306 PENTANDRIA. MONOGYNIA. Phyteuma. 
near Hastings. Mr. J. Woods, jun. ditto. In a small swampy place on 
Maiden Down, opposite the Maidenhead Inn, Somersetshire. Mr. Sole. 
On the bogs of Haldon and Dartmoor, Devon. Rev. Pike Jones. In the 
Scilly Islands. Hooker. On the lawns of Ardgowan. Mr. A. Edgar. 
Abundant in the immediate neighbourhood of Greenock. Mr. M f Dermaid. 
Hook. Scot. By the side of the path leading down to Rhyader y 
Wenoel, (the Swallow’s Cataract,) a fall of the Llygwy, between Capel 
Curig and Bettws, North Wales. E.) P. May—Aug. 
(4) Capsules prism-shaped. 
C. hy'brida. Stem stiff and straight, somewhat branched at the base: 
leaves oblong, scolloped : calyx longer than the blossom. 
(E. Bot. 375. E.)~ Ger. Em. 439. 2—Park. 1331. 2—H. Ox. v. 2. 22. 
(About a span high, rough with minute hairs. E.) Calyx segments perma¬ 
nent, crowning the ripe capsule. Woodw. Blossoms (few, terminal, soli¬ 
tary, E.), purple, deeply divided. The great length of the capsule, and 
the segments of the calyx reaching above the top of the blossom, at once 
distinguish this from every other British Campanula .* 
(Smith observes that C. speculum is scarcely different, unless from its 
larger blossom, and more branched stem. E.) 
Corn Bell-flower. ( Speculum Veneris minus. Ger. Em. E.) Chalky 
corn-fields. Bury and elsewhere in Suffolk, in chalky corn-fields. Mr. 
Woodward. (Broomfield Essex. Mr. W. Christy. About Dorking. 
Mr. Winch. In corn-fields near the school, Rugby. Baxter, in Purt. 
Sunderland Ballast Hills. Mr. W. Weighed. Winch Guide. E.) 
A. July—Aug.t 
PHYTEU'MA. Bloss . wheel-shaped, with five strap-shaped, 
deep, segments : Summits two or three-cleft: Caps, two 
or three-celled ; bursting laterally. 
P. orbicula're. Flowers in a globular head: floral-leaves spear- 
strap-shaped, fringed. 
Dicks. H. S. — (Hook. FI. Lond. 55. E.)— E. Bot. 142— Jacq. Ausir. 437— 
Col. Ecphr. 224— Barr. 525— Riv. Mon. 109. 1— H. Ox. v. 5. 47— 
Ger. Em. 455. 5. 
( Root long and woody. Herb milky, not acrid. Stems solitary, undivided, 
leafy, about a foot high. All the leaves on long stalks. Bloss. brilliant 
deep blue, numerous. Sm. E.) 
(A variety with white blossoms is recorded by Pulteney as growing about 
Buriton, in Hampshire. E.) 
Round-headed Rampion. Chalky pastures. Downs of Sussex and 
Hampshire. Near Leatherhead. (About Dorking. Mr. Winch. E.) 
P. July—Aug. 
* Linnaeus had good reason for considering this as a plant having no very permanent 
character ; for Mr. Robson, having sown it in his garden, raised plenty of luxuriant plants, 
which ripened their seeds ; but these seeds the following year produced plants, the greater 
number of which were C.speculum, and the rest an intermediate plant with smaller flowers 
than the latter, but larger than the former. 
+ Phalena exsoleta, (and Heriades Cumpanularam , E.) feed upon the different species. 
