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Full text of "English botany, or, Coloured figures of British plants /edited by John T. Boswell Syme ; the popular portion by Mrs. Lankester ; the figures by J. Sowerby, J. de C. Sowerby, J. W. Salter, and John Edward Sowerby."

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ENGLISH BOTANY; 


COLOURED FIGURES 


er 


BRITISH. PLANTS. 
EDITED BY JOHN T. BOSWELL SYME, F.LS. Erc. 


THE POPULAR PORTION BY MRS. LANKESTER, 


AUTHOR OF “WILD FLOWERS WORTH NOTICE,” “ THE BRITISH FERNS,” ETC. 


THE FIGURES BY 
J. SOWERBY, P.LS, J. D* C. SOWERBY, F.LS, J. W. SALTER, ALS, FGS 
AND 


JOHN EDWARD SOWERBY 
ILLUSTRATOR OF THE “FERNS OF GREAT BRITAIN,” “GRASSES OF GREAT BRITAIN, 


‘WILD FLOWERS WORTH NOTICE,” ETC. ETC. 


Third Edition, 
ENLARGED, RE-ARRANGED ACCORDING TO THE NATURAL ORDERS, ae : 
AND ENTIRELY REVISED. a & 
HONS OF ALL THE SPECIES BY THE EDITOR. : 


WITH DESCRIP? 


VOLUME. a 
i 


“LONDON: 


ENGLISH BOTANY. 


ORDER LXXXVII._GRAMINA. 


Annual or perennial herbs, rarely shrubs or trees, with tufted or 
creeping soboliferous rhizomes. Stem cylindrical or 2-edged, com- 
monly hollow except at the nodes, simple or branched. Leaves 
alternate, distichous, sheathing, with the sheath almost always split to 
the base, or rarely only at the apex, generally with a small prominent 
scale (ligule) at the apex of the sheath, between the stem and the 

ina; lamina usually linear, rarely lanceolate, with parallel vena- 
tion. Flowers perfect or unisexual, and in that case monecious, very 
rarely diecious or polygamous, in spikelets arranged in panicles, 
spikes, or compound spikes; the part of the stem passing through 
the inflorescence is termed the rachis. Glumes 2 at the base of the 
spikelet, rarely solitary or absent. Florets in the spikelets, when 
- more than 1, arranged on an azis, bifarious, each enclosed between | : 
2 glumelles (pales) or scarious bracts, generally — cond 
ee cts 


2 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


Tree L—ORYZE. 


Spikelets closed during flowering, arranged in a lax open panicle, 
laterally compressed, each containing a single © einen or unisexual 
floret (in the latter case moneecious or ), some- 
times accompanied by the rudiments of 1 or 2 other florets. Glumes 
both absent or rudimentary. Pales glumelike, equal or nearly so, 
the lower one keeled, 5- to 7-ribbed, the upper one 3- or rarely 5- 
ribbed. Stamens 6, 3, 2,or 1. Styles short; stigmas 2, protruded at 
the base of the floret, between the margins of the pales. Caryops 
free, laterally compressed, not furrowed. 


GENUS .—LEERSIA,. Soland. 


Spikelets shortly stalked, arranged in a Jax open panicle, sometimes 
enclosed in the uppermost leaf-sheath, laterally compressed, closed 
during ‘flowering, each here. a single perfect flower, or in some 

ja single male flower without the rudiment of another. 


; 1, boatshaped-compressed and keeled, 
not awned, parchmentlike. “ Lodicules 2, membranous. Stamens 6, 
 3,2,0r1. Styles 2, short, terminal; stigma feathery, protruded at 
the sides of the flower. Caryops glabrous, free from but closely 
enveloped by the pales, strongly laterally compressed, not furrowed. 


—— ‘There is but one 


ae A eee ele grasses 
: sGal 


_SPECTES ; L-LEERSIA ORYZOIDES. Soland. 
; Prats MDCLXXXVI. 


Reich. To. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CLEXXI. Fig. 494, 


=”. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. N No. 1582. 


GRAMINA, Ss 


Brockenhurst Bridge. In several places by the side of the Mole, 
Surrey, from East Moulsey to Brockham Bridge, and by the canal 
near Woking Station, Surrey. 


England. Perennial. Late Autumn. 


Rootstock extensively creeping, sie small tufts of stems and 
long white scaly stolons. Stems erect or somewhat decumbent and 
subgeniculate at the base, cylindrical, smooth with downy nodes, 
simple or sparingly branched near the base, 9 inches to 4 feet re 
Leaves numerous, flat, 3 inches to 1 foot long by 4 to 4 inch b 
gradually acuminated, pale green, thin, rough, with bristles on the mar- 
gins, and on the midrib fccath, especially t towards the base. Sheaths 
covering the internodes and frequently even the nodes, rough. Li 
short, about half as long as broad, blunt, arowe dontioaiaae: Puncle 
2 to 9 inches long, frequently remaining permanently included in the 
slightly swollen sheath of the uppermost leaf, but sometimes wholly 
exserted: in the former case, the spikelets are nearly all perfect ; in 
the latter, some or even all of them have occasionally the ovary 
abortive. Rachis striated, rough; panicle branches, especially the 
ultimate ones, capillary, fle exOOIS, rough. Spikelets very shortly 
stalked, articulated to the pedicels, } to } inch long. Glumes absent. 
Lower ‘pale much more curved than the upper, and abruptly acu- 
minated into a short blunt point, nearly white and transparent with 
a green stripe along the lateral rib, which is nearer to the margi 
than to ne Rie minutely pubescent, with longer hairs along ie 

margins, lateral ribs, and keel, especially on the latter ; sae pale | 
Hices. a little lenges than the lower, strongly ciliated on the keel, 
especially to the apex. Stamens sometimes only 2 in the eub- - 


4 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


pound spike, or rarely in 2 rows in a unilateral simple spike or spike- 
like raceme, laterally compressed, each containing a single perfect floret, 
sometimes with a rudimentary one above it. Glumes conspicuous. 
Pales large, nearly equal, the lower one usually keeled, the upper one 

2-ribbed. Stamens 3, rarely 2. Styles long or rather short; stigmas 
2, protruded at the apex of the floret or shins its middle, between the 
tips or edges of the pales. Caryops free, laterally compressed, not 
furrowed 


GENUS II—SPARTINA. Schreb. 


Spikelets sessile, arranged unilaterally in 2 rows on the racemosely dis- 
posed branches of a compound spike, laterally compressed, closed during 
flowering, each containing a single perfect floret without the rudiment 
of another. Glumes 2, unequal, the upper one much the larger and 
equalling or exceeding the pales, greatly laterally compressed, keeled, 
pointed or very shortly awned, sub-coriaceous. ales 2, — the 
upper one much the longer, the lower one lanceolate, compressed 
keeled, entire or notched at the apex, not awned, upper pale folded 

in two with 2 app t raised into keels. Lodicules 
roy ee Seno & Styles es elongated, more or less coherent nt ; 
stigmas long, rather thick, shortly hairy, protruded at the — 
the feact, Caryops alecan, free, strongly laterally co ess 
furrowed. 


‘The name of this genus is derived from the Greek, ox : made of 
the Lygeum Spartum and like material are sil ellod spate by tho <a 
Spaniards call the Stipa tenacissima Esparto. 


SPECIES L-SPARTINA STRICTA. Roth. 


GRAMINA, 5 


short, fimbriate. Leaves with their apices rarely extending to the top 
of the second sheath above them, shorter than the spikes, broadly 
linear, flat, smooth, with closely-placed thick glaucous cartilaginous 
ribs on the face, dark green and shining on the back. Spikes 2, rarely 
3 or 4, terminal, approximate sessile, or the upper ones shortly stalked, 
erect, closely applied to each other by their backs, unilateral; rachis 
flexuous, flattened on the back, smooth, extending beyond the base of 
the uppermost spikelet, but not conspicuously exceeding and often 
falling short of its glumes. Spikelets 6 to 10 in each spike, erect, 
alternate, about half their own length apart, sessile, linear-lanceolate. 
Glumes unequal, pubescent, the lower one about two-thirds the 
length of the upper, acuminate; the upper one bidentate, with a very — 
short terminal awn, 1-ribbed, coarsely and shortly ciliated on the keel. 

In muddy salt marshes covered at high water, especially near the 
mouths of tidal rivers. Rather local, but abundant in many places 
on the south and east coast from Devon to Lincoln. 


England. Perennial. Late Summer, Autumn, 


Root extensively i | seats the stems in small tufts. 
Flowering stems 6 inches to 1 foot high, rarely more, though I have 

seen specimens 2 feet high. Hoo rather succulent, easily broken, - 
knots covered by the leaf-sheaths. Leaves 2 to 6 inches long by 4 
+ inch broad, erect, stiff but not tough. Spikes 2 to 3} inches lng, 
all so closely applied that they give the inflorescence the appearance 
of asingle spike; this is particularly the case when there are only. 9 
spikes. rh tgp to } inch long, pale yellowish-olive. Anthers yel- 
lowish-white. Stigmas very p 1, nearly white: 
Plant with a strong ¢ odour 1 bling that of th “orig, aici 


- : a — awn or mucro, and the sides have each a 


6 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


Leaves with their apices extending beyond the top of the second 
sheath above them, as long as or intiger than the spikes, broadly- 
linear, flat, smooth, with closely-placed thick glaucous cartilaginous 
ribs on the face, dark green and shining on the back. Spikes 5 to 8 
(rarely 3 or 4 or more than 8), terminal, sub-approximate, sessile, 
erect, the uppermost one stalked, loosely applied to each other, dis- 
tichous, slightly unilateral ; rachis slightly flexuous, triquetro-trigo- 
nous, smooth, extending besoad the glumes of the uppermost spikelet 
for a distance about equal to these ihe, Spikelets 8 to 20 in each 
spike, erect, alternate, more than half their own length apart, sessile, 
- linear-lanceolate. Glumes unequal, glabrous or sub-glabrous the lower 
one about half the length of the upper, acuminate, the upper one 
entire, gradually accuminated or obliquely truncate at the apex, 
which has no distinct awn, 3-ribbed, rough on the keel. 

On mud in tidal rivers, submerged at low water. Rare; abundant 
on the mud-flats of the river r Itchen, cwagestd introduced from 
| moka : 
oe pega” Late Summer, Autumn. 
Very near s. stricta, of which Dr. J. Hooker, in his admirable 
“ Student's Flora,” regards it as a a while Dr. Asa Gray con- 

: siders it as but a Mae} of S. stricta. _alterniflora is 


ra long by 1 to } in inch ety not contracted aad | articulated a 
the base as in S. stricta; the spikes, besides being more pena 
_ are more slender, more distant, more loosely applied, and from 3 to 
“ inches long or more. The point of the rachis is prolonged much 
further beyond the uppermost spikelet, and has the spikelets more. 
dintychous and placed further apart than in S. stricta; the spikelets 
are rather smaller, scarcely } inch long, and glabrous; the outer glume _ 
is shorter, the inner one not conspicuously notched, and without an. 
conspicuous lateral 


Many-spiked Cord Grass. 


= 1a states that at otiaaplel this grass is « regularly cut down o the 
ove haehubeaboninorty ons wor 
: y Bie Ride, 


yor reeds for —— ceca oma 


GRAMINA. % 


a single perfect floret without the rudiment of another. Glumes 2, 
nearly equal, rounded on the back, obtuse and not awned, subscarious, 
longer than the pales. Pales 2, unequal, scarious, truncate, not 
awned, the lower one the larger, rounded on the back, inclosing 
the upper one, upper one with 2 ribs. Lodicules 2, very minute. 
Stamens 3. Styles 2, free; stigmas very long, slender, hairy, pro- 
truded at the apex of the fewer, Caryops glabrous, free, laterally 
compressed, not furrowed. 


Name from yapai, on the ground, and é&ypwertc, grass. 


SPECIES I—-CHAMAGROSTIS MINIMA. Borkh. 
PLATE | 
Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CLXXII. Fig. 453. 
Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. No. 1089. 
Mibora verna, Pal. de Beawy. Gren. & Godr. Fl. de Fr. Vol. Ill. p. 444. Parl. Fl. 

Ital. Vol. I. p. 103. Reichel, c. p. 57. 

M. minima, Desv. Bab. Man. Brit. Bot. ed. vi. p. 401. Duwmort. Agrost. Belg. p. 137. 
Knappia agrostidea. Sm. Eng. Bot. ed. i. No. 1127, 

Sturmia verna, Pers. Syn. Vol. 1. p. 76. 

S. minima, Hoppe. Gaud. Fl. Helv. Vol. I. p. 148. 

Agrostis minima. Linn. Sp. Plant. p. 93. 

The only known species. 

In sandy pastures by the sea. Very local. Anglesea. Not un- 
common in Jersey. It is said to have occurred near Leigh, Essex; but 
there are no specimens in existence to confirm this unlikely locality. 
_ About twenty years ago it was abundant on Gosford Links, Hadding- 

ton, where I believe it was sown by the late covets on wl 

de 1 a : 


‘raised points, the lower ones ptr di ated i ie } 
b hs, sexe os gaan narrower and longer 
ale ha 


listic ous Hort scarcely ig Climes lead-xc 
ith with : rican keel the outer one subsaccat 


4 to} inch ager r w 12 beet: ciara ae 


8 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


these it is difficult to es — ought to be adopted. I have fol- 
lowed Kunth, Koch, Mr. Bentham, and Dr. Hooker in calling it Cha- 
magrostis minima, a isa s generic name—Mibora is older, 
and on this account has been adopted by Professor Babington. But 
ete authors have not adopted the oldest generic name in similar 

s; as, for example, Arctium is universally employed by them 
jitoad of Lappa. French authors of course may be put out of the 
question, as they invariably give the preference to a name bestowed 
on a plant by a Frenchman whenever there is a shadow of an excuse 
for doing so. 

Early Sand-Grass. 


GENUS IV—-CYNODON. Rich. 


Spikelets sessile, arranged unilaterally in 2 rows on the digitately 
disposed branches of a compound spike, laterally compressed, closed 
during flowering, each containing a single perfect floret with the 
rudiment of a second one above it. Glumes 2, nearly equal, keeled, 
. pointed but not awned, subscarious, rather shorter than the pales. 

: — equal, parchment-like, pointed but not awned, the lower one 

at-shaped, bluntly keeled aid inclosing the upper one, the upper 

ons with 2 small approximate keels on the back separated by a furrow. 

Lodicules 2, fleshy. Stamens 3. Styles 2, short, separate ; stigmas 

_ long, rather thick, densely hairy, protruded below the apex of the 
flower. Caryops glabrous, free, laterally compressed, not furrowed. 


“The derivation ea 


SPECIES L-CYNODON DACTYLON. Pos : 
PLatTE MDCXC. 


< 3 ‘Boieh To. FL Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CLXXII. Fig. 454. 


a No. 1581. 
anes on ee Bee 850. 


GRAMINA. Mi 


in the neighbourhood of Penzance and Poole. Vazon Bay, Guernsey. 
It used to be naturalised on Kew Green, near the church, where [ 
gathered it in 1852; but I am not aware if it still maintains its station 
there. | 
England. Perennial. Summer, Autumn. 


Stems prostrate, 3 inches to 3 feet long, rooting at intervals, and 
sending up barren and flowering shoots 2 inches to 1 foot high. 
Barren shoots often prostrate, densely clothed with distichous rigid 
glaucous leaves 1 to 3 inches long. These leaves are glaucous, narrowed 
towards the apex, glabrous or slightly hairy beneath, with numerous 
close ribs, and wi with a few long cilie at the top of the 
sleet on each side of the obscurely marked dee Spikes 2 to 2 
inches long. Glumes more or less tinged with purple. 
qs inch long. Lower pale ciliated. Stigmas crorane about the 
middle of the pales, not between their tips as in the other Spartinex. 


Creeping Dog's-tooth-Grass. 
French, Chiendent dactyle. German, Gefingerter Hundszahn. 


This curious little grass is very local, and confined almost entirely to the south 
coast. For a long time it was supposed to be peculiar to Penzance, but now both the 
Devon and Dorset coasts claim it as a rare native. It is, however, highly probable 
that minute search would at least tend to increase its stations, as few even amongst — 
working Botanists are sufficiently critical in grasses to assure us that all its stations 
are ascertained. It throws out long, very tough runners, which creep for many yards 
through and over the loose soil, rooting at every joint, and furnished with flat, rather 
short, leaves, of a slightly glaucous hue. When in bloom the grass has a very pecu- 
iar aspect, differing from that 4 ports Its. : Tong runners OF 
Semon tad ie rapid growl: tenner ae 


complete mesh-work of ¢ “ ‘ping nae Ep helt A 4 sand from the action ntti - 
- nt ae 


10 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


floret sometimes absent. Stamens 3 or 2. Styles long; stigmas 2, 
protruded at the apex of the floret between the tips if the pales. 
Caryops dorsally — not furrowed, or furrowed on the face 
furthest from-the ra 


GENUS V—DIGITARIA. Scop. 


Spikelets in pairs, one of which is sessile, the other shortly stalked, 
arranged unilaterally in 2 rows on the digitately or racemose-digitately 
disposed branches of a compound spike, dorsally plano-convex, closed 
during flowering, each containing a single perfect floret with the rudi- 
ment of a second neuter one beneath it. Glumes 2, very unequal, the 
lower one minute or obsolete, the upper one shorter than the pales, 
5 to 7 ribbed on the back, acute but not awned, subscarious. Pales 
2, equal, parchment-like, not ribbed, smooth, acute but not awned, 

: —- not keeled on the back, the neuter floret with but 1 pale, 
2 is ribbed and resembles the upper glume. Lodicules 2, fleshy. 
me Stamens, 3. Styles 2, terminal, elongate; stigmas short, rather thick, 

lumose, protruded at the apex of the flower. _ Caryops glabrous, free, 
bi-convex, not furrowed. 

‘This genus is named in allusion to the Giegocs Bo a ee 
_ le — 


SPECIES L-DIGITARIA HUMIFUSA. Pers. 
-Prare MDCXCI. 


Reick Ya: Fic Genta ot Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CLXX 

ts Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsicc. No. 878. 
filiformis, Rol. Reich. Ie. lc. p. 68. 
ae ose glabra, Rom. & Sehultes. Parl. Fi. Ital: Vol. I p. 127. 

a = ambiguum. D. €. Fl. Fr. Vol. I. p. 127. : ae 
: cum glabrum, Gaud. Hook. fil. Stud. Fl p. 425. Kock. Syn. ee 
oor aan Gren. & Godr. FI. de Fr. eer as Kunth, Enum. Plant. 


~ ie - Spikes 2 to 8, a : 
ical. Lower glume rudi- __ 
Pale of the neuter aieaen ioe 


: “hsvish sand Bungay, ‘Suffolk, 


GRAMINA. 11 


“ Norfolk ” (Hooker and Arnott’s “ British Flora”); but the station, 
if it exist, appears to be unknown to the Rev. Kirby Trimmer. 


England. Annual. eigen Autumn. 


nger ribs. Spikes 4 to 3 inches JON ok approximate, ulti- 
mately flees Spikelets about +1; inch long, at first green, ulti- 
mately more or less tinged with dark purple, the lower one nearly 
sessile, the upper one of each pair with a stalk of about t its own length. 
Lower glume absent or very small. 
Glabrous Finger-Grass. 
German, Blut-Hirse. 

Its spreading claw-like habit has obtained for it the name of crab-grass as well 
as finger-grass in the United States. In New York we saw it about houses growing 
much in the same manner as Poa annua with us, and we were inclined to look upon 
it in this position to be as with us an introduced agrarian. We say this on the 
assumption that D. sanguinale is scarcely separable from the D. humifusa, In Ger- 
many the allied species yields a small grain, much in demand as a substitute for sago 
and arrowroot. 


GENUS VI-ECHI NOCHL OA. Pal. de Beauv. 


Spikelets subsessile, in shortly. stalked pairs and fascicles, uni- 
pm ten in 21 rows on 1 the racemosely 


i u se no" : d,s mc wee 

: tot Kd onthe ak the ower 

Se a fleshy. Stamens af ‘Styles 2 2, terminal, 
| or trade 


12 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


SPECIES I-ECHINOCHLOA CRUS-GALLL Pal. de Beaw. 
Pirate MDCXCTI. 

Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CXCI. Figs. 515 and 516. 

Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsicc. No. 2167. 

gery Crus-galli, Kunth, Enum. Plant. Vol. I. p. 143. Dumort. Agrost. Belg. 


ne eat. Linn. Sm. Engl. Bot. ed.i. No. 876. Hook. fil. Stud. Fl. p. 425. 
Koch, Syn. Fl. Germ. et Helv. ed. ii. p. 892. Gren. & Godr. Fl. de Fr. Vol. IIL. 
p- 460. Parl. Fl. Ital. Vol. I. p. 115. 

Leaves glabrous, without any ligule. Branches of the spikes 
alternate, compound; rachis angular, hispid on the angles. Spike- 
lets pubescent. Pale of the neuter floret mucronate or more or less 
longly awned. 

* In cultivated ground and waste places. Imperfectly naturalised. 
Jt used to occur year after year in Battersea Fields. In 1852 and 
1853 it came up abundantly on the mud from the Thames laid down 
_ on what is now Battersea Park. It has also been reported from near 

Guildford and Godalming, Surrey. In ‘the: “ British Flora” i it is 


curred near Thetford, N , and several loc: 
are given for eu Middlesex ¥ in Trimen and Dyer's “Flora” of fat 
county, viz. near Hampton Court, Appleton, and Barnet, &c., but 
it would perhaps be better to expunge it from the British = even 


. ie is a naturalised plant. 


[England.] Anmual. Autumn. 


Stems. numerous, often rooting at the base, geniculate oe stout, oe 
1 to 3 feet high, generally bran ched. Leaves 3 inches to 1 foot ae _ 


4 a ‘dull pants n, with rather tant ribs and 9 toll stronger . oe 


GRAMINA. 13 


GENUS VII.—SETARIA. Pal. de Beaw. 


Spikelets subsessile, in small fascicles arranged on every side of the 
rachis of a dense cylindrical or slightly lobed spikelike panicle, dorsally 
plano-convex, closed during flowering, each surrounded at the base 
by an involucre of stiff bristles, and containing a single perfect floret 
with an imperfect male one beneath it. Glumes 2, very unequal, the 
lower one much smaller than the upper, the upper rather shorter than 
the pales, indistinctly ribbed, pointed but not awned, scarious. Pales 
2, equal, parchmentlike, indistinctly ribbed or transversely rugose, 
acute, but not awned, concave, but not keeled on the back, the lower 
floret with 1 or 2 pales, the lower of which or the only one is indistinctly 
ribbed and resembles the upper glume. Lodicules 2, fleshy. Siatiehs 

3 in the perfect flower, but usually only 1 or 2 in the male flower. 
Styles 2, terminal, elongate; stigmas short, thick, hairy, protruded at 
the apex of the flower. Caryops glabrous, free, plano-convex, not 
furrowed. 


ge al 
1S 


This genus of Grasses is so called from seta, a bristle or hair. 


SPECIES I—-SETARIA VIRIDIS. Pal. de Beaw. 
PLATE MDCXCIII. 


Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Me I Tab. CLXXXVIIL. Fig. 510. 
_ Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsice 475. 
acorns viride, Tinn, Sm. Bag Bat ed. i. No. 875 


14 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


ae on wc bomen more or less geniculate, branched tuwards the 
ending, 3 to 18 inches high. Leaves 1 to 6 inches 
lon ng by 4 to 2 inch broad, lively green with a paler midrib, with 
tant scabrous ribs and serongly scabrous margins. Ligule 
oe of a tuft of hairs. Panicle $ to 3 inches long. Bristles 4 
‘6: ‘, inch long. Spikelets } inch long. 
Green Bristle-Grass. 

French, Sétaria vert. German, Griiner Fennich. 
This grass grows on sandy soils in some districts, and is in some countries a 
troublesome weed. It produces abundance of seed, of which small birds are very 
fond, 


SPECIES I—SETARIA VERTICILLATA. Pal. de Beau. 
Pirate MDCXCIV. 
Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CLXXXVIII. Fig. 511. 
Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. No. 1974. 
‘Panicum verticillatum, Linn. roe eigen ie i. No. 874. 
Panicle spikelike, ¢ ty 1, rather dense, interrupted and broken 
, = * the base, not lobed. Bristles of each spikelet 1 to 4, 
but co. , equalling or slightly arene the tomes but 
"weet talee ws fous See inting , green, 
often tinged with purple. Upper glume as ety as the fertile floret. 
_ Upper pale of the male floret one-third the length of the lower, which 
about equals the fertile floret; pales of the fertile floret equal, finely 
punctured, but not transversely wrinkled. _ 
Tn cultivated fields in Surrey and Norfolk, but scarcely pufficiently | 
well established to be included in the British lists. Indeed I have 
heard of no well-authenticated notice of its occurrence, except asa 


- = weed in Chelsea Botanical Garden, since Battersea Hehe s were con- _ 
a verted into Battersea Park. 


Oo ae Annual. Late or. Autumn. 


GRAMINA. 15 


These are introduced plants, and so generally so over a great part of the world 
that it is difficult to make ont their original type or habitat, but they have probably 
travelled from the East to the West, following man as a tiller of the soil wherever he 
extends his localisation for this purpose. The confusion of the species is not greater 
than that of the genera in this group: Echinochloa, Panicum, Setaria, and others are 
often referred to the same genus. 


Trise [V.—PHALARIDEZ. 


Spikelets closed during flowering, arranged in a dense cylindrical 
or ovoid spikelike panicle, rarely in a lax open panicle, not unilateral, 
laterally compressed, each containing a single perfect floret, with 1 or 
2 inferior imperfect flowers, either scalelike and neuter, or more 
developed and male. Glumes equal, or the lower one shorter, but 
still very conspicuous, the upper one or both, as long as the florets. 
Pales closed during flowering, the lower one keeled, the upper one of 
the neuter flowers absent. Stamens 3, more rarely 2. Styles long; 
stigmas 2, protruded at the apex of the floret between the tips of the 
pales. Caryops laterally compressed, not furrowed. 


GENUS VIT.—HIEROCHLOE. Gwmel. 


Spikelets stalked, arranged in a lax open or rarely contracted 
panicle, laterally compressed, biconvex, closed during flowering, each 
containing a single perfect floret, with 2 male florets i it. 
Glumes a; equal, j nearly as as the floret, keeled, shi : 

es it, but not awned, sca 


ae two Greek words, lpi, sr snd ae a grass,— “iy A‘ 3 


ay i eee 


16 . ENGLISH BOTANY. 


SPECIES I-HIEROCHLOE* BOREALIS. Rim. & Schultes. 
Pirate MDCXCV. 
Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CLXXXITI. Fig. 500. 
H. odorata, Wahl. Koch, Syn. Fl. Germ. et Helv. ed. ii. p. 895. 
Holeus odoratus, Linn. Sp. Plant. p. 1485. 

Rootstock extensively creeping, with elongate stolons. Leaves flat. 
Panicle open during and after flowering, with capillary flexuous 
spreading branches. Pedicels wholly ¢ plabrous: Glumes acuminate. 
Pales of the male florets mucronate, that of the perfect floret acute. 

In damp places by the sides of rivers and streams. Very local. 
Abundant by the river near Thurso, Caithness. Said to have been 
found by Mr. G. Don in Glen Cally, Forfarshire. 


Scotland. Perennial. Late spring, early Summer (?). 


| ‘ootstock slender, whitish, throwing off stolons which produce in 
be summer _ autumn — — stems at a considerable distance 


: ht deep green, "eco cul pe nee ory gone on the 
Ss sheaths smooth ; ligule membranous, parabolical.. Flower- 
ing stems in the wild plant 6 to 15 inches oe the sheaths not 

extending above the middle; the uppermost lamina § long, and 
the longest not above 2 inches ; ; ligule much longer bee kn 
lanceolate. Panicle 1 to 2 inches ‘long, the lower branches about halt = 
the length of the panicle, widely spreading. Florets drooping, } inch 
long. Glumes shining, scarious, very pale green, ti nged with purple. 
_ Pales of the male flower scabrous and , hairy, the lower one 
: strongly ciliated on the margins, acuminate and mucronate, but the 
- mucro is so short that it scarcely deserves the name of an awn. Pales 
: the fertile flower narrower than those of the male pai —_ 
is, Plant with the scent of Anthoxanthum. 
r Babingto: states that bapa age flowers in ily: aad Be Se 


Garden oe from : 


GRAMINA. 17 


This grass, dedicated to the Virgin Mary on account of its sweetness, is strewn 
about Catholic churches on festival days. It is called Vanilla Grass on account of its 
perfume, which latter, it would seem, is of the same kind as that of the Anthoxanthum 
odoratum, to which, indeed, it is not distantly allied. 


GENUS IX.—_ANTHOXANTHUM. Linn. 


Spikelets persistent, subsessile or very shortly stalked, arranged in a 
rather dense spikelike panicle sometimes slightly interrupted towards 
the base, laterally compressed, slightly biconvex, closed during flower- 
ing, each containing a single perfect floret, with 2 neuter florets beneath 
it. Glumes 2, very unequal, the lower one smaller, keeled, scarious, 
pointed or mucronate, the upper one as long as or longer than the 
florets, keeled with 2 ribs besides the keel, gab hanrhacnouc. mucronate. 
Pales of the perfect floret 2, minute, rounded on the back, not awned, 
scarious; pale of the neuter florets 1, emarginate, awned about the 
middle or towards the base, the awn ae the lower floret straight, of 
the upper one bent. Lodicules absent. Stamens 2. Styles “rather 
long; stigmas very long, slender, hairy, protruded at the apex of the 
flower. Catyops glabrous, free, oval-oblong, slightly laterally com- 
— not channelled. 

The of the name of this rangi arene rte ere 
Ear@éc, yellow. : 


ee Carrmozancnox ODORATUM, Tim 


| Centre —" Fr es : 


18 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


In meadows, pastures, woods, &c. Very common, and generally 
distributed. Var. f 1 “i common, but still very frequent. 


England, Scotland, Ireland. Perennial. Early Summer to 
Autumn. 


Rootstock tufted, not creeping, producing several or numerous stems. 
Stems simple, 8 inches to 3 “feet high, erect, from a more or less 
geniculate ‘smooth or sometimes slightly rough i in var. 8. Leaves 
of the catantnal barren shoots longer than those on the elas 
stems, often 1 foot long, very go to those of Hierochloe t 


numerous ribs and usually distant haes bright green, smooth and 
shining beneath where there is a strong keel as in Hiicrsckins borealis, 
but they are very slightly rough on the margins: uppermost stem-leaf 
% to 2 inches long (the lower ones a little more), with a long lanceo- 
late li Panicle 1 to 4 inches long, the larger examples with it 
obed and interrupted at the base than it is in the 
Bettis oes stalked, } $ inch long, slightly spread- 

x from glabrous with a few ciliz 


er r densel 2 pubescens, A ovata groan! share coos 
otched, both wit . from 


rter than its pale; that of the upper about « ing and slightly 
- Pales of the: ‘ertile ees shorter than ioe of giant florets, 
and without any awn. Anthers purple or eye yellow. Plant with 
- the scent of woodruff when it is in process of drying, but t not odorous 
: _ fresh like Hierochloe odorata. 

— Sweet-scented Vernal-Grass. ee 
‘Brom F Flouve odorante. German, Gemeines Ruchgras. 


GRAMINA. 19 


three leads is found to answer the same purpose. ‘Such flavoured hay,” says 
Professor Buckman, ‘‘ we have found in practice to be eaten with avidity, and to do 
more good than ordinary flavourless herbages.”’ 

One of the chief merits of this grass is its early growth, and the fact that it 
elena to — _— vapise! =p flowering stalks till the end of autumn. 
hardy y upholds its claim to a place in the composition 
of all permanent pastures. 


GENUS X.—_DIGRAPHIS. Trin. 


Spikelets persistent, shortly stalked, arranged in a long narrow rather 
dense panicle with short lateral branches spreading during flowering 
and adpressed afterwards, laterally compressed, closed during lowering, | 
each containing a single perfect floret, with the minute scalelike rudi- 
ments of 2 saint florets beneathit. Glumes 2, equal, longer than the 
floret, strongly keeled, but not evidently winged, each with 2 ribs in 
addition to the keel, mucronate, parchmentlike. Pales of the per- 
fect floret 2, faintly keeled, pointed but not awned, the lower one 
ultimately cartilaginous and a little larger than the upper; pale of 
the neuter florets 1, very minute, scarious, not awned. Stamens 3. 
Styles 2, long; stigmas long, thick, plumose, protruded ‘at the apex of 
the flower. Caryops glabroas, free, anaes — com- 
pressed, not channelled. 


The derivation is from dvw, two, and ypadic, a oe 


SPECIES L-DIGRAPHIS ARUNDINACEA in, a 


20 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


to 1 foot long by $ to 1 inch broad, with a short membranous ligule. 
Panicle 4 to 7 inches long, open at the time of flowering, afterwards 
contracted, the longest branches about 2 inches long, bare of spikelets 
for about 4 inch, the uppermost branches with spikelets nearly to the 
base. Spikelets about 4 inch long, green, or tinged with reddish- 
purple. Lowest glumes 3-ribbed, gradually acuminated. Pales a little 
shorter than the glumes, glabrous, shining, ciliated, with 2 pilose 
scalelike barren florets at the base, about half the length of the pales. 
_ A-variety with the leaves striped with white is common in gardens 
under the name of “ Ribbon Grass,” or “ Gardener’s Garters.” 
Ribbon Grass. 
German, Glanzgras. French, Baldingere colorée. 

This grass is generally distributed in sluggish rivers, pond sides, and marshy 
places, in all of which the sportsman welcomes . as a covert for water-fowl. 

The Variegated Ribbon or Striped Grass of our gardens is a variety of a more 
dwarf habit ‘and less tendency—like all or orelae plants—to flower. A still 
more dwarf tufted variety, even less disposed to flower, is for these qualities much 

. a in modern ribbon borders. 


GENUS XI-PHALARIS. Lim ann. 


leach vith 


e ones ee tely pace and Lee little larger — a 
; pale oF ie eee florets 1, very minute, A us, 
SS. Styles 2, very long} co i 
at the p r 


GRAMINA, 21 


swollen at the base, leafy for three-quarters of their length. Panicle 
very dense, spikelike, ovate-ovoid or oblong-ovoid. Spikelets persistent. 
Glumes half-elliptical, white, with a green band at the origin of the keel, 
and another parallel to the inner margin over the 1 or 2 ribs; wing 
of the keel commencing near the base and terminating at the apex, 
broadest about one-fourth from the apex, where it is more than half 
the width of the glume, white, finely serrulate on the margin. 
Barren florets linear, half as long as the fertile flower, ciliated. 

In waste places near towns, and the borders of fields where it has 
been cultivated; indeed, were it not for cultivation, cleaning of bird- 
cages, and pthaaeead bird-catching, the plant would no doubt dis- 
appear from Britain, so it has little claim to be ees 
perly naturalised plant. | 


_ (England, Scotland, Ireland.] Annual. Late Summer, Autumn. 


Stems 1 to 3 feet high. Leaves 3 to 6 inches long by + to 3 inch 
broad, the uppermost sheath greatly swollen and forming a spathe in 
which the young panicle is included, but ultimately the panicle is 
exserted for about twice the lene of the uppermost sheath. Panicle 
1 to 2 inches long by about # inch broad. Spikelets 1 inch long. 
Pales a little shorter than the glumes, at first green, ultimately 
shining, coriaceous, and light brown, closely atime 3 the seed, = 
in this state constituting the “ canary seed” so much used b bird 
fanciers, for which the plant is cultivated as a crop in = gee in 
the south of England, especially in Kent. — 


Canary-Grass. 
German, Kanarien-Hirse. eos oo 
i aie of eater Bape and snow maar in 


72 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


GENUS XIU—ALOPECURUS. Linn. 


Spikelets very shortly stalked, articulated to the pedicles, deciduous, 
arranged in a very dense cylindrical or fusiform or ovoid spikelike 
panicle, laterally compressed, plano-convex, closed during flowering, 
each containing a single perfect floret, without any rudiment of a second. 
Glumes 2, equal, longer than the florets, keeled, acute, or obtuse, 
not awned, often more or less connected at the base, subherbaceous. 
Pale 1, keeled, with 2 ribs on each side besides the keel, usually with 
a dorsal awn, scarious. Lodicules absent. Stamens 3. Styles 2, 
long or Ber often more or less united; stigmas long, rather thick, 
hairy, } protruded at the apex of the foket: Caryops glabrous, free, 
elliptical and laterally compressed, not channelled. 


Se Oe eee Sas et Wie Greek wor adwrnt, a fox, and oipa, a tail. 


aoe Vol. L. Tab. C C UNS T 
Ballot, Fi. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. No. 476. _ 

7 Annual. Stems erect, sarcely geniculate, branched fro the lower 
en: Leaves thin, with rather few and distant broad slightly-raised 

| - pee pee, not —— —— narrowly esaeens -fusiform, 


os -anches ae with a single pkeleks Spikelets oval-elliptical. ‘Cs 
— nearly to the middle, converging at the tips, ees 
acuminate, glabrous; keel slightly winged, ciliated with long hairs _ 
ae siege and with very short ones above the aiid Awn 
from near the base of the pale, and rere as C2 again as the _ 


GRAMINA 93 


es from the lowest nodes in all but weak stems. Barren shoots 
none. Sheaths slightly rough, the lower ones shorter than, the upper 
ones longer than their leaves. Ligule prominent, rather blunt, longer 
than the diameter of the stem. Longest leaves 3 to 4 inches long b y 
4 inch broad; the uppermost leaves, especially on the branches, 
under an inch lone. Panicle 1 to 4 inches long, more lax than in any 
of the other British species of Alopecurus. Glumes, exclusive of the 
awn, about } inch long, green, with darker bands along th e ribs, ulti- 
rad usually tinged with red or purple on the outside, and often 
with a purplish-brown spot at the apex. Keel of the glumes broadest 
- about one-fourth from the apex, and narrowing off from that point 
both to the apex and to the base, where it disappears. Awns slender, 
exserted for about the length of the spikelet. — yellow- 
ish-white or purple. : 
| the vies sometimes, when growing in barren ground, s are slightly 
aC e ulate at the base, but the habit of the stems 
resembles that of the canary-grass more "than it does the other species 
of A rus. 


Slender Foz-tail Grass. 
French, Vulpin des champs. German, Acker-Fuchsschwanz. 

This is an agrarian species, well known, under the name of Black Grass, as a 
common and detested weed in the poor exhausted arable field. 

SPECIES I-A LOPECURUS PALUSTRIS. 
Prares MDCC. MDCCI. MDCCII. 

Perennial. Stems more or less geniculate, honed! deccmnbest, and | 
often rooting at the basal joints, simple or branched 
knots. ee thin, with “numerous” “distant a ribs, or 
: = beg with a few greatly- : ‘slight 


from the en | 


24 | ENGLISH BOTANY. 


more rarely terrestrial, the lower joints slender or slightly swollen, 
simple or branched from the lower knots. Leaves thin, with numer- 
ous close broad slightly-raised slightly-rough ribs, pale green, slightly 
glaucous. Panicle narrowly-cylindrical, rounded at the base and 
apex, frequently slightly attenuated towards the apex ; panicle- 
branches mostly with 2 to 4 spikelets. Spikelets oval-oblong. Glumes 
united only at the very base, obtuse, almost truncate, membranous, 
pubescent, a little shorter than the pales, pale green, with darker 
green stripes; keel not winged, ciliated with long stiff hairs through- 
out. Awn from a little below the middle of the pale and extending 
very little beyond the glumes. Anthers shortly-oblong, orange- 
scarlet or yellowish-white. 
In shallow pools, splashes, and ditches; very rarely on the ground. 
Local, and confined to the southern half of England, excluding 
apparently be heat hie reaching to Norfolk, from whence the 
specimen figured in the first edition of “English Botany ” was ob- 
tained; Gactworas Warwickshire (Mr. H. Bromwich): ; Oakmere, 
: hactiteh Aer C. Bailey); and Denbigh. Said to have been found 
by fe and Forfar, but: these counties cannot be included i in 
nfirmed. 


+. - 
they have co: 


: land. ‘Perennial. Early Summer to Autumn. 
_ Stems numerous, more or less decumbent at the base and genicu-— 
oe lat, sometimes with the lower joints slightly Sey 6 a 18 Sore 

long, the upper ita ae Tarren shoots are gts ometimes ( : 


GRAMINA, 25 


Sus-Srecies I.—Alopecurus geniculatus. 
Prate MDCCI. 
Reich. Te. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CLXXVIII. Fig. 472. 
Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. No. 2164. 

Stems geniculate, decumbent and usually rooting at the base, 
floating or terrestrial, the lower joints slender or rarely slightly 
swollen, simple, branched from the lower knots. Leaves thin, with 
numerous close broad slightly raised rough ribs, dull green, slightly 
glaucous. Panicle cylindrical, rounded at the base and apex, not 
tapering more towards the apex than the base; panicle-branches 
mostly with 2 to 4 spikelets. Spikelets oblong. Glumes united only 
at = Mot base, subacute, as long as the pales, , pubescent, 

arth a fed coloured or more rarely green stripe on each 
side of jhe keel, and another at the apex, parallel to the inner margin; 
keel not winged, ciliated with long silky hairs throughout. Awn 
from below the middle of the pale and nearly as long again as the 
glumes. Anthers narrowly oblong, yellowish-white or purple, changing 
to orange-brown. 

In meadows and wet places, and occasionally floating in the water 
in ponds and ditches. Common, and generally distributed. 


England, Scotland, Ireland. Perennial. Early Summer to 
Autumn. 


Stems 3 to 18 inches long, geniculate, the last joint aes the 
panicle erect ; lowest joint sometimes glans swollen, when it has 
een mistaken for A. bulbosus. ves similar to t snes aioet He s 


ol on ate 


re, eee saat oe or ee a 
7? £246.45 eee 


art. “Aven ae 4 down on =e 8 
ga, ich, even 


26 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


are certainly slight, but they appear to be quite constant. Both 
Mr. H. C. Watson and myself have raised A. fulvus from seed, and 
find it retains its characters, such as they are. 
A. pronus (Mitten) I have always understood to be a form of A. 
eniculatus, with the stems not geniculate. Dr. Hooker, however, in 
the “ Student's Flora,” says, it is a “ prostrate form” of A. pratensis. 
As I have not seen the plant, I am unable to offer any opinion. The 
Rev. W. W. Newbould informs me that from a casual examination 
of the specimens, named A. pronus, in Mr. Borrer’s Herbarium at 
Kew, he is inclined to think that there is either a mixture of speci- 
mens of A. geniculatus and A. pratensis, or that they are hybrids. If 
the latter be the case, probably A. pronus is the same as A. pratensis- 
geniculatus Wichura (A. hybridus, Wimmer), mentioned in Garcke’s 
‘¢ Flora of Nord- und Mittel-Deutschland” (ed. vi. p. 438), of which 
I have specimens from Bremen, collected by Dr. Foeke. 


Bent-stemmed Foxtail-Grass. 
French, _ genowillé. German, Geknieter Fuchsschwanz. 


_ Hi— Alopecurus bulbosus. Linn. 
| -Prare MDCCII. 
, Reich, ts Fl. Germ. it Hale. Vol. 1. Tab. CLXXVIII. Fig. 474, 
-Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. No. 1355 
Stems usually more or less eee erect, or decumbent but 
not rooting at the base, terrestrial, simple, the lowest joints swollen 
into an ovoid corm tapering upwards. Leaves rather thick, with 


- “numerous close broad prominent slightly rough carti! 


ribs, 
_ pale green, slightly glaucous. Panicle fusiform-cylindrieal, abruptly 
pointed at the base and apex, broadest in the middle; panicle- 
branches mostly with 1 or 2 spikelets. Spikelets narrowly oblong. 


= _ Glumes free to the very base, acuminate and shortly mucronate, as 
long as the pales, somewhat parchmentlike, thinly pubescent, pale 


green, with a dark lead-coloured stripe on each side of the keel, 
and another parallel to the inner margin at the apex; keel not 
> Sant ee are also the cee? with om capes hairs in the 


GRAMINA. 27 


been found by Mr. Drummond near Douglas, Cork, but has not been 
observed recently. 


England. Perennial. Early Summer. 


Extremely similar to A. geniculatus, but with the base of the stems 
swollen into bulblike corms. The lower joints of the stem are never 
rooting, the stem is more slender and rey, less geniculate, and the 

upper leat commonly much further f the panicle than in A. ge- 

niculatus. The leaves are narrower and have more prominent nerves 
than in A. geniculatus, and are commonly channelled. The panicle, 
which is # to 2 inches long, is more slender and more fusiform than 
that of A. geniculatus ; the ‘spikelets are narrower, but rather longer 
(4 inch). "The glumes are much more acuminate. Spit mucronate, 
and are — with fewer and shorter hairs ; the keel and ribs on 

have long hairs, at least in the lower part, but not so long 
as those eo the keel of A. geniculatus. 

I have never gathered A. bulbosus, but Mr. F. Stratton has sent 
me numerous fresh specimens from Brading, Isle of Wight, some of 
ren I have in cultivation. 

m still in some doubt if A. fulvus, A. geniculatus, and A. 
‘tices ought to be considered merely as subspecies of one super- 
species. Dr. Bromfield, in “ Phytol.,” ser. i. vol. ili. p. 1080, says, 
“T cannot rid my mind of the impression that A. bulbosus and fulvus 
are but states or perhaps permanent varieties of A. geniculatus, much 
as I should wish to be convinced to the contrary by the many and 
able botanists who still keep them apart.” And the Messrs. Paget, 
in the “ Nat. Hist. of Yarmouth,” say of A. fulvus, geniculatus, and 

ilbosus, that they ‘‘ may be traced into one another by the closest 

and most regular gradations.” I quote the last — from the a 
: Cacaieg Britannies,” not having access to the above-ns ee 


oo Foctail-Grass. 


28 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


as long as the pales, somewhat parchmentlike, thinly pubescent, pale 

2yish-green, with a dark green stripe on each side of the keel, and 
another parallel to the inner margin extending nearly to the base ; 
keel not winged, ciliated (as are also the ribs) with long silky hairs 
throughout. Awn from below the middle of the pales, dnd about as 
long again as the glumes. Anthers narrowly oblong, yellowish-white 
or purple, changing to orange-brown. 

In meadows and pastures, and by roadsides, &c. Very common, 
and universally distributed. 


England, Scotland, Ireland. Perennial. Early Summer. 


Czspitose, producing very gic stolons, which send up barren 
shoots at a short distance from the parent. Stems 2 to 4 feet high, 
rather stout, the uppermost leaf ey at a considerable distance 
below the panicle. Leaves of the barren shoots 9 to 18 inches long 

by 4 to 8 broad; those of the flowering stem shorter, the uppermost 
-stem-leaf sometimes not more than 1 inch long; sheaths smooth; 
ligule blunt, about as long as broad. Panicle 1 to 3 inches long by 
£ t@ } inch broad. i: long, sine vt 

?rofessor Babington salt. 1 base of the 


"OTESSO} Bab Ine Tt : ‘in narshes the 
stem becomes fleshy, and the plant may be taken for A. bulbosus” 


Meadow Foxtail-Grass. 
| French, pin des prés. German, Wiesen-Pucksscharans. 
m.: _s - . RE SM See | 7 7s, where it. is an extremely valuable pasture 


gras beng relished Dy all cattle, i re del ath eer roto and 


- 


greater on a clayey loam than on & sandy soil, and that the quantity of nutritive 
of three to ten. It does not arrive at maturity _ 
till the pat gear at apearpne ya pees = is inferior to many grasses for 
‘the purposes of - — eee: It fl 


yields a con uae crop of leaves if mown 


| 


GRAMINA. 29 


thick, with a few very prominent slightly rough cartilaginous ribs, 
bright green, not glaucous; ligule short, blunt. Panicle oblong- 
cylindrical, subtruncate at the base, abruptly rounded at the apex, 
broadest near the base; panicle-branches with 2 to 6 spikelets. 
Spikelets oval-oblong. Glames united at the base for about one-fourth 
of their length, subconnivent at the tips, gradually acuminate and 
acute, as long as the pales, at sca henncea: densely or thinly silky- 
pubescent, preenish-white, with a dark green or dark purple narrow 
stripe on each side of the keel, and another parallel to the inner 
margin extending nearly to the base; keel not winged, ciliated (as are 
also the ribs) with very long silky hairs throughout. Awn absent, or 
from a little below the middle of the pale, and extending beyond the 
glumes for about half their length, and often much less. Anthers 
oblong, yellowish-white. — 
Var. a, genuinus. 


Panicle compact. Glumes slightly connivent, rather abruptly acu- 
minate, marked with green or greenish-black lines, rarely tinged with 
purple. Awn absent, or if present scarcely extending beyond the 
glumes. 

Var. 8, Watsoni. 


Panicle rather lax, usually longer than that of var. a. Glumes 
connivent at the tips, more gradually acute than those of var. a, with _ 
lead-coloured or purple lines, and ote nica also oie bee nar an | 
Awn extending es ceas the glumes for a = me-fourth of — 
their | 


co 


In wet t paces 0 on | mountains. i ‘Not untouen in the Jes — 
[ ns, reaching Canlochan @ SS 


head .d sparingly above Loch Kander, 
hea of Glen Calter: in wich county it is said to occur also on 


Ben-maec-dhui, and B 


© Ben Lawers, W. H. Campbell,” but T never oni Bod te plant 
oa 


mountain, though I searched for it careful 
;” Ross and mr de given as ¢ ounties 


oe 


| : aa but T have not seen specimens from either. , Ve : n Cadickan Glen : a 
oe H.C. Watson) ; awe ok Kander, head of Glen ie, _ eee 


ch-1 ee Fe em ae Te a ae 


20 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


shorter, and about 1 inch broad, differing from those of A. pratensis 
in the very greatly elevated ribs above and glossy smoothness beneath. 

Spike 2 to 1} inch long, very ad from the long white hairs on the 
margins of the glumes. Spikelets } inch long. 

‘ar. 8 shows some approach towards A. pratensis. Some of of my 
Glen Callater specimens are 2 feet high with as spike 1} inch long. 
Spikelets 1 inch long, the glumes more “gradually 
and more connivent: ‘at the tips than in var. a, and the awn purple 
and about half as long as the spikelet. The leaves, however, are 
precisely similar to those of A. alpinus, var. e, and very different 
trom those of A. pratensis and the continental A. nigrescens (Horn). 


Alpine Foztail-Grass. 


GENUS XUL—PHLEUM. Linn. 


Spikelets persistent, subsessile, arranged in a very dense cylindrical 
or ovoid spikelike panicle, laterally compressed, nearly flat on each 
face, closed during flowering, each containing a single perfect floret, 
in some species with the rudiment of a second neuter one above it. 


_ 2, gt _ than the eaniiets —— obliquely truncate 


-onate parehn ke. Pales 2, scarious, 
oe bee one a hed tranente: and eels toothed at the a 
_ 3- or rarely 5-ribbed, rarely awned; the upper one with 2 approximate 
keels. Lodicules 2, bilobed. Stamens 3. Styles 2, rather long, or 
_ short; stigmas ioe thick, plumose, protruded at the apex of the 
floret. Caryops glabrous, os ovoid, gies compres 3¢ d, not 
channelled. | 

‘Name from the Greek, @éwe, the name of the Saccharum cphelniced, Lam. (See 
Fraas. “ Synopsis,” p. 299.) : ; 

SPECIES I. — PHLEUM ALPINUM. Linn. 
PLatE MDCCV. 


eh To. Ft. Gorm. et Helv. Vol. L Tab. CLXXIX. Fig. 484. 
Fl. Gall. et G Germ. Exsicc. No. 1358. 


rm : oie i inflateds Teale oe S 
= anicle varying fic Pi oid oo 


 W th the sides straight anc 
neate, terminating in a slightly 


the base and apex, very oS 


GRAMINA. 31 


diverging awn, which is as long as the glumes; keel and some- 
times the scabrous awn ciliated with long stiff hairs. Lower pale 
3-ribbed. Rudimentary floret absent. 

In marshy places on mountains. Local. Not unfrequent in the 
glens of the Clova Mountains, Forfarshire. I gathered it in 1851 
very sparingly on Ben Lawers, Perthshire, and abundantly on Loch- 
na-gar and Cairn-towl, Aberdeenshire; in this county it is also reported 
on good authority from the watercourse, Loch Kander, at the head of 
Loch Callander, Ben Avon, Ben-mac-dbui, Ben-a-buird, and Braeriach. 
It is also said to have been found by Dickson on Garvay Moor, Inver- 
ness-shire; but Dickson’s stations are not to be trusted. 


Scotland: Perennial. Autumn. 


Stem 3 to 18 inches high, usually more or less curved at the base. 
Leaves 3 to 5 inches long, } to 4 inch broad, gradually tapering to 

e point, rough on the edges; the uppermost one } to 1 inch long, 
much shorter than its sheath, which is slightly swollen. Panicle 1 to 
2 inches long. Spikelets (exclusive of the awn) 3 inch long. Glumes 
parchmentlike, rounded-truncate at the apex, green on the back, more 
or less tinged with purple towards the edges and apex, ciliated with 
very long hairs on the keel, each one terminated by a long rough awn, 
which is without ciliz, except at the very base. : 

In the typical Phleum alpinum of Scandinavia the awn is more or 
less ciliated; but in all the British specimens the awn is simply 
scabrous, or with a few cilie at the base: this form is identical with 
the Swiss plant named Phleum commutatum by Gaudin, which by 
general consent is now sunk under Phleum alpinum, Zinn. The form 
of the panicle and inflation of the upper sheath vary so much that — 


they are worthless as 


Alpine Timothy-Grass. 
‘French, Fltole des Alpes. German, Gehirgslische. 


mt Mighty elevated and sightly vw 


on ENGLISH BOTANY. 


dense. Spikelets spreading, narrowly oblong, with the sides straight 
and parallel towards the apex. Glumes treneates terminating in an 
erect scabrous awn, about half as long as the glumes; keel ciliated 
with long stiff hairs, the cilia ceasing a little way below the awn. 
Lower pale 3-ribbed. Rudimentary floret absent. 


Var. a, genuinum. 
Pirate MDCCVI. 
P. pratense and P. intermedium, Jord. Bor. Fl. du Centre de la Fr. ed. iii. Vol. IL. 
p. 693. 
Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CLXXIX. Fig. 482. 
Billot, Fi. Gall. et Germ. Exsiee. No. 2759. 


Stem erect, scarcely geniculate and rarely swollen at the base. 
Leaves broad. Spike thick, long, cylindrical. Glumes pale greenish, 


a handeenad ea 


— Te. Le. Tab. _CLXaI. Fig. = 
P. preteen Beinn, Jon ope FL du Centr. de la Fr. ed. iii. Vol. IT. 
p. 693. 

Stems more or less decumbent ees pence and often swollen 
at the base. Leaves rather narrow. Spikes slender, usually more 
or less fusiform or ovoid. Glumes nearly white, with green keels, 
and often slightly tinged with purple. 

Common, and universally distributed in England and the south of 
Scotland. More rare in the north, and probably introduced in the 


A : Hebrides, Orkneys, and Shetlands. Not abouts ies Vorlons Var. 6 


‘ in Deid a common; but I do not possess specimens from any 


of Fife, deere this is = eee a 


GRAMINA. so 


ae ioe moped widely different, they are completely connected by 
termediate forms. Anthers rs usually yellowish-white in var. B, 
Common Timothy-Grass. 
French, Fléole des prés. German, Timothee-Gras. 

It is stated that this grass was first recommended for agricultural use about twenty 
years ago under the name of Timothy grass, an appellation it received from Timothy 
Hanson, who cultivated it on a considerable scale for agricultural purposes in North 
America. It is a hard coarse grass, not much liked by horses, goats, cows, or sheep, 
and swine refuse it. 

Tt is used as a shifting grass crop in Canada, where on the shores of the lakes we 
have seen immense crops as tall as wheat with spikes quite half a foot long. 

It is not used as a self-grass in England, as it is too long in coming to perfection ; 
but it is the chief source of the rough but nutritious winter fodder in some of the— 
States, where natural meadow does not yield the herbage that it does at home. 

Timothy grass has been highly recommended for the purpose of hay, as the stems 
during the time the seeds are ripe co contain more nutritive matter than that of 
most other 


superior quantity of nutritive matter in the stems of tlte seed crop. Mr. Sinclair 
therefore considers it unfit for cultivation by itself as a husbandry grass, but of great 
ee as a constituent of any mixture of grasses for permanent pasture, or the alternate 

usbandry, where it should always form a part of the crop. It grows best in most 
aie soils, and is common throughout the whole of Britain 


SPECIES II—-PHLEUM BOEHMERIL. Sehrad. 
Prats MDCOVIIL. 


Reich. Te. FL Germ. et Helv. Vol. i Tab. CLAXX, Fig. oes . 
Bill . Exsice. No. 13. 


stan and reer so ) at te ape rather dense. e . re 


34 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


In chalky and sandy fields. Very local. Bartlow Hills, Essex; 
Mildenhall and Kentford, Suffolk; Hardingham, Mundford, Beach- 
anwell, Narborough, and Martham, Norfolk; Hildersham (close by 
‘the Essex station), Cambridgeshire, and formerly in several other 
stations in the same county; Hertfordshire. I have a specimen said 
to be collected in a chalk-pit near Rochester, Kent, by Mr. William 
Mclvor in 1846: it is an extremely luxuriant one, leading one to 
suspect that the example is a cultivated one. 


England. Perennial. Summer. 


Plant growing in small tufts, producing numerous stems from 3 to 
20 inches high. Leaves with rough ribs and very rough 8, 
those even of the barren shoots short, from 1 to 3 inches, the “eer 
most ae oe 4 to + meh mies by 3 —_ broad. Panicle 4 2 to 


— Purple-stalked Tint Grom - 


sree ae s1V-PHLEUM, ARENARIUM. Linn, 
: - Phare MDCCIX. — 
. k ‘Reich, Te. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CLXX 
ms sone FL Gall. et Germ. Exsice. No. 477. ae 
is arenaria, Huds. Sm. Eng. Bot. ed. i. No. 222. 
Chilochloa arenaria, Pal. de Beaw:. Reich. Te. Le. p. 64. é 
Annual. - Stem erect or ascending from a curved or sighely 2 ae 
: Ame slender base, simple, or feinched at the base. Leaves flat, with 
ete ice elevated eee te smooth fe Be which : to 7 are : 


ee eT ee ee ee 


GRAMINA. 35 


Links at Rattray Head, Aberdeenshire, but there appears to be no 
record of its occurrence on the west coast, though it has been found 
in the Isle of Man. Local, but widely distributed in Ireland. 


England, Scotland, Ireland. Annual. Early Summer. 


Plant growing in small tufts. Stems 2 inches to 1 foot high, the 
outer ones in each tuft geniculate at the base, and generally branched, 
with the branches very short, and commonly about equal in lengt oth 
among themselves in each tuft: in consequence of this a tuft of the 
plant has one set of panicles near the ground and another raised con- 
siderably above it. Leaves very short, rarely 1 inch long, } to 1 inch 
broad, the uppermost stem-leaf } to 2 inch long, with a very long 
ligule, that of the lower leaves being ne Spikelets } inch long. 
n with a dark k green band on each side of the keel, 

: the Metatien th the | © of which are white and shining ; inner 
margins of the dikes farnished with a few bristles, shorter than those 
of the keel. Anthers yellowish-white. 


Sand Timothy-Grass. 


7@ 


Trine VI.—SESLERIEZ. 


Spikelets closed during flowering, arranged in a dense cylindrical 
or ovoid or rarely unilateral spikelike panicle, slightly laterally com- _ 
pressed, each containing 2 to 13 perfect florets. Glumes equal, or the 
lower one shorter, but still very conspicuous. Pales 2, a o 
the lower one not keeled. Stamens 3. Styles short; stigmas 2, very = 

long, protruded at the mae of the floret between the tips of the pal i. A 
: be bi ae eee : in 


386 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


dorsally compressed, convex on the back, flat and not furrowed, but 
with a basal impression on the face. 


Named after Leonard Sesler, an Italian botanist. 


SPECIES I-SESLERIA CHRULEA. Scop. 
Prate MDCCX. 
Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CLXVIITI. Fig. 444. 


Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsicc. No. 479. 
Cynosurus ceruleus, Linn. Sp. Pl. p. 106. 


Rootstock not stoloniferous. Leaves long, flat, parallel-sided, 
abruptly pointed and terminated by a very short mucro. Panicle 
spikelike, short, ovoid or oblong, rather lax. Spikelets 2- to 3-flowered. 
Glumes nearly as long as the florets, abruptly acuminated, usually 
denticulate towards the apex, terminated by an awn about one-fourth 

_ their own length. Lower pale 5-ribbed, the midrib excurrent into a 

short awn, about one-fourth the Jength of the pale, lateral ribs or at 
Teast one Agee of them also excurrent in the form of teeth or very 


‘Oe ee cnpecalle noe a mica-slate, and a and on 
: ed ocal. It occurs in the counties of York, Durham, North- 

dsuhertacd: Westmoreland, and Cumberland, and sisi in the Scotch 
: ‘Highlands, i in Perth, Stirling, and Ross. Local in Ireland, and ¢ con- 
_ fined to the western counties, from Lough ttc tes 


— Scotland, Ireland. Perennial. — 


- Plant growing in dense or more usually in loose tufts; in the 
former case, the ranches of the rootstock are short, in the latter often _ 
several inches long, with numerous radical fibres, and thickly clothed __ 
with the decayed sheaths and bases of the leaves. Stem 2 to 18 
| inches long, very slender, leafy at the base, and with 1 or 2 ery § : 
leaves above the basal tuft, sed or less decumbent, at least in fruit, 

when it is often prostrate-arching. Leaves variable in length and 
th even in the same pant 3 z a to 1 os et sets me 

more or less rough on the : erous moy 
) he 


4 


GRAMINA, 37 


Trine VII.—AGROSTIDE#. 


Spikelets open during flowering, arranged in a lax open panicle, 
or more rarely in a dense cylindrical spikelike panicle, laterally com- 
pressed, each containing a single perfect floret, sometimes with a 
superior rudimentary one, very rarely with 2 or more perfect florets. 
Glumes equal or unequal, at least one of them longer than the florets. 
Pales scarious, the lower one keeled. Stamens 3. Styles very short; 
stigmas 2, protruded at the base of the florets between the margins of 
the pales. Caryops subcylindrical or compressed, with a furrow line 
on the inner face, loosely covered by the pales. 


GENUS XV—GASTRIDIUM. Pal. de Beauv. 


Spikelets shortly stalked, arranged in a narrow compact dense lobed 
panicle with short lateral branches which are spreading during flower- 
ing and afterwards adpressed, laterally compressed, open during 
flowering, each containing a single perfect floret without the rudiment 
of a second. Glumes 2, nearly equal, both much longer than the 
floret, bluntly keeled, acute but not awned, swollen and ultimately 
indurated at the base, subscarious. Pales 2, very unequal, hyaline, 

the lower one very shortly bearded at the base, truncate and denticulate 


at the apex, with or without a bent dorsal awn ; upper pale very ae 2 


minute, with 2 keels. Lodicules 2, entire. Siaaenn s 8 Styles 2 
Pe ron ae Se at the sides of the floret fee 


38 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


shining, glabrous, scabrous on the keel. Lower pale hairy or pube- 
scent, ipeclly towards the margins in the apical half. Awn from 
about one-fourth below the apex of the pale, nearly as long as the 
. ance. or even exceeding them, sometimes absent. 
In cornfields, dry pastures, roadsides, and waste places. Local. 
Confined to the south of England, reaching north to Glamorgan (or 
perhaps Flint), Warwick, and Norfolk. 


— Annual. Summer, Autumn. 


: seas smooth, the uj permost one nightly swollen, longer 
anicle 


: to 4 ssl long, clove and lobed before and after flowering but 
= = branches oot Adee! es hastidesl are experied, ay 
ull s 


" en ‘part 0 raging oe fos pin a foe 
- rte oreo ge pex of the glumes eee way beyond = 
- a a yellow. 


Auned Nilgrass. 
Si 1B Snith my of thin, “An aumaal grog grown g (though rare) in such 
fields near the sea as are overflowed” It is This konetes: not confined to 


the coast, as it occurs in Surrey. - 
o It is recorded by Mr. Pirin aos as having tun gtore nt Seer Valley 
(see “ Botany of Worcester,” p. 61), In this position i ee 
S of the sea-side flora which still lingers in rp cbit oc nn ag 
marine condition, when in fact this line of country j e of the “ oS 
—adaiel Sedans ndaptencoae oe 


GRAMINA. 39 


awn, subscarious. Pales 2, very unequal, membranous, the lower one 
bearded at the base, terminating in 2 bristles at the apex, and with 
an extremely long bent dorsal awn; upper pale shorter than the lower, 
with 2 keels. Lodicules 2, entire or denticulate. Stamens 3. 
Stigmas 2, sessile, plumose, protruded at the sides of the floret 
between the basal margins of the pales. Caryops glabrous, free, 
_ elliptical-fusiform, slightly furrowed on the inner face. _ 

The name of this genus is derived from the Greek words Aaywe, a hare, and 

obpa, a tail—hare’s tail. 


SPECIES L-LAGURUS OVATUS. Lin. 


Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. XCI. Fig. 169. 
Billot, F). Gall. et Germ. Exsicc. No. 182. 


_ The only known species. 

Sandy places by the sea. Very local. Near the most northern 
martello tower, Vazon Bay, Guernsey; L’Ancresse Common in the 
same island (Mr. ©. Bailey and Mrs. Russell); Sewer’s End, near Saf- 
fron Walden, Essex, about 1842, but no doubt a casual introduction. 


Channel Islands. Annual. Early Summer. 


Plant growing in tufts. Stems slightly geniculate at the base, 
then erect or ascending, unequal, 2 to 18 inches high, usually sae 
from the lower nodes, leafy towards the base. Leavesinthe Guernsey __ 

_ specimens 4 to 2 inches long. by 4 4 to = fick broad, ue clothe a 
as with white "soft pub ripper sheaths swollen and all | 
, ; ligule obtuse, aaah as long as broad, ’ 

SU Th! lay 


ding beyond the clumes, | Pee d fully twi \ 
‘ : — terminate the pale. Ant ers ye 
. . Ovate Hare ‘staid. as = : 


- . spikelike before and after flowering. Pedicels 


40 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


GENUS XVIL—POLYPOGON. Desf. 


Spikelets shortly stalked, arranged in a narrow compact cylindrical 
or lobed often spikelike panicle with short lateral branches which are 
spreading only during the time of flowering, laterally compressed, 
open during flowering, each containing a single perfect floret without 
the rudiment of a second. Glumes 2, nearly equal, longer than the 
floret, bluntly keeled, notched at the apex, with a long awn proceeding 
from the bottom of the notch, scarious. Pales 2, unequal, membranous, 
the lower one not bearded at the base, entire or denticulate, with a 
short awn from the back immediately below the apex, or awnless; 
upper pale smaller, with 2 keels. Lodicules 2, glabrous. Stamens 3. 

Stigmas 2, subsessile, plumose, protruded at the sides of the florets 
_ between the basal margins of the pales. Caryops glabrous, free, ovoid, 
not compressed, with a shallow furrow on the inner face. 


The derivation of oo name of this genus appears to be from zoAuvc, much, and 
: Toye, a ——— of the florets. 


_ SPECIES I—POLYPOGON MONSPELIENSIS. Desf. 
Prare MDCCXIII. 


_ Ie. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Yet E Teh UE Big 170. 
illot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. 
a /panicea, Ait. Sm. ‘Engl. oe oe 
Anipevicras: Mowepbtianain Linn. Spec. Plant. P. 89. 
A. paniceus, Lam. Fl. Fr. Vol. TIL. p. 560 
Phleum crinitum, Schreb. Sm. Fl. Brit. Va Ep (a & 


Annual. Panicle very dense, oblong, with Spproxt ate te spent a 
eo branches when in flower, but closed, cylindrical, s vy lobed 


base, the upper portion thickened, as long as br a thi breadi 
eg ‘Measured at the apex), much short - than t 


GRAMINA, eee 


local. Near Porchester, and at several places in Portsea Island, Hants; 
Plumstead Practice Ground, immediately to the south of the butts, 
aud near Erith, Kent; near the “ World’s End,” Canvey Island, 
Essex, and found by Ray in the same county near Purfleet and a 
mile and a half above Tilbury Fort; Cley and Brancaster, Norfolk ; 
near St. Sampson’s, Guernsey. It has occurred as a casual by the 
Berkley Canal, Gloucester; and on the ballast heaps about Sunderland, 
Durham; and St. David’s, Fife. 


— Annual. Summer, Autumn. 


Plant in tufts with numerous stems, which are frequentl 
somewhat duce tent and geniculate and occasionally bechiett nf 
the base in luxuriant eeepes from 3 inches to 4 feet high. Leaves 
1 to 6 inches = by } to } inch broad, with numerous slender very 
scabrous unequal ribe, pale green; sheaths smooth, the uppermost 
one swollen; ligule long, laciniate. Spike 4 to 6 inches long, more 
distinctly lobed in the larger examples than in the smaller. Spikelets, 
exclusive of the awns, +); inch long. Glumes membranous, whitish, | 
with a green stripe from the base of the awn “rind to the base on 
each side of the keel. Awns white, giving a be appearance to the 
panicle, especially i in the larger examples. n, 
de France,” and Professor Parlatore, ae ai Italiana,” describe the 
glumes as entire; they are not so in the dried British, nor in any 
foreign specimens that I have examined, but I have not had fresh 
examples to see if the glumes were entire in such. The apical lobes 
of the glumes, however, are much shorter and blunter than in P. 
maritimus ( Willd), w hich i is a et me of P. oo which : 

not been detected oe 

InP. Mosapeluede 4 re bee pales mais long as the glumes, 


and the outer pales may be fo und in the | —— awns, and oe 2 = 


_ SPECIES 11-POLYPOGON LITTORALIS. ‘Sm. 


ae _ they would have had a wider range, and have occurred less 
ha i: 


42 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


when in flower, but closed, oblong-fusiform, much lobed, and scarcely 
spikelike before and after flowering. Pedicels articulated at the base, 
_ upwards, longer than broad. Glumes acuminate, acute, 
indistinctly notched at the apex, with very minute acute lobes, finely 
scabrous-pubescent, ciliated with thick cartilaginous hairs on the keel 
slender ones on the margins and apex, with a scabrous dorsal awn 
inging immediately below the apex, from one-half to three-fourths 
as bes as the glumes. Lower pale acuminate and bidentate at 
the apex, with a very slightly scabrous awn from the bottom of the 
notch, varying from as long as to two and a half times as long as the 
re marshes near the sea and tidal rivers. Very local, usually 
growing with P. Monspeliensis. Near Porchester and Portaes, Hants; 
Plumstead Practice Ground, and near Erith, Kent; Essex coast (?), 
said to have been found by Dickson, but not confirmed by recent 
cneeress Cley and near Wells, Norfolk; St. Sampson’s, Guernsey. 


_ England. Perennial. Summer. 
: Stems 9 inches to 8 fest high Longest lesres 2 to 6 inches long 
ppl yap ee ar esha var age 


> 
I 


1g considera i: roeeier to that 
* Inch pa laine of the awns. 
: oe of P. Monspeliensi 


Pos eed Diese 
Both species are very free seeding grasses, and thidie seniin genet Siaidity Ga cates 
tion in any part of England, so that were these grasses part of our aboriginal Flora, 
sparingly, They are 
grasses, against which no ee should — ieee omens 


* 


GRAMINA. 43 


acute but not awned, scarious. Pales 2, unequal, hyaline, the lower 
one very slightly bearded at the base, keeled, truncate and denticulate 
at the apex (rarely acute and entire), with or without a bent dorsal 
awn; the upper one smaller, with 2 keels, or sometimes very minute 
or ‘kent. Lodicules 2, entire. Stamens 3, more rarely]. Stigmas 
2, subsessile, plumose, protruded at the sides of the florets between the 
basal margins of the pales. Caryops glabrous, free, elliptical-ovoid, 
not compremed: with a shallow furrow on the inner face. 

The name of this genus is derived from the Greek aypwortc, the name of some 
grass, perhaps from daypdc, a field. 


Section I—APERA. Pal. de Beauv. 


Lower glume smaller than the upper one. Lower pale entire, with 
an awn a little below the apex more than thrice as long as the pale; 
upper pale little shorter than the lower one. 


SPECIES I-AGROSTIS ANEMAGROSTIS. 
Pirates MDCCXV. MDCCXVI. 

Annual. Without radical leaves. Panicle lax, open during and after 
flowering or always closed. Lower glume shorter and narrower than 
the upper one. Lower pale longer than the lower glume, acute. Awn 
dorsal, slender, slightly bent, from immediately below the apex of the 
pale, three to four times the ‘Tength of the pale. Aid ae pale but little 
shorter than the lower. 


44 ENGLISH BOTANY, 


Stems several, 8 inches to 3 feet high, erect, straight, or slightly 
geniculate at the base, simple or branched from the lower nodes. 
Longest leaves 2 to 5 inches long by } to 1 inch broad, with numerous 
slender rough ribs, pale dull green; sheaths slightly rough, the 

uppermost one not inflated, only than its leaf; ligule long, laciniate. 
Panicle 2 to 10 inches long by 1 to 5 inches broad when expanded, 
green or more or less coed with purplish-brown, ultimately pale 
olive. Panicle-branches capillary, oe, the longer ones bare of 
florets for half their length. Spikelets j', inch long, exclusive of the 
awns. Glumes scabrous on the back. Awns very long and slender. 
I have retained the name A. Spica-venti for this subspecies, because 

been known by this name as distinct from A. interrupta from 
ce time of Linnzus; and under these ecompeeasibes it seems the least 
of two evils to give an entirely new name to the superspecies. 

Apera purpurea of Palisot de Beauvais, a South European variety 

of A. ‘ Seacasw sas, with short but spreading branches, is the connecting 
link between A. Spica-venti and A. interrupta. 


Spreading Silky Bent-Grass. 
oe Agrostide jouet du vent. German, Gemeiner Windhaln. 


Citi open =~ via ac te a 


it 


Sus-Srrcms I.—Agrostis i 
PLATE spate 

"Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. . Fig. 128. 

Apera interrupta, Pal. de Beauv. Bab. Saat Brit. Bot. ed. vi. p. 406. Koch, Syn. 

Fl. Germ. et Helv. ed. ii. p. 904. Reich. Ie. lc. p. 7. 

emagrostis interrupta, Trin. Fund. Agr. p. 18. 
: ‘Paid closed before, during, and after flowering. Longest ‘ae 
_ branches usually shorter than the internode between them and the 
: boned se the shorter ones bearing eens to the base. _ Anthers : 


GRAMINA. 45 


shorter than the internodes, and always adpressed. This and the 
vee anthers seem the only tangible distinctions between A. inter- 
and A. Spica-venti. The spikelets of the two are undistinguish- 
able e, cesta that those of A. interrupta appear to be always green, 
ever tinged with purple. 
Dense-flowered Silky Bent-Grass. 
German, Unterbrochener Windhalm. 
This species is found in the same fields with the former one. It is of no agricultural 
value, but its presence indicates light land. 


Section 11.—TRICHODIUM. Mich. 


Lower glume larger than the upper one. Lower pale truncate and 
denticulate at the apex. Awn from about or below the middle or 
near the base of the pale, not extending beyond the pale more than the 
length of the latter. Upper pale absent or very minute. 


SPECIES I1I—AGROSTIS SETACEA. Cur. 
Pirate MDCCXVIL. 
Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsicc. No. 1977. 
Trichodium setaceum, Rim. & Schultes, ioe Veg. Vol. II. p. 280. 
Vilfa setacea, Pal. de Beawv. Agrost. p 


Densely cespitose, without cline Stems erect or ascending, not 


Yooting at the base. Radical leaves numerous, in compact erect 


fascicles, setaceous, involute, glaucous. Stem leaves few, short, alittle | 
broader than the radical Jeaves, involute; sheaths nearly smooth, th 


46 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


Plant growing in dense tufts. Radical leaves very numerous, 2 to 
9 inches long, very slender, always much shorter than the stem. Stem 
6 inches to 2 feet high, smooth. Uppermost stem leaf $ to 1 inch long. 

anicle 1 to 4 inches long, even in the latter case with the branches ; 
not more than an inch long. Spikelets 1 to Linch long. Glumes green, 
tinged with purple, especially towards the margins and apex, ulti- 
mately straw-colour. Anthers oblong, purple. 

According to Dr. Bromfield the panicle is but little expanded at 
any time, spreading a little only in fine weather and at certain times 
of the day, and collapsing even then when gathered. 

The awn is usually described as s springing from the base of the pale, 
but in the specimens ee = Isle of Wight, Devon, and Cornw 
which [ have examined, i s from a point a little below halfway 
between the middle and the aes of the pale. 


Bristle-leaved Bent Grass. 
SPECIES TII—AGROSTIS CANINA. Lim. 
Prare MDCCXVIII. 
ae To. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. LXXIV. Figs. 128 and 129. 


“— Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ . Exsiec. No, 3486. 
'ieakoie 


, Schrad. Rom. & Schultes, ‘ata Veg. Vol. IL. p. 277. 
Agrulancaninay, Pal. de Bon. Agron. p 5. 


a Loosely ceespitose, with c or without stolons. oo erect or ascending, 


_ few, in loose trailing fascicles, setaceous, involute, green (in the British 
plant). Stem leaves several, moderately long, linear, flat; sheaths 
quite si smooth, the uppermost one not above ‘iene as long as its leaf; 
ligule oblong: -lanceolate, long, scarcely laciniate. Panicle oval-oblong, 

Tax, open during flowering, ae irregularly closed afterwards; 
__ branches long, longer than the internodes of the rachis, slightly ace 
all of them bare of florets towards the base for about half their length. 
. Glumes broadly lanceolate, acuminate, lower one a little longer and 
der than the other, scabrous on the keel throughout. Lower pale 
fourths bees ebepeae of the — ue. ssietid truncate, _ 


nO 


GRAMINA. 47 


what channelled, 1 to 4 inches long. Stem leaves 3 or 4, the upper- 
most one 1 to 3 inches long, by 745 to $ inch broad; sheaths quite smooth, 
the uppermost one less than twice as long as its leaf; ligule long, 
laciniate at the apex vid: Panicle 1 to 5 inches long; panicle-branches 
very slender, the longest 1 to 24 incheslong. Spikelets 7/5 inch long, 
exclusive of the awns. Glumes b — with a green mi midrib, 
rarely wholly pale green. Anthers oblong, purple, tg ed in pro- 
portion than those of A. setacea. Lower “pale longer in proportion 
to the glumes, and with a much narrower truncate apex hh that 
of A. setacea, and differing also in having the 2 excurrent ribs 
forming only small teeth, not short sete. 

The very lax panicle and the root leaves not being densely tufted 
distinguish A. canina from A. setacea at first sight. 


Brown Bent Grass. 
French, Agrostide des chiens. German, Hunds-Straussgras. 


Section II]._EU-AGROSTIS. Godr. 


Lower glume a little larger than the upper one. Lower pale trun- 
cate and denticulate at the apex. Awn absent or from below the 
middle of the pale. Upper pale conspicuous, at least half as long as 
the outer. 


SPECIES IV—AGROSTIS ALBA. Linn. 
Prares MDCCXIX. MDCCXX. 


Raich oP. Gorm. ob lr, Vol I. Tab. XY. and XVI Fig. 18 fo 196, : 
rapinieanie re ess ore emer 9. Linn. ex part 


: and bear a considerable resemblance to those of Alope 


Ye ENGLISH BOTANY. 


thirds of the length of the pale beyond its apex. Upper pale about 
three-fourths the length of the lower one. 


Var. a, genuina. 
Prats MDCCXIX. 
Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsicc. No. 1361. 
A. alba, Sm. Engl. Bot. No. 1189. 2 

Stem rooting only at the base. Panicle lax, branches mostly bare 

of florets at the base. 
Var. 8, stolonifera. Sm. 
Prats MDCCXX. 
Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. No. 3938. 
A. stolonifera, Sm. Eng. Bot. ed. i. No. 1532. Linn. (?) ex parte. 
A. alba, var. B, subrepens, Bab. Man. Brit. Bot. ed. vi. p. 407. 

Stem rooting extensively at the lower joints. Panicle dense, some- 
aa spikelike and lobed before and after flowering, with the branches 
_ much more numerous at each node of the rachis than in var. a, and 

_ most of the shorter ones furnished with spikelets down to the —. 
Tn marshes, meadows, damp woods, and pastures, and frequently 
: floating i in shallow water. Very common, and generally featbaied. 
Var. B, on sands and clayey banks, chiefly by the sea and tidal rivers 
from Devon and the — Wight north to —— 
_ Orkney. 
, England, Seti Indand  Pocanal Scnnie Astana 
A very variable plant, scarcely tufted, and with elongate barren 
_ shoots which sometimes, when floating in water, attain a great length 


and A. geniculatus. Flowering stems 1 to 3 feet hi high. - “Leaves 
all similar, the lon ngest ones 3 inches to i foot long by } to} inch 
one — = to 9 inches ae sually dor but in var. 6 - 


ie 36, — 


; ari ty nt = 


a 


GRAMINA. 49 


essor Buckman writes: ‘“‘ Our own experiments have convinced us that several 
acknowledged varieties can be grown from the seed of a single plant, and we have no 
doubt but that additional permanent forms may be easily obtained. 

“ The presence or absence of the awn, or its relative length, is by no means certain ; 

80 the — is longer or smailer, and the stolons longer or shorter, according to 

; but a slut which will grow in a wet ditch, on the tops of the 

stony Cotswolda or mat together the sands of Dorset and other districts, may be 
expected to be as variable in its size and appearance as it 1 is catholic in its tastes. 

mmen 


“ At the same time,” says Sinclair, ‘‘it is a poor grass, and — will not eat much 
of it, if other kinds are plentiful.” 

It may be well © remark that in a field once under the plough, near Cirencester, 
but afterwards made part of an irrigated meadow, the Agrostis assumed the same 
form as in the neighbouring irrigated fields, thus changing from <A. alba to A. alba 
var. stolonifera under irrigation ; and we have no doubt the true A. alba of the wet 
meadow would change in the arable to the congested form. The A. alba var. stolo- 
nifera is nevertheless an established agrarian weed; and when we say that over a 

part of England this plant costs the farmer ae 1s. to 20s. an acre to keep it in 
check, some notion may be formed of its hindrance to farming, when it is allowed by 
an outgoing tenant to make head, as the loss indicated does not represent the failure 
in crops from its occupying the place of the crop plant itself. 

Consequent on the neglect of this pest, Professor Buckman calculates that for the 
last seven years it has cost him a rent-charge of fourteen per cent. 

This shows how important it is to keep land free from this and every other kind of 
couch grass, for, as it must be removed if good crops are to be obtained, it will be 
found that a great part of the expense of labour and machinery on a farm is after all 
connected more or less therewith, and of all couchlike grasses the A. stolonifera or 
Fiorin is the most troublesome. The collected rhizomes of this and Triticum haye | 
been recommended to leg Wars dg too ee geo lac pare aa gaat 
that it contains a bitter tracti t at all 


50 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


the back from the middle to the apex. Outer pale about two-thirds 
the length of the lower glume, narrowly truncate, and with 2 minute 
teeth at the apex. Awn usually absent; when present, from below 
the middle of the pale and extending about two-thirds the length of 
the pale beyond its apex. Upper pale about two-thirds the length 
of the lower one. 
Var. a, genuina. 
Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. LXXV. Fig. 13. 
Stems tall, at least five or six times as long as the panicle. 


Var. B, pumila. 
Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. LXXV. Fig. 132. 
A. pumila, Linn. Mant. 1. p. 31. D.C. Fl. Fr. Vol. II. p. 22. 
Stems very short, as long as to thrice as long as the panicle. Leaves 
narrower ; : epikelete smaller ; and glumes broader than in var. @. 
On dey heaths and pastures, and by roadsides. Common and 
_ universally distributed. Var. @ chiefly in hilly districts, and dry 
barge paces from eS ee ree Kent north to Skye and Aberdeen, 


gle at Het . Per esc a oo Autumn, 
_Very similar to ll, with which h hiti ften confounded, but it 


hie 


| ing, , but afterwards, and byt the trichotomous divisions —— <i conn’ 
i ——— eons RF grees are smaller, “heist 


poe never hosting The eo are Seton wolee'g ; 
fe of ~ esi oo 


= - Ramil 410 inch 


I IR Se EE 
= os 3 e i ct 7 : 
z ee a sit es * rf 


GRAMINA. I 


This grass is said to be disliked by cattle generally, and is not of sufficient import- 
ance to merit the attention of agriculturists. It grows on dry heaths and pastures, 
sometimes at an elevation of nearly 2,000 feet above the sea. 


GENUS XIX.—-PSAMMA. Pal. de Beauv. 


Spikelets shortly stalked, arranged in a very dense fusiform-cylin- 
drical or slightly lobed spikelike panicle which has short adpressed 
lateral branches, laterally compressed, biconvex, open during flowering, 
each containing a single perfect floret, with the superior stalklike 
rudiment of a second. Glumes 2, nearly equal, a little longer than 
the floret, keeled, acute, but not awned, parchmentlike. ales 2, 
nearly equal, parchmentlike, the lower one shortly bearded at the base, 
keeled, 5-ribbed, bidentate and mucronate at the apex, very shortly 
awned; the upper one with 2 keels. Lodicules 2, lanceolate. Sta- 
mens 3. Stigmas 2, sessile, plumose, protruded at the sides of the 
florets between the basal margins of the pales. Caryops glabrous, 
free, oblong, deeply furrowed on the inner face. 

The derivation of the name of this genus of grasses is from the Greek word Wapypn, 
sand, in allusion to the locality in which the species delights. 


SPECIESI—PSAMMA ARENARIA. Rém. & Schultes. 
Pirate MDCCXXII. 
Reich. Ic. Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. Vol. I. Tab, LXXXV. hee 157. 


 Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. No. 1779. 


Ps. littoralis, Pal. md Pou. Agrost. p. 
hila , Host ; 


ae oe 
"Past, FL Ital. Vol. L p. 214. Sen. Eno, PL = oo 


Jn lo s sand ay r = Rather ¢ oe nos a n, 


52 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


filled wita pith. “es about as long - shoe stem, rigid, channelled 
or involute, with numerous thick | ous negeniad 
pubescent glaucous ribs above; feavee. = of lnseaciaat barren shoots, 

sometimes nearly flat, and then about 1 inch broad, but the aaa 
leaves not above half that width; sheaths smooth; ligule very long, 
laciniate. Panicle 3 to 6 inches long by about 2 inch wide, attenuated 
at the base and apex, very dense. Glames | 4 inch — rough on the 
keel in the upper half. Pales about +! Linch shorter than the glumes, 
the lower one of the same parchmentlike texture as the glumes, and 
with a very short awn from a little below the apex, and not extending 
greatly beyond it, often not at all. Hairs at the base of the pales 
less than half their 1 length. Inner pale nearly as long as the outer, 
but of a thinner texture. 

Leaves resembling those of Triticum junceum, but longer, more 
erect and more rigid, all of them becoming almost convolute when dry. 


Murram. 
German, Gemeiner Sandhalm. 


is known as Mat Grass, or Murram. Dr. Prior says the latter name is 
ae from the Gaelic muram, or the Danish marhalm, sea haulm or straw. Its 
value as a natural sand-binder cannot be overrated ; many thousand acres, on various 
parts of our coast, are preserved from being overwhelmed by the drifting sand by 
means of its agency. » the —_— — ~ fs Jast eatery & jarge district on the 
eastern side of Scotl d and rendered 


mo b — fy 
cae Py cage pe) 1 ee eaves ~f 41h, 5 p- rh a 5 3 


in afew 


to the weaken  ddebeuctinn of the Murram that grew upon it. This g 


_ found growing on sandy shores, should always be ‘carefully preserved by 
of lea Acts =. boheicoer ine — been passed to protect it, — 


of the eonst ine, an 


1. ae ef 


- embankments. te this it may i praia that 34 is . 
: but inasmuch as we have grown it on the sandy clays of the 
I from the s oe 


GRAMINA. 53 


with a stalklike superior rudiment. Glumes 2, nearly equal, or the 
lower one a little longer than the upper, much longer than the florets, 
parchmentlike or membranous, keeled, very acute or mucronate, but 
not awned. Pales 2, unequal, the lower one conspicuously bearded 
at the base, keeled, truncate or denticulate at the apex, with a straight 
or bent dorsal or subapical awn; upper pale smaller, with 2 small 
keels on the back. Lodicules 2, lanceolate. Stamens 3. Stigmas 
subsessile, plumose, protruded at the sides of the florets between the 
basal margins of the pales. Caryops glabrous, free, narrowly oblong 
and slightly dorsally compressed. 

The name of this genus of grasses is derived from xaAapoc, a reed, and &ypwartc, 
@ grass. 


SPECIESI-CALAMAGROSTIS EPIGEIOS. oth. 
‘Pirate MDCCXXIT. 
Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. LXXXITV. Fig. 154. 
Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsicc. No. 687. 
Arundo Epigeios, Linn. Sm. Engl. Bot. ed. i: No. 403; and Engl. FI. Vol. L 
p. 169. 


Leaves broadly linear, firm, with numerous raised cartilaginous 
nearly equal rough ribs and very scabrous margins, dull green, slightly 
glaucous; sheaths slightly rough, the upper one longer than its leaf; 
ligule very long, lanceolate, laciniate. Panicle erect, chiong-tnnceclaie, 

or lanceolate-cylindrical, rather dense, closed and lobed, except at the 
moment of flowering, when it opens slightly ; panicle-branches very 
rough. Spikelets crowded = subunilateral on the ultimate branches _ 


of = ae nes lance olte-buate, ea! scabrous: on . the 2 


54 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


Rootstock creeping, with long scaly stolons. Stems 2 to 6 feet 
high, stout, rough, erect. Leaves of the barren radical tuft 1 to 2 feet 
long, the lower stem leaves COnSEIEFSUTY longer, the uppermost one 
6 inches to 1 foot or more long, 3 to 3 inch broad, flat, but becoming 
acess when the plant is gathered or late in the season, when they 

: wither. Panicle 6 inches to 1 foot long, 1 to 2 inches broad; 
rary very numerous at each node, forming half-whorls, 
the longest from 2 to 3 inches, unbranched and bare of spikelets for 
about half their length at the base, the shorter ones branched to about 
} inch from the base. Spikelets nearly } inch long, usually dull purple 
a purplish-brown, but sometimes wholly pale green. Hairs white, 
ultimately about as long as the glumes. 

Wood Small Reed. 
French, Arundo épigeios. German, Land-Schilf. 
This is one of our handsomest grasses, and would seem to be more common than 
is generally mie We have found it in quantity in the woods at Oakley Park, 
_ Cirencester. I iSiesr de aga bee woods of Dorset. Its silky hairs give the 
— . g asp tol Sage ae ae 


ek ee ot Helv. ‘Vol. Lab. XXXII eo ee 
Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. No. 418. _ 
SACS ahs coos nig, Sin. ce Bot. ed. i. No. 2159; sod Bog. Vol 1 
Pp AeU,. 

| ae linear, fianeia: wish numerous siete si goal puberuent 
ribs es porate in the uppermost leaves) and finely scabrous 1 | 
pale green; sheaths smooth, the uppermost one about as long « as its 
Meads Teale rather short, oblong, laciniate. Panicle drooping at the 
apex, broadly oblong-lanceolate, rather lax, loosely a irregulafly - 
_ ¢losed before and after flowering, at which time it is widely =_ oe 
le-branches slightly rough. Spikelets laxly placed all x round : 
ultimate branches of the panicle. Glumes lanceolate. late, 

j rough « on ome ive in win —— perine membranous. 


GRAMINA. 55 


in England, extending from Devon, Isle of Wight, and Kent to Lan- 
cashire and Worhambarlaad said to occur near Pennicuik, Edin- 
burgh, planted ( ?). 

England. Perennial. Late Summer, Autumn. 


Rootstock creeping, with lone stolons. Stem 2 to 4 feet high, 
much more slender and smooth than that of C. Epigeios. Leaves 
+ to + inch broad, much less pid, and with the ribs little elevated, 
and every third or fourth rib stronger than the others. Panicle 3 to 

9 inches long. Branches more slender, smaller, and fewer at each 
node than in the panicle of C. Epigeios. Glumes +3, inch long, 
brownish-purple, rarely green. Inner pale not at all bifid, and with 
the extremely short awn springing from near the apex of the pale 
instead of from the middle, as in C. Epigeios. 

The earlier British botanists, such elndcon and Withering, trans- 
posed the names of this and the last species, from a Linnean error in 

quoting the synonyms. 
Purple-flowered Small Reed. 
French, Calamgrostis lancéolé. German, Lanzettliches Schilf. 


SPECIES Il-CALAMAGROSTIS STRICTA. Nutt. 


Piares MDCCXXV. MDCCXXVI. 


Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. LX XVIII. Fig. 142. 

Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. No. 3936. 

C. neglecta, Fl. Wett. Fries, Summ. Veg. Scand. p. 7 

Arundo stricta, Schrad. Sm. Engl. Bot. ed. i. No, 2160; and Engl. Fl. Vol. x 


RI7L 
a ek Beitr. Vol. VL p. 137. 
Pinna pean: Enum. Plant. VoL eS 249. 


56 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


Var. a, genuina. 
Pirate MDCCXXYV. 
C. stricta, Hook. Brit. Fl. ed. iv. p. 34. 


Uppermost ligule scarcely so long as broad, very obtuse. Lowest 
glume lanceolate, gradually tapering to the point; upper glume 
elliptical-lanceolate, rather abruptly acute. Awn scarcely exceeding 
the lower pale. Hairs at the base of the florets about half as long as 
the glumes. 

Var. 6, Hookert. 
Pratre MDCCXXVI. 
C. Lapponica, Hook. Brit. Fl. ed. iv. p. 34 (non Hartm.). 

Ligule rather longer than broad, subacute. Both glumes elliptical- 

lanceolate and abruptly pointed, but the upper one a little broader 
than the lower. Awn slightly exceeding the lower pale. Hairs at 

| the base of the florets about three-fourths the length of the glumes. 
Panicle shorter and denser than in var. «. 

_ In marshes on the gravelly shores of lakes. Very rare. Formerly 
found at Whitemore Marsh, about a mile from Forfar, but now de- 
stroyed by drainage; Oakmere, Cheshire. Var. @ confined to Ireland. 

On the shores and islands of — Neagh, in the counties Ar- 
magh (?),* Antrim, and Derry. 


England, [Scotland] (extinct), I — (var. p only). Pere . 


Rootstock shortly creeping, with rather short slender lite: 

Stems 1 to 3 feet high, slender, erect, radical leaves very slender, 
6 inches to 1 foot long, those of the stem a little broader (about Jy 
as fom — and 3 to 1 6 ee Foe le Panicle 3 to 8 inches long in the © 
oe dak mer Glomes ee with a broad — 


ji longer SP tay it ought to 
indebted to Mr. S. A. stewart, 


; 
: 
j 


GRAMINA. yf 


seem to be from the books. I cannot find it at Babington’s station 
on Shane’s Castle Island. It is certainly extinct on Harbour Island, 
as I fear is the fate also of Carex Buxbaumii. On the little islet near 
Magharry it is in some plenty, but the bounds are so small that it 


will scarcely continue very long even there. The Rev. Mr. Robin- 


son had another station on the County Tyrone shore of Lough Neagh, 
but he has not seen it for some time, and fears that it has disappeared 
from that station also.” Mr. Stewart could not find a single specimen 
in the station in County Derry, where he gathered it four years ago. 
Narrow Small Reed. 
German, Vernachlissigtes Schilf. 


Tre VITI.—PHRAGMITIDE. 


Spikelets open during flowering, arranged in a lax open panicle, late- 

ly compressed, each containing 1 to 7 perfect florets, sometimes with 
a male one at the base. Glumes equal or slightly unequal, as long as 
or shorter than the florets. Pales 2, scarious, the lower one keeled. 
Stamens 3. Styles long; stigmas 2, protruded near the apex of the 
florets, between the margins of the pales. Caryops laterally com- 
pressed. 


GENUS XXI.—P HRAGMITE S. Trin. 


Spikelets stalked, pie oo in a loose open panicle, with ene 


sare ne at = petal seo of flowering, : : 


1 to 6 stalked perfect ie cath pete ae one at the cee a . 
Glumes 2, very SS the lower ¢ one much oe cmon es — 


‘brou , free, oblong-ovoid, ora ras 
3e name of this pees of grasses is derived from or a sete, 


58 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


SPECIES L_-PHRAGMITES COMMUNIS. Zrin. 
Prare MDCCXXVII. 
Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ, et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CLXXXYV. Fig. 502. 
Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. No. 90. 
Arundo Phragmites, Linn. Sm. Engl. Bot. ed. i. No. 401; and Engl. Fi. Vol. I. 
p- 168. 

Leaves rough on the edges ; ligule composed of very short equal 

hairs. Glumes very acute, entire at the apex. 


Var. a, vulgaris. Gren. & Godr. 
Arundo Phragmites, “ Merat.” Dwmort. Agrost. Belg. p. 125. 
Stems erect. Spikelets 3- to 6-flowered. 


Var. 8, nigricans. Gren. & Godr. 
A. nigricans, “ Morn” Dumort. Agrost. Belg. p. 125, and Tab. IX. Fig. 35. 
_A. Pseudo-phrag tes, Lej. “Spa. Vol. I. p- 43.” Test. Gren. & Godr. 
. Stems erect. _ Spikelets 1- to 2-flowered. _ Stems shorter and more 
ves nar’ -and panicle much sn r than i in var. a. 


satealting from Conswall, the Tele of Wight, and ener to Coa ind | ae 
Shetland. Var. 6, Yarmouth, Isle of Wight, and ay elsewhere. - 
Var. y, on the south shore of the Isle of Wight. 


England, Scotland, — Perennial. Late snouts 


2 -Rootstock extensively er g, thick, and articulated. Seas, 
3 to 58 feet high or more in var. a. Radical - none. Leaves 
numerous, often secund, the longest 9 to 18 inches 2 to iyinch 
tg — penpals eat to the acute 


~~ 


GRAMINA, 59 


Var. 8 is probably merely a depauperate state of Ph. communis, 
though the acute Dumortier admits it asa species. In it the stems are 
from 18 inches to 3 feet high. Leaves 2 to 5 inches long by } to 3 
inch broad, more glaucous than in var. 2. Panicle 3 to 6 inches. long, 
with the pikes blacker than in var. #, each containing a single 
male floret, sometimes with 1 female one above it. 

Var. y I have not seen. Dr. Bromfield describes it as springing 
from the steep —— banks of wet clay on the southern shores of the 
Isle of Wight, with the stems “ depending like long and slender ropes, 
or trailing i ina straight or serpentine direction, on the shingly beach or 
smooth and level sand, and that without rooting at the joints, to the 
length of 20, or 40, or even 50 feet. I have never observed the ex- 
tremities of the stolons to blossom under these circumstances, as indeed 
they could scarcely be expected to do with so exhausting a length of _ 
iihetat) the leaves too are very short, as if imperfectly developed, 

sasionally a few radicles are em from one or other of the 
Phytol.” vol. i. p. 146. 
: Common Reed. 
_ French, Roseau commun. German, Gemeines Rohr. 


Although this grass has no agricultural merits, yet it is serviceable in many points 
of view. In Sweden the country people use the panicle to dye woollen cloth green. 
The reeds are used for thatching, and are found to be more durable than straw. 
Garden screens are made of them, and they form a good foundation for plaster floors ; 
they are also in demand by brickmakers. Till the introduction (in the seventh 
century) of pens made boise = Berd of birds, they were used for writing. They 

also occasionally serve for arrows. The young shoots when cut off from the root 

where not mane to the light, ‘make an excellent ee. The nest of > sedge- 


is g y : 
ad. Peiguciapials ses ee ee 


mere —. a age food oes. _—. laeedevas nn — 


60 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


margins of the pales. Caryops fusiform, with a furrow on the inner 
face, closely covered by the pales. 


GENUS XXU.—MILIUM. Linn. 


Spikelets stalked, arranged in a loose open panicle with elongate 
branches which are spreading at least during the time of flowering, 
slightly dorsally compressed, biconvex, open during flowering, each 
containing a single perfect floret, without the rudiment of another. 
Glumes 2, nearly equal, as long as the florets, concave, pointed but not 
awned, subherbaceous. Pales 2, equal, shining, not keeled, not awned, 
not bearded at the base, subcoriaceous ultimately undurated, the 
upper one concave, notched at the apex, embraced by the lower one. 
Lodicules 2, entire. Stamens 3. Styles 2, short; stigmas plumose, 
protruded at the sides of the floret between the basal margins of the 
one Caryops _ free, oblong, dorsally eoenpreased, flattened 

and furrowed on the inner face. 


a. iiss ie en of ‘grasses is ee ey a thousand, or the Celtic 
Se i this haces ak 


of me 
HaLrGiess Ul LOS secus. 


| SPECIES 1-MILT UM EFFUSUM. Linn. 
: : PL ATE MDCC "ahs ‘ 


Reich: Te. FL Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. a Fig. 159. 
Pilot, Fi. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. No. 1 
Agrostis effusa, D.C. Fl. Fr. Vol. Ti. ae": 


Perennial. Stem smooth. Leaves broadly I ftacai: Panicle large, 


compound, lax; panicle-branches capillary, very unequal, slightly SS 


rough, in half whorls, spreading-deflexed. Spikelets distant. ‘Glumes 
oval, acute, very slightly shagreened. cs 
In woods. Not uncommon in England. Move rare Ta Sadhana 
at least to the north of the Forth and Clyde, but extending to = : 
oT Rather rare in Ireland, but widely distributed. 


Scotland, lease "Perennial. ‘Summer. 
.¢ x short stolons and tufts of 


GRAMINA. 61 


spread i ypreatertal unbranched for half of their length, or more. 
Prikelets 4 inch long. Glumes pale green, rather dim, with numerous 
very minute rounded points on their surface, and 3 faint ribs. Outer 
pale a little shorter than the glume, ultimately hard, shining, and 
yellowish. Anthers yellow 

Plant with much the habit of the lax-panicled species of the genus 
Panicum, to which some authors think Milium allied, considering 
that the lower glume is wanting, and what is here described as the 
lower glume is really the upper glume, and the apparent upper glume 
is the solitary pale of a neuter floret. 

Wood Millet Grass. 
French, Millet étalé. German, Gemeines Flattergras. 

This grass in its natural state seems to be confined to woods as its place of growth. 
When transplanted, however, it will thrive and grow in open exposed situations. 
Birds are remarkably fond of the seeds; and near game covers a better grass cannot 
_ be encouraged, as it saves the cornfields. 


Trine X.—AVENE. 


Spikelets open during flowering, arranged in a lax open panicle 
or rarely in a cylindrical or ovoid spikelike panicle, cylindrical or slightly 
laterally compressed, each containing commonly 2 or 3 perfect florets, 
sometimes the upper one neuter, and very rarely the lowest one male ; 
rarely there are 4 to 9 perfect florets. Glumes usually as long or 
longer than the florets. Pales herbaceous or scarious, the lower one 
rounded or keeled on the back, often ultimately indurated, with a — 
dorsal awn which is commonly twisted and bent. Style very short or _ 


absent; stigmas 2, protruded at the base of the florets between the a ie 


margins of the pales, or rarely included. Caryops eee compressed 
| and  ioceu or slightly —— — sed, d, and w a far , 


- GENUS XXII—CORY¥NEPHORUS. Pa a Besws. 
- Spikelets stalked, arranged in a rather com 


oe 


pact panicle with short 

branches which are spreading only during the time of flowering, 

lich ghdly. laterally compressed, biconvex, open during flowering, each 
, 2 perfect florets, the lower one sessile, the upper one stalked. 

: nearly equal, longer than the florets, keeled, pointed but 

4 = Pales 2, — scarious, the lower one ¢ 1 
; got al awn, which is jointed 

el rate i in ‘the upper portion, and with a ri Ted — 

artic was = 6 Sees at the 


62 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


apex, 2-ribbed. Lodicules 2, bifid. Stamens 3. Stigmas 2, terminal, 
sessile, plumose, protruded at the sides of the florets, between the basal 
margins of the pales. Caryops glabrous, ovoid, with a narrow furrow 
on the inner face. 

The name of this genus of grasses is derived from the Greek words xopwrn, a club, 
and %opde, bearing. 


SPECIES L-CORYNEPHORUS CANESCENS. Pal. de Beaw. . 
Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. XCIV. Fig. 178 
Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. No. 91. 
Aira canescens, Linn. Sm. Engl. Bot. ed. i. No. 1190; and Engl. Fl. Vol. I. p. 105. 
Hook. fil. Stud. Fl. p. 437. 
- Perennial. Stems fasciculate, usually geniculate at the base. Radi- 
cal = densely fasciculate, very numerous, setaceous, very rough, 
_ glaucous. Panicle oblong-lanceolate and open during flowering, ahier: 
— par ney rowly oblong, and lobed ; panicle-branches short. 
ar a Heed shorter than the glumes, its terminal portion filiform, 
gradually dilated upwards until at the apex it becomes nearly a as 
bas as fee lower portion. —— 
On sandy coasts. Very rare. The only places in Britain where 
there can be no doubt that it occurs are Lowestoft Denes, in Suffolk, 
- and Yarmouth Dene: Norfolk. “In J ersey it occurs on the Quenvais, 
and on the sands of St. Brélade’s and St. Aubin’s Bays. Tt has been 
reported from the counties of Somerset, Dorset, Kent, and seins 
y oe and ‘the sesooe , : 


2 ham; bie last almost 


Perennial. Summer a 


slender set setaceous | fe Jeaves, ies 8s inches 
ur plis h shee : - stems ‘ 9 


oS nt growing in ioe cohering but very dense t 
able fascicles of 


GRAMINA, 63 
base, but gradually thickening nearly to the apex. Anthers dark 
purple. 


Grey Hair-Grass. 
French, Corynéphore blanchdétre. German, Graues Silbergras, 


GENUS XXIV._AIRA. Linn. 


Spikelets stalked, arranged in a loose or rarely compact panicle 
with long (rarely sheets. branches which are spreading at least 
during the time of flowering, laterally compressed, biconvex, open 
during flowering, each containing 2 or rarely 3 perfect florets, or 2 
perfect florets and a stalklike rudiment, all the florets sessile, or — 
the upper one or ones stalked. Glumes 2, nearly equal, as long 
as or longer than the florets, keeled, scarious. Pales 2, unequal, 
scarious, the lower one concave, rounded on the back, bifid or den- 
ticulate at the apex, usually with a dorsal awn, which is bent,-more — 
rarely straight, but never articulated or clavate, nor surrounded by 
a ring of hairs in the middle, usually from below the middle of the 
pale. Upper pale bifid, 2-ribbed. Lodicules 2, lanceolate, ae 
Stamens 3. Stigmas 2, terminal, subsessile, plumose, protruded a 
the base of the florets between the margins of the pales, chy 
glabrous, fusiform, flat, or with a narrow ecco on the inner face. 

The derivation of the name of this genus of grasses ie feoen eigees; to Seah; on 
account of the supposed peneaving inne of some af the — 


Perennial. . Spikelets wa sub-c mp im 

Fobeceis cl dtd does 20 oret d y stipitate 
_ Lower pale scarious, smooth, not hardening over the | s, truncate 
and denticulate at the apex. Awn dorsal, teint twisted at 
wok base, eetily incurved, but not distinctly geni ile 


SPECIES L-ATRA MAJOR 
Pares MDCCXXX. MDOCXXXI. 


64 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


shorter than its sheath; sheaths smooth or nearly so; ligule long, acute, 
laciniate. Panicle lax or rather lax, pyramidal, drooping at the apex, 
open while in flower and more or less so after flowering; panicle- 
branches slender, spreading, and the longer ones often slightly recurved, 
rough or smooth. Spikelets numerous, on thick pedicels, shorter than 
the spikelets. Lower pale truncate and with 4 small teeth at the apex. 
Awn dorsal, from near the base or above middle of the pale, slightly in- 
curved, not distinctly twisted at the base, rarely extending beyond the 
pale, and never more than one-fourth beyond it, scarcely exceeding the 
glumes. Second floret shortly stipitate; third floret reduced to a 
pedicel with a small apical tuft of hairs resembling that at the base of 
the two perfect florets. 
Sus-Srecies L—Aira ceespitosa. Linn. 
Prare MDCCXXX. 

Reich. Ye. Fl, Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab, XCVI. Figs. 185 to 169. 
Billot, FL Gall. et Germ. Exsice. No. 1587. 

Panicle-branches all slightly reflexed, rough. Glumes 
rough on the keel. Awn _ mail above the base of the pale, 


Vax a, genuina. 
Leaves long, ultimately slightly arching outwards. Panicle large, 
very lax. Spikelets ily silvery-grey or yellowish-white. 
| Var: B, brevifolia. Parnell. : 
Leaves short, straight. Panicle smaller and more compact than in 
var. «; the spikelets a little larger, purplish-lead-calour with whitish 


Var. y, Pseud-alpina. 


m6 short, straight. Panicle similar to that of var. 8, but 
it smoother panicle-branches. — Spikelets larger, pale olive, often 
eee rplish oer green, usually if not _— Vivi- 


aon woods aod ty roadsides. Common, 
Van ° te in oe datricts = moun- 
mount: but rather 


GRAMINA, 65 


— long, by } to } inch broad, with 3 or 4 broad ribs on each side 
f the oarra gir clothed with minute asperities pointing forward; the 
feel 4 th larger prickles, also pointing towards the apex of 
the leaf. Stam 2 to 4 feet high, with its leaves much shorter than the 
radical ones, but otherwise resembling them, flat, but as well as the 
radical ones becoming involute when dry. Panicle 6 ito 15 inches 

long, y a half as broad. Spikelets very numerous, } inch long. 
has the stems 15 paguene e 2 feet ew = a leaves 


2 to 6 ‘inches long, and erect, not arching as ; the panicle 
more compact, 2 to 4 inches long; the Gckalete 4 al Tittle larger, and 
much more deeply coloured. 


Jar. y is similar to var. A in its short leaves and low stems. Panicle 
4 to 8 inches long, almost always viviparous. Spikelets nearly } inch 
long. 


Tufted Hair-Grass. 
French, Canche gazonnante. German, Rosenformige Schmiele. 
This ¢ , a Das By ope ie a igh my pp pas 
and parks, as it grows into large tufts, and fi i iti the surfa which ave 


termed by farmers rough cups or hossacks, and are , difficult to get rid of. From the 
extreme roughness and coarseness of the leaves cattle seldom touch it, and as it 
contains but little nutritive matter it is not worth the attention of the agriculturist. 
It is a sure indication, wherever found on the farm, that the land wants under- 
draining, without shtick no cutting it out will destroy it. But the efficiency of 


and vary considerably both in size and colour. 


Sus-Specres IL.—Aira _— Linn. — 


nt anaes Engl. Bot. ed. i, No, 2162. 
es sae "Bb Sy Vo Vol Tp 68- 


cae oe on the Lar or : tos ro ge ) ards the ap oe 
only. frm stave te mie oth pl and ut gy 


On rocky débris on ¢ high onion: Rare. Most. y ent ) 
irlic ‘is said to have occurred in many other places in 
it has been 80 confounded with the var. ee of » ee 


66 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


leaves 2 to 6 inches long by 1 to } inch broad, rather smoother than 
those of A. caspitosa; the panicle from 1 to 4 inches long, with fewer 
and considerably larger spikelets than in A. cespitosa, vars. a and 6, 
but undistinguishable from those of var. y, except by the smoother 
midrib. I have never gathered any but viviparous specimens, and a 
my Scandinavian specimens of A. alpina are also viviparous. 

I can see no invariable difference between A. ceespitosa and A. alpina, 
except that in the former the awn is inserted below the middle of the 
pale, and in A. alpina above it. The awn in A. alpina is wake, not 
more bent nor more twisted at the base than that of A. czespitosa. 


Alpine Hair-Grass. 


Section II—AVENELLA. Koch. 


Perennial. Spikelets scarcely compressed, with 2 perfect florets, but 
no third rudimentary one, the second floret distinctly stipitate. Lower 
pale subscarious, slightly rough with minute blunt points, not hard- 
_ ening over the caryops, truncate and denticulate at the apex. Awn 

poe —_ bused: at 2 base, geniculate. Florets with con- 

: : ; the base. 


Perennial. Czspitose. Radical leaves sinha aise chan- 
nelled, or folded together, pithent evident ribs, a ne dull 
green or glaucous. Stem leaves few, rough, the upper one much 
shorter than its sheath; shieathar slightly rough (at least the lower 
ones); ligule prominent, obtuse or acute, split. Panicle very lax, 
erect or drooping at the apex, open while in flower, and partially so 

after — — capillary, flexuous, ee * or 


8 pairs, suberect or pate a ‘Spikelets rather few, on pedicels, 


—. spikelets. Lower pale truncate, and with 4 small : 


i, g in the middle, about fies bea 
: and glumes Second floret sort stipitate; third floret 


GRAMINA. 67 


Sus-Sescmss L—Aira eu-flexuosa. 
Pirate MDCCXXXII. 

Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. XCV. Fig. 182. 
Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. No. 1587. 
A. flexuosa, Arct. Plur. 
Deschampsia flexuosa, Trin. Gren. & Godr. Fl. de Fr. Vol. IIT. p. 508. 
Avenella flexuosa, Parl. Fl. Ital. Vol. I. p. 246. 
Avena flexuosa, Mert. & Koch. Fl. Deutschl. Vol. I. p. 570. 

Leaves filiform, channelled above, with a few prominent lines 
beneath, firm, nearly smooth, dark green, not glaucous. Ligule of 
uppermost leaf oblong, obtuse, split, not longer than the diameter of 
the stem opposite to it. Panicle erect, or rarely slightly drooping at 
the summit. Pedicels of all the florets slender, equalling or exc 
the spikelets. Second floret very shortly stipitate, the portion of axis 
between the two being scarcely a fourth of the length of the second 
spikelet. 

Var. a, genuina. 


Panicle open. Spikelets rather large. Glumes variegated with 
light purple shading into red, with yellowish-white scarious tips. 
Var. B, montana. 
A. montana, Linn. Sp. Plant. p. 96 (ex parte ?). 
Panicle contracted, at least after Howertng. b eoa larger than | 


+ 


in var. ra Glumes of a muck 


aianes face, and a ie pontine a on the under. Upper- 
: ta eo 3 nh — 
‘the apex of the branches, } to} inch Jong. Gl 


Ps 
aeGoarth longer than the 


__ The var. on ee oe same ration to the nora form of A. Bee 
flexuosa that oes to tosa. 


68 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


Sus-Srecms 1—Aira uliginosa. Weihe. 
Prats MDCCXXXIII. 

Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. XCV. Figs. 183 and 184. 
Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsicc. No. 2174. 
A. flexuosa, var. 3, Hook. fil. Stud. Fl. p. 436. 
A. discolor, “ Thuill.” Duwmort. Agrost. Belg. p. 130. 
A. setacea, Huds. Fl. Angl. ed. i. p. 30, test. Trimen, Journ. Bot. 1869, p- 342. 
Deschampsia Thuillieri, Gren. & Godr. Fl. de Fr. Vol. IIL. p- 508. 
D. discolor, Crep. Fl. Belg. ed. ii. p. 342. 


Leaves filiform, conduplicate, with a few prominent lines beneath, 
flaccid, nearly inanoeths, pale glaucous green. Ligule of uppermost 
leaf linear-lanceolate, very acute, lacerate, five or six times the 
diameter of the stem opposite to it. Panicle drooping at the summit. 
Pedicels of the lateral florets thickened upwards, shorter than the 
spikelets. Second floret usually longly stipitate, the portion of the 
axis between the two being often equal to half the length of the 
second spikelet. 

In wet turfy bogs. Apparently local, but probably widely dis- 
tributed. Fleetpondnorth, Hants; Woking Common, Surrey; Stratton 
Heath (?) and Cawston Decoy, Norfolk. Fortarshire; “ Loch of 
Drum,” Kincardineshire, “ Lak Cosas. Aberdeenshire,” Dr. J. Roy. 
“Near Clifden Roundstone and Kilkieran, Connemara. 


England, Scotland, Ireland. Perennial. Summer. 
Very near A. eu-flexuosa, but the radical leaves are longer (3 to . 


inches), more slender, not semicylindrical, but folded into a gutter, 
and very glaucous; the ligule of the uppermost stem leaf is five or six 


: : times longer and very acute ; ee panicle is usually ps oe 


a 5 or 6 a the a ck are + 5 inch eteg te more numerous and 1 Leese : 


if ago imag to = montana 
‘or it, he ¢ wiih 
sa. Dr. Teme, however, | 
aga ived._ 


GRAMINA. 69 


their opinions during their lifetime, and if their views alter, will demand 
to be judged by their latest published opinions. In the case of A. 
setacea, no doubt, Hudson’s first impression was right, but an excep- 
tional case like this is no ground for establishing a precedent for 
depriving botanists of the right to withdraw statements which they 
subsequently believe to be erroneous. 
Bog Hair-Grass. 
German, Sumpf-Schmiele. 


Section II].—AIRELLA. Dumort. 


Annual. Spikelets with 2 perfect florets, but no third rudimentary 
one; the second floret sessile, or very shortly stipitate—the axis 
not being developed between it and the first floret, or but slightly 
developed. Lower pale at first subscarious, but at length becoming 
hardened over the caryops, bifid, with 2 rather long acute subsetaceous 
cusps at the apex. Awn dorsal, evidently twisted at the base, geni- 
culate. Florets without hairs at the base, or with very short ones. 


SPECIES IL—AIRA CARYOPHYLLEBEA. Lin. 
Prats MDCCXXXTIV. 


Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. - Tab. XCIV. Fig. 180, 

Billot, F\. Gall. et Germ. Exsicce, 

Avena caryophyllea, Wigg. Koch, ya FL Germ. et Helv. ed. ii. p. 922. 
Airopsis caryophyllea, Fries, Summ. Veg. Scand. p. 78. 


Annual. Radical leaves none. Stem leaves setaceous, involute, : 


“cep ernie slightly rough, ewe ene oa n+ eclopans one e much | ae : 


pkccicts. Cries | 
‘in 2 long narrow 


‘longer get the iat ‘Lower pee 
oe i: ar the middle of 


70 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


| Var. a, genuina. 
A. caryophyllea, Bor. Fl. du Centr. de la Fr. ed. iii. p. 701. 

Stems few from each root, short. Panicle short, somewhat trian- 
gular; panicle-branches ascending after flowering. Spikelets few, in 
lax corymbs at the extremity of the branches of the panicle. Florets 
both sessile and both awned. 

Var. 8, patulipes. 
A. patulipes, Jord. Bor. Fl. du Centr. de la Fr. ed. iii. p. 701. 


Stems rather numerous from each root, short. Panicle subtri- 
angular; a spreading, divaricate after flowering. Spike- 
lets few, larger than in var. a, in lax corymbs at the extremity 
of the branches of the panicle. Florets both sessile, and both awned. 


Var. y, aggregata. 
A. aggregata, Timeroy, and A. plesiantha, Jord. Bor. Fl. du Centr. de la Fr. ed. iii. 
pp. 701, 702. 

Stems numerous from each root, tall. Panicle oblong; panicle- 
branches ascending, erect after flowering. Spikelets numerous, smaller 
than in vars. « and @, aggregated into rather dense racemes at the ex- 
tremity of the panicle-branches. Florets both sessile, and both awned. 
In dry fields and waste places, and on rocks and banks. Common, 

s iad generally distributed. htt distribution of the varieties I am 


: z unable to give, having few specimens of A. caryophyllea, which have 


not been collected by ayaa T possess var. « from Somerset, Surrey, 
Norfolk, and Fife; var. 6 from oS Yorkshire, collected Be 
Mr. Clackma hire, Kincardineshire, and 


see var. @ and api fe fans © 
out p oo — less in 


: a eececkly into on 
n had they not been 
ut also by th 


GRAMINA,. 71 


judicious Professor Boreau. Besides these varieties there exists in 
France and Belgium another, called A. multiculmis by M. Dumortier, 
and accepted as a species by MM. Jordan and Boreau. It is ve 
likely to occur in England, although I have not seen specimens. t 

most nearly resembles the var. aggregata, but has the panicle still 
more compact, having somewhat the aspect of Corynephorus cane- 
scens. Both the florets are awned, but the second one is shortly 
stipitate 

% Provincialis (Jord.) is perhaps another beige: found in the 
south of France, and not likely to occur in Britain. It is readily dis- 
tinguished by the lower floret not being awned 

There is a closely allied species, or possibly only well-marked sub- 
species of A caryophyllea, viz. A. capillaris, Mert. & Koch, common 
in the south of Europe, with much iaate ockelit a more 
panicle, and the lower floret (or both florets) without an awn, to 
which A. rea Gaud., A. Tenorii, (Fuss., and A. Cupaniana, Guss., 
are to be referred, A. Provincialis, Jord. , being the connecting link, 
which possibly ought to be referred to this second subspecies. 


Silvery Hair- Grass. 
French, Canche caryophyllée, German, Nelkenblittriger Hafer. 


SPECIES IV—AIRA PRAICOX. Linn. 
Pirate MDCCXXXV. 
Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. L. pass XCIV. Fig. 179. 
Billot, Fi. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. No. 
Avena preecox, Pal. de Beauv. Koch, ee Fl. Germ. et Helv. ed. ii. p. 922. 
Airopsis precox, Fries, Summ. Veg. Scand. p. 78. 
Trisetum precox, Dumort. Agrost. Belg. p. 122. 
Annual. Radical leaves 1 none. Stem leaves setaceous, deeply 
—— yale green, 


: paper yp sae vu than the Poway ease chek as “fe 
the spikelets. Lower pale terminating in 2 long tapering acute ser- 
rated cusps. Awn dorsal, from one-third above the base of the pale, 
A twisted i in | the lower half, geniculate: about the middle, from half to 
- two-thirds as 1d le — of the lower | 


oe Z : floret SET much shorter than. that of aes upperone. Second _- 
a ar — very shortly stipitate ; third floret —— sbeent. oo 


of short hairs at the base. 


a2 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


On dry banks, rocks, and wall-tops, and in sandy pastures. Rather 
common, and generally distributed. 


- England, Scotland, Ireland. Annual. Early Summer. 


Plant growing in small tufts, with few or numerous — 1 to 8 
inches high, erect or ascending, or sometimes decumbent. Leaves 3 to 
13 inch long, the uppermost leaf } to 3 2 inch long ; panicle } to 14 inch 
long, always contracted. Spikelets # inch long, pale green. Glumes 
green with broad white scarious margins, acute, mas on the keel. 
Lower pale ultimately hard, rough with small points, brown. 

In the usual state of this plant, the panicle is continuous, but in 
luxuriant forms it is sometimes interrupted; each of the panicle- 
branches bears rarely more than 3 spikelets, arranged in a racemose 
manner. 

When in flower it cannot be confounded with any other British 
grass, but in its earlier stage it bears a striking resemblance to 
starved specimens of A. caryophyllea, before the panicle of the latter 
opens; and as A. caryophyllea is from a fortnight to three weeks 
later in flowering than A. precox, it is possible that some of the 
records of A. preecox belong to A. caryophyllea. My own experience 

is that though A. IEE is as widely distributed as A. caryophyllea, 
—— abundan 


Early Hair-Grass. 
French, Canche précose. German, Friihzeitiger Hafer. 


GENUS XXV—AVENA. Linn. 


Spikelets more or less distinctiy stalked, arranged in a loose open or 
compact panicle, which is rarely reduced to a racemose or very rarely 
to a compact spikelike panicle, at first cylindrical, afterwards slightly 

laterally compressed, open during flowering, each containing 2 to 8 
ee — the — one nometimnes male, = upper one often imperfect or 
e <like rudiment. - Glumes 2, a 


7 


GRAMINA, © is 


them. Caryops downy at the apex or glabrous, with or without a 
furrow on the inner face. 

The derivation of the name of this genus of grasses is from aveo, to desire, because 
cattle are fond of it. 


Sus-Genus I.—TRISETUM. Pers. 


Perennial. Spikelets small, compressed. Glumes subscarious, 1- to 
3-nerved. Lower pale permanently membranous, keeled, awned. 
Caryops subcylindrical, not furrowed, usually glabrous. 


SPECIES I—AVENA FLAVESCENS. Linn. 

Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. L. Tab. CII. Figs. 204 to 206. 

Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsicc. No. 1374. 

Trisetum flavescens, Pal. de Beauv. Bab. Man. Brit. Bot. ed. vi. p. 410. Kunth, 
Enum. Plant. Vol. I. p. 298. Fries, Samm. Veg. Scand. p. 78. Gren. & Godr. 
Fl. de Fr. Vol. III. p. 523. Crep. Man. Fl. Belg. ed. ii. p. 344. Parl. FI. Ital. 
Vol. I. p. 260. Dumort. Agrost. Belg. p. 122. 

T. pratense, Pers. Syn. Plant. Vol. I. p. 97. 

Perennial. Rootstock shortly creeping, stoloniferous. Stems rather 
few in each tuft, glabrous, with pubescent knots. Leaves linear, 
flaccid, thin, with numerous slender slightly raised ribs, pubescent 
above, ‘but scarcely so beneath, green; lower sheaths pipes the 
_— ones mag 2 omen: a Mig ees rruncat Panicle A i 

Ord nc nes OD un er us, 


siiles sty to the base. "pedicels Mion than + pope pikes ats, 


Ne numerous, at first linear-ellipt 


if lle “Glumes —: anequal, rou: 
Vf as long as the oa 


oe onthe Kel, acuminate the lowe it half as long | 


1 ae that of “the lowest floret — as” long as” the = : 
eos : he w mal eeneies have — 


74 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


Generally distributed in England; more rare in Scotland, extending 
north to Aberdeen and Stirling. Not common in Ireland, and there 
found chiefly in the south and middle of the island. 


England, Scotland, Ireland. Perennial. Summer. 


Rootstock shortly creeping, producing at its apex a small dense 
tuft consisting of stems and barren shoots, and producing rather short 
slender subterranean stolons, which in the succeeding year produce 
tufts similar to those of the parent, from which they become discon- 
nected. Stems 9 inches to 2 feet high. Longest leaves 2 to 4 inches 
long by } to 4 inch bed, eradually tapering. pipusass 2 to 6 inches 
long. “Spikelets 3 1 to 1 inch long, exclusive of the a 

the Continent a : variety of this plant occurs, with the spikelets 
variegated with violet, bat I have seen no British specimens of this 


. 


eo Oat-Grass. 
French, Avoine cultivée. German, Gemeiner Hafer. 


This is our smallest-fowered Oat-grass, and is distinguished by its panicles of 
_ pie = eee ea florets. It is frequent in the meadow, and 
‘tetas 


"Gee Boae nt —AVENASTRUM. Koch. 


~ Perennial. Spikelets erect, large or rather large, slightly com 

pressed. Glumes subscarious, 1 to 3-nerved. Lowest floret pales 
Lower pale scarious, at length parchment-like, not keeled, awned. 
ert fie fusiform, with a furrow on the inner face, _— at Rene 


SPECIES I—A VENA Sgetucehcce he! Linn. 
Beih. To. FL Germ. et Holr. Vol. Tab. CV. ais. 
Exsice. 


= peers kom. & Schule Syst. Veg. Vol. it = 662, Dumort, Agrost, 
“ — —e _ 


oe numerous in eac 


GRAMINA. 75 


slender, rough. Pedicels shorter than the spikelets. Spikelets erect, 
few, Di caeedgualnped 2- to 4-flowered, shining, green, variegated 
with violet and white. Glumes nearly equal, rough on the keel, 
acuminate, the lower one 1-nerved, the upper one eS rather 
larger than the lower, and nearly as long as the spikelet. Lower pale 
gradually acuminate, terminated by 2 “short acute teeth, ultimately 
- parchment-like with scarious margins. Awn from a little above the 
middle of the pale, that of the lower floret twice as long as the 
upper glume. Axis bearded at the base of the florets, the hairs of 
the second floret more than half the length of its lower pale. 

In meadows and by the banks of streams. Rather sparingly 
but widely distributed, extending from Cornwall, Isle of Wight, 
and Kent to Orkney and Shetland. Not unfrequent, and generally — 
distributed in Ireland. 

England, Scotland, Ireland. Perennial. Summer. 

Stems 1 to 2 feet high. Longest leaves 2 to 6 inches long by { to 

1 inch broad, rather abruptly pointed at the apex. Panicle 2 to 6 
inches long. Spikelets } to = inch long, exclusive of the awns, varie- 

ted with pale or dark purple, green, ‘and white. Awns brown. 

Downy Oat-Grass. 
French, Avoine pubescente. German, Weichhaariger Hafer. 

This species is common in mountain pastures, especially in limestone districts, and 
indeed follows the chalk and oolites into the valleys. Of little acpreterte Nonan 
ae Teh and maples like all grasses of e downy character. 


SPECIES UL—AVEN A PRATENSIS. in: 


h tuft, 


ves gerry Loe ae as rather | sin ch 


76 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


spikelet. Lower pale gradually acuminate, terminated by 2 acute 
rough teeth, ultimately parchment-like, with scarious margins. Awn 
fiom a little above the middle of the pale, that of the lowest floret 
about twice as long as the upper glume. Axis bearded at the base of 
the florets, the hairs of the second floret less than a tenth the length 
of its pale. 

Var. a, genuinum. 

Pirate MDCCXXXIX. 
Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Hely. Vol. L. Tab. CII. Fig. 207. 
A. pratensis, Sm. Engl. Bot. ed. i. No. 1204; and Engl. Fl. Vol. L. p. 164. 

Stem and sheaths cylindrical. Panicle-branches often solitary (at 
least from the upper nodes of the rachis), short, usually = very 
rarely with even 2 spikelets. 

Var. 8, alpina. 
| Reich. Ic, Fl, Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CIV. Fig. 212. 
A. alpina, Kunth, Enum. Plant. Vol. I. p. 301. eich. Ic. Le. p. 22. Koch, Syn. FI. 
= et Helv. ed. ii. p. 918. 
_ planiculmis. ‘Sm. Engl. Bot. ed. i. No, 2161 (non Selirad.). 


Stem and sheaths more or less compressed, the latter rougher and 
the leaves broader than in var.. Panicle-branches mostly in pairs, 
the longer one of each pair usually with 2 or even 3 spikelets, which 
are considerably larger than those of var.e. Awns of the florets 
usually longer from the bend to the apex than in var. a. 

Var. a on dry pastures, downs, and rocks, particularly of chalk or 

_ trap. Rather common, and generally distributed. Var. 8 on ledges 
of rocks in mountainous and hilly districts. Apparently neither form 
Be has been observed in Ireland. 


England, Scotland. Perennial. = 


: Plant one in dense tufts somewhat like those of Aira ag at 
of the barren tufts eis wpe ty to} 


GRAMINA. vue 


4 to 9 inches long. Spikelets 3 to 1 inch long. Though the extreme 
examples of the alpine form are very different from A. pratensis of 
lowland pastures, the transition between the two is so gradual that all 
idea of separating them into species has been given up by common 
consent. 

A third variety, A. bromoides (Zinn.), is frequent in the south of 
Europe. It has the spikelets smaller, although the florets are usually 
more numerous than in var. «. The glumes and pales are also 
broader in proportion. 

A. pratensis much resembles A. pubescens, but forms dense tufts; 
the leaves are narrower, thicker, with stronger nerves and rough 
edges, and are glaucous above and glabrous. The sheaths also are 
never pubescent, the stems are more rigid, the spikelets larger and 
usually less highly coloured, and the hairs at the base of the florets 
are much shorter in A. pratensis than in A. pubescens. 


Glabrous Oat-Grass. 
French, Avoine des prés. German, Wiesen-Hafer. 
This grass is wrongly named “ meadow,” as it is seldom if ever found in a position 
that is worthy of that name. It possesses hard eutting leaves. Sinclair says that 


“its nutritive matter contains a less proportion of bitter extractive and saline matters 
than any other of the Oat-grasses that have been submitted to experiment.” 


Sus-Genus II].—EU-AVENA. Gren. & Godr. 
Annual. Spikelets ultimately drooping or nodding, large, scarcely 
compressed. Glumes herbaceous, many-nerved. Lowest wpticeied oS 
perfect. Lower pale subherbaceous, at length coriaceous, not keeled, __ 
more or less distinctly awned, at least in the lower florets. 7 : 
——— the inner face, - 


"SPECIES Iv _AVENA STRIGOSA. Schr. 
Prats MDCC: XL. 
Reich. To. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CVI Fig. a7. 


 ~Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. No. 27 


Danth: 


thonia ae Se a —— 


78 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


with violet at the base and with dark awns. Glumes nearly 
equal, as long as the spikelets, herbaceous, with broad scarious margins, 
the lower one 5- to 7-ribbed, the upper 7- to 9-ribbed. Lower pale 
lanceolate, gradually acuminate, terminated by 2 long scabrous setz 
about half the length of the rest of the pale or more, ultimately 
coriaceous and brown towards the base, with a few long scattered 
whitish hairs near the middle or wholly glabrous, 5-nerved, with 
the nerves conspicuous towards the apex and vanishing towards the 
base. Awn present in all the florets, from about the middle of the 
pale, that of the lowest floret about twice as long as the upper glume. 
Axis not fragile beneath the lowest floret, abroiie except at the base 
of the upper floret, the hairs at the base of the second floret scarcely 
reaching to the base of the pale. 

A weed in cultivated fields. Scarcely naturalised in England and 
the south of Scotland, but frequent in the north, extending to Orkney 
and Shetland. Rather 1 rare, but widely daistbated 3 6 Fieland. 


: [agiend, | wom — Annual. Summer. 


lways with. a long ra ae ee awn. ae mt also 4 is ack dashes 
d, more acuminate, and more strongly nerved towards the 


Phe Tartarian or Potatoe oat, Avena Orientalis, which is also fre- 


.e glume the lower pale not terminating m 2 Fae the — 
or even ‘oth the florets without an awn. 

A. strigosa and A. Orientalis tion is t com- 

1% ‘not always effected Lehre the anthers | prin pe — the 

which time Boye inn be found em pty of pollen; at least 


he case i in the county of Fife. As sc, however, though 
ertil ed in the ‘same ised occas! onal vy be — with 


GRAMINA. 79 


SPECIES V—AVENA FATUA, Lin. 
Prare MDCCXLI. 
Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CVI. Fig. 218. 
Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsicc. No. 1372. 

Annual. Without radical leaves or barren shoots. Leaves dd 
broadly linear, flaccid, thin, flat, with numerous slender rough ribs 
every third, fourth or fifth of which is stronger than the others, dull 
green; sheaths smooth; ligule short, laciniate. Panicle sub-erect, 
very lax, at first subsecund, ultimately spreading in all directions. 
Pedicels capillary, mostly longer than the spikelets. Spikelets droop- 
ing, ultimately pendulous, numerous, opening widely during and after 
flowering, 3-flowered, more rarely 2-flowered, green, with dark brown 
awns. Glumes equal, longer than the spikelets, herbaceous, with 
narrow scarious margins, both commonly with 9 ribs. Lower pale 
lanceolate, gradually acuminate, terminated by 2 short scabrous set 
less than one-tenth the length of the rest of the pale, ultimately 
coriaceous and usually dark-brown, with numerous long close yellow 
or orange hairs on the back and sides, extending from the base to the 
middle or only at the base, or very rarely wholly glabrous, 5-nerved, 
the nerves rather faint and vanishing about half-way down towards 
the base. Awn present in all the jie from about the middle of 
the pale, that of the lowest floret about twice as long as the upper 


glume. Axis fragile beneath the lowest floret, hairy at the base of a : : 


the florets, the hairs at the base of the second floret exter 
beyond the base of the Lo for about = of its — 


Se voor 


hairs from the base —— i“ where re — wn si 
- ra < brown. mmr enies 


5 py intermedia. 
me - comin in LindBl, Bot. Not. 1841, p. 151. a 
Pe _ Koch, Syn. Fl. Germ. ote ep 917. oe 


gene | 


80 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


in Ireland, where it occurs in counties Kerry, Cork, and Dublin. 
Var. 8, Claygate, Surrey (Mr. H. C. Watson), Bluntisham, Hunts (Rev. 
W. W. Newbould); Knutsford, Cheshire (the Hon. J. L. Warren); 
and doubtless elsewhere. 


England, [Scotland], Ireland. Annual. Summer, Autumn. 


Stem 2 to 4 feet high, stout. Leaves 6 inches to 1 foot or more 
long, 3 to 2 inch broad, dull green, darker on the back, often with a 
few long scattered hairs. Panicle 6 inches to 1 foot or more long. 
Spikelets 3 to 1 inch long exclusive of the awns. Lower pale ulti- 
mately very dark brown in var. «, but much paler in var. B. 

fatua is readily ished from A. strigosa by its very 
lax panicle ultimately spreading i in all directions, by its more equal 
glumes, which are longer in proportion to the florets, by its lower 
pale being darker in hor eal usually densely clothed in the lower half 
with bristly hairs, which are at first pale but ultimately become dull 
Satie arte ‘and having the apex terminated by 2 very short 
instead of 2 very long sete. 

In habit A. fatua closely cg ap the cultivated oat, A. sativa, 
aot it has the panicle larger an an d more Spreading, the ‘fl orets all 
; the lower ner ved, and 
tiseally hairy. The florets in A. fatua open and allow the stigmas 
to protrude usually before the anthers are empty of pollen; and from 
the fragility of the axis of the spikelet the florets drop more readily 

a strigosa or. A. sativa. 

_ The two vars. were first noticed in Britain, as far as I am aware, 
in Grays s ‘ Natural Arrangement of British Plants,’ where our var. 
6 is made the type of the species ; but it seems to 'be less abundant 
begesin ibe a both in Britain and on the Continent. 


Wild Oat. 
French, honden follette. German, Flug- or Wind-Hafer. 


oo Tenis one ofthe most mihiovons of agrvian wes and ait grows fn cor 
crops, if its eeds 1 t the corn is cut, the sowing of these render it difficult 


Ulli IS Vie, UO 


ct sty ies om hn arin on 
in th ce of hairs at the 
ook atte tively at i a poor sample f market 

ate Y ee ¥ ioe! will be 


ara with son mays in better soils 


: “ ime 2 rs 
‘ Holeus ayenaceus, Scop. (Sm. Engi Bot. ei. No. a8. — 


GRAMINA. | 81 


40 Ibs. a bushel, in poor lands soon become awned and weigh under 38 Ib. per bushel. 
No wonder, then, that nk eel should be made a test of quality. 

We conclude, then, that the A. strigosa, A. fatua, and A. sativa are, to say the least, 
very near relatives. 

The use of the wild oat, with its brown hairy seed and twisted awn, as an artificial 
fly is well known; the uncoiling of the awn when wetted causing those contortions 
by which it imitates a fly in trouble. It is of common use with rustic fishermen. 
These awns also make excellent Beate being very sensitive to the humidity 
of the atmosphere, which causes them to expand; and during dry weather they 
contract. 


Sus-Gexus IV.—ARRHENATHERUM. Pal. de Beauv. 


Perennial. Spikelets erect, rather large, slightly compressed. 
Glumes subherbaceous, 1- to 3-nerved. Lower floret usually male. 
Lower pale subherbaceous, ultimately parchment-like, keeled, con- 
spicuously awned in the lower floret, but very ia so in the upper 
one. Caryops elliptical, dorsally compressed with a furrow on the 
inner face, pubescent at the apex. 

The name of this genus of grasses is derived from the words anv, male, and a®ip, 
an awn. 


SPECIES VI-AVENA ELATIOR. Lim * 


Reich, Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. XCVIII. Figs. 192 and 193. 
Arrh 


enatherum elatius, Mert. & Koch. Koch, Syn. Fl. Germ. et Helv. ake ne Les 


Gren. & Godr. Fl. de Fr. Vol. TIL. p. 520. Parl. ie es dn sa ae 
Man. FI. Belg. ed. ii. p. 344. 


“A. avenscoum, Pal. de Beaws. Bab, Man. Brit. Bot!ed. vi. p. 411. Hook oa 


Brit. Fi. ed. v vill. ai 544. Kunth, Enum. Plant Vol. L a = eich Toe 


$2 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


purple. Glumes unequal, herbaceous, with broad scarious margins, 
the lower one small, 1-ribbed, the upper one twice as long as the 
lower, and nearly as long as the florets, 3- to 5-ribbed. Lower pale 
lanceolate, gradually acuminate, terminated by 2 rather short tapering 
cusps, ultimately parchment-like, hairy or glabrous. Awn of the 
lower or male flower from about the middle of the pale, and about 
twice as long as the upper glume, bent’ in the middle; awn of the 
upper or perfect floret inserted at the bottom of the notch between 
the cusps of the pale, straight, and extending but little beyond the 
pale, being about twice as long as the cusps. Axis not fragile, with a 
short tuft of hairs at the base of the florets, hairs at the base of the 
second floret about one-eighth the length of the pale. 


Var. a, genuina. 

A. elatior, Wild. Spee. Plant. Vol. I. p. 443. 

Arrhenatherum elatius, Presl. Boreau, Fl. du Centre de la Fr. ed. iii. Vol. IT. p.703. 
Lower joints of the stem not swollen. Knots glabrous. Lower 

: Lots more or —— hairy. | 
‘Var. bs nodosum. Reich. 
‘ walbosa, Wild. D.C. Fl. Fr. Vol. VI. p. 261. 
Arrhenatherum bulbosum, Presl. Boreau, Fl. du Centre de la Fr. ed. iii. Vol. II. 
p. 703. 

Lower joints of the stem swollen into bulblike knobs, mostly one 
above the other. Knots of the stem usually pubescent. Lower 25 
glabrous. Panicle-branches usually ‘aceasta in var a. 

In cultivated fields, - ss sigesig pa in meadows and woods. Vary 
ted. Var. 8 nearly as common in some 


common, 


oe districts as the types form, expecially when the _ grows in culti- : 
; vated d. | 


groun 
England, Scotland, Ireland. Perennial. Summer, Autumn. 


Stems 18 inches to 6 es high, slender, terete, smooth. Barren 
less than half che heig] i ae ge eames 


GRAMINA. — 83 


eee, the uppermost one much longer than broad, 
and gradually tapering upwards. 
False Oat-Grass. 
French, Arrhénathére élevée. German, Hoker Wiesenhafer. 

This is a large succulent species of grass, greatly aiding the grass crop almost every- 
where, but is not much relished on account of the quantity of bitter extractive matter 
it contains. 

The variety bulbosum is interesting from the fact that the swollen nodes give the 
appearance to the quasi roots of a vac! of small onions ; hence the name “ Onion 
Couch.” It is common in poor sandy soils, whence it is difficult of eradication. 

All the forms of this grass are particularly liable to attacks of Uredo Segetum. 


GENUS XXVI—HOLCUS. Linn. 


Spikelets stalked, arranged in a rather loose panicle, with rather 
elongate branches which are spreading only during the time of 
flowering, laterally compressed, biconvex, open during flowering, each 
containing a single perfect floret, with a male floret above it. Glumes 
2, nearly equal in length, but the upper much broader than the lower, 
as long as or longer than the florets, compressed and keeled, not 
awned, parchmentlike. Pales 2, nearly equal, membranous, or ulti- 
mately parchmentlike, the lower one keeled, obtuse, entire, awnless or 
very rarely awned in the lower floret, but with a dorsal bent awn in 
the upper floret; upper pale truncate wie dentate at the apex, 2-ribbed. 
Lodicules 2, glabrous. Stamens 3. Stigmas 2, subsessile, plumose, _ 
protruded at the sides of the florets between the basal margins of the — 
pales. Caryops free, glabrous, oblong-cylinedrical, not furrowed. | a 


The name of this genus of grasses is derived. from the Greek words, Bebe ond oe 
édcw, I draw. A name given to. — that were a to have oo 


ater dmmareenenma nite: 


_ $PECIES [-HOLCUS. MOL — 
‘Piate MDCCXLUI. 


oe — Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. XOVIL Bet 191. 


li , Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. No. 2174. 
eee wees eet D.€. Ml Fe. Vol. IIL p. 4. 


Spa creeping, producing scattered : 


84 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


puberulent or subglabrous ; ligule short, oblong. Knots of the stem 
much more densely pubescent than the sheaths. Panicle erect, 
open during the time of flowering, closed before and after it ; 
pees brian short, branched, thinly hairy. Glumes unequal, 
acuminate, submucronate, longer than the flowers, subglabrous or 
clothed with very short sparse pubescence, ciliated with stiff hairs on 
the keel, the upper one larger than the lower, with the lateral ribs 
rather nearer to the ribs than to the inner margin. Lower | = 
the lower or perfect flower glabrous, shining, not awned; pale of 

_upper or male flower glabrous, shining, awned. Awn from ee 
one-third below the apex of the pale, at = straight, ultimately genicu- 
late, but not hooked, extending beyond the pale about the length of 
the latter, and about one-third longer than the upper glume, scabrous 
throughout. Axis with a tuft of unequal hairs at the base of the 
upper or male floret, hi Pn from a —— to one-third the length 


stures, and on hedgebanks. Rather common, and 


Flow owering stems sie tees wo 8 les barren stems 1 foot to 
: 18 inches. Eanes of the flowering shoots 4 to 8 inches long by } to 
4 inch broad; those of the barren stems shorter and narrower. 
Panicle 2 to 5 inches long. Spikelets 1 inch long, whitish. Glumes 
with the lateral ribs of the upper one and the keel of both green, or 
ane purple, their surface clothed with minute tubercles producing 
short hairs. Anthers dark purple. 
Creeping Soft-Grass. 
enk Houlque molle. German, Weiches Honiggras. 

- ‘This Grass is common on light barren soils, either in woods or open pastures, but 
Ao - neither cows, horses nor sheep thrive on it. Pigs are said to be fond of the roots, which 
. —— — ~ nutritive matter, having very much the flavour of 
new meal. It nischievoi weed when it occurs in arable land, and is only got 

of of by deep ploughing, — Ss 


-HoLcUS. LANATUS. Linn, 


GRAMINA. 85 


the leaves appear to be radical. Leaves broadly linear, thin, flaccid, 
flat, with numerous slightly unequal thick slightly prominent ribs per- 
manently pubescent, ciliated, but not rough on the margins ; sheaths 
pubescent; ligule short, oblong. Knots of the stem neureely more 
pubescent ee the sheaths. Panicle erect, open during the time 
of flowering, closed before and partially closed after it; panicle- 
branches short, branched, thinly hairy. Glumes unequal, subobtuse, 
both shortly awned, longer than the flowers, finely pubescent, ciliated 
with stiff hairs on the keel, the upper one larger than the lower, ovate- 
oblong and acute in profile, with the lateral ribs about equidistant from 
the keel and the inner margin. Lower pale of the lower or perfect 
floret glabrous, shining, not awned. Lower pale of the upper or male 
floret shining, awned. Awn from about one-fourth from the apex of 
the pale, and about half as long again as the pale, at first slightly 
curved and extending a little heyousl the glumes, ultimately hooked 
and included within the glumes, smooth throughout, or scabrous only 
at the apex. Axis without hairs at the base of the upper or male 

ret. 

In meadows, pants, woods, hedges, &c. Common, and univer- 


sally distributed. 
England, Scotland, Ireland. Perennial. Summer. 


Plant growing in dense tufts. Pols felis 2 stems 1 to 2 feet high. 
Leaves 6 inches to 1 foot long, by 1 to 3 broad, whitish on account t of 


the copious pubescence with which they are clothed. Panicle2to5 


_— in flower. 


oo = peas a 


: and incladed within the glumes. 
‘Yotta : ee 
- Foech Honlque lemenies. | German, Wolpe Hin oe 


inches long, very similar to that of H. ig bn but more 8D apis a a 
Hin with pink. ee, : 


86 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


If made into hay the seeds are scattered wherever the hay is carried. It has spread 
all over the United States, no doubt taken there in grass seeds. 


Tre XI.—_FESTUCEA. 


Spikelets open during flowering, arranged in a lax open panicle, or 
more rarely in a compact spikelike panicle, rarely unilateral on the 
branches of a compound spike, or distichous in a simple or sub- 
simple spike or raceme, cylindrical or laterally compressed, each con- 
taining 2 to many perfect florets, very rarely with but a single one. 
Glumes shorter than the florets, rarely equalling them. Pales herba- 
ceous, or at length parchmentlike, the lower one rounded or keeled 
on the back, obtuse or pointed, without an awn, or with a straight 
dorsal or apical awn, which occurs chiefly in the species of those 
eo which have very numerous florets much longer than the 

es. Stamens 3, rarely 2 or 1. Styles very shext or absent; 
stigmas protruded at the base of the florets, between the margins 
of eo! cae nantes —— a —s with a facrow 
inner face. 


pre XXVIL—TRIODIA. R. ie 


Spats: shortly stalked, arranged in a nearly ahajde distichously 2 
subeacenions panicle, scarcely compressed, open during flowering, — 
each containing 2 to 5 perfect florets. Glumes 2, nearly equal, as long 

as or a little shorter than the florets, keeled, poinbed but not awned, 
- subherbaceous. Pales 2, the lower one rounded on the back, 3-toothed 
at the apex, but not distinctly awned, parchmentlike; upper pale 


_ entire, 2-ribbed. Lodicules 3, somewhat fleshy. Stamens 3. | Styles 2, - 


as . terminal; stigmas plumose, protruded at the sides of the floret: = 
, the basal a the pales. Caryops free, gla : 


fattened on the inner fie, but a fred, . 


a | 


inch bond. 


GRAMINA. 87 


SPECIES I—-TRIODIA DECUMBENS. Pal. de Beaw. 
Pirate MDCCXLYV. 
Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CLXVI. Fig. 433. 
Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. No. 1376. 
Poa decumbens, With. Sm. Engl. Bot. ed. i. No. 792. 
Festuca decumbens, Linn. Spec. Plant. p. 110. 
Danthonia decumbens, D.C. Gren. & Godr. Fl. de Fr. Vol. II. p. 561. Parl. FI. 
Ital. Vol. I. p. 297. Crep. Man. Fl. Belg. ed. ii. 
Sieglingia decumbens, Bernh. Garcke, Fl. von Nord- coud Mittel-Deutschland, ed. vi. 
p. 488. Gren. Fl. de la Chaine Jurass. p. 905. 
Ceespitose. Stem at first decumbent, afterwards ascendin 
erect while in flower, slightly compressed, smooth, leafy to above the 
middle and frequently up to the panicle. Leaves rather rigid, nar- 
rowly linear, flat at the base, channelled towards the apex, keeled, 
with numerous strong veins, rough on the edges, glaucous above, 
green beneath; sheaths thinly pubescent, bearded at the apex; ligule 
composed of short hairs. Panicle subracemose; panicle-branches 
erect, 1- to 3-flowered. Pedicels about as long as the spikelets or 
longer, slightly thickened upwards. Spikelets few, ovoid, scarcely 
compressed, green, slightly tinged with violet, 3- to 5-flowered. 
Glumes about as long as the florets, acute, 3-nerved. Lower pale 
3-toothed at the apex, the central tooth sometimes produced into a 
mucro. : 
On hilly pastures, heaths, and more ~~ in scenes _ 
common, and generally distributed. 


England, Scotland, Ireland. 


Stems 6 to 21 inches 
Feeh “i! 


5 pe ay ict, Dos 
2 in ication that the whole of the 
oe igh ce lea 


cn 


88 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


very short lateral branches spreading only at the time of flowering, 
laterally compressed, open during flowering, each containing 2 to 5 
perfect florets. Glumes 2, unequal, both shorter than the florets, 
keeled, pointed or mucronate, but not awned, scarious, the lower one 
1-ribbed and smaller than the upper, which is 3-ribbed. Pales 2, 
the lower one keeled, entire, and pointed, or bifid and very shortly 
awned from between the teeth; upper pale bidentate, 2-ribbed. 
Lodicules 2, oblong, entire, or 2-toothed. Stamens 3. Styles 2, 
terminal, very short; stigmas plumose, protruded at the sides of the 
floret, between the ‘tana margins of the pales. Caryops glabrous, 
free, oblong, laterally compressed, not furrowed. 
This genus of grass was named in honour of a German botanist, G. F. Kéler. 


SPECIES I-KOELERIA CRISTATA. Pers. 
Pirate MDCCXLVI. 

Reich, Ic. Fi. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. XCIIL. Fig. 174. 
Billot, Fi. Gall. et . No. 1365. 
Aira cristata, Linn. Sm. Engl. Bot. ed. i. No. 648; and Engl. Fl. Vol. L p. 101. 
Poa cristata, Wild. D.C. FL. Fr. Vol. ITI. p. 65. 
Festuca cristata, Poll. Fl. Veron. Vol. Lp. 121. 
Airochlon cristata, Links én. Sym. Br. p07. Paral, Grases of Great Britain, 

p. 4 

Perennial. Tootstock: casptose, many-headed, producing 1 numerous 
flowering stems and barren » Stems erect from a slightly 
curved base, pubescent or puberulent, leafy nearly to the middle. 
_ Leaves narrowly linear, flat or involute, with several thick continuous 
cartilaginous ribs, generally pubescent; sheaths more or less jake: 
scent, not filamentous at the edges; ligule very short, truncate. 
Panicle pyramidal-oblong or subcylindrical, more or less lobed, its 
__ short branches spreading during the time of flowering, but adpressed 
both before and afterwards. Spikelets 2- to 4-flowered. eines acu- 
woe eee or scabrous, or glabrous and scabrous on the keel 

: Lower pale acuminate or acute, as not awned. 


Se ee ee r 


‘purple. — 


GRAMINA. 89 


ated at the base and apex, slightly lobed. Glumes smooth and 
shining, with only the keel scabrous. 


Var. y, albescens. 
K. albescens, D.C. Gren. & Godr. Fl. de Fr. Vol. Ill. p. 526. Bor. Fl. du Centre 
de la Fr. ed. iii. Vol. IL. p. 718. 
K. arenaria, Dwmort. Agrost. Belg. p. 115. 


Leaves narrow, involute. Panicle slender, cylindrical, lobed and 
frequently interrupted towards the base. Glumes glabrous and 
shining, scabrous on the keel. Lower pale less acuminate than in 
vars. « and B. 

Var. « rather common, and generally distributed, extending north 
to Sutherland and Ross. Var. 6 on downs and chalky banks, appa- 
rently confined to England, from whence I have specimens from 
Somerset, Kent, and Cambridge. Var. y in sandy places by the sea: 
Quenvais, Jersey, Mr. H. C. Watson; it should be looked for on the 
southern and western shores of England. Not unfrequent, and gene- 
rally distributed in Ireland; but I have no means of knowing which 
of the varieties occur in that island. 


England, Scotland, Ireland. Perennial. Summer. 


Stems 3 to 18 inches high, or even more in var. e, in which case it 
is probably the K. pyramidalis of Rochel. Leaves green, slightly 
glaucous above, 2 inches to 1 foot long, by } inch broad or more in 
var. a, and considerably less in vars. 8 and 7; the uppermost stem-leaf _ 


inch long, silvery. 


} to 14 inch long flat. Panicle 1 to 3 “inches a ‘oes ao about 


GENUS XXIXMO OLINIA. ‘Schrank. 


Gekclets stalked, arranged in a compact or lax panicle with : 


] short or = branches, iene Compress 


90 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


the lower one rounded or faintly keeled on the back, entire or dentate, 
not awned or shortly awned, rather strongly ribbed, parchmentlike; 
upper pale obtuse or bifid, 2-keeled. Lodicules 2, entire. Stamens 3. 
Styles 2, terminal, very short; stigmas hairy, protruded at the sides 
of the flower between the basal margins of the pales. Caryops free, 
glabrous, oblong or fusiform, furrowed on the inner face. 

This genus of grasses was named in honour of G. J. Molina, an Italian botanist. 


SPECIES I-MOLINIA CHRULEA. Minch. 
Pirate MDCCXLVIL. 
Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. No. 94. 


cerulea, Linn. Mant. Sm. Engl. Bot. ed. i. No. 750; and Engl. Fi. Vol. 
I p. 11S, 
ceruleum, Gaud. Fries, Summ. Veg. Scand. p. 77. 
Aira cerulea, Linn. Spec. Pl. p. 95. 
Festuca csrulea, D.C. Fl. Fr. Vol. III. p- 46. Bor. Fl. du Centre de la Fr. ed. iii. 
| Vol. IL. p. 716. 


Hlelini and barren stems fasciculate, the former with the up- 
--permost ; near the base of the stem, without leafless scales at 
the base. Leaves elongate, erect or ascending, not rete — 
: formed of a ring of hairs. Panicle beidhes ¢ erect or or 2 sending, short or 
or elongate. Glumes 1-ribbed. Lower pale rounded on the eed, 
an 


entire, acuminate, but not awned, with 3 slightly pr ribs; 
: nel cote 
Vat. & genuina. 
ehh Gea Vol. I. Tab. CL. Fig. 372. 
o . — Reich, Te. Le. p- 47. 

. : , Dumort. Agrost. Belg. p- 108. 

aves , rarely — the base of Sen evil, Panicle 

short ‘usually wholly 


ed 9 with tarde 


GRAMINA. 91 


long lateral branches. Spikelets green, with the glumes and pales 
narrowly (rarely broadly) edged with purple, and usually with fewer 
florets than in var. a. 

On heaths and in moist woods. Rather common, and generally 
. distributed. Var. 6 in marshy woods, by the sides of streams, and 
on mountains. 


England, Scotland, Ireland. Perennial. Summer, Autumn. 


Plant growing in dense circular tussocks, composed of closely placed 
tufts, the base of each of which is enlarged and somewhat bulbous 
and white. Var. has the stems 6 inches to 2 feet high, destitute 
of knots, except close to the base, where there is a single one. 
Radical leaves none. Leaves few, sheathing the flowering stem about 
as far as the middle, the lower one short, the longest from 2 inches to 1 
_ foot long by to 4 inch broad, tapering towards the base and apex, ve 
acute, flat, rather stiff, with slender slightly rough closely placed 
ribs, every ‘third, fourth, or fifth of which is stronger than the others, 
glabrous or sparingly hairy above, dull bluish-green; sheaths shorter 
than the leaves, smooth, often tinged with | purple ; ; ligule rudi- 
mentary, with a few short hairs. Panicle 2 to 10 inches long, narrow. 
Spikelets 1 to } inch long, dull purple, sometimes tinged with green, 
2- or 3-flowered; the uppermost floret rudimentary minute. Anthers 
and stigmas purple. 

Var. 8 has the stem 1 to 3 feet high or more. Leaves 6 to 18 inches 
long. Panicle 4 to 18 inches long, baci the branches much longer, 
and the spikelets more distant than in a, green, with the glumes 


and pales edged with purple. When the spikelets of var. 8 have buta 


single floret, the plant is the M. depauperata of Lindley, — is fat ae 
a starved state of the lax-panicled form of M. cerulea. It is indeed | 
said that M. pa art er has the pale 5-ribbed instead of 


92 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


pressed, open during flowering, each containing 1 to 3 perfect florets, 
with a clavate padementary one above one Glumes 2, slightly 
unequal, as long as or a little shorter than the florets, concave, not 
awned, 3- to 7-ribbed, scarious. Pales 2, the lower one rounded on 
the back, entire, not awned, strongly ribbed, parchmentlike; upper 
pale 2-toothed, 2-ribbed. Lodicules 2, entire. Stamens 3. Styles 
2, terminal, very short; stigmas plumose, protruded at the sides of 
the flower between the basal margins of the pales. Caryops free, 
glabrous, elliptical, flattened and furrowed on the inner face. 


The name of this genus of grasses is derived from the word Mel, honey, on account 
of the sweetness of its stem. 


SPECIES I-MELICA NUTANS. Lina. 


Pirate MDCCXLVIILI. 


Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Hely. Vol. I. Tab. CLXVII. Fig. 437. 
Billot, F). Gall. et Germ. Exsice. No. 2974. 
M. Montana, Huds. D.C. F1. Fr. Vol. III. p. 31. 


Enenen; scancely. paepiboen, ‘Shortly arecping, stoloniferous 


: Leaves linear, tape tapering ermal: ‘och end, flat, with numerous very 
slender ribs, slightly pubescent above, bright green; sheaths slightly 
pubescent-scabrous, the lowest with undeveloped lamine, split at the 
very apex only, the uppermost one about as long as its leaf; ligule 
very short, truncate, without appendages. Panicle drooping, linear, 
nearly simple, racemose, rather lax, secund. Panicle-branches finely 
pubescent, all simple ind arching-spreading, or the lower ones, with 

2 to 4 racemed spikelets and ~~ to the rachis. Pedicels mostly 

: elses ren itimately o7 fertil 

oo a terminal neuter ane _ Glumes a little shorter than La 
al, obtuse, maroon-red, with pale scarious edges, the up 

longer — the ge Pee ae oval, eAcione: 

ly punctate-scabrous, aid ea 

le eds se ‘of rocks. Rather scarce, 

ae York north to Aber- 


GRAMINA. 93 


2 inches long. Spikelets } to 3 inch long. Foret floret about 4 
inch long. Pale of the neuter flower obovate, turbinate, oblicvely 
truncate, and with the edges inflexed. 
Nodding Melic-Grass. 
French, Mélique penchée. German, Nickendes Perlgras. 
From the early growth of this a — its enous well in open situations when 
cultivated, it is worthy of agricultural 


SPECIES IL-MELICA UNIFLORA. Retz. 
Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CLX VII. Fig. 436. 
Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsicc. No. 1594. 

Rootstock slender, scarcely cespitose, creeping, stoloniferous. 
Stems slender, erect. Leaves linear, tapering towards each end, flat, 
with numerous slender ribs, slightly pubescent above, bright green; 
rp pubescent, entire, the uppermost one shorter eg: its leaf, all 

2; ligule nearly absent, but with a long subulate pubescent 
siciale at the top of the sheath, on the side of dis stem opposite the 
lamina. Panicle erect, pyramidal, slightly compound, very lax, equal. 
Panicle-branches finely scabrous, most of them branched at the apex, 
simple, spreading-ascending. Pedicels mostly longer than the spike- 
lets. Spikelets ultimately obovate-oblong, with 1 ee floret and a 
terminal neuter floret. Glumes as long as or a little longer than the ~ 
spikelet, oval-oblong, abruptly acuminate, maroon-red, with pale 
edges, the upper one conspicuously larger than the lower. Lower 2 


rally distributed in fugue « en de south ae Soxcand, ae 
rare north of the Forth and Clyde, tk ough said to extend to Kin- SS 


: , Stgme Lo ® fet heh, Lonet Jeeves 48 inches ng by 


Panicle 3 to 8 inches longs lowest panicle-branches 
pi ikelets } ¢ tof _ ong. _ Lowest floret about 


M. nutans, bat even when not Le tower the reinarkable os 
from the ligu it on the opp ate mile of bam . 


. 94 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


spikelets with longer more acuminate — and only a single fertile 
floret, are more conspicuous characters ? 
Wood Mole. Crass 
French, Mélique uniflore. German, Hinbliithiges Perlgras. 
The most natural place of growth of this grass is in rocky moist shady woods, having 
a clayey soil, situated about 300 feet above the sea. It has not been found in America, 


or further north than a latitude of 62°, Its limit of altitude seems to be about 1 000 
feet above the sea. 


GENUS XXXI—CAT ABROSA. Pal. de Beauv. 


Spikelets stalked, arranged in a loose open panicle, subcylindrical 
or slightly laterally compressed and biconvex, open during flower- 
ing, each containing 2, or, more rarely, 1 or 3, perfect florets, of which 
the lowest is sessile and the uppermost stalked, sometimes with 1 or 2 
stalk-like rudi e the perfect florets or floret. Glumes 
2, unequal, both Shutter than the floret, concave, not awned, 1- or 
cr aaa 3-ribbed, scarious. Pales 2; the lower one concave, keeled, 
ounded or truncate and erose- da tenlated at the apex, not awned, 
3- to 7 -ribbed, with the ribs not extending to the apex, parchment-like, 
with a broad scarious apex; upper pale lanceolate, truncate or emar- 
ginate, 2-ribbed. Lodicules 2, lanceolate. Stamens 3, Styles 2, very 
short, terminal; stigmas plumose, protruded at the sides of the flower 
between the basal ee of the pales. Caryops free, glabrous, obo- 
vate, laterally compre not furrowed. 

The name of this genus of plants is derived from the Greek word, caraBowac, an 


| SPEOUES LC AT ABROSA AQUATICA. Paul. de Bean. 


Prater MDCCL. 
Bois. To. F. Germ. ot Hel. Vol I Tab. CL. Fig. 374. 
> FL. Gall. et Germ. Exsicc. Exsice. No. 2175. 


itica, Linn. Sm. Eng. Bot. ed. i. No. 1557. & Eng. FL Vol. I. p.101, 
aquatica, Presl ; Koch, Syn. Fl. Germ. et Helv. ed. ii. p. 933. (non Wahl.) 
8, Reich. Fi. G Ge sire de ale : 
Kol. Dc. HL Fr. Vol. mere es ss 
voting ‘at the base. Lee flaccid, — : 
e oblong-tria lar, rounded at the apex. 


“Sane 2- rarely 1- 3- or 4- _ - ad 
Lower = = h 3 very 


GRAMINA. 95 


In ditches, by the margins of pools and ponds, and on wet sand; 
rather scarce but distributed over the whole island, reaching to Ork- 
ney and Shetland. Widely distributed throughout Ireland. 


England, Scotland, Ireland. Perennial. Summer. 


Stems extensively creeping and rooting, producing long leafy barren 
branches which are often floating and sometimes attain the length of 2 
or 3 feet. Flowering stems 3 inches to 2 feet high, erect or ascending, 
leafy up to the panicle. Longest leaves 1 to 9 ‘inches long by 4 to § 
of an inch broad, thin, slightly glaucous, the lower ones often produc- 
ing barren shoots from their axils. Panicle 1 to 10 inches long, with 
numerous spreading branches } to 3 inches long, arranged in half- 
whorls, with the — in each whorl unequal and distantly - 

branched. Spikelets y+ to 1 inch long, not contiguous. Glumes 
unequal, much shorter than the spikelets, truncate, erose-denticulate, 
often violet, the outer one much the smaller and without ribs, the 
upper one broadly obovate and 3-ribbed at the base. Outer pale 
truncate, erose and scarious at the apex, with the 3 ribs running 
into the white scarious part, greenish or yellowish olive, often tinged 
with dull purple but having the ribs green. 

Professor Babington states that though the spikelets are usually 2- 

they are sometimes 3- to 5-flowered, but I have not seen the plant 
with more than 3-flowered spikelets. 
metimes, when growing on wet sand by the i. the stems are 
only 2 or 3 inches high and the spikelets are commonly Piet 
but it seems impossible to draw a line of demarcation between this 
and the ordinary form 
Water Whorl-Grass. 
French, Catabrose aquatique. German, Wansers Queligras. 
a This is sid to be one of the ewestst of British grass, the young Teves and por. : 
tions of the stem b noe 
_ Tiquorice. Waterfowl are fond of the seeds and young shoots. "Gal atthe oeves : 
_ with relish, but as the plant is strictly aquatic, oe places and 
pools, it is unfit for cultivation. Oe 
; ee and wet sway if me of our rivers it assumes a 
ines ind tephily picuous form, but if from any cause the water recedes for some- 
_ time it grow I and i icuou 


2 in inv me mth hor of ive . i 
7 s high, each caly P . 


96 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


florets. Glumes persistent, very unequal, the lower one the smaller, 
both shorter than the florets, not awned, subscarious. Pales 2, the 
lower one concave, rounded on the back, truncate or obtuse, not awned, 
with 7 prominent ribs, subherbaceous, more or less scarious at the 
apex ; upper pale bidentate, 2-ribbed, the ribs very finely ciliated. 
icules 2, truncate. Stamens 3, rarely 2. Styles 2, terminal, short, 
persistent; stigmas clothed with plumose hairs, protruded at the sides 
of the flower between the margins of the pales. Caryops free, 
glabrous, oblong, furrowed on the inner face. 
The name of this genus is derived from the Greek word y\ucic, sweet, in allusion 
to the saccharine nature of some of the species. 


Section L—EU-GLYCERIA. Ledeb. 


Spikelets very long, cylindrical before flowering, afterwards linear, 
or oblong-linear, and laterally compressed. Lodicules cohering. Stems 
weak. Leaves flaccid. 


SPECIES I-GLYCERIA FLUITANS. BR. Br. 

Prarzs MDCCLII. MDCCLIL 
Poa fluitans, Scop. Hook. & Arn. Brit. Fl. ed. viii. p. 548. 

_ Festuca fluitans, Linn. Spec. Plant p. 111. 

Perennial. Rootstock subcespitose, without male stolons. 
Stems procumbent and rooting at the base, and then ascending or sub- 
erect, rather stout, weak. Leaves flaccid, ecedly ae parallel-sided, 
rounded or abruptly acuminate at the apex, ultimately flat, with 
numerous very slender ribs, pale glaucous ee. often Poms : 
_ sheaths compressed, ancipitate; ligule prominent, triangular, 
subacute, often lacerate. Panicle erect or drooping at the apex, 


: a elongate, subsecured, lax, sometimes nearly simple and racemose, 


- sometimes compound, Panicle tenet commonly 2 or 3 or 5 at the 
lower _— — — bac par sree He those at each of the 


GRAMINA. 97 


[Sus-Srscies 1—Glyceria eu-fluitans. 
Prats MDCCLI. 
Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CLIT. Fig. 380. 
Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. No. 483. 
G. fluitans, Fries. Bab. Man. Brit. Bot. ed. vi. p. 415. et Auct. Plur. 

Sheaths scarcely furrowed or slightly furrowed. Panicle slender, 
subracemose. Rachis smooth. Panicle-branches 2 or 3 together at 
the lower nodes of the rachis, spreading in flower, at other times 
adpressed, or diverging in fruit, 1 of those at each of the lower 
nodes longer than the others and bearing several racemosely ar- 
ranged spikelets, but not again branched; the other branch or pair 
of branches with but a single spikelet. Spikelets linear, acute, with 
7 to 15 florets inserted on i axis at distances equal to about twice 
their breadth. Lower pale (in profile) 5 or 6 times as long as broad, 
obliquely truncate, subacute, narrowly scarious at the apex. Anthers 
about 5 times as long as broad. Caryops narrowly eliptical. 


Var. «, genuina. 
G. fluitans, Townsend. Ann. Nat. Hist. Ser. ii. Vol. V. p. 104. 
Sheaths scarcely furrowed. Lower panicle-branches in pairs. 
Var. B, pedicellata. 
G. pedicellata, Towns. Ann. Nat. Hist. Ser. ii. Vol. V. p. 108. 


Sheaths slightly furrowed. Lower hPa Cee ostly in 
threes. lane rather — tion totheir 


land , Scotland, Ireland. “Perennial. a on : 
Stems 1 to 3 fect high, thick, weak, rooting at the base, and then 
4 Lees 3 nes to 1 ot lng, bp 9 4 inch bro 
upth ? its leaf; ae 
Dhani a 


98 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


referring to the figure of “Festuca fluitans” in Curtis’ Flora Lon- 
donensis, fasc. i. tab. 18, as ‘‘a good plate” of his G. pedicellata. 
Floating Meadow-Grass. 
French, Glycérie aquatique. German, Fluthende Schwaden. 

The Floating Meadow-Grasses are very variable. They have all, however, one 
character in common, namely, that from their situations they are extremely liable to 
become ergotised ; and we have reason to think that the greediness with which cattle 
eat them, is, when in this state, not without much danger, especially to gravid 
animals, 

In several parts of Germany this grass is cultivated for its seeds, which form the 
manna croup of the shops, and are considered a delicacy in soups and gruels. Birds 


it is said are fond of the seeds, which, when pounded into meal, make bread very 
little inferior to wheaten bread. 


Sus-Speecies Il—Glyceria plicata. ries. 
Prars MDCCLII. 


Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CLIII. Fig. 381. 
_ Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsicc. No. 183. 
- _ A UOS ee 


ee ee 2 > 


. 7 compound, or slender and 
ae kemeobertoeinenttg Pansies 3 
Ge eer aes adpres uring flowering 


- and diverging in fruit, 1 of those at each oF ths wee nodes longer 
than the others, usually greatly so, and bearing several racemosely 
arranged spikelets, or compound and bearing branches with racemosely 
ieiied spikelets, the other branches with a single spikelet, or (rarely ) 
one of them with 2 or 3 spikelets. Spikelets oblong-linear, obtuse, with 
4 to 12 florets inserted on the axis at distances about equal to their 
_ breadth. Lower pale (in profile) 3 or 4 times as long as broad, trun- __ 
__ eateerose, subobtuse, broadly scarious at the apex. Anthers about | 
twice as ee as broad. Caryops broadly —- : 


Var. a, genuina. 


ale cgenly compound, with the branch i in Suit in 
t fives at ee Spikel ts all 


P talked. 


GRAMINA. 99 


than Cowdenbeath, Fife, though I believe I gathered it near Swan- 
bister, Orkney, but I have preserved no specimens from that locality 
in my herbarium, and as it was in the year 1849 I cannot now speak 
with certainty. In Ireland it is recorded from counties Dublin, 
Galway, and Mayo. The variety 6 appears to be nearly as common 
as the type. 

England, Scotland, Ireland. Perennial. Summer, Autumn. 


Very near G. eu-fluitans, but occasionally attaining a larger size and 
with the spikelets shorter and thicker than those of G. eu-fluitans— 
comparing spikelets of each plant which have the same number of 
florets, but as the number of florets in the spikelet varies in each sub- 
species, 5 a of G. oS with numerous florets will be con- 
siderably longer than those of G. eu-fluitans with few: in G. plicata, 
in fact, the length of the spikelets varies from } to 1 inch. This 
comparative shortness arises from the florets being placed closer to 
each other on the axis of the spikelet of G. plicata. The florets are 
also shorter, } to 4 inch long, the lower pale is broader in proportion | 
to its length, more strongly ribbed, blunter, and more scarious at 
the apex, which is often shortly 3- to 5-toothed. Anthers only about 
half as long as in G. eu-fluitans, caryops shorter and broader, and 
rachis is slightly rough in the upper 

G. plicata var. a cannot well be mistaken for G. eu-fluitans on 
account of the compound panicle with much more numerous spikelets, 
but var. 6 and transition states between var. @ and var. § require 
minute examination to separate them from G. eu-fluitans. 

When growing in dry places G. plicata var. 6 is densely ceepitose, a 
the stems sometimes not above 3 or 4 oe Tong, and the oe oS 
nr cael eee ace oe 

A third subspecies of & 


>“ Beorion I.-MEGACHLOA. 


| Eeidets * rather short, | alipea-ovid wed slightly Seared 
before iweriong:: : ds oblong and greatly laterally compressed. 


ag firm ¢ or aoe 


dicules free ‘from each other. Stem stout, oe Leaves hacts oe 


100 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


SPECIES I1—GLYCERIA AQUATICA. Sm. 
Puiare MDCCLI. 
Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CLIT. Fig. 379. 
-. Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. No. 2176. 
G. spectabilis, Mert. & Koch. Koch, Syn. Fl. Germ. et Helv. ed. ii. p. 932. 
Poa aa. Linn. Sm. Engl. Bot. ed. i. No. 1315. Hook. & Arn. Brit. Fl. - viii. 


Hytrockia aquatica, Hartm. Lindl. Syn. Brit. Fl. p. 316. 


Perennial. Rootstock extensively creeping, not czspitose, with 
long subterranean leafless stolons terminating in leafy barren stems. 
Stems erect, very stout, rigid. Leaves very stiff, broadly linear, 
parallel-sided, abruptly-acuminated and hooded and mucronate at the 
apex, With numerous broad elevated ribs; sheaths compressed, anci- 
pitate ; ligule short, truncate, with an elongate central point. Panicle 
erect, pyramidal, equal, rather lax, very compound. Panicle-branches 
commouly 5 at the lower nodes of the rachis, somewhat unequal, all of 

| teen bearing numerous a diverging during and after flower- 

ing. Spikelets shortly st stalked, short, oblong-lliptical and compressed 
ae 1 and greatly compressed, 4- 

1 9-flowered, ‘olive. Glumes slightly unequal, the upper one the 
larger, but considerably shorter than the lowest floret. Lower pale 

subobtuse, scarcely scarious at the apex, with 7 prominent ribs. 

By the edges of ditches and —_ rivers and ponds; rather common 


of Lindores, Fife. In Aberdeenshire it is merely naturalised, according 
to Dr. Dickie’s Botanist’s Guide. It is also reported from Forfar and 
“guiende but those counties are so much to the north of its ascertained 


‘ cd until —— cocupice an area of about 30 square yards; 
oe jl ntr oduced dit will soon have 


mores EO eae eee 


GRAMINA. 101 


4 to 14 inches long by 2 to 6 inches broad, with very numerous —— 
lets. Florets } inch long, rarely viviparous. Anthers y 


Reed Meadow-Grass. 
French, Glycérie flottante. German, Wasser Schwaden. 

This is a true aquatic species of grass, usually growing in water, either of ponds or 
rivers. Its panicles of neatly formed awnless locuste of flowers are very imposing, 
and its foliage is at all times broad and conspicuous, so that this grass is a fine covert 
for waterfowl. On cultivating this grass in plots of land out ot the water curious 
results were arrived at, which suggest the propriety of continuing to repeat the e2 
ments. It is one of the few aquatic species which will live out of water, acnaehd it is 
even then too harsh to be of any value. 

The leaves of this grass are particularly liable to attacks of Uredo longissima, Sow., 
Elongated Uredo, which occurs in long olive-brown slits beneath the epidermis of 
the leaves. 


GENUS XXXUI.—SCLEROCHLOA. Pal. de Beaw. Bab. 


Spikelets ( excepting the terminal ones) subsessile or very shortly 
stalked, arranged in a lax or dense panicle, which is usually more or 
less distichously unilateral and sometimes reduced to a_spikelike 
raceme, slightly laterally compressed before flowering, open during 
flowering, each containing 3 to 11 perfect florets. anne persistent, 
unequal or nearly equal, both shorter than the florets, not awned, 
subscarious. Pales 2, the lower one concave, rounded on the back, © 


at least towards the base, but often keeled towards the ae not a 
awned, with 5 (rarely 3) eos faint bse parchme no 


102 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


back, indistinctly keeled towards the apex only. Caryops oblong- 
linear, not furrowed on its face. 


SPECIESI—SCLEROCHLOA MARITIMA. Lindi. (non Reich.) 
Piate MDCCLIV. 
Reich. Te, Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CLI. Fig. 377. 

Glyceria maritima, Wahl. Sm. Engl. Fl. Vol. I. p. 118. Hook, Stud. Fl. p. 445. 
Koch, Syn. Fl. Germ. et Helv. ed. ii. p. 933. Fries, Summ. Veg. Scand. p. 77. 
Gren, & Godr. Fl. de Fr. Vol. IIT. p. 535. Crep. Man. FI. Belg. ed. ii. p. 347, & 
Not. Fase. v. pp. 209 & 246. Reich. Ic. 1.c. p. 48. 

- Puccinellia maritima, Parl. Fl. Ital. Vol. I. p. 570. 
Poa maritima, Huds. Sm. Eng. Bot. ed. i. No. 1140. Hook. & Arn. Brit. Fl. ed. viii. 


Wid dence: Kunth, Enum. Plant. Vol. I. p. 394. 

Rootstock densely cepitose, producing very numerous elongate 
decumbent or prostrate leafy barren stems or shoots, which sometimes 
root at the nodes, and a few flowering stems. Flowering stems 
= or erect usually from a curved or geniculate base, rather 
Leaves of the barren stems distichously spreading, thick and 


= mens bely flat with a few very thick prominent cartilaginous ribs 
_ sheaths smooth, the uppermost one longer than its leaf; ligule sh 
truncate. Panicle unilaterally distichous. Rachis with distant zn 
Panicle-branches rather slender, rigid, 2 or 3 at each of the lower 


siely disposed on and siccees to the br 5 of he 
| spikelets: on short thick | le ay = 


. but not excurrent. : — oe 


GRAMINA, 103 


Var. 6, dejlexa. 


Panicle-branches deflexed or reflexed in fruit. 

In salt marshes and on moist shores of the sea and tidal rivers ; 
common, and generally distributed. Var. 6 Rhyl, Flint, Mr. J. 
Whittaker; “at the farthest extremity of the St. Helen’s Spit,” Isle 
of Wight, Dr. Bromfield in “ Flora Vectensis.” 


England, Scotland, Ireland. Perennial. Summer. 


t growing in dense tufts, with very numerous trailing and 
iter rooting barren shoots, from a few inches to 1 foot or more 
long, with numerous spreading distichous leaves 1 to 4 inches oe 
These leaves appear rush-like, but are really folded together. Flowe 
ing stems 6 inches to 2 feet high. Panicle 2 to 6 ‘inches long; thes 
longest branches 1 to 24 inches. Spikelets } to 4 inch long, accord- 
ing “to the number of florets, pale green, often tinged with purple, 
especially on one side. Florets 1 to } inch long. 


Creeping Sea Meadow- Grass. 


SPECIES U—-SCLEROCHLOA MULTICULMIS. 
Piates MDCCLV. MDCCLVI. 
Glyceria distans, Hook fil. Stud. Fl. p. 446. 

-Rootstock cxespitose, producing a few short ascending or erect leafy 
barren shoots, which do not root at the nodes, and very) numerous 
flowering stems. Flowering stems erect or a from 
a curved or geniculate base. Leaves of the barren shoot scendi fing as 
or erect, rather thick but not at a — — more or r Tess ho 0 ed 


Panicle a see or more or pe Gintichon sly ut later al, 
rather Jax, ‘ines onP ag or tease ise ia 5 
a Bahia ith | distant nodes. Panicle-branches weak or rather rigid, 


104 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


and subcompressed. Lower glume faintly 1-ribbed, the upper one 
3-ribbed. Lower pale more or less broadly scarious at the apex, 
obtuse or acute, sometimes mucronate, faintly or rather strongly 5- 
ribbed, with the midrib falling short of the apex or excurrent. 
Anthers oblong. 


Sus-Srecres L—§clerochloa distans. Bab. 
Prats MDCCLYV. 


Reich, Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CLI. Figs. 375 & 376. 
Billot, F1. Gall. et Germ. Exsicc. No. 184. 
Glyceria distans, Sm. Engl. Fl. Vol. I. p. 118. Koch, Syn. Fi. Germ. et Hely. ed. ii. 
. 932. Fries, Mant. ii. p.10, & Summ. Veg. Scand. p.77. Gren. & Godr. Fl. de 

Fr, Vol. III. p. 556. Crep. Man. Fl. Belg. ed. ii. p. 347, & Not. Fase. 5, pp. 209 
& 226. Reich. Ic. l.c. p. 47. 

Puecinellia distans, Parl. Fi. Ital. Vol. I. p. 367. 

Poa distans, Lann. Sm. Engl. Bot. ed. i. No. 986. Hook. & Arn. Brit. Fl. ed. viii. 


| Pectin dae, Komik, Enum. Plant. Vol. I. p. 393. 
erga stems rather weak. Leaves gradually hooded at the 


ne = C " Panicle nearly. equal, lax, triangular or oblong in outline. 


S es very slender or cay lary, weak, from 3 to 6 at the 
lower ‘utes of the rachis, but generally 5, unequal, the longer ones 
rane hed and bare of spikelets me ae base for nearly half their 
_ascending- spreading in flower, reflexed in fruit. Spikelets 
distichously ‘and spicato-racemosely Toe on the branches of the 
panicle ; the lateral ones on extremely short thick pedicels, which are 
slightly dilated upwards and usually about as long as the lower 
glume; all 3- to 8-flowered, usually 5- or &-flowered, at first com- 
od subeylindrical, afterwards oblong-elliptical and much com- 


pressed. Lower pale broadly scarious at the apex, obtuse, not — 


: - mucronate, very faintly 5-ribbed, with the midrib fallin 
ee — oblong. 


short of the e 


GRAMINA. 105 


Rare inland. Var. 6 in the west of England: Bideford, Devon; Beadley 
Bay, Gloucester; Breedon, Leicestershire ; and near Dublin. 


England, Scotland, Ireland. Biennial or perennial (?). Summer, 
Autumn. 


Stems 3 inches to 2 feet high. Leaves with the barren shoots 
1 to 6 inches long by }5 to } inch broad, slightly glaucous. aie 
leaves short, the uppermost one § to 3 inches long. Panicle 2 to 
10 inches long, pyramidal. Spikelets 4 1 to 4 inch long, often tinged 
with purple, but sometimes wholly green. Florets 74, to } inch long. 

The var. 9 is scarcely deserving of separation from the : 

S. distans bears considerable resemblance to S. maritima, but the 
barren shoots are not prostrate, and the leaves on them are not spread- 
ing, not fleshy, nor conduplicate ; the flowering stems are more nume- 
rous, weaker; the panicle is nearly equal, not “unilateral ; the panicle- 
branches more numerous, more slender, and more of them bare of 


spikelets at the base ; the pedicels are considerably shorter; the 


ies Meadow-Grass. 
French, Glycérie écartée. German, Abstehender Schwingel. 


Sus-Species I11.—Sclerochloa Borreri. Bab. 


Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsiec. No. 2177. ee oo 
Glyceria Borreri, Bab. ee ee ean caer Crep, Mon, 


ae branched and bare of spikelets at the base for Soak one-eighth to 
ne-thirc _ of their Jength, — in flower, ascending or 
g in fruit. Spikelets unilaterally, — = 

i posed. ont the branches of rata nicle the lateral ce 


106 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


pressed. Lower pale narrowly scarious at the apex, subacute, mucro- 
nate, 5-ribbed, with three of the ribs prominent and the midrib 
reaching the apex and extending beyond it forming a mucro. 
Anthers quadrate-oblong. 

In salt marshes and waste places by the sea and tidal rivers, local. 
Confined to the south and east coast of England, from Sussex to 
Suffolk, or perhaps York. Frequent along the estuary of the Thames, 
especially on the Kentish shore. I have seen no specimens from any 
stations north of Walton-on-the-Naze, Essex, where I have gathered 
it plentifully, but the Rev. W. W. Newbould has found it at Lowestoft, 
Suffolk. In Ireland it occurs at North Lots, near the mouth of the 
Liffey; at Sandy Mount, and along Dublin Bay. 


England, Ireland. Biennial or perennial. Summer, Autumn. 


Stems 6 to 18 inches high. Leaves 2 to 10 inches long by 1 to 
4 inch broad, boat-shaped at the extremity, abgntly claucous. Panicle 
z i to 6 inches long. Spikel ~ og s to } inch long, rarely faintly 
- ae ee with aa _Florets 7 peck ee ong. 
Very similar to S dutans, | intermediate ch alehgoee it and 


- a included wiiea a ae the loweat whorl of issues pointing i ina 
- different from my of the others. If these lowest ‘branches are 


Sea op supposes te his pitti ono nome published 
nS iculus of his “Notes.” I have Kote me at present 
spec s, raised from the seed of the Essex plant, i 


8 . dist and = Borreri oe : 


GRAMINA. 107 


as subspecies, and have thought it best to give a new name to the 
aggregate under which I have included them. 


Borrer’s Meadow- Grass. 


SPECIES IL—_SCLEROCHLOA PROCUMBENS. Pal. de Beaw. 
Puate MDCCLVILI. 

Billot, Fi. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. No. 2587. 

Glyceria procumbens, Sm. Brit. Fl. Vol. I. p. 119. Hook. fil. Stud. FI. p. 446. Gren. 
& Godr, Fl. de Fr. Vol. III. p. 537. Crep, Man. FI. Belg. ed. ii. p. 347, & note 
fase. 5, p. 208. 

‘Scleropoa procumbens, Parl. Fl. Ital. Vol. I. p. 474. 

oe Curt. Sm. Engl. Bot. ed. i. No. 532. Hook. & Arn. Brit. Fl. ed. viii. 

eee proctinberis, Kunth, Enum. Plant. Vol. I. p. 393. 

Rootstock czspitose, producing a few short ascending leafy barren 
shoots which do not root at the nodes, and very numerous flowering 
stems. Flowering stems rather stout, Wek ascending or decumbent 
or procumbent, sometimes from a curved or geblealate base. Leaves 
of the barren shoots ascending or erect, linear, rather thick, but not 
at all fleshy, flat, deeply hooded at the apex, with numerous thick 
prominent cartilaginous ribs. Stem leaves similar to those of the 
barren shoots ; sheaths smooth, the upper one longer than its leaf; 
ligule elongate, narrowly triangular, acute. Panicle distichously 
unilateral, dense, ovate- or lanceolate-oblong. Rachis with approxi- _ 
mate nodes, trigonous. Panicle-branches rigid, 2 or 3 at each of 


the lower nodes of the rachis, the longer ones bare of spikelets and S — 
unbranched at the: io for from. — to eineha-a88 of = ae 


“branches of the pniele; the : 3- red, 
but 1 5-flowered. Lower gme re, the upper one Sched. 

: J0V er om —_— broadly scarious at the apex, subobtuse, sometimes 

t ly 1 cronate, rather strongly 5-ribbed, with — the ribs prominent 


towards» Apes; an the midrib reaching the apex or sometimes 
sight excurrent and seed a minute mucro. _Anthers quadrate- 


hough extending 1 - com cai ae Sat Son 


108 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


of any well authenticated Scotch station, though it is said to occur in 
Forfarshire. Widely distributed in the south and east of Ireland. 


England, Ireland. Biennial or perennial (?). Summer, Autumn. 


Stems 3 to 18 inches high, rather thick but weak, sometimes in dry 
mer quite prostrate. Leaves 2 to 7 inches long by } to 1 inch 
broad. Panicle 1 to 3 inches long, the branches in the middle as 
long as those at the base. Spikelets } to inch long. Florets Linch 
] 


_ Distinguished from S. Borreri by its more compact and more 
perfectly unilateral panicle, with the lower branches much shorter in 
proportion to the middle ones, by its longer spikelets and florets, by 
its lower pale being more strongly ribbed towards the apex in fruit, 
and with its midrib either not excurrent or forming only a very 
minute mucro. The leaves also are broader, and the ligule much 
longer and more acute. 

S. distans, S. Borreri, and S. procumbens, are all perennant: 
generally the plant dies after once flowering, but sometimes the root 
remains alive, and throws up flowering stems the second year. 


_ Section IL—SCLEROPOA.  Griesb. 


Rachis and panicle-branches _ancipitate-triquetrous. Spikelets 

_ broadly elliptical and greatly laterally compressed before flowering. 
Glumes nearly equal, both 1-ribbed, or rarely the upper one 3-ribbed. 

__ Lower pale 3-ribbed, conspicuously keeled in the apical half. Caryops 
_ ovoid-linear, furrowed on the face. : : 


SPECIES V-SCLEROCHLOA RIGIDA. Link. 
Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. OXLIX. Fig. 370. 
rigida, Sm. Engl. Fl. Vol. I. p. 119. Hook. jil. Stud. Fi. p. 446. _ | 
a rigida, Griesb. Parl. Fl. Ital. Vol. I p. 473. Gren. & Godr. Fl. de Fr. 
p58. Se | 


Sm. Engl. Bot. ed. i. No. 1371. Hook. & Arn. Brit. Fl. ed. viii. 


, Enum. Plant. Vol. I. p. 892 Koel, Syn. Fl. Germ. ot Helv. 


GRAMINA. 109 


late base. Leaves narrowly linear, thin, not at all fleshy, nearly flat, 
tapering to the apex, with numerous slender prominent cartilaginous 
ribs; sheaths smooth, the uppermost one shorter than its leaf; ligule 
elthueste, narrowly triangular, acute, often lacerate. Panicle distich- 
ously unilateral, racemose in the upper half, rather dense, triangular- 
oblong or linear-oblong. Rachis with approximate nodes, ancipitate- 
triquetrous. Panicle-branches rigid, solitary at each node of the 
rachis, the lowest ones forked from the base, the upper ones simple, 
ascending-erect in flower, ascending-spreading in fruit. Spikelets 
rather numerous, unilaterally, distichously, and racemosely disposed 
on and slightly diverging from the lower branches of the panicle, 
solitary and terminal on those in the upper half of the panicle; the 
lateral ones on pedicels about as long as the glumes; all 5- to 
10-flowered, but usually 6- or 7-flowered. Glumes acute, scarcely 
hooded, 1-ribbed, rarely the upper one 3-ribbed, the upper one cover- 
ing half the second floret and reaching up nearly to the base of the 
fourth floret. Florets separated from each other by a portion of the 
rachis as long as the width of the lower pale. Lower pale narrowly 
scarious at the apex, oblong-lanceolate in profile, gradually tapering 
to the apex, sub-obtuse, faintly mucronate, obsoletely 3-ribbed, the 
lateral ribs scarcely distinguishable, the midrib slender, excurrent, and 
forming a mucro. 

On dry barren ground, wall tops, and rocks. Commonand generally  __ 
distributed in Bnglend, more rare in Scotland, where it appears to be ce 
confined to the eastern coast, reaching to the shores of the Dornoch 
Firth, Ross-shire. Rather local, but eae detathiseil 5 in Ireland. 


England, Scotland, Ireland. Annual. Summer. - i 


Plant oreg gal jous. 

a 4 inches, about ry times as “Tong: as broad. Spikelets green, fre- 

: voonsad tinged with purple, 7, to } inch, ig according to the — 
. — eal florets. Florets 4 ee long. ae 

| Hard Meadow-Grass. | 
— oe 


sa | : 
Id , especially 


Stems rather few i in each individ bt, _ 
os lono to 


istric ‘ _ Wherever it occurs in a district, we assume that it indicates a eo 


110 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


SPECIES VI-SCLEROCHLOA LOLIACEA. Woods. 
Pirate MDCCLIX. 
Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CXXV. Fig. 274. 
Billot, F1. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. 2586. 
Glyceria loliacea, Watson ; Hook. fil. Stud. Fl. p. 446. 
Scleropoa loliacea, Gren. & Godr. Fl. de Fr. Vol. III. 
Catapodium loliaceum, Link ; Lindl. Syn. Brit. FL { p- "997. Parl. Fi. Ttal. Vol. I. 
p- 478. eich. Ic. lc. p. 32. 
Poa loliacea, Huds. Hook. & Arn. Brit. Fl. ed. viii. 0. 
Triticum loliaceam, Sm. Engl. Bot. ed. i. No. 221, & Engl. Fl. Vol. I. p. 185. 
T. Rottbéllia, D.C. FL Fr. Vol. III. p. 86. 
Brachypodium loliaceum Rém. & Schultes ; Fries, Summ. Veg. Scand. p. 75. 
Festuca rottbéllioides, Kunth, Enum. Plant. Vol. I. p. 395. 


Annual. Without barren shoots. Flowering stems rather few, 
rather stout, rigid, decumbent or ascending from a curved or 
geniculate base, sometimes curved throughout. Leaves narrowly 
linear, thin, not at all fleshy, nearly flat, tapering to the apex, with 

numerous slender prominent cartilaginous ribs; sheaths smooth, 
the uppermost one about as long as its leaf; ligule elongate, oblong, 
truncate, often erose-denticulate. Puzicle distichously unilateral, 
‘spicate, rather dense, linear. Rachis with approximate nodes, ancipi- 
tate-triquetrous. -Panicle-branches all simple, rigid, solitary at each 
node of the rachis, resembling very short pedicels, or the lower ones 
slightly . loneatedt and with 2 bo. > spikelets, — os Bowes ao fruit. 

a v7 disposed 

on and adpressed to the lower branches of the gras solitary and. 

_ terminal on the extremely short branches of the upper half of the 

_ panicle, or throughout; the lateral and solitary ones subsessile; all 5- 

: to eeestige: _— oe - or r 8-flowered. Glumes obtuse, sometimes 
he rd dy. “1p ~ 


m1 ¢ nate. [igiauaty 
rib “thick, shortly excur- 


oe xy = sea; rather pee a 


GRAMINA. 111 
and reliable testimony. Rather local, but widely distributed in 
England, Scotland, Ireland. Annual. Summer. 


Plant growing ‘in small compound tufts with rather few stems in 
each individual tuft, 2 to 6 inches long. Leaves 1 to 2 inches long. 
Panicle 1 to 24 inches long by } to 1} inch broad. Spikelets green, 
rarely tinged ‘with pale purple, } to 2 inch long. Florets about 
zy Inch long. 

Plant with the habit of Triticum, but the spike is unilateral with a 
distinct back and a face, the spikelets are not quite sessile, and the 
inary panicle-branches are sometimes developed, though rarely above 
4, inch long exclusive of the terminal spikelet. 

Dwarf Meadow-Grass. 


French, Glycérie Ivraie. 


GENUS II—POA. Linn. 


Spikelets stalked, arranged in a loose open or somewhat contracted 
panicle, laterally compressed, open during flowering, each containing 
2 to 8 perfect florets. Glumes 2, nearly equal, both shorter than the 
florets, not awned, usually both 3-ribbed, subherbaceous with scarious 
margins, rarely wticlls subscarious. Pales 2, the lower one compressed, 
keeled, throughout entire, not awned, 3- to 5-ribbed, subherbaceous with 
scarious margins; upper pale 2-cleft, 2-ribbed. Lodicules 2, entire or 
bilobed. Stamens 3. Styles 2, terminal, very short; aS eae plumose, , 
protruded at the sides - Pere foo between oe basal margins sof the 


CIES I-POA ANNUA Lin 
Reich, Te. Fl. Germ. ot Helv. Vol. Tab. CLY. Figs. 887 and 388. 


on a Germ. Exsice. No. 93. 


ual or Saenedal. No rootstock, stolons or or barren Sects: Stem 


o from a eee 


base which i is some- 


: ts ai ut Olle thir Ss : ° Leaves t flaccid, “ 


112 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


rather broadly linear, flat, abruptly pointed and hooded at the apex, 
bright green; sheaths smooth, strongly ancipitate, none of them dilated, 
the uppermost one longer than its leaf; ligule very prominent, oblong 
obtuse or truncate. Panicle erect, more or less distichously weilaneral, 
deltoid or deltoid-triangular in outline, lax. Panicle-branches from 1 
to 4 at the lower nodes of the rachis, but generally 2, unequal, the longer 
ones bare of spikelets and unbranched at the base for from one-third to 
half their length, spreading-ascending in flower, spreading o r ascending- 
spreading in fruit, smooth. Spikelets ovate-lanceolate, 2-to €-fiiWieted, 
usually 4- or 5-flowered. Florets not connected at the base by arach- 
noid hairs. Lower glume 1-ribbed, the upper 3-ribbed. Lower pale 
green rarely suffused with purple, broadly white and scarious at the 
apex, with or without a red or purplish line between the green and 
white, subacute, faintly 5-ribbed, with the ribs more or less silky-hairy 
towards the base. 

In waste places, cultivated ground, roadsides, meadows, &c.; ex- 
tremely common, and universally distributed. 


England, Scotland, Ireland. Annual or biennial. Spring to Winter. 


Stems 2 to 18 inches long. Leaves 1 to 6 inches by yi 15 to $ inch. 
Panicle 3 to 4 inches. Spikelets 4 to} —_ Florets } inch. 


of a rootstock. The wai plant is much softer and less rigid 
a the genus. The leaves are often crimped at the 


__P. supina, Schrad, is said to be a mountain form with highly 

. coloured mpikelets, but I have not seen specimens : 

: French, Paturin annuel. German, einjdhriges iene. 

Wide pain te ld sek examen species to be found on way-sides and hedges, and 
chien y enom amet Thee eaten Sa. 
oS git or bwe hink= and ae it for er al the year round, he 
ac Se hoe It is o ver, in damp pastures that it 


GRAMINA. oe 113 


leafy barren shoots, but no stolons, and with several flowering stems. 
Barren shoots on slender stalks or subsessile, swollen into elliptical-lan- 
ceolate bulbs at the base, with the outer sheaths membranous. Flower- 
ing stems erect or ascending from a geniculate base which is swollen 
into a more slender bulb than that of the barren shoots, slender, rather 
wiry, straight; the uppermost knot about one-third or one-fourth above 
the base. Leaves of the barren shoots and base of stem thin, flaccid, 
narrowly linear, flat, with a very deep central furrow, rather gradually 
pointed and hooded at the apex, bright green; stem leaves extremely 
short, channelled, and more hooded. than those of the barren shoots; 
sheaths smooth, indistinctly ancipitate, the lowest ones greatly dilated, 
the uppermost one many times longer than its leaf; ligule very 
prominent, oblong-lanceolate, subacute. Panicle erect, nearly equal, 

deltoid-ovoid in flower, subcylindrical-ovoid in fruit, dense. Panicle- 
branches 1 to 3 at the lowest nodes of the rachis, but generally 2, 
unequal, the longer ones bare of spikelets and unbranched at the base 
for from one-fifth to one-third of their length, ascending-spreading in 
flower, erect and adpressed in fruit, slightly rough. Spikelets ovate, 
3- to 6-flowered, usually 4- or 5-flowered. Florets connected at the 
base by arachnoid hairs. Glumes both 3-ribbed or the lower one 
1-ribbed. Lower pale acuminate and very acute, indistinctly 5-ribbed, 
with the midrib and marginal ribs silky-hairy towards the base, 

green, more or less tinged ih purple, rather broadly 7 and 
scarious at the apex. | 

On sand and fine atte. on the seashore. 
Devon; oe = St. Helen’s Spit, Isle 


ae 
_ Flowering stems 3. inches to 
1; inch 


most stem leaf 1 to 4 4 inch long by Ty to 
its palbe, 1 rhich 


114 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


The bulbs remain when the plant is subjected to pot culture. They 
divide like shallots, and the cloves afterwards usually become more or 
less evidently stal 

Bulbous Meadow-Grass. 
French, Pdturin bulbeuw. German, Zawiebeliges Rispengras. 


SPECIES T1.—POA ALPINA. [inn. 
Prate MDCCLXIT. 
Reich. Tc. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CLVI. Figs. 392 and 393. 
Billot, F1. Gall. et Germ. Exsicc. No. 1380. 

Perennial. Rootstock thick, shortly creeping, usually without 
estival leafy barren shoots or stolons, with subsolitary flowering 
stems. Flowering stems erect, often from a curved base which is 
swollen into a cylindrical bulb, with the outer sheaths fibrous, slender, 
rather wiry, generally bent at the knots, the uppermost knot about 
one-third or one-fourth above the base. Leaves at the base of the 
flowering stem thick, firm, broadly linear, nearly flat, abruptly pointed 
and hooded at the apex, green, slightly glaucous ; stem leaves ex- 
tremely | short, channelled, and more hooded at the apex than the 
radical ones ; _ smooth, ancipitate ; ligule very prominent, 
oblong-lanceolate, truncate and erose. Panicle erect, nearly equal, or 
somewhat distichously unilateral, deltoid-ovoid in flower, rhombic- 
ovoid in fruit, rather dense. Panicle-branches 1 to 3 at the lowest 
nodes of the rachis, but generally 2, unequal, the longer ones bare of 
spikelets and unbranched at the base for from one-third to one-half 
their length, spreading in flower, erect-ascending or ascending in fruit, 
slightly rough. Spikelets ovate, 2- to 6-flowered, usually 4- or 


= _ 5-flowered. Florets not connected at the base by arachnoid hairs. 


= —- both 3-ribbed, or the lower one I-ribbed. Lower pale acumi- 
te and —— indistinctly 5-ribbed, with the midrib and marginal 
Ot -hairy in the lower two-thirds, green, often more or tae suf- 


GRAMINA. 11s 


serotina. Leaves 1 to 5 inches long by % to - inch broad, almost 
fleshy. Panicle 3 to 2 inches long, most commonly viviparous. Spike- 
lets 4 to } inch long. Florets } inch long. 

Out of thousands of wild specimens I have never seen one with the 
rootstock and base of the stem unclothed with the decayed bases of 
former leafsheaths, which give it the sub-bulbous appearance above 
mentioned; but in cultivation, either from more rapid es of 
the rootstock, or more rapid decay of the leafsheaths, this i 
sometimes disappears, as may be seen in the original figure in “ English 
rae which is given in the present edition on the right of the 

at 

Alpine Meadow-Grass. 


French, Paturin des Alpes. German, Gebirgs-Itispengras. 


SPECIES IV—POA LAXA. Hanke. 
Piares MDCCLXIIL. MDCCLXIV. 


Rootstock rather slender, very shortly or not at all creeping, ceespi- 
tose, with estival leafy barren shoots but no stolons, with numerous 
or several flowering stems. Flowering stems erect or ascending some- 
times from a curved or geniculate base which is scarcely swells, 
with the outer sheaths membranous, slender, weak, not bent at the 
upper knots; the uppermost knot at about one-fourth above the base. 
Leaves at the base of the flowering stem thin, narrowly linear, tapering, 
flat, gradually pointed and not hooded, or rather abruptly pointed and 
hooded at the apex; stem leaves not much cpr! than the =— oo 
ones, and in other respects similar to them; sheaths wa 
uppermost one longer than its leaf; ligule very prominent, oblong- 
triangular, subtruncate and pera Panicle — drooping 


pr al he ele a sid ON ees 


AP enTT Aaah td 


ee ust 
stcewards, cr slaeable cc ha ‘form: Tather lax 
rather dense. Panicle-branches 1 to 3 at ‘the lowest 1 nod: s of th 
rachis, but generally 2, unequal, the longer one : celets 
unbranched at the base for half or two-thi 
- ing or erect in flower and fruit, or spreading in fr 
— rough. ate oS — 2 See 6-lowe ered, 2 - 


i 


116 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


Sus-Srecres I1—Poa stricta. Lindeberg. 
Pirate MDCCLXIITI. 
Fries, Herb. Norm. Fasc. xv. No. 94. 
Poa laxa, Bab. Man. Brit. Bot. ed. vi. p. 413. 
Poa laxa var. vivipara, Anderss. Gram. Scand. p. 43. 
Rootstock shortly creeping, somewhat oblique, cespitose at the 
apex. Stems firm, straight. Leaves flat, gradually tapering to the 
apex, not hooded; uppermost sheath 2 to 4 times longer than its 
leaf; ligules all donate: Panicle open in flower and more so after- 
oe Panicle-branches slender, diverging in flower, afterwards 
spreading. Spikelets ovate, 2- to loweied. always (?) viviparous. 
Florets scarcely connected by arachnoid hairs. Lower pale some- 
what acuminate and acute, dark purple, narrowly g ereen on the keel, 
__ with rather narrow brownish-white margins. 
3 ee rocky débris and damp ledges of rocks, on high mountains, very 
eo Loch-na-gar, Aberdeen, whee I have gathered it on the rocky 
a aie — the south-east corner of the great precipice, and on 
| in the corrie of n-an-ean. Ben Sakae Inverness, Prof. 


; ifts eC tne 2 to 12 ion stems | 
) inches to 1 foot high. Longest iat Leena epee 
stem leaf } to 2 inches long. Panicle 1 to 24 inches lon g, resembling — 
oo. he of bt poe but always slightly drooping at the apex. Spikel 
4d inch long. Florets about 4 inch, almost all viviparous and 
wi a are not so appear to produce no seed. Anther: 


ind Norway, me is not known to occu in the Se 
Europe. 

_ Straight-Stemmed Meadow-Grase. - 
oS © Sue-Seatms eons -eu-laxa, — ee 


“5 a ee ag ee ee 


GRAMINA. 7 


curving by their own weight. Leaves flat towards the base, chan- 
nelled, and abruptly pointed and hooded at the apex ; uppermost 
sheath 2 to 3 times as long as its leaf; ligule of the uppermost stem 
leaf elongate, those of the lower leaves and of the barren shoots 
quadrate, not longer than broad. Panicle slightly open and rhom- 
boidal in flower, closed and fusiform-cylindrical in fruit. Panicle- 
branches very slender, ascending in flower, erect in fruit. Spike- 
lets ovate, 1- to 4-flowered, but generally 2- or 3-flowered, never (?) 
viviparous. Florets very slightly connected by arachnoid hairs. 
Lower pale subacute, glaucous green, more or less faintly stained with 
purple, with broad brownish-white margins. 

On rocky débris and dry ledges of rocks, on high mountains; rare. 
Loch-na-gar, Aberdeen, where I have gathered it on the rocky débris 
under the south-east corner of the great: precipice, and on rocks at 
the north-west margin of the same corrie, and on rocks on the north 
slope of Cairn-Towl, Aberdeen. Ben Nevis, Inverness. “Mr. John 
Mackay ” (Smith, “ English Botany ”’). 


= Perennial. Autumn. 


118 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


SPECIES V.—POA GLAUCA. Smith. 
Pirates MDCCLV. MDCCLXVI. MDCCLXVIL. 
P. nemoralis, var. glauca, Hook fil. Stud. Fl. p. 43. non Koch. 


Rootstock slender, more or less shortly creeping, with solitary or 
few or numerous flowering stems, not stoloniferous, or with very 
short autumnal stolons, without xstival leafy barren shoots. Stems 
erect, usually from a curved base, not swollen at the base, glaucous ;_ 
the uppermost knot rarely higher than from one-sixth or one-third 
above the base, rarely near the middle of the stem. Leaves linear, 
parallel-sided and abruptly pointed and hooded, or narrowly linear, 
tapering towards the apex and gradually pointed and hooded, glaucous, 
often intensely so; sheaths smooth or nearly so, compressed and 
ancipitate, the ‘uppermost one as long as or a little longer than its 
leaf; ligule rather prominent, quadrate or a little bronder than long, 
truncate. Panicle erect, Mists tiiaaly-inilateo, more rarely decal 
i oo —— slightly drooping at the apex, triangular in flower and 

vards, or rhombic-ovoid in flower and linear afterwards, lax. 
Panicle-branches 1 to 5 at the lowest nodes of the rachis, but 
| icin 2, the longest 0 s unbranched and bare of spikelets at the 


base for from oubidied 1s tall these Wicglly Watending Si See ad 


sometimes in fruit, but more often erect and adpressed in fruit, more 
or less scabrous. Spikelets ovate-oblong or elliptical-lanceolate, 2- to 
6-flowered. Glumes both 3-ribbed. Flovets free, or more or less 
connected at the base by arachnoid hairs. Lower pale subacute “ 
subobtuse, igen 5-ribbed, with the midribs and marginal-ribs 

silky-hairy at the base or in the lower half, glaucous-green, more or 
less suffused with purple, with a reddish-brown blotch near the te | 
— narrow on scarious margins. 


pee ena p _— cesia. Smith. 


GRAMINA. 119 


sheaths nearly smooth, acutely ancipitate, the uppermost one a little 
longer than its leaf ; ligule more than twice as broad as long, obliquely 
truncate and obtase-atipled. Panicle erect, distichously unilateral, 
deltoid-triangular in flower and° fruit, or somewhat rhombic in fruit. 
Panicle-branches 2 to 5 at the lower nodes of the rachis, but usually 2 
or 3, rigid, spreading in flower and fruit, or ascending in fruit, bare of 
spikelets and unbranched at the base for about one-third to one-half 
their length, scabrous. Spikelets ovate-oblong, 3- to 6-flowered, but 
usually 4- or 5-flowered. Glumes acute, both shorter than the lowest 
floret. Florets not connected at the base by arachnoid hairs. Lower pale 
subobtuse, glaucous-green, variegated with pale purple and reddish, 
with rather narrow white scarious margins. 

Said by Smith to have been sent from Scotland to Mr. Fairbairn 
of Chelsea Garden, and also sent to himself from the garden of Mr. 
J. Mackay, who alleged that he had brought it from Ben Lawers and 
other Highland mountains, but no wild specimens are known to exist. 


Scotland? Perennial. Summer, Autumn. 


Plant growing in dense tufts producing a succession of Te 
flowering stems 1 to 2 feet high. Leaves 1§ to 3 inches long by } 
1 inch broad, very similar to those of Poa pratensis, var. sib carahee 
but intensely glaucous, or rather cxsious, as there is a blue tinge in 
the white. vera 1 to 4inches long. Spikelets } to } inch Tong. 
Florets } inch lon, 
I am indebted es Mr. T. Moore for living specimens from Chelsea 
Garden of the plant from which the ee ke description was taken. 
th’s - herbarium ; — so 


: sown, while Ertan ond PI Balfouril 
alive in culti aia Gs dhe open peo: 
~ Ca sts Modi Grave. 


Sus-Specres » T—Poa eu-glaucs. 
im. Engl. Bot. ed. i. No. 1720. 
a, Sm. Eng. ite 
sia, Bab. Man. Brit. Bot. sp i 
ora meaner 2 


. 


120 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


solitary, or more rarely 2 to 5, erect, slightly curved throughout, 
usually sharply curved or geniculate at the base, rather slender, rigid, 
smooth, intensely . glaucous; the uppermost knot one-fifth to one- 
sixth above the base. Leaves narrowly linear, tapering, gradually 
pointed and slightly hooded at the apex, intensely glaucous; sheaths 
nearly smooth, acutely ancipitate, the uppermost one a little longer 
than its leaf; ligule about thrice as broad as long, truncate. Panicle 
erect, distichously unilateral, triangular in flower, rhombic or oblong in 
fruit; panicle-branches 1 to 3 at the lower nodes of the rachis, but 
generally 2, rigid, spreading in flower, ascending or erect in fruit, 
bare of spikelets and unbranched at the base for from one-half to two- 
thirds of their length, scabrous. Spikelets elliptical, 2- to 6-flowered, 
usually 2- or 3-flowered. Glumes acuminate, the larger one as long 
as or very little shorter than the first floret. Florets not connected at 
the base by arachnoid hairs. Lower pale acute or subacute, dark 
purple more or less tinged with samba reddish-brown towards 
the apex, with narrow white scarious margi 
: On damp ledges of rock on high witagstin: rare, and very local. 
Snowdon, —— am — sep and Glen Isla, Forfar; Stuich- 
n west side of Ben Lawers, Perthshire. 


:E seit , Scotland: Poncanial. Late Summer, Autumn. 


- Rootstock often an inch or more in length, slender. Stems 4 inches 
to 1 foot high, solitary or few together, eas the apex of the root- 

stock. Leaves 3 to 2 inches long, by zz to 1; inch broad. Panicle 
2 inch to 3 inches long. Spikelets yy to 4 inch long. Florets to inch 


sce Differs from P. cesia in the rootstock being conspicuc rs creeping 
and the plant not at all czespitose, in the stem being more slender and i its. 
_ uppermost knot lower down, in the leaves being much nar 
tapering, more gradually pointed, and not boat-shaped at 
ne are fewer leaves at the base of the stems the penile i : 
lax and has longer branches ; the spikel ts are 1 
i ibe re acuminate and longer 


terminating 


don = i P. ie : 
: have t too —— - : 


GRAMINA. int 


Sus-Specres IIL.—Poa Balfourii. “ Parnell.” (Bab.) 
Prats MDCCLXVII. 
Reich, Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CLVIII. Fig. 400. 
P. cxsia, Reich. Ic. l.c. p. 51. 
P. nemoralis, var. ¢, Hook & Arn. Brit. FI. ed. viii. p. 553. 
P. glauca, var. a, Sm. Engl. Fl. Vol. I. p. 128 (ex parte). 

Subcespitose. Rootstock rather shortly creeping. Flowermg stems 
few or rather numerous, erect, straight, usually sharply curved or geni- 
culate at the base, slender, not rigid, smooth, glaucous; the uppermost 
knot one-third or one-fourth above the base, rarely near the middle (?).. 
Leaves narrowly linear, narrowed upwards, gradually pointed and 
hooded at the apex, glaucous; sheaths nearly smooth, ancipitate, the 
uppermost one about as long as its leaf; ligule about twice as broad 
as long, obliquely-truncate, Gbttae: Pinte erect, or slightly secundly 

g, more or less distichously unilateral (particularly in small 
examples), rhombic-triangular in flower, oblong or linear in fruit. 
Panicle-branches 2 to 5 at the lower nodes of the rachis, but usually 2, 
not rigid, spreading-ascending or ascending in flower, erect and often 
adpressed in fruit, the longer ones bare of spikelets and unbranched at 
the base for from one-third to one-half their length, scabrous. Spike- 
lets elliptical, 2- to 5-flowered, but usually 3- or 4-flowered. Glumes 
acuminate, the larger one as long as or even a little longer than the 
first floret. Florets more or less connected at the base by arachnoid 
hairs. Lower pale subobtuse or subacute, pale green variegated with 
ee violet wah: a relish: bern stain at the apex, am with sagas 


| oe fo) Var. A, a aud. a 

| -B, Ralb w a ee : 
oe oralis, var. montana, Bab. Msn. But Bote. p12 nom Goad. 
o a eae Le 


122 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


On rocky débris and ledges of rock on mountains. Not uncommon. 
Snowdon, Carnarvon (?); Ingleborough, Yorkshire (?); the Cheviots, 
Northumberland (!); Clova Mountain, Forfarshire; Ben Voirlich and 
the Breadalbane Mountains, Perthshire. “ Las oe, Mr. R. 
Mackay, also on rocks north base of the Mourne at Castleton ” Brae- 
mar. (Dickie’s Botanist’s Guide.) 


England, Scotland. Perennial. Late Summer. 


Stems 6 to 8 inches high. Leaves 1 to 3 inches long by ¥ az to 
inch broad. Panicle 1 to 5 inches long. Spikelets 1 to + inch ce 
Florets } inch long 

Very closely allied to P. eu-glauca, from which it is often impossible 
to distinguish it in herbarium specimens: but the two forms are 
readily separable when growing. P. Balfourii grows in tufts and has 
the flowering stem and panicle-branches weak, “not rig gid as in P. eu- 

_ glauca; the ligule is eae and the whole plant is ae glaucous, and 
without the bluish or cxsious tinge of P. eu-glauca. The panicle is 
longer and narrower, much more closed in fruit, except in small 
nt we mes in bana oe Later are often istesarad even 


ian cime panicle becomes 
oe over P to one ade: 


Bee 


forms of P. nemorediss, although Dr. Parnell himself, in his descrip- 
tion, distinguishes his a3 montana from P. nemoralis by the ligules” 


oF the former bein very yicuous. The presence or —— of 


: eed on a Rena yoott anaes come specs of Poa more fen 
develo oped than in others. — 

I do not venture to La continental oe under the sub- 
acies ~ oe account of not —s cone © authentic : 


GRAMINA. 123 


numerous flowering stems, not stoloniferous, or with very short autum- 
nal stolons, without estival leafy barren shoots. Stems erect, not 
swollen at the base, green, rarely glaucous; the uppermost knot about 
the middle of the stem. Leaves narrowly linear, tapering towards the 
apex, gradually pointed and hooded, green, rarely slightly glaucous ; 
sheaths smooth, slightly compressed and bluntly ancipitate, the upper 
one usually shorter than its leaf, rarely as long as its leaf; ligule 
extremely short, truncate. Panicle erect or drooping at the apex, 
usually nearly equal and pyramidal in flower, but sometimes par- 
tially distichously secund and oblong in flower, usually closed and 
linear in fruit. Panicle-branches 1 to 5 at the lower nodes of the 
rachis, but usually 3 or 4, the longer ones unbranched and bare o. 
spikelets at the base for about half their length, spreading or spread- 
ing-ascending in flower, commonly erect and often adpressed in fruit, 
scabrous. Spikelets elliptical-lanceolate, 1- to 6-flowered. Glumes 
both 3-nerved. Florets free, or more or less connected at the base by 
arachnoid hairs. Lower pale acute or subacute, obsoletely 5-ribbed, 

with the midrib and marginal ribs silky-hairy in the lower third, 
wholly pale green, rarely tinged with pale purple, especially towards 
the tip, with narrow white scarious margins. 


Var. a, vulgaris. Gaud. 


Green. Stem weak, not at all rigid. ) 
shorter than its deaf. —- erect | or Senses 


124 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


Var. 6, glaucantha. Reich. 
P. nemoralis, var. glauca, Bab, Man. Brit. Bot. ed. vi. p. 413. (non Gaud.? ) 

Glaucous. Stem rather firm. Uppermost sheath about as long as its 
leaf. Panicle slightly drooping, lax, equal, pyramidal in flower, closed 
afterwards. Spikelets 2- to 4-flowered, glaucous green, sometimes 
tinged with pale purple. 

Var. ¢, Parnellit, Hook & Arn. 
Pirate MDCCLXIX. 
Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. No. 3685. 

Slightly glaucous. Stem rather weak. Uppermost sheath as long 
as or even longer than its leaf. Panicle secundly drooping,* tad: 
equal, broadly ‘pyramidal and open in flower, closed afterwards. 
Spikelets 2- to 4-flowered, but usually 2- or 3-flowered, green, often 
faintly anged with purple. 


Var. &, divaricata. 


"Green. Stem rather weak. Uppermost sheath as long as or longer 
than its leaf. Panicle erect, lax, distichously unilateral, oblong-trian- 
gular and open in flower and fruit. Spikelets 1- to 4-flowered, but 
usually 2-flowered, green, often tinged with pale purple. 

Varieties a and Bi in woods and on hedge banks, rather se 
and generally distributed in England; more rare in Scotland, exten 
ing to Elgin and Dade Var. y on walls and in pa ane : 

England acl Scotland. Var. 3 on mountains (Snowdon ?). Var. « 
on rocks, Teesdale. Var. £ in woods in hill y districts, Breadalbane 

and Braemar. Some of these varieties occur in oe east weed —— of 
et) but I do not know which. 


GRAMINA. 125 


forms differ by having the ligule extremely short, and the uppermost 
knot always about the middle of the stem ; most of the forms of 
P. nemoralis besides are far less glaucous in colour and have the 
spikelets much less tinged with violet, but certainly it is sometimes 
difficult (at least when the plants are dried) to separate some of the 
forms of P. nemoralis from some of those of P. glauca. 
Wood Meadow- Grass. 
French, Pdtwrin des bois. German, Hain-Rispengras. 


SPECIES VI—POA COMPRESSA. Linn. 
Prats MDCCLXX. 
Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. : ues CLVIII. Fig. 401. 
Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsice 

Not cespitose. Rootstock an extensively creeping, producing 
few or several flowering stems and long or short stolons terminating 
in vernal or estival leafy shoots or leafy barren stems. Flowering 
stems erect or ascending from a curved or geniculate base, not swollen 
at the base, green; the uppermost knot usually above the middle of the 
stem. Leaves narrowly linear, parallel-sided, rather abruptly pointed 
and hooded at the apex, dull opaque green ; sheaths smooth or nearly 
so, very greatly compressed and ancipitate, the uppermost one about as 
long as or longer than its leaf; ligule slightly prominent, 4 or 5 times 
as broad as long, transversely truncate. Panicle erect, indistinctly 
distichously unilateral, oblong or rhombic-oblong in flower, narrowly 
oblong and lobed afterwards, dense. Panicle-branches 2 to 5 at the 
lowest nodes of the rachis, but generally 2, the longest ones un- 
branched and cesses of reer at the base for from one-fourth 
; ascending in Agirhe and erect = ae ral 


_ 8-ribbed or more rarely 5-ribbed, ¥ v 
- silky-hairy at the base or in the iets 


tly tinged with pale dusky — and mich very harrow white 
— estes 


126 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


9-flowered. Florets connected by arachnoid hairs. Lower pale obso- 


_letely 3-ribbed. 
Var. 8, polynoda. 
‘ P. polynoda, Parnell, Grasses of Britain, p. 84. Bab. Man. Brit. Bot. ed. iv. 
p. 403. 


Uppermost knot above the middle of the stem, often two-thirds 
from the base. Spikelets 4- to 6-flowered. Florets free or with but 
a single arachnoid hair at the base.. Lower pale obsoletely 5-ribbed. 
Stem more decumbent, knots more numerous, ligule longer, panicle 
more contracted and with shorter branches than in var. a. 

In dry fields and on banks, on walls and amongst rocky débris. Not 
very common but generally distributed in England. Local in Scotland 
and very scarce north of the Forth and Clyde, though it is said to 
occur in Forfarshire, and I have myself gathered it on the shores of 
the Dornoch Firth, near the Mickle Ferry, Rosshire: in this last station, 
however, it may have been introduced, as it was in but small quantity. 

_ Very rare in Ireland, the only certain locality being in the neighbour- 
: heat of rene ‘Var. P im very dry places and among stones. 
s 3 Perennial. Summer. 


s soli oy or in 1 loose tufts 6 inches to 2 feet high ; 
brownish 


5 knots 5 of th ei ataie usually -purple. Lperoeed leaves 1 to 
4 inches_ 1 to acl broad. Panicle 2 inches long. 


~~ by ty 
Spikelets} ets inch "ong. Florets about t wa feng. 


pole oe as a variety, an wid perhaps it ral be considered as a 

_ depauperised state, but I have not been able to test this by cultivation. — 

_ The extremes are certainly widely different in appearance, but it | is 

= — to draw a line between them, as there is no constant corre- 

—— Iatic ' distinctive characters. Poa subcompressa, Parnell,is one of 
inks faheciguiladds: Geen, Lavin: 5-ribbed pales and distineth ly webbed - 
florets. 


= de fee se ee ee 
i‘. ele $ less ome nice at SAE a nl. 2) guards 


GRAMINA. 127 


SPECIES VIL—POA PRATENSIS. Linn. 
Piates MDCCLXXI. MDCCLXXII 
Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. its Tab. CLXI. Figs. 413 to 417. 
Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsicc. No. 3488. 

Rootstock slender, sane creeping, producing few or several 
flowering stems, and long or short stolons terminating in vernal or 
vestival leafy barren shoots. Flowering stems erect, usually curved 
at the base, not swollen at the hase, green or slightly glaucous ; 
the uppermost knot one-fourth to one-third above the base. Leaves 
linear or narrowly linear, parallel-sided, rather abruptly pointed and 
hooded at the apex, bright green or slightly glaucous; sheaths smooth 
or nearly so, compressed, those of the barren shoots greatly so, and 
ancipitate, the uppermost one on the stem about two or three times as 
long as its leaf; ligule rather prominent, rather broader than long, 
obliquely truncate. Panicle more or less drooping at the apex, equal, 
oblong-pyramidal or deltoid pyramidal i in flower and fruit, or rhombic- 
oblong or narrowly oblong in fruit, lax or rather dense. Panicle- 
branches 2 to 5 at the fewest nodes of the rachis, but generally 3 to 5, 
the longest ones unbranched and bare of spikelets at the base for 
from one-fourth to one-half their length, spreading and often arching- 
drooping in flower and fruit, or ascending or even erect in fruit, 
eabrous. Spikelets lanceolate-elliptical, 2- to 6-flowered, but usu- 
ally 3- or 4-flowered. Lower glume 1-ribbed, a pes one 3-ribbed. | 
Florets connected at the base by numerous arachnoid : 
ee acuminate sod acute, peoseiepey 5 abhet. wih, the midrib and 
: | in the lower : 


ia te ’ 
t, green. Panicle bl S-pyral inet, mer a oe , 


hairs. ae 


128 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


Var. y, subcerulea. Sm. 
Prats MDCCLXXII. 
P. subcerulea, Sm. Engl. Bot. ed. i. No. 1004. 


Leaves of the barren shoots as broad as those of the stem, short, 
flat, slightly glaucous or purplish. Panicle deltoid-pyramidal, com- 
monly rather few-flowered, open after flowering. 


Var. 5, strigosa. Gaud. 


Leaves of the barren shoots much narrower than those of the stem, 
at length convolute, slightly glaucous or purplish. Panicle oblong, 
closed after flowering. 

In meadows, pastures, cultivated ground, and waste places; very 
common and universally distributed. Var. & chiefly in woods and 
shady places. Var. y in dry places, especially wall-tops and stony 
ground and on mountains. Var. 4 on wall-tops and stony and sandy 


nace 
| , Ireland. Perennial. Summer. 


. Var. has the stems 9 inches to 2 fest high, Ingest leaves 4 to 
8 inches long i. Panicle 2 to 5 inches;  eoreoha 
about % inch; florets y'5 inch, green, or slightly tinged with dull 


i | 

: var . B has the stems 1 to 2 feet high, leaves of the barren shoots 
6 inches to 1 foot long by +4; to 74 inch broad, those of the stem 
shorter and } to 1 inch broad. Panicle 3 to 6 inches long. Spikelets 
and florets shout the same size as in var. «, or a little sma er, green. 

Var.y has the stems 3 to 8 inches high, the longest meee 1 to 3 inches 
long by § inch broad, the uppermost stem leaf mu h hooded, so as to 
be boat-s . Panicle 1 to 2 inches long. Spikelets broader in 
= han in vars. a and A, always more or less tinged with 


Ete 


: Yar 3 as the stems 6 to 18 inches high, | leaves of the barren. 


1 by its numerous : 


ry acute eower ple with its ribs Dos: a 


ie smaller than inthe 


GRAMINA. 129 


SPECIES IX—POA TRIVIALIS. Linn. 
Prats MDCCLXXITI. 
Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CLXIL Figs. 418 to 420. 
Billot, Fi. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. No. 2588. 

Cespitose. Rootstock not at all creeping, producing several or 
numerous flowering stems, and numerous short or elongate xstival bar- 
ren shoots or decumbent stems, but no subterranean stolons. Flower- 
ing stem erect, curved or geniculate at the base, and sometimes rooting 
at the lower knots, not swollen at the base; green, the uppermost knot 
usually from one-third above the base to a little below the middle of 
the stem. Leaves linear, tapering towards the apex, gradually pointed, 
flat, green; sheaths rough, rarely smooth, compressed, those of the 
barren shoots greatly so and ancipitate, the uppermost one on the 
stem about twice as long as its leaf; ligule very prominent, longer 
than broad, lanceolate-triangular, acute. Panicle erect, equal, pyra- 
midal or oblong-pyramidal in flower and fruit, very lax. Panicle- 
branches 3 to 6 at the lowest nodes of the rachis, but usually 5, 
the longest ones unbranched and bare of spikelets at the base for 
about half their length, spreading in flower and fruit or ascending in 
fruit, scabrous. Suileelots elliptical, 2 to 4 flowered, but usually 
3-flowered. Lower glume 1-ribbed, upper one 3-ribbed. Florets 
connected at the base by numerous arachnoid hairs. Lower pale 
acute, conspicuously 5-ribbed, the midrib alone silky-hairy in the — 


lower half, green, occasionally tinged with purple, and with ol S _ 


white — ——- towards the — 
: Var stra 


P. sabe, Bh. D.C 0. FL Fr. Vol. IU. gia 


ee Var. B, Kili. — | 
a P. Ried, “D.0. Syn. Gall. 1607.*” Test. Gaud. Agrest. Hal VoLke 211. 
x : She oaths s smooth. : ee 

In soya pestares, aide hed pitied ; very com- 
and g a. distributed. Var. Ps in woods : ; es 


130 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


broad. Panicle 3 to 9 inches long. Spikelets 1 inch long. Florets 
yy inch long. 
Very similar to P. pratensis, but usually taller and with a larger 
panicle, which does not droop at the apex. The leaves taper more 
ually towards the apex and are less hooded; the panicle-branches 
are more numerous at the lower nodes of the rachis; the spikelets 
are smaller and fewer flowered; and the lower pale more regularly 
curved on the back, not distinctly acuminate, and glabrous on the 
mar; 


gins. 

Var. @ is very readily to be distinguished from P. pratensis by its 
rough sheaths, but the most important characters which separate 
P. trivialis from P. pratensis are, the absence of a creeping root and 
subterranean stolons in the former and its long acute ligule. 

Rough Meadow- Grass. 
French, Patwrin commun, German, Gemeines Rispengras. 


GENUS XXXV.-BRIZ A, Linn. 


_ Spikelets stalked, arranged in a very loose open panicle, laterally 
_ compressed, open during flowering, each containing 3 to 10 perfect 
_ florets. Glumes 2, nearly equal, subrotund, concave, both shorter 
_ than the spikelets, not keeled, not awned, 7- to 9-ribbed, scarious. 
Pales 2, the lower one concave, rounded on the back, not keeled, 
cordate at the base, entire and obtuse, not awned, faintly 7- to 9- 
ribbed, scarious; upper pale suborbicular, truncate, 2-keeled. Lodicules 
2, entire or sub-bilobed. Stamens 3. Styles 2, short, persistent ; 
stigmas plumose, protruded at the sides of the florets between the 
basal margin of the pales. Caryops adherent to the upper pale, 
glabrous, roundish-ovate, convex on the outside, concave within. 


™ 
Tei) 


The name of this genus is derived from the Greck word Bpilw, I balance, owing 


from the ends of a balance 


SPECIES I-BRIZA MEDIA. Lim. 
: Prars MDCCLEXIV. =” 
i. Ie. FI. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CLXV. Fig. 429.0 
Pl. Gall. et Germ. Exsice.No.1575. 0 


GRAMINA. 131 


smooth, the uppermost one very slightly inflated, much longer than 
its leaf, frequently eight or ten times as long, and very rarely so little 
as twice as long ; ligule slightly prominent, generally broader than 
long, obtuse, rarely sub-acute, erose. Panicle erect, deltoid-pyramidal, 
lax, open. Panicle-branches in pairs, spreading, once or twice tricho- 
tomous, slightly scabrous. Spikelets drooping or pendulous, roundish- 
deltoid, compressed, 4- to 9-flowered, but usually 7-flowered. Glumes 
broadly oval-obovate, concave and hooded towards the apex, shorter 
and narrower than the lower pales of the florets contiguous to them, 
dull purple, rarely green, with broad white scarious margins. Lower 
pale quadrate-oval, concave, hooded towards the apex, slightly in- 
durated and boat-shaped in fruit, purple, rarely green, with broad 
white scarious margins. Anthers purple or yellow, exserted. 

In meadows, pastures, downs, and heaths. Rather common, and 
generally distributed in England and the south of Scotland, extending 
north to Ross and Lanark. It occurs in Orkney, but possibly it may 
have been introduced there with grass seeds. Frequent throughout 
Treland. 

England, Scotland, Ireland. Perennial. Summer. 


about as broad. 


a French, Brize commune. German, Gemeines 2 rg 
A beantiful grass, often gathered to form winter bouquets. Al 


. 


§ Eb coat 


132 ENGLISH BOTANY. . 


SPECIES IL—BRIZA MINOR. Linn. 
Pirate MDCCLXXV. 
Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CLXV. Figs. 428 and 430. 
Billot, Fl. Gall, et Germ. Exsice. No. 1379. 

Annual. Without a rootstock, Flowering stems several or nu- 
merous, appearing in succession, simple or branched from the lower 
knots, without radical leaves. Leaves flaccid, very broadly linear, 
tapering towards both ends, flat, with rather numerous widely 
placed ribs, pale yellowish-green, slightly glaucous ; uppermost stem- 
leaf smaller than the others, but in other respects similar to them ; 
sheaths nearly smooth, the uppermost one considerably inflated and 
longer than its leaf, but rarely so much as twice as long ; ligule 
very prominent, much longer than broad, oblong-lanceolate, acute or 
subacute, laciniate. ipa erect, pyramidal-subspherical, lax, open. 
Panicle-branches in pairs, spreading, twice or thrice or four times 
trichotomous, aie | ipauclens slightly drooping, ovate-deltoid or 

ovate-triangular, 5- to 9-flowered, but generally 7- or 8-flowered. 
Glumes broadly oval-obovate, concave and almost saccate towards the 

- apex, as long as or longer than and as broad as the lower pales of 
the florets contiguous to them, green, rarely purplish, with very 
broad white scarious margins. Lower pale suborbicular, concave, 
saccate towards the apex, greatly indurated, vs = — 
in fruit, green, with very broad white scarious margins. Anthers 
purple, included or nearly so. 

In dry cultivated fields, generally among corn, rare and very local. 
Confined to the south-west of England, from Cornwall and Devon, or 
perhaps Somerset, to Hants, near Southampton and Ryde. Very rare 
in Ireland, where it occurs in fields at Black Rock, near Cork. Fre- 
ey in Jersey and Guernsey. 


England. Ireland. Annual. Summer. 


oe "Stone 6 inches to 2 feet high, thicker bet not so wiry as those of 
B. pram Leaves 2 to 6 inches long by } to § inch broad. Panicle 
- 


: th " Florets J Tz inch long. 
eadily media by ite titted ‘flowering stems, some- 
. saeclotaig Short: branches terminating in panicles from the 

ots: ader, , more flaccid, and yellow-green tender 
much nailer ‘then the others, not 


GRAMINA. _ 133 


GENUS XXXVI—CYNOSURUS. Linn. 


Spikelets subsessile or very shortly stalked, disposed in pairs, one 
of which. is fertile, the other barren and resembling a pectinated bract 
placed behind its fertile spikelet, unilaterally arranged in a dense 
continuous or slightly interrupted spike-like panicle, laterally com- 

ressed, open during flowering, each fertile one containing 2 to 5 

perfect florets. Glomes of the perfect florets 2, nearly equal, strongly’ 
keeled, shorter than floret, pointed, 1-ribbed, scarious. ales of the 
fertile florets 2, the lower one rounded on the back, 2-toothed, with 
an awn from between the teeth, 5-ribbed, the ribs all converging 
into the awn; upper pale 2-toothed, 2-ribbed. Lodicules 2, entire. 
Stamens 3. Styles 2, very short, terminal; stigmas plumose, protraded 
at the sides of the re between the basal margins of the pales. 
Caryops usually adhering to the upper pale, glabrous, oblong-convex 
on the back, slightly furrowed on the inner face. 


From two Greek words, xiwy and ovpa, a tail—dog’s tail. 


Section I.—EU-CYNOSURUS. Coss. & Germ. 


Panicle linear. Sterile spikelets destitute of glumes, with the pales 
acuminate and mucronate. Lower pale of the fertile floret with an 
awn shorter than itself. 


SPECIES I-CYNOSURUS CRISTATUS. — - 
Prare MDCCLXXVI. : 
Reich. Ic. Fi. Germ. et Helv. Vol: I. Tab. oo 
Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. No. 1383. oe ae ee 
- Perennial. Cxspitose. Rootstock with 1 aoe ; hort barren tufts, 
ae several flowering stems or rarely only one. “Flowering stems | 
erect, rather rigid, leafless at the apex ; uppermost knot 
oe middle of the stem. Leaves narrowly ont tapering 
: apex, rather rigid, with a few closely-placed ele 
= th, bright green ; sheaths smooth, the upperme 
@ as long as its leaf; ligule slightly prominent, 
cat ee 


ist: ENGLISH BOTANY. 


serrulate on the keel, all empty. Fertile spikelets 3- to 5-flowered, 
shorter than the barren spikelets. Glumes of the fertile florets nearly 
equal linear-lanceolate, shortly mucronate. Lower pales of the fertile 
florets lanceolate, acuminate, indistinctly 2-toothed, scabrous. Awn 
from between the teeth of the pale, and from one-third to one-fourth 
of its length. 

In pastures and meadows and by roadsides, very common, and 
universally distributed. 

England, Scotland, Ireland. Perennial. Late Summer. 


Plant growing in small tufts, with radical leaves 1 to 6 inches long, 
and flowering stems 9 inches to 2} feet high. Uppermost stem-leaf 
1 to 3 inches lon ng. Pans icle 1 to 4 inches long by 4 to 3 inch broad. 
Barren — to } 1 inch long. Fertile spikelets 1 1 to + inch long. 
Florets 35 inch long, exclusive of the awn. Pales of both usually 
green, but sometimes tinged with pale purple. Anthers pale purple. 

Florets occasionally viviparous. 

Crested Dog’s-tail-Grass. 
—— Cynosure & créte. German, Gemeines Kammgras. 


a ee 


a : stures, often forming a considerable portion of 
lta gael adliy It seldom grows more than 18 inches high, 
and in very d t On dry upland pastures 
this grass forms the principal herbage, and being relished by sheep, must be regarded. 
as one of our most useful kinds; but upon moist land its produce is too small to 
recommend it for cultivation. The slender stem of this grass is valuable for making 
he eee Hoes, See weyers ey ee er 


Section I.—PHALONA. Dumort. 


_ Panicle ovoid or ovate, contracted. Sterile spikelets desgtinte of 
_ glumes ; with the pales acuminate and lonely awned. Lower ope of 
Cae fertile — with an awn longer than itself. 


GRAMINA,. 135 


at the apex ; uppermost knot usually above the middle of the stem. 
Leaves broadly linear, tapering towards the apex, flaccid, with nu- 
merous rather distant faintly-elevated ribs, rough on the margins and 
keel, yellowish-green; sheaths smooth, the uppermost one a little 
inflated, about as long as its leaf; ligule very prominent, oblong, 
much longer than boda, obtuse, often higher at one side than at 
the other. Panicle spike-like, ovoid or shlongaveid, continuous, often 
lobed, distichously unilateral. Panicle-branches short, unequal, the 
liner ones usually several times dichotomous and bearing numerous 
spikelets, the uppermost ones or all the branches once dichotomous and 
bearing 2 or 4 spikelets, ascending, rough. Sterile spikelets without 
glumes, with the pales equally Siaiant, lanceolate, acuminate, scabrous 
on the keel, with an awn about their own length, the uppermost ones 
sometimes containing a floret. Fertile spikelets 2- to 3-flowered, as 
long as the barren spikelets. Glumes of the fertile florets sally 
equal, strap-shaped-lanceolate, insensibly attenuated into an awn 
about half their own length. Lower pales of the fertile florets ellip- 
tical-lanceolate, acuminate, deeply 2-toothed, scabrous towards the 
apex. Awn from between the teeth of the pale, and equalling it in 
— or a little longer. 

n sandy pastures. Very rare, and confined to the Channel 
Islands. Below Fort Regent, Jersey; near Port de Fer and other 
places, Guernsey. In England it is also occasionally to be met with — 
as a casual introduction in cultivated felda sown with corn, Italian 
rye-grass, or clover. 

Channel Islands [England]. Arinoal: Summer 

Stems 3 inches to 2 feet high in the Channel I. 
‘Sometimes between 3 or 4 feet when growing in 
Leaves 2 to 6 inches long by + to @ inch broad; i in the c cornfield speci- 
. mens often much longer and broader. ‘Panicle } inch to 2 inches long ae 
(or in the cultivated state. sometimes 3 or 4 inches) by 3 to 3; inch oe 
broad. Barren Ase about 4 inch long, exclusive of . awns. 
a ong. Florets } inc long. ae 
oe Dog. s-tail-Grass. - 
French, — hévissé. 


GENUS | XXXVIL—DjA OTYLIs. Linn. 


(136 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


open during flowering, each containing 8 to 11 perfect florets. 
- Glumes 2, unequal, shorter than the spikelets, keeled, mucronate, 1- to 
5-ribbed, subherbaceous. Pales 2, the lower one keeled, entire or 
notched at the apex, mucronate or shortly awned from immediately 
below the tip, with 5 or more ribs, the ribs converging into the mucro 
or awn. Upper pale bifid or truncate, 2-ribbed. Lodicules 2, bifid. 
Stamens 3. Styles 2, short or rather long; stigmas long and phimose or 
short and hairy. Caryops free, glabrous, oblong or obovate, placed 
convex or subtregonous, with or without a furrow on the inner face. 
The name of this genus is derived from daxrvXoc, a finger. 


SPECIES I—DACTYLIS GLOMERATA. Linz. 
Pirate MDCCLXXVIIL. 

Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. cae CXLVIL. Figs. 363 and 364. 
Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsicc. No. 2591. 
_ Densely cexspitose rootstock, not creeping. Flowering stems ascend- 
ing or erect. Leaves rather flaccid, broadly linear, gradually tapering 
to the apex, which is slightly hooded, ultimately nearly flat (in the 
British form), strongly keeled, with numerous broad continuous flat- 
tened slightly scabrous ribs ; sheaths compressed, strongly ancipitate, 

us and minutely pubescent, the uppermost one about as long as 
ite leat: ligule very prominent, triangular, acute, generally lacerate. 
Panicle erect or slightly drooping when in flower, distichously uni- 
lateral. Panicle-branches solitary at the lower nodes of the rachis, 
the lowest ones usually elongate and bare of spikelets at their base 
for half their length or more ; the upper ones very short, all bearing 
unilateral clusters of spikelets towards the apex: or in small speci- 
a mens the lower elongate panicle-branches wanting, and the spikelets 
Lee. ae unilateral Py Bh snes — nem 


ee ae a Tee ee ea 


GRAMINA. 137 


wards nearly flat, more or less glaucous. Panicle 2 to 8 inches long 
or more in large specimens. Spikelets about } inch long. Florets 

+ inch long, scr ami of the glumes. Lower pale green, or more or 
leas tinged with purplish-red. Anthers pela purple, es to 
eee isck range: 

In the south and west of Europe there isa small glaucous form 
with involute leaves” ooh a compact semi-cylindrical panicle (D. 
Hispanica, Linn. reas may occur in the Channel Islands or south- 


west of Englan 
Rough Cock’s-foot-Grass. 
French, Dactyle aggloméré. German, Gemeines Knaulgras. 


A very valuable agricultural grass. Horses, re and sheep eat it with greediness, 
and fatten well in pastures in which it aboun 


GENUS XXXVII—FESTUCA. Linn. 


Spikelets stalked or subsessile, disposed in a lax and open, or dense 
and contracted panicle, or in a racemose or spikelike and generally 
unilateral panicle, at first cylindrical, afterwards compressed, open 
during flowering, each containing 8 to 12 perfect florets. Glumes 2, 
shorter than the florets, or the larger one nearly equalling them, more 
or less unequal, the lower one sometimes very minute or obsolete, 
keeled, acuminate or acuminate-aristate, scarious or subherbaceous. 
Pales 2, the lower one faintly keeled or rounded on the back, entire 
or 2-toothed, pointed or awned, with an excurrent mid-rib, the lateral — 
ribs vanishing below the apex, membranous or parchment-like; upper 


pale acute, 2-toothed, 2-ribbed, scarious. Lodicules 2, entire or 2- 
lobed. Stamens 3, more rarely 1 or 2. Stigmas 2, sessile or F sub- oo 


sessile, terminal, plumose, protruded at the he sides of : 

the basal margins of the pales. Caryops generally adhering 

upper pale, glabrous, oblong, convex on the tak, concave or fur- 
rowed within. esas the i — to the base. : 


- I. rw. £8 eer eer Gee ‘ 
1 1 fr , Signifying 
mesqiges mf : 44 


— [_VULPIA. Gmel. 


Gi 


oe ENGLISH BOTANY. 


SPECIES lL—-FESTUCA UNIGLUMIS. Soland. 
Prats MDCCLXXIX. 

Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CXXX. Fig. 291. 
Billot, F). Gall. et Germ. Exsicc. No. 2593. 
F. bromoides, “ Innn.” Orep. Man. Fl. de Belg. ed. ii. p. 353. (Non Sm.) 
Vulpia uniglumis, Dumort. Agrost. Belg. p. 101. Parl. Fi. Ital. ‘Vol. I. p. 424. 

Reich. Ic. 1. ¢. p. 35. Lindl. Syn. Brit. Fl. p. 314. 
NV. a Godr. Gren. & Godr. Fl. de Fr. Vol. III. p. 568. (Non Link, nec 


Vv. eee Tink, Hort. Reg. Berol. p. 147. 


Annual. Without tufts of radical leaves. Stems ascending or 
erect from a decumbent and geniculate base, usually branched from 
the lower nodes. Leaves narrowly linear, channelled, ultimately 
convolute, with a few very broad thick raised finely-downy ribs, 
green ; sheaths smooth, the uppermost one considerably longer than 
its leaf (usually more than twice as long) ; ligule extremely short, 

truncate in the middle, but produced into an auricle on each side of 
_ the base of the leaf. Panicle short, dense, semi-cylindrical, oblong, 
_ simple, racemose, ¢ ay tichously unilateral. Panicle-branches all reduced 
_ to pedicels bearing singl le spikelets. Pedicels applied to the rachis, 
ds, mostly shorter than the spikelets. aa 
lets a to (flowered erect. Glumes very unequal ; lower glum 


sixth the par of the the upper g 
florets (exclusive of the = Saas attenuated into a sca 


awn about one-fourth of its own length. Florets imbricated, ae 

separated in fruit. Lower pale gradually attenuated into an awn 
exceeding its own length, at least in the lower florets, scabrous on 
_ the keel and awn, and sometimes slightly punctate-scabrous towards 

me apex, elsewhere mutes Anthers 3 (or =) Hook. Jil. ye 


a. —- more or "less aay suena an over. Anther 1 


GRAMINA. 139 


of stem about equal to its own length between its apex and the base 
of the panicle. Panicle 14 to 34 inches Jong. Spikelets resembling 
those of Bromus Madritensis in miniature, 1 to 14 inch long. 
(exclusive of the ~ pale green, wil white-margined pales, and 
purple or whitish a 
The lower perio is very variable in size and shape; in the smallest 
form it is = obtuse, while when most developed it is acute or 
even awned. Lower pales of the lower florets slightly overlapping 
those of the upper florets. 
Single-glumed Fescue-Grass. 
French, Fétuque uniglume. 


SPECIES U—FESTUCA MYUROS. Lin. 
Puates MDCCLXXX. MDCCLXXXI. MDCCLXXXITI. 
Vulpia Mynuros, Parl. Fl. Ital. Vol. I. p. 418. 


Annual. Without tufts of radical leaves. Stems erect from a 
slightly geniculate but rarely decumbent base, simple, or branched 
from the lower nodes in luxuriant examples. Leaves very narrowly 
linear, channelled, ultimately convolute, with a few very broad thick 
slightly-raised downy ribs, green, the upper ones slightly glaucous; 
sheaths smooth, the uppermost one considerably larger than its leaf, 
usually about twice as long ; ligule extremely short, truncate in the 
middle, but produced into an auricle on each side of the base of the 
leaf. Panicle long or short, dense or rather lax, somewhat semi-cylin- 


- drical, linear or obloni, branched towarie the Laie ee re E 
halt, simple and racemose Loesch = sc memes less distich 


10us florets, or rarely nearly & as s long, eabihy or subulate. 
the low r pales becoming ‘evalate. ae ake ie aay attenu- 
an awn seceding its own length, scabrous on the keel a 


140 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


Sus-Spzcms 1—Festuca ambigua. Le Gall. 
Pirate MDCCLXXX. 
Bab. Eng. Suppl. Bot. No. 2970. Man. Brit. Bot. ed. ii. p. 418. 
F. Myurus proper, var. ambigua. Hook. fil. Stud. Fl. p. 449. 
F. Pseudo-myurus, var. Lloyd, Fl. de l'Ouest de la Fr. ed. ii. p. 589. 
F. uniglumis, var. 8, Brom. Fl. Vect. p. 606. 
Vulpia ambigua, A. G. More, Proceed. Linn. Soc. Lon. Botany, Vol. VI. p. 190. 


Stems erect or ascending, decumbent and geniculate at the base. 
Uppermost sheath reaching nearly or quite up to the panicle. 
Panicle erect, occupying from one-third to one-half of the whole 
length of the stem, dense, continuous, fusiform-semi-cylindrical, 
distichously unilateral, branched towards the base only. Lowest 
panicle-branches from one-sixth to one-third the length of the panicle, 
closely adpressed. Upper glume subobtuse, mucronate, 3 to 6 times 
as long as the lower one, and from one-fourth to one-half the length 
of the contiguous floret, exclusive of the awn of the latter. Florets 
purplish-brown, slightly enlarged upwards after flowering. Lower 
pale not ciliated, punctate-scabrous. 

_ On loose blown sand. Very local. At St. Helen’s Spit, Isle of Wight 
(Mr. A. G. More). On the an Ryde, Isle of Wigh t (Dr. Brom- 
field), i in 1839, but I am informed that this station is now built upon. 


- England. Annual. Early Summer. 


Stems numerous, 3 to 15 inches high, in luxuriant examples 
with branches produced from the nodes terminating in small panicles, 
but in weak specimens these branches are wanting. Leaves 2 to 4 
inches long, very narrow, convolute, the upper ones slightly glaucous. 
Panicle very dense, 2 to 6 inches long by 4 to 3 inch broad in the 
middle, and tapering to each end. Spikelets 3- Pes 7-flowered, 4 to 3 
inch long, exclusive of the awns, at first pale yellowish-green, but 
_ soon becoming tinged with reddish or or purplish-brown. Awns pale 
y Vety vintlar is habe tc but with the panicle tapering 
ie similar in habit to jumis, t e panicle 
ete itwneds apex, = beasiched at the base, though the branches 
closely ap lied to th 


ta he | 


s closely e: dona a ” The spikelets are much smaller and the 
oe in \ proportion ; the glumes less unequal and the outer 
t, n them ,and the stamen only 1. 


more slender and rather less 
nai is eidhesed. 


on ‘a Balmato ee om the ec Wight specimens sent me = 


GRAMINA.  - 141- 


Sus-Srecres Il.—Festuca Pseudo-myuros. Soyer-Willemet. 
Pirate MDCCLXXXT. 
Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. COXXX. Fig. 290. 
Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsicc. No. 487. 
F. Mynuros, Poll. Sm. Engl. Bot. ed. i. No. 1412, and Engl. Fl. Vol. I. p. 143. Bab. 
Man. Brit. Bot. ed. vi. p. 18. Kunth, Enum. Plant. Vol I. p. 396. 
F. bromoides, var. 3, Hook. & Arn. Brit. Fl. ed. viii. p. 557. 
Vulpia Pseudo-myuros, Reich. Fl. Excurs. p. 37, and Ic. 1. c. p. 34. Gren. & Godr. 
Fl. de Fr. Vol. III. p. 564. 
V. Mynros, Gmel. Lindl. Syn. Brit. Fl. p. 13. 
V. Myuros, var. a. Parl. Fi. Ital. Vol. I. p. 418. 

Stems erect, slightly geniculate at the base. Uppermost sheath 
reaching nearly or quite up to the panicle. Panicle drooping at the 
apex, at least in luxuriant specimens, occupying from one-half to one- 
third of the whole length of the stem, rather dense, tapering towards 
the apex, slightly interrupted below, continuous above, linear, di- 
stichously sub-unilateral, branched towards the base only. Lowest 
panicle-branches from one-sixth to one-third the length of the panicle. 
Upper glume subulate, 2 to 3 times as long as the lower one, and a 
little more than half the length of the contiguous floret, exclusive of 


the awn of the latter. Florets green, slightly enlarged geno after 


flowering. Lower pale not ciliated, punctate-scabrous. . 
On wall-tops and on dry waste ground. Rather common, and 
widely distributed in England, extending from Cornseall Dare Isle 


of Wight, and Kent, north to Chester and York. Rare in roms: a 3 


Middleton, County Cork (the Rev. T. Albin), — Jor 
near Holly Mount, Mayo (Cyb. Hib.) 


- England, Ireland. 


Stems 8 to 30 inches high. Leave 1 tod i coches Tong, vey narrow, a 
soon orem convolute and oo. 


= 


ages iret ons 
Eee exclusive of 


+ 


142 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


not feel at all confident that Mr. Lloyd and Dr. Hooker are not 
correct in placing F. ambigua as a variety of F. Pseudo-myuros. 
Mouse-tail Fescue-Grass. 
French, Fétuque fausse queue de rat. German, Miiuseschwanz-Schwingel. 


Sus-Srecies Il.—Festuca sciuroides. Roth. 
Pirate MDCCLXXXII. 

Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CXXX. Fig. 293. 

Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsicc. No. 488. 

F. bromoides, Sm. Engl. Bot. ed. i. No. 1411, and Engl. Fl. Vol. I. p. 142. (an 

Tann, ? 

F. aun var. a, Hook. & Arn. Brit. Fl. ed. viii. p. 557. Koch, Syn. Fl. Germ. 

et Helv. ed. ii. p. 937. 

Vulpia sciuroides, Gmel. Gren. & Godr. Fi. de Fr. Vol. IIT. p. 65. 

'V. bromoides, Dumort. Reich. Ic. l.c. p. 35. 

V. Myuros, 8, bromoides, Parl. Fl. Ital, Vol I. p. 419. 

Stems erect. Uppermost sheath ultimately falling far short of the 

base of the panicle and leaving a portion of the stem exposed at the 
_ apex. Panicle erect, rarely occupying more than one-sixth part of 

the whole stem, pod Sermons, not so much, rather dense or rather 

S sC tin : p : narrowly oblong , slightly di 

or unilateral, s ibs wih “ati usually to st the mide: 
Teen scenes from one-third to one-half the length of the 

panicle. Upper glume subulate, scarcely twice as long as the lower, 

and about five-sixths the length of the contiguous floret, exclusive of 

the awn of the latter. Florets green, rarely tinged with purplish, 

greatly enlarged upwards after flowering. Lower pale not ciliated, — 

a ee a or nearly smooth. 
__In dry pastures waste places, by road-sides and on wall-tops. _ 

‘Cailtien sa penerally distributed, extending north to — el gs 
aaa 
oe Sue Ireland. Auondl Summer. : 


oe ’ usually 1 6 inches to 1 Biot high, bat : varying from 3 
a to 3 rie = anicle 2 to 4 inches long. Spikelets ¢ to 4 
ong, exc ze ive > of the wns. — inch ne without sv 


oh - "upper pat exserted £ from : 


Bee soe the rachis, short, 


GRAMINA. : 143 


contiguous floret; in the florets when in fruit being more separated, 
and making a greater angle with the axis of the spikelet, so that the 
awns cia greatly; and in the lower pale being usually less 
scabro 


Barren Fescue-Grass. 
French, Fétuque queue d’écurewil. German, Hichhornschwanz-Schavingel. 


Section I].—EU-FESTUCA. 


Panicle contracted or diffuse at the time of flowering, compound. 
Lower glume a little smaller than the upper, but never minute. 
Lower pale semi-cylindrical, rounded on the back, with a terminal 
awn shorter than the pale. Stamens 3. 

Perennial, with the lower leaves, or sometimes all the leaves, seta- 
ceous or linear, conduplicate or convolute; ligule auricled. 


SPECIES IIlI—FESTUCA OVINA. Lin. 
Pirates MDCCLXXXIIT. MDCCLXXXIV. 
Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsicc. No. 2977. 
F. ovina proper, Hook. fil. Stud. Fl. p. 448. 
F. ovina, var. a, Hook. & Arn. Brit. Fl. ed. viii. p. 557. 

Perennial. Densely cespitose. Rootstock with erect branches, with 
very numerous tufts of radical leaves and several flowering stems, but 
no stolons. Flowering stems erect or ascending from the very base, 
slender, slightly angular, 8 sughy rough towards the apex, with barren 
tufts 


of leaves E = from tha tower at the fe —— : . - ae 


obsolete, except at the ma gins of th od it 

an auricle on each side of the stem. Panicle erect, short, lax, rhombic- 

triangular and open in flower, Tnear cod closed at other times, 
| Fatichoosly unilateral. lewis — ra nches 1 or 2 at the lower 


, other times; pepe ponicle-branch simple at 
ag Wants © Is b : : ; a. 


~ ssi lightly unequal, ocodase aa 


nalate, “the perone 
rth of the” spikelet. Lower pale oo. 


144 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


Var. a, genuina. 
Pirate MDCCLXXXITII. 
Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CXXXL Figs. 294 and 296. 
' FP. ovina, Sibth. Gren. & Godr. Fl. de Fr. Vol. III. p. 570. 
Leaves all setaceous, flaccid, green, the radical ones much shorter 
than the flowering stem. Lower pale shortly awned. 


Var. , tenuifolia. 
Prats MDCCLXXXIV. 
Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Hely. Vol. I. Tab. CXXXI. Fig. 295 and 296, 
F. tenuifolia, Sibth. Gren. & God. Fl, de Fr. Vol. III. p. 570. 

Leaves all setaceous, flaccid, green, the radical ones long and slen- 
der, at least half as long as the flowering stem, and often as long. 
Lower pale mucronate, not awned, smooth. 

Spikelets often hie ae on mountains, and in Orkney at the 
sea-level. 

Var. y, glauca. Koch. 
F. glauca, Lam. Diet. Vol. IL. p. 459. 

‘Leaves all thickly setaceous, rather rigid, often recurved, glaucous, 
_ shorter than the flowering stems. Lower pale shortly awed, smooth 
or —— 

Var. 3, major. 


Reich. Te. Fl. Germ. et Hely. Vol. I. Tab. CXXXII. Fig. 
F. duriuscula, Reich. Gren & Godr. Fl. de Fr. Vol. ne Bab. Man. Brit. 
Bot. ed. vi. p. 409? 

Stem-leaves rather broader than the others. Lowe pale —s 
shortly awned. . 
Stem Pes panicle and spikelets larger than in “the preceding 

varieties. 


_ Var. a common and generally distributed in dry pastures and on 
- joke Var. 6 chiefly in mountainous districts and in woods. Var. 
, on dunes — the sea-shore or more rarely inland. Var. 3 in 


GRAMINA. 145 
inch; in var.¢ the spikelets are } to $ inch long, and the florets 
1 inch. 


Sheep's Fescue- Grass. 
French, Fétuque des brebis. German, Schaf Schwingel. 


SPECIES IV—FESTUCA RUBRA. Lin. 
Prares MDCCLXXXV. MDCCLXXXVI. 

Perennial. Loosely cxspitose or not cxspitose. Rootstock with 
horizontal branches, with rather numerous or few tufts of radical 
leaves and flowering stems, and short or elongate stolons. Flowering 
stems erect : a curved base, stout, striate, smooth or slightly 
rough towards the apex, without any barren tufts proceeding from its 
lower knots at the time of flowering, so that it does not appear to be 
surrounded by radical leaves. Leaves all narrowly linear or linear, con- 
duplicate or channelled, or those of the flowering stem nearly flat, all 
more or less keeled, green or glaucous ; ligule shanlete; except at the 
margins of the leaf, where it is produced into an auricle on each side 
of the stem. Panicle erect or slightly secundly drooping, rather 
long, very lax, triangular and open in flower and afterwards, or linear 
and closed in flower, distichously unilateral. Lower panicle-branches 
2 at the lower nodes of the rachis, elongate, spreading in flower and 
sometimes afterwards; uppermost panicle-branches simple, and re- 
duced to short pedicels bearing single spikelets. Spikelets 3- to 
12-flowered, elliptical or oblong-elliptical . Glumes unequal, | lanceolate, 
the upper one from half eae again to twice as long as the low 


one, and one-third to one-fourth as long as. the spikelet. ie — a 
> than stool, : 


se 


very narrowly scarious- at the 3 apex, “smooth or more al is : oe 


esis . 
Sco Leste & auriuscula. oe oe 


a i eles, Gee. & Godr. Fi. de Fr. VoL TIL p. 574 Parl. Fl tal. Yate a 
F. ovina, var. 8, duriuscula, He Hook. & Arn. Brit. Fl. ed. vit. p. 
F. rubr nee Man. Brit. Bot. ed. vi. p. 419. 


146 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


In meadows and pastures, &c. Extremely common and uni- 
versally distributed. 


England, Scotland, Ireland. Perennial. Summer. 


Stems 9 inches to 3 feet high. Radical leaves 2 inches to 1 foot 
long: Panicle 2 to 7 inches long. Spikelets 1 to } inch long, usually 
5 or 6 florets, green or glaucous, often more “or less tinged with 
purple. Florets $ to } inch long. Lower pale smooth or more or 
less pubescent, sometimes terminated by an awn half its own length. 

A very variable plant, but usually larger and stouter than any of 
the states of F. ovina, with the stem-leaves more numerous, and 
always either flat or widely channelled, so as to show the upper sur- 
face, which bears a few broad | greatly-raised finely-pubescent ribs, but 
the chief point of difference is in the mode of growth. 

In F. ovina the rootstock divides into numerous erect straight 
branches, each of these branches is often again branched at 
intervals, but the branches all remain as nearly parallel as may be, 
the outside ones in large tufts however being pushed out of the 
erect into an ascending position by the pressure exerted on them by 
= the central ones. _ i ultimate branch bears numerous closely- 

_ placed leaves, of which h the itera are withered by the time 
of flowering. The flowering stem forms a continuation of the line 

of the rootstock without any curve at the base, though often with a 

bend at its first node above the base, and is not separated from the 
tufts of radical leaves by any portion " clothed with leafless sheaths, or 
sheaths of which the lamine have decayed. : 

In Festuca duriuscula the rootstock divides into shot horizontal 
branches, produced ae stolons orange in the summer or autumn of 
the preceding year. ese branches diverge horizon and are 
_ clothed with sheaths which are either leafless or Reale Aelia 
quite withered at the time of flowering, some of them terminating in 
barren tufts of leaves, others in flowering stems, the base in both being 
_ sharply bent round from the horizontal direction of the rootstock- 
_ branches into the vertical one of the barren tufts and flowering stems. 
___ Under the name of Festuca duriuscula, from Continental botanists, I 
find about an equal number of —— of the ious described above 
under that name, and of the large agi es ig Gvins, | theme t 


= 


as var. major. Unfortunately “ 
y set: of Billot’s collection. Under the name “nines Koch, 
. and Reichen i dout less 


GRAMINA. 147 


species under one name and separated slight varieties as distinct species. 
In writing a systematic work even of the smallest pretensions (how 
much more then on the scale of Linneus’ writings), it will always be 
found that some of the sections have been more completely studied 
than others ; and when these least-considered groups come in their turn 
to be described, time and opportunity are pesnestty <d ting to arrive 
at a satisfactory conclusion respecting them. They have to ok worked 
out as best they can to take their place in the work, and form those 
weak points in it of which critics are so prone to lay hold and cry 
*« Ex uno disce omnes.” 

Probably much of the alpine viviparous Festuca belongs really to 
F. duriuscula ; bat I have collected the true F. ovina viviparous in 
Orkney and Mull; anda non-viviparous state brought into Balmuto 
Garden, has this year (1871) become viviparous. ” Probably this is 
owing to the beard summer, as I have seen Alopecurus pratensis and 
Cynosurus tus viviparous in places where I could not have failed 
to observe them had they been so in previous years. 

F. cexsia, Sm. Engl. Bot. Ed. I. No. 1917, judging from the plate, 
is apparently a form of F. duriuscula and not of F. ovina, though 
doubtless Smith included under that name glaucous states of the true 
F. ovina. 

Hard Fescue-Grass. 


French, Fétuque dure. German, Starkerer Schwingel. 
Sus-Srecies I].—Festuca arenaria. Osbeck. 
Prare MDCCLXXXVIL. 
Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. No. 2184. 


F. rubra, var. arenaria, Bab. Man. Brit. Bot. od vip 10 Kuck, sm P Germ. a 
et Helv. ed. ii. p. 939. ee 
F. rr, Sn Bg. Bote No, 206 


‘148 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


Very closely allied to F. duriuscula, of which many think it to be 
but a maritime variety. The mode of growth is the same, but hes 
stolons, and consequently the branches of the rootstock, are so m 
lengthened that there is no tendency to a cespitose habit. The 
leaves of the barren tufts are disposed on shoots which are usually 
so elongated that they appear as barren stems; thee are more rigid, 
from the ribs being thicker and more cartilaginous, and have the two 
edges so closely applied that they appear rush- like: they are always 
more or less glaucous, which is only occasionally the case in F. durius- 
“ie The lower sheaths of F. rubra are always pubescent, while they 

re only occasionally so in F. duriuscula. The stem-leaves are more 
ssvahiite. the lower ones being conduplicate like those of the barren 
‘shoots, and the uppermost ones deeply channelled, with fewer, more 
prominent, and more hairy ribs than in F. duriu scula. The panicle 
is more often drooping and secund; the panicle-branches less rigid; 
the spikelets iiig broader, usually with more numerous florets, and 
ss glaucous. Lower pale usually pubescent, very rarely wholly 

rbrous. , 
Creeping Fescue-Grass. 
Frenck, Fétuque rouge. German, Rother Schwingel. 


‘HEDONORUS. Pal. de Beauv. 


diffuse at the time of flowering, any nearly simple and 
spikelike Lower glume a little smaller than the upper, but never 
minute. Lower pale lanceolate, semi-cylindrical, rounded on the back, 
not awned, or with an awn at or from a little below the apex much 
shorter than the pale. Stamens 3. 
Perennials, with all the leaves broad and flat; ligule not auricled. 


SPECIES V—_FESTUCA SYLVATICA. vill 


"Reich. Te. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. L Tab. OXXX. Fig. 326. 
.. No. 887. 


GRAMINA. 149 | 


prominent rough ribs and scabrous margins, yellowish-green; sheaths 
rough, the uppermost one about as long or a little longer than its 
leaf; ligule prominent, as long as broad, laciniate. Panicle equal, lax, 
erect and open and pyramidal in flower, secundly drooping and closed 
in fruit. Lower panicle-branches 1 to 5 at each node of the rachis, 
but generally 3, elongated, spreading-ascending in flower, and ascend- 
ing-erect in fruit, the uppermost ones shorter, but not reduced to 
pedicels. Spikelets 2- to 5-flowered, but usually 3- or 4-flowered, at 
first linear-elliptical, afterwards oval. Glumes unequal, linear, mu- 
cronate, both 1-ribbed, the lower one little more than half as long and 
half as broad as the upper, the upper about half as long as the spikelet 
and subulate. Lower pale narrowly lanceolate, longly acuminate and 
mucronate (almost awned), strongly 3-ribbed when dry, with the 
midrib excurrent, finely punctate-scabrous, scarcely scarious at the 
apex, pale green. 
Var. a, genuina. 
Pirate MDCCLXXXVII. 
F. calamaria, Sm. Engl. Bot. ed. i. No. 1005. 
Leaves very broadly linear. Spikelets 3- to 5-flowered. 


Var. 6, decidua. 
Piare MDCCLXXXVIIL 
F, decidua, Sm. Engl. Bot. ed. i. No. 2266. 
Leaves linear. Spikelets 2- to B-flowered, con with a one or 
two flowers perfect. 
Whole plant emaller then in var. : ee oe 
- Inwoods. Local and rare. Sparingly distributed from Sussex, Wilts, 
and Gloucester, to Banff, Elgin, and Inverness. Rare but widely 
: distributed i in Ireland. Var. B, Sussex, Westmoreland, and. Ayr. 


England, Scotland, Ireland. Perennial. Summer. 


= Plant ceorme in dense circular tufts, the eae of the thizome 

bs ino very short and terminating in several stems of both kinds, but 

it radical leaves—the lower sheaths of both barren and flower- 

s being rown aving no lamine. Stem 2 to 3 feet 

high. Longest leaves 9 ‘aha to 1 foot long, by 3 seer inch 7 in 

ae a; tot aber {nc in 8. : inches | 
| Sidhe Fh ing ot ne 


150 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


Var. A is rather a small state than a true variety, and is noticed here 
only because it was given as species by Smith in his earlier works. 
Wood Fescue-Grass. 
French, Fétuque du Bois. German, Wald Schwingel. 


SPECIES VI-FESTUCA ELATIOR. “Lim.” Sm. 
Prates MDCCLXXXIX. MDCCXC. 
Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CXLI. Fig. 334. 
F. arundinacea, “ Schreb.” Bab. Man. Brit. Bot. ed. ii. p. 42. Koch, Syn. Fl. Germ. 
et Helv. ed. ii. p. 948. Fries, Summ. Veg. Scand. p. 75. Gren. & Godr. Fl. de 
Fr. Vol. III. p. 580. Parl. Fi. Ital. Vol. I. p. 453. Reich. Ic. Lc. p. 40. 
Schedonorus elatior, Rim. & Schultes ; Lindl. Syn. Brit. Fl. p. 313. 
Bacetum elatius. Parn. Grasses of Brit. p. 107. 
Ceespitose. Rootstock with rather short thick creeping branches 
terminating in tufts of flowering and barren stems, and with rather 
short stout stolons terminating in barren stems. Flowering stems erect 
from the base, very stout, smooth, leafy, with all the sheaths furnished 
_ with laminz, but the lowest laminz withered by the time of flowering. 
_ Leaves all very broadly linear, flat, very firm, tapering towards the 
apex for the last quarter of their length, with numerous thick very 
— rough riba, and. very scabrous margins, dull green above, 
2 i shining-green below; sheaths ahiooth or rough, the upper- 
niet oa many (two to six) times longer than its leaf; ligule ex- 
pone short, many times broader than long, truncate, 
Panicle equal, lax, more or less secundly drooping and ovate-pyramidal 
acid opens ix Rowe. erect and closed or open in fruit. Lower panic 
branches two at each node of the rachis, each branch of the ase 
bearing several spikelets, but the one much longer and more 7. 


__divaricate in fruit; the uppermost 0 ones shorter, and a iw of eat: 

solitary and reduced to pedicels bearing a angle spikelet; all very 
_seabrous. & usually 5- or 6-flowered, 

: 1 Glumes un- 
al, la ‘subacute or even mucronate, the lower one 1- 

ed. and he quarters hig fh Laid which is 3-ribbed. : 


GRAMINA. 151 


Var. a, genuina. 
F. elatior, Sm. Eng. Bot. ed. i. No. 1593. 


Sheaths usually smooth, or the lowest ones slightly rough. Panicle 
closed in fruit. 
Var. 6, arundinacea. 
Prare MDCCXC. 
F: arundinacea, Schreb. Bab. Man. Brit. Bot. ed. vi. p. 420. 


Sheaths very rough, especially the lower ones. Panicle-branches 
divaricate after flowering. 

Plant larger and stouter, ribs of the leaves and panicle-branches 
more scabrous than in var. «. 

On meadows and banks by the sides of streams and near the coast, 
rather common and generally distributed. Var. 8 on wet banks 
and moist sand by the sea, on the south coast of England, in Devon- 
shire, the Isle of Wight, and Kent. 

England, Scotland, Ireland. Perennial. Summer, Autumn. 

Var. « is a large coarse grass, growing in tufts, which rapidly 
increase in size, from the stout stolons extending annually consider- 


ably in advance of the flowering stems. Stems usually 3 or 4 feet 
hi ee Lag serving from 2 to 5 feet. ae hein 1 to 2 feet ue ae 
eflexed, the t ae 


152 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


SPECIES VU—FESTUCA PRATENSIS. “Huds.” Hook. 
PLaTEs MDCCXCTI. MDCCXCII. 
Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. No. 3270. 


Loosely ceespitose. Rootstock with short slender creeping branches 
terminating in small tufts of flowering and barren stems or solitary 
flowering stems, and with very short slender stolons terminating in 
barren stems. Flowering stem erect from a more or less curved or 
geniculate base, rather slender, leafy, with all the sheaths furnished 
with lamin, but the lowest lamine frequently withered by the time 
of flowering. Leaves all linear or broadly linear, flat, tapering 
gradually from the base to the apex, with numerous father thick, 
slightly prominent smooth ribs, and slightly scabrous margins, bright 
yellowish-green on both sides, but more shining below; sheaths 
smooth, the uppermost one two or three times longer than its leaf; 
ligule very short, _ several times broader than long, truncate, lacerate. 
Panicle lax, distichously unilateral or Sivichons, erect or scarcely 
droop ing and « and narrowly triangular-oblong or linear-oblong 
i flower, erect ok closed in fruit. Lower panicle-branches two 

at each node of the rachis, one branch of the pair bearing several 
spikelets, and the other commonly but a single spikelet, ascending 
in flower, erect and adpressed in fruit, the upper ones shorter, and a 
number of them solitary and reduced to very short pedicels bearing a 
single spikelet or sometimes all or nearly all solitary and reduced 
to very short pedicels bearing a single spikelet; all smooth or slightly 
scabrous.. Spikelets 5- to 12-flowered, but usually 7- to 9-flowered, 
at first fusiform-cylindrical, afterwards linear-elliptical.._ -Glumes 
slightly unequal, lanceolate, subobtuse, the lower one 1-ribbed and 
three: marters he length. of the upper one, which is 3-ribbed. Lower 
oo, , acute or mucronate, rarely _ 

oo shortly awned, faintly ‘S-ribbed hee ary, with the midrib nearly 

res excurren Seon a little below the 

erally more or less 


pt eich: Lancers white and scarious at the margins — 
die | 


we 2 


153 


Var. a, genuina. 
Pirate MDCCXCI. 


F. pratensis, Huds. Sm. Engl. ed. i. No. 1592; and Engl. FI. Vol. I. p. 147. Gren. 
Godr. Fl. de Fr. Vol. I. p. 518. Fries, Summ. Veg. Scand. p. 75. 
F. elatior, Linn. Fl. Suec. (non Spec. Plant.) Koch, Syn. Fl. Germ. et Helv. ed. ii. 
p- 943. Parl. Fi. Ttal. Vol. I. p. 455. 
- Schedonorus pratensis, Rim. & Schultes ; Lindl. Syn. Brit. Fl. p. 5312. 
Bucetum pratense, Parn. Grass. of Brit. p. 105. 


Panicle compound. Lower panicle branches in pairs, one branch of 
each pair bearing several spikelets. 


Var. 6, loliacea. 
Prats MDCCXCII. 
Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CXLI. Fig. 333. 
F. loliacea, Huds. Sm. Engl. Bot. ed. i. p. 1821; and Engl. Fl. Vol. L. p. 146. 
Koch, Syn. Fl. Germ. et Helv. ed. ii. p. 914. Parl. Fl. Ital. Vol. L. p. 456. 
Schedonorus loliaceus, Rim. & Schultes ; Lindl. Syn. Br. Fl. p. 313. 
Brachypodium loliacium, Fries, Mant. iii. p. 15, and Summ. Veg. Scand, p. 75. 
Glyceria loliacea, Gren. & Godr. Fl. de Fr. Vol. IIL. p. 532. 
Lolium festucaceum, Link, Hort. Berol. Vol. I. p. 273. 
Bucetum loliaceum, Parn. Grass. Brit. p. 104. 


Panicle reduced to a simple distichous spike-like raceme. Panicle 
branches all reduced to very short 1-flowered pedicels or rarely the 
lowest ones with more than 1 spikelet. ce 

In meadows. Common and generally eekrigns Var. 6 more 
local, but not rare, often — with the ¢ 0 'y form. : 


Stems 18 inches to 8 fost hig , 7 inches | 

leaves 4 inches Lot tng in vat by Fo tach road | 

B to 7 inches long in var. 23 5 to 10 inches long im in var. 6. Spil 
7s Florets 3 inch | 2 

: ln Var. 8 thingh the apie isle or nasty so, i i wally 
r, and the spikelets larger. it has the leaves - much 

and usuall | 


r. a closely i estables i small states of F. eae but it is more 
slender and flaccid, with shorter and narrower leaves, more tapering 
ae beri apex, and with much slenderer and smoother ribs; the 

: is much narrower and less branched, scarcely drooping, “with the 


2 sepe rate and usually more nu 
er SO mc ta towards ae 


ong in var. = ion 
a 


more distichous = piped unilateral, a. ted de - 
a are much narrower, more . 


154 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


and not only one as in Lolium. It might also possibly be mistaken 


for Glyceria fluitans, but the pales are not truncate nor 7-ribbed as in 
that plant. 


depauperised F. pratensis, I am unacquainted with it in the living 
state, though the variety above mentioned is common. 
Meadow Fescue-Grass. 


GENUS XXXIX._BROMUS. Lunn. 


eOe fe beg sc ; ie cs : aoe i a 
_ compressed, open during lowering, with 4 to 15 perfect florets. Glumes 
_ 2, shorter than the florets, unequal, or nearly equal concave or keeled, 


GRAMINA. 155 


with an awn shorter than itself, or very rarely longer, or sometimes 
absent. 
Perennials. 


SPECIES L-BROMUS GIGANTEUS. Lim. 
Pirates MDCCXCIIT. MDCCXCIV. 
Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. L het CXLV. Fig. 358. 
Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. 888. 
Festuca gigantea, Villars; Bab. aie Brit. Bot. ed. vi. p. 419; et Auct. Plur. 
Bucetum giganteum, Parnell, Grass. of Brit. p. 108. 

Perennial. Rather loosely cxspitose. Rootstock not creeping or 
stoloniferous, producing several tall flowering and short barren stems. 
Flowering stems stout. Leaves flaccid, very broadly linear, gradually 
tapering from a little above the base to the apex, very acute, flat, 
with very numerous slender unequally raised slightly scabrous ribs, 
and very scabrous margins, very finely scabrous-puberulent between 
the ribs, bright green; sheaths split to the base, sulcate, nearly smooth, 
or the lower ones scabrous, often puberulent, the uppermost one about 
as long as its leaf ; ligule slightly prominent, broader than long, trun: 
cate, lacerate, hashes on one side than on the other. Panicle ioe 
drooping large, lax, open and semi-pyramidal in flower and fruit. 
Rachis ace distant nodes, scabrous. Panicle-branches 2 at the lower 
nodes of the rachis, the longer ones penis and bare of florets at . 


the base for about half their length, arching-spreading in flower, _ : 


scabrous. Spikelets applied to the branches of tg ‘ieeicle 
ubcylindrical 2 


cute ot ane, edly sarions onthe margins, the mena 
longer than the lower and with 3 rominent jnacgor with 1 


| Awa oii the bottom of the notch of the pale, erect, usually , 
once a d a half to twice as long as the pale, more resol ong 
> pa e. 7 at the apex. Stigmas s pringing from the 


156 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


Var. 6, triflorus. 
Pirate MDCCXCIV. 


B. triflorus, Linn. Spec. Plant. p. 115. 
Festuca triflora, Sm. Engl. Bot. ed. i. No. 1918. 


Spikelets 3- or 4-flowered. 
Plant smaller, leaves narrower, panicle less drooping and less decund, 
and spikelets more lanceolate than in var. «. 
In woods and in hedges. Rather common and generally distributed 
_ in England, more rare and local in Scotland, though extending as far 


north as Argyle and Elgin. Frequent eee Ireland. Var. 6 
not rare. 


England, Scotland, Ireland. Perennial. Summer, Autumn. 


Stems 2 to 4 feet high or more. Longest leaves 9 to 18 inches long, 
by 3 to ¢ broad, the uppermost and lowermost shorter and narrower 
on the middle of the ei all awned at the base. Panicle 
9 © cadens to 1 foot long or more. ikelets pale n, 3 to 2 inch 
long, exclusive of the awns 2 : poet Y 
Var. ie iil cca w: smaller state of the plant, and it is dif- 
ficult to draw any line between it and var. a 
This plant is intermediate in its churkebaes between Festuca and 
Bromus. Jt has the habit and awn of the latter, but the glabrous 
ovary and terminal styles of the Festucw, and the inner pale is less 
ciliated on the ribs than in Bromus. I have retained the plant in 
the genus Bromus, in which Linnzeus placed it, on account of its 
- similarity to Bromus asper, and unlikeness to any of the true 
estuce. 


Tail Brome-Grass. 
French, Fétugue élaneée. German, Riason Sclwingel. 
—— ee ASPER. me, 


= 


pon Ha Fl. Angi. el. isp oi 
! "us asper, Fries, Summ. Veg. Scand. p76, aoe . 
al. Rather oe exspitose. —  oonlteck not creeping or 
~~ —— hoes flor verin, or short barren stems. 


-hing, very broadly linear, 28 
bs : Malte to te get, 


GRAMINA. 157 


long spreading-reflexed hairs, the uppermost one shorter than its 
leaf, and sometimes subglabrous ; ligule prominent, longer than 
broad, lacerate, equal. Panicle secundly drooping, very large, lax, 
open and semi-pyramidal in flower and fruit. Rachis with distant 
nodes, pubescent. Panicle-branches 2 to 5 at the lower nodes of the 
rachis, the longer ones unbranched and bare of florets at the base for 
about half their length, arching-spreading in flower, scabrous. Spike- 
lets drooping, linear-fusiform-cylindrical before flowering, afterwards 
wedge-shaped-oblong and compressed, ultimately oblong 5- to 9-flow- 
ered. Glumes lanceolate, acute, not awned, broadly scarious on the 
margins, the upper one-third longer than the lower (or sometimes 
not much larger) and with 3 prominent ribs, the lower one with 1 
Florets widely open during the time of flowering. Lower pale oblong- 
lanceolate, acuminate, deeply bidentate, with rather broad scarious 
margins and apices, with 3 faint pubescent ribs, slightly scabrous 
towards the apex. Awn from the bottom of the notch of the pale, 
- usually from one-half as long to as long as the pale, more rarely not 
longer than half the pale. Ovary woolly at the apex. Stigma 
springing from a little below the apex of the ovary. 


Ls Var. 6, serotinus. 


Pirate MDCCXCV. 


B. serotinus, Beneken. Bot. Zeit. 1845, p. 724. Garcke, Fl. v. Nord- & Mittel-Deutschz. 
ed. vi. pe 


Sheaths all with spreading-reflexed hairs. Panicle-branches ah 


2 at the lower nodes of the rachis (at least in the wild state), each of == 
them bearing several — Glumes int ‘Pales _— - 8 


brous on each side of the midi 


? Var. 7 Be eneker 


Reich. Ic, Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. OXLV. Be. 357. 
 Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. No. 887. 


: _—-B. asper, Beneken Garcke, 1. ec. p. 459. 


oe er + sheaths ~Segigerepteg Panicle-branches 3 to 6 at the hatchet 


158 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


" Argyle and Elein. Frequent and generally distributed in Ireland. 
Var. 6 doubtfully indigenous. “ Near the ‘Plough,’ Camberwell,” 
“in Sowerby’s herbarium.” (Dr. Trimen, ‘Journ. Bot.’ 187 0, p- 
378); Kensington Gardens! (Hon. J. L. Warren, ‘ Journ. Bot.’ 
1871, p. 238). 


England, Scotland, Ireland. Perennial. Summer, Autumn. 


A robust grass, with the stems 2 to 6 feet high. Longest leaves 9 
inches to 2 feet by } to 1 inch broad. Panicle 9 to 18 inches long or 
more. Spikelets 3 to 1 inch long, exclusive of the awns. Florets 4 
inch long, exclusive of the awns. 

Sometimes confused by young botanists with B. giganteus, but the 
leaves are more hairy, and the sheaths, or at least the lower ones, 
with long spreading-reflexed hairs; the panicles and spikelets are 
more drooping; the spikelets longer, with shorter awns; the ovary is 
hairy at the apex, pa the stigmas are not terminal. 

The only form that is certainly wild in Britain, so far as is yet 
known, i is the B. serotinus = Beneken. 

och 


7 by cee seat Sa "by B a8) us asper. 

‘The number of branches of the panicle at ae ee pe epoa a is 

a aereceet of but little im i ee In specimens from Lyons, col- 
: + ahs and Wwe: 


. ac cin ut thi al Bot,” Sept 1870, wishes to substitute the 
name Bromus ramosus of Hud st _e ition of the “ Flora 


3 W f Ai setacea, Dr. Trimen, fortunately oa 
ic — is not age to ihe a to disturb ge lees accepted 


aarige Trespe, 


GRAMINA. 159 


SPECIES IL—BROMUS ERECTUS. Huds. 
Pirate MDCCXCVI. 
Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. " pe CXLVI. Fig. 360. 
Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. No. 1093. 
Schedonorus erectus, Fries, Sui, Vee Scand. p. 76. 


Perennial. Very densely cxspitose. Rootstock shortly creeping, — 


but not stoloniferous, each branch ending in tufts of several flowering 
stems and barren shoots or short barren stems. Flowering stems 
rather stout, wiry. Leaves rigid, very narrowly linear, the radical 
ones and those of the barren shoots conduplicate, ciliated ; those of the 
stem broader, flat or widely channelled, glabrous, all dark green; 
sheaths split only at the apex, deeply striate, usually pilose with 
distant spreading-ascending hairs, or nearly glabrous, the uppermost 
one about as long as its leaf; ligule short, broader than long, trun- 
cate. Panicle erect, nearly simple, rather small, dense, contracted, 
oblong in flower and fruit. Rachis with rather distant nodes, glabrous 
or slightly scabrous. Panicle-branches 2 to 5 at the lower nodes of the 
rachis, most of them bearing only a single spikelet, not more than 2 
at each node bearing 2 or 3 spikelets, these being bare of spikelets 
and unbranched for about half their length, nearly erect in flower 
and fruit, slightly scabrous. Spikelets erect, linear-fusiform-cylin- 
drical before flowering, afterwards oblong and compressed, 4- to 12- 
flowered. Glumes lanceolate, with subulate points, very acute, but not 
awned, narrowly scabrous on the margins, the upper one about one-— 


sixth longer than the lower, and with 3 prominent ribs, the lowerone => 


with 1 ub. -Florets widely open during the time of flowering, 


Lower pale oblong-lanceolate, — shortly bidentate, eee - 
rather narrow scarious margins and apices, with 5 or 7 rather faint —__ 


scabrous-pubescent ribs. Awn fGen the bottom of the notch of the — 
pale, about one half of the length of the pale. Ovary woolly at the 
a oo ee 
Var. 2, genuinus. | us 
"Lower = ale glabrous or nearly so, Sat on the ribs. 


160 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


the north and west. Doubtfully native in Scotland, though it has 
been found in New Abbey Churchyard, Kirkcudbright, below: Salis- 
bury Craigs, Edinburgh, and near Pettycur and Dunfermline, Fife. 
Rare in Ireland, but occurring in Counties Cork and Galway, and 
near Dublin. Var. 8. Combe Hay, near Bath (Mr. T. Dutton). 


England, Scotland (?), Ireland. Perennial. Summer. 


Stems 18 inches to 3 feet high or more, with their bases enclosed 
in decayed leaf-sheaths. Longest leaves 6 inches to 1 foot long or 
more; stem-leaves shorter and broader, 1} toi inch broad. Panicle 
25 to 6 inches ence Spikelets 3 to 14 inch long, exclusive of the 
awn. Florets } to 2 inch long. Spikelets prettily variegated with 
green, pale red or purple, and white, somewhat like those of Avena 
pratensis and pubescens. Anthers reddish-purple. 


Upright-perennial Brome-Grass. 
French, Brome dressé. German, Aufrechte Trespe. 


_ SEcTIoN ley ties etetpemtenes Gren. & Godr. 
? Spice enlarged towards the apex during and after flowering. 


Florets penceely « open during flowering. ‘Lower pale subulate, semi- 
cylindrical, keeled, with an awn exceeding its length, usually very 


aS greatly so. Stamens 2 or 3, rarely 1. 


Biennials or annuals. 


SPECIES IV—BROMUS MADRITENSIS. Linn. 
Pare MDCCXCVIL. 
--Billot, Fl. Gall. ot Geen Exsice. No. 1098. 
B. diandrus, Curt. Bab. Man. Brit. Bot. ed. vi. p. 421. Sm. fee Bot. edt ie 
1006 ; and Engl. Fl. Vol. I. p. 160. 
oo — D.C. Fi. Fr. Vol. v. P- 276. 


ar owl r, more or less 
reath split half way down, © 


Taneeolate. Panicle aes: : — 


upper ones glabrous; ligule oy 


oF io — oe 


GRAMINA. 161 


with 2 or 3 spikelets, and mostly all shorter than the spikelets (exclu- 
sive of the awns), suberect in flower and fruit, slightly scabrous or 
pubescent. Spikelets erect, linear-elliptical before flowering, oblong 
and enlarged upwards during flowering, and inversely triangular with 
concave sides in fruit, 5- to 15- flowered. Glumes subulate, very acute, 
but not awned, broadly scarious on the margins, the upper one about 
thrice as long as the lower, and with 3 prominent ribs, the lower with 
lrib. Florets distinct, diverging and slightly curved outwards in fruit. 
Lower pale linear-lanceolate-subulate, deeply bidentate, with 2 long 
apical teeth about one-sixth the length of the pale, with rather broad 
scarious margins and apices, with 7 rather faint ribs, of which the two 
marginal ones are contiguous, finely punctate-scabrous, or more rarely 
pubescent. Awn from the bottom of the notch of the pale, about as 
long as the pale, straight in flower, curved outwards in fruit. Sta- 
mens 2, more rarely 1 or 3. 


Var. a, Curtis. Bab. 


Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CXLI. Fig. 342. 

B. Madritensis, Rim. & Schultes, Syst. Veg. Vol. Il. p. 648. Reich. Ic. 1. c. p. 41. 
Panicle oblong, rather dense. Rachis and panicle-branches slightly 

scabrous, not pubescent. Glumes and pales minutely punctate- 

scabrous, but not pubescent. 


Var. 8, rigidus. Bab. 
Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CXLII. Fig. 


341, a 
B. ——— ” Rom. & Schultes, Syst. Veg. Vol. IE p 651. — Sas Le op 
41. (non Koch). ee 


a 


Panicle very Ses, inversely deltoid. Rachis a 


minutely pubescent, the latter very short. Glumes and pales sa : 


cent with long close hairs. 
On sandy banks and dry waste places, oo on wall-tops. Local and 
confined to the south of England, from Devon, mainland Hants, and» 
Kent; to Pembroke, Carmarthen, es and Gloucester, and 
| : : asual it has been found i in 


| ae not native. Var. 6, Jerscy, — and Sark, also aa De . 


a Annual or Biennial. oe 
hie Lor ongest Teas 1 to 4 inches by 


162 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


inch broad. Panicle 2 to 5 inches long. Spikelets 1 to ate exclusive 
of the awns. Florets about 1 inch, exclusive of the a 

In var. 6 the panicle, in the specimens I have seen, is iat above 14 
to 2 inches, exclusive of the awns, and the panicle-branches are sinuses 
shorter and fewer. Possibly it ought to be considered a distinct sub- 
species, but I have never seen it alive, though I have looked carefully 
for it both in Jersey and Guernsey. In habit it — B. fas- 

ciculatus. Presl. 

Upright-annual Brome-Grass. 


SPECIES V-BROMUS MAXIMUS. Desv. 
Piare MDCCXCVIIL. 
Reich. Ic. Fl, Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CXLU. Fig. 338. 
Billot, F\. Gall. et Germ. Exsicc 
B. rigidus, Koch? Fl. Germ. et ely. ed. ii. p. 949. —— FL. de l'Ouest de Ia Fr. 
ed. ii. p. 598. (non Roth). 
_B. ambigens, Jord. in Billot, Annot. p. 229. 
Biennial or annual? Stems stout, ascending from a more or less 
geniculate or curved base. Leaves rather broadly linear, more or less 
oO pubescent ; sheaths split half way down, cylindrical, pubescent; 
ligule Laer about : as long as — lecerate. Panicle at first 


: cakey Gage ahs (es WA oceans Ra open at least in 
flower. Rachis with distant nodes, rather thinly setosely-pubescent 
(or in Continental forms densely aetinnrie Panicle-branches 2 to 

6 at the lower nodes of the rachis, rarely bearing more than a single 
spikelet, sometimes 1 or 2 of them with 2 or 3 spikelets, and (in the 
Jersey plant) most of them shorter than the spikelets, or several | 
- — nem as long as the spikelets (exclusive of their awn), ascending- 

| spreading or spreading in flower and fruit, or suberect in fruit, more 
Q or less setosely-pubescent like the rachis. Spikelets erect or slightly — 
_ drooping,. linear-elliptical before flowering, oblong and enlarged up- 
wards during flowering, and ultimately oblong-wedge-shaped, with 
str matt sides, 4- to 12-flowered. Glumes- oo very 
ite, wned y scarious on the margins, the upper one 
mger bacon the lower and B-ribbed, the —— 


more or less geniculate or aber 


GRAMINA. © | 163 


(usually from half as long again to twice as long), straight in flower 
and fruit. Stamens 2, more rarely 3. 

In sandy places and by road-sides. Very local. Abundant on the 
Quenyais, more sparingly in St. Aubin’s Bay, and at St. Clement’s 
Jersey. 

Channel Islands. Biennial or Annual. Early Summer. 


The Jersey plant has the stems 1 to 2 feet high. Leaves 2 to 6 inches 
long, by § to 4 inch broad. Panicle rather dense, 3 to 8 inches long. 
Spikelets green, 1 to 13 inches long, exclusive ‘of the awns. The 
florets about 4 inch long. Awns 1} to 2 inches long. Pedicels of the 
lateral spikelets much shorter than the spikelets, 

Readily distinguished from B. Madritensis by its more lax and 
rt Me slightly secundly-droopin g panicle, with much larger spikelets, 
which have their florets less separated in fruit and not at all curved; 
the awns, also, are longer in proportion and never at all curved out- 
wards in fruit, so that the fruiting spikelets are regularly wedge-sha 
with straight ‘sides, in B. maximus: while in B. Madritensis they are 
much wider at the apex and have concave sides. 

The Jersey plant belongs to a group of varieties or subspecies (I do 
not venture to say which) included under the name B. maximus. 
Our plant appears to be precisely the B. rigidus, var. a, of Lloyd, the 

- Maximus, var. 2 minor, of Grenier & Godron, and the B. ambigens 
of Jordan. B. rigidus of Roth and Recchesback | is a distinct plant, 
doubtless the pubescent state of B. Madritensis. 


Great Brome-Grass.. 


SPECIES VL-BROMUS ede miont sence Linn, 
PLATE MDCCXCTX. 


Reich. in. Fh Geen, ot Hlalv. Vol I. Tab. OXLIL Fig. 339. 
Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. No. 1095. 
‘Schedonoras sterilis, Fries, Summ. Veg. Scand. p. 76, 


Biennial or annual ? Stems rather a 


: te way down, cylindrical, cuately pubescent or subglabrous, the eS 
ae st one ne wholly glabrous ; ligu t a 
ae ese droopin ‘Si lower and fruit 
i “nes rly single — and seer theckte with distant nodes, . 
ere "Pani 


164 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


ing-reflexed in flower and fruit, finely setosely-scabrous. Spike- 
at drooping, linear-elliptical before flowering, oblong and enlarged 
upwards durstie flowering, and ultimately oblong-wedge-shaped, with 
straight sides, / to 10-flowered. Glumes lanceolate-subulate, very 
acute, but not awned, broadly scarious on the margins, the upper one 
twice as long as the lower and strongly 3-ribbed, the lower one 
1-ribbed. Florets scarcely overlapping, but not diverge or at all 
curved outwards in fruit. Lower pale Tincar- lanceolate-subulate, deeply 
bidentate, with 2 long apical teeth about one-tenth the length of the 
pale, with broad scarious margins and apices, with 7 prominent and 
nearly equidistant ribs, scabrous-puberulent. Awn from the bottom 
of the notch of the pale, a little longer than the pale, usually about 
one-fourth longer, straight in flower and fruit. Stamens 3. 

In dry places, especially by road-sides. Frequent in England and 
the south of Scotland, but rather rare, or at least local, north of the 
Forth and Clyde, though extending to Elgin, Banff, ‘isd the neigh- 
bourhood of Glasgow. Local, but widely distributed, in Ireland. 


England, Scotland, Ireland. Biennial or Annual. Summer. 


Stem 18 inches to 3 feet high. Longest leaves 3 to 8 inches long, 
by } to } inch broad. Panicle 6 to 10 inches ge Spikelets 3 to 
1} inch’ long, exclusive of the awns. Florets 1 to 2 inch long, 
exclusive of the awn. Awns 3 to 1 inch long. Pedicels of the 

lateral spikelets nearly as long as the spikelets. 

___ B. sterilis has much the aspect of the large open-panicled forms of 
B. maximus, such as B. Borei of Jordan, but the panicle is much 
more lax, the branches more capillary, longer, and greatly arching- 
drooping; the rachis not at all pubescent; the spikelets smaller, green 
or urple, with the awns shorter in proportion; apes more unequal. 
th B. maximus and B. sterilis are ordinaril arily biennial, but occa- 
ae. lants of each may be found flowering in autumn—probably 

| from the earlier ripened seeds of the same year, or else 


: i; a apnea which have remained dormant in the ground until the 


Barren Brome-Grass. 
cumeen, Brome stérile. — Taube Trespe. 


| Szotrox. Ill. —SERRAFALOUS. Parl. 


GRAMINA. 165 


SPECIES VII-BROMUS SECALINUS. Linn. 
Pirates MDCCC. MDCCCI. 
Serrafalcus secalinus, Bab. Man. Brit. Bot. ed. vi. p. 421. Gren. & Godr. Fl. de Fr. 
Vol. IIT. p. 588. Parl. Fi. Ital. Vol. I. p. 338. 

Biennial or annual. Stem nearly glabrous, except on the knots. 
Leaves thinly pubescent, deep green; sheaths split at the apex only, 
glabrous, or pubescent with very short reflexed hairs. Panicle erect 
in flower, and (especially in luxuriant examples) more or. less 
secundly-drooping in fruit, simple or slightly branched, rather lax. 
Rachis with distant nodes. Panicle-branches 3 to 6 (rarely only 2) 
at the lower nodes of the rachis, unequal, a few of the longest with 
from 2 to 5 spikelets, unbranched and bare of spikelets for half their 
length, not more than the length of 2 internodes, the shortest and 
those in the upper part of the panicle reduced to pedicels, scabrous 
or hispid-pubescent, ascending-erect in flower, arching-ascending in 
fruit. Pedicels longer than or about as long as their spikelets. 
Spikelets erect in dower, drooping in fruit, at first elliptical-lan- 
ceolate and acute, ultimately oval-ovate and sub-obtuse, 5- to 15- 
flowered, green. Glumes unequal, the inner or larger one extending 
half way to the apex of the third floret.* Floreta imbricated in 
flower, but separate in fruit, from the margins of the lower pales 
becoming involute. Lower pale with the margins regularly curved 
from the base to the apex, 5-ribbed, notched at the apex, glabrous 


or pubescent, with narrow scarious margins. Awn from the bottom | 


the notch of the pale, straight or flexuous, very rarely bent out- 


Se ee eee — 


varying 
pale a long asthe lower. 


gn 

: Pare MDCCC. 

Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CXCIV. Fig. 353. 

Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. No. 1093. 

'B. secalinus, Schrad. Sm. Engl. Bot. ed. i. No. 1171, and Engl. Fl. Vol. I. p. 154, 


ee _Sheaths mia ied or Somes so, Panicle-branches scabrous, Spike- 


166 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


Var. 8, velutinus, 
Piate MDCCCI. 
Reich. Ie. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CXCIV. Fig. 350. 
Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsicc. No. 185. 
B. velutinus, Sehrad. Sm. Engl. Fl. Vol. I. p. 159. 
B. multifiorus. Sm. Engl. Bot. ed. i. No. 1884. 

Sheaths pubescent with short hairs. Panicle-branches hispid- 
pubescent. Spikelets finely pubescent. Awns erect. 

In cultivated fields, and occasionally by roadsides. Rather scarce. 
Generally but thinly distributed throughout England, but not persis- 
tent in its stations. Imperfectly naturalised in Sect though it 
has been found as far north as Ross and Isla. Uncertain in its 
appearance, and ill-established in Ireland, though extending from 
north to south. Var. 8. is more rare and less thoroughly established 
in England than var. «.; it appears to be most frequent in the Metro- 
: _— counties. 


England Seon] oe Biennial or annual (?). 
Autumn. 


Stems 1 “to 2 feet fot oie ee Leaves 2 to 8 inches long, by 4 
tod inch broad. © Panicle 2 to 10 inches —— ose z tol inch 


Readily distinguishable from all its allies. pases in Diein 
by the florets being rene — from each other when i in 
fruit. 

“Many authors divide this species into two varieties according io te 
_ size of the spikelets ; the type being re form with smaller spikelets, 
whether they be glabrous or pubescent ; the second form, Bromus — 
grossus, D. C., being that with wee spikelets, and with the florets 
__ more separated in fruit on account of the margins of the lower pale 

ae sr tm beyond the caryops, and consequently becoming more 


| iassesiack figures a variety divergens, in which the awns are 


in rae ech _—— < o 


rrence of this form i in Britain. 


MINA. 167 


GRA 


split at the apex only, pubescent with short or long reflexed hairs. 
Panicle erect or secundly drooping in flower and fruit, simple or 
rarely slightly branched, lax in flower, contracted in fruit. Rachis 
with rather distant nodes. Panicle-branches 2 to 3 at the lower nodes 
of the rachis, unequal, all reduced to pedicels, or a few of the longest 
ones at the lower nodes with from 2 to 3 spikelets, unbranched and 
bare of spikelets for half their length, not more than the length 
of two internodes, the shortest of the lower ones and all those in the 
upper part of the panicle reduced to pedicels, scabrous. Longest 
pedicels longer than or about equal to their spikelets, the upper 
ones ‘asuthy” shorter than the spikelets. Spikelets erect or drooping 
in flower and fruit, at first oval-lanceolate or lanceolate, ultimately 
oval- or oblong-lanceolate, always acute, 4- to 10-flowered, green 
or more or less tinged with brownish-purple. Glumes unequal, the 
inner or largest one extending half way to the apex of the fourth 
floret.* Florets closely imbricated in flower and fruit. Lower pale, 
regularly curved on the margins from the base to the apex, or with a 
very obtuse angle a little beyond the middle on each side, 5-ribbed, 
notched at the apex, glabrous or puberulent, rarely pubescent, with 
narrow scarious margins. Awn from the bottom of the notch of the 
pale, straight and erect, as long as, or a little longer, than the pale. 
Upper pale a little shorter than the lower. 


Sus-Srecies lL—Bromus eu-racemosus. 
PLare MDCCCIIL. 
Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Hely. Vol. I. Tab. recs 348. 
Billot, Fi. reer Hxsice. , 2185.. 
kK n ‘ 


sus, Fries, 
Bot. ed. i No. 1070. Kok Syn. FL Germ. et Helv. ed. ii. p. 946. 


" Brit. Bot. ed. vi. p.422. Gren. Fl. du Jure, p. 922. 


 Panicks erect in flower and fruit. Pukka all Safely more 
ie than 1-flowered, the upper ones much shorter a their spikelets. 
Spike iS ultimately oval-lanceolate, acute. Lower pale uniformly 
d on the margins from the base to the apes — _ Mathers four 


Mosk: IIE p: 10;-sed Geum Vaso Haak 76 Sm Bag SS 


racemosus, Parl. Fl. Ital. Vol. I. p. 391. Bab. FL Ca .B. 308, a1 ay lo 


168 : ENGLISH BOTANY. 


Newbould tells me he believes it is abundant in Essex, and probably 
occurs in Herts. I have a specimen from Alloa, Clackmannanshire, 
collected by Dr. Carrington. In the “ Cybele Hibernica,” it is said to 
be not unfrequent in Ireland. 


England, Scotland, Ireland. Biennial. Summer. 


Stems 18 inches to 3 feet high, erect. Leaves 2 to 6 inches long, 
and about } inch broad. Panicle 2 to 6 inches long. Spikelets 4 to 
3 inch long. 8) green, always glabrous. Florets 1 inch long, exclusive 
of the awns.  Awns long, purple. 

A much Pano and often a taller plant than B. secalinus, with 
smaller and more acute fructing spikelets. Florets not separated in 
fruit, and the margins of the pale not rolled inwards in fruit. 

The greater part of what has been called B. racemosus in Britain is 
doubtless a small state of B. commutatus, while in some cases the 
name has been applied to a glabrous state of B. mollis, but besides 
these, we have in Britain the plant named B. racemosus on the Conti- 
nent. - 

| Racemose Brome-Grass. 

French, Brome des Prés. German, Traubenformige Trespe. 


Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. L Tab. CXLIIL Fig. 47. 

Billot, F1. Gall. et Germ. Exsicc. No. 1091. 

B. pratensis, Ehrh. Sm. Eng. Bot. ed. i. Sub. No. 1984. Fries, Mant ¢ lil. p. 9, & 
Summ. Veg. Scand. p. 76. 

B. racemosus, var. commutatus, Hook. fil. Stud. Fl. p. 451. 

B. arvensis, Sm. Engl. Bot. ed. i. No. 920, & Engl. Fl. Vol. I. p. 155. 

Serrafaleus commutatus, Bab. Man. Brit. Bot. ed. vi. p. 422. Parl. Fi. Ital. Vol. L 
p- 390. Gren. § Godr. Vol. III. p. 589. 


' Panicle drooping, except in starved specimens, when it is scknetinisens 


erect. Lower panicle-branches frequently with 2 or more spike- — 
lets. Spikelets oblong-lanceolate, always very acute. Lower pale 


not uniformly curved on the margins from the base to the apex, 


a but with an obtuse angle a little beyond the middle on each side. 
By: roadsides and in res and cultivated ground. Rather 
common. Cease distributed in a More local in Seat 


oe upper ones and those of the florets on the 


GRAMINA. 169 


to 18 inches long, $ to 11 inches long, often wend tinged with 
reddish. Florets 1 to 4 inch long, exclusive of the awn 

Very similar to 8. eu-racemosus, but with the stem more slender, 
and the panicle and spikelets usually larger and more or less drooping, 
in consequence of their weight. Spikelets more pointed, and dimmer 
in colour, often with a faint tinge of reddish brown; the margins of 
the pales with an obtuse angle, so that in profile they : are aeniagbe's 
while in B. eu-racemosus they are half-oval. The margins of t 
pales are more involute in fruit in B. commutatus than in B. eu- 
racemosus, but much less so than in B. secalinus. 

Confused Brome-Grass. 
French, Serrafaleus confondu. German, Traubenformige Trespe. 


SPECIES IX—BROMUS MOLLIS. fim. 
Piates MDCCCIV. MDCCCV. 

Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CXLIII. Figs. 345 and 346. 
Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsicc. No. 1091. 
Serrafaleus mollis, Parl. Fl. Ital. Vol. I. p. 395. Bab. Man. Brit. Bot. ed. vi. p. 422. 

Biennial or annual. Stem erect or ascending or decumbent, finely 
pubescent or puberulent, more pubescent on the knots. Leaves 
pubescent, greyish-green ; sheaths split at the apex only, densely 
pubescent with long or short reflexed hairs. Panicle erect in flower 
and fruit, simple or slightly branched, rather dense or dense, slightly 
open in flower,. contracted in fruit. Rachis usually with approximate 
nodes. Panicle branches 1 to 5 at the lower nodes of the rachis 
unequal, sometimes all cothicad to pedicels, but more commonly the _ 
longer ones branched, and bearing from 2 to 4 spikelets, unbranched _ - 
apd bare of spikelets for half their length, not more than the length — ec 
of two internodes of the rachis, the shortest of the lower ones and _ 


all those in the upper part of the panicle, or all of them reduced to : 2 


pedicels, pubescent. Pedicels mostly shorter than their —-* the | 


almost obsolete. Spikelets erect in flower mis ce ‘first oy 
ee orang and acute, ultimately oval and obtuse or subobtuse, 


xten tending half way to the apex of the fifth, or even of the eigl th, 
orets: very closely imbricated in flower and fruit. Lower pale with: ~ 
m — eran. _— on the margins, | half ri between the middle — 


, greyish-green. Glumes unequal, the inner or larger 0 one 


at the ss se Laat : oe 


(170 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


straight and erect, or bent outwards in fruit, usually a little shorter 
than the pale. Upper pale a little shorter than the lower. 


Var. a, genuinus. 
Piate MDCCCIV. 
B. mollis, Fries, Summ. Veg. Scand. p. 76. 
B. Ferronii “ Mabille,” test. Lloyd, F). de ’ Ouest de la France, ed. ii. p- 595. (A small 
form with a nearly simple contracted panicle.) 
Serrafaleus mollis, Gren. & Godr. Fl. de Fr. Vol. III. p. 590. 


Stems erect or ascending. Spikelets pubescent. Awns nearly straight 
and erect. 
Var. 2, glabrescens, Coss. 
B. mollis, leiostachys, Fries, Summ. Veg. Scand. p. 76, and B. hordeacens, “ Linn.” 


Fries. Mant. iii. p. 11, & Summ. Veg. Scand. pp. 76, 248. 
Serrafaleus hordeaceus, Gren. & Godr. Fl. de Fr. Vol. III. p- 590. (A small form 
with a contracted simple panicle.) 


Stems erect or ascending. Spikelets subglabrous, or rarely quite gla- 
= brous. Awns nearly straight and erect. Usually smaller than var. a. 


1 malities Hy FL. de Ouest de la Fr. ed. ii. p. 595. Bor. Fi. du Centr. de la 
Fr. ed. iii. 
Pca is Gren. & Godr. Fl. de Fr. Vol. IIL p. 591. 


Stems ascending. Spikelets densely pubescent. Awns bent ee 
in fruit. Panicle always nearly simple and contracted. 

Very common and generally distributed. Var. 8 generally in drier 
places than var. «; but small forms both of a and @ are to be found 
in sand and dry places on the sea-shore. Var. y on sandy sea-shores  __ 
in Cornwall and the Channel Islands; and I have a a collected _ 

by the late Mr. M‘Nab at Balmae, Kirkeudbéy itshire, so it is — 
J ocere found along the western coast of —— 


Su ammer r to pon 


beg ¢ from a few Gecck, : 
: Brikelots 4 inch to 1 2: 
e longer. | 


GRAMINA. 171 


Var. y is remarkable for the awns ultimately twisting outwards, a 
character which has remained constant under cultivation through 
several years. I have raised it from seed collected at the Lizard, 
Cornwall, by Mr. C. Bailey, in July 1866, for five years. 

Distinguished from B. eu-racemosus by its more pubescent sheaths, 
by its more dense panicle, by its florets being more closely imbricated, 
oe fod the lower pale being strongly angled on each side beyond the 


= rom B. commutatus it is separable by its erect and denser 
panicle, by its less acute spikelets, by its more closely imbricated 
florets, and by the margins of the lower pale having a more pro- 
minent ancle. The spikelets are of a greyer green “and the pales 
have broader pale scarious margins, so that their colour is less uni- 
form than that of B. eu-racemosus and B. commutatus. 

From B. secalinus it may be known by the florets not being 
separated in fruit, and by the leaf sheaths being densely pubescent. 


Sojt Brome-Grass. 
German, Weichhaarige Trespe. 


SPECIES X¥—-BROMUS ARVENSIS. Lin. 
Pratre MDCCCVIL. 


Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CXLIII. Fig. 348 
Serrafalcus arvensis, Parl. Fl. Ital. Vol. I. p. 323. Bab. Man. Brit. Bot. ed. vi. p. 423. 
Gren. & Godr. Fl. de Fr. Vol. IIT. p. 588. 


Annual or biennial. Stem erect or ascending, very clea quite 
glabrous ; knots subglabrous. Leaves pubescent, green; sheaths 


split at the apex only, densely pubescent with short reflexed hairs. 


Panicle erect in flower and fruit, much branched or rarely only — 


slightly branched, very lax, widely open in flower, and slightly so in - 


_ fruit. Rachis with very distant nodes. Panicle branches 1 to 7 at the — 
lower nodes of the rachis, unequal, very rarely all reduced to pedicels, 


= _ the longer ones commonly branched and bearing from 2 to 12 spike- — 


lets, unbranched and bare of spikelets for half or two-thirds of their _ 
. usually about the length of three internodes of the rachis, the 
_ shorter of the lower ones and all pe" of the upper part of the panicle, — 
ae rarely all of them, reduced to pedicels, finely scabrous. Pedicels. 
except a few of the lateral ones, Tonger than their spikelets. Spikelets — 
: slightly droop ing in flower, erect in fruit, at first Imear-subcylin- 


t comme snp | and subobtuse, 6- to. 12- a oe 


172 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


fruit. Lower pale, with a prominent obtuse angle on the margins half 
way between the middle and the apex at each side, deeply bidentate at 
‘the apex, quite glabrous or very minutely scabrous, with broad white 
scarious margins. Awn from the bottom of the notch of the pale, 
straight, erect or slightly curving outwards, a little longer than the 
pale. Upper pale nearly as long as the lower. 

In fields of saintfoin and clover, and by waysides; doubtless intro- 
duced with foreign seed, but plentiful in Kent and Cambridge, and 
more sparingly in Surrey and Essex and York; on waste ground in 
Middlesex and Hampshire ; also on ballast hills at Middlesborough, 
Durham ; and Charleston, and Inverkeithing, Fife. 


[England]. Annual or biennial. Summer, Autumn. 


Stems 6 to 30 inches high, wiry. Leaves similar to those = the 
preceding species, but narrower, sometimes not more than ;1, inch 
broad. Panicle 1 to 9 inches long. Spikelets } to 1 inch long. Florets 
4 to 3 inch long. 

_ A well-marked species, distinguished in its fully developed form by 
its very lax open roundish-pyramidal panicle, with long capillary 
branches, —— ey arching from the weight of the spikelets 

in flower, but become firmer, nearly st ie and ascending in fruit. 
_ The spikelets are pong and more para llel-sided than in any other 
of our species; the pales narrower, ‘with 2 more acute and longer 
teeth at the apex, and enn gs are prettily variegated with green 
and purple, with white 

Our plate represents the ucts much more secundly droopin; 
than it ever is in a living plant, the branches having apparently all 
been bent over in one direction to get the panicle within the com 
of the ss sl ae 
ed specimens sometimes have the panicle nearly or exte 

ae simple, but they still have the long slender capillary branches, 
alth ough these are reduced to pedicels. 

__ B. arvensis is sometimes confounded with B. patulus, M. & K., a 

- = not sufficiently naturalised to be deserving of a place in the 
- British Flora as yet, though it seems to be more now than it 

vas | fae patul us has the panicle caatles than that “ 

nsi drooping with shorter branches and larg 

pan cre are drooping in fi 

aden have ooekes lower pales: 


GRAMINA, 173 


Tre XII.—TRITICEZ. 


Spikelets usually open during flowering, sessile or subsessile, 
arranged in a simple distichous spike, the rachis of which is excavated 
to receive them and has at each notch a single spikelet containing 2 
to 30 perfect florets. Glumes 2 or 1. Styles absent; stigmas 2, 
usually protruded at the base of the florets between the margins of 
the pales. Caryops dorsally compressed, with a furrow on the inner 
face. 


GENUS XL—BRACHYPODIUM. Pal. de Beauv. 


Spikelets subsessile, solitary, arranged alternately within their — 
broadsides to the rachis in a distichous simple spike, at first cylin- 
drical, afterwards slightly laterally compressed, open during flower- 
ing, each containing 5 to 10 perfect florets. Glumes 2, opposite, 
placed right and left of the rachis, shorter than the florets, un- 
equal, mucronate, strongly-ribbed, subherbaceous. Pales 2; lower 
one linear-lanceolate, concave, entire, mucronate or awned, sub- 
herbaceous; upper pale entire and rounded at the apex, 2-ribbed. 
Lodicules 2, entire. Stamens 3. Stigmas 2, sessile, terminal, plumose, 
protruded at the sides of the floret between the basal margin of 
the pales. Caryops slightly adhering to the upper pale, downy at 
the apex, narrowly oblong, convex on the back, furrowed on the 
inner face. 


The name of this genus comes secretes dibs nk wt ft om vy aS : 


short eee of the spikelets. 


Reich. Te. F. oe ee Vol. I, Tab, CXXVI. Figs. 277, 278 and 279, 
a et Germ. Exsicc. No. 489. 


wiatee Pal. de Boome. eg! p- 101. Reich. s ee Pp. 32. 


Retention a, Sm. Engl. FL. Vol. L. p. 149, ‘pon Vell 
Triticum i eu a Plat. Vol. Zp. 445. ‘Fein, Com. 


: oi without stolons, 7 


174 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


with numerous unequal slightly elevated ribs, and smooth mar- 
gins, yellowish green or bright green, hairy with long soft hairs; 
sheaths pubescent with long soft spreading-reflexed hairs, or sub- 
glabrous; ligule deltoid, subacute. Spike simple, lax, arching-droop- 
ing. Spikelets adpressed to rachis, except at the time of flowering, 
at first linear-cylindrical-lanceolate, and very acute, ultimately ob- 
long-linear, 5- to 12-flowered, more or less pubescent or glabrous. 
Inner glume two-thirds the length of the contiguous floret, mu- 
cronate or shortly awned, 7-ribbed. Lower pale gradually acumi- 
minate and acute, 7-ribbed towards the apex. Awn as long as or 
longer than the pale, at least in the upper florets. Upper pale a little 
shorter than and about as broad as the lower one. 


Var. 2, pubescens.. 
Spikelets more or less villose-pubescent. 


Var. 6, ‘ as 


_ Spikelets glabrous. 
: In woods | and forsee and aly on open banks. Rather common 
nd , d, a ng north to Orkney. hs or 


— Scotland, Ireland. Perennial. Sanna ia 
t growing in small or large round tufts. Stems 9 sag! to2 

i gees usually arching towards the circumference of 
Leaves of the barren stems or shoots 6 to 18 inches long, we tok 4 
inch broad. Stem leaves 2 to 8 broad. Uppermost stem “Jeaf 4 to 9 
inches long, } to 3 inch broad. pee 2 to 8 inches long, with 3 
— to 10 spikelets. Spikelets § to 14 inches long. Florets about 3 2 inch 
long at the base of the spikelet, rapidly diminishing in size towards 
= ee apex of the spikelet. Glumes and om commonly more or less 

: t, at least towards the sides and ape 
‘form with | — I ae" only in Fi fe, bet 


False Wood Brome-Grass. 
ni an, 1, Wald Seals 


SPECIES Il—BRACHYPODIUM PINNATUM. Pal. de Beauv. 

Pirate MDCCCVIILI. 

Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CX XVII. Figs. 281 and 282. 

Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. No. 1981. 

Bromus pinnatus, Linn. Sm. Engl. Bot. ed. i. No. 730. 

Festuca pinnata, Huds. Sm. Engl. Fl. Vol. I. p. 150. 

Triticum pinnatum, Monch; Kunth, Enum. Plant. Vol. I. p. 445. Parn. Grass. of 

Brit. pp. 290-296. 

Perennial. Subczespitose or scarcely cxspitose. Rootstock with 
creeping branches, terminating in tufts of numerous barren stems or 
barren shoots and flowering stems, and with autumnal or hybernal 
stolons terminating in barren stems. Stems erect, unbranched, or 
branched at the base. Leaves firm or rather firm, broadly linear, 
tapering from below the middle to the apex, very acute, with nume- 
rous nearly equal greatly elevated ribs, and scabrous margins, yellow- 
ish green, often with a glaucous tinge, hairy with short hairs, or 
subglabrous ; sheaths glabrous, or pubescent with short reflexed 
hairs ; ligule subquadrate, obtuse. Spike simple, rather lax or dense, 
erect or very slightly arching-drooping. Spikelets diverging from 
the rachis, at first linear-cylindrical-fusiform and acute, ultimately 
elliptical-linear, 7- to 20-flowered, glabrous or more or less pubes- 
cent. Inner glume about half the length of the contiguous floret, 
acute or mucronate, 7-ribbed. Lower pale abruptly acuminate and 
subacute, 7-ribbed towards the apex. Awn shorter than the pale, 
usually not half as long, and frequently reduced to a mere mucro. 


one. 


Var. «, 


. Spikelets glabrous. 
Var. A, alli 
Spikelets more or ioe finely pubescent with short hairs. : oe 
_ On downs and in pastures, especia cially in chalk districts. _ 
ather local, but frequent in the Seek ‘and east of England, seaching . 
to Yorkshire. It-has been reported from both Scotland and a 


| Perennial. Summer. 
Leaves of f the barren 
broad. 


Upper pale as —-* as and broader towards the —_ than the lower ao 


& bet oouee ‘is —_ doubt B. sylvaticum sae — Inistaken a 


eo vis ENGLISH BOTANY. 


— with 3 to 12 spikelets. Spikelets } to 1} long, sometimes 
‘slightly curved outwards when it is Bromus corniculatus, Lam. F1, Fr. 
Vol. III. p. 608. Florets 3 inch long. 
‘ery similar to B. sylvaticum, but always distinguishable by its 
8 root. The stems are more rigid. The leaves are stiffer and more 
rect, and become involute when withered from the shrivelling of the 
thick ribs on the upper surface. The spikelets are broader in the 
middle and more nearly erect. Tne awns are much shorter. The 
lower pale broader, and the upper pale longer and broader. 
Barren False-Brome-Grass. 
French, Brachypode primielle. 


GENUS XLI—TRITICUM. Linn. 


Spikelets quite sessile, solitary, arranged alternately with their 
broadsides to the rachis in a distichous simple spike, laterally com- 
pressed, flat on both sides or turgid, usually open during flowerin 
each containing 2 to 12 perfect florets, generally with 1 or 2 a 
or neuter florets above them. Glumes 2, opposite, placed right and 
left of the rachis, equal, shorter than the florets, rounded or keeled 


. on the back, many nerved, obtuse or awnei, subcoriaceous or sub- 
ee 8 


‘baceous. Pales 25 the lower one concave, entire, apiculate or 
~ awned, subherbaceous or subcoriaceous ; ; upper pale 2-toothed or 
notched, 2-ribbed. Loins 2, entire. Stamens 3. Stigmas 2, 
sessile, terminal, plumose, usually protruded at the sides of the floret 
betwhen the basal margins of the pales, or included. Caryops free 
or adhering to the upper pale, pilose at the apex, oblong, convex on 
the back, furrowed on the inner face. 
All the British specimens belong to the section Agropyrum, expose: 
the spikelets not turgid, and being perennial plants. | 
The name of this genus comes from the Latin word tero, to — because its pro- 
ee flour. Re 


| af SPECIES I-TRITICUM CANINUM. ke 

Bo Phare MDCCCIX. © a 

le Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol, I. Tab. CHIE. Bg 254, 

Gall. et Germ. Exsicc. No. 2598. ee ; 
n. D.C. Fl. Fr. Vol. IT. ‘p85. oe 

, Rom. —— aes & God ‘FL de Fe, Vol. P. ons 


GRAMINA. | 177 


Stems fasciculate, erect, flexuous, weak, hollow. Leaves flaccid, 
broadly linear, gradually tapering to the apex, very acute, flat, not 
involute when dry, with numerous slender unequal non-contiguous 
slightly scabrous ribs, thinly pubescent with short rather soft lak 
bright green. Spike slightly arching or erect, rather lax, rarely com- 

pact, with prominent scale-like bracts at the base of the lower spikelets. 
Rachis not fragile, glabrous or pubescent, scabrous on the angles. 
Spikelets 2- to 5-flowered, longer than the internodes, and sometimes 
equalling 2 internodes, fusiform, slightly compressed. Glumes vari- 
able in length, from half as long to as long as the spikelet, the lower 
one usually equalling the first floret, not overlapping each other at the 
base, linear-elliptical, acuminate and very acute, or even shortly 
awned, strongly ribbed. Lower pale linear-lanceolate, gradually 
pointed and acute, with 2 very obscure teeth at the apex, smooth 
towards the base, distinctly 5-ribbed in the apical third, awned, 
very rarely only mucronate. Awn slender, usually as long as the pale, 
or sometimes longer, rarely only half as long, or in some of the 
florets reduced to a short mucro. 


Var. a, genuinum. 
Spikelets 3- to 5-flowered. Awn as long as or longer than the 
. Var. 8, biflorum, Mitt. (2) 
T. alpinum, Don. MS. 
Spikelets about 2-flowered. — narrower than in var. 2, nuR : 
_ smooth on both sides. ; 
In woods and shady places, and on ee a at S 


from Cornwall and Kent to S 


ok Herbarium.” Mr. W. Mitten. — - 
2 om Scotland, Ireland. Perennial. la Summe 


wine in small lax tufts, with a few shal” hone i 
tems— on — 18 inches to 3 feet high. Leaves 6 inches _ 
‘1 to 3 inch broad. Spikes 3 to 6 inches long. Spike- 
Tong, exclusive of the awns. ee to oo long, 


is said to be ‘ae running cme roots. = 


- yather scarce. Thinly but widely distributed throughout Britain, 
im Ireland. Var. 6, “Rocks ox Ben Lawers. GD Don in os : 


178 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


SPECIES I—TRITICUM REPENS. Lim. 
Pratss MDCCCX. MDCCCXI. MDCCCXI. 


Not ceespitose or loosely caespitose. Rootstock exclusively creeping 
with long stolons. Stems solitary or subsolitary or fasciculate, 
erect or ascending, straight or slightly flexuous, or geniculate at the 
base, firm. Leaves flaccid or firm, broadly linear, tapering to the 
apex, acute, flat, sometimes involute when dry, with numerous unequal, 
slender and non-contiguous, or thick cartilaginous and contiguous, 
scabrous ribs, with or without distant long or rather long soft 
hairs, bright green or more or less glaucous. Spike erect or more 
or less arching, compact, sometimes lax at the base, or wholly lax, 
with indistinct scale-like bracts at the base of the lower spike- 
lets, or without them. Rachis pubescent or glabrous, scabrous or 
smooth on the angles, not fragile when dry. Spikelets 3- to 12- 
flowered, longer than the internodes, elliptical or elliptical-wedge- 
shaped or elliptical-linear, compressed. Glumes commonly three- 
quarters the length of the spikelets, but sometimes not more than 
half their length, usually a little shorter than the first floret, linear- 
lanceolate, acuminate, acute, or awned, or obtuse, strongly ribbed 
when dry. Lower pale linear-lanceolate, gradually pointed and acute, 
or obtuse, smooth, indistinctly 5-ribbed at the apex only, mucro- 
nate or awned, or apiculate. Awn when present short, usually 
shorter than the pale, rarely as long, but more commonly represented 
by a short mucro, or by an apiculus only. 


Sus-Sreces 1—Triticum eu-repens. 
Pirate MDCCCX. 

_ Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Hely. Vol. I. Tab. CXX. Figs. 257 to 261. 
_Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. No. 2597. 
 'T. repens, Auct. Plur. Duval-Jouve, Mém. del Acad. de Montpelier, Vol. VIL. p. 371. 
Bab. Man. Brit. Bot. ed. vi. p. 424. Hook. fil. Stud. Fl. p. 453. 
gr repens, Pal. de Beauv. Gren. ode. M.de Br. Vol. I. p 608 Parl. 

"FL Teal. Vol I. p. 496. Reich. Te. Le.p. 30. 


ms solitary or subsolitar y yrarely in loose faces, erect straight : 
— pa —- daccid, not d: 
when dry, erou 


GRAMINA. 179 


often scabrous on the angles. Spikelets more or less diverging from 
the rachis, 3- to 7-flowered, generally equalling 2 or even 3 internodes, 
ultimately elliptical or elliptical-wedgeshaped, much compressed. 
Glumes usually at least three-fourths the length of the spikelets, and 
always more than half their length, commonly acute or awned, rarely 
obtuse. Lower pales acute or awned, or rarely obtuse with a very 
short apiculus. Axis of spikelets scabrous, with slender internodes. 


Var. a, genuinum. Duval-Jouve. 

Glumes lanceolate-acute. Pales mucronate. 

Var. 6B, barbatum. Duval-Jouwve. 

Glumes tapering, subulate or awned. Pales awned. 

Var. y, obtusum. 

Glumes obtuse, obliquely-truncate. Pales obtuse, with a minute 
apiculus. 

In cultivated ground and waste places, by road-sides, and on the 
sea-shore, occasionally in woods. Common and universally dis- 
tributed. 

England, Scotland, Ireland. Perennial. Late Summer. 


Very variable. Stems 1 to 4 feet high. Leaves 2 inches to 1 foot 

mg by 4 to 3 inch broad, sometimes rather firm when growing in ¢ 
soils, with slender shy ee per ribs, which are not cartila 
nous, and each of whic hed with a row of minute a 
Spike 2 to 8 inches long, not more ro lies one-fourth the same sr 3 its 
stem, and often much shorter in proj ne neierably fro te 
long, usually so crowded — Baws —— cont bk a 
-Tachis, but 3 m luxuriant specimens 


ems 

‘tion of their noth 
compact. The spikelets | 
r sid = in thaebeme to 


ales are 


180 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


Sus-Srecies Il.—Triticum pungens. Koch. 
Pirate MDCCCXI. 


T. repens, var. y. Sm. Engl. Fl. Vol. I. p. 183 (in part, ?). 
T. littorale, Host; Duval-Jowve, Mém. de VY Acad. de Montpel. Vol. VII. pp. 374 and 


377. 


Agropyrum pungens, Rém. § Schultes, Syst. Veg. p. 753. Parl. Fl. Ital. Vol. I. 
p. 498. 


A. pungens and A. pyenanthum, Gren. & Godr. Fl. de Fr. Vol. TIT. p. 606. 
A. littorale and A. acutum, Reich, Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. p. 30. 
Stems in rather dense fascicles, erect, rarely ascending, straight, 
solid in the upper internodes. Leaves firm, distinctly and regularly in- 
volute, especially towards the apex when fading or dry, with numerous 
thick very prominent slightly unequal contiguous ribs, each of which is 
furnished with a single row of asperities, and usually glabrous, green or 
glaucous. Spike erect, compact, occupying one-fourth to one-tenth of 
the whole stem. Rachis rigid, glabrous or pubescent, scabrous on the 
Bae Spikelets more or less diverging from the rachis, 5- to 12- 
flowered, A Sond Pa 2 or even 3 internodes, oer aipteal 

eee is ee ‘den haped, much compressed. : 


ualiwa press the apex. ‘Pales mucronate or awned, or obeaat wi ‘csi 
a very short apiculus. Axis of spikelets puberulent (“ glal 
Duval-Jouve, ) with rather broad internodes a — 


Var. a, genuinum. 
Prats MDCCCXI. 
Beich. Ie. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CXXIL. Fig. 266 (A. skh 
- Glumes and _ subobtuse, apiculate or very — mucronate, 


ae Var. B, iii oe 
Bue 10, Gor Her Vl. ub, XE ig 358, a oo 


GRAMINA. 181 


with the spikelets more diverging from the rachis than in vars. e and 
6. Plant more glaucous. 

On sea-shores, especially by the banks of tidal rivers and back- 
waters. Probably common in England. I have specimens from 
Devon, Isle of Wight, Sussex, Kent, and Essex. Babington gives it 
as a native of Scotland, though without naming any definite station. 
In Ireland it is said, in the “ Cybele Hibernica,” to be “ probably 
common.” I have seen specimens from the neighbourhood of Dublin. 


England, Scotland (?), Ireland. Perennial. Late Summer. 


Stem 1 to : feet high, usually rigid. Leaves 3 inches to 1 foot 
long by + to 4 inch broad, remarkable for their greatly raised ribs 
resembling those of Elymus arenarius, commonly more or less glau- 
cous above and green below, but very variable in colour. Spikes 2 
to 10 mens long. Spikelets 3 to § inch long, usually glaucous. 
Florets 1 to } inch long. 

¥ ery ‘Variable j in size and colour, and exhibiting the same variations 

ur in T. eu-repens, from which indeed it can only be certainly 
distinguished by the structure of the leaves: the very prominent 
cartilaginous ribs in T. pungens completely fillmg up the upper 
surface of the leaf ; these cartilaginous ribs shrivel in drying, and 
consequently, when the leaves are no longer in vigorous growth, and 
more so when the leaves are allowed to wither, the upper 
surface of the leaf contracts more than the lower, and consequently 
the edges of the leaves become involute, especially towards the - 

— becomes pungent. 
plant grows in compact tufts of flowering and barrer 


oe is pe the case in T. eu-repens, iat ae it eee oces 
occur in that plant. 

The Rev. V. W. Newbould informs me that T. repens, var. nin 
Smith’s Herbarium, is represented by T. pungens. | 


sionally : os oe 


I suspect that T. repens, 6. littoreum, Bab. Man. Hive Bot ed. vi. oS 


p. 424, ought also be referred to T. pungens, as the —— —_ : 
“involute ” makes it probable that there must be cartilaginous ne 
the upper side ; al have not seen — ied by Paseaees 


8. 


oe i 7 variety (4. intermedium) occurs on the roast _ faland 
‘stations, which has _ not been detected in Britain, though it ; izht to- 


182 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


Sus-Sprcies I.—Triticum acutum. D.0¢. 
Prate MDCCCXII. 


Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. L Tab. CXXI. Fig. 262. 
Duval-Jouve, Mém. de Acad. de Montpelier, Vol. VIL. p. 387, and Planche, 20, Fig. 3. 
Optime! 


T. laxum, Fries. Mant. IIL. p, 13, and Summ. Veg. Scand. pp. 74 and 249. 
T. pungens, Pers.? Syn. PL. p. 109. 
“TT. affine, Dethharding,” teste Reic 
acutum, Rim. & Schultes, Syst. Veg. Vol. IT. p. 751. Gren. & Godr. Fl. 
tole Vol, III. p. 605. Parl. Fl. Ital. Vol. I. p. 499. 

Stems in loose fascicles or solitary, ascending or suberect, usually 
from a decumbent and geniculate base, solid. Leaves firm, involute, 
especially towards the apex when fading or dry, with numerous 
thick rather prominent unequal contiguous subcartilaginous ribs, 
each of which is thickly clothed with minute asperities, not disposed 
in 1 or 2 regular lines, and glabrous or with a few rather long 
_ soft distant hairs, green or glaucous. Spike more or less slightly 
_ arching, lax, one-half to one-fourth of the whole stem. Rachis rather 
: gs glabrous, scabrous or smooth on the angles, not fone Spike- 
lets adpressed to the rachis or slightly curv 5- to 8- 

: Sowers, but little longer than the internodes, and very nas equal- 
ling 2 internodes, ultimately linear-elliptical, slightly compressed. 
Glumes two-thirds to three-fourths the length of the spikelets, rarely 
half the length, subobtuse or subacute or apiculate, with a smooth 
keel. ales obtuse, apiculate or more rarely mucronate, or very 
rarely shortly awned. Axis of the wilkdlate puberulent, with the 
internodes broad, greatly enlarged upwards. 

_ On sandy sea-shores, Probably common and generally distributed, 
S shank I have not seen specimens from north of St. Andrews, _ 
and Cumberland. In Ireland, according to the “Cybele Hibe 

a itis —os and extends from north to south of the island. 


nd, Scotland, Ireland. Perennial. Late Summer, Autumn. 


oe inches to 3 feet high. Leaves I to 18 inches oi by } to 
pe Spik e 3 to 10 inches Se aeent s to 1 inch long. 


- GRAMINA. 183 


agri are easily dried flat, which it is difficult to do with e of 
pungens. The ribs of the leaves of T. acutum are also thickly 
covered all over with very minute asperities, not with a single row of 
large ones as we find in T. pungens. The spike is lax, and occupies 

a much greater part of the stem than in T. pungens. The spikelets 
are more closely applied to the rachis, usually longer and narrower in 
proportion. The axis of the spikelet is more distinetly puberulent, 

so as almost to deserve to be called minutely pubescent. 

The characters which distinguish T. acutum from T. junceum will 
be mentioned under that species. 

Perhaps T. pungens and T. acutum ought to be combined in a ver- 
species distinct from T. repens on account of the different structure 
of the leaves. I have repeatedly endeavoured to raise our two 
maritime forms of Triticum from seed, but never could get it to 
germinate; as in many other extensively creeping plants, the seed 


a to be but rarely perfec 

[ have followed Mr. Lloyd (“ FI. de YOuest de la France,” ed. il. 

p. 600) in joining T. pungens, Awet., campestre, G. §& Gr., and acutum, 
D. C., with T. repens, rather than Dr. Hooker ( Stud. Flora,” p. 454), 
who considers them as subspecies of T. junceum, with which they have 
certainly far less affinity than they have with T. repens, but it would 
be highly desirable that they should be raised from seed, should any 
botanist on the coast be fortunate enough to obtain it. 

The figure which Reichenbach gives of “'T. acutum,” in the Ic. 
Fl. Germ. et. Helv. Tab. CX XII. Fig. 266,* appears to me to represent 
T. pungens; while that of A. affine, Tab. CXXI. Fig. 262, is a fair 
representation of T. acutum. 

Decumbent Sea Couch-Grass. 
German, Spitziger Weizen. 


SPECIES UL—TRITICUM JUNCEUM. in 


Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. L. Tab. OXXT 

Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. No. 2985. 

‘Ducal-Jouve, Mém. de Y Acad. de Montpeion, Vol. VEE p _ 390. 

Agropyram junceum, Pal. de Beauv.; TES Pari. 
_ FL Ital. Vol. Lp. 502. 


a _ Not _chempitone. Rootstock extensively er with Tong stolons. 


"mart set en tapering to the apex, greatly | 
: Loo oanelameraaal oan gam 


Wwttes UR 


aly hates 
velvety SACLE Dy 


ee each of which he i 


i of a b bach Tn me 


184 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


ually more or less slightly arching, lax, one-half to one-fourth of the 
whole stem. Rachis rather firm, glabrous, smooth on the angles, 
readily breaking across at the nodes when dry. Spikelets adpressed 
to the rachis, 4- to 8-flowered, as long as or a little longer than the 
internodes but not equalling 2 internodes, ultimately linear-elliptical, 
slightly compressed. Glumes half to three-fourths the length of the 
spikelets, obtuse truncate or subapiculate, with a smooth indistinct 
keel. Pales obtuse, obliquely-truncate or notched, apiculate, not 
awned. Axis of the spikelets puberulent, with the internodes greatly 
enlarged upwards. 

On sandy sea-shores, and on dunes where there is loose sand; 
common and generally distributed, extending north to Orkney. 


England, Scotland, Ireland. Perennial. Summer, Autumn. 


Stems 6 inches to 2 feet high. Leaves 2 to 8 inches long by 1 to 
dinch broad, very glaucous. Spike 2 to 9 inches long. Spikelets 3 
to ly inch long. Florets $ to 2 inch long. 
ery in habit to T. acutum, but with the leaves narrower 
and ultimately much more involute, thicker, or even somewhat fleshy, 
with the ribs fewer, much more prominent, and more cartilaginous, 
_ crvon 4 clothed with a pile of very short white hairs, the upper 
_ surface more glaucous. The rachis is remarkable for the facilit ty soe 
which it c ultimately breaks across at the nodes, thus’ separating in: 
with the spikelets attached to their apex. The ae 
sae fainter and more numerous ril les are more obtuse, 
and commonly more or less notched, and the apiculus is shorter. 
The whole plant is usually more glaucous, —— the upper side 
of the leaves and the spikelets. 


Sand Couch-Grass. 
German, Binsenformiger Weizen. 
GENUS Dg 8 ily 8 29 # IU M. Linn. 


oo _ Spikelets quite sessile, solitary, arranged alternately edgeways to. 

its rachis i in a distichous simple spike, Interally compressed, flat on 

both sides, open oS flow ‘ing, each containing 3 to 20 perfect 
Glum: pera CRSecegie Ee . ; 


slet away from ihe his, 


: r y one on the side next the 


one or acute, not awed sub- oo : a 


tS Se 


GRAMINA, 185 


3. Stigmas 2, terminal, sessile, plumose, protruded at the sides of the 
floret between the basal margins of the pales. Caryops free, or rarely 
adhering to the upper pale, wholly glabrous, oblong, convex on the 
back, broadly furrowed on the inner face. 

The derivation of the name of this genus is supposed to be from linwm, flax ; and. 
colo, I till. 


SPECIES I—-LOLIUM PERENNE, “ Linz.,” Hook. fil. 
Pruates MDCCCXIV. MDCCCXYV. 


Perennial, biennial, or annual. Spikelets 3- to 20-flowered, linear- 
elliptical, tapering from the middle to the apex, not truncate. Glumes 
shorter than the spikelets (except in monstrous. forms), equalling or 
shorter than the contiguous floret. Florets linear-lanceolate, slightly 
curved on the inner margin in profile, not turgid in fruit. Lower 
pale not indurated in fruit, elliptical-linear, obtuse or faintly notched 
with blunt cusps, not awned or with a slender awn. Caryops linear- 


oblong, about half the length of and a little narrower than the pales. 


Sus-Srecies L—Lolium eu-perenne. 
Prats MDCCCXIV. 

Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CXII. Fig. 35. 
Billot, F). Gall. et Germ. Exsicc. No. 2778. 
L. perenne, Auct. Plur. Sm. Eng. Bot. ed. i. No, 315, &. 

Perennial, with barren shoots. Flowering stems several, usually 
decumbent and geniculate at the base. Leaves narrowly linear, taper- 
ing slightly to the oe deep green. Spikelets closely applied to 


the rachis, except during the time of flowering, when they diverge a 
: oe; 3- to 11-flowered. Lower pale not awned. : 


Var. «, genuinum, Godr. 
an robust. Spikelets 7- to 11-flowered. 


Var. B, tenue. 


= Len, Lion, Spec. Plant. p. 122 (non Guss.). 


ike — = pgm 3- to A-flowered. Whole pnt much — 


186 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


outwards towards the circumference of the tuft, from their bases being 
usually decumbent and geniculate. Stems 18 inches to 2 feet high, 
or a little more, erect or ascending. Leaves 3 inches to 1 foot long 
by } to finch broad, those of the barren shoots conduplicate when 
oung. Spikes 3 to 10 inches long. Spikelets 1 to % inch long. 

F lorets + inch long. 

Var. tenue is rather a starved state than a true variety. 

Monstrosities of the spike are not unfrequent. Sometimes it is 
compound, especially towards the base: sometimes the rachis is 
shortened and the spikelets diverge widely, forming a flattened, oblong, 
blunt spike: sometimes the florets are fasciculate within the glumes, 
and in this case are frequently inflated and abbreviated, so as to be 
ovoid, and sometimes shorter than the glumes. 


Common or Perennial Rye-Grass, 
French, Ivraie vivace. German, Englisches Raygras. 


Sus-Srecizs I.—Lolium Italicum. 4A. Braun. 
Pirate MDCCCXYV. 
Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. LXXVIL (CXILL) Figs. 238 and 239, 
xsice. No. 1392. 


_ L. Boucheanum, Kunth, Enum. Plant. Vol. I. p. 436, 


= fe with barren shoots, or more often biennial. Stems nume- 


rous, usually nearly straight throughout, rarely decumbent and geni- 
culate at the base. Leaves broadly linear, tapering greatly to the 
apex, yellowish-green, Spikelets loosely applied to the rachis, except 
during the time of flowering, when they diverge greatly, 5- to 12- 
flowered. Lower pale with a long slender awn, : 

’ Tn cultivated fields, and by roadsides and waste places. Not unfre- 
quent, but always escaped from cultivation. : 


to be merely 
‘ren shoots 


GRAMINA. 187 
mud dredged from the Thames and deposited on the ground now 
occupied by Battersea Park. 

Ttalian Rye-Grass. 
French, Ivraie d’Italie. German, Italienisches Raygras. 


SPECIES I—LOLIUM TEMULENTUM. Lins. 
Pirates MDCCCXVI. MDCCCXVIL. 

Annual. Spikelets ultimately wedge-shaped, very obtuse or trun- 
cate at the apex, 3- to 9-flowered. Glumes as long as or longer than 
the spikelets, and many times exceeding the contiguous floret. Florets 
turgid i in fruit, half ovate-ovoid, greatly curved on the inner margin 
in profile. Lower pale somewhat indurated in fruit, oval, deeply 
notched with subacute cusps, with a stout awn of variable length, or not 
awned. Caryops oblong-ovoid, nearly as long as and as broad as the 
upper pale. 

Var. a, genuinum. 
Pirate MDCCCXVI. 
Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CXI. Figs. 231 and 233. 


Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. No. 3944. 
L. temulentum, Sm. Engl. Bot. ed. i. No. 1124, and Engl. FI. Vol. L. p. 174, 


Awns longer than the pales. 


Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I, Tab. OX. Fig, 2 229, 
Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. 


No. 491. | . 
_ Le arvense, With. Sm. Engl. Bot. ed. i. No. 1125; Bagh WL Vol. y.174 (oom 


Schrad. nec Reich.). 
L. robustum, Reich. Fl. Germ. Excurs. p. 139, ants Fl. Germ. ot Helv, Vol. I. p.25. 
-Awns shorter than the florets or absent. . 
_ Incultivated fields. Rather rare, though asp, distributed, wend: 
¢ north to Argyle and Moray, though itis not more than naturalised 
tlan = * may be in a seme abundant i in 


188 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


‘Florets 1 to inch long, exclusive of age awns. Rachis sometimes 
smooth, ‘sometimes pulverulent, scabro 

Re eadily distinguishable from all Se forms of L. perenne by its 
blunt or truncate fruiting spikelets, long rigid glumes, turgid florets, 
and large brown caryops. 

Lolium linicola, Sidr} is a very distinct plant, which, strangely 
enough, has net confounded with the variety of L. temulentum 
termed L. arvense by Withering. It may be readily known from L. 
eckateutain by its more slender stem; by its narrower leaves; by 
the spikelets tapering slightly from beyond the middle to the a 
which is obtuse but not truncate; by the glume being little shorter 
than, or at most equal to, the spikelet, though always : as long as, or 
longer than the contiguous floret; by the florets being narrower and 
less turgid, the lower pales less indurated, and by the caryops being 
considerably smaller and narrower in proportion. The awn is entirely 

absent, or more rarely present, and then very short. It cannot be 
dicistdeved as a naturalised plant, though it has occurred in flax fields 
in several places. 

Common Darnel. 


French, Ivraie enivrante. German, Tawmel Lolch. 


Tre XIII._ROTTBOELLIE®. 


_ Spikelets open ‘ganas flowering, sessile, arranged in a simple, di- 
stichous or unilateral spike, the rachis of which is excavated to receive 
them, and has at each notch a single solitary spikelet, containing a 
single perfect floret, and sometimes a superior rudiment. Glumes 2 
or 1. Stigmas 2, sessile, protruded at the base of the florets between 
the margins of the pales, Caryops dorsally compressed, with a furrow 

on the inner face. ; 


GENUS ATUI.—_LEPTURUS. R. Br. 
Spikelets quite sessile, solitary, arranged alternately in a simple 
os Siete, in the excavations of the rachis of which they are ecmpletely 

sunk when closed, open during flowering, each containing a single 

pa Sank _— with the masse rudiment of a second neuter one 

oret nearly equal ; 2 or 1 in all 

. the only one on the side of the _ 

ng as or longer than the floret, not : 
Pal 


GRAMINA. | . 189 


brous, narrowly oblong, convex on the back, furrowed on the inner 
“The name of this genus of plants is derived from Nerréc, slender ; and odpé, a tail— 
in allusion to its taper slender spikes. 


SPECIES I—LEPTURUS FILIFORMIS. Tri. 
Pirate MDCCCXVIIL. 
Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CVIII. Fig. 223. 
Billot, F1. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. No. 2190. 
L. incurvatus, # filiformis, Bab. Man. Brit. Bot. ed. vi. p. 426. 
Ophiurns filiformis, Rim. & Schultes, Syst. Veg. Vol. II. p. 797. 
O. incurvatus, Lindl. Syn. Brit. Fl. p. 295. 
Rotbillia filiformis, Roth. Bertol. Fl. Ital. Vol. I. p. 766. 
R. incurvata, Sm. Engl. Bot. ed. i. No. 760, and Engl. Fl. Vol. I. p. 175. 


Flowering stems erect or decumbent, much branched. Ligule 
very short, truncate. Spikes slender, cylindrical, scarcely tapering to 
the apex, straight or. very slightly curved. Lateral florets with 2 
glumes. Pales as long as the glumes. 

In salt marshes and waste places by the sea, and on the margins of 
tidal rivers. Common and generally distributed in the southern half 

of England, less common in the north. Very local in Scotland, where 
-_ I know of no stations but Aberledy Bay, Haddington ; and Blackness, 
Linlithgow. Possibly it may have been ined near Inverkeithing, 
Fife; bat it is doubtful whether the plant which occurred there 
was the native L. filiformis, or the continental sub-species L. incur-— 
vatus, which has occurred on ballast at St. Davids, in the neighbour- 
hood of Inverkeithing. Frequent but rather local all x round the Irish 
coast. 


— ee Ireland. Perennial Sammes Autumn, 


— See 4 inch, closely fitting into the excavations of the rachis, so 
en the plants _ in —— the ee resemble slender 
Glues. eee in fl 20uS, | 3-ribbed. 


190 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


Trrre XIV._HORDEIEE 


Spikelets usually open during flowering, sessile or subsessile, 
arranged in a simple distichous spike, the rachis of which is exca- 
vated to receive them, and has at each notch 2 to 6 spikelets placed 
side by side, each spikelet containing 1 or more perfect florets; some- 
times the lateral spikelets have only a floret. Glumes 2. Stipenas 2, 
sessile, usually protruded at the base of the florets between the mar- 
gins of the pales. Caryops dorsally compressed, with a furrow on the 


inner face. 


GENUS XLIV—ELYMUS. Linn. 


Spikelets quite sessile, in pairs or threes at each node of the rachis, 
arranged in a simple spike, open during flowering, each containing 2 
to 4 perfect florets. Glumes 2 to each epikelet, nearly equal in all the 
florets, both of them on the side of the spikelet farthest from the rachis, 
a little shorter or a little longer than the florets, not awned, subcori- 
aceous or subherbaceous. Pales 2, the lower one rounded on the 

back, acuminate, pointed or mucronate or awned, subherbaceous or 
subcoriaceous. Upper pale, 2-toothed, 2-keeled, scarious. Lodicules 
2, entire. Stamens 3. Stigmas 2, sessile, inserted a little below the 
| summit of the ovary, plumose, protruded at the sides of the florets 
_ between the basal margins of the pales. Caryops adhering to the 
oie pubescent at the apex, narrowly linear, convex on the back, 
furrowed on the inner face. 
_ This genus derives its name from the country where the species are abundant— 
Elyma, i in 


SPECIES I-ELYMUS ARENARIUS. Linn. 
= ee as CXVL. Figs, 247 and 248. 
ue | y creeping, with long stolons, 
Leaves broadly ye eis 


h and green ae ag ligule a 
Spike ver fle | 
Sat se were at the opike in pave pie ee 

( threes, need epteinoae with He a per= 


191 
points, not awned, as long as the florets, glabrous, usually pubescent at 
the apex, and frequently ciliated with long soft hairs on the keel and 


lateral margins near the apex. Lower pale linear—lanceolate, acumi- 
nate, shortly mucronate but not awned, densely pubescent with short 
hairs 


On sandy sea-shores and on dunes amongst loose sand. Rather rare. 
Possibly in Devon and Dorset and South Wales, and certainly from 
Essex and North Wales northward to Orkney and Shetland. Rare 
and very local in Ireland, where it is chiefly found on the north 


coast. 
England, Scotland, Ireland. Perennial. Late Summer. 


Plant growing in large roundish tufts, beyond the cireumference of 
which the barren tufts of the stolons come up singly. Leaves 6 inches 
to 3 feet long by } to $ inch broad. Stems 2 to 4 feet high, inclining 
towards the circumference of the tufts. Spikes 6 inches to 1 foot long, 
straight or slightly arched. Spikelets 3 to 1 inch long. Florets 3 to 
1 inch long, 

Elymus geniculatus, Curtis, which was alleged to have been found by 
Dickson near Gravesend, but which is now known only as a cultivated 
plant, resembles E. arenarius, but has the rootstock far less creeping, 
and the stolons so short that their barren shoots come up close to 
the parent tufts. The leaves are about half the breadth of those 
of E. arenarius. The spike is not so dense, and the spikelets in 
the middle of the spike are rarely more than 2 together, and the 
upper ones are often solitary. The glumes are subulate, glabrous, 
and much longer than the florets. Spikelets 1- or 2-flowered. The 
lower pales are subulate, shortly Lalasaege The benny of the — - 
relied on as a character, is apparentl monstrosity: out of 
: —_ ee a by me not ¢ ‘one had the spike 


geniculate. 
Sand Lyme-G Grass. ; 


GENUS XALV.-_HO RDE U M. Linn. 


Spike sais quite sessile, or the lateral ones shortly stalked, i in es oe 
— mee in 1 pairs, at each node of the rachis, arranged i in a : simple 


192 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


and longly awned, subherbaceous. Pales 2, the lower one rounded 
on the back, longly awned, or rarely not awned in the lateral spike- 
lets, subherbaceous. Upper pale 2-toothed, 2-keeled. Lodicules 2 
entire. Stamens 3. Stigmas 2, inserted a little below the summit 
of the ovary, sessile, plumose, usually protruded at the sides of the 
floret between the basal margins of the pales. Caryops adhering to 
the pales, pubescent at the apex, convex on the back, furrowed on 
the inner face. 
** Hordeum,” the Latin name of barley. 


SPECIES I-HORDEUM SYLVATICUM. Huds. 
Piatre MDCCCXX. 

Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CXV. Fig. 246. 

Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. No. 490. 

Elymus Europeus, Linn. Sim: fox Bot. ed. i. No. 1317 and Engl. Fl. Vol. I. p. 178. 
Kunth, Enum. Fl. ed. i. p. 482. Koch, Syn. Fl. Germ. et Helv. ed. ii. p. 954. 
Fries, Summ. Veg. Scand. p. 74. Gren. & Godr. Fl. de Fr. Vol. IIL. p. 597. 
Parl. Fi. Ital. Vol. I. p. 524. Reich. Ic. l.c. p. 28. 

i pebvdergones: with barren shoots. Loosely cxspitose. Flowering stems, 
erect, from a shortly and slightly curved base, which is clothed with 
brownish fibres derived from decayed leaf sheaths; knots pubescent. 
Leaves broadly linear, tapering from a little below the middle to the 
apex, very acute, with numerous slender distant scabrous unequal ribs, 
usually thinly pubescent with rather long soft hairs, bright but 
rather dark green; sheaths pubescent, with rather short and = 
reflexed faire the: uppermost one usually subglabrous; ligule ve 
short, truncate. Spike erect, fusiform-cylindrical. Spikelets ied 

_ to the rachis, in threes, the lateral ones perfect, sometimes with a 
second floret, the central one usually male. Glumes of the lateral 
__ spikelet linear-subulate, insensibly attenuated into awns of about 
their own length, not ciliated, those of the central spikelet nar- 
rower when it is male, smooth, with the awn scabrous. Florets all 
a sessile within, the glumes. Lower pales elliptical-linear, acuminate, 
bidentate, faintly 3-nerved and scabrous towards the apex. Awn 


It oods and copses, chiclly cm chalk nd. cite. Rare. Ex- 
from Wilts, Hants, Kent, and Essex, north to Chester and 
‘Very rave in Treland, where the only bbtion isa 


ibernic  esomte it wo be native 


| om the bottom of the notch of the pale, and y about twice its - 
a usuall | 


at Mount Merrion, Dublin; = the a a : : . o 


193 


Stem 1 to 3 feet high. Leaves 3.inches to 1 foot long. Spike 1 to 
4 inches long. Spikelets 3 3 to 3 inch long, exclusive of the awns. 


Wood Barley. 


SPECIES 1—HORDEUM PRATENSE. duds. 
Pirate MDCCCXXI. 

Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. 1. Tab. CXVII. p. 251. 

Billot, Fl. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. No. 1391. 

H. secalinum, Schreb. Koch. Syn. Fl. Germ. et Helv. ed. ii. p. 955. Fries. Summ, 
Veg. Scand. p. 74. Gren. & Godr. Fl. de Fr. Vol. TIT. p. 595. Parl. Fl. Ital. 
Vol. I. p. 521. 

H. murinum, var. 6, Linn. Spec. Plant. p. 126. 

Perennial, with barren shoots or barren stems. Rather loosely 
-exspitose. Flowering stem erect from a shortly and slightly curved 
or geniculate base, which is clothed with brownish withered leaf- 
sheaths; knots glabrous. Leaves rather firm, narrowly linear, taper- 
ing from a little below the middle to the apex, very acute, with 
numerous slender rather approximate very scabrous nearly equal 
ribs, pubescent with rather short and rather stiff hairs, bright-green ; 
lowest sheath pubescent with rather short stiff reflexed hairs, all 
except the lowest glabrous; ligule very short, truncate. Spike erect, 
oblong-linear, parallel: peed, tetragonal, compressed, olive-green. 
_ Spikelets ascending, diverging slightly from the rachis, in threes, the 
lateral ones male, the central one perfect. Glumes of all the spikelets 
setaceous, insensibly attenuated into awns about twice their oie 
length, very scabrous, as well as their awn. Central spikelet with _ 
its floret sessile, the lateral ones with their florets stipitate within — 
_ the glumes. Lower pale of the central spikelets al-] 
acuminate, entire, faintly 3-ribbed towards the apex, wholly glabrous, _ 

eng ,and as long a8 the awns of 


with a terminal awn about its own length. 
ge glumes : lower pale of the lateral spikelets sl nd 1 narrower 
so than sein of the central floret, very indistinetly ribbed and con- 


rr fined by an awn shorter than its own length and much s 
an those of its glumes. 
_ In meadows and pastures, sea¥ ont thee drier parts of | salt iis: 
Fre me ges and oh corte distributed i in n England, es ecial ly — the 
xhbo d of Be i ale, where it grows on the Scotch ‘side of the a 
dae ean le ba : - 


Ss 


194 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


Salisbury Craigs, Edinburgh, where it does not now exist; Kincardine, 
Clackmannan; and St. Andrew’s, Fife. Local, and usually near the 
coast in the south and east of Ireland. 


England, Scotland, Ireland. Perennial. Summer. 


Flowering stems few or rather numerous, 1 to 3 feet high, slender, 
stiff, flowering nearly together. Barren stems 1 to 8 inches high. 
Leaves 1 to 5 inches long, by } to 4 inch broad, the uppermost stem 
leaf generally shorter and broader than the others. Spike 14 to 5 
inches long. Perfect florets # inch long, later florets 4 inch’ long 
in both cases, exclusive of the awns. Fertile spikelets $ to 3 inch, 
inclusive of the awns. 

Grenier & Godron, and some other authors, strangely enough, state 
that this species is biennial. It is as truly perennial as Cynosurus 
cristatus or Dactylis glomerata. 


Meadow Barley. 


SPECIES I1—HORDEUM MURINUM. Linn. Auct. 
Pirate MDCCCXXI. 
Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ. et Helv. Vol. I. Tab. CXVIL. Fig. 249. 
Billot, FI. Gall. et Germ. Exsice. No. 1599. 

Biennial or annual, without barren shoots. Flowering stems as- 
cending, from a longly geniculate base; knots glabrous. Leaves 
very flaccid, broadly linear, tapering from ‘ae base to the apex, very 
acute, with numerous slender distant slightly-scabrous unequal ribs, pu- 
bescent with rather short and rather stiff hairs, pale green, slightly glau- 
cous ; lowest sheath usually pubescent, with rather short and rather 

stiff hairs, all except the lowest always glabrous; ligule very short, 
truncate. Spike erect or slightly inclined, broadly oblong. linear, usually 


aS slightly enlarged upwards, tetragonal, much compressed, glaucous- 


green. Spikelets ascending-erect, scarcely diverging from the rachis, 
in threes, the lateral ones male, the central one perfect. Glumes of 
, the central floret lanceolate-linear, attenuated into awns of about 


a a 3 their own length, ciliated with long stiff hairs: inner glume of 


4 the lateral spikelet linear-subulate, insensibly attenuated into an awn 
ut three times its own length, and a little shorter than those of 
cent ral spike scabrous, and ciliated with rather short hairs on 


cenatans, 


GRAMINA. 195 
with its floret sessile, the lateral ones with their florets indistinctly 
stipitate within the glumes. Lower pales of all the florets elliptical- 
linear, acuminate, entire; that-of the central floret strongly 3-ribbed 
throughout, wholly glabrous, with a terminal awn of more than three 
times its own length, and twice as long as the awns of the glumes: 
lower pale of the lateral florets exceeding that of the central floret, 
faintly 3-ribbed towards the apex, glabrous or slightly scabrous, pu- 
bescent towards the apex, terminated by an awn of about twice its 
own length, a little shorter than that of the central floret, but much 
exceeding those of the glumes. 

On dry banks by roadsides and in waste places, especially in the 
neighbourhood of towns and villages, and by the sea. Common and 
generally distributed in England and the south-east of Scotland. 
North of the Forth it is nearly restricted to the coast, extending to 
Kincardineshire, and as an introduced plant to Aberdeen and Moray. 
Very rare in Ireland, and confined to the south and east of the 
island. ‘ Only in and about towns and buildings, possibly introduced ” 
(“ Cyb. Hib.”). 

England, Scotland, Ireland. CR oonciomt: or Annual. Early Summer 


Usually biennial, but occasionally annual from plants springing from 
early ripened seeds, and flowering during the first year. Stems 
numerous, 6 inches to 2 feet high, weak, usually geniculate for about 
half their length, flowering in long succession. Leaves 2 to 6 inches 
g by 4 to 5 inch broad. Spikes 2 to 4 inches long, perfect floret _ 

1 inch long. Lateral florets +4, to 3 inch long, exclusive of the : 
aah * fertile spikelet 1} to 2 inches long, including the awn. ae 

This can scarce confounded with H. prat 1 


nearer the  eice pore _the ge tanta more td, 

_ being larger and much broader i in p ~ an 

Dla less diverging awns, and by the whole Cg ode claucous 
French, Orge queue de rat. German, Miuse Gerste, 

SPEC ES IV. ~ oa gtr MARITIMUM. With. 


oo - Reich. To Fl. Germ. ot Helv Vol 1 ab, CXVIL Bg 250. 
| see 


oe oot ee s 


(196 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


from the base, or erect or ascending from a longly geniculate base ; 
knots glabrous. Leaves rather firm, narrowly linear, tapering from 
the base to the apex, with numerous slender approximate scabrous 
nearly-equal ribs, pubescent with very short stiff hairs, pale glaucous- 
green; lowest sheath puberulent, with very short reflexed hairs, or 
glabrous, all except the lowest one always glabrous ; ligule very 
short, truncate. Spike erect, oblong-linear or oblong, usually nar- 
rowed upwards, cylindrical-tetragonal, slightly compressed, glaucous- 
green. Spikelets ascending, the lowest ones often spreading and 
diverging widely from the rachis, in threes, the lateral ones male, the 
central one perfect. Glumes of the central floret cylindrical-setaceous, 
attenuated into awns about twice their own length, not ciliated or 
scabrous: inner glume of the lateral florets half oval-lanceolate, 
curved towards the side of the central floret, and nearly straight on 
the side next the outer glume of the spikelet to which it belongs, 
terminated by an awn about twice its own length, and a little longer 
than that of the central spikelet, not ciliated or viebtous: : outer plums 
_of the lateral spikelets setaceous and awn-like throughout, scabrous, 
heen ho ‘point of its awn equalling that of the central floret, and 
consequently a lit tle shorter than that of the inner glume of the lateral 
: gables Florets all nearly sessile within their glumes. Lower pales 
of all the florets elliptical-linear, entire, indistinctly 3-ribbed towards 
the apex, and glabrous: that of the central floret with a stout. awn 
nearly twice its own length, and a little longer than that of its own 
ee and equalling that of the inner glume of the lateral spikelets : 
lower pale of the lateral florets with an awn of about its own length, 
and scarcely half as long as that of the central floret. 
In salt marshes and in meadows by the sea and tidal rivers, and on 
_ embankments and by roadsides in such localities. Rather frequentand _ 
eet distributed in the south of England, reaching north to 


leaf 4 to 1 inch long, and usually broader than the others; upper-— 

most sheath greatly swollen. Spikes 3 to 2 inches long. Spikelets } 

inch =e without the awn. Fertile floret 3 2 to } inch Tong, including 
the 


Soenbies H. murinum, but with narrower and firmer leaves, 
shorter and narrower spikes, with more rigid and much more di- 
verging awns, but best known by the unilateral wing-like development 
of the inner olume of the lateral florets. 

Sea-Barley. 
German, Meerstrands Gerste. 


True I. (dis).*NARDER. 


_ Spikelets closed during flowering, sessile, arranged in 2 unilateral 
rows in a simple spike, the rachis of which is excavated te receive 
them, and has at each notch a single spikelet containing 1 perfect floret. 
Glumes absent. Style short ; stigma 1, very long, protruded at the 
apex of the florets between the tips of the pales. Caryops linear- 
trigonous, with a furrow on the inner face. 


GENUS I.(bis) -NARDUS. Linn. 


Spikelets quite sessile, solitary, arranged in 2 rows in a unilateral 
simple spike, closed during flowering, each containing a single 


perfect florgt. Glumes absent. Pales 2, the ore one — oF 


keeled, awned, parchment-like; upper pale entire. 


Lodicules absent. Stamens 3. Style 1, iene: eae by a 7 
‘single long slender pubescent stigma, protraded at the apex of the = 


ores between .the tips of the pales. — Caryops a — line 
-_trigonous, channelled on the inner face. | 


eo Greek vépdoc, cme plant wth a ponsteting odour. Wis pi ese 
oo — say. 


‘SPECIES I-NARDUS STRICTA. Linn, 
Prare MDCCCXXIV- : 


- ‘pak ML Germ. et Holv. Vl. I Tab. CLXX. Fig. 450.0 
oe No. 189. o 


198 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


On heaths, moors, and in sterile pastures, especially in upland 
districts. Locally common and widely distributed. 


England, Scotland, Ireland. Perennial. Summer. 


Densely cxspitose, each tussock consisting of numerous tufts densely 
arranged in a chordorrhizal manner; each tuft is enveloped at the base 
by a few dilated lanceolate leafless sheaths, so as to be somewhat 
bulbous, and to bear some resemblance to those of J uncus squarrosus 
in miniature. Leaves chiefly radical, thickly setaceous, rigid, 2 to 9 
inches long, spreading; sheaths 1 to 4 inches long, those of the 
radical leaves all of the same length ; ligule elongate, truncate on 
the radical leaves, longer and lanceolate, and bifid on the stem 
leaves. Flowering stems 4 to 18 inches long, wiry, usually leaf- 
less above the level of the sheaths of the radical leaves, but 
sometimes with a single leaf similar to the radical ones, but smaller 
and scarcely so long as its sheath, which is split only at the apex. 
Spikes 1} to 4 inches long, unilateral. Spikelets adpressed to the 
rachis, distichously unilateral, each with a minute scale at the base, 
probably representing an abortive bract, for, from its position opposite 
the lower pale, it cannot be the outer glume, as in that case 

_ the inner glume would be entirely abortive, while, so far as I know, 
_ if there be but one glume present, it is always the inner one, and 
besides, there is no appearance of articulation of this scale to the 
_achis. Spikelets purple, about 1 inch long, exclusive of the awn, 
which is from 4 to 1 inch more. Lower pale subulate, acuminate, 


Mat-Grass. 
French, Nard roide. German, Steifes Borstengras. 


— EXCLUDED SPECIES. 

-—s«éDIGITARIA SANGUINALIS. Pal. de Beaw. 

An introduced casual, not persistent in its stations and less so than ‘ 
ly, for it appears to have been at one time found year sfier = 


Li Ce 


GRAMINA, 199 


PANICUM MILIACEUM. Linn. 
On rubbish heaps, chiefly about London, but not established. 


SETARIA ITALICA. Pal. de Beaw. 


Occasionally about London, doubtless scattered with the refuse of 
birdcages, being often given to birds under the name of Italian 
millet. - 


SETARIA GLAUCA. Pal. de Beaw. 


In waste places. It has occurred in Surrey, Sussex, Middlesex and 
Hants. In 1853 it was abundant on the mud dredged from the 
Thames and laid on Battersea Fields. It is liable to be passed over 
when young as §. viridis, for it is only as the fruit ripens that the 
involucral bristles assume their characteristic orange tinge, and the 
lower pale shows the transverse wrinkles which distinguish it from 

. viridis. 
PHALARIS PARADOXA. Lin. 

In corn-fields at Swanage, Dorset, found by Mr. Hussey, but it has 
not, I believe, occurred since 1851. It has also been found near 
Huddersfield, introduced with foreign wool, but the plants in that 
locality scarcely deserve to be mentioned any more than those from 
the distillery refuse of Wandsworth and Mitcham. 


PHLEUM MICHELII au. : 

Said to have been found on the summit of the highest mountains — 

in Forfarshire by G. Don, but by no one else. Mr. H. C. Watson 

suggests that possibly the long-awned form of Alopecurus alpinus, 

to which I have given the name Watsoni, may have been mistaken 
for it. 


PHLEUM ASPERUM. Jac. 


; from Somerset, Gloucester (believed to be an escape from. 
: the Duchess of Portland’s garden at Badminton), Oxford, Cam- 
ae —— ed with P, Béhmeri), nasi Bedford (an error), 


ies casi bs, bie. betes eidlesied ah Cobbone, Kent: by 


Villiam Maclvor_ aes sie but oe se mies cs : S 


200 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


PHLEUM TENUE. Schrad. 


A weed in a bed of onions at Thirsk, Jaevsagens found by Mr. J. G. 
Baker. 


PSAMMA BALTICA. Bom. & Schulies. 


Ross Links, north-east of Belford, Northumberland. Mr. William 
Richardson in “ Journ. Bot.” Jan. 1872, p. 21. I have not seen any 
specimen, but the name is suthentiontad by Dr. Trimen, who, how- 
ever, judiciously says, ‘Further examination of the station will, 
however, be desirable before we publish a figure and full description 
of A(nmophila) Baltica as a British plant.” 


STIPA PENNATA. Linn. 


Said to have been found in Ken (Caen) Wood, Hampstead, London 
(an impossible station); Rumbold’s Moor, Yorkshire, by Samuel 
Gibson (an unreliable authority). Long Sleadale, about six miles north 
of Kendal, Westmoreland, Dr. Richardson and Mr. Lawson (from a 
garden?). Mr. J. Tatham says ina letter to Mr. H. C. Watson, that 

he has wild specimens gathered in Westmoreland by the late J. Gough, 
of Kendal, “ Comp. Cyb. Brit.” p. 593. So very conspicuous a grass 
-eould scarcely be overlooked by modern botanists, so that no doubt 
there has been some error or imposition in saying it occurred wild in 


AVE NA SUBSPICATA. Lik. 
“In Alpibus Angliz.” Andersson, Gram. Scand. p. 69. Unknown 
_as a British plant by the botanists of this country. 


AVENA PLANICULMIS. Schrad. 
ee "Reported f Forfar through mistake of name—A. pratensis 
var. alpina, being g 80 called | Smith; Glen Sannox, on the ascent of 

- Goatfell frot 7 e Isle 0 f Arran, Mr. Stewart Murray; 
it Dr. "Balfour and and | ep sh rehed for it ae vain, : 


GRAMINA. 201 
ERAGROSTIS POHOIDES. Pal. de Beaw. 
In a new made road at Birkenhead, Chester, Mr. F. M. Webb. 


POA DISSITIFLORA. Bom. § Schulies. 


The Rev. W. W. Newbould identifies a Poa from Ben Lawers 
contained in Smith’s Herbarium with P. dissitiflora, Rim. § Schultes, 
on the authority of authentic specimens from Greenland, collected by 
Hornemann, contained in the Kew Herbarium. From a misapprehen- 
sion on my part, I believed that Mr. Newbould had identified the 
plant figured in English Botany by Smith as Poa glauca with P. dis- 
sitiflora, but in a subsequent letter Mr. Newbould explains that this is 
not the fact, so that the name “ dissitiflora” on Pl. MDCCLXVI. 
will be found in the Errata to this volume corrected into “ eu-glauca.” 
Being unable at present to visit the Kew Herbarium, I can offer no 
opinion on the subject, though, from what Mr. Newbould writes, 
P. dissitiflora must be either the plant I have called P. Balfourii, 6. 
ambigua, or P. nemoralis, 3. glaucantha. Romer & Schultes’ descrip- 
tion is insufficient to decide the point. 


POA SUDETICA. Hanke. 

“Kew Grounds, Dr. Hooker, and Warwick, Mr. Kirk.” Comp. 
“‘Cyb. Brit.” p. 594. Ihave gathered it also in Battersea Fields in 
1853, on mud dredged from the Thames; and, in the same = 
the grounds of Chelsea Hospital. 


BROMUS TECTORUM. Lin. oe 
In waste places near towns and on ballast; but scarcely established, _ 
except at Gloucester Docks. Professor Thiselton-Dyer tells me he 
has met with it on St. Vincent’s Rocks, Bristol. The secund panicle 
ani horizontal spikelets at once distinguish it from B. Madritensis. © 


BROMUS UNIOLOIDES. Wild. 


Round a partly drained pond in Warwick Old Park, and in a 
: potatoe-field at Woodcourt, Warwickshire, Mr. H. Bromwich ; also 
ina = at Newton in Cleveland, Tes 1854, Mr. W. ‘Muda. 


BROMUS PATULUS. Mert. § Koch. oe 
Tn waste cle near towns and on ballast; apparently established ae 
r Docks. In 1853 it was plentiful on the mud taken _ 
nes and. d laid on Battersea F Fields. Prof. Thiselt milton ae 
: ae . fe 


202 ENGLISH BOTANY. 


: tells me he has noticed it at Cirencester and on St. Vincent’s Rocks. 
It is said also to have occurred in Yorkshire. 


BROMUS SQUARROSUS. Linn. 


Said to have occurred at Glastonbury, Somerset; and recorded at 

“ Marshfield,” (Maresfield?) Sussex, by Hudson. I have myself seen 
it on the mud from Battersea Fields in 1853, and in the compendium 
of the “ Cybele Britannica,” Gloucester and Scotland (?) are mentioned 
in its distribution. 


TRITICUM CRISTATUM. Scihreb. 


Said by George Don to have been found by himself on steep banks 
and rocks atwots Arbroath and Montrose, and in the “ Cybele 
Britanica,” Mr. H. C. Watson states that in a letter from Sir W. C. 
Trevelyan, dated August 19, 1839, he remarks that T. cristatum was 
then “abundant in Lunan Bay, near Arbroath ;” but in 1848, Mr. 
Gardner asserted in his “‘ Flora of Forfarshire ” that * Don ues has 
found it.” “ Cyb. Brit.” Vol. III. p. 237. 


ELYMUS GENICULATUS. Curtis. 

Said to have been found in salt marshes near Gravesend by Mr. 
Dickson. No doubt there is a well-known garden plant, whose native 
country is unknown, which was figured by Curtis as his E. geniculatus, 
but I have little doubt that Dickson saw nothing at Gravesend but 
the leaves of Triticum pungens, and distributed the garden plant 
under the belief that it was the same as he had seen growing wild, 
_ as he did with several other species. In the compendium of the 
_ “Cybele” Mr. Watson says, ‘near Greenwich or Gravesend, Kent,” 
= and Smith mention Gravesend ony : 


LOLIUM MULTIFLORUM. Lom. 
sub-species of L. perenne, or perhaps a cultivated annual variety 


LEPTURUS INCURVATUS. Trin 

This plant, distinct as a sub-species (or possibly een only as a 
variety) from L. filiformis, has been found on. ballast heaps at St. 
_ David’s, Fife, but not recently I believe. ee 


Several other grasses, as Elusine Indica, Gartn., Chloris compressa, 
“ Nees, Lappago racemosa, Willd, Crypsis aculeata, Ait., and /Egilops 
orate, Lien have eccured among wool or distillery refuse, or on 
that from ial detailed notice. 


Page 2 after line 29 insert Oryza clandestina, 4. Braun; Garcke, Fl. v. Nord-und Mitt.- 


ed, vi. p. 440. . 
» 25 line 1 after geniculatus add Linn. 
» 28 ,, 39 for Linn. read Smith 
2 38 ” 26 h 
» 43 ,, 29 ,, Spica venti. »» Spica venti, | 


wo ae oa » lesser. 
» 63 after line 12 insert Weingiirtneria canescens, Bernh, Garcke, Fl. v. Nord-und Mitt.- 
Deutsch. ed. vi. — 


» 64 after line 16 insert Deschampsia eespitosa, Pal. de Beauv. Gren. § Godr. Fl. de Fr. 
Vol. III. p. 507. Parl. Fl. Ital. Vol. I. p. 241. Kunth, Enum. Plant. Vol. I. p. 286. 
roagod agers eh a aa 


isbn ot A Sates. 


» Fries, Fries ; 
Ce "Tf fe tas bal a lees Hook. § drm. Brit. FL ed. vil p48. 
oo 97 line 18 for Townsend. read Townsend, 


ae 8 ., 1, 
oubtfu ive in os 


. 


INDEX TO LATIN NAMES. 


[Species in CAPITALS, Sub-species and Excluded Species in small letters, and Synonyms in talics,] 


t’/GILOPS 
—— [ovata, L.] (excluded) ...essssssseesnees 


AT'RA 


toe reeneneesenenes. 


— ceri! 
— saapiilea, Benth abies de Bian 


sa, oO eaecescececeen slit 
— geet oo -mdeexxix. 
caryophylle a, 
cone i CLEYCPEYLLER, EAR. dias sneewicn 
mdecxxxiv. 


FADD cocesuoes acseente SMISERINE- 


mdecxxxii 


—— flexuo'sa, Auch. .............--Mdcexxxii. 
oa fees stheiane a 
— flezudsa, var. B, Hook. Sil. .mdcexxxiii. 

‘ta, a ee i. 


__ MA’JOR eo ueces: 
Linn, ; 


—— PRE’COX. Linn............-mdccxxxy. 
‘pie iran ——. Line rence eR: 


AIROUH'LOA 


: ert, ik neo eal ; 


ATEOP'SIS- 


a 


| AGROPY'RUM | 


| —— stolonifvera, Fries. ... 


PLATE 


—— acu'tum, Reich.....0..0+ceec0000.Mdccexi. 
—— acu'tum, R. _ an parece ee 


sinseesnccuese SMODERE. 
— pycnan'thum, G. & G. 
ee re'pens, ¥. de Bee iosenceceeecss OCR, 


AGROS'TIS 


decxx. 
Bab......mdecxx. 


pumila, L US Oop meer | 
nygipaa ste SETA‘CEA, ( Cet eeneeereere: ; 
—— Spica-ven'ti, Dit sesescssseeeeestn cov. 
are 


ae 
cdeaducece. TRCEEEE, © 


visstse cues B85 


SERUSER 


: PLATR PAGE 
ALOPECU’RUS 
—— pani'ceus, Lam.... mdeexiii. 40° 
—— PRATEN’SIS, Linn.............mdeciii, 27 
ce praten'sis-genicula'tus, Wichura wu... 26 
—— pro'nus, Mitten 26 
ANEMAGROS'TIS 
omen interruy 4 i mdeexvi 44 
— Spica-ven' ti, Trin mdeexy. 43 
APEH'RA 
—— inierrup/ia, P.de B.............mdeexvi. 43 
—— Spica-ven'ti, P. de B.............mdeexy. 43 
AMMOPH'ILA 
— —o Link. m i. G1 
—— arundina'cea, Host. mdecexxii 51 


a —— odora’tum, Dum. .......0..0000¢ i 1 


oo oo sosvese.mdexevi. 


ARRHENATH'ERUM ~ 
—— avena'ceum, FP. do Beer nesedcni, 
- bulbo! swm, Presl.... 

—— ela'tius, M. & K......... 


mongering 


: ce ao — ‘cla'teus, Pronk. Seca lea, 


SSSSSRSSE 


yeacaw 


Sez 


ER even bes i 
RRR precoz, P. B. wen ie 
— reariaein Linn... 


—— pratensis, Sm..............-MdCCxxxyviii. 
—— PUBES'CENS, Linn. ...... ii. 
—— STRIGO'SA, Schred.............mdeexl. 
—— [subspica’ta, Link.] (excluded)......... 


AVENEL/LA 
—— flexuo'sa, Parl.............e000eeMACCExxil. 


BALDIN'GERA 


—— arundina'cea, Dum.............mdexevii. 
—— colora’ta, FI. Wett. .........-..mdexcvii. 


BRACHYPODIUM 

poneace grac’ile, P. de B. 

— lolia’ceum, Fr. mdeexcii 

— lolia'ceum, R. & §. 
— PINNA’TUM, P. de ue 

—— SYLVATICUM, R.& 


BRACONNOT'IA 
des, GOdr. .......00000¢.Macceix. 


SS —— 


—— Linn.. 


BROMUS 
— ARVEN'SIS, Linn. ............mdecevi. 
—— arven'sis, Sm.......se00eeee0se0+--MACCevi. 
—— as'per, Benek. 
BES. oe ccscovstevcss MROCEXOVL 


— 
oisaaaiida: am’ bigens, Tord. 


/ — commmta'tas, Beli asia * 
hii ‘dy C pie Sean | 


torn eareee 


mi 
The S eee eeeee. — le 


67 


INDEX TO LATIN NAMES. 


PLATE PAGE 


BROMUS 
— praten'sis, Ehrh.........+..+-....mdcccii. 


— racemo'sus, B. commuta’tus ‘ wedlecdi, 
—— rigidus, Koch. as mae 


— ae PR Sone . Idecci. 165 
secali’nus, Schrad.........++.......mdece, 165 
—— seroti’nus, Benek................mdecexev. 157 
[squarro’sus, L.] ( WE) Sesvecinesae 202 


———_ sylvatiicus, SM......ccecccevens py 173 
— [Teete'enm, L} (exelu = eee 201 
— IPM RANI cobs ceaseecuds m 156 
— [unioloi’des, Willd. ] (eielndedy 3 201 
—— veluti'nus, Schrad. ...............mdecci. 166 


BUCE’TUM 
— éela'tius, Parn. ...mdeelxxxix. mdecxe. 
if, 


— abeceevelece Un iii 

mdeexciv. 
— lolia'ceum, Parn. ........+0+....mdeexcii. 
— praten'se, Parn...........++.0..-mdeexci. 152 


CALAMAGROS'TIS 


ETOS, Ro bis ciesvcvss IRUOREIAN. 

—— LANCEOLA'TA, PR. oth....-.-mdcexxiv. 
— Lappon'ica, Hook. ........... 

—_— STRIC'TA, Nutz. os ae 

mdeexxvi. 

— stricta, Hook. ee 

CATABRO'SA -— 

é a tat’ ice P. — 
CATAPOD'IUM CS 


- CHAMAGRO'STIS 


— MINTIIA, Bork. mdstessis, os 


 GHILOCHEOA — : 
: —— proeonnay B. G0 Beevers, 


| —— CANES’ 


—— GLOMERA’TA, Linn. ...mdcelxxviii. i 
stricta, -ndelxxxvil. 4 


| ECHINOCH' LOA 


PAGE 


CORYNE’PHORUS 
CENS, P. de B......mdecxxix. 62 


CRYP’SIS 
—— [aculea’ta, Ait] (excluded) .......... 203 


CYN’ODON 
— DAC'TYLON, Pers...............mdexe. 8 


CYNOSU’RUS 


mdeex. 36 
eseee-Mdecelxxvi. 133 


ceruleus, Linn. 
— __ CRISTA'TUS, inn. 
—— ECHINA'TUS, Linn. ......mdeclxxvii. 134 


DAC’TYLIS 
— cynosuroi'des, Linn. (er parte) wo...  - 
mdelxxxvii. 


ta, Soland.........+ one 


mens ITA 
— bens, D.C. mdecxly. 87 
— reser P. de B. mdecxl. 77 


| DESCHAMP’SIA 


— alpina, R. &S. ......c0es 


oo ARUNDINACEA, Trin. waatexevi., a - 


—— CRUS-GALLL, P, de Beri, : s 


% pare oy 
J wwereseeeeee 


ENGLISH 


PLATE 


—— ceru'leum, nom aad apecemmcnten 
—— cerulewm, Gand...............mdecxl 


ERAGROSTIS 
— [Pomoides, P. de B.] (excluded) ...... 


FESTU’CA 
aaa ambigua, Le Gall. ............mdeclxxx. 
-arena'ri a, Osbeck........:...mdcclxxxvi. 
cea, Auct.. 


he mdeexe. 
—— arundina'cea. Schreb.  .........mdeexe. 
ose een ae, Crep. ce eras 
Si. ...s<cc- cies, Mee Eee. «24S 
a, Hook, & 


—— bromoi'des, var. 8, Hook. & Arn. ...... 
: - i 
—— ceru'lea, D.C, .....2.0..00....--mdecxlvil. 


—— calama' ria, Sm. . -mdecelxxxvii. 
mdeelxxxvili 
..mdeexlvi. 


eee eres 


“— cristata, POM. eovveeneeeeeee 


——— ened ae sacvee sneer 
— -ELATIOR, aaa? -mdcelxxxix. 
a : mdecxe. 
iain eke srevseeesenseseestndeexci. 
. mdeeliii. 
es tee nee 

..mdeexciii. mdeexciv. 155 


Joa, 
— oe ide leek 
, Linn. sereeeee see tndeckexx. 


XXXIV. 
oe Sibth. ra 
ee Ca —* Arn. . wntnmosunras 


PLATS PAGE 


FESTU’CA 
—— Pseudo-myu'ros, Soy-Will. .........00. 


—— Pseudo-myu'ros, var. Lloyd .........-+. 


—_— RU’ BRA, TARR iocridc cep cs AROCCOEREY. 
mdeclxxxvi. 

bra, Sm. mdeclxxxvi, 147 

—— rubra, var. arena'ria, Hook. & Arn. 


———— 


Dnf. sononmndeclnse 


___ SYLVATICA, Vill. ......mdeclxxxvii. 
Ixxxvili. 148 
peli — a 144 
seis 's’ sica. mdeecliy. 102 
—_— ao ra, eee 156 


—— UNIGLUMIS, Sol. .........mdeclxxix. 


GASTRID/IUM 
—— austra'le, P. de B. md 
— LINDIG/ERUM, Goud.........mdecxi 


ceKxi.g 
e 
* 


-GLYCHRIA 


eee ee mene veeseetndecl. 

pone — agvarica, Sm. ede 

fy: BAD...n<-.-sseincoserose TBGOELNL. 

ee — confer, Fr, ee 105 

Hook. fil. ...mdcelv. mdcelvi. 

eocihess ciunen svn buencs TERETE: 
d 


— FLUITANS R. Br. mdeclii. mdeeliii. 
deelii. 


INDEX TO LATIN NAMES. 


PLATE PAGE 


HOLCUS 


—— MOUTAS, Limn.....ccc-cc0ce decxlin. 83 
—— LANA'TUS, Linn. deovesaeves MGCEXLV, 
mdexey. 16 


— es Odora’ tus. Tinn 


PRA SE, Huds. EEO 
—— secali'num, Schreb. 
— SYLVATICUM, Huds. aa 192 


HYDROCH LOA 
—— aquat'ica, Hartm.............---..mdecli. 100 


KNAP'PIA 
—— agrostid’ea, Sm.......-...000-Mdclxxxix. 7 


KOELERTA 

— albes'cens, D.C 89 
arena'ria, Dum. 89 

—— CRISTA'TA, Poers..........-..mdcexlvi. 88 

—— crista'ta, Bor. .0...0...0.s.5-.-mdeexlvi. 88 

— gracilis, Bor. mdecexlyi 85 


Sc emeeteae 


LAGU’RUS 


—— OVATUS, Linn. mdeecxii. 39 


LAPPA’GO 


—— [racomo'sa, Willd.] (excluded) ......... 203° 


+ ee eeee 


. B. flifor'nis, Babe cscs 
SORES 


oe Fg 


| (exeluded)......... 203 | 


PLATS PAGE 
LOUTUM 
— oomeronndcoy Lam.) (excluded) ...... 202 
-mdecexiv. 185 
ene Reich. ............mdecexvil. 187 
TEMULEN’TUM, i 


omar pee . iv. 


Z...s00+-.mdccexvi. 
mdecexvii. 187 
Ss ea Sm. ......+2+5-mdeceexvil. 187 


qicauiessieetanesbeneeie Loe 


—— 


MELICA 
—— cerwlea, Linn, .......00..0...mdecxiviil. 90 
cl pails Wadi oes smdecxlviii. 92 
—— NU’TANS, Linn. ............mdeexlviil. 92 
— UNIFLO'RA, Z Til ele. 93 


MIB'ORA 


—— min'ima, Desy. mdelxxxix. 7 
—— ver'na, P. de Boccssssessonese m@clxxxix. 7 
MILV/TUM 

—— EFFU'SUM, Linn. .........mdeexxviii. 60 
—— lendig/erum, Linn. mdeexi. 37 
MOLIN TA 

—— arundina'cea, Schrank. 

tis! sima, 


ssdudsesiceeserses OU 
—_— BAI. sin ices vecseceucocccceee: | Oe 
—— CHERU'LEA, Ménck.........mdeexlvii. 90 
—— caerulea, Dam.....<.--.<000..- MACcxlViis 
ce dipaupera'ta, LR | Rep teneerereees er” 

—— littora'lis, Host. 


sénopisiiebiersrenn: OU 


/_ NABDU: So 


eoreemmmecas ee e 
“OPHIVRUS— 


“ORYZA 


al andesti’na, A Br 


189 | : 


eee se eee 1. 
ARIEN’SIS, Linn. ae. 
7A Fe ate iS it 
—— [paradoxa, L.] gues seplbiere sce 
— phleoi'des, Linn. .........+0....Mdceviii. 
PHAL'ONA 
— echina'ta. Dum....-..........mdcelxxvil. 
PHLE’UM 
—— ALPI'NUM, Linn 


mean 


mdeev. 


(A'RIUM, Linn. ........ mdecix. 
COS ak ae orig ] lecoiaded ) etn 
eeviii. 


Sete ee 


1 mdecviii 
in (excluded) .......0+.0. 
{Sees B 
oearerne , 5 Ké. etd ceseceesencrEROCCViiL, 
inten plone: Sew cscs tales 
See sreseeeeeeeemdcevi. 
— — Pres Tord reenter 
— — ferent (excluded) ecole 
—— COMMOU'NIS, Trin..........mdceexxvii. 


Se Sees bese cesses COC UOREL 
—_— eae Linn. 
eae nto Lin neveveereneetiicl, 


mdecl 


eretscesecesl? 


ce’sia, Reich. a sain 


ENGLISH 


PAGE 


200 


68 


——. _memora'lis, var. —-* 


—— nemora'lis, 


en ae 


BOTANY. 


PLATE 
POA 
— fiitans, Scop..........mdeclii. mdecliii, 
—— fuitans, var. a, cer ae Sierra 
—— fiwitans, var. B, Hoo 


—— GLAU'CA, Sm. ...mdeclxy. md 

eon 

—— _ Glatt ca, St. ......02...s00e00eee-eel xvi, 

—. glance, var. @, Sm. ............mdcelxvi. 

mdecelxvii. 

‘ca, var. B, Sm, .........-..mdeelxy, 
KoWleri, D.C. 

—— lazr'a, Auct. Plur.............0.-™ 

‘ax'a, Bab. 


mdcclxiii 


—— LAX’A, Hanke....mdcelxiii. mdcelxiv. 
—— laz'a, var. minor, Hook. fil...mdcelxiv. 


— lar’, var. vivipara, Hook. fil. ......... 


—— lolia'cea, Huds. .. 
—— maritima, Hu 


—— mi'nor, Baber 
—— monta'na 


pees NEMORA‘LIS, Linn, ..... sie 
Lxix, 


. md 
oo Var. shit Loewen 


Hook. fhe. 
eelxvii. 


moan’. 


— ccna eae var. ® 8, Hook, & ec 
— nemordlis, var. €, Hook. & Arn......... 
Jeclayii 


----mdeelxix. 
oa wee 

Sdease 
ae peal Sm. emer age 


+a eeeeeneeeene wlll 


mdee! 


Srareteeeensee 


ae 


ee erecnncnnceecsoer: tree 


——e 


POLYPO'GON 


— _ Lagat ce, R.& Ro aieaty. 


oe LITTORA'LIS, Sm... 
oe MO? Ag mh : 


—— subcompres'sa, : 
—— [Sadet‘ica} (excluded) seneeeneeeeeeneees 
supi'na, 


3 ‘pnbnakbate use kmusecakeuna: 4 


PUCCINEI/LIA 
—— dis‘tans, Parl. ..............-.+..--mdeelv. 
—— marit'ima, Parl.,................-mdecliv. 


ROTTBOEL’LIA 
eae fii ifor'mis, Roth. ...,...--+--mdecexviil. 


Sener oreeeeere 


SCHEDONO'RUS (P. de B.) 

—~ calama'rius, R. & 8, ......mdeclxxxvii. 
XXXVili. 

— ela'tior, R. & 8...mdeclxxxix. mdcexe. 


—— lolia'ceus, R. & S. 
—— praien'sis, R. & S.........000+0.-Maccxci. 


seecacecenenes Li. 


SCHEDONO’RUS (¥r.) 
easton as'per, Fr. . : 
Fr. mdeexeyi. 


erectus, : 
es FEF HEE, BE acs pens nnn icccyesee MOCCECEE, 


SCHLEROCH’LOA 

—~ veri, "coat ageoronageeg ean .-mdeelyi. 
— dis'ta mdeecly. 

<i pint ye. de B] (excluded) misiedenes 


Dath. .cceccss¢sss+s.neciyn, 


SCLEROP'OA 

—— lolidcea, Gren, & Godr, ......mdeclix. 
oe procumbens, Parl........,-.--..mdeelvii 
— ee Ges oeenernere ade 


SERRAFALOUS 

— commuta’tua, Bab, ......00000. 

a horded'ceus, < & G. 
—— Lloydia'nus, G. & G. .....+025.-. 

———. motlis, G. _ Qynnnsneres anon 

RREOSENS mol lis, Pa 


- 


ooere teen meee cesene i 


‘gedinmetcs il. 


een el 


TO LATIN NAMES. 


ae secali’mus, Bab, ........mdame, mdeeei. ‘165 


36 
ot REPENS, 1 onceices mise 


) —— [penna'ta, Z,] (excluded) 


. — tip, Do 


2 —_.. € 


SLEGLIN'GIA ‘ 
——— decum'bens, Bernh.......--......mdecxlv. 


SPARTINA 
—— STRIC'TA, Roth .....-.-0-- 
ALTERNIFLO'RA 


Ja cecccesenecscae 


= 
aed — oe 


—— stricta, var. aliernifio’ra, A. Pa 
iel roe 


STY'PA 


STUR'MIA 


min'ima, Hoppe.......++++++++ md 
ver'na, Pers. 


mdelxxxix 


TRACHYNOTTIA 
—— alterniflo'ra, D.C.........-.-mdclxxxviii. 
se Bp, DO iss icis coins CLARA VES 


TRICHO'DIUM 
ee mum, Scrad......s.es+..-.-M€ccxviil. 
——.. seta’ ceum, RB, & S....9esee00+.e-MACeXVIL. 


TRIO’DIA 
—— DECUM'BENS, P. de B......mdcexlv. 


TRISE'TUM 
—— flavescens, P. de B, fe sa a TO 


nee 
pensebacckon 


sete [erstwtum, See (sie 


at. ee 


—_ 


= JUN’CEUM, L _ deeexiii. 1 


as 


oS laz'um, Fresssentnercresreeeemiecesii 


a _ pun'gens, ochre nrc, 2 


mdeexx. 


—— re'pens, Auct. Pl. 


More. seveseneeseeeecclexx, 140 

s, Dum. ............mdeclxxxii, 142 

Godr. ............mdcclxxix. 138 
Link. é 


~ 


— canedcens, Bernh. .,,.,,mdcerxix. 204 (62) 


. 
=H 
ed 
ane 
eat 


INDEX TO 


Alpine Foxtail-grass 
—— Hai 


r-gTass 
Meadow-grass 


Timothy-grass mdecy. 31 
Ambiguous Fescue-grass ............-mdeclxxx. 
Ann m 


ua, -grass 
Meadow-grass 
Awned Nit-grass mdecxi. 38 


Balfour’s Meadow-grass — 
=~ — Ww 194 

mdecexiii. 197 
aa wal genseectesrdssscteveeccusesdnaceenn. 195 


©-gTass 
@SCUC-QTASS ......++++++00eNACclLExxil 
ee Oat 
Blue Moor-grass 
Bog Hair-grass pais ioe 
Borver's Meadow-grass 


Beard-grass, yee one 4 
” = se ‘ 
, Perennial aeany ae 
¥ : ‘ Sit s 2 iS = 
: —_—— Pristle-lesved veveneeetndcexvii. 
ms ee 


mdeclvi. 
mdecl: 


Dense flowered Silky ee 
Spreading Silky .........mdeexv. 
_ Bent-stemmed, Foxtail-grass_ .........mdeci. 
-Bristle-grass, Green .-mdexciii. 


RM cciccs 


RED Yninn eee ! 
ie 
a cocdbares MMOCEXVIE. 


ENGLISH NAMES. 


PLATE PAGE 

Brome-grass, snap tshrangpe +-Indeexevi. _ 
Barren......-mdceevi 176 

”, Wood oerreeeesIAeceyvi 


35 


a] 
See 


Brown Bent-grass  ............-.0 alee: 47 


Czsious Meadow-grass SURI OE 


6 
Couch-grass, Common ----s-seoe----.mdeeex. a 


— Erect Sea eens fi 181 
.-mdecexiii. 


ses 


wea ceseessseea avecmdeccix. 17 
y’s-tooth-grass sosteversse ste i os : 


mdeexlii 


ingl 
Tall ......md 
Wand 


Ided-leaved Meadow: vane 


sie 
- Bent-st -stemmed “de 
mdceii 


Floating 
Kop, Yorkshire ..........---.-s-se0-+< 
» Bel “grass 


—————— 
| Orange-anthered — 
Slender ......,.....-..mdexeix. 
Tuberous .....-,---+-+e-mMdceii, 


— loa nedestieoun TRACER. 
-mdcexxxviii. 


Oat-grass ...+-+-.+...00 li 
Glaucous + Meadow-grass sesenbedees THOSCLENI, 
mdcciv. 


i mdeexxxi 
Meadow mdcelxii 
| ee en mdeey. 


Annual 


cies 
— Beard -veeoneneemdeenii 
Fee Ris : acd 


S. Wastin 


Brome  ..:..--se0es-+-Indecxcix. 


amex. 


CSO TOR Oe Ree eee 


cet enann nee eeneraee Bere si 


tee e eres 


nnn 


_ —— Green Bristle 


BOTANY. 


PLATE 


UC ....0..--Mdcclxxxvi. 
adow 


Grass, Creeping cmon 


pera Crested eae mdeelxxvi 
nena WP oes cies EI. 
EEE aE Heath mdeexly. 

——Sea Couch — 
——— Dense-flowered Silky B 


Dame teen eeee 


—— Downy Oat ..,,.........--mdecxxxvii. 

—— Dwarf Meadow 

—— Early Hair .....,.,,..s0000+-Mdccxxxv. 
Sand 

—— Erect Sea Couch..............-mdecexi. 


mdclxxxix. 


Sieben: 
—— Glaucous Meadow.........:..mdcelxvi. 
Great Brome 


oath Hate scccseccecsccce 
— Italian Rye 


enlaceies. 


 —— Loose Deis iene 


—— Many-spiked Cord .. svondeleeavi, 
Marsh Bent .........mdecxix. 


-indexev. 
— 


INDEX TO ENGLISH NAMES. 


eCclx, 


ll 


resets Sand Timothy 
Hard 


ee he 's Fescue sit APNE RES 

mdcelxxxiv. 
Paty eg macau eir seca 
Silv: 


iv. 


ein Haske ronal car aearms XCix, 
— — 
TEE Meadow 


wee teesee 


NS Soft Brome 


3 


ited 
a a mdccev. 
Silk . mdacexy, 


—. that -stemmed — aki nes 
‘ii. 


— Sweet-scented EE, 


ec Tuberous POS-C80 6. co ceeesss —. 
Hair Aeexxx. 


PLATE PAGE 
md 


wicca ) Solegibed 6 mdelxxxrii 
— Sep to-gnse Brome ...mdeexcvii. 
——— Upright-perennial Brome...mdeexevi. 
ices WAGER WEHOFE oo caccevess saapecen Ok: 

-—_—. Wavy M c 
—— Wood Couch 
Fesene ............mdeclxxxvii. 
mdeclxxxviil. 


——______ Meadow ...........++--M 3 


. 


Melic. mdecexlix. 
llet... ....cescececers MOCOXEVILL. 
Yellow Oat................+-MOCCxxxvi. 


mdeexevili 


Green ——— ws... -mdexciii 
nr-grase 


mdcexxix. 


: Tawar 4 Alpine sesesseensesneennsmndceeni, 


eee eeeeseeseee nee 


- : ; sdeetiai. 
ae sseneeseeseeeeTGGOEEEY. 
Grey . ‘ 


Heath ree eiestuseteeces 31.. 
Silvery ........::0.--.mdeexxxiv. 
Tufted. mdeexxx. 


oe lee 
— ‘Meadow-prase Cchcoteccesccncs- DOI VEEL: 
Hard-grass, Sea MR LESE OIGSID 


ne Se Se ee An ii 


‘Heath-grass, a mdeexlyv. 
—_— . 2a EN 
vers, 


—————- Wood. 
oe tite Wood inernenE 
-grass, Blue 


Mat- snitrantcenees een ereenreeese MOAT: 


COUS'....+-+eee--Mdcel xvi. 
mdcelviii 
Procumbent.........mdeelyii. 
‘ mdeceli. 
Reflexed ...............mdcely, 
Rough .......+.«..mdeclxxiil. 


Smooth ... mdeelxxi 
—________+—_ Straight-stemmed. ..........- 
deel xiii. 

Wavy mdcelxiv. 

‘ood mdeelxvili 


mdeclxix. 
Melic-grass, Nodding ...............mdecxlviii. 
—————— Purple mdecexlvii 


. mdeex. 
— 


Mose Fone 


215 


PAGE 
198 


as Perennial Beard 


a 


False _mdeexlii. 
——_— Ciabrous vreceneamdleenavii 
mdecexxxix. 

Yellow -mdeexxxvi. 
Orange-anthered lars tail-grass .........mdee. 
Ovate cosa rreerieieereee ance 


eee reer eres ees 


Lg a as i _ 
Loose eee 


i Pa t 
} ee pera : 


. pens ee 7 7 a 2. ve os 67 
SEE eee set oe ' yi. 93° i 
a S . via 


i 
ing sera — 


a 


™ 
--Ryegrass, Common sesvdesevis oes IBACOCEIV, 
——_—— Italian.....................mdecexv. 


se 
. 


mdceexix. 
mdeci 


CCxXv. 

-veaneexsiv 
ere 
sesseseeeee IGceciy. mdecev. 


PLATE PAGE 


+ 2 Ne 
Racemose Brome-grass Sceppeenmancemenetis 


187 


184 
191 
35 


ENGLISH BOTANY. 


Soft-grass, insta 
Spreading Silky Bent-grass .........mdeexv. 
Straight-stemmed eae OW-OTABR -.< ose. clce 


oes 


Xevi. 


Sweet-scented Vernal-grass ...... 


Tall Rin ttn oe -+++- Mdeexciii. mdeexciv. 
——Fescue-grass ......mdeclxxxix. mdcexe. 

| Timothy-grass, Alpine ................-.mdecy. 
Common ...mdeevi. mdcevii. 
leeviii 


San iii: 
Tuberous Fox-tail-grass mdeeii 
i mdecxxx. 


Twin-spiked Cord-grass .........mdclxxxvii. 


Upright-annual Brome-grass ......mdeexcvii. 
———— -perennial Brome-grass ...mdcexeyvi. 


Vernal-grass, Sweet-scented .........mdexevi. 


ee ee eee es 


: Millet-grass be Nas i a FT ny Ss aie 
Ss ll- j Bee FES 


Yellow 0 Oat-grass “seseeeeeesesee eee MOCCEXEVI. 
Yorkshire For : : mdcexliv, 


~ TLLUSTRATIONS, 


* 
se 


E 


Glabrous Pinger-erans. 


humifasa. 


Titania 


FS Dio PRO PHOT ANI ietr MONI. 
es pee a ahs AE Rima eee 
manne . 


ae 


eee’ 


ne 


“a - 
— —> ag. 


R 


ae 


ae 


eT ne ct ee 


MDOXOVIIL 


££ B. 1319. 


eran 


Tgendiianen st tai 
Sa BOA 


FJ 
i 


a i 2 i i 
‘aimee 


ene 
VE ft VE : 
PA as 


we 


; MDCCXXIV. 


XIV. 


MPCCXxX 


crete 


MDCCXXXVI 


MDCCXXXVII. 


MDCCXXX VIII. 


MDCCXXXIX. 


fo 


teri 
Itt. 


iad 


j 


groomer gy 
OF oeclace 


ee . 
we as oe 


ay = 


MDCCXLY. 


MDCCXLVI. 


MDCCXLVIL. 


MDCCXLVIII. 


MDCCXLIX 


ae 


sg MDCCLI. 


MDCCLVI. 


MDCCLVIII, 


MDCCLXII 


ee 


———. 


MDCCLXYV. 


| BP. 


. 
5 


MDCCLXVIL 


EB. B.S. 2918. 


Poa Balfourii. Balfour's Sonslon-prast. 


MDCCLXVITII 


m | 


MDCCLXXLI. 


4 
‘ 


3 
; 


Pk, 


idee beer at rela 


II 


CLXXI 


MDC 


MDCCLXXIV. 


WDCCLXXVI. 


4 | 
% 

| 

Pi 

s 


a 
se 


SECS em eae 


MDCCLXXIX. 


RR lode 


PY Cig 


emcee 


Uae 


te ye tach 


MDCCLXXXITT. 


MDCCLXXXVI. 


eee eo neS NOT se Peepeey Na Sere eee EPEC PAE Fc rate acer meh ae eee BER Ee Pa ee ER RE ORT EMG Lh SP RRC ee em 


MDCCLXXXVIII 


MDCCXC: 


MDCCXCVI. 


i 


a i cee ee ile Se 


seit 


POE ORIN SP aT ae Ce 


MDCCX! 


ilaaile 


4 


* 


ae A 
See 


M 


MDCCCXV. 


MDCCCXVILI. 


ds 
fils, 


Meh 


a aeaepepas — 


Sy 


Sper seal 


MDCCCXXI. 


SS 


Potion. 
Sh