AnacjalUs. ' PRIMULACE.E. 63 



ovate-oblong (2 lines long) : ovules 10 to 18. — L. Spec. i. 147 (not of Syst. Veg., where it is 

 confounded with L. ciliuta, L.) ; Lam. 111. t. 101, f. 2. L. lutta, &c., Pink. Anialth. t. 48, 

 t.'.i. L. punctata, Wnlt. L. Itirsuta, Michx. — Sandy or gravelly soil, New Brunswick and 

 Canada to AVisconsin and Georgia. 

 L. asperulaefolia, Poir. A foot or more high, mostly glabrous : leaves in whorls of 3 

 or 4, or some opposite, ovate-lanceolate from a broad closely sessile base, 3-5-ribbed, glau- 

 cous beneath, an inch or so in length ; the upper reduced to bracts of a small leafy-bractcd 

 raceme : pedicels not longer tlian the flowers : divisions of the corolla lanceolate, 3 or 4 

 lines long. — Diet. Suppl. iii. 477 (wrongly said to come from Eg3'pt) ; Duby in DC. I.e. 

 L. Ilerbcmoiiti, Ell. Sk. i. 2.32; Chai^m. 1. c. — Pine woods, N. Carolina to Georgia. 

 L. stricta, Ait. A foot or two high, glabrous, soon branched, very leafy ; the axils 

 bearing fascicles of small leaves or sometimes torose bulblets : leaves opposite and occa- 

 sionally alternate, lanceolate, acute at both ends, nearly veinlcss ; the upper mostly 

 abruptly reduced to linear or subulate bracts of a long and closely many-flowered virgate 

 raceme : pedicels filiform, longer than the flowers : divisions of the corolla lanceolate or 

 oblong, 3 lines long. — Hort. Kew. ed. 1, i. 199. L. vuhfiris, Walt. Car. 92. L. racemosa, 

 Lam. ; Michx. Fl. i. 128. L. Indbifera, Curt. Bot. Mag. t. 104. Viscnm terrestre, L. Spec, 

 ii. 1023, buLbiferous and flowerless. — Wet ground, Newfoundland to Saskatchewan and 

 Upper Georgia. 



Var. producta, Gray, with a long and loose foliaceous-bracted raceme, gradually 

 passing into ordinary leaves subtending filiform pedicels : flowers rather larger. — L.ruce- 

 niosa, Michx. 1. c. (herb.), in part. — New York and Michigan. 



Var. angustifolia, Chapm. Leaves all narrowly lanceolate and linear, a line or 

 two broad : raceme ratiier few flowered. — L. anf/usti/hlia, Michx. 1. c. L. Looinisii, Torr. in 

 Croom, Cat. PL Newbern, 46. — Low country, N. Carolina to Georgia. 



* * * Flowers (rather large), solitary in the axils of ordinary leaves: corolla not dark-dotted nor 

 streaked: filaments slightly monadelphous at base. 



L. NUMMULARiA, L. (MoNEYWORT.) Glabrous : stems prostrate and creeping: leaves 

 orbicular, short-petioled : sepals cordate-ovate, valvate and reduplicate in the bud, nearly 

 equalling the corolla. Sparingly naturalized, escajied from gardens into moist grounds 

 in N. Atlantic ^tates. (Eu.) 



§ 2. Naumburgia. Corolla with hardly any tube deeply 5- (or even G-7-) 

 parted into linear divisions (light yellow and somewhat pui-plish-dotted), and with 

 a small tooth interposed in each sinus : filaments distinct, slender, equal : leaves 

 opposite, those at the base of the stem reduced to scales. — Naiimburfjld, Mocnch. 

 lliijrsanthus, Schrank. 



L. thyrsiflora, L. Glabrous or becoming so : stem a foot or two high from a slender 

 rootstock, naked below: leaves lanceolate, sessile : peduncles only from 2 or 3 pairs of 

 lower axils, much shorter than the leaf, bearing several or numerous small flowers in a 

 dense head or oblong spike: capsule glandular-dotted, few-seeded. — Engl. Bot. t. 176; 

 Fl. Dan. t. 517. L. cnpitata, Pursh, Fl. i. 135. — Wet bogs, Pennsylvania to Canada and 

 northwai'd, thence west to Oregon and Alaska. (Eu. to Japan.) 



9. G-LAUX, Tourn. Sea-Milkwort. (From ylavMg, sea-green.) — Single 

 species. Flowers dimorphous as to reciprocal length of filaments and style. 



G. maritima, L. A somewhat succulent little herb, glabrous and glaucous or pale, 

 perennial by slender running rootstocks : stems a span or less high, erect or spreading, 

 very leafy : leaves from oval to oblong-linear, a quarter to half inch long, entire, sessile : 

 calyx-lobes oval, purplish or white. — Salt marshes along both sea-coasts, -from New Eng- 

 land and from California northward ; also in the interior west of the Mississippi, in sub- 

 saline soil: fl. sunnner. (Eu., Asia.) 



10. ANAG-ALLiIS, Tourn. Pijipernfl. (Ancient Greek name, prob- 

 ably from dra, again, and ayulloi, to delight in.) — Low herbs, mainly annuals 

 and of the Old World, one indigenous to Chili, one widely naturalized round the 



