DIADELPHIA. HEXANDRIA. Fumaria. '825 
frequently running into tendrils. Robs. ( Seed-vessels globular. We would 
willingly correct our representation of this plant; but; on again comparing 
it with specimens; are not aware of the small error noticed in E. Bot. 943. 
Whether the few tendrils be considered as distinct from the twisting foot* 
stalks or not; they are accurately delineated in the annexed plate. E.) 
Ramping Fumitory. (Welsh:- Mwg y ddaear afreo-lys. E.) Gardens, 
cultivated ground, and under walls with F. officinalis. Rocks by the sea 
side; ditch banks. (Frequent about Liverpool. Dr. Bostock. In hedges 
about Gateshead and Monk-Wearmouth. Winch Guide. At Llangefni, 
Anglesey. Welsh Bot. About Red hall, near Edinburgh. Lightfoot. 
Abundant in Cornwall and Devon. E.) A. Aug.—Oct. 
F; clavicula'ta. Legumens strap-shaped, about three-seeded: leaves 
with tendrils. 
FI. Dan. 340— E. Bot. 103— Dod. 60—Lob. Ohs. 438. 2, and Ic. i. 758. 1— 
Ger. Em. 1088. 2—J. B. iii. a. 204. 1 —Park. 288. 6—H. Ox. iii. 12. 3— 
Ger. 929. 5 and 6. 
Tendrils generally forked, sometimes with two minute leaves near the end. 
Stems angular, slender, climbing, two or three feet long, purplish at the 
base. Leqftts egg-spear-shaped, ending in a sharp flexible point. Spikes 
towards the top of the stem or branches, of about five flowers, seldom more 
than two of which come to perfection, lateral. Calyx-leaves inversely 
heart-shaped, white, very small. Blossom standard oblong, concave, 
reflexed at the end, not notched. Nectary blunt. Keel a little concave 
at the top, and reflexed at the edges. Filaments , one fixed to the 
standard, the other to the base of the two wings, and uniting them. 
Germen heart-shaped. Style crooked. Summit flat, and ragged. Seed- 
vessel oblong, tapering, with one to three seeds. The shape of the seed- 
vessel distinguishes this from the two preceding species. Flowers small, 
greenish, yellowish white, or sometimes with a purple tinge. 
White Climbing Fumitory. (Welsh: Mwg y ddaear gafaelgar. Co¬ 
ry dalis claviculata. De Cand. Grev. E.) Woods and moist hedges, boggy 
and rocky places, in sandy soil, and on the banks of lakes and rivers. 
Among the rocks of Stonehall, near Rawdon, seven miles from Leeds. 
Mr. Wood. Thorpe, near Norwich. Mr. Woodward. In a marsh on 
the east side of Kendal castle. Mr. Gough. Thatched cottages in many 
parts of the Highlands of Scotland covered with it. Mr. Brown. Among 
loose stones on the north-east side of the Wrekin. Salop. Mr. Aikin. Dry 
stony places in Furness Fells. Mr. Atkinson. On Malvern Hill, above the 
spring. In some of the least frequented lanes about Birmingham. On 
the south side of Carn ynghornwy, Anglesey. Welsh Bot. (Knot's 
Hole, near Liverpool; Lady's Isle, Loch Katrine. Dr. Bostock. In the 
field, near a small pond, on the east side of Willesboro’ Leas, Kent. Mr. 
G. E. Smith. Among bushes on Newcastle Town Moor, Northumber* 
land. Winch Guide. Abundant in hedges by the road side near Llan* 
gollen from Chirk, E) A. June—Sept, 
