900 . SYNGENESIA. iEQUALIS. Crepis. 
shaped, with a few pointed teeth towards the base, edges and ribs slightly 
hairy. . Flowers large, yellow, Fruit-stalks branched, cottony. Floral- 
leaves awl-shaped. Calyx scales strap-spear-shaped, the outer somewhat 
cottony, the inner smooth. Seeds cylindrical, smooth, furrowed. Down 
as long as the calyx. Woodw. 
Narrow-leaved Hawkweed. (Welsh: Heboglys culddail. E.) Hedges 
and dry shady places. Ditchingham, Norfolk. Mr. Woodward. Ditch 
banks near Birmingham. Stokes. (Woody hills at the back of Thorpe, 
near Norwich. E. Bot. Sea coast at Rooker’s Gill, near Monk Wear- 
mouth, Durham. Winch Guide. Dartmouth Castle. Rev. J. Pike Jones. 
On the walls of Warwick Castle; and at Hord’s Park, Salop. Purton. 
On south east side of Anglesey. Welsh Bot. King’s Seat, Dunkeld. 
Lightfoot. E.) 
Var. 2. Leaves smooth, very entire, dark green; Dill, in R. Syn. truly 
linear. 
Pet. 13. 12. 
About London, but not common. Near Bungay, frequent. Mr. Wood¬ 
ward. P. Aug.* * 
CRE'PIS.f Hecept. naked, (very slightly hispid : FI. Brit. E.) 
Calyx double, outer one deciduous : Down hair-like, 
somewhat pedicellate. j 
O. fcet'ida. (Leaves between notched and winged, with reversed 
teeth, hirsute: leaf-stalks toothed: stem hairy: calyx downy. 
E.) 
(E. Bot. 406. E.)— Col. Ecphr. 242-— Park. 794. 3— Bod. 641. 3— Lob. Obs. 
113. 1, and Ic. i. 226. 1»— Ger. Em. 279— H. Ox. vii. 44— Pet. 12. 8 and 9 
— Magn. Bot. 129. 
Unopened Jlowers nutant. Leaves smelling like bitter almonds. Linn, 
rather like opium. Relh. Floivers small, yellow. ( Stems spreading, 
branched, leafy, cylindrical, hairy ; the central one only upright, about a 
foot high. Calyx hairy or woolly. Blossom reddish at the back. Re¬ 
ceptacle honey-combed. Seeds slender, yellowish, furrowed, roughish. 
FI. Brit. Down on a long rough stalk. Herb lactescent. E.) 
Fetid Hawk’s-beard. Dry meadows and pastures. About Cambridge. 
Ray. Banstead Downs, by the side of the road to Dorking. Charlton 
chalk pits, Kent. Petiver. Near Greenhithe. Barton, near SwafFham, 
Norfolk. Mr. Pitchford. Near the sixth mile stone from Bury to New¬ 
market; and Great Saxham. Sir T. G. Cullum. Willington Ballast 
Hills, Durham. Mr. Winch. E.) B. June—July. 
C. tecto'rum. Leaves spear-shaped, notched, sessile, smooth; the 
lower ones (runcinate, amplexicaul. E.) 
Curt. 327—{E. Bot. 1111/ F.)— Wale. — Fl. Dan. 501—Pet. 12. 6—Gmel. 
ii. 6— Lob. Ic. i. 239 —Ger.-'Em. 297. 4— Park. 794. 2— H. Oavvii. 7. 29 
* (In Scania, the Narrow-leaved Hawkweed is said to furnish an elegant dye for 
. woollens. .IS,-).: . • 
+ (From xpenis, a shoe; the blossom bearing some resemblance to the form of a slipper. 
E.) 
* (It has been attempted to limit the present genus to such as have the down of the 
seed sessile, the others being denominated Barhhausia and Prendnth.es; but the down, 
being far from invariable in this respect, affords no positive criterion; E.) 
