896 SYNGENESIA. iEQUALIS. Hieracium, 
Moot black externally* Herb glaucous, abounding in bitter milk. $tems 
pithy, a foot high, or more, smooth, bearing, one, two, or three leaves. 
Flowers very large and handsome, lemon-coloured; calyx hairy. Leaves 
chiefly radical, on long dilated foot-,stales , Copiously hairy at the base. 
Sm. • , . • r ... .... , A . 
Glaucous Hairy Hawjcweee*. H., Lawsorii,, V ill. Willd. Sm. Upon 
rocks by the rivulet between Shap arid Anna well, Westmoreland. Mi*. 
Lawson. On rocks by* the Maze- Beck, and at Maze Beck Scar, West¬ 
moreland. Mr.'W. Robertson, in Eng. El. --On the sloping-side of a hill 
called Gordil, near Malham, in Craven. Dr. Richardson. Foot of Ben 
Cruachan. Prof. Hooker. Rocks at Dunkeld. Mr. Winch. 
P. July. E.) 
H. paludo'sum. Stem (angular, tubular, E.) panicled: leaves am- 
plexicaul, toothed, smoothcalyx hispid. 
{E. J$ot. 1094. E.)— Allion. 2*8. 2 and 31. 2— FI. Ban. 928— Ger. 236— 
Ger. Em. 300— J. B. ii. 1033. 1— J. B. ii. 1026. 3— H. Ox. vii. 5. 47. 
Stem one to two feet high, hollow, in which it differs from H. murorum; 
furrowed, smooth, generally bright purple at the base. Leaves smooth, 
alternate, the lower on leaf-stalks, oval-spear-shaped; the upper spear- 
shaped, deeply toothed towards the base, entire at the summit; the 
uppermost very eptire. Leafstalks and midribs of the leaves sometimes 
purple,, especially underneath. Fruit-stalks smooth. Flowers solitary, 
smaller than in IT. murorum. Calyx stales strap-spear-shaped, with 
numerous black hairs on the back. Woodw. Leaves notched like those of 
Dandelion but not so deeply. Flowers bright yellow. 
Marsh Succory-leaved Hawkweed. Moist meadows, woods, and 
sides of rivulets in the mountainous parts of Craven, Yorkshire, and both 
in the Lowlands and Highlands of Scotland. Hardrow Force, in Wensley 
Dale, Yorkshire. Mr. Wood. On the west side of the river just below 
the bridge at Kirkby Lonsdale, Westmoreland. Sir J. E. Smith. Near 
Rydal, Westmoreland. Mr. Woodward. At the Hermitage, near Tay- 
mouth. Dr. Stokes. Marshy ground at the foot of Pentland Hills. Dr. 
Hope. (Near Barnard Castle, Durham. Rev. J. Harriman. And Cas¬ 
tle Eden Dean. Mr. Winch. E.) P. July. 
(H. magula'tum. Stem branched, tubular, many-leaved, cymose : 
leaves egg-spear-shaped, strongly toothed: teeth pointing for¬ 
ward. 
E. Bof. 2121— FI. Ban. 1113. 
Taller, and more leafy than H. murorum , qr sylvaticum. Has rather ellip¬ 
tical than heart-shaped leaves, whose strong deep teeth point forward, 
and are by no means radiated. Leaves strongly speckled with black. 
From H. sylvaticum it is also distinguished by the cymose, not panicled, 
growth ,of its stem ; the flowers are also larger, more numerous, with a 
darker, thicker calyx , and the whole herbage of a darker green. , Stem 
decidedly hollow. E. Bot. (This, according to Smith, “■ very distinct 
species,” is considered by Prof. Hooker as var. sylvaticum. E.j 
Stained-leaved Hawkweed. II. sylvaticum. Oed. Sm. Linn. tf. vol. 
ix. 240. (5. H. murorum y. FI. Brit. This plant was brought from West¬ 
moreland in 1731, by Mr. Cro.we, from whose garden it has .established 
itself, by seed, in the neighbourhood of Norwich, preserving its original 
