274 
46. CAMPANULACE^. 
raceme few-flowered, cal. -segments laticeolate. — E. B. S. 2773. 
— St. 1 — 2 feet high. L. long, narrow, with very narrow ser- 
ratures. Fl. very large, often solitary. Cal.-segments entire. 
— "Woods near Cullen, Banffshire, and Thorpe Arch, York- 
shire." Not a native. P. VII.] 
i6. C. Rajnm'culus (L.) ; 1. crenate, root-1. elliptic-lanceolate 
narrowed into a petiole, stem-1. linear-lanceolate, panicle erect 
racemose, cal.-segments subulate. — E. B. 283. — St. 3 feet high, 
angular, rough. Fl. small, pale blue. Cal.-segments entire. — 
Sandy soil in the South. B. VII. VIII. Rampian. E. 
7. C. pat'ula (L.) ; 1. crenate, root-1. oblong-eUiptic narrowed 
into a petiole, stem-1. linear-lanceolate, panicles verj/ lax,fl. on 
long stalks erect, cal .-segmeritstoothed at the base subulate. — E. B. 
42. — St. 2 feet high, terminating in a very loose spreading 
panicle. Fl. purplish blue, funnelshaped, open. — Hedges and 
thickets. B. VII. Vm. E. 
5. Legou'sia Duramde. 
1. L. hyh'rida (Delarb.) ; st. simple or branched, 1. slightly 
crenate wavy oblong sessile, lower 1. spathulate, cal. rough, its 
segments lanceolate longer than the cor. shorter than the ovary. 
— Campanula L. E. B. 375. — St. 3 — 12 in. high, rough with 
rigid minute hairs. Fl. few, terminal, solitary, small, lilac.^ — 
Corn-fields. A. VI.— IX. E. S. 
6. Wahlenbergia Schrad. 
1. TF. hederdcea (Reich.) ; 1. roundish cordate angularly 5- 
lobed stalked alternate, st. filiform prostrate, peduncles solitary. 
— Campanula L. E. B. 73. — St. branched slender, creeping 
greatly. Peduncles longer than the leaves. Fl. pale blue, 
bellshaped, narrow, at first nodding, afterwards erect. Cal.- 
segments subulate. Caps, nearly globose. — Damp peaty places 
in the South and West. P. VII." VIII. Ivy-leaved Bell-fiower. 
E. S. I. 
Order XLVII. ERICACE^.i 
Cal. 4 — 5-parted, persistent. Cor.gamopetalous,4^ — 5-parted, 
usually regular and marcescent ; or sometimes only slightly 
cohering below. Stam. 8 — 10, hypogynous. Anth. 2-celled, 
1 Monotropea', Vacclnieae, and Pyrolace;c are considered distinct orders by 
Maout and Decaisne. 
