Didynamia. 
115 
Stachys. Gen. char -Cal. five-cleft, bearded ; 
cor. upper- lip arched, lower reflected at the sides ; 
middle segment larger, notched ; stamens towards the 
reflected sides, without anthers. 
Sta. Sylvatica, Hedge Woundwort ; with six-flower- 
ed whorls, and heart-shaped leaves on foot-stalks. Com- 
mon in woods and hedges. 
Sta. Arvensis, Corn Woundwort, or Hedge-nettle ; 
with six- flowered whorls, weak stem, and leaves heart- 
shaped, blunt, crenated, somewhat hairy. Annual, and 
common in gardens and gravelly soils. 
Sta. Coccinea , Scarlet Stachys ; with six-flowered 
whorls and ovate, heart-shaped, crenated leaves, with 
dilated footstalks. Native of Chili, and seems hardy 
enough for the climate of this country. Bot. Mag. 18, 
666 . 
Sta. Lanata, Woolly Stachys ; cultivated in gar- 
dens, remarkable for its woolly leaves and stem, and 
much sought after by the domestic bee. 
Prunella. Gen. char. — Filaments two-forked at 
the summit, stigma two-cleft. 
Prun. Vulgaris, Self-heal ; with all the leaves ovate, 
oblong, and on footstalks. Perennial, and common in 
meadows and pastures. 
Prun. Grandidora, Great- flowered Self-heal ; leaves 
ovate, oblong, slightly serrated, upper lip of the calyx 
deeply divided into three lobes. Native of the Alps ; 
and, with its fine purple blossoms, is a hardy ornamen- 
tal plant in the flower-garden. Bot. Mag. 10. 337° 
