782 TETRADYNAMIA. SILIQUOSA. Brassica. 
numerous, heart-spear-shaped, generally entire, but sometimes slightly 
toothed, pale sea-green. Pods smooth, numerous, lying close to the 
stem, and tiled. Seeds reddish brown. Woodw. Pods when fully grown 
cylindrical, compressed. Blossoms greenish white, in very long and 
slender terminal bunches. 
Smooth Tower Mustard. Meadows, pastures, pits, and waste places, 
in gravelly soil. (In sand-pits and other places near Charlton Church, 
E.) and Lewisham, Kent; near Colchester. Spixwort, Norfolk. Mr. 
Woodward. Lichfield. Mr. Whately. Castle Bromwich. Mr. Jones. 
In the quarries above Bath, which is one of the stations mentioned by 
Ray for his Cardamine Bellulis folio. Mr. Swayne. St. Vincent’s Rocks, 
near Bristol, which, being another station of Mr. Ray’s plant, renders it 
probable that his Cardamine was our T. glabra. (On walls nearOving- 
ham, Northumberland; near Gainford, Durham. Mr. Winch. In a 
wood opposite the Inn at Bowling Bay. Hopkirk. Hook. Scot. E.) 
A. May—June. 
BRAS 7 SICA. # [Calyx closed: Pod nearly cylindrical, with 
a beak barren or single-seeded : Seeds globular. E.) 
B. campes'tris. Root tapering: stem-leaves uniform, heart-shaped, 
(pointed, embracing the stem: lower-leaves lyre-shaped, toothed, 
rather hairy. E.) 
[E. Bot. 2234. E.) 
[Stem two feet high, upright, branched, leafy, cylindrical, smooth, rather 
glaucous. Lower-leaves rough with hairs on the veins underneath; all 
slightly glaucous, paler on the under surface. Petals yellow, rather 
large. Pods cylindrical, bluntly four-cornered, reticularly veined, a little 
swelling out, two inches long, with an awl-shaped beak, quadrangular 
at the base, striated. FI. Brit. Cal. spreading upwards. 
Field Cabbage. Wild Navew. B. campestris. Linn. Willd. Sm. De 
Cand. Hook. Grev. In corn-fields, and about the banks of ditches, road 
sides, &c. At Harwich, and plentifully between Cropredy and Mor- 
lington, Oxfordshire. Rev. Dr. Goodenough. Near Broadford, Isle of 
Skye, and in fields near Forfar. Mr. Mack ay. FI. Brit. Road side from 
Leith to Queensferry, near Bangholm. Mr. G. Don. Grev. Edin. Bradley 
near Orford, Suffolk. Rev. Mr. Sutton. Ballast Hills of Tyne and Wear ; 
in fields through the church-yard above the bridge at Kirby Londale. 
Mr. Winch. E.) A. June. 
B. NA f pus. Root fusiform, a regular continuation of the stem: leaves 
smooth; upper heart-spear-shaped, embracing the stem; lower 
lyrate, toothed. E.) 
( E • Bot. 2146. E.)— Ludw. 165— Blachw. 224— Wale. — Fuchs. 177— J. B. 
ii. 843— Trag. 730 —Lonic. i. 191. 3—Lob. Obs. 200. 2 —Ger. Em. 235. 2 
—Park. 865— H. Ox. iii. 2, row 3. 2./. 3—Ger. 181. 2. 
Stem somewhat branched, cylindrical, smooth, about two feet high. Leaves 
smooth, glaucous. Ccdyx yellowish green. Summit a flatted knob. Pod 
* (Probably from Ppcurcrw, to boil; being commonly so prepared as an esculent 
vegetable, E.) 
