0 a tall, thin plant with white, yellow, pink, red, or purple bell-shaped flowers growing all the way up its stem
I have mentioned some already for your garden:—Canterbury bell, cornflower and foxglove are biennials.
Marigolds are in full bloom all over the forest, and so are foxgloves.
Roses which had degenerated into little better than wild ones, showed late red and pink blooms, honeysuckle and columbines flowered, and foxgloves raised their graceful heads.
The heather, mingling with these furze bushes, was just beginning to bloom, and here and there a tall foxglove towered above the undulating irregular mass of purple and gold.
The shepherd's rose and the stately foxgloves were more full of color and scent.
Some of the herbs and many of the flowers, like the foxglove, are still an important source of some of our most valuable medicines.
It is then that the flowers are out and the banks are covered with successions of primroses, bluebells, foxgloves, valerian and all the other wealth of blooms.
Liquorice, foxglove and all kinds of others spring to mind.