CYNOr.LOSSUM. LYCOI’SIS. 
219 
.‘5. Cynoglossum Linn. 
1. C. officinale (L.); 1- downy acute, lower 1. elliptical con- 
tracting^ into a jictiole, upper 1. lanceolate narrowed below sub- 
cordate half claspiiiif. — E. B. 921. — Cor. dull crimson, “veiny; 
veins disaj)pearing in drying.” “ N\its plane in front surrounded 
by a tbiekened prominent margin.” — Waste ground. B. VI. VII. 
Hound' s-tonyue. 
2. C. montanmn {hwm.) ; 1. slightly hairy acute nearly glabrous 
and sinning above scabrous beneath, inferior oblong narrowed 
into a long petiole, upper 1. lanceolate slightly narrowed below 
clasping. — C. sylvaticum Sm., E. B. 1 642.— Cor. reddish, chan- 
ging to blue. L. sometimes very scabrous. — “ Road-sides and 
hedges in shady situations.” B. VI. VII. 
Tribe II. Anchusea. 
4. Borago Linn. Borage. 
fl. B. officinalis (L.) ; lower 1. obovate obtuse attenuated be- 
low, segments of the cor. ovate acute flat sju'eading. — E. B. 36. 
— Fl. blue. Stem-1, much narrowed below so as to appear 
stalked, eared at the base. Whole plant hispid with tubercled 
hairs. St. spreading. — On rubbish and in waste places, scarcely 
a native. B. VI. VII. 
5. Anchusa Linn. 
fl. A. officinalis (L.); 1. lanceolate hispid, spikes crowded 
unilateral, bracts ovate-lanceolate, calyx-segments bluntisb hairj' 
on both sides, scales of the cor. hairy. — E. B. 662. — Fl. deep 
pm'ple. Cal. -segments naiTow, longer than the tube. St. 1 — 2 
feet high, rough with deflexed hairs. — Waste ground, rare. P. 
VI. VII. Common Alkanet. E. 
t2. A. sempervirens (L.) ; 1. ovate, lower 1. on long stalks, 
peduncles axillary each bearing 2 dense spikes with an interme- 
diate flower, cal. -segments hairy on the outside only, bracts mi- 
nute lanceolate, scales of the cor. dowTiy. — E. B. 45.- — Fl. blue, 
rather salver- than funnelshaped. Cal. -segments nan-ow. St. 
1^ — 2 feet high, rough with spreading somewhat deflexed hairs. 
— Waste groimd near ruins, rare. P. V. — VIII. 
6. Lycopsis Linn. 
I. h. arvensis (L.); 1. lanceolate erose-dentate very hispid, 
cal. of fr. bellshaped erect. — E. B. 938. — Fl. small, blue. Whole 
plant very hispid with strong hairs each rising from a scaly 
tubercle. — Corn-fields and hedges. A. VI. VII. Bugloss. 
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