SCROPHULARIACE^. (FIGWORT FAMILY.) 285 



of the corolla. Pod many-seeded. Rank herbs, with mostly opposite leaves, 

 and small greenish-purple or lurid flowers in loose cymes, forming a terminal 

 narrow panicle. (So called because a reputed remedy for scrofula.} 



1. S. asil6st, L. Smooth (3 -4 high); stem 4-sided; leaves ovate, 

 oblong, or the upper lanceolate, cut-serrate, rounded or heart-shaped at the base. 

 1J. (8. Marilandica, L., and S. lanceolata, Pursh.) Damp copses and banks. 

 July. (Eu.) 



5. COL,J,I]% T IA, Nutt. COLLINSIA. 



Calyx deeply 5-cleft. Corolla declined, with the tube saccate or bulging at 

 the base on the upper side, deeply 2-lipped ; the upper lip 2-cleft, its lobes partly 

 folded backwards ; the lower 3-cleft, its middle lobe keeled and sac-like, enclos- 

 ing the 4 declined stamens and style. Fifth stamen a slender rudiment. Pod 

 many-seeded. Slender branching annuals, with opposite leaves, and handsome 

 party-colored flowers in umbel-like clusters, appearing whorled in the axils of 

 the upper leaves. (Dedicated to the late Zaccheus Collins, of Philadelphia, an 

 accurate botanist.) 



1. C. verna, Nutt. Slender (6' -20' high) ; leaves ovate; the lower peti- 

 olcd ; the upper ovate- lanceolate, clasping by the heart-shaped base, toothed ; 

 whorls about ^-flowered ; flowers long-pe duncled ; corolla (bine and white) twice tlte 

 length of the calyx. Rich shady places, W. New York to Wisconsin and Ken- 

 tucky. May, June. 



2. C. parviilora, Dougl. Small ; lower leaves ovate or rounded, peti- 

 oled; the upper oblong-lanceolate, mostly entire; whorls 2 - G-flowercd ; Jloivers 

 sho rt-prd uncled ; the small (blue) corolla scarcely exceeding the calyx. South 

 shore of Lake Superior (Pitcher) ; thence westward. 



C. ufcoLOR, Benth., a showy Californian species, has become common in 

 cultivation. 



6. C II EL. ONE, Tourn. TURTLE-HEAD. SNAKE-HEAD. 



Calyx of 5 distinct imbricated sepals. Corolla inflated-tubular, with the 

 mouth a little open ; the upper lip broad and arched, keeled in the middle, 

 notched at the apex ; the lower woolly-bearded in the throat, 3-lobed at the apex, 

 the middle lobe smallest. Stamens 4, with woolly filaments and very woolly 

 heart-shaped anthers ; and a fifth sterile filament smaller than the others. Seeds 

 many, wing-margined. Smooth perennials, with upright branching stems, op- 

 posite serrate leaves, and large white or purple flowers, which arc nearly sessile 

 in spikes or clusters, and closely imbricated with round-ovate concave bracts 

 and bractlets. (Name from ^eXoiwj, a tortoise, the corolla resembling in shape 

 the head of a reptile.) 



1. C. glfsbra, L. Leaves very short-petioled, lanceolate or lance-oblong, 

 pointed, variable in width, &c. : the flowers white, rose-color, or purple. Also 

 C. obliqua, L., &c. Wet places ; common. July - Sept. Called also SHELL- 

 FLOWER, BALMONY, &c. 



