78 THE fLORAGOF THE ‘ALPS 
flower-stalk and calyx glandular-pubescent, leaves linear, 
somewhat fleshy, the lower in whorls of 4; fields; South- 
ern Switzerland (very rare), Pyrenees. V. striata, DC. 
(repens, Ait.); perennial, flowers larger, corolla striped 
with violet and yellow, or rarely white, spur sometimes 
wanting, flower-stalk glabrous, stem I-3 ft.; Southern 
Switzerland (very rare), Lombardy, Dauphiny, Pyrenees. 
L. Pelisseriana, Mill.; annual, stem erect, 6-10 in., gla- 
brous, leaves linear, often in whorls, seeds with a fimbriate 
wing; fields in the South. JL. oviganzfolza, DC. (Pl. 91); 
perennial, stem partially decumbent, racemes short, leaves 
oblong or obovate, shortly stalked ; Pyrenees. 
C. Flowers purple or violet, axillary, usually solitary :— 
L. Cymbalaria, L., lvy-leaved Toadflax, Mother of Thou- 
sands; perennial, stem prostrate, leaves 3—7-lobed, glab- 
rous; wallsandrocks. L. mznor, Desf.; annual, flowers on 
long stalks, leaves linear-oblong, alternate; fields, common. 
D. Flowers yellow, solitary, axillary :—L. spurza, Mill., 
a very hairy plant with ovate or orbicular leaves; and 
L. Elatine, Mill., a very hairy plant with hastate leaves, 
are annual weeds in cultivated land. 
‘Several other species occur in cultivated land in the 
Pyrenean lowlands. 
3. ANTIRRHINUM, Tourn. 
Flowers axillary or in racemes; corolla personate, with 
a saccate tube; stamens 4; stigma shortly 2-lobed; cap- 
sule of two unequal cells, dehiscing by pores; leaves 
usually entire and alternate. 
A. majus, L.; Snapdragon, Frog’s-Mouth; flowers 
large, radical leaves lanceolate; walls (naturalised in 
Switzerland). A. latifolium, DC. ; flowers yellow, leaves 

