898 SYNGENESIA. .&QUALIS. Hieracium. 
(H. Cerinthoi'des. Stem solid, bearing a corymb, with leaves 
hairy, slightly toothed: stem-leaves oblong, semi-amplexicaul: 
root-leaves inversely egg-shaped : leaf-stalks bearded with long 
hairs. 
E. Bot. 2378 —Gouan. III. t. 22, /. 4— Villars Dauph. v. 3, t. 32. 
Herb rather glaucous, one to one foot and a half high ; stem nearly smooth, 
stout, slightly angular. Flowers rather large, pale yellow, on bristly 
stalks. Cal. covered with shaggy, but short, hairs. Radical-leaves be¬ 
sprinkled, though often slightly, with dots, a little like those of Cerinthe. 
Sm. 
Honeywort-leaved Hawkweed. Near the head of Clova, &c. An¬ 
other discovery of Mr. G. Don, who states it to be by no means a 
scarce plant in the Highlands of Scotland, growing upon rocks. 
P. Aug. E.) 
(H. amplexicau'le. Glanduloso-pilose: stem corymbose: leaves 
toothed; radical ones oblongo-ovate, petiolate; cauline ones 
cordate at the base, amplexicaul. 
Has many points in common with the last species, but is every where 
covered with brownish glandular hairs, most thickly on the peduncles 
and involucre. Lower cauline leaves more or less oblong; upper ones 
truly cordate. 
Amplexicaul Hawkweed. Walls the castle of Cleish, Kinross-shire. 
Mr. Arnott. Clova mountains. Mr. G. Don. Hook. Scot. Said likewise 
to have become naturalized on the walls of Magdalen College, Oxford. 
Purt. Mid. FI. P. Aug. E.) 
H. sylvat'icum. (Stem solid, many-leaved, simply racemose: leaves 
egg-spear-shaped, toothed chiefly about the base : teeth pointing 
forward. Sm. E.) 
( E . Bot. 2031. E.)— Allion. 28. 1— Lob. Ohs. 517. 2, and Ic. i. 517. l—Ger. 
Em. 304. 2—Park. 801. 2 —Tabern. 505. 1— J. B. ii. 1034. 3. 
{Flowers bright yellow, smaller than those of H. maculatum , and much 
fewer, often but two or three in the panicle. Sm. E.) 
(Wood Hawkweed. Welsh: Heboglys y goedwig. E.) H. murorum a. 
FI. Brit. H. sylvaticum a. Hook. II. sylvaticum. With. Sm. Grev. 
Chalky woods, or old park walls. E.) Old Roman Camp at Sidmonton, 
near Newberry. On the side of the lake Llyn y Cwn. Ray. (Epping 
Forest, near Highbeach. Mr. E. Forster. Coal-pit heaps, near Gates¬ 
head, and on the town w r alls of Newcastle. Mr. Winch. Walls in War¬ 
wick, Perry. Arthur’s Seat, and Braid Hill. Dr. Graham. Grev. Edin. 
E.) On Dudley Castle Hill, Staffordshire. P. Aug. 
H. villo'sum. Stem tubular, branched: leaves rough with hair: 
root-leaves egg-shaped, toothed: stem-leaves heart-shaped, am¬ 
plexicaul. 
Jacq. Azistr. 87— Clus. 141— J. B. ii. 1027— H. Ox. vii. 5. 58— {E. Bot. 
2379. 
Root-leaves very variable in size, the smaller ones on very long leaf-stalks. 
Stem-leaves sometimes strap-shaped, and not embracing the stem. The 
whole plant woolly, and when cultivated rising to the height of four feet. 
(The copious long shaggy hairs of the stem, leaves, and calyx ; and lemon- 
coloureAjlowet's, nearly two inches over, distinguish this species. Sm. E.) 
