188 AMONG THE WILD FLOWERS. 
2-flowered peduncles, pale yellow flowers, and 
scarlet fruit, is native in Sussex; this last is 
called Fly-Honeysuckle. The handsome foreign 
shrubs, Weigela rosea and Leycesteria formosa, 
are of this Order. The ovate-leafed Honey- 
suckle is Lonzcera Japonica. 
Two pretty plants with heads of blue 
flowers, of Nat. Ord. CAMPANULACEA, linger on 
late into the autumn: /aszone montana, Sheep’s- 
bit, or Sheep’s Scabious, corolla light blue, 
leaves at the root in a rosette, stems bare up- 
wards; and Phyteuma, Rampion, two species ; 
P. orbiculare has serrate leaves, cordate at the 
root, lanceolate on the stem; its globose heads 
of blue flowers are met with on chalky downs ; 
the other species, P. sfzcatum, has a spike of 
cream-coloured flowers ; its habitat is said to be 
Sussex. It is interesting to observe the like- 
ness of the individual flowers of these plants to 
those of Campanula. 
Under the Nat. Ord. PLANTAGINACE2, we 
have the 5 species of Plantago, Plantain,—P. 
Coronopus, Buck’s-horn Plantain, has pinnatifid 
or dentate leaves, probably suggesting the 
name ‘“ Buck’s-horn;” this plant is called 
“Star of the Earth,’ from its stellate appear- 
