DIDYNAMIA— ANGIOSPERMIA. Scrophularia. 139 



S. Scorodonia. Linn. Sp. PL 864. Willd. v. 3.271. Fl. Br. 664. 

 Engl. Bot. v.3\. t. 2209. Dicks. H. Sicc.fasc. 15.9. 



S. Scordii folio. Grisl. Lusit. 7o. 



S. Scorodoniae foliis. Moris, v. 2. 482. sect. 5. t.35. Pluk. Al- 

 r)iag. 338. Plujt. t. .59./. 5. Raii Syn.*2S3. 



Sage Figvvort. Pctiv. H. Brit. i. 35./ 1 1 . 



On the banks of rivulets in the south, very rare. 



Between the port and St. Hilary, Jersey. SherarcL About St. Ives, 

 Cornwall, plentifully, near the seashore. Mr. E. Lhwijd; and 

 Huds. 



Perennial. July, August. 



Stems about a yard high, leafy, branched, bluntly quadrangular, 

 clothed with minute, soft, spreading hairs. Leaves downy in 

 like manner underneath, stalked, heart-shaped and 3-ribbed at 

 the base, veiny, doubly serrated ; the serratures and points of 

 those which accompany the flowers most acute. FL on axillary, 

 forked, downy stalks, composing a long leafy cluster. Tube of 

 the corolla pale ; lower lip (turned uppermost) dull purple, the 

 interior lobe greenish. Caps, ovate, smooth. Calyx downy. 



Grisley speaks of this plant as '' an efficacious remedy for ulcers /' 

 probably such as are scrofulous. 



4. S. vernalis. Yellow Figvvort. 



Leaves heart-shaped, doubly serrated, downy. Flower- 

 stalks axillary, solitary, forked, leafy. Corolla without 

 an interior lobe. 



5. vernalis. Li;m. % P/.864. HVld. v. 3. 274. FLBr.664. Engl 

 Bot. V. 8. t. 567. Hook. Scot. ]S9. Lond.t.70. FLDan.t.4\\. 



S. n.327. HaU.Uist.v. \. 141. 



S. flore luteo. Bauh. Prodr. 1 1 2. / Ger. Em. 7 1 7. / Riv. Monop. 

 lrr.t.\07.f.2. 



S. montana maxima latifolia, flore luteo. Barrel. Ic. t. 273. 



Lamium Pannonicum aliud. Clus. Pann.. 59-1./ 595. Hist. v. 2. 

 38./ 



In thickets, and under hedges, but rare. 



Near Bury St. Edmund's. Sir T. G. Cullum, Bart. In Surrey. 

 Huds. About Ncwburgh, Yorkshire. Rev. Archdeacon Peirson. 

 In a lane about two miles south of Stifkey, Norfolk, on the 

 right hand side. Dr. Hooker. It is also said to grow in Berk- 

 shire, Kssex, and several i)arts of Wales ; yet neither Dillenius 

 nor Ray takes notice of this species. 



Biennial. April, May. 



Root tuberous, scaly. Herb downy, of a light pleasant green. 

 Stem hollow, about 2 feet high, with I or 5 slightly winged an- 

 gles. Leaves in the latter case 3 together ; otherwise oj)posite ; 

 the uppermost alternate ; all stalked, broadly heart-shaped, 

 acute, sharply and doubly serrated, veiny. 7-7. light yellow, on 



