328 lxiii. labiate. \_ Ajuga . 
2. T. Scurdium L. (Water G .) ; herbaceous perennial pro- 
cumbent at the base villous or rarely glabrous, leaves oblong or 
ovate-oblong toothed sessile green on both sides,' floral ones 
similar, whorls axillary 2 — 6-flowered, calyx declinate cam- 
panulate gibbous at the base on the under side, the teeth 
short nearly equal. — a. leaves narrow or rounded at the base. 
T. palustre Lam. — /3. leaves shorter cordate-amplexicaul at 
the base. E. B. t. 828. T. scordioides Schreb. 
Low wet meadows, rare. Near the bridge of Portumna, county 
Tipperary, Ireland. Devonshire, Oxfordshire, Cambridgeshire, and 
Yorkshire. If. 7, 8. — The var. a. is the plant of Linn$us; but Mr. 
D. Moore (in the Phyt. ii. p. 1 29) has proved the two supposed species 
to be the result of situation. 
3. T. *B6trys L. ( cut-leaved annual G .) ; annual erect vil- 
lous, leaves pinnatifid, segments oblong quite entire or incise 
divaricate green on both sides, floral leaves similar, whorls axil- 
lary 6-flowered, calyx gibbous at the base on the under side 
inflated tubular, the teeth lanceolate equal. 
Rare. In a stony and steep valley, facing the south, near the end of 
Box Hill farthest from Burford Bridge. Q. 8. 
4. T. *Chamce'drys L. ( Wall G.) ; leaves ovate inciso-serrate 
wedge-shaped and entire at the base green on both sides, floral 
leaves smaller nearly entire, whorls of 2 — 6 flowers, upper ones 
racemose, calyx declinate campanulate, the teeth lanceolate- 
acuminate nearly equal, flowers axillary, stem ascending. E.B. 
t. 680. 
Borders of fields and mostly ruined walls ; Winchelsea Castle, Sus- 
sex; Gateshead, Durham; St. David’s, Pembrokeshire; city walls of 
Norwich ; plentiful. Near Coupar, Forfar, and Kelly Castle, Forfar- 
shire ; Methven wood, Perthshire. Near Cork. If.. 7. — Flowers 
reddish-purple, large handsome, mostly in the terminal axils. 
[ Teucrium regium Schreb., supposed by Mr. Bentham to be a var. 
of T. Jtavum, a plant peculiar to the region of the Mediterranean, is 
said to have been found on a declivity of the Blorenge near Aberga- 
venny ; but it cannot be indigenous.] 
7. A'juga Linn. Bugle. 
Cal. ovate, nearly equal, 5-cleft. Cor. with the tube ex- 
serted: upper lip short, erect, entire or emarginate; lower one 
larger, patent, trilid. Stam. 4, ascending, protruded above the 
upper lip ; cells of the anthers diverging or divaricate, at length 
confluent. — Name said by Pliny to be corrupted from Abiga 
(abigo, to expel) of the Latins, a medicinal plant allied to 
this; but the Greek (accus. alvyd), unyoked, is the more 
probable derivation. 
1. A. reptans L. ( common B.)\ glabrous or downy, stem 
