102 COROLLIFLOE^E. 



2. S. minor (lesser S.) In bogs and moist heathy places. 

 Smaller and more slender than the last, from 4 to 6 inches high. 

 Leaves entire ; lower ones broadly ovate and somewhat lobed at 

 the base. Flowers small, on short axillary stalks, rose-colour ; 

 the lower lip white, with pink spots. Forde bog, near Newton. 

 Wet places about Dartmoor. (E. B. t. 524.) P. vn.-x. 



OED. LXIY. VERBENACEJE, 



VERBENA. YEEYAIN. 



V. officinalis (common Vervain.) By roadsides and in dry 

 pastures. Stem erect, from 1 to 2 feet high, rather hairy; leaves 

 opposite, lanceolate but deeply cut, almost pinnatifid, upper ones 

 3-lobed ; stem dividing at the top into 5 or 6 slender flower- 

 spikes ; flowers small and sessile, each accompanied by a small, 

 ovate, pointed bract ; corolla pale purple, tubular, 5-cleft. Fre- 



?uent in dry waste places. Warberry Hill. Babbicombe, etc. 

 E. B. t. 767.) P. YII.-IX. 



OET>. LXV. LENTIBTTLARIACEJE. 

 PINGUICUZiA. BUTTEKWOET. 



1. P. vulg-aris (common Butterwort.) In bogs and moist 

 heaths. Leaves all radical, light green, ovate, covered with small 

 crystalline points, the margins rolled up. Flower-stalks rising 

 naked from the tuft of leaves, each bearing a single bluish-purple 

 flower, with a long spur to the corolla. Forde bog, near Newton. 

 Bovey Heath. (E. B. t. 70.) P. v.-vn. 



2. P. Lusitanica (pale B.) In similar situations to the 

 last. Like the P. vulgaris, but smaller; leaves more delicate, 

 and covered with red veins, margins very much curled up ; flower- 

 stalks slender ; flower pale yellow tinged with lilac, spur short 

 but much curved, lobes of the corolla nearly equal. Forde bog. 

 Haldon. Bogs in Dartmoor, Ivybridge, etc. (E. B. 1. 145.) P. 

 vi.-x. 



UTRICUIiARIA. BLADDEEWOET. 

 XJ. vulgaris (greater Bladderwort.) In ditches and pools* 



