712 DIDYNAMIA. GYMNOSPERMIA. Galeopsis. 
(Downy Hemp-nettle. G. grandijlora. Gmel. Willd. With, to JEd. 7. E.) 
G. villosa. Huds. Sm. Dicks. Sandy corn-fields, Yorkshire and Lanca¬ 
shire. Near Newark, and about Bangor. Hudson. A. July—Aug. 
G. tetra'hit. (Stem bristly, swollen below each joint: blossom 
twice as long as the calyx: upper lip nearly straight. E.) 
(Hook. FI. Land. 191. E.)— Riv. Mon. 31, Cannab. spur — E. Bot. 207— 
Kniph. 8— (FI. Han. 1271. E.)— Hod. 153. 4 —Lob. Ic. i. 527. 2— Ger. 
Em. 709. 2. a—Ger. Em. 709. 1— Ger. 573— Pet. 33. 8. 
Blossom, generally purplish, (nearly three-fourths of an inch long; lower- 
lip three-lobed, mottled, with darker lines in the middle ; tube white, E.) 
sometimes white, in numerous dense whorls. Calyx , teeth terminated by 
sharp awns as long again as those of G. Ladanum. Woodw. ( Upper-lip 
always narrower and flatter, nearly erect; in the following species, 
broader, more convex, and bends down more over the tube of the corolla. 
FI. Lond. Stem covered with strong bristles, quadrangular, one to two 
feet high. Leaves rather large, ovate, hispid on both sides. 
Var. 2. Blossoms white, and much larger than those of the preceding. 
Cannabis spuria Jlore albo magno eleganti. R. Syn. 240. 
Var. 3. Terminal flower regularly salver-shaped, with four equal stamens. 
Observed by Dr. Smith at Matlock in 1788. See E. Bot. 207. Linn. 
FI. Lapp. Ed. 2. 201. 
In all these varieties the leaves are egg-spear-shaped, and only the upper 
parts of the stem and branches are hairy. 
Common Hemp-nettle. (Nettle-hemp. Welsh: Penboeth gyffredin. E.) 
Hedge-banks, borders of corn-fields, and amongst rubbish. 
A. July—Aug. 
G. (versi'color. Stem hispid, swollen below each joint : blossom 
thrice as long as the calyx: upper lip tumid; middle lobe of the 
lower heart-shaped. E.) 
(Curt. — E. Bot. 667. E.)— Riv. Mon. 32, Cannab. spur.Jl. maj. — FI. Han. 
929— Barr. Ic. 1158— Lob. Ic. i. 527. 3— Ger. Em. 709. 2. b.—Pcerk. 599. 
1— Pluk. 41. 4. 
(In general habit resembling G. Tetrahit , but larger in all its parts. E.) 
Stem and branches very hairy in every part. Leaves paler green and 
more hairy underneath than the last. Calyx purplish red. Blossom 
about one inch long, pale yellow; lower lip deep yellow, its middle 
segment purple, bordered with white. The seeds produced similar 
plants year after year, and the beauty of its blossoms might challenge a 
place in the flower garden. 
It varies in having the leaves broad and egg-spear-shaped, or narrower 
and spear-shaped. 
(Bee-nettle. Laiige-flowered Hemp-nettle. G. versicolor. Curt. 
Sm. Hook. Purt. Grev. G. cannabina. Oed. With. Willd. G. Tetrahit (3. 
Linn. Lightf. Huds. E.) Hedges at Kirkby in Furness, and in fallow 
ground, near Hutton Roof, Westmoreland. Mr. Atkinson. (Plentiful 
near Norwich, and at Watlington, Norfolk; also about Moffat and near 
Edinburgh. Sir J. E. Smith. Observed by Sir T. G. Cullum at Gretna 
Green very abundant. FI. Brit. Melrose, Scotland, and Jesmond near 
Newcastle. Mr. Winch. In corn-fields about Bingley and Keighly. 
Whitaker’s Craven. Corn-fields about Congleton, Stockport, and Ches- 
