The Salad Burnet.
In similar situations we may find the Lesser Burnet or Salad Burnet (Poterium Sanguisorba) of the same order. This plant is so different in general appearance from the majority of the Rose family that the amateur would hardly associate it with the others. The flowers are small, and collected together in dense, purple cymes on the top of long, angular stalks. They have no petals, and the four overlapping sepals are usually deciduous. The stamens, five to thirty in number, are pendulous on long, slender filaments; and the upper flowers display their crimson stigmas before the lower ones produce their stamens. The stem is erect, from six to eighteen inches in height; and the pinnate leaves have many small, sessile, oblong leaflets with coarsely-serrate edges. This plant flowers during June, July, and August.
The Field Gentian.
The Bedstraw Family (order Rubiaceæ) is represented on the chalk by the Rough-fruited Corn Bedstraw (Galium tricorne), which is common in fields. It is a spreading plant, with procumbent stems, one to three feet long; and small, long, narrow leaves, rough with recurved prickles, arranged in whorls of from six to eight. The flowers are small and white, grouped in little cymes of three. The fruit is comparatively large, and granulated, but not bristly, and it droops by the bending of the pedicel. The plant flowers from June to October.
The Red Spur Valerian (Centranthus ruber—order Valerianaceæ) is a glaucous, leafy plant (see [Plate VIII]), sometimes growing to a height of two feet or more, often to be seen in chalk-pits and limestone quarries, and frequently on old walls. It is not indigenous, but is cultivated largely as a garden flower, and has now become naturalised. Its corolla, which is sometimes white, has five unequal lobes, a long, flattened tube, and a slender spur. The plant flowers from June to September.
Of the Composite flowers we shall note two species, the first being the Woolly-headed Plume-thistle (Carduus eriophorus), common in chalky fields, where it throws up its large, cottony heads to a height of from three to five feet during July and August. In order to distinguish it from other similar thistles we must note that its stem is not winged, and that the deeply-divided leaves, with bifid lobes, half clasp the stem at the base; also that the involucre bracts are lanceolate, with long, reflexed spines. The heads of this thistle are of a pale purple colour, of a globular form, two to three inches in diameter, and covered with a thick, cottony growth.