208 JOUKNAL OF THE EOYAL HORTICULTUKAL SOCIETY. 



latiloba.— DC, "Prod." vii. 478 (fig. " Paxt. Mag." x. 81). 



(Syn. grandis F. & M., " Ind. Sem. Hort. Petrop." v. 34.) 

 Hab. : Siberia. 

 Var. alba. 



Var. imllida ; " Gard. Chron." 1902, xxxii. 24 ; heliotrope-coloured 

 flowers. 



A most valuable showy border plant ; grows well in rather shady 

 places ; spreads rapidly ; easily divided. There are two forms 

 of the type (blue flowers) differing in the size of the leaves and 

 flowers. 



Lehmanniana.— Bgr. in Lehm. "Reliq. Bot." 211 (fig. "Ann. Sc. Nat." 

 xvii. (1884), t. 15a). 

 Hab. : Turkistan. 



A desirable plant ; height 8-10 inches ; leaves small, lanceolate, 

 serrate ; flowers racemose, large. 

 Leutioeinii. — Hedr. in "Ann. Sci. Nat." ser. iv., xii. (1860), 374 = 

 incurva. 



lihanotica. — DC, "Prod." vii. 462. See stricta. 



lingulata.— Waldst. et Kit. "Fl. Hung." t. 64 (1802) (fig. "Rchb. 

 Ic. Grit." vi. 574). 

 (Syn. capitata, Sims "Bot. Mag." t. 811.) 

 Hab. : Bosnia, Servia, Thessaly, &c. 



Leaves linear, spathulate, very scabrous ; flowers chiefly capitate ; 



in the way of glonierata. 

 linifolia.— " Scop. Ann. Hist. Nat." p. 47 (1769) (fig. Rchb. "Ic. PI. 



Germ." xix. t. 1602; Timb. "Lag. Camp. Pyr." t. 1; Nich. 



" Enc. Hort." i. p. 255). 

 (Syn. ficaroides, Tim. in Mem. Acad. Toulouse," ser. v., vi. 1862, 



33 ; Langsdorffiana, Fisch. ex DC, " Mon. Camp." 271.) 

 Var. valde?isis, "Fl. Ped." iii. t. 6. A pubescent form. 

 Hab. : Alps, Tyrol, &c., N. America. 



A most valuable plant for rockeries ; a strong grower ; it is scarcely 

 more than a variety of rotundifolia, the rounded basal leaves 

 being sometimes though not always present. The leaves are 

 generally larger and the flowers finer, but there are intermediate 

 forms. Ficaroides is a form with much smaller leaves than 

 the type : it is well figured in " Etude sur quelques Campanules 

 des Pyrenees," by Timbal Lagrave. These forms are not constant, 

 so any attempt to make separate varieties for them must only 

 lead to confusion : linifolia and rotundifolia sport very 

 much from seed, and no variety can be depended on to come 

 true. It is also to be noted that soil and situation are great 

 factors in the case of certain varieties or forms. 

 Loeflingii.— Brot., "Fl. Lu6it."i. p. 287 (1804); Brot., "Phytogr." 18. 

 (Syn. longijjes Coss. ex " Nym. Comp." 482.) 



(erinoides Cav. in " Anal. Cienc. Nat." iii. 20 [1800J.) 

 {matritensis DC, " Mon. Camp." p. 832.) 

 {Duriaei Boiss., " Voy. Bot. Esp." 401.) 

 Hab. : Portugal, Spain, Morocco. 

 Annual. — A pretty species allied to rhomboidalis. 



