SCROPHULAEIACEffi. (fIGWORT FAMILT.) 93 



8. M. pilosus, Wat. A span to a foot high, much branched, soft, villous and 

 Blightly viscid, many flowered from near the base; leaves lanceolate to narrowly oblong, 

 Bessile, entire; calyx tube not prismatic; corolla yellow, obscurely bilabiate, 3 or 4 lines 

 long, usually a pair of brown-i)uri)lc spots on the lower lobe. 



7. LIMOSELLA, L. Mudwort. 



Calj'X campanulate. Corolla rotate-campanulate, nearly regular. Style short; stigma 

 thickish. — Diminutive annuals, with narrow fleshy leaves in clusters around the 1-flow- 

 ered scapes. Flower small, white or purjjlish. 



1. L. aquatica, L. An inch to a span high, growing in brackish mud or in fresh 

 Water. 



8. VERONICA, L, 



The lower lobe and sometimes the lateral ones of the rotate corolla sometimes smaller 

 than the others. Stamens 2, one oia each side of the upper lobe of the corolla. C'ap- 

 Bules compressed. Flowers small (a line or two broad), in racemes or spikes, or solitary 

 in the axils; blue, purplish, or white. 



1. V. Americana, Schw. Stems a span to two feet long; leaves ovate or oblong, 

 serrate, rather succulent, short-petioled, an inch or two long, opposite. Flowers in axil- 

 lary racemes, bluish, with purple stripes. Common in damp places. 



2. V. peregrina, L, A span or more high, all the upper leaves alternate, linear- 

 oblong; flowers minute, in the axils of the leaves, and mostly narrow bracts; capsule 

 obcordate. 



9. CASTILLEIA, Mutis. Painted-Cup. 



Calyx tubular, more or less cleft in front or behind, or both; the lobes 2 and lateral, or 

 4. Corolla tubulai", laterally comjDressed, csijecially the long upper lip (galea); the lower 

 lip very short or minute, 3-toothed, and somewhat saccate below the short teeth; the 

 tube usually inclosed in tlic calyx. Stamens 4, inclosed in the galea; anthers 2-celled, 

 the long cells unequal, the outer fixed by the middle, the inner ones smaller, pendulous. 

 Style long; the capitate stigma sometimes 2-lobed. Herbs, sometimes woody at the base, 

 with mostly alternate, sessile leaves, the floral ones or their tips, as well as the calyx 

 lobes, commonly petaloid and colored red, yellow, or white. Flowers in terminal, simple, 

 leafy spikes. 



. 1. C. affinis. Hook. & Arn. Annual; a foot or two high; leaves narrowly lanceo- 

 late, entire; the upper floral bracts usually broader, the apex toothed, red; spike with 

 scattered, frec^ucntly pedicellate flowers below; calyx red; an inch long, its front fissure 

 hardly twice as deep as the back one, the narrow lobes acutely 2-cloft; corolla 1 to IJ 

 inches long, exserted so as to expose the callous lip; the galea about equal to the tube, 

 yellowish or tipi)cd with red. 



2. C. latifolia, Hook. & Am. Perennial (as are all the following); branching from 



