10. nUOSKUACK.E. 
3 / 
ROinewliat elongated so as slightly to separate the lateral lobes. 
V. Curtisii E. B. S. 2(i0.'l. — Mountainous pastures. /S. Sands 
near the sea. P. VI. VII. 
8. V. tricolor {h.) •, anth.-cells diverging below, anth.-spurs 
elongate subclacate-jiliform, spur of the corolla about equalling 
the calycine ajipendages, 1. crenate-serrate lower ones ovate- 
eordate, upper 1. ovate or ovate-lanceolate, stip. hjr ate -pinna tijid-. 
terminal lobe s])atbulate crenate, st. ascending. — E. B. 1287. R- 
4517 . V. Curtisii (Miiek.) from Portmarnock. — FI. with the 
upper pet. j)urple, lateral ones bluish, lower one yellow. Caj)s. 
ovate. I have never found the terminal lobe of the stij). quite 
entire, although it often has only one tooth on each side. — 
/3. arvensis; j)et. shorter than the calyx whitish, caps, nearly 
globular. V. arvensis E. B. S. 2712. — Common. A. V. — IX. 
Heartsease, Pansy. 
Order X. DROSERACEiE. 
Sep. 5, imbricate. Pet. 5, regular. Stam. 5 or 10, free. Styles 
,'i or 5. Ovary free. Caps. 3 — 5-valved. Seeds v\ithout an 
arillus. Embryo straight, in fleshy albumen. — L. with a circinate 
vernation. 
1. Drosera. Cal. deeply 5-cleft. Pet. 5. Stam. 5. Styles 
3 — 5, deeply bifid. Caps. 1 -celled with 3 — 5 valves, many- 
seeded. 
2. Parna.s.sia. Cal. deeply 5-cleft. Pet. 5. Stam. 5, with 
5 scales fringed with glandular setse interposed. Stigmas 4, 
sessile. Caps. 1 -celled, with 4 valves. — Differs from this 
Order by wanting the circinate vernation, and is referred by 
Lindley to Saxifragea and by Don to Hypericinece. 
1. Drosera Zmw. Sundew. 
1. D. rotundifolia (,L.) ; 1. orbicular spreading, petioles hairy, 
jieduncles erect, seeds with a loose chafly coat. — E. B. 867. R. 
4522. — Flowering stalks 2 — 6 in. high. “ Stigmas white, clubbed, 
entire. Anth. white.” Borr. L. covered, as in all our sjrecies, 
with hairs terminating in large glands secreting a viscid fluid 
which retains insects that settle upon them. — Common in boggy 
places. P. VII. VIII. Round-leaved Sundew. 
2. D. longifolia (L.); 1. s])athulate obtuse erect, petioles gla- 
brous, peduncles arcuate or decumbent at the base, seeds with a 
close rough not chaffy coat. — E. B. 868. D. intermedia R. 4523., 
Koch, Fries. — “ Stig. pink, bifid. Anth. yellow'.” Borr. A va- 
riety with shorter leaves and the flowering stalks shorter than 
the leaves is found in Ireland and Scotland. — Common in boggy 
places. P. VII. VIII. 
