DIDYNAMIA. ANGIOSPERMIA. Antirrhinum. 735 
— ■ -- - ■ ..i-- 
Oxfordshire, abundant, and plentiful about Llandovery and Llangaddock, 
South Wales. E. Bot. In the little lane from Cowes Castle, up the hill 
on the right hand. Mr. T. F. Forster, jun. Bot. Guide, in which work 
Sir Joseph Banks is stated to have found, on stubble-fields near South¬ 
ampton, a Pelorian variety of this plant. E.) P. July—Sept. 
{A. arvense , though inserted in the Flora Anglica by Hudson, from a 
misapprehension of JDillenius, and in former Editions of our work, is 
now understood to have no pretensions to a place here. E.) 
(3) Leaves opposite ; nectary short } blunt . 
(A. mPnus. Leaves mostly alternate, spear-shaped, blunt ; stem much 
branched, spreading; (calyx longer than the spur. FI. Brit. E.) 
Licks. II. S.' — Curt. 296 — FI. Dan. 502 — E. Bot. 2014. E.)— Riv. Mon. 
85. 2, Linaria arv. min. — Lob. Ic. i. 406.1— Ger. Em. 549. 5—■ Park . 1334. 
2— J. B. iii. 465. 1 —Matth. 1198. 
{Plant pubescent, slightly viscid, six to twelve inches high. Lower 
branches opposite, the upper alternate. Fruit-stalks from the bosom of, 
and equal to, or longer than the leaves. Calyx segments strap-shaped, 
nearly equalling the blossom. Blossom purplish, small, lower-lip yellow. 
Least Snap-dragon. Gravelly corn-fields. Binham, Norfolk. Mr. 
Crowe. Near Berkhamstead, Herts ; (and corn-fields at Field Dalleny, 
Norfolk. Mr. Woodward. Willington Ballast Quay ; and Fulwell Hills, 
near Sunderland. Mr. Winch. About Bury, Yarmouth, and Battersea. 
E. Bot. Fields between Chudleigh and Hennock, near Chudleigh bridge. 
Rev. J. P. Jones. In fields about Lanvayer and Abergavenny. Purton. 
About Dalbeth ; Barncluith, near Hamilton. Hopkirk. Exhall and 
Grafton, Warwickshire, in corn-fields. E.) A. June—Sept. 
(4) Leaves alternate. 
A. linaria. Leaves spear-strap-shaped, crowded: stem upright: 
spikes terminal, sessile: flowers tiled: (calyx much shorter than 
the spur. E.) 
Dicks. II. S. — Curt .—( E. Bot. 658. E.)— Knipli. 6— FI. Dan. 982— Riv. 
Mon. 83.1, Linaria .— Woodv. 221— Sheldr. 49— Ludw. 12— Dod. 183. 1—< 
Lob. Qbs. 222. 2, and Ic. 1. 406- 2— Ger. Em. 550. 1— Park. 458. 1— Ger. 
440— Lonic. i. 154. 2— Fuchs. 545— J. B. iii. 456. 2— Blackw. 115— Trag. 
357— H. Ox. v. 12. 10. 
{Root creeping, rather woody. Stem nearly cylindrical, smooth, two feet 
high, or more, crowded with leaves, and bearing a spike of flowers 
several inches long, yielding a faint, rather sickly smell. E.) Branches 
nearly upright, axillary. Calyx smooth. Blossom lower lip , segments 
circular, the middle one much smaller, the projecting part orange- 
coloured, pubescent, the rest pale yellow and smooth. Nectary long, 
and awl-shaped. 
Var. 2. Flowers nearly white. 
Var. 3. Nectaries two or more to each flower. 
Var. 4. Peloria.*' Blossoms regular, with five equal stamens and five 
nectaries growing in a circle around the base of the tube. 
* (From the Greek monstrous; a deformity, out of the usual course of nature. 
VOL. III. 
L 
