the Blood Wall-flower.) But Prof. 
Hooker doubts the constancy of these characteristics. E.) Flowers in 
terminal bunches, yellow, (very fragrant. E.) 
Wild Wall-flower. Wall GiLLiFLOWER.t (Welsh: Melyn y gauaf; 
Murwyll. E.) C. fruticulosus. Linn. (FI. Brit. Hook. Scot. C. Cheiri. 
Huds. With, to Ed. 4. and most other English Authors. E.) Old walls, 
roofs, and rocks. P. May—June.f 
* (From X £ ‘§> th e hand; and avQog, a flower; supposed to allude to its agreeable scent, 
always acceptable in hand : or more probably from the pods of some species expanding like 
fingers. E.) 
*j* (Sometimes corrupted to July-ft ower; by the old authors Gillo-R ower, and we con¬ 
ceive originally derived from the Italian Gialla , q. d. Yellow-i\ ower. E.) 
f (This well-known and acceptable flower has produced a considerable number of varie¬ 
ties in the garden, as the double, easily propagated by slips; and according to Thomson, 
“The yellow Wall-fiower , stained with iron-brown. 
And lavish stock* that scents the garden round: ” 
