LABIATE. (MINT FAMILY.) 317 



somewhat spiny, half the length of the purple corolla, diverging in fruit. Wet 

 banks of streams, &c., mostly northward. June -Aug. (Eu.) To this, for 

 the present, we must refer all the following as varieties, diflcrcnt as some of them 

 are : 



Var. aspera. (S. aspera, Miclr.r.} Stem more commonly smooth on the 

 sides, the angles beset with stiff reflexed bristles; leaves hairy or smoothisli, 

 pointed, the lower petioled, the lower floral as long as the flowers ; spike often 

 slender and more interrupted ; calyx-tube rather narrower and the teeth more 

 awl-shaped and spiny. Common in wet grounds. This passes into 



Var. glabra. (S. glabra, Ridtlll, sn/>/)l. cat. Ohio pi. 1836.) More slen- 

 der, smooth and i/labronx 1/iroii</hout, or with few bristly hairs ; leaves oblong- or 

 ovate-lanceolate, taper-pointed, more sharply toothed, mostly rounded or trun- 

 cate at the base, all petioled. W. New York (Sarticell) to Michigan and south- 

 westward. 



Var. COl'data. (S. cordata, Riddell, I. c. S. Nuttallii, Shuttlciv.) Stem 

 beset with spreading or reflexed bristly hairs ; leaves hairy or smoothish, oblong, 

 heart-shaped at the narrowed base, all more or less petioled ; calyx-teeth some- 

 times shorter. Common westward and southward. 



3. S. liyssopifolia, Michx. Smooth and glabrous, or nearly so ; stems- 

 slender (1 hiii'h), the angles sometimes rcflexcd-bristly ; leaves linear-oblong, or 

 narroidy linear, sessile, obscurely toothed towards the apex ; whorls 4 - 6-flowered, 

 rather distant ; corolla (violet-purple) twice or thrice the length of the triangu- 

 lar-awl-shaped spreading calyx-teeth. 1[ Wet sandy places, Massachusetts to 

 Michigan, and southward : rather rare. July. 



BETONICA OFFICIN\LIS, the WOOD BETONY of Europe, of a genus hard- 

 ly distinct from Stacliys, was found by C. J. Sprague in a thickot at Newton, 

 Massachusetts. 



3O. .LEONIIRUS, L. MOTFIERWORT. 



Calyx top-shaped, 5-nerved, with 5 nearly equal teeth which are awl-shaped, 

 and when old rather spiny-pointed and spreading. Upper lip of the corolla 

 oblong and entire, somewhat arched ; the lower spreading, 3-lobed ; its mid- 

 dle lobe larger, broad and inversely heart-shaped, the lateral ones oblong. 

 Stamens 4, ascending under the upper lip : anthers approximate in pairs, the 

 valves naked. Nutlets truncate and sharply 3-angled. Upright herbs, with 

 cut-lobed leaves, and close whorls of flowers in their axils. (Name from Xeoov, 

 a lion, and oupa, tail, i. e. Lion's-tail.) 



1. L.. CARDIACA, L. (COMMON MOTHERWORT.) Tall; leaves long-peti- 

 oled ; the lower rounded, palmately lobed ; the floral wedge-shaped at the base, 

 3-cleft, the lobes lanceolate ; upper lip of the pale purple corolla bearded. 1|. 

 Waste places, around dwellings, &c. July- Sept. (Nat. from Eu.) 



2. It. MARRUBIASTRUM, L. Tall, with elongated branches; stem-leaves 

 oblong-ovate, coarsely toothed ; corolla (whitish) shorter than the calyx-teeth; 

 the tube naked within ; lower lip rather erect. (2) Koad-sides, Pennsylvania: 

 rare. (Adv. from Eu.} 



27* 



