894 SYNGENESIA. iEQUALIS. Hieracium, 
Creeping Hawkweed. (Irish: Clovas Lugh. Smith reverses the syn. 
and fig. Fi. Dan. as regards this and the following species. E.) Moist 
mountainous situations. Fairfield mountain near Rydall, Westmoreland. 
Hudson. (Patterdale. Rev. Mr. Richardson. Coxbench Wood, Derby¬ 
shire. Dr. Johnson. Bot. Guide. The genuine plant certainly found in 
Scotland. Mr. G. Don. E.) P. July—Aug. 
H. auric'ula. Leaves entire, spear-shaped, acute., hirsute: suckers 
creeping: (calyx shaggy. E.) 
(FI. Dan. 1111— E. Bot. 2368 ? E.) 
Leaves spear-shaped, rough with small hairs. Stalk and calyx beset with 
black bristles. Planted in a garden it rose the next year to three feet 
high, with flowers in a kind of umbel on long fruit-stalks. Linn. Root 
as if bitten off, with numerous simple fibres. Suckers leafy. Stalk 
upright, scarcely six inches high, somewhat hairy, hairs scattered. 
Leaves mostly very entire, pointed, naked. Flowers in a panicle, three 
to six, yellow. Huds. (A plant little understood. E.) 
Narrow-leaved Hawkweed. On mountains. On Dalehead, not far 
from Grasmere, Westmoreland. Hudson. P. July. 
(H. auranti'acum. Leaves elliptical, entire: stem almost naked, 
simple, hairy, bearing a corymbus of many flowers : calyx 
shaggy. 
Jacq. Austr. 410— E. Bot. 1469— Kniph. 11— Col. Ecphr. 2, t. 30. 
j Root creeping, and throwing out many scions. Stem a foot high or more, 
erect, cylindrical, very hairy, scarcely bearing one or two small leaves. 
Blossom deep-brownish orange colour. Calyx and fower-stalks clothed 
with long hairs, like those on the leaves or stem. Leaves nearly all 
radical, elliptical, broad, entire, hairy, especially on the rib. Receptacle 
naked. Seed-down rough. Stalk and calyx invested with black glandular 
hairs. E. Bot. 
Orange Hawkweed. Not uncommon in gardens; and found truly wild 
in several woods in Bamffshire, and at Craigston near T urref, by Mr. 
George Don. Coalston woods. East Lothian. Mr. Maughan. Hook. 
Scot. At Failsworth, four miles from Manchester. Mr. John Bradbury. 
Eng. FI. P. July. E.) 
(3) Stem leafy ; Down sessile. 
H. sabau'dum. Stem upright, many-flowered: leaves egg-spear¬ 
shaped, toothed, semi-amplexicaul, (rough underneath. E.) 
Allion. 27. 2— (E. Bot. 349. E.)— FI. Dan. 872— Pet. 13. 7 —Gmel. ii. 14. 
2— J. B. ii. 1030. 3— H. Ox. vii. 5. 59. 
Stem (dying down in winter : E.) sometimes branched from half or two- 
thirds of the way up ; the uppermost branches often springing from one 
point as an umbel; those below alternate. In branches where the top 
of the stem has been bitten off the leaves often assume the figure of those 
of II. umbellatum; the fruit-stalks become congregated, as in Gmel. ii. 
14. 1, and FI. Dan. 872. See also var. 4. St* Flowers numerous, yel¬ 
low, open only a few hours. (Stem stiff and upright, three feet high, 
cylindrical, furrowed, rough, scarcely hollow, but spongy within, ter¬ 
minating in a branched, many flowered, hairy panicle. Calyx brownish 
green, hairy, the lower scales loose. Seeds angular, chesnut-coloured, 
rather rough. FI. Brit. E.) 
