MONADELPHIA. DECANDRIA. Geranium. 801 
but the flower and every part of the plant is a third smaller. Mr. Atkin* 
son. 
Striped Bloody Crane’s-bill. G. sanguineum (3. Linn. y. Huds. Sm. 
G. Lancastriense. With. Ed. 3 and 4. G. hcematodes Lancastriense, flore 
eleganter striato. Dill. Ray. 
(2 ) Petals notched, or cloven ; fruit-stalks two-flowered. Perennial. 
G. pyrena'icum. Petals two-lobed, twice as long as the calyx : leaves 
kidney-shaped, lower ones with five to seven, upper with three 
trifid lobes. 
Curt. 159—(E. Bot. 405. E.)— Ger. Prov. 16. 2. 
Stem two or three feet high, hairy. Leaves hairy, the lower with mostly 
seven lobes; lobes with three-clefts, segments rounded or blunt, the mid¬ 
dle one frequently scolloped, the upper with mostly three lobes. Fruit- 
stalks longer than the leaves. Floral-leaves pointed, four to each fruit- 
stalk. Calyx leaves broad and short. Petals as long again as the calyx, 
deeply cloven ; lobes roundish, entire. Woodw. Petals nearly divided 
down to the base and much larger than in G. pusillum, of a bright 
bluish purple. ( Capsules keeled, not wrinkled, when young pubescent. 
Seeds without dots. Linnseus confounded this with his molle originally, 
(Sm.) and we have received the same as such from Professor Thunberg. 
Var. 2. FI. alb . Blossoms white. 
In Chelsea garden, growing as a weed. Curtis. 
Perenial. Dove’s-foot Crane’s-bill. Meadows and pastures. On the 
banks of the river between Bingley and Keighley, Yorkshire. Near 
Enfield; and about Brompton, Chelsea, and in the dry part of the pas¬ 
turage in Battersea fields. Hudson. At the back of St. John’s College, 
Oxford. Mr. Woodward. (In a lane leading from the south-east part of 
Edinburgh to the King’s Park, abundantly. Sir J. E. Smith. Hedge op¬ 
posite Rose Hall, Beccles. Mr. F. Turner, in Bot. Guide. Hebburn 
Ballast Hills, Durham, and Hill of Kinnoul, Perth. Mr. Winch. In Lit¬ 
ton, and Monsal Dales, near Tideswell, Derbyshire. Mr. O. Sims. Bot. 
Guide. Rubbish at Luton Hoe ; and Ford End, Bedfordshire. Abbot. 
Upper part of Wick grounds, Brislington, near Bristol. E.) 
P. June—July. 
G. nodo'sum. Stem quadrangular, upright : leaves five or three-lobed, 
toothed, rough above, glossy beneath : petals scored, notched. 
{E. Bot. 1091. E.)— Clus. ii. 101. 1—Ger. Em. 947. 2— Park. 703. 2— 
J. B. iii. 478. 1 —Pet. 65. 4—7/. Ox. v. 16. 22— Clus. ii. 101. 2. 
Stem spreading, more compressed than in G. striatum. Petals flesh-co¬ 
loured, with three purple scores, running half way to the point. Linn. 
Flowers before blossoming hanging down, afterwards upright. Stems 
(about, eighteen inches high, slender, red, E.) smooth, shining, swoln at 
the joints. Leaves, the lower with five lobes, the upper with three 
opposite. Lobes spear-shaped, wide apart, entire at the base, irregularly 
serrated upwards, with three strong nearly parallel ribs, and with a few 
short stiff hairs arising from glands. Stipules and flower-stalks alike 
small, pointed. Fruit-stalks short. Calyx leaves awned, smooth. Petals 
red, scolloped ; scollops, blunt, regular. Woodw. {Capsules even, downy 
all over. Sm. E.) 
p 2 
