236 FIG WORT FAMILY. 



M. semperflbrens, has lanceolate smooth calyx-divisions, and smaller 

 rose-purple or violet corolla. 



3 LOPHOSPERMUM. Corolla very obscurely 2-lipped, and with 2 bearded lines. 



M. erubescens. Somewhat soft-pubescent, with irregularly toothed leaves, 

 rose-colored flowers 3' long, and ovate-oblong rather leaf-like sepals. 



M. scandens, now less common and not so showy, is less pubescent, and 

 has smaller less-inflated deeper purple corolla, and lance-oblong sepals. 



16. DIGITALIS, FOXGLOVE. (Latin name, from shape of the corolla, 

 likened to the finger of a glove, in the common species.) 



D. purpiirea, PURPLE F., of which varieties with corolla white or pale 

 and more or less strongly spotted corolla are common, 2' long, the lobes rather 

 obscure; leaves rugose, somewhat downy. Cult, from Eu. : fl. summer. 2/ 



17. GERARDIA. (Named for the herbalist, Gerarde.) Handsome, but 

 uncultivable plants : fl. late summer and autumn. The following are tho 

 commonest wild species : mostly of gravelly or sandy soil. 



1. Corolla purple or rose-color, somewhat bell -shaped : calyx-teeth short : anthers 

 all alike, nearly pointless at base : leaves narrow, linear or thread-shaped, 

 entire : loosely branching, nearly all annuals, except the first. 



G. linifblia. Pine-barrens S. ; with erect branches, and erect linear leaves 

 about the length of the peduncles, truncate calyx, and corolla 1' long. 2/ 



G. tenuifblia. N. & S. ; with opposite pedicels equalling the linear 

 spreading leaves, broadly awl-shaped calyx-teeth, and corolla ' -' long. 



G. fllifdlia. S. ; with alternate pedicels twice the length of the rather 

 fleshy thread-shaped or slightly club-shaped leaves ; corolla |' long. 



G. aph^lla. S. ; with short pedicels alternate along one side of the 

 flowering branches, and minute scale-like or awl-shaped appressed leaves, 

 minute calyx- teeth, and corolla ' long. 



G. purpiirea. N. & S. in low ground ; with stout pedicels not longer 

 than the conspicuously 5-lobed calyx, opposite and spreading rather broad 

 linear leaves, and corolla |' - 1' long. 



G. maritima. Salt marshes N. & S., lower than the preceding, and with 

 fleshy blunt leaves, the pedicels as long as the upper ones and as the obtusely 

 5-toothed calyx, and corolla '-$' long. 



2. Corolla purple (or sometimes white] : calyx deeply and unequally 5-cl.eft : 

 anthers pointless, those of the shorter pair much smaller : leaves rather broad. 



G. auriculata. Low grounds, from Perm. S. & W. ; rough-hairy, with 

 nearly simple stem, lanceolate or oblong leaves entire, or the lower with a lobe 

 on each side of the base ; flowers sessile in the upper axils ; corolla 1' long. 



3. Corolla yellow and with a longer tube, the inside woolly, as are the filaments 

 and anthers ; the latter almost projecting, slender-pointed at base : calyx 

 5-cle/l: taller herbs, with leaves or some of them pinnatifid or toothed. 2i 

 * Stems nearly simple : fiowers in a leafy raceme : corolla more tubular. 

 G. flava, DOWNY FALSE FOXGLOVE. Open dry woods: 3 -4 high, 

 minutely soft-downy ; upper leaves lanceolate or oblong and entire, lower sinuate 

 or pinnatifid; pedicels very short ; corolla 1|' long. 



G. quercifolia, SMOOTH F. Rich woods, commoner S. & W. : 3 - 6 

 high, smooth and glaucous ; upper leaves often entire, lower once or twice 

 pinnatifid ; pedicels as long as calyx ; corolla 2' long. 



G. integrifolia. Barrens, from Penn. S. & AV. : l-2 high, smooth, 

 not glaucous ; leaves lanceolate, entire ; corolla 1'long. 



* * Stems bushy-branched : calyx-lobes toothed or pinnatifid: leaves mostly cut. 

 G. grandiflbra. Oak openings from AVisconsin S. : 3 -4 high, minutely 

 downy ; leaves ovate-lanceolate, coarsely cut-toothed, the lower pinnatifid ; ped- 

 icels shorter than the barely toothed calyx-lobes ; corolla 2' long. 



