~ 
ee ae ee ee ae ee SS Se eee ee 
DIDYNAMIA. ANGIOSPERMIA. Scrophularia! 543 
Stem spreading, rod-like. Eeaives spear-shaped. Calyx 
leaves short, with clammy hairs. Nectary blunt, scarcely pro- 
low mas sometimes ket 
. 2. Leaves sitting, bent downwards. Blass. rose co- 
foured 0 or white. 
Greater Snap dragon. Old walls; chalk cliffs near Dover, 
and betweenNorthfleet and Gravesend. [ Walls near Norwich, 
Walsall. Mr. Prrr.—Somersetsh. and Devon. plentiful, and on 
Bey Castle and Church in rich profusion. A 
P. B. June, July.* 
‘SCROPHULARIA. Cal. 5-cleft: bloss. with 5 
divisions; tube globular; the lower segment 
reflected: caps. 2-celled, partition double. 
S. Leaves heart-shaped, doubly serrated: bunch com-Scorodo‘nia, 
pound, with leaves interspersed. 
Hi, ox. v. 35. row 2. f. 2-Pluk. 59. 5—Pet. 35. 11. 
‘Resembles S. xodosa and S. auriculata, but differs from the 
latter in the hairiness of the stem, and the want of appendages 
- _ leaves, Stem very hairy. Leaves with a gaping hollow 
an r serratures inted, ( Mant.) serratures 
Hot ( Syst veg.) ashe with Spits inters tspere, hil sae is oes 
he case th the othe eaves 
upper t an si as a eee ie serratures. Floral. baie 
Peer a pair beneath each division of the fiat eile: 
Mr. Woopw. Blass. dusky e le. 
Balm-leaved Figwort. Watery places, and Poa Island 
of Jersey, between the Port and St. Hi ilary. Sea shore about St. 
Ives, Cornwall. ?. July, Aug. 
S. Leaves oblong-heart-shaped, 3-fibred at the base, nodo’sa. 
corners 0 the stem acute. 
Fl, dan. 1167-Kniph. 2—Ludw. 72-Gunn. ii. 4. 1-Blackw. 
87-Fachs. 194—F. B. iii. 421-Riv. mon. 107. 1, Scro- 
phularia.—Matth. 1130-Ded. 50. 1-Lob. obs. 289. 1, 
and ic. i. 533. 2-Ger. em. 716. 1—Park. 610. 1-H. ox. 
v. 8. row 3. 3—Pet. 35. 0-Ger. 5 79. 2-Trag. 184— 
Mit. de 195..3. 
* Though tie seeds vegetate on the ground, it is only in dry soils and 
Situations that the plant continues to tive long enough to produce flowers. 
