DIDYNAMIA, ANGIOSPERMIA. Antirrhinum. 733 
Caps. two-celled, many-seeded, opening unequally at the 
top, the divisions reflexed. 
(1) Leaves angular, ( alternate . E.) 
A. cymbala'ria. Leaves heart-shaped, five-lobed, alternate,* stems 
trailing. 
Curt. — (E. Bot, 502.— FI. Ban. 1220. E.)— Riv. Mon. 86. 2, Cymbalaria .— 
J.B. iii. 685— Matth. 1184— Lob. Obs. 337. 2, and Ic. i. 615. 1— Ger, 
Em. 529. 6— Park. 682. 1— H. Ox. v. 14. 30— Lon. 1. 61. 2. 
Seeds wrinkled like the kernels of the walnut. Blossom sometimes white. 
Linn. Whole plant smooth and shining. Leaves, the smallest with only 
three lobes; lobes of the lower blunt, of the upper pointed, (often purple 
beneath, rather fleshy. E.) Flowers on long fruit-stalks bending at the 
top. Blossom, spur as long as the calyx. Woodw. Stems thread-shaped. 
Leafstalks very long, like tendrils. Calyx, segments equal, smooth. 
Blossom pale purple; palate yellow, tufted with orange-coloured hairs. 
Nectary slender, crooked, (rather longer than the calyx. E.) 
Ivy-leaved Snap-dragon. (Welsh: Trwyn y llo eiddewddail. E.) 
About London frequent, particularly adjoining the Thames. Walls of 
Burleigh House, near Stamford. Mr. Woodward. (Windsor Castle. 
Rev. Dr. Goodenough. FI. Brit. Pontefract. Mr. Brunton. Frequent 
in Sussex. Mr. Borrer. On a wall at Oldport, near Oswestry. Dr. Evans. 
Bot. Guide. Abbey walls. Great Malvern. Burton. St. Mary’s church¬ 
yard wall, and in Mellos’ lane, Warwick. Perry. Debris of Salisbury 
Craigs. Greville. FI. Edin. Various walls in Oxford. Sibthorp. At 
Llysdulas, and Beaumaris. Welsh Bot. On a wall opposite the White 
Hart Inn, Brislington; and about Redland Court, near Bristol, very 
abundant. E.) P. June—Oct.* 
A. spu'rium. Leaves egg-shaped, alternate, pubescent: stems trailing, 
hairy. 
(-Eh Bot. 691. E.)—- Curt: — FI. Ban. 913— Fuchs. 167— J. B. iii. 372. 1— 
Bod. 42. 1— Ger. Em, 625. 1 —Lonic. i. 63. 3 — Park. 553. 1 — H . Ox. V . 
14. 27 — Matth. 694 — Ger. 501. 1 — Lob. Ady. 197, and Ic. i. 470. 1— Riv. 
Mon. 86. 1, Etatine. 
Stem branched from the base, with long expanding hairs. Leaves hairy, 
sometimes slightly toothed. Fruit-stalks from the bosom of the leaves. 
Calyx very hairy, shorter than the body of the blossom. Woodw. Fruit - 
stalks, the lower generally shorter, the upper longer than the leaves. 
(Blossom with a recurved greenish spur; upper lip short, violet; lower 
yellow, palate orange. Lower leaves in pairs. The flowers are some¬ 
times found regular. E.) 
Round-leaved Snap-dragon or (Fluellin. E.) Corn-fields, Suffolk, 
frequent. Mr. Woodwood. (At Seething, Norfolk. Mrs. Kett. FI. Brit. 
Its pendulous branches and elegant foliage, variously interwoven, often cover old 
moist walls witii a thick tapestry, and when in blossom make a beautiful appearance. Mr. 
Woodward. (No plant is better adapted for ornamental rock-work. Some have sup¬ 
posed it to have been introduced from Italy, and to have spread from different gardens till 
completely naturalized : but we find a notice (in Mag. Nat. Hist.) of its having been found 
on the lower part of a rock near Barmouth, in a situation probably wild. E.) 
