LABIATE. 
erect, glabrous, or pubescent. Radical leaves petiolate ; cauline 
ones nearly sessile. Lower whorls remote ; upper ones spicate, 
6-20-flowered.  Corollas varying from blue to rose-colour and 
white. This was formerly recommended as a vulnerary herb, 
but it is now altogether neglected. 
Creeping or Common Bugle. 
3 foot. 
3 A. oxieNTA Lis (Lin. spec. 785.) plant without stolons as- 
cending, pilosely woolly ; leaves ovate, coarsely and sinuately 
toothed, narrowed at the base: floral ones sessile, broad-ovate, 
deeply lobed or toothed, exceeding the flowers; whorls distant, 
or the upper ones are approximate; tube of corolla twisted, ex- 
serted, naked inside; limb of corolla resupinate. %. H. Na- 
tive of Europe and Asia, in the region of the Mediterranean, on 
dry hills and pastures ; as of Spain, Sicily, Italy, Grecian Islands, 
Syria, Tauria, and Caucasus, &c. Bügula obliqua, Moench, 
métb. p. 382. Bugula orientalis, Mill. dict. no. 5.— Dill. elth. 
t. 58. f. 61. Radical leaves petiolate, large. Calyx deeply 5- 
cleft, with narrow, very pilose segments.  Corollas blue. 
Eastern Bugle. Fl. May, June. Clt. 1732. Pl. 1 to 14 foot. 
4 A. rynAuIDA'LIS (Lin. spec. p. 785.) plant without stolons, 
pilosely hispid or glabrous, erect; cauline leaves approximate, 
scarcely petiolate, obovate: floral leaves broad-ovate, clasping 
the flowers, tetragonally pyramidate, the upper ones often co- 
loured, all quite entire or obscurely sinuated ; upper whorls or 
all spicate ; tube of corolla straight, exserted, annulate inside. 
2t. H. Native of Europe, in shady mountain-places ; and of 
Eastern Caucasus; as of Lapland, Sweden, Pyrenees, Cevennes, 
Provence, Switzerland, Piedmont, Greece, &c. in several parts 
of the North of Scotland. Smith, engl. bot. t. 1270. id. fl. 
dan. 185. Bugula pyramidàlis, Mill. dict. no. 2. Tedcrium 
pyramidàle, Crantz, stirp. austr. Radical leaves 14 to 2 inches 
long, gradually becoming smaller as they ascend the stem. 
Whorls many-flowered. Calyx 5-cleft. Corollas blue or purple. 
Pyramidal Bugle. Fl. May, June. Scotland. PI. 4 foot. 
5 A. ciLIA TA (Bunge, enum. pl. chin. bor. p. 51.) plant with- 
out stolons ; stems erect, elongated, glabrous ; cauline leaves re- 
mote, ovate, coarsely toothed, membranaceous, almost glabrous, 
with ciliated margins: lower floral leaves similar to the cauline 
ones : upper ones ovate, acute, quite entire, coloured a little, ci- 
liated ; whorls spicate, or the lower ones are remote; tube of 
corolla much exserted. %. H. Native of the North of China, 
in humid shady places at the rivulet called Ssi-jui-ssy, Bunge. 
Stems a little branched. Corollas blue. Bracteas purplish. Very 
nearly allied to 4. Genevénsis. 
Ciliated Bugle. Pl. 1i foot. 
6 A. Geneve'nsis (Lin. spec. p. 785.) plant without stolons ; 
stem erect, pilose ; cauline leaves oblong-elliptic or obovate, nar- 
rowed at the base: lower ones petiolate: floral ones ovate or 
cuneated : superior ones scarcely equalling the flowers or shorter, 
all usually coarsely toothed, 
membranaceous, green on both 
surfaces, and beset with scat- 
tered hairs ; upper whorls spi- 
cate: lower ones distant; tube 
of corolla much exserted. YY. 
H. Native of Europe and Asi- 
atic Russia, on grassy moun- 
tains; as of Sweden, France, 
Germany, Italy, Tauria, and 
Caucasus, North of China, &c.; 
North of England, among the 
mountains. A. alpina, Lin. mant. 
p. 80. Smith, engl. bot. t. 477. 
A. foliósa, Tratt. arab. 1. p. 25, 
with a figure. ? A. rugosa, 
Host, fl. austr. 2. p. 120. A. 
Fl. May, July. Britain. Pl. 
CIX. Asvuea. 871 
multiflóra, Bunge, enum. pl. chin. bor. p. 51. A. pyramida- 
lis, Bieb. fl. cauc. 2. p. 32. Lasch. in Linnea. 5. p. 443. and of 
many other authors, but not of Lin. A. alpéstris, Dumort, flo- 
rul. belg. p. 42.? Tetcrum Genevénsis, Crantz, stirp. austr. 
Bügula alpina, All. ped. 1. p. 45. Bügula decümbens, Mill. 
dict. no. 2. Bügula Genevénsis, Mill. dict. no. 4. Bugula 
montàna, Riv. mon. irr. t. 140. f. 2. Plant very variable in sta- 
ture, form of leaves, and hairiness, as sometimes hardly to be 
distinguished from 4. pyramidalis, and sometimes it is also allied 
to A. australis and A. remota. Leaves more or less pilose, with a 
few teeth or lobes ; upper floral ones coloured. Calyx 5-cleft, 
hairy. Corollas varying from blue to rose-colour and white ; 
tube annulate inside. 
Geneva Bugle. Fl. May, July. England. Pl. 3 to 1 foot. 
7 A. REMOTA (Benth. in Wall. pl. rar. asiat. 1. p. 59. lab. p. 
694.) plant without stolons, branched at the base, procumbent ; 
floriferous branches ascending, villous ; leaves oblong-elliptie or 
ovate, narrowed at the base: floral leaves ovate-cuneated, ex- 
ceeding the flowers, all thickish and somewhat coriaceous, vil- 
lous, coarsely few-toothed ; whorls remote or the upper ones are 
approximate ; tube of corolla exserted ; middle segment of lower 
lip scarcely emarginate. %. H. Native of India, in the pro- 
vinces of Oude, Hurdwar, and Kamaon, Wall; Himalaya at 
Nag-kanda, Royle ; Deyra Dhoun, Royle and Jacquemont ; Be~ 
rali and Mirpoor, Jacquemont. This differs from 4. Genevénsis 
in the characters given. Whorls many-flowered. Calyx inflately 
globose after inflorescence. Corollas varying from violaceous or 
blue to rose colour and white, more slender and smaller than in 
A. Genevénsis. 
Remote Bugle. Pl. ascending or procumbent. 
8 A. O'punvpis (Burch. cat. geogr. pl. afr. austr. no. 3700.) 
plant without stolons, erect, pilosely hispid ; leaves obovate, nar- 
rowed at the base: floral leaves ovate, equalling the flowers or 
scarcely exceeding them, all thickish and somewhat coriaceous, 
glabrous or villous, coarsely few-toothed ; lower whorls remote : 
upper ones spicate ; tube of corolla equalling the calyx ; middle 
lobe of lower lip bifid. t. G. Native of the Cape of Good 
Hope, Masson, Burchell. Allied to A. Genevénsis and A. remota, 
but differs from both in the stems being erect and hispid, in the 
floral leaves being broad, and in the flowers being twice the size, 
and in the form of the corolla. Corollas blue; tube annulate 
inside. 
Ophrys-like Bugle. Pl. 1 to $ foot. 
9 A. AusTRA'Lis (R. Br. prod. p. 503.) plant without stolons; 
stems ascending or erect, pubescent, rather villous or glabrous ; 
leaves narrow-oblong, narrowed at the base, quite entire or sin- 
uated, thickish, rather villous: floral leaves similar to the cau- 
line leaves, exceeding the flowers; lower whorls remote: upper 
ones subspicate; tube of corolla exserted; middle segment of 
lower lip emarginately bifid. ^£. F. Native of New Holland, 
in grassy places, at Port Jackson, and in the interior, &c. Very 
like A. Genevénsis, but differs in the leaves being narrower, 
longer, and more entire, especially the floral leaves. Stem, 
leaves, and calyxes pubescent, with short adpressed hairs. Teeth 
of calyx short. Corolla blue; tube annulate inside. 
Southern Bugle. Fl. May, July. Clt. 1822. Pl. 3 foot. 
10 A. Dremr’yica (Benth. lab. p. 695.) plant humble, without 
stolons, ascending ; leaves narrow-oblong, narrowed at the base, 
petiolate, or the superior ones are sessile, quite entire or sinu- 
ately toothed, thickish : floral leaves similar to the cauline ones, 
much longer than the flowers; whorls all remote; tube of co- 
rolla equalling the calyx: middle segment of lower lip shortly 
emarginate. 21. F. Native of Van Diemen's Land, Gunn and 
Lawrence. Plant more humble, more villous, and less erect than 
A. australis. Leaves, especially the floral ones, usually toothed. 
Corollas blue ; ? tube annulate inside. 
Van Diemen’s Land Bugle. PI. } foot. 
