MIMULITS LUTEUS SlI 



to the country people as "wild musk," is needed here 

 it is well known as a garden plant. The large 

 foxglove-shaped flowers grow singly on their stems 

 among the topmost leaves, and the form of stem, 

 leaf, and flower is a very perfect example of that 



MlMULUS LUTEUS 



kind of formal beauty in plants which is called 

 " decorative." This character is well shown in the above 

 figure, reduced to little more than half the natural 

 size, from a spray plucked at Bransbury, on the Test. 

 But the shape is nothing, and is scarcely seen or 

 noticed twenty-five to fifty yards away, the proper 



