526 DECANDRIA. DIGYNIA. Chrysosplenium. 
P. uni'flora. Stalk bearing only one flower: (pores of the anthers 
contracted, tubular: stigma with five pointed rays. E.) 
( Hook. FI. Lond. 207. E.)— E. Bot. 146— Riv. Pent. 139. 1— H. Ox. xii. 
10. 2 — FI. Dan. 8. 
( Flower odoriferous, white with red streaks, nearly an inch broad. Leaves 
nearly circular. Stem one inch high ; peduncle two inches long. E.) 
Single-flowered Winter-green. Fir woods (since destroyed, as also 
this beautiful little plant. Prof. Hooker,) near Brodie House, in Moray, 
Scotland, plentifully, (discovered by James Brodie, Esq. On the Islands 
of Harris and Bernera among the Hebrides, gathered about the year 
1783, by Mr. James Hoggan. Mr. Gotobed. In 1824, found plentifully 
in the woods at Scone, by Mr. Bishop; also by Sir G. Mackenzie, Bart, 
upon his estate at Coul, in Boss-shire. Hook. E.) P. July.* 
DIGYNIA. 
CHRYSOSPLE'NIXJM.f Cal. coloured, four or five-cleft: 
Blass, none: Caps, two-beaked, one-celled, many-seeded, 
partly beneath: division of the valves extending but 
half way down. 
C. alternifo'lium. Leaves alternate. 
Dicks. H. S. — E. Bot. 54— FI. Dan. 366— Wale. — Pet. 6. 10— H. Ox. xii. 8. 
S—J. B. in. 707. 1. 
Larger than the next species, (and somewhat earlier in flowering. Mr. O. 
Roberts, E.) so that where they grow intermixed this may be known at 
some distance. Stamens three-cornered. Boot-leaves longer than the leaf¬ 
stalks. Woodw. Middle stem-leaves solitary or alternate. {Stems three 
to six inches high, succulent, angular, decumbent, branched at the sum¬ 
mit. Leaves kidney-shaped, numerous at the base. Flowers in a ter¬ 
minal corymb, small, bright yellow, the central one mostly five-cleft, and 
decandrous, the others four-cleft. E.) 
Alternate-leaved Sen-green. Golden Saxifrage. Wet shady 
woods, along with the C. oppositifolium } but less frequent. About Esholt, 
on the river Air, eight miles above Leeds, plentifully. Mr. Woodward. 
Boggy grove on Porland Heath, near Norwich. Mr. Woodward. Pur¬ 
lieu Lane, leading from the Wytch to Mathon, Worcestershire. Mr. 
Ballard. River side and woods at Roslin. Mr. Brown. Moorlands at 
Belmont, Staffordshire. Mr. Pitt. In a wood at Colton Beck Bridge in 
Furness Fells. Mr. Jackson. Banks of the Wear, opposite Cocken. Mr. 
Winch. Baydales, near Darlington. Mr. Robson. (Moat at Naworth 
Castle, Cumberland. Hutchinson. Edge of the mill dam, near the bot¬ 
tom of the Beech Lane, and stream sides, near Tocknels, Painswick. Mr. 
O. Roberts. Balsal-temple, Warwickshire. Purton. St. Bernard’s 
Well; Arniston and Auchindenny woods. Greville. Bally last, Tyrone. 
E. Murphy, Esq. E.) P. March—May. 
* (Few plants are better calculated to adorn the wilderness than these truly elegant 
species ; nor is their culture in peaty soil particularly difficult. E.) 
■j* (From Kpvtxog , gold, and, as is conjectured, <puMov, a leaf, or, more appropriately in 
this instance, the petal. E.) 
