Salvia. LABIATiE. 369 



or rarely subcordate base, coarsely and irregularly serrate, on slender petioles ; upper lan- 

 ceolate or linear-lanceolate, sometimes entire; floral subulate or ovate-lanceolate, mostly 

 caducous : spiciform inflorescence on a long naked peduncle, interrupted, of densely many- 

 flowered clusters, finely and the calyx very densely and softly wiiite-tomentose (often 

 tinged with violet) ; the latter oblong-cylindraceous and in age striate-sulcate, as it were 

 truncate ; the teeth 3, very broad and obtuse, exceedingly sliort : lower lip of the violet- 

 blue corolla with middle division obcordate-two-lobed. — Lab. 274; Braun in Bot. Zeit. 

 ix. 44. S. iricliostijla, Bischoff, Ind. Sem. Heidelb. 1^47. .S". aimibilis, Kunth, Ind. Sem. 

 Berol. 1848. S. cwsia, Scheele in Linn. xxii. 588. — Texas, in rich soil; common. 



S. aziirea, Lam. Glabrous or puberulent: lower leaves lanceolate or oblong, obtuse, 

 denticulate or serrate, tapering into a slight petiole ; upper narrower, often linear, entire ; 

 floral or bracts subulate, somewhat persistent : spiciform inflorescence looser, more inter- 

 rupted, and fewer flowers in the clusters, sometimes thyrsoidal or paniculate-branched : 

 pedicels short: calyx oblong-campanulate, usually minutely puberulent, obscurely bila- 

 biate ; the very broad and obtuse upper hp and the two similar but acutish lobes of the 2- 

 parted lower lip distinct but short : corolla deep blue (sometimes varying .to white) ; lower 

 lip sinuately 3-lobed and emarginatc. — " Diar. Hist. Nat. i. 409," & Diet. vi. 626 ; Pursh, 

 Fl. i. 19 ; Bot. Mag. t. 1728. S. Mexicana, Walt. Car. 65, not L. S. acuminatisslma, Vent. 

 Cels, t. 50. S. angustlfolia, Michx.-Fl. I. 13, not Cav. aS. acuminata, Pers. Syn. i. 24. S. 

 ehtla, Poir, Diet. vi. 625. S. coriifolia, Scheele in Linn. 1. c— S. Carolina to Florida and 

 Texas. Westward varies insensibly into 



Var, grandiflora, Benth. Cinereous-puberulent : denser inflorescence and calyx 

 tonientulose-sericeous. — DC. Prodr. xii. .302. S. Pitcheri, Torr. in Benth. Lab.' & DC. 1. c. 

 S. elomjuta, Torr. in Ann. Lye. N. Y. ii. 231, hot HBK. 5. lomjifolia, Nutt. in Trans. Am. 

 Phil. Soc. n. ser. v. 185. — Mississippi tp. Kansas, Colorado, and Texas. 



S. angustif olia, Cav. Slender, usually glabrous, except usually some scattered spread- 

 ing bristly hairs, especially at the nodes: leaves linear (H to 3 inches long, 1 or 2 lines 

 Avide), entire or obscurely denticulate, acute, somewhat petioled : inflorescence virgate, 

 slender, of distant few-flowered clusters : pedicels very short : calyx narrowly oblong or 

 cylindraceous, with lips half the length of the tube; upper ovate, entire, acute; lower of 2 

 similar but more pointed lobes: lower lip of tlie blue corolla as wide as long; the middle 

 lobe emarginate or undulate. — Ic. iv. 9, t. 317; Benth. I.e.; Bot. Reg. t. 1554; Brit. Fl. 

 Card. n. ser.^ t. 219. S. replans, Jacq. Schoenbr. t. 319. S. vircjata, Ort.— (Mex.) 



Var. glabra. Wholly glabrous, even the hairy ring at the nodes wanting or obsolete. 

 — S. azurea, Torr. Bot. Mex. Bound. 131, in part : that including these three species. — S. W. 

 Texas, Wright, &c. (Mex., Ilartwecj.) 



= = Flowers barely half inch long or shovter, and bilabiate calyx a quarter inch long : corolla- 

 tube hardly at all exserted: st3-le glabrous or nearly so. 



a. Annuals :_ leaves from linear- to oblong-lanceolate, tapering into the slender petiole : inflorescence 

 virgate-spiciform, interrupted, naked, the floral leaves or bracts very small : upper lip of calyx 

 ovate and entire. 



S. lanceolata, VsT'illd. Puberulent or nearly glabrous, branched from the base, 5 to 

 12 inches high : leaves lanceolate or linear-oblong, obtuse, irregularly serrate witii obtuse 

 appressed teeth or nearly entire: the inconspicuous floral ones lanceolate or subulate, 

 somewhat persistent, seldom exceeding the pedicels : calyx minutely hairy on the nerves, 

 deeply bilabiate ; its lower lip 2-cleft, the teeth ovate and mucronatc-acute : corolla small 

 (4 lines long), little exceeding the calyx, its lower lip little prolonged : lower fork of the con- 

 nective narrowly linear, bearing its lateral lobe nearer the insertion. — Enum. 37 ; Jacq. f. 

 Eel. i. t. 13. S. tric/wstemoides, Pursli, Fl. i. 19. — Plains,. Nebraska to Texas, Arizona, and 

 southward. Also E. Florida, Leavenworth. (Mex.) 



S. subincisa, Benth. More pubescent above, a foot or more high : leaves oblong-lan- 

 ceolate, incisely dentate (inch or two long) ; the floral minute, ovate, caducous : calyx gland- 

 ular-pilose, hardly equalling the throat of the (half inch) corolla; the broad lower lip 

 merely 2-toothed : lower fork of the connective bearing its lateral lobe at the middle. — PI. 

 Hartw. 20. — New Mexico and Adjacent Texas, Fcndler, Wriyht, Bigelow. (Mex.) 



b. Perennials, or the Arizonian species uncertain : leaves ovate, serrate, mostly slender-petioled ; 

 those of the iutevnipted spiciform or racemiform inflorescence small and caducous. 



S. serotina, L. A span to 2 feet high, much branched, pubescent: leaves ovate and 

 with truncate or subcordate base, obtuse, crenate-serrate (9 to 20 lines long) ; floral minute : 



24 



