98 COEOLLIFLOE2E. 



GALEOPSIS. HEMP-NETTLE. 



1. G. Ladanuin (red Hemp-Nettle!) In dry, waste places. 

 Stem about 1 foot high, with opposite branches, covered with 

 soft hairs, not swollen at the joints. Leaves on short stalks, 

 lanceolate, slightly serrate, hairy on both sides. Flowers bluish- 

 pink, with a mixture of crimson and white ; calyx hairy, 5-cleft. 

 Fields, etc., about Torquay and Marychurch. (E. B. t. 884.) 

 A. vn.-ix. 



2. G. Tetrahit (common ff.) In cornfields, woods, and cul- 

 tivated grouuds. Stem from 1 to 2 feet high, beset with sharp 

 hairs, swollen below the joints. Leaves of an oblong, pointed, 

 oval form, serrate, hairy. Flowers in whorls ; corolla varies in 

 colour from purple to white ; calyx-teeth long and pointed. 

 Yery common. (E. B. t. 207.) A. vn.-ix. 



GALEOBDOLON. WEASEL-SNOUT. 



G. luteum (yellow W. y or Archangel.) In woods and damp 

 shady situations. Stem erect, not branched, about 1 foot high; 

 leaves bright green, ovate, pointed, sharply but unevenly serrate. 

 Flowers in whorls, large and showy, yellow, with the under lip 

 spotted with reddish-orange ; upper lip of the corolla undivided 

 and arching over ; calyx-segments pointed and tipped with 

 bristles. Ansti's Cove. Bradley Woods, hi great abundance. 

 (E. B. t. 787.) P. V. VI. [Placed by Bentham among the 

 Lamiums, under the name of Lamium Galeobdolon.~\ 



LAMITJM. DEAD-NETTLE. 



1. la. album (white Dead-Nettle.} Under hedges, in borders 

 of fields and waste places. Stem from 12 to 18 inches high ; 

 leaves in pairs, stalked, heart-shaped, pointed, coarsely toothed; 

 flowers in close axillary whorls, pure white ; upper lip undivided, 

 arched; calyx-teeth long, sharp, and spreading. Chelston. 

 Cockington lanes, etc., frequent. (E. B. t. 768.) P. iv.-ix. 



2. IB. purpureum (red D.) Under hedges, in fields and 

 waste places. Stem from 4 to 8 or 9 inches high, with a few 

 roundish stalked leaves at the base, then rising naked, but 

 thickly covered at the top with broadly heart-shaped, unevenly 

 toothed leaves on short stalks. Flowers purplish-red ; floral 

 leaves with a purplish tinge. Very abundant. (E. B. t. 769.) 

 A. iv. x. I have found this plant in flower during the whole 

 year, in sheltered spots about Torquay. 



