540 53. SCROPHULARIACER. 
Verbascum nigro-Lychnitis, “ Schiede,” E. B. 3. 
Provinces - 234. Kent; Syme! Sussex. Norfolk. 
“ Hybrid.” Phytologist, iv. 861. Eng. Bot. vi. 119. 
Veronica (spicata) genuina, E. B. 3. 
Provinces [-- 3] 4. [18]. Suffolk! Cambridge; Bab. flo. 
Syn. 193. Cyb. ii. 198. Hast of England. 
Veronica (spicata) hybrida, Linn. 
Provinces [1] ---5 67----12. Glouc. Wales. Westm. 
Syn. 746. COyb. ii. 193. West of England. 
Veronica fruticulosa, Linn. 
Provinces -15 16. (14. Wall near Edinburgh.) 
Error. (Alien in 14.) Cyb. ii. 198. 
Veronica (scutellata) pubescens, E. B. 3. 
Provinces -- 3-5 ---9---13-15. Probably in others. 
Syn. 753. Simply a pubescent state of the type form. 
Veronica (officinalis) hirsuta, Hopkirk. 
Provinces - 18. Ayrshire only, and now extinct? 
Syn. 756. Cyb. il. 200. A specimen from Perthshire is in my 
herbarium, given to me labelled as hirsuta by Mr. Maughan; but 
this is not quite like the garden plant from Ayrshire. 
Veronica Allionti, Villars. 
Provinces - 15 --18. Forfar; Don. Shetland; Edmondston. 
Error. Hook. Scot. 10. Shetland flo. 16. Forfar flo. 186. 
Veronica peregrina, Linn. 
Provinces - 3-15, Middlesex, sown. Perth, in gardens. 
Casual. Ireland, in cultivated land; Cyb. Hib. 
Veronica (polita) grandiflora, Bab. man. 
Provinces- 2-4-1415. Wight. Camb. Berwick? Fife. 
Syn. 761. Eng. bot. vi. 150. Omitted from the latter editions of 
the Manual. In the ‘Eastern Borders’ the Berwick plant is 
named ‘ Buxbaumii,” but the figure of “V. filéformis” in the 
Flora of Berwick has the capsule of polita, not that of Buabaumii. 
Bartsia (Odontites) vulgaris, E. B. 8.“ O. verna, Reich.” 
Provinces all? “ Rather common, especially in the South”; E. B. 
Syn. 765. Naming the specimens in my own herbarium, by the 
printed characters in English Botany, this segregate seems to be 
the more frequent form. 
Bartsia (Odontites) serotina, E. B.3. ‘O, rubra, Gr. & Godr.” 
Provinees all? “ Very common”; Eng. Bot. vi. 175. 
Syn. 765. “Seems to have little claim to be considered a distinct 
species, as most continental botanists regard it”; E. B. 
Bartsia (Odontites) rotundata, “ Ball, in Ann. N. H.” 
Provinces - 2-4. Sussex. Cambridge. 
Syn, 765, Eng. Bot. vi. 174. Not known to me. 
