688 



VEKBENACEAE (VEliVAXN EAMILY) 



appressed-pubesoent upon both surfaces, 6-8 cm. long, 1-1.5 cm. wide ; nutlet.' 

 brownish-white, not constricted at the base, usually pitted, 3-3 mm. long. — 

 Rocky hills and barrens of the Ozark region. Mo. and Ark. 



12. feCHIUM [Toum.] L. Viper's Bugloss 



Corolla with a cylindraceous or funnel-form tube ; lobes 

 rounded, spreading. Stamens mostly exserted, unequal. Style 

 thread-form. Nutlets roughened or wrinkled, fixed by a flat 

 base. (A plant name used by Dioscorides from ex is, a viper.') 



1. E. vulgAee L. (Blue-weed, Bi.uk DisviL.) Rough 

 bristly biennial ; stem erect, .3-9 dm. high ; stem-leaves linear- 

 lanceolate, sessile ; flowers showy, in short lateral clusters, dis- 

 posed in a long and narrow thyrse or in an open panicle ; buds 

 pink ; corolla brilliant blue (rarely pale or roseate) . — Roadsides 

 and meadows, locally abundant. June-Sept. (Nat. from Eu.) 



87T. E. Tulgare. FlG. 877. 



VERBENACEAE (Veevaik Family) 



Herbs or shrubs, with opposite leaves, more or less 2-Uppecl or irregular 

 corolla, and didynamous stamens, the 2-i-ceHed fruit dry or drupaceous, usually 

 splitting when ripe into as many l-seeded indeMscent nutlets; resembling the 

 following family, but the ovary not 4-lobed, the style therefore terminal, and 

 the plants seldom aromatic or furnishing a volatile oil. . Seeds with straight 

 embryo and little or no albumen. — A large family in the Tropics, sparingly rep- 

 resented in cool regions. 



1 . Verbena. Flowers in spikes or heads. Calyx tubular. Fruit splitting Into 4 nntletB. 



2. Lippia. Flowers In spikes or heads, Oalyx short, 2-cleft. Fruit splitting into 2 nutlets. 

 8. Callicaipo. Flowers in axilla?^ cymes. Calyx short. Fruit berry-like, with 4 nntletB. 



1. VERBMa [Tourn.] I-. Vekvain 



Calyx &-toothed, one of the teeth often shorter than the others. Corolla 

 tubular, often curved, salver-form ; the border somewhat unequally 6-oleft. 

 Stamens included ; the upper pair occasionally without anthers. 

 Style slender; stigma mostly 2-lobed. — Flowers sessile, in single 

 or often pauicled spikes, bracted, produced all summer. (The 

 Latin name for any sacred herb; derivation obscure.) — The 

 species present numerous spontaneous hybrids. 



§ 1. Anthers not appendaged ; flowers small, in slender spikes. 



* Spikes filiform, with flowers' or at least fruit scattered, naked, the 

 inconspicuous bracts shorter than the calyx. 



1. V. OFFICINALIS L. (EcEOPBAN V.) Auuual, glabrous or 

 nearly so, loosely branched, 3-9 dm. high ; leaves pinnatifid or 

 3-cleft, oblong-lanceolate, sessile, smooth above, the lobes cut and 

 toothed ; spikes panicled ; flowers purplish, very small. — Road- 

 sides, waste places, and old fields, especially from the Middle 

 States westw. and southw. (Nat. from Eu.) Fig. 878. 



2. V. urticaefblia L. (White V.) Perennial, from minutely 

 pubescent to almost glabrous, rather tall (0.5-1.5 ni. high) ; leaves 

 oval or oblong -ovate, acute, coarsely serrate, petinled; spikes at length much 

 elongated, loosely panicled; flowers very small, white. — Thickets, roadsides, 

 and waste ground. (Trop. Am.) 



Var. rip^ria (Raf.) Britton. Leaves deeply cleft or incised ; flowers blue.— 

 N. J. to Va. and N. C. 



