406 THE JOURNAL OF BOTANY 
Syme gives several synonyms, some of which belong to the true 
clandestina, but none, I think, to my plant. 
It may be well to state what I consider to be the true S. clan- 
destina Li, Fortunately there is not great difficulty in this case in 
arriving at a conclusion. Linneus diagnosed it (Sp. Pl. ed. 2, 
.8 
corollis calyce angustioribus”’; he cites as a synonym “ Horminum 
sylvestre, inciso folio, cesio flore, italicum. Barr. rar. 24, t. 220,” 
and gives a detailed description. A reference to Barrelier's work 
. a (ih 144) 8 
the plant there described and figured differs essentially from the 
Guernsey plant; it is 8. clandestina L., common in many. parts of 
Spain, France, and Italy, which Barrelier saw on the Roman 
gna. 
in his possession, when he prepared Sibthorp’s Flora Greca and 
wrote the Prodromus, described and figured S. controversa as 
S. clandestina L. 
t would seem probable that the excellent plates in Jordan and 
Fourreau’s Icones ad Floram urope (where several Salvias, under 
the generic name of Gallitrichum, are figured) might have included 
nder S. pratensis, in Corbidre’s Nouvelle Flore de Normandie, 
p. 458, there is described var. parviflora Lec. & Lam., the S. dume- 
or. and (?) of Andrz., but if this is the same plant as that 
t 
botanist who has done such excellent work in the island where 
it grows. 
_ Salvia Marquandii, sp. n. Herbaceous. Rootstock woody, 
thick and large. Height of thirty specimens 30-4 cm., simple or 
with 2-5 branches. Radical leaves rather long, stalked, the aver- 
age length of stalk of lower leaves 25-30 mm., of the leaf-blade 
mm., breadth 25 mm., oval-oblong, subobtuse, more or less 
$ 
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towards the apex, and abruptly narrowed into three minute teeth : 
the divisions of the lower lip lanceolate and gradually narrowing 
