Veronica. DIANDRIA :MONOG'YNIÀ. a4 
/ * 
one to two feet high. Branches opposite, cross-armed, ascending.— 
Leaves opposite, petioled, running down on the petioles, oblong, 
irregularly crenulate, waved, rugose, a little downy ; two or threeinch- 
es long.— Racemes terminal, long, verticelled. Verticils six-flowered, 
six-bracted.— Flowers small, pale purple. Stamens as in the genus, 
with the rudiments of two additional sterile filaments between the 
large pair.—Germ elevated on a large fleshy receptacle.—This plant | 
is slightly aromatic. 
3. S. lanata. R. wee 
Herbaceous, four-sided, Seife Leaves sessile, oratesoblong, en- 
tire woolly. Flowers verticillate. 
Found by Colonel Hardwicke on the most clavate doiak: near 
Adwaanee, on the road from Hurdwar to Sirinagur. -It is his S. 
integrifolia. See Asiatic Researches. vol. 6. p. 349. 
Obs. Salvia rosea of Vahl, is the same as S. coccinea, an Ameri- 
can plant, which though in a manner naturalized here has no o right to 
a place in this Flora. | 
i VERONICA. - 
aol four-cleft, the lower segment smaller. Capsules two-celled. 
iy. diis. Wail. — ond 
- Smooth, erect. Leaves linear-lanceolate, waved, unequally serra- 
ted. Racemes terminal and axillary, elongated. Dod "covered — 
with short glandular hairs. s ; 
This little plant was discovered in the Tutraye by Mr, W. Jacky. ; 
assistant surgeon on the Honourable Company's Bengal establish- 
ment; who most obligingly communicated the following description. 
Root creeping. —Stem herbaceous, erect, fistulous, round, smooth, 
ramous.— Leaves opposite, sessile, stem-clasping with their broad: 
base, linear-lanceolate, acute, gradually narrower towards omg 
with waved, unequally serrated margins, smooth,— 
illary and terminal. —Peduncles 4* elici; -r th s ort, 
T" N 
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