SCROPHULARINEjE. 
217 
fl. loosely spiked distant, sep. linear longer than the corolla. — 
E.B. 1155. St. 27— About a foot high. Fl. purple.— Dry 
sandy and gravelly fields. A. VII. VIII. E. I. 
3. Linaria Mill. 
*1. L. Cymbalaria (Mill.); 1. roundish-heartshaped 5 lobed 
glabrous, st. procumbent. — E. B. 502. St. 70. 10. — Stems slen- 
der, rooting. Fl. solitary, axillary, upon long stalks, pale blue. 
— Old walls. V. — X. Ivy -leaved Toadflax. 
2. L. Elatine (Mill.) ; I. ovate-hastate, lower 1. ovate, spur 
straight, peduncles glabrous, st. procumbent. — E. B. 692. St. 
70. 11. — Fl. solitary, axillary, upon long slender stalks, small, 
yellow, with the upper lip purple. — Gravelly and chalky corn- 
fields. A. VII.— IX. E. I. 
3. L. spuria (Mill.) ; I. roundish-ovate entire, spur curved 
upwards, peduncles hairy, st. procumbent. — E.B. 691. St. 70. 
12. — Fl. similar to the last but larger. L. with here and there 
a small tooth. — In both this species and the preceding some of 
the fl. are often regular with 5 spurs or partially so with 2, 3, or 
4. — Gravelly and sandy corn-fields. A. VII. — IX. E. 
4. L. minor (Desf.) ; /. linear -lanceolate obtuse glanular-pu- 
bescent mostly alternate, fl. solitary axillary, peduncles 3 times 
as long as the calyx, segments of the upper lip diverging, seeds 
oblong sulcate.— E. B. 2014. St. 70. 15. — Fl* small, with the 
tube, upper lip, and spur of the cor. purplish, lower lip yellowish. 
St. erect, 4 — 10 in. high, branched, glandular-pubescent. — 
Saody fields. A. VI.— VIII. 
5. L. pelisseriana (Mill.) ; wholly glabrous, 1. linear the lower 
ternate or quaternate upper alternate, sterile branches radical 
prostrate with ternate lanceolate or ovate 1., fl. racemose, pedun- 
cles as long as the bracts, sepals linear acute twice as long as the 
capsule, seeds discoidal with a fimbriated wing smooth externally 
tubercular within. — E. B. S. 2832. — Fl. purple with darker veins. 
St. one or more from each root, erect, about a foot high. Caps, 
bilobed. — Jersey. A. VI. O. 
[Mr. Borrer finds near Guildford, apparently indigenous, 
L. simplex (DC.) which differs from the preceding and following 
species by having — glandular-hairy cal. peduncles and rachis, 
peduncles shorter than the bracts, sep. obtuse not longer than 
the caps, and seeds discoidal. He hopes to be enabled shortly 
to determine its claims more satisfactorily. A. VI. — IX.] 
6. L. repens (Ait.) ; glabrous, 1. linear scattered or partly 
whorled, fl. racemose, sep. lanceolate as long as the spur but 
shorter than the caps. , seeds angular with transverse elevated lines, 
—E.B. 1253. L. striata DC, Koch, R. Icon. t. 423.— "Fl. bluish." 
