360 SCROPHULARlN/E 



Appearing early in spring, and resembling a Calceolaria, this is 

 the most ornamental British species. — Fl. April — June. Perennial. 



*5« MfMULUS (Monkey flower). — Herbs with square stems, 

 opposite leaves, and conspicuous, solitary, axillary flowers ; calyx 

 5-cleft, 5-angled ; corolla 2-lipped, gaping, the upper lip 2-lobed 

 and reflexed ; seeds many. (Name from the Greek mimo, an ape, 

 from the form of the flower.) 



1.* M. Langsdorfli (Yellow Monkey-flower). — A pretty North 

 American plant, with hollow creeping stems, ovate, veined leaves, 

 and large, yellow, funnel-shaped flowers, which has escaped from 

 cultivation and become naturalised by the sides of many streams. 

 Some of its cultivated varieties have the flowers blotched with 

 brown or red. — Fl. June — September. Perennial. 



limos^lla aquAtica (Common Mudwort). 



6. Limos£lla (Mudwort). — Small, tufted, creeping, glabrous, 

 aquatic plants, with radical, linear leaves and minute, solitary, 

 axillary flowers ; corolla short, bell-shaped, 5-cleft, nearly polysym- 

 metric ; stamens 4, with i-chambered anthers. (Name from the 

 Latin limits, mud, from the character of the places in which the 

 plant grows.) 



1. L. aqudtica (Common Mudwort). — The only British species, 

 a small plant, throwing up from the roots a number of smooth, 

 spathulate leaves on long stalks, and minute, pale pink or white 

 flowers on shorter stalks. — Watery places ; not common. — Fl. July 

 — September. Annual. 



7. Sibth6rpia (Cornish Money-wort). — Slender, creeping, hairy 

 plants, with rounded, lobed, stalked leaves, and small, solitary, 

 axillary flowers ; calyx in 5 deep, spreading segments ; corolla short, 

 rotate, 5-cleft, nearly polysymmetric ; anthers 2-chambered ; capsule 



