Sei/meria. SCROPHULARIACE.E. 289 



V. Bi'xnAUMii, Tcnorc. More pubescent: leaves mainly roundish, crenate-dentate, shorter 

 than the filiform pedicels : corolla larger, nearly half inch in diameter, blue : sepals 

 divaricate in fruit, ovate-lanceolate : capsule broadly obcoi-date-triangular, with a widely 

 open emargination, ripening several or rather numerous seeds. — Waste grounds, rare in 

 Atlantic States. (Nat. from Eu.) 

 V. HEDEK.CFOLi.v, L. Hairy: leaves roimdish, often subcordate (half inch long), somewhat 

 3-5-lobed, commonly shorter than the pedicels : sepals triangular-subcordate, acute, at 

 length erect: corolla small: capsule turgid, 2-lobed, 4-ovuled, 2-4-seeded. — Moist banks, 

 New Jersey, Penn., &c. : rather rare. (Nat. from Eu.) 



V. MarilAxdica, L. Spec. i. 14 (PI. Gronov. Fl. Virg.) is Polypremum procumhcns. 

 V. CarohniAna, Poir, Diet. viii. 520, appears to be Mitreola petiolata. 



V. REMFORMis, Raf. in Med. Rep. & Jour. Bot. i. 228, is not made out : perhaps V. hede- 

 rcvfoJia, but its flowers are not " subsessile," nor are they said to be so in the original char- 

 acter in Med. Repository. 



V. PuRSHii, Don, Syst. iv. 573 ( F. renifonnis, Pursh, Fl. i. 10), collected by Lewis and 

 Clark " on the banks of the Missouri," is not identified, although described in detail ; probably 

 not of this genus. 



26. BtrCHNERA, L. (/. G. Buckner, an early German botanist.) — Erect 

 perennials or biennials (of both worlds), drying blackish, scabrous; with un- 

 divided leaves, the lower opposite, and the upper gradually reduced to subulate 

 bracts of a terminal spike ; the flowers white, bluish or rose-purple, produced in 

 summer. 



B. Americana, L. Rough-hispid : stem strict, 2 feet high : lowest leaves obovate or 

 oblong, obtuse; tlie others from ovate-oblong to linear-lanceolate, coarsely and sparsely 

 dentate, somewhat veiny, sessile : spike short, rather dense, or interrupted : calyx not half 

 the length of the tube of the purple (inch long) corolla : lobes of the latter cuneate-ob- 

 ovate,3^or 4 lines long. — Spec. ii. 300; iMichx.Vl. ii. 18; Benth. in DC. 1. c. 498. —Moist 

 sandy or gravelly ground. Western New York and Wisconsin to Virginia, Arkansas, and 

 Louisiana. 



B. elongata, Swartz. Scabrous, but seldom hispid, slender, a foot or more high, long- 

 naked above : radical leaves obovate ; lower oblong or lanceolate, obscurely or rarely den- 

 tate ; upper linear: spike slender, often few-flowered: tube of purple ("blue or white") 

 corolla not twice the length of the calyx; its rounded lobes not over 2 lines long. — Fl. 

 Ind. Occ. ii. lOGl ; Benth. 1. c. — Pine barrens, S. Carolina to Florida and Texas. ( W. Ind., 

 S. Am.) 



27. SEYMERIA, Pursh. (Henry Sei/mer, an English amateur-naturalist.) 

 — Erect and mostly branching herbs (mainly of Atlantic States and Mexico, one 

 in Madagascar !) ; annuals or some perennials ; with copious and mostly opposite 

 incised or dissected leaves, the uppermost reduced to bracts of the somewhat race- 

 mose or spicate and comparatively small yellow flowers, produced in late summer. 



§ 1. Style filiform and long: stigma simple or slightly capitate : corolla gla- 

 brous within, except a line at the insertion of the stamens : anthers dehiscent 

 from the apex and tardily to near the base : leaves small : stems paniculately 

 much branched. 



* Leavcts filifornily dissocted : corolla very deeply cleft; the lobes obl((iig. 

 S. tenuifolia, Pursh. Clabrous, or the branches puberulent, very slender, 2 to 4 feet 

 high: leaves (half inch long) copiously 1-2-pinnately parted: pedicels filiform: corolla 

 about 3 and capsule 2 lines long : caly.x-lobes setaceous : filaments minutely woolly at 

 base: anther-cells acutisli. — Fl. ii. 737 ; Benth. in DC. Prodr. x. 511. Anoni/mosai.'^sloidcs, 

 Walt. Afzclia cnssioides, Gmel. Syst. 927. Gemrdia A/zelia, Michx. Fl. ii. 20. — Low pine 

 barrens, N. Carolina to Florida and Texas. 



* * Leaves or their divisions linear or broader: corolla-lobes obovate or oval, about the length of 

 the tube and tliroat : pedicels short. 



19 



