VSRBBNA. XC11. VERBEJKACEJE. 411 



1. P. CANADENSIS. (P. gladiata. Michx.} Lousewort. 



Hirsute; st. simple; Ivs. alternate, petiolate, lance-oblong, pinnatifid. 

 lobes oblong-ovate, crenate-dentate ; spike short, dense, leafy; cal. truncate 

 downwards; cor. galea abruptly incurved, with 2 setaceous teeth; caps, acu 

 minate. Tj. Pastures and low grounds, U. S. ! & Can. Stem erect, a foot high 

 Leaves 3 6' by 1 2', chiefly radical. Spike short, hairy, with a few small 

 leaves at the base. Calyx truncated in an oblique direction downwards. Co- 

 rolla yellowish and purple ; the upper lip long, erect, forming a galea or helme' 

 cut square off at the end, with a bristle-like tooth at each corner. Capsule pro- 

 longed into a lanceolate point ' long. May July. 



/?. gladiata (P. gladiata MX.). Caps, prolongated into an ensiform poini 

 which is I 7 in length. Plant rather taller. 



2. P. LANCEOLATA. Michx. (P. pallida. PA.) Branching LmiseworL 

 Nearly glabrous ; st. branched ; Ivs. subopposite, briefly petiolate or ses- 

 sile, oblong-lanceolate, doubly incised-crenate ; spike rather dense; cal. 2-lobed; 

 cor. galea as long as the lip, incurved at apex, ending in a short, conical beak.- 

 % In alluvial woods, &c. N. Y. ! to Wis. Lapham I S. to Va. Stem 1 2f in 

 height, smooth, with pubescent lines, nearly opposite leaves and a few axilla- 

 ry branches. Leaves 3 5' by 1 1J'. Spikes 1 2' in length, with ovate-lan- 

 ceolate bracts. Calyx and corolla smooth, the latter greenish-yellow, an^ineh 

 in length, with the galea somewhat emarginate at the end. Capsule short, 

 broadly ovoid. Sept. 



29. MELAMPYRUM. 

 Gr. //eXaf, black, irvpos, wheat; the seeds blacken the flour of wheat if ground with it 



Calyx 4-cleft ; upper lip of the corolla compressed, the margii 

 folded back ; lower lip grooved, trifid ; capsule 2-celled, oblique 7 

 opening laterally, cells 2-seeded ; seeds cylindric-oblong, smooth. 

 Herbs with opposite Ivs. Fls. solitary in the upper axils. 



M. PRATENSE. /?. Americanum. Benth. (M. Americanum. MX.) Cow 

 Wheat. Lvs. linear and lanceolate, petiolate, glabrous, the Kpper ones 

 toothed at base; fls. axillary, distinct. Inhabits woods, Can. to Ga., W. to 

 Ky. Stem with opposite branches, 8 10' high, round, erect. Leaves opposite, 

 1 H' by 3 5", the floral ones broader, with setaceous teeth at base and taper- 

 ing to an obtuse point. Flowers in the axils or' the upper leaves, yellowish, 

 slender, the corolla twice the length of the calyx. Capsules acute, declined, 4- 

 seeded. Jl. 



ORDER XCII. VERBENACE^. VERVAINS. 



Trees and shrubs, sometimes herbs. Lvs. generally opposite, simple or compound, exetipulate. 



Fls. in axillary corymbs or dense heads, or alternate-spicate. 



Cal. tubular, 4 5-toothed, inferior, persistent. 



Cor. tubular, the limb bilabiate or irregularly 4 5-cleft, deciduous. 



Sta. 4, didyniimous, seldom equal, occasionally only 2. 



Ova. 2 4-celled : ovules erector pendulous, solitary or twin. Style 1. 



Vr. drupaceous, baccate or dry, dividing into 2 or 4 1-seeded portions. 



Seeds with little or no albumen. 



Genera 56, species 610 ; the herbs chiefly natives of temperate regions and the shrubs and trees of thb 

 tropics, where they are in some instances very large. The teak-wood (Tectona grandis), native of India, 

 justly styled the " Oak of the East," is a timber tree of immense size and great durability, often attaining 

 the height of 100 feet The wood contains silex. The medicinal properties of the tribe are little known 

 unimportant. 



Conspectus of the Genera. 



\ Corolla subequal, funnel-form Verbena. 1 



( in spikes or spiked corymbs. ( Corolla bilabiate, nodding in fruit .... Phri/tnz. 3 

 Flowers (. in small pedunculate, axillary heads. . Lippia. 3 



I. VERBENA. 



Celtic farf am, to remove stone, hence Eng. vervain and Lat. verbena. 



Calyx 5-toothed, with one of the teeth often truncate ; corolla 



funnel-form, limb 5-cleft, nearly equal ; stamens 4 (rarely but 2) ; 



seeds 2 4. enclosed in a thin, evanescent pericarp. Herbs with op 



posite Ivs. Fls. mostly alternately spicate, rarely cayp&iie or corymbed. 



35* ff 



I UNIVERSITY \ 



