103 
ORDER 80. GOODENOVIZE. Don's. syst. prod. 3. p. 723. 
403. ~“SCAEVOLA. Br. Pentandria Monogynia. 
Scaeva—the left hand; defective; the flowers have the appearauce of want- 
ing one half---Lobelia. Gaert. L. ¢, 25. 
‘/ 804. S. Taccapa. Rox. Flora lL. p, 527. Rheed. Mal. 4. ¢.59. Rumph. 
’ Amb. 4. ¢. 54, Bot. Mag. ¢. 2732. : 
* Rather a pretty shrub, with alternate, obovate leaves, and white axillary 
flowers, slightly fragrant aud villous inside. {t may be readily known by 
the cleft tube of the corolla; and the segments of the border all on one side: 
gardens, Bombay.---not common. 
5 ORDER 8}. CAMPANULACEE. Don’s. syst. 3. p. 733. 
THe CamPANULA TRIBE, Lind. nat. syst. p. 185. 
404. CAMPANULA. L. Pentandria Wonogynia. 
Name given in allusion to the shape of the flowers, 
805. C. Deutscens. Rox. Flora, 1. p. 504. Wahlenbergia dehiscens. 
Don’s. syst. 3.p. 740. Wallichin Asiat, Res. 12. p. 571. 
An annualplant, with alternate, linear lanceolate leaves, and small bluish 
white, terminal, corymbiform flowers. 
It possesses no great beauty; but is interesting from its connection with — 
the “purple heather-bell,’—SirWalter Scott’s hare-bell, but not Shake- 
speare’s, which is the Hyacinthus non scriptus. 
** A foot more light, a step more true, 
Near from the heath-flower dash’d the dew; 
F’en the slight Aare-bell raised its head, 
Elastic from her airy tread.” 
“ For me,’-—she stoop’d and, looking round, 
Pluck’da blue-hare-bell from the ground, 
‘* For me whose memory scarce conveys 
An image of more splendid days, 
This little flower that loves the lea, 
May well my simple emblem be,” 
Then playfully the chaplet wild 
She wreathed in her dark locks, and smiled, 
Ellen,—the Lady of the Lake. 
‘“* That evening fell so sweetly still, 
So mild on lonely moor and hill, 
The little genii of the fell 
Forsook the purple-heather-bell, 
And all their dripping beds of dew, 
In wind-flower, Thyme, and violet blue.” 
The Queen’s Wake. 
Sprengel confounds C. gracilis, and some others with this species.—Grows 
in the dry rocky bed of the Yena, above the Fall, Mahableshwur. Flowers in 
April and May.—I1 is a rare plant. 
ORDER 82, SYMPLOCINE. Don’s. syst. 4. p.1. 
405. SYMPLOCOS. v. Polyadelphia Polyandria. 
Syn—with, and plico-—to fold; in reference to the limb of the corolla. Lam. 
t. 435. , 
