PENTANDIIIA— MONOGYNIA. Lithospermum. 955 



L. officinale. Liun. Sp. PL 189. Mllhl. y. 1. 751. Fl. Br. 213. 



Engl. Bot. V. 2. t. 134. Flook. Scot. GS. Schrad. Asperif. 24./. 6. 

 L. n. 59.5. Hall. Hist. v. 1. 2G3. 

 L. seu Milium Soils. Raii Syn. 228. 

 L. minus. Matth. Valgr. v.2.269.f. Camer. Epif. 6j9.f. Ger. 



Em. 609./. 



In dry gravelly or chalky situations, amongst rubbish and ruins. 



Perennial. May. 



Root tapering, strong, whitish. V/iiole herb rough with minute, 

 close, callous bristles. Stem annual, near 2 feet high, branched, 

 round, leafy. Leaves ovate or lanceolate, greyish green, nume- 

 rous, sessile, alternate ; paler and softer beneath. Clusters axil- 

 lary and terminal, leafy, revolute, dense, finally elongated into 

 straight, leafy branches, their leaves often broader than those on 

 the main stem. Cor. of a pale buff-colour, with a protuberance 

 at the base of each segment, Stam. minute, in the middle of 

 the tube. Seeds grey, with a kind of porcelain polish, and a 

 stony hardness, whence they have been falsely reported to con- 

 tain calcareous earth, effervescing with acids, and to cure the 

 stone, I know^ not how. There are seldom more than 2 seeds 

 perfected in each flower. 



2. L. arvense. Corn Gromwell. Bastard Alkanet. 

 Seeds wrinkled. Corolla not much longer than the calyx. 



Leaves obtuse, without lateral ribs. 



L. arvense. Linn. Sp. PI. 190. Willd.v. 1. 751. FL Br. 213. Engl 

 BoL V. 2. t. 123. Hook. Scot. 68. FLDan. t. 456. 



L. sylvestre. Camer. Ep'it. 660./. 



Heliotropium n. 594. HalL Hist. v. 1. 263. 



Buglossum arvense annuum, Lithospermi folio. Raii Syn. 227. 



Echioides flore albo. Riv. Monop. Irr. t. 9. 



Anchusa degener, facie Mil'ii Solis. Ger. Em. 610./. 



In corn-fields and waste ground. 



Annual. May, June. 



Root tapering, with a bright red bark, which communicates its 

 colour to oily substances, as well as to paper, linen, and pale 

 faces. Stem a foot high, generally branched and spreading, often 

 decumbent. Leaves of a brighter green, and rather more hairy, 

 than in the former, without transverse veins or ribs. Spikes ter- 



. minal, leafy, at length much elongated. Cor. white, with swell- 

 ings at the base of the limb. Seeds brown, polished, curiously 

 wrinkled and pitted, usually all perfected. 



Willdenow says he has seen a variety with hXueJlowers. 



3. \j.purpurO'C(Rruleum, Creeping, or Purple, Grom- 



well. 

 Seeds even. Corolla much longer than tlie calyx. Leaves 



