381 
2-6-flori. Bractee subulatz, molliter lanatæ, calycem zequan- 
tes. Calyx sessilis, semipollicaris, molliter villosus, post an- 
thesin parum auctus, dentibus lanceolato-linearibus, nunc 
usque ad apicem mollibus villosis, nunc spina glabra terminatis. 
Corolla fere sesquipollicaris, extus pubescens.—Kanaour. 
TT. Lamium amplexicaule, Linn.—Benth. in Wall, L pl 
63.—Choor mountain and Kanaour. 
18. L. petiolatum, (Royle); foliis caulinis longe petiolatis 
floralibus subsessilibus omnibus ovato-lanceolatis acuminatis 
duplicato-serratis basi rotundatis hispidulis, verticillastris mul- 
tifloris, bracteis lineari-subulatis calyce brevioribus, dentibus 
calycinis basi lanceolatis longe subulato-acuminatis molliter 
hispidis, corollae tubo vix exserto tenui labio superiore elon- 
gato integro inferiore abbreviato. — Common in the Himalayan 
range.—Allied to L. album; but the leaves are different in 
shape, the flowers are smaller, and the teeth of the calyx much 
longer, and are thickly clothed with soft hairs. 
79. Stachys sericea, Wall.—Benth. in Wall. 1. c. 1. 64.— 
Mussooree, and common in the Himalayan range. 
80. S. splendens, Wall.—Benth. in Wall. 1. c. 1. 64.- — 
Mussooree; common in the Himalayan range. 3i 
81. Leonurus pubescens, Benth. in Wall. 1. c. 1. 63.—Choor 
mountain and Kanaour. 
82. L. Sibiricus, Linn. — Benth. in Wall. l. c. 1. 68.— 
Deyra Doon. 
83. Marrubium catariefolium, Lam.— Cashmere. 
84. Roylea elegans, Wall. Pl. As. Rar. 1. 57. t. 74.—Syen 
range and Jounsar in the Himalaya. 
85. Eremostachys superba *, (Royle); foliis infimis maximis 
* This plant is certainly of the same genus as Phlomis laciniate, Linn. or Ere- 
mostachys laciniata, Ledeb. Fl. Alt. 413. ; and both may be considered as gene- 
rically distinct from Phlomis as well as from Moluccella, but the E. moluccelloides, 
Ledeb. 1. e. appears to me to be inseparable from AMoluccella levis, which I should 
consider as the type of the latter genus. The character calyx corolla amplior, 
which has been hitherto considered as distinctive of Moluccella, is, like the Sta- 
mina longissima of Trichostema, the Anthere cruciate of Glechoma, the Corolla 
faux inflata of Dracocephalum ; characters which are all equally applicable to nearly 
half the genera of Labiata, and it is impossible to form any natural arrangement of 
