SYNGENESIA. iEQUALIS. Hiehacium. 895 
Shrubby Hawkweeb. (Welsh: Heboglys llydanddail. E.) Woods and 
hedges. P. Aug.—-(Sept. E.) 
Var. 2. Leaves covered with a short and just perceptible down. Ray. 
Gmel ii. 14. I—Pet. 13. 9. 
Moist shady woods. Hudson. Near Uls water, Westmoreland. Ray. 
Var. 3. Leftves longer, with fewer teeth, one flower only on the stem. 
Pink. 37. 3— Pet. 11. 6. 
On a dry bank at the edge of a wood in a lane leading from Hornhill to 
Rickmans worth, Hertfordshire. Ray. 
Var. 4. Leaves broad spear-shaped, on very short leaf-stalks. St. 
Pet. 13. 8. 
Perry Wood, near Worcester. Stokes. 
(H. denticula'tum. Stem erect, leafy, many-flowered, solid, cymose. 
with downy glandular stalks: leaves elliptic-lanceolate, finely 
toothed, smoothish, glaucous beneath. 
E. Bot. 2122. 
Stem a yard high, roughish, pithy, leafy from top to bottom. Leaves twice 
the size of the preceding, scarcely at all clasping. Flowers yellow, noi 
an inch broad. Cal. a little viscid. Recept. cellular. Sm. 
Small-toothed Hawkweeb. II. denticulatum. E. Bot. H. prenan- 
thoides. FI. Brit. Loch Rannoch, Perthshire; and among bushes on the 
banks of the Earn. Mr. G. Don. Banks of Clyde at Daldowie. Hopkirk 
Hook. Scot. P. July—Aug. E.] 
H. prenanthoi'des. Stem upright, solid: panicle terminal : leaver 
spear-shaped, embracing the stem, glaucous beneath. 
(E. Bot. 2235. E.)— Allion. 27. 1 and 3. 
Whole plant more or less hairy, (three feet high. E.) Leaves fringed wit! 
hairs, edged with a few minute distant teeth; dark green above, glau 
cous underneath, (numerous, alternate. E.) Flowers numerous, brigh 
yellow, forming a panicle. ( Seeds very smooth, brown. Peduncle. 
downy. The glaucous green of the leaves is alone sufficient to distin¬ 
guish this from all our other species. (Differs from H. denticulatum. E 
Bot. 2122, with which it was confounded in FI. Brit, in having the leave 
embrace the stem by their rounded dilated base, and in their singula 
roughness near the edge, which there forms a bristly border. E. Bot. E. 
(Rough-bordered Hawkweed. II. spicatum. Allion. Pedem. i. p. 208, 
Dicks.; but no trivial name could be more improper as applied to a plan 
with a large spreading panicle. H. prenanihoides. Villars. Willd. With 
Sm. Hook. Sym. Hull. E.) Found by Mr. Dickson in woods in the soutl 
of Scotland. Linn. Tr. ii. 288. (Near Pitmain. Mr. J. Mackay. Banks o 
the Esk near Forfar. Mr. G. Don. Near Cramond Bridge. Mr. Neill, ir 
Grev. Edin. Willington Ballast Hills, Durham. Mr. Winch, in Bot 
Guide. E.) P. June—Aug 
(H. Lawson'i. Stem branched, solid, few-leaved: leaves elliptic-lan; 
ceolate, decurrent, glaucous, fringed, nearly entire. 
E. Bot. 2083— Villars. Dauph. v. 3, t. 29— Dill. Elth. 149. 
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