246 
57. SCHOPHTOABlACE^. 
broad. Cor. -tube straight. St. 1 — 2 feet high. — Meadows and 
pastures. A. VI. E. S. I. 
2. i2. major (Ehrh.) ; 1. linear-lanceolate serrate, fi. in crowded 
spikes, cal. glabrous, lobes of the upper cor.-lqj oblong, bracta 
with an attenuate point incise-seiTate. — Cal. often slightly 
downy on its edges. Lateral lobes of the upper cor.-lip longer 
than broad, purple ; the central part tnmcate. Cor.-tube slightly 
curs'ed. Style^labrous. Caps, often longer than broad. Anth. 
very vUlose. Bracts yellowish with green points. — H. & A. call 
this H. angustifolia (Gm.), and apply the name of R. major 
(Ehrh.) to the foreign R. hirsutus (Lam.). The latter plant has 
never been found in Britain. — a. platypterus (Fries) ; seed not 
twice as broad as its ^ving. R. major Koch, R. I. f. 975. — /3. ste- 
nopterus (Fries) ; seed quite twice as broad as its -wing. R. major 
E.B. S. 2737. — y. upterus (Fries) ; seed not winged but rounded 
and longitudinally ribbed or ftuTOwed on the back. R. Reichen- 
bachii Drej. — Cultivated land. a. Hastings. ^. North of Eng- 
knd and Scotland, y. Forfarshire. A. VII. VIII. E. S. T. 
10. Baets'ia lAnn. Eed Eye-bright. 
1. B. alpina (L.) ; 1. opposite ovate slightly clamping blimtly 
serrate. — E. B. 361. St. 17. 1-5. — Creeping. St. square, 4 — 8 in, 
high, simple. Fl. foiTning a short dense leafy spike, purplish 
blue, downy. Cal. purjilish, viscid. Anth. hairy. — Alpine pas- 
tures, rare. P. VI. VII. E. S. 
11. Eufea'gia Griseb. Marsh Eye-bright. 
1. E. viscdsa (Benth.) ; 1. opposite, upper L alternate ovate- 
lanceolate sessile acutely-serrate. — E. B. 1045. Bartsia Sm. — L. 
sometimes linear-lanceolate. St. round, 3 — 12 in. high, simple. 
Root fibrous. Fl. distant, axillary, upper ones crowded, yeUow. 
Anth. hairv. St., 1., and cal. viscid.— -Damp places in the West 
of E., South-west of S., and South of L A. VII.— IX. E.S.L 
12. Ettphea'sia Linn. Eye-bright. 
i. Euphrasia. Anthers unequaUy mtta-onate. 
1. E. officitmlis • 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. 
— E. B. 1416. — St. 1 — 8 in. high. Fl. axillary, solitary, sessile, 
crowded towards the ends of the branches. Seeds ovate (grejdsh) 
with white winged ribs and fine transverse lines between them; 
or fusiform (yellowish) with very slight traces of transverse 
lines. Some authors divide this species into many. — Pastures, 
woods, heaths. A. VI. — \'III. Common Eye-bright. E. S. I. 
