102 THE JOURNAL OF BOTANY 
y: + ts i Racemorum axi pilosissimo, calycibus pilo- 
Subther arrangement, also recognizing two distinct species, 
appeared in 1850 in Grenier & Godron’s Flore de France. In this 
Flora S. Verbenaca is described as ‘‘corolle petite, 4 peine plus 
longue que le calice, d’un pourpre clair et uniforme . . . feuilles 
crénelées ou lobées-crénelées ... plante de 2-4 na & odeur 
faible,” ne the other species, S. horminoides Pourr. (= S. multt- 
fida Sibth. & Sm.= S. pialdicleftov St. Am.) is <istinguishe ere 
2 rote une fois plus longue que le calice,.. . in férieute, 
& lobe moyen grand, blanc... feuilles poem oblongues, 
incisées-crénelées ou incisées- pinnatifides . . plante de 2-6 décim. 
& odeur désagréable.” It will be observed that the ‘tess of these 
descriptions seems to fit a plant akin to that commonly met with 
in Britain, while the second includes, with taller forms, the S. clan- 
destina of the Species Plantarw 
The third edition of Bore’ s Flore du Centre de la France 
(1857) monies shows the same two species, but adopts the name 
of S. pallidiflora St. Am. for the second in place of S. horminoides 
Pourr. The account of this plant, it may be arian is some- 
what different from the cet ti ag its important points 
being—* Plante... & odeur forte... feuilles d’un vert clair, in- 
cisées-crénelées ou a ipitkinubaeda .. corolle d’un — ome une 
fois plus longue que le calice, 4 lévre supérieure urbée en 
faux dés la base.” No mention is ea a white Siew lip to 
the corolla. 
In 1870 an entirely new departure was made in Jordan & 
Fourreau’s Icones Fl. Europ. ii. pp. 17-19, where the Salvias of 
the Verbenaca-clandestina group are formed into a new genus, 
Gallitrichum. Under this generic name the authors describe and 
igure & num of pe relying for distinction on the varia- 
thing and development of glands, form of 
i corolla. 
pilose calyces and e pale blue corollas, ‘Nene the lower lip 
entirely white, im the S. clandestina L. A third, G. pallidi- 
florum, from Agen, is stated to be the S. patlidijlora of St. Amans. 
This is shown with narrow, deeply crenate-dentate leaves, of a 
light rae the calyx bearing comparatively few glands but many 
pilose hairs, and the corolla, which has divergent lips, the upper 
i b ithin 
oulon, G. a vale, see 
to differ from G. alli idiflors m chiefly in the basadst a 
A special interest for us attaches to another species, G. anglicum, 
in that it is founded on specimens from Wembury, South Devon. 
This is a form with broad, deep green leaves, pallidites glands on 
the calyx, and corollas not unlike those of G. idiflorum in size 
and shape, but of a purple colour, with two ee spots in the 
throat, at the base of the lower lip. One species, G. rubellwm 
