88 XCIII. LABIATE. | Seutellaria, 
smaller and narrower, almost passing into bracts. Pedicels axillary, 
turned both to one side, 2 to 3 lines long. Calyx hirsute, scarcely as 
long as the pedicel. Corolla pale blue, about 5 lines long, the tube 
hortly exserted, the lower lip considerably longer than the upper one. 
—B in DC. Prod. xii. 428. 
N. S. Wales. Port Jackson to the Blue Mountains, R. Brown, A. and R. Cun- 
ngham, and others. 
Victoria. Nangatta mountains, 7". Mueller. 
nv 
long. b 
lower z rather longer than the upper one.—Benth. in DC. Prod. xii. 
: m. i. 983. 
N. S. Wales. Port Jackson, R. Brown; Mudgee, Woolls; Liverpool plains, 
A. Cunningham; New England, C. Stuart. 
n Yarra river, Darebin Creek, Bacchus marsh, &c., F. Mueller and 
others. 
Tasmania. Port Dalrymple, 2. Brown; very common in rich soil in the northern 
rts of the island, J. D. Hooker. Some of Story’s specimens remarkably luxuriant 
and nearly 1 ft. high. 
S. Australia. Kangaroo island, ZZ. Brown, Sealy. 
. The species is nearly allied to the European and Asiatic S. minor and to the N, Ame- 
rican S. parvula. 
13. ANISOMELES, R. Br. 
Calyx 5-nerved, 5-toothed. Corolla-tube about as long as the calyx, — 
the upper lip erect, entire, short and somewhat concave; lower lip 
2-celled, all the cells parallel and transverse. Nuts smooth.—Coarse | 
rbs. Flowers in false-whorls either dense or developed into opposite . 
cymes, all axillary or forming terminal racemes. E 
The genus consists of very few but very variable species, common in tropical Asi — 
scarcely extending into E. Africa. The Australian forms, whether regarded as one -i 
