THE LAPLAND ALPS. 301 



7ieiim, his own plant being entirely new, 

 if not a pentanclrous variety of that llhodo- 

 dendrum, which is much to be suspected. 



The above description, of the fruit espe- 

 cially, is sufficient to show it cannot belong 

 to the same genus with Azalea procumbens, 

 though perhaps it may accord better with 

 the American Azalece.) 



41. Campanula with, a contracted flower. 

 (C. inuflora.) Differs from the common 

 blue kind, {rotundifoUa,) in having the 

 leaves as well as the flower much contracted 

 at the base, so that the latter is funnel- 

 shaped. The embryo is oblong, with six 

 sides, rough, vvith three orifices near the 

 base of the calyx. 



42. Lychnis with a concealed flower. 



