GALEOrSIS. STACHTS. 
261 
nuate at both ends serrate or nearly entire downy on both sides, 
cal. shaggy with adpressed hairs and a few gland-tipped hairs 
intermixed, upper cor. -Up slii/hth/ notched. — JE. B. 884. — Cor. piu-- 
ple yariegated with crimson and white, shaggy externally. St 
about a foot high. St. and 1. varying much in hairiness, pale 
green or purplish. — (3. canescens ; 1. narrow nearly entire, bracts 
' often reflexed at the end, cal. and upper pai't of st. clothed with 
patent hairs. — In gravelly and sandy districts. jS. Southampton, 
on shingles. A. VIH. ll. E. S. I. 
3. G. Tet'rakit (L.) ; st. thickened at joinings hisind,\. oblong- 
ovate acuminate serrate, cal. tubular, ciil. -teeth and tube nearly 
equal, cor.-tube equalling the eal., upper lip ovate. — E. B. 207. 
St. 62. 6. — St. 1 — 2 ft. high. Cor. purplish variegated with white, 
large ; tube slender, slightly inflated ; middle lobe of lower lip 
subquadrate, flat, crenulate, blunt or slightly emarginate. Cal.- 
teeth as long as their tube, which is shorter but quite as broad 
and more strongly ribbed than in the next species, rather in- 
flated below the mouth. Nuts wholly green, the oblique top 
longitudinally marked with veins all springing from the wholly 
acute inner angle of the nut. L. slightly pubescent above. — 
^. G. bifida (Boenni) ; middle lobe of lower cor.-lip oblong en- 
tire emarginate purple with pale ultimately revolute edges, base 
with a yellow 2-lobed spot and several dots. A more slender 
plant with paler leaves and smaller flowers. — ^Woods and culti- 
vated ground. A. VII.— IX. E. S. I. 
4. G. versic'olor (Curt.) ; st. thickened at the j.oinings hispid, 
1. oblong-ovate acuminate sen-ate, cal. bellshaped, cal.-teeth 
shorter tnan the tube, cor.-tube much e.rceeding the cal., upper lip 
roundish-oval.—^. B. 667. St. 62. 8.— St. 2—3 ft. high. Cor.- 
tube inflated above. Fl. very large, yellow, usually with a broad 
purple spot upon the lower lip. Cal.-teeth shorter than their 
tube. Nuts with the oblique top dark brown, inner angle rounded 
off almost to the base. Difiicult to distinguish upon paper from 
G. TeimM.— Cultivated ground. A. VII. VIII. E. S. I. 
14. Sta'chts Linn, Woundwort. 
1. S. Beton'ica (Benth.) ; spike oblong interrupted below, 
whorls many-flowered, st. erect, lower 1. ovate-oblong with a 
cordate base crenate blunt -svith long stalks, upper 1. olDlong-lan- 
ceolate serrate acute subsessile, bracts linear-lanceolate equalling 
the nearly glabrous cal., stam. falling short of the Im.—Betonica 
officinalis Sm., E. B. 1142.— St. 1—2 ft. high. Whoris some- 
times separated considerably. Cor. purplish red ; tube exserted. 
The English plant has the round crenate not emarginate lower 
lip of B. hirta (R.).— Woods aud thickets. P. Vn. VIII. Be- 
tony. E. S. I. 
