BAETSIA. — ETJPHKASIA. 
313 
its edges. Lateral lobes of the upper cor. -lip longer than broad 
purple ; the central part truncate. Cor.-tube slightly curved. 
Style glabrous. Caps, often longer than broad. Anth. very 
villose. Bracts yellowish vnth green jwints. — a. 
(Fries) ; seed not twice as broad as its wing. R. major Koch. 
R. I. f. 975. — /3. stenoptervs (Fries) ; seed quite twice as broad 
as its wing. R. major E. B. S. 2737. — y. apterus (Fries) ; seed 
not winged but rounded and longitudinally ribbed or furrowed 
on the back. R. Reichenhachii Drej. — Cultivated land. a. 
Hastings. /S. North of England and Scotland. 7. Arbroath 
and Monifieth, Forfarshire. A. VII. VIII. E. S. 
11. B.uit'sia Linn, em., Stev. Red Eye-bright. 
1. U. alpina (L.) ; 1. opposite ovate slightly clasping bluntly 
serrate. — E. B. 361. — Creeping. St. square, 4 — 8 in. high, 
simple. Fl. forming a short dense leafy spike, purplish blue, 
downy. Cal. purplish, viscid. Anth. hairy. — Alpine pastures, 
rare. P. VI. VII. E. S. 
12. Eufrag'ia Griseb. Marsh Eye-bright. 
1. E. viscdsa (Benth.) ; 1. opposite, upper 1. alternate ovate- 
lanceolate sessile acutely serrate. — Bartsia L. E. B. 1045. — L. 
sometimes linear-lanceolate. St. round, 3 — 12 in. high, simple. 
Root tibrous. Fl. distant, axillary, upper ones crowded^ yellow. 
Anth. hairy. St., 1., and cal. viscid. — Damp places in the West 
of E., South-west of S., and South of I. A. VII.— IX. E. S. I. 
13. Euphra'sia Linn. Eye-bright. 
1. E. officinalis (L.) ; 1. ovate or oblong-lanceolate nearly 
sessile serrate (3 — 5 teeth on each side), lobes of the lower cor.- 
lip emarginate, of the upper lip patent sinuate-dentate, anth. 
hairy, seeds with ribs.— B. 1416.— St. 1—8 in. high. Fl. 
axillary, solitary, sessile, crowded tov/ards the ends of the 
branches. — a ; glandular-pubescent above and on the calyx, 
caps, oblong-obovate, seeds ovoid greyish. L. usually large and 
broad, sometimes densely imbricate (E. ericetorum Jord. ?). — (3. 
nemorosa (Pers.), pubescent not glandular, caps, linear-oblong, 
seeds fusiform yellowish. L. usually narrow, sometimes {E. 
salisburgensis Hoppe) with very long teeth. — Some authors 
divide this into many species ; but even the above are scarcely 
distinguishable at all times. — Pastures, woods, heaths. A. VI. 
— VIII. Common Eye-bright. E. S. I. 
