Page:Transactions of the Linnean Society of London, Volume 12.djvu/271

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of the Genus Tofieldia.
241
2. T. alpina, racemo cylindracco, bracteis pedunculo subæqualibus, caule glabro diphyllo, petalis obovatis, germinibus oblongis.

T. palustris. Decand. Fr. v. iii. 193. Redout. Liliac. t. 256.

Anthericum n. 1205. Hall. Hist. v. ii. 98; excluding the synonyms of Mœring and Gorter.

A. Pseudoasphodelus. Jacq. Enum. 59, 233.

Narthecium iridifolium. Villars Dauph. v. ii. 225.

N. calyculatum. Allion. Pedem. v. ii. l65. Lamarck Franc. v. iii. 298.

Scheuchzeria Pseudo-asphodelus. Scop. Carn. v. i. 263.

Phalangium alpinum palustre, iridis folio. Tourn. Inst. 368. Segu. Veron. v. ii. 6l. t. 14. Scheuchz. It. v. i. 139.

Pseudo-asphodelus alpinus. Bauh. Pin. 29.

Pseudo-asph. pumilus, foliis iridis. Clus. Pan. 261. t. 262.

Pseudo-asph. secundus. Clus. Hist. v. i. 198.

Pseudo-asph. quibusdam. Bauh. Hist. v. ii. 634; the description, not the figure, which represents a Pancratium.

Asphodelus Lancastriæ verus. Ger. Em. 96.

Very common in moist grassy pastures on the alps of Europe, throughout Austria, Switzerland, the south of France, and north of Italy, flowering in August. Scheuchzer says it grows on the shady dry ridges of hills, and he therefore wonders at Tournefort's epithet of palustris. I have gathered this plant in the boggy margins of alpine rivulets, on the plain of mount Cenis. Seguier, Villars, and Allioni speak of it as an inhabitant of rich, moist, or spongy soils, among grass. Notwithstanding what is said in Gerarde's Herbal, there is no authority for its ever having been found in Britain.

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