TETRADYNAMIA. SILIQUOSA. Tuekitis. 781 
{Hook. FI. Lond. 176. E.)— Jacq. Austr. 11 — E.Bot. 178 — Clus. ii. 126. 2 
—Ger. Em. 272. 2—Park. 852. 2—Pet. 47. 1 —H. Ox. iii 2. 23—Barr. 
353. 
{Herb more or less downy. Root woody. Flowers straw-coloured, small, 
with spreading borders, in corymbose clusters. Fruit-stalks short. 
Glands within the shorter, and two without the longer stamens. Style 
very short, permanent. E.) Stem one to two feet high, cylindrical, scored, 
downy, generally simple. Leaves hairy on both sides; root-leaves oblong, 
thick, greyish, waved at the edge; stem-leaves similar, toothed, regu¬ 
larly decreasing upwards in size ; the upper more pointed, rather serrated 
than toothed, not so grey. Pods very long, smooth, strap-shaped, com¬ 
pressed, on short fruit-stalks, rising at the base and then bent down¬ 
wards, forming an elegant curve. Woodw. 
Tower Turkey-pod. (Tower Wall Cress. E.) Old walls and stony 
places, rare. On Trinity and St. John’s College walls, Cambridge. Mr. 
Woodward. (On the walls of Magdalen College, Oxford. Sibthorp. 
On the walls of the castle of Cliesh, Kinross-shire. Mr. Arnott, in 
Hook. Scot. E.) A. May—June—(B. FI. Brit. E.) 
(A. hirsu'ta. All the leaves hispid, toothed: stem leafy, hirsute: 
pods quite erect. E.) 
j Dicks. H. S. —( E. Bot. 587. E.)~ Jacq. Ic. i.— Wale. — C. B. Pr. 42. 2 —* 
Park. 834. 6— Pet. 47. 12 — H. Ox. iii. 3. 5 — FI. Dan. 1040. 
{Stems several, a foot high, leafy, stiff and upright. Root-leaves egg- 
shaped, toothed; stem-leaves spear-shaped, blunt, toothed, semi-amplex- 
icaul, occasionally arrow-shaped at the base. Pods slender, smooth, an 
inch long. Blossom white, small. Bunches terminal. E.) By cultiva¬ 
tion, or in a rich natural soil, it loses most of its hairiness, and grows 
taller. With. 
Hairy Wall Cress. (Welsh: Twr-ged blewog. E.) Rocks, stony 
places, old walls and dry mountainous pastures. Banks beyond Mid¬ 
hurst, Sussex. Doody. Switham Bottom, near Croydon. Hudson. 
About Settle, Yorkshire; King’s Park, Edinburgh. Lightfoot. Laken- 
ham, near Norwich. Mr. Crowe. St. Vincent’s Rocks, plentifully. Dr. 
Broughton. Wick Cliffs, Rev. G. S wayne. Bay dales, Darlington. Mr. 
Robson. (Old walls at Ely, Brandon, and Weeting, Norfolk. Mr. 
Woodward. On walls near Penmon Church, Anglesey. Welsh Bot. 
Frequent about Cheddar, Somersetshire. E.) P. June. 
TURRFTXS.* {Pod very long, angular; valves keeled : (Seeds 
in two rows. E.) 
T. glabra. Root-leaves toothed, hirsute; others very entire, em¬ 
bracing the stem, smooth. 
Curt. 253— FI. Dan. 809— {E. Bot. 777. E.)—Clus. ii. 126. I—Lob. Ic. 220. 
2— Ger. Em. 272. 1 — Ger. 212. 1— Park. 852. 1— H. Ox. iii. 2. 22— Pet. 
47. 10. 
(Whole plant erect and straight. E.) Stem two to three feet high, simple, 
cylindrical, slightly scored, smooth. Root-leaves spear-shaped, tapering 
into leaf-stalks, indented towards the base, entire upwards ; stem-leaves 
* (From turris, a tower; but whether in allusion to its form of growth, or not 
unfrequent station upon such buildings, may be questionable. E.) 
