282 PENTANDRIA. MONOGYNIA. Pulmonakia, 
roughs not cottony. Flowers dull blue, or reddish, smaller than in the 
preceding, neither has the plant the strong scent nor the hoariness of that. 
( Radical leaves ovato-lanceolate, on very long foot-stalks. Hook. E.) 
(Green-leaved hound’s-tongue. E.) C. offinalis. y. Linn. Near the 
third milestone from Worcester on the road to Pershore. Nash. (By 
the road side near the church, at Chingford, Essex. Mr. Woodward. 
Out of St. Benedict’s gate, Norwich. Andrew Caldwell, Esq. In Nor- 
berry Park, Surry. Mr Winch. Near the river at Guildford. Mr. W. 
Christy. In a hedge upon the Roman road, near Stowting, Kent. Rev. 
Ralph Price, in Sm. Obs. In Pig well-lane; and on a hedge bank near 
the Cape of Good Hope, Warwick. Perry. Carse of Gowrie. Mr. G. Don. 
Hook. E.) B. May—June. 
(C. omphalo'des. Stems creeping : root-leaves heart-shaped. 
Kniph. 1— Curt . Bot. Mag.v. 1 .pi. 7. 
Leaves oval, and tapering to a point, rather than heart-shaped, smooth. 
Blossoms larger than those of the preceding species, bright blue. Stems 
slender, flowering ones nearly upright, but, as Curtis observes, putting 
forth trailing shoots, which take root at the joints. 
Blue Navelwort. Discovered by Mrs. Taylor growing among the 
rocks at Teignmouth. Polwhele. Rev. Pike Jones suspects this must be 
an error, he having diligently searched the same spot in vain. 
P. March—April. E.) 
PULMONA'RIA. # Bloss. funnel-shaped ; mouth not closed : 
Calyx tubular, but pentagonous. 
(1) Calyx as long as the tube of the blossom. 
P. angustifo'lia. Root-leaves spear-shaped. 
( E. Bot. 1628. E.)— Kniph. 1 —FI Dan. 483— Ger. 66 2. 2-,-Qus. ii. 170. 
1— Ger. Em. 808. 2— H. Ox. xi. 29. row 2. 5— Park, pan 251. 2. 
(Much taller than the following species. E.) Very nearly allied to P. of¬ 
ficinalis, differing only in the narrowness of its leaves. Linn. Blossom red 
at first, expanding, soon changing to blue. All the leaves spear-shaped, 
(and much less spotted than in P. officinalis. E.) 
BuGLOss-CowsLir. Long-leaved Sage of Jerusalem. Narrow¬ 
leaved Lungwort. “Mr. Goodyer found it in a wood by Holbury 
House in the New Forest.” Johnson, in Ger. Em. p. 809. Mr. Robson 
informs me that a specimen was sent him in the year 1783, by the late 
Mr. Waring, of Leescrood, Flintshire, who found it growing wild on the 
ruins of the monastery of Maes Glas, in that county ; (but Mr. Griffith 
says Mr. Waring’s specimen proves to be Anchusa sempervirens. Mr. 
Griffith had, however, himself the good fortune to discover this very rare 
plant in May, 1804, in a wood through which the road did then pass 
between Newport and Ride, in the Isle of Wight; and in the summer of 
1806, it was gathered in the same spot by Mr. Turner and Mr. W. Borrer, 
directed thither by the same gentleman. P. May. E.) 
P. officina'lis. Root-leaves egg-heart-shaped, rough • upper leaves 
egg-shaped, acute. E. Bot. 
(From puhno, the lungs j the leaves being spotted like tubercular lungs, E.) 
