COEOLLIFLOE^!. 85 



cliffs. Cockington lanes. Upton. Dry hedge-banks on the side 

 of Paignton road, etc. (E. B. t. 255a) A. m.-v. M. stricta 

 of Link, with sessile clusters, Petit Tor, April 1859. 



6. IKE. versicolor (yellow and Hue S.) In both dry and wet 

 meadows and on banks. Stem from 3 to 12 inches high. Leaves 

 oblong, narrow, pointed, upper ones opposite ; clusters stalked ; 

 flowers small, yellow before fully expanded, afterwards bright 

 blue. Hope's Nose. Meadfoot cliffs. Forde bog, near Newton. 

 (E. B. t. 480.) A. IV.-YI. 



ANCHUSA. ALKANET. 



A. sempervirens (evergreen Alkanet.} In waste grounds, 

 stony places, and among ruins. Stem from 1 to 2 feet high, hairy ; 

 leaves orate, pointed, hairy ; the lower leaves large and on long 

 stalks ; flower-stalks axillary ; flowers bright blue. Berry Pome- 

 roy, near the Castle. Stoke Gabriel, in a hedge by the way to 

 the river. Near Ide churchyard. Dartmouth, side of the walk 

 leading to the Castle. (E. B. t. 45.) P. v.-vn. 



LYCOPSIS. BUOLOSS. 



Ii. arvensis (small Bugloss.} Cornfields and under hedges. 

 Stem from 12 to 18 inches high, upright, more or less branched 

 towards the top, angular and leafy ; leaves lanceolate, with wavy 

 margins, very hairy, sessile ; lower leaves tapering into a footstalk. 

 Flowers in a leafy raceme, small, bright blue. Fields near the 

 Parsonage at Moreton. North Bovey, Fl. Z>. (E. B. t. 938.) 

 A. vi. vn. 



SYMPHYTU1VI. COMFBEY. 



S. officinale (common Comfrey.) In wet places and by the 

 sides of streams. Plant from 18 inches to 4 feet high, rough and 

 hairy, winged in its upper part, branching ; root-leaves on long 

 stalks, rough, ovate ; upper leaves sessile, lanceolate, wavy. Flower- 

 clusters in pairs, drooping ; flowers yellowish-white, sometimes 

 purple. Formerly at Meadfoot, but now extinct. Forde, near 

 Newton. Side of a brook between Kingskerswell and Newton. 

 Exininjster. (E. B. t. 817.) P. v. vi 



