SYNGENESIA. AEQUALIS. Hieeacium. 897 
habit and characters. The late Mr. Teesdale also found it growing wild 
in Yorkshire, and designated it as a new species by the name it now 
bears. Rocky woods in the North Riding. Mr. Teesdale. On Breidden 
hill, Montgomeryshire. Mr. Bowman. (Rocks by Gordale Scar, York¬ 
shire, Mr. Dawson -Turner, in Bot. Guide. Fir wood east of Forfar. 
Mr. G. Don, in Hook. Scot. E.) P. July—Sept. E.) 
H. muro'uum. (Stem branched, panicled, with a single leaf: root- 
leaves ovate-heart-shaped, toothed, wavy. E.) 
( E . Bot. 2082. E.)— Barr. Ic. 342— Tabern. 504. 2— J. B. ii. 1034. 1— Ger. 
.Em. 304. 1 — H. Ox.vu. 5. 54— Pet. 13. 2 and 3—Trag. 27Q—Munt. 233 
— Pet. 11.4. 
(Stem eight to twenty inches high, scabrous and shortly pubescent, slightly 
branched upwards in a corymbose manner, and bearing mostly a single 
| petiolate leaf, blit when there are two, the upper one is usually sessile. 
Leaves more or less ovate, petiolate, subentire or toothed, the teeth 
spreading, hairy or subglabrous, often purplish beneath. Flowers rather 
large, deep yellow, on rather divaricate branches. Involucre (calyx), 
rough, with .black bristly, glands intermixed with a short pubescepce, 
very different from H. Lawsoni. Grev. E.) 
French Lungwort. Golden Lungwort, or (Wall ' Hawkweed. 
Welsh : Heboglys y Muriau. E.) Woods, old walls/shady banks, and 
balks of corn-fields. Bolton Abbey, Craven, Yorkshire. Castle Dinas 
Bran. Mr. Wood. Arthur’s Seat, Edinburgh. Dr. Stokes. Conzic Sear, 
near Kendal. Mr. Woodward. (Cheddar Cliffs, Somersetshire. Mr. 
E. Forster, in E. Bot. On old walls about Shaftesbury; cliffs of Pur- 
beck. Pulteney. Wood between Longridge and Shepscombe, near Pains- 
wick. Mr. O. Roberts: or may not this latter station, as also that of 
Cheddar Cliffs, belong to H. sylvaticmn, it being extremely difficult even 
on the examination of many supposed specimens of each, to indicate 
invariable specific characteristics ? At Hilton, Ryhope, and Castle 
Eden Dean, Durham. About the Lakes of Cumberland and Westmore¬ 
land. Mr. Winch. In Anglesey. Welsh Bot. On the High Tor rocks, 
Dartmoor. Rev. J. Pike Jones. E.) P. July. 
(Var, d. FI. Brit, is said to have been discovered on Ben Gloe, and other 
mountains of Scotland, by Mr. J. Mackay, who described it with leaves 
toothed and snipped, not spotted; stems only a span high, hairy, nearly 
naked; blossoms double the size of those of other varieties; calyx 
covered with soft hairs, of a black colour. Very nearly allied to this 
must be considered 11. pulmonarioides of Villars, H. pidmonarium of 
E. Bot. 2307. 
Stem branched, cymose, with few leaves, solid : leaves spear-shaped, deeply 
toothed, the teeth pointing forward. Radical-leaves numerous, rather 
clouded with purplish-browm than spotted, narrower than those of 
H. maculatum ; Jlowers also fewer and larger, and stem not half so tall 
as in that species. 
Gathered by Mr. W. Borrer on the banks of the Scottish river Nevis, near 
the bridge : also on Gorsdale Scar, Yorkshire. Mr. Winch. July. P. E.) 
(Mr. Dawson Turner suspects a new species, most resembling H.murorum, 
will be found on the walls of Castleton Castle^ Derbyshire. E.) 
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