132 FLORA OF MOUNT DESERT. 



LINARIA, Juss. Toad Flax. 



L. Canadensis (L.), Dumont. Wild Toad Flax. 



Frequent in dry soil. An exceedingly depauperate form in 

 gravelly hollows among rocks, especially on the mountains. 

 Browns Mt. ; Flying Mt., etc. (Rand); — shore, Northeast Har- 

 bor (B. E. J. Gresham); — Baker Island (Redfield). 



L. VULGARIS, Mill. Butter-and-Eggs. 



Roadsides; infrequent. Southwest Harbor; Town Hill; 

 Great Cranberry Isle (Rand) ; — Baker Island (Redfield). 



CHELONE, L. Snake-head. Turtle-head. 



C. glabra, L. 



Wet places, along brooks and rills; frequent. 



ILYSANTHES, Raf. 

 I, riparia, Raf. /. gratioloides (L.), Benth. False Pimpernel. 



Rare. Muddy border of Somes Stream (R. & R.); — shore 

 of little mill-pond, Somesville (Rand). 



VERONICA, L. Speedwell. 



V. scutellata, L. Marsh Speedwell. 



Boggy ground; infrequent. Northeast Harbor (William H. 

 Dunbar); — Ripples Pond; High Head meadow; bog near Sea 

 Wall (Rand) ; — '' Mt. Desert " (F. M. Day). 



V. officinalis, L. Common Speedwell. 



Dry ground; rare and local. Roadsides and fields, Salis^-ury 

 Cove (Faxon, R. & R.); — "Norway Drive," south of Salisbury 

 Cove (Rand, Mary Minot). Apparently confined to the neigh- 

 borhood of Salisbury Cove, and appearing both introduced and 

 indigenous. 



V. serpyllifolia, L. Thyme-leaved Speedwell. 



Fields, clearings, and roadsides; common. Apparently both 

 introduced and indigenous. 



