120 ENGLISH BOTANY. 



Tribe II.— CHELONEiE. 



Corolla tubular, more or less bilabiate, not spurred or saccate 

 at the base ; upper lip covering the others in bud. Stamens 4, 

 didynamous, with the rudiment of a fifth which bears no anther. 

 Inflorescence compound, primarily indefinite, and secondarily 

 definite. Leaves, or at least the lower ones, opposite, rarely 

 verticillate. 



GENUS II— S CROPHULARIA. Tournef. 



Calyx 5-partite or 5-clcft. Corolla tubular, sub-bilabiate ; 

 tube sub-globular or urceolate ; limb with the upper lip the 

 largest, 2-lobed, the lower with 3 short fiat lobes, of which the 

 lateral ones are erect and the lower one spreading or reflexed. 

 Stamens I, didynamous, generally with a fifth reduced to a flattened 

 filament terminating in a free scale-like appendage at the base of 

 the upper lip, sometimes absent. Anthers transverse, with the 

 lobes confluent, so as to be 1-celled. Stigma capitate, entire. 

 Capsule generally conical, acute, opening septicidally and septi- 

 fragally by 2 valves. Seeds very numerous, minute. 



Herbs, with the lower leaves opposite. Flowers rather small, 

 lurid purple, green, yellow, or reddish, in axillary cymes arranged 

 so as to form a slender panicle. 



The name of this genus of plants is due to the supposed efficacy of the species in 

 curing scrofula. 



Section I.— EU-SCROPHULARIA. Reich. 



Corolla-tube not contracted at the throat ; limb irregular, 

 with upper lip longer. Stamens 4, with the rudiment of a fifth, 

 resembling a scale, inserted on the upper side of the corolla-tube. 



SPECIES I— SCSOPHULARIA AQUATICA. Limn. 



Plate DCCCCXLYII. 



Reich. Ic. Fl. Germ, et Helv. Vol. XX. Tab. MDCL. Fig. 1. 



Billot, PL Gall. etGerm. Exsicc. No. 1720. 



S. Balbisii, Hornem. Koch, Syn. Fl. Germ, et Helv. ed. ii. p. 593. 



Rootstock not tuberous. Stem acutely quadrangular, with the 

 angles narrowly winged. Leaves oblong or oval-oblong, with 

 winged petioles, obtuse or subacute, crenatc or crenate-serrate, 

 sometimes with a few small lobes proceeding from the wing of the 



