feronica. biandma movogynia. 147 



one to two feet high. Branches opposite, cross-armed, ascending. — 

 Leaves opposite, petiuled, running down on the petioles, oblong, 

 irregularly crenulate, Avaved, rugose, a little downy ; two or three inch- 

 es lono-. — Racemes terminal, long,verticelled. FerfjV^/s six-flowered, 

 six-bracted. — Flozvers small, pale purple. Stamens as in the genus, 

 with the rudiments of two additional sterile filaments between the 

 large ^a\r.— Germ elevated on a large fleshy receptacle.— This plant 

 is slightly aromatic, 



S. S. lanata. R. 



Herbaceous, four-sided, villous. Leaves sessile, ovate-oblong, en* 

 tire, jvoolly. Flowers verticillate. 



Found by Colonel Hardwicke on the most elevated mountain near 

 Adwaanee, on the road from Hurdwar to Sirinagur. It is his S. 

 integrifolia. See Asiatic Researches, vol. 6. /;. 349. 



06s. Salvia rosea of Vahl, is the same as S. coccinea, an Ameri- 

 can plant, which though in a manner naturalized here has no right to 

 a place in this Flora, 



VERONICA. 



Coral four-cleft, the lower segment smaller. Capsules two-celled, 



1. V. undulala. Wall. 



Smooth, erect. Leaves linear-lanceolate, waved, unequally serra- 

 ted. Racemes terminal and axillary, elongated. Peduncles covered 

 with short glandular hairs. 



This little plant was discovered in the Turraye by Mr. W. Jack, 

 anassislant surgeon on the Honourable Company's Bcngil establish- 

 ment, who most obligingly communicated the f >llowing description. 



Ruot creeping. — Stem herbaceous, erect, fistulous, round, smooth, 

 ramous. — Leaves opposite, sessile, stem-clasping with their bn^ad 

 base, linear-lanceolate, acute, gradually narrower towards their apex, 

 with waved, unequally serrated margins, smooih.— Racemes long, ax- 

 illary and itnmwA.—'Feduncles and pedicels hispid with short, glan- 



S 2 



