822 
Scentless Anisomeles. Shrub. 
3 A. Heynea‘na (Benth. in Wall. pl. rar. asiat. 1. p. 59. lab. 
p. 702.) glabrous or finely pubescent; leaves remote, oblong- 
lanceolate, narrowed at the base ; cymes of flowers on long pe- 
duncles, secund, few-flowered ; calycine teeth lanceolate, acute. 
5.?S. Native of the Indian Peninsula, Heyne; Island of Sal- 
cette, on the higher mountains, in shady woods, at the temple of 
Kennerg, Jacquemont. Leaves serrately crenated, smaller and 
thinner than the rest, pale green, and usually finely pubescent. 
Heyne’s Anisomeles. Shrub.? 
4 A. SALVLEFOLIA (R. Br. prod. p. 503.? Benth. lab. p. 702.) 
villous; leaves oblong-elliptic or lanceolate; whorls dense, 
many-flowered ; calycine teeth short, broad-lanceolate, acute. 
h.?S. Native of tropical New Holland; Island of Timor. 
Very nearly allied to 4. intermèdia, and A. ovata, var. mollissima, 
but differs in the smaller stature, slenderer branches, smaller ca- 
lyxes, and in the teeth being 4 times shorter than the tube. 
Sage-leaved Anisomeles. Shrub. ? 
5 A. ova‘ra (R. Br. in Ait. hort. kew. ed. 2. vol. 2. p. 364.) 
hairy, rarely almost glabrous; leaves ovate, acuminated or 
roundish or truncately subcordate ; whorls dense, many-flowered ; 
calycine teeth lanceolate, acute. (2. ? S. Native of the hotter 
parts of Asia, in waste and bumid places in most parts. Jacq. 
fil. ecl. 1. t. 86. Hook. bot. misc. 2. p. 358. t. 19. A. disticha, 
Heyne, ex Roth. nov. spec. p. 254. Népeta Amboínica, Lin. 
suppl. p. 273. Ballota dísticha, Lin. mant. 83. Ajuga disticha, 
Roxb. fl. ind. 3. p. 2. Népeta dísticha, Blume, bijdr. p. 823. 
Marrübium I'ndicum, Burm. fl. ind. p. 127. et thes. zeyl. t. 71. 
Monárda Zeylánica, Burm. fl. ind. p. 12.  Ballóta Mauritiàna, 
Pers. ench. 2. p. 126.—Rheed. mal. 10. p. 175. t. 88. Leaves 
obtuse, broadly crenated. Whorls 10-40-flowered, secund, or 
nearly equal ; lower ones distant ; upper ones interruptedly spi- 
cate. Corollas purple; lower lip of a deeper colour. 
Ovate-leaved Anisomeles. Fl. July, Aug. Clt. 1823. 
2 to 3 feet. 
6 A. ca'npicans (Benth. in Wall. pl. rar. asiat. 1. p. 59. lab. 
p. 703.) canescent from pubescence ; leaves ovate-oblong or 
lanceolate, narrowed at the base; whorls many-flowered, rather 
loose ; calycine teeth lanceolate, acute. h.?S. Native of the 
Birman Empire, on the banks of the Irrawaddi, near Yenan- 
ghuen, Wallich.: Habit of A. Malabárica, but the leaves are a 
little broader, pubescent on both surfaces, as well as the stems 
and calyxes. Cymes usually elongated as in 4. Malabárica, 
but the flowers are fewer. Calyx elongated, having the teeth as 
in A. ovàta. 
Whitish Anisomeles. Shrub. ? 
7 A. INTERME'DIA (Wight, mss. ex Benth. lab. p. 703.) 
clothed with tomentose pubescence or subvillous ; leaves ovate- 
lanceolate, cuneated at the base; whorls many-flowered, dense, 
or the cymes are at length ample and elongated ; bracteas subu- 
late; calyx hairy, having the teeth lanceolate at the base, and 
subulate at apex, very soft. h.? S. Native of the Indian 
Peninsula, on the mountains of Madura; and of Ceylon, at Pe- 
radenia. Habit intermediate, between 4. ovdta, and A. Malabá- 
rica, but is more nearly allied to the latter, from which it differs 
in the broader less tomentose leaves, and broader calycine teeth. 
Intermediate Anisomeles. Shrub. 
8 A. Marasa'nrca (R. Br. in. bot. mag. t. 2071.) tomentosely 
villous; leaves oblong-lanceolate, narrowed at the base ; whorls 
many-flowered, dense, or the cymes are ample, and at length 
elongated : floral leaves, bracteas, and subulate calycine teeth, 
very soft. h.S. Native of the hotter parts of Asia, in humid 
places by the sides of rivulets ; as of the Indian Peninsula, Bur- 
man Empire, Mauritius, Penang, Java, Malabar, &e. Hook. 
Journ. bot. 1. p. 225. t. 127. Népeta Malabárica, Lin. mant. 
566. A’juga fruticósa, Roxb. fl, ind. 3. p.l. Stàchys Mala- 
PI 
LABIATÆ. LXXIX. ANISOMELES. 
LXXX. Garrorsis. 
bárica, Sieb. fl. maur. exc.—Rheed, mal. 10. p. 185. t. 93.? 
Branches canescent from short tomentum. Leaves 2-4 inches 
long, obtuse, serrately crenated in the upper part, quite entire at 
the base. Whorls distant, disposed in simple racemes. Corolla 
rose-coloured or purplish : throat of corolla and filaments pilose, 
Odour of Stachys sylvatica. 
Malabar Anisomeles. Fl. July, Aug. 
to à feet. 
Cult. The species are of the most easy culture and propagation. 
A light rich soil answers them well; and cuttings strike root 
readily in the same kind of soil. 
Cit. 1817. Shrub 2 
LXXX. GALEOPPSIS (from yadn, gale, a weasel ; and oye, 
opsis, resemblance; the mouth of the corolla gaping like that of 
an animal) Lin. gen. no. 717. Schreb. gen. no. 972. Juss. 
gen. p. 114. Benth. lab. p. 523. Tetrahit. Dill. gen. 3-4. 
Moench. meth. 
Lin. syst. Didynàmia, Gymnospérmia. Calyx tubularly cam- 
panulate, somewhat 5-nerved, with a nearly equal mouth and 5 
nearly equal teeth, or the superior teeth are the longest, some- 
what spinescent at apex. Corolla with an exserted tube, which 
is naked inside, a dilated throat, and a bilabiate limb ; upper lip 
ovate, entire, arched; lower lip spreading, trifid: the lateral 
lobes ovate, and the middle lobe obcordate or somewhat bifid; 
palate furnished with an elevated tooth above, at the recess of 
the lobes. Stamens 4, ascending, the lower two the longest; 
anthers 2-celled : cells opposite, transversely and bivalvately de- 
hiscent ; inner valve roundish, with ciliated edges: outer one 
*larger and naked. Style about equally bifid at top ; lobes subu- 
late, stigmatiferous at apex.—Annual divaricately branched erect 
herbs, rarely decumbent at the base. Floral leaves almost simi- 
lar to the cauline leaves. Whorls numerous, many -flowered, 
distinct. Flowers red or cream-coloured, or variegated with 
both these colours. This genus is readily distinguished from all 
other labiate genera in the structure of the anthers. 
1 G. ocumorrv'ca (Lam. dict. 2. p. 600.) stem pubescent ; 
leaves oblong or oblong-lanceolate, clothed with soft villi on 
both surfaces; calyx clothed with glandular villi. ©. H. Na- 
tive of Middle Europe ; as of Britain, France, and Germany, in 
sandy corn-fields; in England, as in Cambridgeshire, Notting- 
hamshire, Yorkshire, Lancashire, and about Bangor in Wales, 
Rchb. icon. bot. eur. 1. p. 40. t. 46. G. villdsa, Smith, fl. brit. 
2. p. 629. engl. bot. t. 2353. G. grandiflora, Gmel. syst. p. 905. 
G. prostrata, Vill. dauph. 2. p. 388. G, dubia, Leers herb. no. 
453. Tetràhit longiflórum, Moench, meth. p. 395. G. ségetum, 
Rchb. ex Steud. nom. p. 351. G. Ládanum, majus Krok. fl. 
siles, no. 932. Stems often decumbent at the base. The whole 
plant generally clothed with glandular hairs. Corollas large, 
cream-coloured. : 
Cream-coloured flowered Hemp Nettle. Fl. July, Aug. Bri- 
tain. Pl. 1 foot. 
2 G. La’panvm (Lin. spec. p. 810.) stem glabrous or pubes- 
cent ; leaves oblong-lanceolate, clothed with short tomentose pu- 
bescence on both surfaces ; calyxes clothed with adpressed pe 
bescence and glandless pili. ©. H. Native throughout Europe, 
from Sweden and Scotland to Spain, Italy, South of Russia and 
the Caucasus; a common weed in corn fields, plentiful in Britain, 
Smith, engl. bot. t. 884. G., canéscens, Schultes, obs. p» 108. ? 
G. angustifolia, Ehrh. Tetrahit Ládanum, Meench, meth. 394. 
— Petiv. brit. t. 33. f. 11.—Mor. hist. 3. p. 386. sect. 11. t. 12. 
f. 18. Plant erect. Branches purplish. Leaves remotely ser- 
rate-crenated. Whorls few at the tops of the branches, 6-10- 
flowered. Corolla red, having the tube and throat generally 
spotted with yellow : sometimes not above half again as long 35 
i; calyx, and sometimes 2 or 3 times as long, pubescent out- 
Side. 
