23G 
58. SCROPHULARINE.E. 
p.art truncate. Antli. very villose. Bracts yellowish with green 
points. — a. pJatypterus (Vv'ics) ; seed not twice as broad as its 
wing. R. major Koch., fi. /. f. 975. — stenopterus (Yr'ies) ■, seed 
quite twice as broad as its wing. R. major Bab. ed. \ S. 2737. 
— y. apterus ( Fries) ; seed not winged but rounded and longitu- 
dinally ribbed or furrowed on tbe back. R. Reichenbachii Drej. 
— Cultivated land. a. Hastings. Mr. Borrer. j3. North of En- 
gland and Scotland, y. Arbroath, S. Mr. IV. F. L. Carnegie. 
A. VII. VIII. E. S. 
9. Bartsia Linn. 
I. B. alpina (L.); 1. opposite ovate slightly clasping bluntly 
serrate. — F. B. 361. St. 17- 15. — St. square, 4 — 8 in. high, 
simple. Root creeping. El. forming a short dense leafy spike, 
])urj)lish-blue, downy. Cal. jnirplish, viscid. Anth. hairy. — 
Alpine pastures, rare. P. VI. Vll. 
10. Eu FRAG I A Griseb. 
1. F. inscosa (Benth.) ; 1. opposite, upper 1. alternate ovate- 
lanceolate sessile acutely-serrate. — F. B. 1045. Bartsia Sm. — L. 
sometimes linear-lanceolate. St. round, 3 — 12 in. high, simple. 
Root hbrous. FI. distant, axillary, upj)er ones crowded, yellow. 
Anth. hairy. St., I., and cal. viscid. — Damp places in the w'est 
of England, south-west of Scotland, and south of Ireland. 
A. VII.— IX. 
11. Euphrasia 
1. F. officinalis (L.) ; 1. ovate or oblong-lanceolate nearly sessile 
seiTate (3 — 5 teeth on each side), cor. glabrous, lobes of the lower 
lip emarginate, of the ujtper li]> patent sinuate-dentate, anth. un- 
equally mucronate hairy. — F.B. 1416. — St. 1 — Sin. high. FI. 
axillary, solitary, sessile, crowded towards the ends of the 
branches. A peculiarly variable plant of which it is next to im- 
possible to define the varieties. Fries “pro tem])ore” distin- 
guishes 2 species — 1. F. officinalis {K .) ; 1. ovate, floral-1, cordate- 
triangular or -ovate ; — 2. F. gracilis (Furies) ; 1. oblong-lanceolate, 
floral-1, with a wedgeshaped base; — No. 1 is common in Britain; 
No. 2 is less generally distributed, it inhabits mountain sides 
and elevated heaths and is more slender and elegant than No. I. 
— The cai)s. varies in shajie, the upper lij) of the cor. in toothing, 
and the whole plant excejit the cor. in ])ubescence. — Pastimes, 
woods, heaths. A. VII. VIII. Fye-bright. 
2. F. Odontites (L.) ; 1. narrowed from the base opposite linear- 
lanceolate remotely serrate, fioral-1. longer than the fi., cor. pu- 
bescent, lobes of the lower lip oblong-obtuse, anth. with 2 equal 
points hairy. — Bartsia Sm., F. B. 1415. — St. about a foot high. 
