92 COEOLLIFLOE^:. 



or 5 feet high, upright, leafy, terminated by its long flower-spike. 

 Leaves stalked, alternate, ovate-lanceolate, serrate, downy be- 

 neath ; the radical leaves very long. Flower-spike of very nu- 

 merous bell- shaped flowers, of a rich purplish-crimson externally, 

 lighter within, but sprinkled with purple spots. Very abundant. 

 Meadfoot cliffs. Warberry Hill, etc. (E. B. t. 1297.) P. v.- 



. SNAPDEAGON. 



1. A. majus (great Snapdragon.) On old walls and clefts 

 of rocks ; very often but the outcast from gardens. Flowering 

 stems arising from the leafy base of the plant from 1 to 2 feet 

 high. Leaves narrow lance-shaped, entire ; lower ones opposite 

 upper alternate. Flowers large, in a crowded, handsome spike ; 

 corolla not spurred, more than an inch long, purplish-red and 

 yellow; sometimes white. Walls near Torre Abbey. Babbi- 

 combe. Totness Castle. (E. B. t. 129.) P. vn. ix. 



2. A. Orontium (lesser S.) In dry sandy or gravelly fields. 

 Stem erect, about 1 foot high, slender ; leaves narrower than in 

 the last, linear-lanceolate ; flowers in loose spikes, distant, mostly 

 in the axils of the upper leaves ; corolla purple, small, surrounded 

 by the long, linear segments of the calyx. Dartmouth. (E. B. 

 t. 1155.) A, vii.-x. 



IiINARIA. TOADFLAX. 



1. Ii. Cymbalaria (ivy -leaved T.) On rocks, old walls, and 

 shady banks. A trailing plant, with slender stems, rooting at 

 the nodes ; leaves 5-lobed, roundish heart-shaped, stalked, some- 

 times purplish on their under sides ; flowers solitary, on long 

 stalks ; corolla small, pale lilac, with a yellowish palate ; spur 

 short. Very abundant on walls and rocks about Torquay. An- 

 tirrhinum, Linn. (E. B. t. 502.) P. iv.-x. 



2. !. spuria (round-leaved T.) Cornfields and waste places 

 in a sandy soil. Stem trailing ; leaves alternate, ovate, downy ; 

 flowers small, yellow; upper lip purple ; corolla with a bent spur. 

 Fields at Marychurch. (E. B, t. 691.) A. YII.-XI. Antirrhi- 

 num, Linn. 



3. Ii. Elatine (sharp-pointed Fluellin, or I 7 .) In cornfields, 

 etc., very similar to the last, but smaller in every part, and with 

 broadly hastate leaves. Abundant in fields about Torquay. An- 

 tirrhinum, Linn. (E. B. t. 692.) A YII.-XI. 



4. Li. repens (creeping T.) On rocky places near the sea 



