2;>() IK, WOKT FAMILY. 



3. Corolla with lubes imbricated and not plaited in the bud, tidier 2-lipped or more 

 or less irregular, the divisions or lofjes at most 5. Pedant-Its f. out the axil oj 

 leaves or bracts, nojioioer ever really terminating the main stem or branches. 



* Tree, with large and opposite Catalpn-like leaves. 



6. PAULOWNIA. Calyx very downy, deeply 5-clefr. Corolla decurved, with a 

 cylindrical or funnel-form'tube, and an enlarged oblique border of 5 rounded 

 lobes. Stamens 4, included. Pod turgid, thick, filled with very numerous 

 winged seeds. 



* * Herbs, or a few becoming loio shrubs. 

 - With 5 anther-bearing stamens and a wheel-shaped or barely concave corolla. 



6. VERBASCUM. Flowers in a long terminal raceme or spike. Calyx 5-parted. 



Corolla with 5 broad and rounded only slightly unequal divisions. All the 

 filaments or 3 of them woolly. Style expanding and flat at sipex. Pod 

 globular, many-seeded. Leaves alternate. 



-- +- With only 2 or 4 anther- bearing stamens. 



** Corolla wheel-shaped, or at least irith wide tprwiKng border mostly nunh longer 

 than the short tube : jlowers tingle in the. axils of the leaves or collected in a 

 raceme or spike. 



7. CELSIA. Like Verbascum, but with only 4 stamens, those of 2 sorts. 



8. ALONSOA. Calyx 5-parted. Corolla very unequal, turned upside down by 



the twisting of the pedicel, so that the much larger lower lobe appears to be 

 the upper and the two short upper lobes the lower. Stamens 4. Pod many- 

 seeded. Lower leaves opposite or in threes. 



9. VERONICA. Calyx 4-parted, rarely 3 -5-parted. Corolla wheel-shaped, or 



sometimes salver-shaped, with 4 oV rarely 5 rounded lobes, one or two of 

 them usually rather smaller. Stamens 2, with long slender filaments. Pod 

 flat or flatfish, 2 - many-seeded. At least the lower leaves opposite or some- 

 times whorled. 



*-* -M- Corolla s'llcer-shnped, with almost regnl'ir 4 - 5-l<>bed border: floicer$ in a 

 terminal spike. Here one species of AV ( J would be sought. ' 



10. BUCHNERA. Calyx tubular, 5-toothed. Corolla with a slender tube, and 



the border cleft into 5 roundish divisions. Anthers 4 in 2 pairs, one-celled. 

 Style club-shaped at the apex. 1'od many-sseded. Leaves mainly opposite, 

 rough ish. 



4^. 4H- -4. Corolla either obviously 2-lipped, or funnel-form, tubular, or bell-shaped. 

 = Corolla 2-parted nearly to the base, the 2 lips sac-shaped or the lower larger one 

 slipper-shaped: stamens only 2 (or very rarely 3), and no rudiments of more. 



11. CALCEOLARIA. Calyx 4-parted. The two sac-shaped or slipper-shaped 



divisions of the corolla entire or nearly so. Pod many-seeded. Leaves 

 chiefly opposite, and flowers in cymes or clusters. 



= = Corolla almost 'i-pnrted, the middle lobe of the lower lip folded together to form 

 ajlat pocket which encloses the 4 stamens and the style. 



12. COLLINSIA. Calyx deeply 5-cleft. Corolla turned down ; its short tubo 



laterally flattened, strongly bulging on the upper side: upper lip 2-cleft and 

 turned back; the lower one larger and 3-lohed, its middle and laterally 

 flattened pocket-shaped lobe covered above by the two lateral ones. A little 

 rudiment of the fifth stamen present. Pod globular, with few or several seed-. 

 Flowers on pedicels single or mostly clustered in the axils of the upper oppo- 

 site (rarely whorled) letfVd*, which' are gradually reduced to bracts, forming 

 an interrupted raceme. 



== = == Corolla not 2-parted nor salver-shaped, but in/It a tube of some length in 



proportion to (lie, '2-!i/>/>ed or more or less irregular (rarely nearly regular) 



4 - b-lobed border, and 

 a* \Vtth a spur or sac-like projection at the base on the lower fide, and a projecting 



})'ilatt to the, l<i'( r lip, which commonli/ closes the throat or nearly so : stamens 



4, and no obvious rudiment. 



13. LINARIA. Calyx '.-parted. Corolla personate, and with a spur at hae. 



(Lessons, p. liVj. fiir. 211.) Pod many-seeded, opening by a hole" or chink 

 which forms below the summit of each cell. 



14. ANTIRRHINUM. No spur, but a sac or gibbosity at the base of the personate 



corolla (Lessons, p. 102, fig. 210): otherwise like 13. 



