18 THALAMIFLOR.E. 



either blue, purple, pink, or white, the corolla beautifully crested. 

 Daddy-hole Plain, and many places about Torquay and Mary- 

 church. (E. B. t. 76.) P. v.-ix. 



OED. XII. FEANKENIACEJE, 



OED. XIII. ELATINACEJE. 



OED. XIV. CARYOPHYLLACEJE. 

 STJBOED. I. SILENE^E. 

 DIANTHUS. PINK. 



D. Armeria (Deptford Pink.) In pastures and on hedge- 

 banks. Stem from 1 to 2 feet high, erect and branching, downy. 

 Leaves linear and slightly hairy. Flowers clustered, rose-coloured, 

 with white dots. Ilsham. IJpton Lane, near Torquay. Near 

 Newton, on the Ashburton road. (E. B. t. 317.) A. vil. Vlli. 



SAPQNAKZA. SOAPWORT. 



S. officinalis (common S.) By roadsides, in borders of woods 

 and on hedge-banks. Plant from 1 to 3 feet high, stout and 

 leafy. Leaves broadly lanceolate, opposite. Flowers handsome, 

 of a beautiful rose-colour, in a large terminal cluster. Shaldon. 

 Banks of the Teign, at Teignbridge. (E. B. t. 1060.) P. vui. 



SIL3CNE. CATCHFLY. 



1. S. inflata (bladder Campion.) By roadsides, in fields, 

 and on banks. Stem erect, from 2 to 3 feet high. Leaves some- 

 what oval, lanceolate. Flowers numerous, drooping, in a termi- 

 nal panicle, white, the petals deeply cloven ; calyx inflated, nearly 

 globular and very much veined. Warberry Hill. Park Hill 

 wood. Meadfoot; and common in fields and waysides. (E. B. t. 

 164.) P. vi.-vm. 



maritima (sea Campion or CatcJifly.) Rocky banks 



