70 LABIATiE. Prunella. 



p. 137. P. Pennsylvanica, Willd. hort. Berol. p. 9. <. 9 ; Pursh, I. c. ; Bart. fl. Am. sept, 

 t. 60. 



Perennial. Stem erect, ascending or decumbent, often branching at the base, 8-12 inches 

 high ; the upper jiart pubescent. Leaves dull green, variable in breadth ; the nerves and 

 petioles a little hairy. Spikes ovate or oblong-cylindrical, thick, terminal. Bracts mostly 

 reniform, with a short abrupt point, ciliate, often purplish. Calyx large, closed in fruit ; the 

 upper lip broad, with 3 short points : teeth of the lower lip lanceolate, pointed. Corolla violet, 

 sometimes pale : middle lobe of the lower lip finely toothed. Anthers appro.ximated by pairs 

 beneath the upper lip. 



Woods, road-sides, etc. ; very common. July - September. A variable plant, and divided 

 into many species by some European botanists. It seems to be an introduced plant in the 

 United States, but it has been found in nearly all parts of the world. 



H.SCUTELLARIA. Linn. ; Benth. Lab. p. ^\9. SCULLOAP. 



[ From the Latin, scutclla, a little disk or cup ; from the appearance of the calyx.] 



Calyx campanulate, 2-lipped ; the lips entire ; upper one with a galeate appendage on the 

 back, deciduous. Corolla 2-lipped ; the tube elongated : upper lip vaulted ; lower one 

 dilated, convex. Stamens 4, ascending. — Herbs, with the flowers in terminal or axillary 

 spikes or racemes, sometimes axillary and solitary. 



* I'Vmtvrs terminal, racemose. 



1. Scutellaria pilosa, Michx. (Plate LXXVIL) Hairy ScuUcap. 



Stem erect, mostly simple, hairy-pubescent ; leaves rhombic-ovate, crenate-serrate, petiolate, 

 lowest ones truncate or cordate at the base ; raceme terminal, loose, somewhat branched ; 

 bracts elliptical-ovate ; calyx hairy. — Michx. fl. 2. p. 11 ; Pursh, fl. 2. p. 413 ; Ell. sk. 2. 

 p. 91 ; Beck, hot. p. 282 ; Darlingt. fl. Cest. p. 352 ; Benlh. Lab. p. 434. S. ovalifolia, 

 Torr. compcnd. p. 237, not of Pers. ? 



Perennial. Stem 12-18 inches liigh, acutely 4-angled. Leaves 3-4 distant pairs, 

 1-2 inches long and an inch or more wide, abruptly tapering into a petiole at the base, naked 

 in the axils ; the lowest pair smaller and broader in proportion, usually more or less cordate 

 at the base, sprinkled with apprcssed hairs above ; the under surface (particularly on the 

 veins) slightly pubescent and marked with impressed dots. Flowers in a loose somewhat 

 paniculate terminal raceme. Pedicels 1-2 lines long. Corolla 6-8 lines long, pubescent, 

 purplish blue above ; the tube pale or nearly white. 



Open woods and thickets, in the southern part of the State, and on Long Island and Staten 

 Island. June - July. 



