DIDYNAMIA— GYMNOSPERMIA. Mentha. 83 



On the banks of the Medway, Kent. Rand. Between Rochester 

 and Chatham. Miller. 



Perennial. September? 



Herb haiiv all over, exhaling, when rubbed, the sweet scent of 

 Frankincense Thyme. Stem erect, 2 feet high, apparently un- 

 branched, leafy, all its hairs closely reflexed, various in length. 

 Leaves on rather short stalks, spreading, 1 to 2 inches long, 

 ovate-lanceolate, narrower than in the foregoing, sharply and 

 unequally serrated, acute, as well as entire, at each end. Whorls 

 dense, sessile, many-flowered, axillary, accompanying every 

 pair of leaves, and concealing the /oo<s<a/A:s. Bracteas linear- 

 lanceolate, or awl-shaped. Flower-stalks thickly covered with 

 hairs of various lengths, spreading horizontally, or now and then 

 slightly recurved. Cal. tubular, clothed in every part, but most 

 densely at the base, with ascending hairs. Cor. hairy at the 

 outside, as well as in the throat ; its colour, according to Buddie, 

 nearly red. Stam. shorter than the corolla. Style much longer. 



Very closely related to the last species. How far it is distinct can 

 be determined by the discovery, and sufficient examination, of 

 fresh specimens only. 



8. M. rubra. Tall Red Mint. 



Flowers whorled. Leaves ovate. Stem upright, zigzag. 



Flower-stalks, and lower part of the calyx, very smooth ; 



teeth hairy. 

 M. rubra. Sm. Tr. of Linn. Soc.v. 5. 205. Fl. Br. G20. Engl. Bot. 



V. 20. t. 1413. Hull ] 73. Hook. Scot. 180 ? 

 M. sativa. Sole Menth. 47. t. 2\ ; calyx very erroneous. 

 M. verticillata. Raii Syn. 232 ; but not of Rivinus. 

 M. crispa. Besl. Hort. Eyst. (Bst. ord. 7. t. o.f. 1. 

 M. rotundiore folio glabro, pulegii flore. Moris, v. 3. Z&d.sect. 1 1 . 



i. 7.f. 2. Herb. Bobart. 

 M. crispa verticillata, folio rotundiore. Raii Syn. ed. 2. 124. Herb. 



Buddie, and Herb. Sherard. Bauh. Hist. v. 3. p. 2. 215./. 

 M. prima. Dod. Pempt. 95./. 

 M. sativa rubra. Ger. Em. 680./. 

 M. cruciata. Lob. Ic. 507./ 

 Menta. Brunf. Herb. v. 2. 76./ 

 About wet hedges and thickets, and the reedy banks of rivers or 



ditches. 

 By the river Lea near the ferry house. Herb. Sherard. Peckham 



fields. Dillenius. In North Wales, and Shropshire. Mr. Sole. 



By the road side between Edmonton and Enfield^ also near 



Walthamstow. Mr. E. Forster. Under a wet hedge in the road 



from Watton to Saham church, Norfolk. 

 Perennial. September. 

 The whole herb is usually almost smooth, though in dry situations 



liable to become minutely hairy, when the hairs on the stem aie 



g2 



