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Ay eS ‘ ne ‘ie ; , Pad ie s PLT ee Oe merase peter es tl ah ee ea | oe a“ 4 Vaal ‘ Z oll, ae { 7 > ae Pak 2) le be Pt LNT hates } 8 ay . ae rey a A ss < wi Lite ie ; ‘ ' Mh ts » Nv " of: pi :. * ais, n . ‘ ¢ DML), Se a a ; Ay eae ws \ a : iy y i ' sabe ah, rie oy) ‘et > \ eh iy ™7 a ‘ bene i eee, aN } . ¥ vu « ids - ni % fou ‘ Rm, " y a “ iy, « ‘ wy p ' ‘ ese ? whA 4’ " ;- 7 ; = . ; » ‘f- i caps Y ¥ Tah } ee e ' Ma on ‘ " ’ ? Oe . y ' we 71 ; 5 @ i ‘ 7] i ' ie * ‘ ‘ v, # p 4) ' Ky 4 - ae : — 4/ ¥ - ¢ "a - r ‘a bd a Hotany for Voung People and Common Schools. HOW PLANTS GROW, A SIMPLE INTRODUCTION TO STRUCTURAL BOTANY. WITH A POPULAR FLORA, OR AN ARRANGEMENT AND DESCRIPTION OF COMMON PLANTS, BOTH WILD AND CULTIVATED. ILLUSTRATED BY 5020 WOOD ENGRAVINGS. By ASA GRAY, M.D. FISHER PROFESSOR OF NATURAL HISTORY IN HARVARD UNIVERSITY. ~t ™ > ra wsotetY leis =~ "So wy & A gy fey ZU is i 0; pe of Washi ” /? NEW YORK: IVISON, PHINNEY, BLAKEMAN & CO., 47 & 49 GREENE ST. CHICAGO: S C. GRIGGS & CO., 39 & 41 LAKE ST. 1868. Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1858, by IVISON AND PHINNEY, in the Clerk’s Office of the District Court of the Southern District of New York. eye BOTANY OR YOUNG PEhOPLL. Dart Hirst. BOW PLANTS GROW . CONSIDER THE LILIES OF THE FIELD, HOW THEY GROW : THEY TOIL NOT, NEITHER DO THEY SPIN: AND YET I SAY UNTO YOU, THAT EVEN SOLOMON IN ALL HIS GLORY WAS NOT ARRAYED LIKE ONE OF THESE. — Matthew vi. 28, 29. Our Lornp’s direct object in this - lesson of the Lilies was to convince the people of God’s care for them. Now, this clothing of the earth with plants and flowers —at once so beau- tiful and so useful, so essential to all ' animal life — is one of the very ways (\\ in which He takes care of his crea- tures. And when Christ himself di- rects us to consider with attention the plants around us,— to notice how lo? ee BOTANY FOR YOUNG PEOPLE. they grow, — how varied, how numerous, and how elegant they are, and with what — exquisite skill they are fashioned and adorned,— we shall surely find it profitable and pleasant to learn the lessons which they teach. Now this considering of plants inquiringly and intelligently is the study of — Botany. It is an easy study, when pursued in the right way and with diligent attention. ‘There is no difficulty in understanding how plants grow, and are nour- ished by the ground, the rain, and the air; nor in learning what their parts are, and how they are adapted to each other and to the way the plant lives. And any young person who will take some pains about it may learn to distinguish all our common plants into their kinds, and find out their names. Interesting as this study is to all, it must be particularly so to Young People. It appeals to their natural curiosity, to their lively desire of knowing about things: it calls out and directs (i. e. educates) their powers of observation, and is adapted to sharpen and exercise, in a very pleasant way, the faculty of discrimination. To learn how to observe and how to distinguish things correctly, is the greater part of education, and is that in which people otherwise well educated are apt to be sur- prisingly deficient. Natural objects, everywhere present and endless in variety, afford the best field for practice; and the study when young, first of Botany, and afterwards of the other NaTuRAL SCIENCES, as, they are called, is the best train- ing that can be in these respects. ‘This study ought to begin even before the study of language. For to distinguish things scientifically (that is, carefully and accurately ) is simpler than to distinguish zdeas. And in NaturaL History* the learner is gradually led from the observation of things, up to the study of ideas or the relations of things. | This book is intended to teach Young People how to begin to read, with pleasure and advantage, one large and easy chapter in the open Book of Nature; namely, that in which the wisdom and goodness of the Creator are plainly written in the VEGETABLE Kinapom.* ee * Natural Ilistory is the study of the productions of the earth in their natural state, whether minerals, plants, or animals. These productions make up what are called the Three Kingdoms of Nature, viz.: ~. 1. The Mineral Kingdom, which consists of the Minerals (earths, metals, crystals, &c.), bodies not endowed with life. 2. The Vegetable Kingdom, which comprehends Vegetables or Plants. 8. The Animal Kingdom, which comprehends all Animals. The natural history of the mineral kingdom is named MINERALOGY. The natural history of the vegetable kingdom is Borany, — the subject of this book. The natural history of the animal kingdom is named ZodLocy. BOTANY FOR YOUNG PEOPLE. 3 In the First Part of this book we proceed to consider, under four principal heads or chapters, — I. How Plants Grow, and what their Parts or Organs are, CHAPTER I. Page 5. The Parts of a Plant, Section I. Page 5. How Plants grow from the Seed, oy bs es |} How Plants grow Year after Year, alan 88 A tia» Different Forms or Kinds of Roots, Stems, and Leaves, Re EV ee II. How Plants are Propagated or Multiplied in Numbers, Cuaprter II. Page 56. How Propagated from Buds, Section I. Page 56. How Propagated by Seeds, _ TE. Shia ee Flowers: their Arrangement, their Sorts, &c., ee 2) Re Fruit and Seed, pi RRS MA co Il. Why Plants Grow; what they are made for, and what they do, Cuapter III. Page 85. IV. How Plants are Classified, Named, and Studied, CuapTer LV. Page 93. Classification, — as to the Plan of it, Section I. Page 93. Names of Plants, 3 10 Cnn The Natural System of Classification in Botany, me | ae ae How to study Plants by the Flora, in Part IL, a) eWeek hak ree The Seconp Part of the book consists of a Popular Flora for Beginners, viz. a Classification and Description (according to the Natural System) of the Common Plants of the country, both Wild and Cultivated. Then follows a Dictionary of the peculiar terms which we have occasion to use in describing plants, or their parts, combined with a full Index to Part I. Every science, and every art or occupation, has terms or technical words of its own, and must have them. Without them, all would be confusion and guess-work. In Bot- any the number of technical words which a young student need to know is by no means great, and a little diligent study and practice will make them familiar. The first and most important thing for the student is, to know well the general plan of a plant and the way it grows; the parts plants consist of; the uses of the sey- eral parts; their general forms, and the names which are used to distinguish them. This is all very interesting and very useful in itself; and it is indispensable for study- ing plants with any satisfaction or advantage to find out their names, their proper. ties, and the family they belong to; i. e. to ascertain the kinds of plants. 4 BOTANY FOR YOUNG PEOPLE. Let the learners, or the class under their teacher, therefore, in the first place go earefully once through the First Part of the book, or at least through the first two chapters, verifying the examples and illustrations given, as far as possible, with their own eyes, and searching for other examples in the plants and flowers around them. Then they may begin to study plants by the Flora, or Second Part of the book, ac- cording to the directions given in the last section of Chapter IV. Whenever they meet with a word which they do not remember or clearly understand, they will look it out in the Index, and refer back to the place in the first part of the book where it is used and fully explained. Remember that every one has to creep before he can walk, and to walk before he can run. Only begin at the beginning; take pains to understand things as you go on, and cultivate the habits of accuracy and nice dis- crimination which this study is eminently adapted to inspire. Then each step will render the next one easy; you will soon make more rapid progress; will be able to ascertain with facility the names and the structure of almost all common plants; and will gradually recognize the various and interesting relationships which bind the members of the vegetable creation together in natural families, — showing them to be parts of one system; varied expressions, as it were, of the thoughts of their Di- vine Author; planned in reference to one another; and evidently intended to enlarge and enlighten our minds, as well as to gratify our senses, and nourish, clothe, warm, and shelter our bodies. So the study of Botany — the most fascinating branch of Natural History, especially for the young — becomes more and more interesting the more we learn of it, and affords a constant and unalloyed intellectual gratification. When young students have thoroughly mastered this little book, they will be well prepared to continue the study in the Lessons in Botany and Vegetable Physiol- ogy, and in the Manual of the Botany of the Northern United States, by the same author. The illustrations are referred to throughout by numbers, with “Fig.” prefixed. The numbers occasionally introduced, within parenthesis-marks, and without any prefix, (as on p. 20, line 1, and p. 36, line 9,) are references to former paragraphs, where the subject, or the word used, has already been explained. *,* The illustrations on the first page represent: — Fig. 1. Our commonest wild species of true Lily, viz. the Canada Lily. Fig. 2. The Chalcedonian Lily, a native of Palestine, with scarlet flowers, sup- posed to be “ The Lily of the Field’? to which our Saviour referred in the Sermon on the Mount. Fig. 3. Lilies of the Valley, not true Lilies, but belonging to the Lily Family. — ee CIA Pore ih. 3. HOW PLANTS GROW, AND WHAT THEIR PARTS OR ORGANS ARE. \) Y=. \ (j JY yy NGS So ON. Zoe Wwe S&S Section I.— The Parts of a Plant. 1. Pxants are chiefly made up of three parts, namely, of Loot, Stem, and Leaves. These are called the plant’s Organs, that is, its instruments. And as these parts are all that any plant needs for its growth, or vegetation, they are called the ORGANS OF VEGETATION. 2. Plants also produce lowers, from which comes the Fruit, and from this, the Seed. ‘These take no part in nourishing the plant. Their use is to enable it to give rise to new individuals, which increase the numbers of that kind of plant, to take the place of the parent in due time, and keep up the stock; that is, to reproduce and perpetuate the species. So the Flower with its parts, the Fruit, and the Seed, are called the plant’s ORGANS OF REPRODUCTION. 3. The different sorts of Lilies represented on the first page, and the common Morning-Glory on this page, show all the parts. KOS 4. The Root (Fig. 4, 7) is the part which grows downwards H Y into the ground, and takes in nourishment for the plant from the co soil. It commonly branches again and again as it grows: its smaller branches or fibres are named feootlets. Real roots never bear leaves, nor anything besides root-branches or rootlets. Tr d. The Stem (Fig. 4, s) is the part which grows upwards, e and bears the leaves and blossoms. At certain fixed places the 4. Morning-Glory, | Stem bears a leaf or a pair of leaves. 6 HOW PLANTS GROW, 6. Leaves (Fig. 4, 7, 2) are generally flat and thin, green bodies, turning one face upwards to the sky, and the other downwards towards the ground. They make the Loliage._4 : ¢. The Plan Vegetation. We see that a plant has a body or trunk (in scien- tific language, an axis), consisting of two parts,—an upper and a lower. The lower is the Root: this fixes the plant to the soil. The upper is the Stem: this rises out of the ground, and bears leaves, which are hung out on the stem in the light and air. The root takes in a part of the plant’s food from the soil: this the stem carries to the leaves. The leaves take in another part of the plant’s food from the air. And in them what the roots absorb from the ground, and what they themselves absorb from the air, are exposed to the sunshine and digested ; that is, changed into something proper to nourish the plant. For there is no nourishment in earth, air, and water as they are; but vegetables have the power of making these into nourishment. And out of this nourishment it prepares, the plant makes more growth. That is, it extends the roots farther into the soil, and sends out more branches from them, increasing its foothold and its surface for absorbing; while, above, it lengthens the stem and adds leaf after leaf, or shoots forth branches on which still more leaves are spread out in the light and air. 8. So the whole herb, or shrub, or tree, is built up. A tiny herb just sprouted from the seed and the largest tree of the forest alike consist of root, stem, and leaves, and nothing else. Only the tree has larger and more branching stems and roots, and leaves by thousands. a | 9. The Plant in Reproduction, After having attended in this way to its nourish- ment and growth for a certain time, the plant sets about reproducing itself by seed. — And for this purpose it blossoms. Many plants begin to blossom within a few weeks after springing from the seed. All our annuals, of which the Garden Morn- ing-Glory (Fig. 4) is one, blossom in the course of the summer. iennials, such as the Carrot, Parsnip, Mullein, and the common Thistle, do not flower before the second summer; and shrubs and trees, and some herbs, do not begin until they are several years old. | 10. The object of the Flower is to form the Fruit. The essential part of the fruit is the Seed. And the essential part of a seed is the Germ or Embryo it con- tains. The Germ or Embryo is a little plantlet in the seed, ready to grow into a new plant when the seed is sown. Let us notice these organs one after the other, beginning with AND WHAT THEIR PARTS ARE. | 7 11. The Flower. Flowers are most interesting to the botanist; who not only ad- mires them for their beauty, the exquisite arrangement and forms of their parts, and the wonderful variety they exhibit, but also sees in the blossoms much of the na- ture or character of each plant, and finds in them the best marks for distinguishing the sorts of plants and the family they belong to. So let the student learn at once 12. What the Parts of a Flower are. A flower, with all the parts present, consists of Calyx, Corolla, Sta- mens, and Pistils. One from the Morning-Glory (Fig. 4, f) will serve for an example. Here is one taken off, and shown of about the natural size, the corolla, Fig. 5, separated from the calyx, Fig. 6. The calyx and the corolla are the Mloral Envelopes, or the leaves of the flower. They cover in the bud, and protect the stamens and pistils, which are the Essential Organs of the flower, because both of these are necessary to forming the seed. 13. The Calyx —a Latin name for “ flower-cup ” — is the cup or outer covering of the blossom (Fig. 6). It is apt to be green and leaf-like. 14, The Corolla is the inner cup, or inner set of leaves, of the flower. It is very seldom green, as the calyx commonly is, but is “colored,” i. e. of some other color than green, and of a delicate texture. So it is the most showy part of the blossom. | . Fig. 5 shows the corolla of the Morning- “cs Glory whole. Fig. 7 is the same, split down and spread open to show | 15. The Stamens. These in this flower | grow fast to the bottom of the corolla. () | There are five stamens in the Morning- AL) Glory. Each stamen consists of two parts, it / namely, a Jilament and an Anther. The a! Iilament is the stalk; the Anther is a little ease, or hollow body, borne on the top of the filament. It is filled with a powdery matter, called Pollen. Fig. 9 shows a separate stamen on a larger scale: f, the filament; a, the anther, out of which pollen is falling from a slit or long opening down each side. { ae they are as familiar as root, stem, and leaves are to everybody. of the flowers of a Lily (like those shown on a reduced scale in Figures 1 and 2, on the first page), where all the parts are on a larger scale. Here is a Stamen (Fig. 9), with its stalk or /lament, f, and its Anther, a, discharging its yel- HOW PLANTS GROW, 16. The Pistils are the bodies in which the seeds are formed. They be- long in the centre of the flower. ‘The Morning-Giory has only one pistil: this is shown, enlarged, in Fig. 8. The Rose and the Buttercup have a great many. A pistil has three parts. At the bottom is the Ovary, which becomes the seed-vessel. This is prolonged upwards into a slender body, called the Siyle. And this bears a moist, generally somewhat enlarged por- tion, with a naked roughish surface (not having any skin, like the rest), called the Stigma. Upon this stigma some of the pollen, or powder from the anthers, falls and sticks fast. And this somehow enables the pistils to ripen seeds that will grow. 17. Let us now look at a stamen and a pistil from one low dust or Pollen. And by its side is the Pistil (Fig. 10), with its Ovary, ov.; and this tapering into a Sige, st.; and on the top of this is the Stegma, stig. Now cut the ovary through, and it will be found to contain young seeds. Fig. 11 shows the ovary of Fig. 10 cut through lengthwise and magnified by a common hand magnifying- glass. ig. 12 is the lower part of another one, cut in two crosswise. ‘The young seeds, or more correctly the bodies which are to become seeds, are named Ovules. In the Lily these are very numerous. In the Morning-Glory they are few, only six. 18. These are all the parts of the flower, —all that any flower has. But many flowers have not all these parts. Some have only one flower- cup or one set of blossom-leaves. Lilies appear to have only one set. Some have neither calyx nor corolla; some stamens have no filament, and some pistils have no style: for the style and the filament are not necessary parts, as the anther and the ovary and stigma are. ‘These cases will all be noticed when we come to study flowers more particularly. Mean- while, please to commit to memory the names of the parts of the flower, Calyx, Corolla, Stamens, and Pistils, and the parts of these also, and learn to distinguish them in all the common blossoms you meet with, until = ye ee Se eee ee ee = K /\ AND WHAT THEIR PARTS ARE. 9 on | PVA. Notice, also, that the calyx and the corolla, one or both, often consist of separate leaves; as they do in the true Lilies. cach separate piece or leaf of a corolla is called a Pétal: and each leaf or piece of a calyx is called a Sépal. 20. The corolla, the stamens, and generally the calyx, fall off or wither away after blossoming; while the ovary of the pistil remains, grows larger, and becomes 21. The Fruit. So that the fruit is the ripened ovary. It may be a berry, a stone-fruit, a nut, a grain, or a pod. The fruit of the Lily and also of the Morning- Glory is a pod. Here is the pod or fruit of the Morning-Glory (Fig. 4, fr. and Fig. 18), with the calyx remaining beneath, and the remains of the bottom of the style resting on its summit. And Fig. 14 shows the same pod, fully ripe and dry, and splitting into three pieces that the seeds may fall out. ‘This pod has three cavities (called Cells) in it; and in each cell two pretty large seeds. Lily-pods have three cells, as we may see in the ovary in the flower (Fig. 12), and many seeds in each. 22. feeds, These are the bodies produced by the ripened pistil, from which new plants may spring. Here (Fig. 15) is a seed of Morning-Glory, a little enlarged. Also two seeds cut through lengthwise in two different directions, and viewed with a magnifying-glass, to show what is inside (Fig 16,17). The part of the seed that grows is 23. The Embryo, or Germ. This is a little plantlet ready formed in the seed. In the Morning-Glory it is pretty large, and may readily be got out whole from a fresh seed, or from a dried one after soaking it well in hot water. In Fig. 16 it is shown whole and flatwise in the seed, where it is a good deal crumpled up to save room. In Fig. 17, merely the thickness of the embryo is seen, edgewise, in the seed, surrounded by the pulpy matter, which is intended to nourish it when it begins to grow. In Tig. 18, the embryo is shown taken out whole, and spread out flat. In Fig. 19, its two little leaves are separated, and we plainly see what it consists of. It is a pair of tiny leaves on the summit of a little stem. ‘The leaves (Fig. 19, c, c) are named Seed-leaves or Cotylédons ; the little stem or stemlet is named the Radicle, r. 7 ; 9 A 10 HOW PLANTS GROW FROM THE SEED. Analysis of the Section. 1.* Plants consist of two kinds of Organs : those of Vegetation ; what they are: 2. those of Repro- duction; what they are, what their use. 4. The Root; what it is; rootlets. 5. The Stem; what it is, what it bears. 6. Leaves. 7. The Plant in Vegetation; action of the root, stem, and leaves: they change earth, air, and water into nour- ishment, and use this nourishment in growing. 8. Shrub or tree like an herb, only more extended. 9, The plant reproduces itself, by seed; blossoming. 10. Object of flowers, fruit, seed: all intended for producing the germ or embryo; what this is. 11. Flowers, why particularly interesting to the botanist. 12. What the parts of a flower are; Floral Envelopes; Essential Organs, why so called. ) 13. Calyx. 14. Corolla. 15. Stamens; what they consist of; Filament; Anther; Pollen. 16. Pistils; how situated; parts of a pistil; Ovary, Style, Stigma; its use. 17. Stamens and pistil shown in another flower, and the parts explained: Ovules, what they are. 18. All these parts not always present; what ones often wanting. 19. Leaves of a corolla, called Petals; of a calyx, Sepals. 20. What becomes of the parts of a blossom. 21. Fruit, what it is, what it contains. 22. Seeds, what they are, what the part is that grows. 23. Embryo or Germ; what it consists of: Cotyledons or Seed-leaves; Radicle or Stemlet. | Section IIl.— How Plants grow from the Seed. 24. Illustrated by the Morning-Glory. We now know what all the parts of a plant are; that a plant, after growing or vegetating awhile, blossoms; that flowers give rise to fruit; that the fruit contains one or more seeds ; and that the essential part of a seed is the embryo or germ of a new plant. To produce, protect, and nourish this germ, is the object of the flower, the fruit, and the seed. The object of the embryo is to grow and become a new plant. How it grows, is what we have now ~ to learn. 25. Life ina Seed, But first let us notice that it does not generally grow at once. Although alive, a seed may for a long while show no siens of life, and feel neither the summer’s heat nor the winter’s cold. Still it lives on where it falls, in this slumbering way, until the next spring in most plants, or sometimes until the spring after that, before it begins to grow. There is a great difference in this respect in different seeds. Those of Red Maple ripen in the spring, and start about the mid- dle of the summer. Those of Sugar Maple ripen in the fall, and lie quiet until.the next spring. When gathered and Jaid up in a dry place, many seeds will keep alive for two, three, or several years; and in this state plants may be safely transported — * The numbers are those of the paragraphs. HOW PLANTS GROW FROM THE SEED. | 1g all around the world. How long seeds will live is uncertain. ‘The stories of seeds growing which have been preserved for two or more thousand years with Egyptian mummies, are not to be believed. But it is well known that Sensitive Plants have been raised from seeds over sixty years old. Ifew kinds of seeds will grow after keeping them for five or six years; many refuse to grow atter the second year; and some will not grow at all unless allowed to fall at once to the ground. ‘There is no way of telling whether the germ of a seed is alive or not, except by trying whether it will grow, that is, will germinate 26. Germination and Early Growth. Cornet is the sprouting of a plant from the seed. Having just illustrated the parts of a plant by the Morning-Glory, from the root up to the seed and the embryo in the seed, we may take this same plant as an example to show how a plant grows from the seed. If we plant some of the seeds in a flower-pot, covering them lightly with soil, water them, and give them warmth, or if in spring we watch those which sowed themselves naturally in the garden the year before, and are now moistened by showers and warmed by sun- shine, we shall soon see how they grow. And what we learn from this one kind of plant will be true of all ordinary plants, but with some differences in the circum- stances, according to the kind. 27. The seed first imbibes some moisture through its coats, swells a little, and, as it feels the warmth, the embryo gradually wakes from its long and deep sleep, and stretches itself, as it were. ‘That is, the tiny stem of the embryo lengthens, and its end bursts through the coats of the seed; at the same time, the two leaves it bears grow larger, straighten themselves, and so throw off the seed-coats as a loose husk; this allows the seed-leaves to spread out, as leaves naturally do, and so the seedling plantlet stands revealed. Observe the whole for yourselves, if pos- sible, and compare with these figures. Tig. 19 is repeated from p. 9, and repre- sents the embryo taken out of the seed, straightened, enlarged, and the two leaves a little opened. Fig. 16 and 17 show how the embryo lies snugly packed away in the seed. I*ig. 20 shows it coming up, the seed-leaves above just throwing off the coats or husk of the seed. Fig. 21 is the same, a little later and larger, with the seed-leaves spread out in the air above, and a root well formed beneath. And Tig. 22 is the same a little later still. _ 28. At the very beginning Of its growth, the end of the little stem which first comes out of the seed turns downward and points into the earth. From it the root is formed, which continues downwards, branching as it grows, and burying itself 12 HOW PLANTS GROW FROM THE SEED. more and more in the soil. The other end of the stem always turns upwards, and, as the whole lengthens, the seed-leaves are brought up out of the ground, so that they expand in the light and air, which is the proper place for leaves, as the dark and damp soil is for the root. 29. What makes the root always grow downwards into Be ea har the ground, and the stem turn upwards, so as to rise out of it, we no more know, than we know why newly-hatched ducklings take to the water at once, while chickens avoid it, although hatched under the same fowl and treated just alike. But the fact is always so. eae And although we know not how, <) j the why is evident enough; for the root is thereby at once } placed in the soil, from which it has to absorb moisture and other things, and the leaves appear in the air and the light, where they are to do their work. 30. Notice how early the seed- —Cotyleddons or ling plant is complete, that is, becomes a real vegetable, with all its parts, small as the whole | thing is (Fig. 21). For it al- Radicte or stemlet. |, ready possesses a root, to connect ? it with the ground and draw up what it needs from that; a stem, Root. to elevate the foliage into the light and air; and leaves, to take in what it gets directly from the 20 2 22 air, and to digest the whole in the light (as explained in the last section, Par. 7 ). That is, it already has all the Organs of Vegetation (Par. 1), all that any plant has before blossoming, so that the little seedling can now take care of itself, and live — just as any larger plant lives —upon the soil and the air. And all it has to do in order to become a full-grown plant, like Fig. 4, is to increase the size of its organs, and to produce more of them; namely, more stem with more leaves above, and more roots below. We have only to watch our seedling plantlets a week or two longer, and we shall see how this is done. --------- Radicle or stemlet. HOW PLANTS GROW FROM THE SEED. 13 51. The root keeps on growing under ground, and sending off more and more small branches or rootlets, each one adding something to the amount of absorbing surface in contact with the moist soil. The little stem likewise lengthens upwards, and the pair of leaves on its summit grow larger. But these soon get their full erowth; and we do not yet see, perhaps, where more are to come from. But now a little bud, called the Plumule, appears on the top of the stem (Fig. 22), just be- tween the stalks of the two seed-leaves; it enlarges and unfolds into a leaf; this soon is raised upon a new piece of stem, which car- ries up the leaf, just as the pair of seed-leaves were raised by the lengthening of the radicle or first joint of stem in the seed. Then another leaf appears on the summit of this joint of stem, and is raised upon its own joint of stem, and soon. Jig. 23 shows the same plant as Fig. 22 (leaving out the root and the lower part of the stem), at a later stage; c¢,c, are the seed-leaves ; /is the next leaf, which came from the plumule of Fig. 22, now well raised on the second joint of stem; and Z/' is the next, still very small and just unfolding. And so the plant grows on, the whole summer long, producing leaf after leaf, one by one, and raising each on its own joint of stem, arising | from the summit of the next below;—~as we see in 23 Fig. 4, at the beginning of the chapter, where many joints of stem have grown in this way (the first with a pair of leaves, the rest with one apiece), and still there are some unfolding ones at the slender young summit. _~ 82. How tue Seedling is nourished at the Beginning, Growth requires food, in plants as well as in animals. To grow into a plant, the embryo in a seed must be fed with vegetable matter, or with something out of which vegetable matter can be made. When a plant has established itself, — that is, has sent down its roots into the soil, and spread out some leaves in the air, —it is then able to change mincral matter (viz. earth, air, and water) which it takes in, into vegetable matter, and co to live and grow independently. But at the beginning, before its. organs are developed and established in their proper places, the forming plant must be sup- plied by ready-made vegetable matter, furnished by the mother plant. On this supply the embryo germinating from the seed feeds and grows, —just as the new- — > 14 HOW PLANTS GROW FROM THE SEED. born animal does upon the mother’s milk, or as the chick developing in the egg does upon the prepared nourishment the parent had laid up for the purpose in the yolk. 33. Tear open a fresh Morning-Glory seed, or cut a dried one in two, as in Fig. 17, and this supply will be seen, in the form of a rich and sweetish jelly-like matter, packed away with the embryo, and filling all the spaces between its folds. This is called the Albumen of the seed (that being the Latin name of the white of an egg); and this is what the embryo feeds upon, and what enables its little stemlet (Fig. 19, r) to grow, and form its root downwards, and carry up and ex- pand its seed-leaves (c,c) in the air, and so become at once a plantlet (Fig. 21), with root, stem, and leaves, able to take care of itself, just as a chicken does when it escapes from the shell. 34, This moist nourishing jelly would not keep long in that state. So, when the seed ripens and dries, it hardens into a substance like thin dried glue or gum, which will keep for any length of time. And whenever the seed is sown, and absorbs moisture, this matter softens into a jelly again, or gradually liquefies, and the seed-leaves crumpled up among it drink it in at every pore. im) Y | : all WAV Serrate. Dentate. Crenate. Wavy. Sinuate. Incised or Jagged. > 50 HOW PLANTS GROW. number of projecting parts, or lobes, may be expressed by saying two-lobed, three« lobed (Fig. 121), &e., according to their number. Or, more particularly, a leaf is Lobed ; when the pieces are roundish, or the incisions open or blunt, as in Fig. 120.3215 and Cleft; when cut about half-way down, with sharp and narrow incisions, as in — Fig. 122, 123; and so two-cleft, three-cleft, five-cleft, &c., according to the number. Parted ; when the cutting extends almost through, as in Fig. 124,125. And we say two-parted, three-parted, &c., to express the number of the parts. Divided ; when the divisions go through to the base of the leaf (as in Fig. 127), or to the midrib (as in Fig. 126), which cuts up the blade into separate pieces, or nearly so. r 3 Pinnately Palmately 121 Lobed. Partede Divided. 140. As the cutting is always between the veins or ribs, and not across them, the arrangement of the lobes depends upon the kind of veining. Feather-veined leaves have the incisions all running in towards the midrib (as in the upper row of figures), because the principal veins all spring from the midrib; while radiate or palmately veined leaves have them all running towards the base of the blade, where the ribs all spring from the footstalk, as in the lower row of figures. So those of KINDS AND FORMS OF LEAVES. ye the upper row are called pinnately lobed, cleft, parted, or divided, as the case may be, and those of the lower row palmately lobed, cleft, &c. ‘The number of the lobes or pieces may also be expressed in the same phrase. Thus, Hepatica has a pal- mately three-lobed leaf (Fig. 121); the Red Maple a palmately five-cleft leaf (Fig. 84), and so on. 141. In this way almost everything about the shape and veining of a leaf may be told in very few words. How useful this is, will be seen when we come to study plants to find out their names by the descriptions. 142. All these terms apply as well to the lobes or parts of a leaf, when they are themselves toothed, or lobed, or cleft, &c. And they also apply to the parts of the flower, and to any flat body like a leaf. So that the language of Botany, which the student has to learn, does not require so very many technical words as is commonly supposed. 143. Compound Leaves (121) are those which have the blade cut up into two or more separate smaller blades. The separate blades or pieces of a compound leaf are called Leaflets. The leaflets are generally jornted with the main footstalk, just as that is jointed with the stem, and when the leaf dies the leaflets fall off separately. 144. There are two kinds of com- pound leaves, the pinnate and the palmate. 145. Pinnate leaves have their leaflets arranged along the sides of the main footstalk, as in Fig. 128, 129, 130. 146. Palmate (also called Digitate) leaves bear their leaflets all at the very end of the footstalk; as in Fig. 151. 147. There are several varieties of pinnate leaves, The principal sorts are: — 128 129 Odd-pinnate. Pinnate withatendris © Abruptly pinnate, Pye HOW PLANTS GROW. Interruptedly pinnate, when some of the leaflets of the same leaf are much smaller than the rest, and placed between them, as in the Water Avens. Abruptly pinnate, when there is no odd leaflet at the end, as in Honey-Locust, Fig. 130. | Odd-pinnate, when there is an odd leaflet at the end, as in the Common Locust (Fig. 128) and in the Ash. Pinnate with a tendril, when the footstalk is prolonged into a tendril, as in Fig. 129, and all of the Pea tribe. 148. Pinnate leaves may have many or few leaflets. The Bean has pinnate leaves of only Te Baliwats ae of 5 leaflets. three leaflets. 149. Palmate leaves generally have few leaflets; there is not room for many on the very end of the footstalk. Common Clover -has a palmate leaf of three leaflets (Fig. 136); Virginia Creeper, one of five leaflets (Fig. 72), as well as the Buckeye (Fig. 1381) ; while the Horsechestnut has seven, and some Lupines from eleven to seventeen. 150. Twice or Thrice Compound Leaves are not uncommon, both of the pinnate and of the palmate sorts. While some leaves of Honey-Locust are only once pinnate, as in Fig. 130, others are doubly or twice pinnate, as in Fig. 182. Those of many Acacias are thrice pinnate. Fig. 183 represents one of the root-leaves of Meadow-Rue, which ‘is of the palmate kind, and its general footstalk is divided into threes for four times in suc- cession, making in all eighty-one leaflets! When a leaf is divided three or four times, it is said to be decompound. This is ter- nately decompound, because it divides each time into threes. 132. A twice-pinnate leaf of Honey-Locust. KINDS AND FORMS OF LEAVES. 53 151. Leaves without Distinction of Footstalk and Blade, or: with no very obvious distinction of parts. Of this kind, among several others, may be mentioned, — Needle - shaped leaves, such as those of Pine-trees and Larches (Fig. 134). These are long, slender, and rigid, and often with little if any distinc- tion of sides. Awl-shaped or Subulate leaves are those which from a broadish base ta- per into a sharp and rigid point, like 133 Ternately decompound, or four timescompound leaf. one sort of those of the Red Cedar and Arbor Vite (Fig. 135, those on the larger branchlets). Those on other branchlets, as at a, are shorter, blunt, and scale-shaped. Thread-shaped or Filiform leaves ; round and stalk-like, as those of the Onion. Hquitant leaves, like those of Iris (Fig. 64), which are folded together lengthwise, as may be seen at the base, where they override each other. They grow upright, with their faces looking horizontally, instead of having an upper and a lower surface, as most leaves do. 134 Needle-shaped leaves of Larch. Awl-shaped leaves, &e. 54 HOW PLANTS GROW. 152. Stipules, as already explained (120), are a pair of appendages at the base of the leaf, one on each side. These often grow fast to the base of the leafstalk, as they do in the Rose and in Clover (Fig. 136; st, the stipules). Or they may join with each other and form a kind of sheath round the stem, as they do in the Buttonwood and in Polygonum (Fig. 137). Many leaves have no stipules at all. In many cases they fall off very early, especially those that serve for bud-scales, as in Magnolia. 153. The Arrangement of Leaves on the stem has already been explained as to the two principal ways (59). Leaves are either Alternate, when they follow each other one by one, as in the Morning-Glory (Fig. 4) and the Linden (Fig. 83); or Opposite, when in pairs, that is, two on each joint of stem, one opposite the other, as in Maples (Fig. 84). To these may be added a third, but less common arrangement, viz. the Whorled ; where there are three, four, or more leaves on Stipules united, the same joint of stem, forming Whorlet teas a circle or whorl; as in Madder and Bedstraw (Fig. 157’). But this is only a variety of the opposite mode. Analysis of the Section. 81. Vegetation very simple in plan, very diversified in particulars. 82. The study of the forms of the organs is Morphology. 83-89. Roots, their forms and kinds. 84. Primary or original; secondary; how they originate. 85. Aerial roots. 86. Aerial rootlets. 87. Air-Plants; how they live. 88. Parasitic Plants, their economy. 89. Shapes of roots: fibrous; fleshy; the principal sorts. 90. Forms or kinds of stem; herbaceous, shrubby, arboreous. 91. Culm or straw-stem. 92. Direc- tions or positions of stems. 93. Peculiar sorts. 94. Thorns or Spines, how shown to be branches ; ANALYSIS OF THE SECTION. 55 Prickles. 95. Tendrils. 96. Peduncles or Flower-stalks. 97. Buds. 98. Branches connected with the ground. 99. Stolons. 100. Runners. 101. Suckers. 102. Offsets. 108. Rootstocks. 104. Fleshy Rootstocks. 105. Tubers. 106. Corms. 107. Bulbs; 108. scaly and coated. 109. Bulblets. 110. Internal Structure of Stems; Cellular Tissue; Wood. 111. The two classes of stems. 112. Ex- amples, both in herbs and trees. 1138. Endogenous stem; how its wood is arranged. 114. External appearance and growth. 115. Exogenous stem; common wood. 116. How it increases in diameter year after year: Sap-wood and Heart-wood. 117. The latter dead, the former annually renewed. 118. External appearance and mode of growth. 119. Leaves ; their varieties, why useful to learn. 120. Their parts: Blade, Footstalk, Stipules. 121. Simple and Compound. 122. Structure and Veining of leaves: woody or fibrous part; cellular tissue or green pulp; Epidermis or Skin. 123. Ribs. 124. Veins and Veinlets; Nerves, so called. 125. Two kinds of veining. 126. Netted-veined or Reticulated. 127. Class of plants that have this kind of veining. 128. Parallel-veined or Nerved; class of plants that have this kind of veining. 129. Both kinds of two sorts. 1380. Feather-veined or Pinnately veined. 131. Radiate-veined or Pal- mately veined. 132. Shapes of leaves enumerated; as to general outline. 1838. Those that taper downward. 134, 135. Intermediate shapes, how expressed. 186. Shapes depending upon the base. 137. Forms of apex. 138. As to margin or toothing, &c. 139. Lobing or division. 140. How this is related to the veining; how both the kind of lobing and the number of parts may be expressed, 141, so that a short phrase will describe the leaf completely. 142. All the various terms apply as well to other parts, as to calyx, corolla, petals, &c. 143. Compound Leaves ; Leaflets. 144. The two kinds. 145. Pinnate leaves. 146. Palmate or Digitate. 147. Varieties of pinnate leaves. 148. Number of leaflets. 149. Also of palmate leaves ; why their leaflets are generally fewer than those of pinnate leaves. 150. Twice or thrice compound and decompound leaves. 151. Leaves without distinction of blade and footstalk ; Needle-shaped ; Thread-shaped ; Awl- shaped; Equitant. 152. Stipules; often united with the footstalk, or with each other. 153. The arrangement of leaves on the stem: the three modes, viz. alternate, opposite, whorled. UHRA PRE in aia HOW PLANTS ARE PROPAGATED OR MULTIPLIED IN NUMBERS. SEcTION I.— Flow Propagated from Buds. 154. PLANTs not only grow so as to increase in size or extent, but also multiply, or increase their numbers. ‘This they do at such a rate that almost any species, if favorably situated, and not interfered with by other plants or by animals, would soon cover the whole face of a country adapted to its life. 155. Plants multiply in two distinct ways, namely, by buds and by Seeds. All plants propagate by seeds, or by what answer to seeds. Besides this, a great number of plants, mostly perennials, propagate naturally from buds. 156. And almost any kind of plant may be made to propagate from buds, by taking sufficient pains. ‘The gardener multiplies plants artificially in this way, 157. By Layers and Slips or Cuttings, In laying or layering, the gardener bends a branch down to the ground, — sometimes cutting a notch at the bend, or remov- ing a ring of bark, to make it strike root the quicker, — and covers it with earth; then, after it has rooted, he cuts off the connection with the parent stem. Thus he makes artificial stolons (99). Plants which strike root still more readily, such as Willows, he propagates by cuttings or slips, that is, by pieces of stem, containing one or more buds, thrust into the ground or into flower-pots. If kept moist and warm enough, they will generally strike root from the cut end in the ground, and develop a bud above, so forming a new plant out of a piece of an old one. Many woody plants, which will not so readily grow from slips, can often be multiplied 158. By Grafting or Budding. In grafting, the cutting is inserted into a stem or branch of another plant of the same species, or of some species like it, as of the Pear into the Quince or Apple; where it grows and forms a branch of the stock (as the stem used to graft on is called). The piece inserted is called a scton. In grafting shrubs and trees it is needful to make the inner bark and the edge of the wood of the scion correspond with these parts in the stock, when they will grow together, and become as completely united as a natural branch is with its parent stem. In budding or inoculating, a young bud, stripped from one fresh plant, is inserted under the bark of another, usually in summer; there it adheres and gen- HOW PLANTS ARE PROPAGATED. 5ST erally remains quiet, as it would have done on the parent bough, until the next spring, when it grows just as if it belonged there. 159. The object of all these ways of artificial propagation from buds is to pre- serve and to multiply choice varieties of a species which would not be perpetuated from seed. For as the fruit of all the natural branches is alike, so it remains essentially unaltered when borne by branches which are made to grow as artificial branches of another plant, or to take root in the ground as a separate plant. The seeds of an apple or other fruit cannot be depended upon to reproduce the very same sort of apple, — that is, an apple of the very same flavor or goodness. The seeds will always reproduce the same species, but not the individual peculiarities. These are perpetuated in propagation from buds. This kind of propagation is there- fore very important to the cultivator. It takes place naturally in many plants, 160. By Stolons, Offsets, Runners, or Suckers, in ways which have already been described (99 to 103, and Fig. 74). These are all forms of natural layering, and they must have taught the gardener his art in this respect. For he merely imitates Nature, or rather sets her at work and hastens her operations. Also, 161. By Tubers (74, 75, Fig. 59, 60). These are under-ground branches with lively buds, well charged with prepared nourishment, rendering them more inde- pendent and surer to grow. Potatoes and Ground-Artichokes are familiar illus- trations of the kind. They are propagated year after year by their buds, or eyes, being very seldom raised from the seed. Each annual crop of tubers is set free at maturity, by the death of all the rest of the plant. 162. By Corms, Bulbs, and Bulblets; as explained in paragraphs 77 and 106 to 109. Fig. 76 shows a corm or solid bulb of Crocus, which itself grew by feeding upon its parent, whose exhausted remains are seen underneath: it has already pro- duced a crop of buds, to grow in their turn into another generation of corms, con- suming their parent in the process. Bulbs produce a crop of new bulbs from buds in the axils of some of their scales. Tulips, Daffodils, and Garlies propagate very freely in this manner, not only keeping up the succession of generations, but multi- plying greatly their numbers. Analysis of the Section. 154. Plants multiply as well as grow. 155. In two ways; all plants by seeds, many by buds. 156. Most kinds may be propagated by buds artificially. 157. By Layers and Slips or Cuttings. 158. By Grafting or Budding. 159. Object gained by this mode of propagation. 160. It takes place naturally, by Stolons, Offsets, &c. 161. By Tubers. 162. By Corms, Bulbs, and Bulblets. 58 HOW PLANTS ARE PROPAGATED. Section .— How Propagated by Seeds. 163. PropaGcation from buds is really only the division, as it grows,.of one plant into two or more, or the separation of shoots from a stock. Propagation from seed is the only true reproduction. In the seed an entirely new individual is formed. So the Seed, and the /’ruzt, in which the seed is produced, and the Flower, which gives rise to the fruit, are the Organs of Reproduction (2). 164. Every species at some period or other produces seeds, or something which answers to seeds. Upon this distinction, namely, whether they bear true flowers producing genuine seeds, or produce something merely answering to flowers and seeds, is founded the grand division of all plants into two series or grades, that is, into PH#&NoOGAMOUS or FLOWERING PLANTS, and CrRyPTOGAMOUS or FLOW- ERLESS PLANTS. 165. Cryptogamous or Flowerless Plants do not bear real flowers, having stamens and pistils, nor produce real seeds, or bodies having an embryo ready formed in them. But they produce minute and very simple bodies which answer the purpose of seeds. To distinguish them from true seeds, they are called Spores. Ferns, Mosses, Lichens, and Seaweeds, are all flowerless plants, reproduced by spores. 166. Phenogamous or Flowering Plants are those which do bear flowers and seeds; the seed essentially consisting of an embryo or germ, ready formed within its coats, which has only to grow and unfold itself to become a plant; as has been fully explained in the first and second sections of Chapter I. 167. Flowerless plants have their organs too minute to be examined without. much magnifying, and are too difficult for young beginners. The ordinary or Flowering class of plants will afford them abundant occupation. We are to study first the Flower, then the Fruit and Seed. Srecrion III. — Flowers. §1. Their Arrangement on the Stem. 168. Inflorescence is the term used by botanists for flower-clusters generally, or for the way blossoms are arranged on the stem. Everything about this is governed by a very simple rule, which is this : — 169. Flower-buds appear in the same places that common buds (that is, leaf- buds) do; and they blossom out in the order of their age, the earliest-formed first, SST ELE, Oe A. ctl FLOWERS: THEIR ARRANGEMENT ON THE STEM. 59 and so on in regular succession. Now the place for buds is in the axils of the leaves (axillary buds, 58), and at the end of the stem (terminal bud, 57): so these are also the places from which flowers spring. Fig. 138 is a Trillium, with its flower terminal, that is, from the summit of the stem. Fig. 139 is a piece of Moneywort, with axillary flow- ers, 1. e. from the axils of the leaves. The Morn- ing-Glory (Fig. 4) also has its flowers axillary. 170. Nolitary Flowers. In both these cases the blossoms are solitary, that is, single. There is only one on the plant in Trillium (Fig. ) 138). In Fig. 139, there is on- iq “4 ly one from the same axil; and although, as the stem grows on, flowers appear in succession, they ! are so scattered, and so accom- panied by leaves, that they cannot be said to form a flower-cluster. 171. Flower-Clusters are formed whenever the blossoms are more numerous or closer, and the ac- companying leaves are less con- spicuous. Fig. 140 is a cluster (like that of Lily of the Valley, Fig. 3) of the kind called a Terminal Flower. raceme. On comparing it with Axillary Flowers. Fig. 139, we may perceive that it differs mainly in having the leaves, one under each blossom-stalk, reduced to little scales, which are inconspicuous. In both, the flowers really spring from the axils of leaves. So they do in all the following kinds of flower-clusters, until we reach the Cyme. 172. The leaves of a flower-cluster take the name of Bracts. These are gen- erally very different from the ordinary leaves of the plant, commonly much smaller, and often very small indeed, as in Fig. 140. In the figures 141 to 144, the bracts are larger, and more leaf-like. They are the leaves from whose axil the flower arises. Sometimes there are bracts also on the separate flower-stalks (as on the lower ones in Fig, 140): to distinguish these we call them Bractlets. F e 60 HOW PLANTS ARE PROPAGATED. | | | 173. The flower-stalk or footstalk of a blossom is called a Peduncle (96). So | the flowers in Fig. 188, 139, &c. are peduncled or stalked. But in | Fig. 141 they are sitting on the stem, or sessv/e. | 174. In clusters we need to distinguish two kinds of flower-stalks ; namely, the stalk of the whole cluster, if there be any, and the stalk | of each blossom. In such cases we eall the stalk of the cluster the | Pedunele, and the stalk of the individual flowers we name the Pedt- | cel. In the Lily of the Valley (Fig. 3, as in Fig. 140), there is the | peduncle or general flower-stalk (which is here a continuation of | the main stem), and then the flowers all have pedicels of their own. | 175. Kinds of Flower-Clusters, Of those which bear their flowers on | the sides of a main stalk, in the axils of leaves or bracts, the prin- cipal kinds are the Raceme, the Oorymb, the Umbel, the Head, and the Sprke with its varieties; also the Panicle. In the head and | the spike the flowers are sessile. In the others they have pedicels : | or footstalks of their own. 4 176. A Raceme is a cluster with the blossoms arranged along the . sides of a main flower-stalk, or its continuation, and all on pedicels | of about the same length... A bunch of Currant-blossoms or berries, | or the graceful cluster of the Lily of the Valley (Fig. 3, 140) are 140 ' | | good illustrations. Fig. 142 shows the plan of the raceme. Notice that a raceme | | always blossoms from the bottom to the top, in regular order; because the lower | . buds are of course the oldest. . ' : Wry “ ; Vv Oy ONY 1h JW \ 141 144 Spike. Raceme. Corymb. Umbel, 177. A Corymb is a flat-topped or convex cluster, like that of Hawthorn. Fig. FLOWERS: THEIR ARRANGEMENT ON THE STEM. 61 143 shows the plan of it. It is plainly the same as a raceme with the lower pedicels much longer than the uppermost. Shorten the body, or axis, of a corymb so that it is hardly perceptible, and we change it into 178. An Umbel, as in Fig.144. This is a cluster in which the pedicels all spring from about the same level, like the rays or sticks of an umbrella, from which it takes its name. The Milkweed and Primrose bear their flowers in umbels. 179. The outer blossoms of a corymb or an umbel plainly answer to the lower blos- soms of a raceme. So the umbel and the corymb blossom from the circumference towards the centre, the outer flower-buds being the oldest. By that we may know such clusters from cymes. 180. A Iead is a flower- cluster with a very short body, or axis, and without any pedi- cels to the blossoms, or hardly any, so that it has a rounded form. The Button-bush (Fig. 145), the Thistle, and the Red Clover are good examples. 181. It is plain that an umbel would be changed into a head by shortening its pedicels down to nothing; or, contrarily, that a head would become an umbel by giving stalks to its flowers. 182. A Spike is a lengthened flower-cluster, with no pedicels to the flowers, or hardly any. Fig. 141 gives the plan of a spike ; Head. rai and the common Mullein and the Plantain are good examples. a A head would become a spike by lengthening its axis. A ra- = ceme would become a spike by shortening its pedicels so much 146. Catkin. that they could hardly be seen. The Cathkin and the Spadix are only sorts of spike. 183. A Catkin or Ament is a spike with scaly bracts. The flowers of the Wil- low, Poplar, Alder, and Birch (Fig. 146) are in catkins. 62 HOW PLANTS ARE PROPAGATED. | 184. A Spadix is a spike with small flowers crowded on a thick and fleshy body or axis. Sweet-Flag and Indian-Turnip are common examples. In Indian-Tur- 147 Spadix and Spathe. 188. A Panicle is an irreg- ularly branching compound flower-cluster, such as would be formed by a raceme with its lower pedicels branched. Tig. 149 shows a simple panicle, the branches, or | : what would be the pedicels, ae only once branched. A sai bomen bunch of Grapes and the flower-cluster of Horsechestnut are more compound panicles. nip (Fig. 147) the spadix bears flowers only near the bottom, but is naked and club-shaped above. And it is surrounded by a peculiar leaf or bract in the form of a hood. 185. Such a bract or leaf enwrapping a spike or cluster of blossoms is named a Spathe. 186. A set of bracts around a flower-cluster, such as those around the base of the umbel in Fig. 144, is called an Involucre. : 187. Any of these clusters may be compound. ‘That is, there may be racemes clustered in racemes, making a compound raceme, or corymbs in corymbs, or umbels in umbels, making “a 7 a compound umbel, as in Caraway (Fig. 148), Parsnip, Parsley, and all ¢ that family. The little umbels of a | € compound umbel are called Unmbel- € lets ; and their involucre, if they have any, is called an Jnvolucel. NY GOA TZ, Dy OY Y Oy J Bye Z A crowded compound panicle of this sort has been called a Z’hyrse. 149 189. A Cyme is the general name of flower-clusters of the Panicle. kind in which a flower always terminates the stem or main peduncle, and each of FLOWERS: THEIR PARTS. 63 its branches. The plan of a cyme is illustrated in the following figures. Fig. 150, to begin with, is a stem terminated by a flower, which plainly comes from a terminal bud or is a terminal flower. Fig. 151 is the same, which has started a branch from the axil of each of the uppermost leaves; each of these ends in a_ flower-bud. | Fig. 152 is the same, | with the side branches again branched in the same way, each branch ending in a flower-bud. This makes a_ cluster ' ‘ : Plan of the Cyme. looking like a corymb, as | shown in Fig. 143; but observe that here in the cyme the middle flower, a, which ends the main stem, blossoms first; next, those flowers marked 6; then | those marked c, and so on, the centre one of each set being the earliest ; while in the corymb the blossoming begins with the outermost flowers and proceeds regu larly towards the centre. The Elder, the Cornel, and the Hydrangea (Fig. 169) have their blossoms in cymes many times branched in this way; that is, they have compound cymes. 7 190. A Faseicle is only a close or very much crowded cyme, with very short footstalks to the flowers, or none at all, as the flower-cluster of Sweet-William. § 2. Lorms and Kinds of Flowers. 191. The Parts of a Flower were illustrated at the beginning of the book, in Chapter I., Section I. Let us glance at them again, taking a different flower for the example, namely, that of the Three-leaved Stonecrop. Although small, this has all the parts very distinct and regular. Tig. 153 is a moderately enlarged view of one of the middle or earliest flowers of this Stonecrop. (The others are like it, only with their parts in fours instead of fives.) And Fig.154 shows two parts of each sort, one on each side, more magnified, and separated from the end of the flower-stalk (or Receptacle), but standing in their natural position, namely, below or outside a Sepal, or leaf of the Calyx; then a Petal, or leaf of the Corolla ; then a Stamen; then a Prstzl. 5 64 HOW PLANTS ARE PROPAGATED. 192. This is a complete and regular, yet simple flower; and will serve as a pat- tern, with which a great variety of flowers may be compared. 193. When we wish to designate the leaves of the blossom by one word, we call them the Perianth. This name is formed of two Greek words meaning “around the flower.” It is convenient to use in cases where (as in the Lilies, illustrated on the first page) we are not sure at first view whether the leaves of the flower are calyx or corolla, or both. eaten Ce 194. A Petal is sometimes to be distin- suished into two parts; its Blade, like the blade of a leaf, and its Claw, which is a kind of tapering base or foot of the blade. More commonly there is only a blade; but the petals of Roses have a very short, nar- row base or claw; those of Mustard, a longer one; those of Pinks and the like, a narrow claw, which is generally longer than the blade (Fig. 308). 195. A Stamen, as we have already learned (10, 17), generally consists of two parts; its /lament and its Anther. But the filament is only a kind of footstalk, no more necessary to a stamen than a petiole is to a leaf. It is therefore sometimes very short or wanting; when the anther is sesszle. The anther is the essential part. Its use, as we know, is to produce pollen. 196. The Pollen is the matter, looking like dust, which is shed from the anthers when they open (Fig. 159). Here is a grain of pollen, a single particle of the fine powder shed by the anther of a Mallow, as seen highly magnified. In this plant the grains are beset Sepal. 155 with bristly points; in many plants they are smooth; and they differ _Pollen-grain. sreatly in appearance, size, and shape in different species, but are all just alike in the same species; so that the family a plant belongs to can often be told by seeing only a grain of its pollen. The use of the pollen is to lodge on the stigma of the pistil, where it grows in a peculiar way, its inner coat projecting a slender thread FLOWERS: THEIR NATURE. G5 which sinks into the pistil, somewhat as a root grows down into the ground, and reaches an ovule in the ovary, causing it in some unknown way to develop an embryo, and thereby become a seed. 197. As to the Prstzl, we have also learned that it consists of three parts, the Ovary, the Style, and the Stigma (16); that the style is not always present, being only a stalk or support for the stigma. But the two other parts are essential, — the Stigma to receive the pollen, and the Ovary to contain the ovules, or bodies which are to become seeds. Fig. 156 represents a pistil of Stonecrop, magnified; its stigma (known by the naked roughish surface) at the tip of the style; the style gradually enlarging downwards into the ovary. Here the ovary is cut in two, to show some of the ovules inside. And Fig. 157 shows one of the ovules, or future seeds, still more magnified. 198. Nature of the Flower. In the mind of a botanist, who looks at the philosophy of the thing, A flower answers to a sort of branch. True, a flower does not bear much resemblance to a common branch; but we have seen (90—109) what remarkable forms and ap- pearances branches, and the leaves they bear, occasionally take. Flowers come from buds just as branches do, and spring from just the same places that branches do (169). In fact, a flower is a branch intended for a peculiar purpose. While a branch with ordinary leaves is intended for growing, and for collecting from the air and preparing or digesting food, — and while such peculiar branches as tubers, bulbs, &c. are for holding pre- pared food for future use, —a blossom is a very short and a special sort of branch, intended for the production of seed. If the whole flower answers to a branch, then it follows that (excepting the receptacle, which is a continuation of the flower-stalk) — The parts of the flower answer to leaves. This is plainly so with the sepals and the petals, which are commonly called the leaves of the blossom. The sepals or calyx-leaves are commonly green and leaf-like, or partly so. And the petals or corolla-leaves are leaves in shape, only more delicate in texture and in color. In many blossoms, and very plainly in a White Water-Lily, the calyx-leaves run into 156 157 Pistil. Ovule. 66 HOW PLANTS ARE PROPAGATED. corolla-leaves, and the inner corolla-leaves change gradually into stamens, — show: ing that even stamens answer to leaves. 198°. How astamen answers to a leaf, according to the botanist’s idea, Fig. 158 is intended to show. The filament or stalk of the stamen answers to the footstalk of a leaf; and the anther answers to the blade. figure represents a short filament, bearing an anther which has its upper half cut away; and the summit of a leaf is placed above it. Fig. 159 is the whole stamen of a Lily put beside it for comparison. If the whole anther corre- sponds with the blade of a leaf, then its two cells, or halves, answer to the halves of the blade, one on each side of the midrib; the continuation of the filament, which con- nects the two cells (called the connective), answers to the midrib ; and the anther generally opens along what answer to the margins of a leaf. 199. It is easy to see how a simple pistil answers to a leaf. A simple pistil, like one of those of the Stonecrop (Fig. 154, 156) is regarded by the botanist as if it were made by the folding up inwards of the blade of a leaf, The lower part of the 159 Plan of a Stamen. (that is, of what would have been a leaf on any branch of the common kind,) so that the margins come together and join, making a hollow closed bag, which is the 161 Plan of Pistil. ovary; a tapering summit forms the style, and some part of the margins of the leaf in this, destitute of skin, becomes the stig- ma. ‘l'o understand this better, compare Fig. 160, represent- ing a leaf rolled up in this way, with Fig. 156, and with Fig. 161, which are pistils, cut in two, that the interior of the ovary may be seen. Jt is here plain that the ovules or seeds are at- tached to what answers to the united margins of the leaf. The particular part or line, or whatever it may be, that the ovules or seeds are attached to, is called the Placenta. 200. Varieties or Sorts of Flowers, Now that we have learned how greatly roots, stems, and leaves vary in their forms and appearances, we should expect flowers to exhibit great variety in different species. In fact, each class and each family of plants has its flowers upon a plan of its own. But if students understand the general plan of flowers, as seen in the FLOWERS: THEIR FORMS AND KINDS. 67 Morning-Glory, the Lily (Fig. 1-12), and the Stonecrop (191), they will soon learn to, understand it in any or all of its diverse forms. The principal varieties or special forms that occur among common plants will be described under the families, in the /’lora which makes the Second Part of this book. There stu- dents will learn them in the easiest way, as they happen to meet with them in collecting and analyzing plants. Here we will only notice the leading Ainds of Variation in flowers, at the same time explaining some of the terms which are | used in describing them. 201. lowers consist of sepals, petals, stamens, and pistils. There may be few or many of each of these in any particular flower; these parts may be all separate, as they are in the Stonecrop; or they may be grown | together, in every degree and in every conceivable way; or any one or more of the parts may be left | out, as it were, or wanting altogether in a particular | flower. And the parts of the same sort may be all | alike, or some may be larger or smaller than the rest, or differently shaped. So that flowers may be classified into several sorts, of which the following \ ' | , are the principal. 202. A Complete Flower is one which has all the four parts, namely, calyx, corolla, stamens, and pis- | tils. This is the case in all the flowers we have: yet taken for examples ; also in Trillium (Fig. 188, reduced in size, and here in Fig. 162, with the blossom of the size of life, and spread open flat). 203. A Perfect Flower is one which has both sta- mens and pistils. A complete flower is of course a perfect one; but’ many flowers are perfect and not . complete ; as in Fig. 163, 164. 204. An Incomplete Flower is one which wants at least one of the four kinds of organs. This may happen in various ways. It may be Apetalous ; that is, having no petals. This is the ' ease in Anemony (Fig. 163), and Marsh-Marigold. For these have only one row of flower-leaves, and that is a calyx. The petals which are here wanting appear 163 Incomplete flower of Anemony,. 68 HOW PLANTS ARE PROPAGATED. in some flowers very much like these, as in Buttercups (Fig. 238) and Goldthread. Or the flower may be still more incomplete, and Naked, or Achlamydeous ; that is, without any flower-leaves at all, neither calyx nor corolla. That is the case in the Lizard’s-Tail (Fig. 164), and in Willows. of’ _ Or it may be incomplete by wanting either the stamens or the pistils; then it is 205. An Imperfect or Separated Flower, Of course, if the stamens are wanting in one kind of blos- som there must be others that have them. Plants with imperfect flowers accordingly bear two sorts of blossoms, namely, one sort Staminate or Sterile, those having stamens only, and therefore not producing seed; and the other Pistillate or Fertile, having a pistil but no good sta- mens, and ripening seed only when fertilized by pollen from the sterile flowers. The Oak and Chestnut, Hemp, Moonseed, and Indian Corn are so. Fig. 165 is one of the staminate or sterile flowers of Indian Corn; these form the “tassel” at the top of the stem: their pollen falls upon the “silk,” or styles, of the forming ear below, consisting of rows of pistillate flowers. Fig. 166 is one of these, with its very long style. The two kinds of flowers in this case are Monecious ; that is, both borne by the same individ- ual plant; as they are also in the Oak, Chestnut, Birch, &c. In other cases Diecious ; that is, when one tree or herb bears flowers with stamens only, and another flowers with pistils only ; as in Willows and Poplars, Hemp, and Moonseed. Fig. 167 is Pere | a staminate flower from one plant of Moon- seed, magnified; and Fig. 168, a pistillate flower, borne by a plant from a different root. There is a third way: some plants produce what are called Polygamous flowers, that is, having some blossoms with pistils only or with 164 Flower of Lizard’s-Tail. o eae |: Indian Corn. FLOWERS: THEIR FORMS AND KINDS. 69 stamens only, and others perfect, having both stamens and pistils, either on the same or on different individuals. The Red Maple is a very good case of this kind; the Hydrangea. two or three sorts of flowers look- ing very differ- ently when they appear in early spring; those of one tree having long red stamens and no good pis- til, those of other trees having con- spicuous _pistils, in some blossoms | with no good sta- mens at all, in others with short ones. There are also what are called abortive or 206. Neutral Flowers; having neither stamens nor pistils, and so good for nothing except for show. In the Snowball of the gardens and in richly cultivated Hydran- geas all the blossoms are neutral, and no fruit is formed. Even in the wild state of these shrubs, some of the blossoms around the margin of the cluster are neu- tral (as in the Wild Hydrangea, Fig. 169), consisting only of three or four flower-leaves, very much larger than the small perfect flowers which make up the rest of the cluster. Also what the gardener calls Double Flowers, when full, are neutral, as in double Roses and Buttercups. These are blossoms which by cultivation have all their stamens and pistils changed into petals. 207. A Symmetrical Flower is one which has an equal number of parts of each kind or in each set or row. Flax. This is so in the Stonecrop (Fig. 153), which has five sepals in the calyx, five petals in the corolla, ten stamens (that is, two sets of stamens of five each), and five pistils. Or often it has flowers with four sepals, and then there are only four | ; } | 70 HOW PLANTS ARE PROPAGATED. petals, eight stamens (twice four), and four pistils. So the flower of Trillium (Fig. 162) is symmetrical; for it consists of three sepals, three petals, six stamens (one before each sepal and one before each petal), and a pistil plainly composed of three put together, having three styles or stigmas. Flax affords an- other good illustration of symmetrical flowers (Fig. 170): it has a calyx of five sepals, a corolla of five petals, five stamens, and five styles. In such flowers, and in blossoms generally, the parts alter- nate with each other; that is, the petals stand be- fore the intervals between the sepals, the stamens, when of the same number, before the intervals be- tween the petals, and so ‘on. 208. An Unsymmetrical Flower is one in which the different organs or sets do not match in the number of their parts. The flower of Anemony, Fig. 163, is unsymmetrical, having many more stamens and pistils than it has calyx-leaves. And the blossom of Larkspur (Fig. 171) is unsym- ‘i 172 : metrical, because, while ; ie ee it has five sepals or leaves in the calyx, there are only four petals or co- rolla-leaves, but a great many stamens, and only one, two, or three pistils. The sepals and petals are dis- played separately in Fig. 172; the five pieces marked s are the sepals; the four marked p are the petals. 209. A Regular Flower is one in which the parts of each sort are all of the same shape and size. The flowers in Flax (Fig. 170) and in all the examples pre- ceding it are regular. While in Larkspur and Monkshood we have not only an unsymmetrical, but FLOWERS: THEIR FORMS AND KINDS. 7} 210. An Irregular Flower; that is, one in which all the parts of the same sort are not alike. For in the Larkspur-blossom one of the sepals bears a long hollow spur or tail behind, which the four others have not; and the four small petals are of two sorts. The Violet-blossom (Iig. 173) and the Pea-blossom (Fig. 351) are symmetrical (except as to the pistil), but irregular. Fig. 174 shows the calyx and the corolla of the Violet above it displayed ; s, the five sepals; p, the five petals. One of the latter differs from the rest, having a sac or spur at the base, which makes the blossom irregular. So far, most of the examples in this section are from 211. Flowers with the parts all distinct, that is, of separate pieces ;— the calyx of distinct sepals, the corolla of distinct petals (i. e. Polypetalous), the stamens dis- tinct (separate, &c.), and all the parts growing in regular order out of the receptacle, in other words, ¢vserted on the receptacle. ‘These are the simplest or most natural flowers, the parts answering to so many leaves on a short branch. But as in Honeysuckles (Fig. 389) the leaves of the same pair are often found grown tugether into one, so in blossom-leaves, there are plenty of 212. Flowers with their parts united or grown together. The flower of Morning- Glory (Fig. 4) is a good example. Here is the ca- lyx of five separate leaves or sepals (Fig. 176) ; but in the corolla (Fig. 175) the five petals are com- pletely united into a cup, just as the upper leaves of Honeysuckles are into a round plate. Then, in Stramonium (Fig. 177), the five sepals also are ie united or grown together - int almost to their tips into a Pas cations cup or tube; and so are the five petals likewise, but not quite to their tips ; and the five teeth or lobes (both of the calyx and of the corolla) plainly show how many leaves there really are in each set. \ When this is so in the corolla, it forms what is called a 72 HOW PLANTS ARE PROPAGATED. 213. Monopetalous corolla; i.e. a corolla of one piece. It is so called, whether it makes a cup or tube with the border entire, as in Morning-Glory (Fig. 175), or with the border lobed, that is, the tips of the petals separate, as in Stramonium (Fig. 177), or even if the petals are united only at the bottom, as in the Potato- blossom (Fig. 182). The same may be said of a calyx when the sepals are united into a cup, only this is called Monosepalous. A mo- nopetalous corolla (and so of a calyx) is generally distinguishable into two parts, namely, its Zube or narrow part below, and its Border or Limb, the spreading part above. It is regular when all sides and lobes of it are alike, as in Fig. 175,177, &c. It is erregular when the sides or parts are different or unequal in size or shape, as in Sage, Dead- Nettle (Fig. 181), the common Honeysuckle, &. It is 178. Trumpet- Tubular, when long and narrow without a conspicuous border, as Pa re aa. ATS, or Trumpet-shaped ; tubular, gradually enlarging upwards, as in Trumpet-Creeper and ‘Trumpet-Honeysuckle (Fig. 178) ; Funnel-shaped or Funnel-form (like a funnel or tunnel); when the tube opens gradually into a spreading bordér, as in Morning-Glory (Fig. 175) and Stramoni- mm (Fie. 177); Bell-shaped or Campanulate ; when the tube is wide for its length and the border a little spreading, like a bell, as in Hare- bell (Fig. 179). Salver-shaped ; when a slender tube ~ spreads suddenly into a flat border, as in Phlox (Fig. 180). Wheel-shaped or Rotate ; same as salver-shaped, with the tube very short or none, as in the corolla of the Potato (Fig. 182) and the Nightshade (Fig. 183). Labiate or Two-lipped; when the border di- vides into two parts, or ips, an upper and a lower (sometimes likened to those of an animal with gaping mouth), as in Sage, Dead-Nettle (Fig. 181, and the like. This is one of the irregular forms of monopetalous corolla, and the commonest. FLOWERS: THEIR FORMS AND KINDS. 73 9214. Stamens united are also common. They may be united by their filaments or by their anthers. In the Cardinal-flower (Fig. 184), and other Lobelias, both the anthers (a) and the filaments (f) are united into a tube. So also in the Pumpkin and Squash. Botanists use the following terms to express the different ways in which stamens may be connected. ‘They are Syngenesvous, when the anthers are united into a ring or tube, as in Lobelia (Fig. 184 a), and in the Sun-’ flower, and all that family. Monadelphous (i.e. in one brotherhood), when the filaments are united all into one ~ set or tube, as in Lobelia (Fig. 184 /), and the Mallow Family (Fig. 185); also in Passion-flowers and Lupines (Fig. 187). 184. Lobelia. Diadelphous (in two brotherhoods), when the filaments are united “1 two sets. Fig. 186 shows this in the Pea, and the like, where nine stamens are combined in one set and one stamen is left for the other. 4 Triadelphous (in three brotherhoods), 185. Mallow. when the filaments are united or collected in three sets, as in the Common St. John’s-wort or Hy- pericum (Fig. 297 ); and Polyadelphous (in many brotherhoods), when combined in more than three sets, as in some St. John’s-worts. 215. Pistils united are very common. Two, three, four, or more grow together at the time of their formation, and make a Compound Pistil. Indeed, wherever there is a single pistil to a flower, ‘+ ig much oftener a compound pistil than a simple one. But, of course, when the pistils of a flower are more than one, they are all simple. Pistils may be united in every degree, and by their ovaries only, by their styles only (as they are slightly in Prickly-Ash), or even by their stigmas only (as in Milkweeds), or by all three. But more commonly the ovaries are united into one Compound Ovary, while the styles or stigmas are partly separate or dustinct. Three degrees of union are shown in these figures. Fig. 188, two pistils of a Saxi- frage, their ovaries united only part way up (cut across both above and below). | | | 74 | HOW PLANTS ARE PROPAGATED. Fig. 189, pistil of Common St. John’s-wort, plainly composed of three simple ones, with their ovaries completely united, while their slender styles are separate. Compound Pistils of two and three cells. Fig. 190, same of Shrubby St. John’s-wort, like the last, but with the three styles also grown together into one, the little stigmas only sepa- rate; but as it gets older this style generally splits down into three, and when the pod is ripe it also splits into three, plainly showing that this compound pistil consists of three united into one. On turning now to Fig. 8 and Fig. 10 to 12 on the same page, it will be seen that the pistil in Morning-Glory and in Lily is a compound one, made of three united even to their stigmas. This is shown externally, by the stigma being some- what three-lobed in both. And it becomes perfectly evident on cutting the ovary in two, bringing to view the three cells (Fig. 12, as in Fig. 189, 190), each an- swering to one simple ovary. 216. So compound ovaries generally have as many cells as there are simple pistils or pistil-leaves in their composition; and have the placentas (199) bearing the seeds all joined in the centre: that is, the placentas or compound placenta in the axis. partitions or divisions between the cells vanish, as in Pinks: then the compound pistil is only one-celled. And sometimes there never were any partitions; but the pistil was formed of two, three, or more open pistil-leaves grown together from the first by their edges, just as petals join to make a monopetalous corolla. ‘Then the ovules or seeds, or the placentas that bear them, are parietal, that is, are borne on the parietes or wall of the ovary. Fig. 191 But sometimes the is the lower part of a compound ovary, with three pa- One-cetied compound ovary, with placentas rietal placentas or seed-bearing lines; and Fig. 192 is parietal, a diagram, to explain how such a pistil is supposed to be made of three leaves united by their edges, and these edges bearing the ovules or seeds. a ¢ a 1 1 ee FLOWERS: THEIR FORMS AND KINDS. 75 217. Flowers with one set of Organs united with another, The natural way is, for all the parts to stand on the receptacle or end of the flower-stalk, — the stem-part of the blossom (191). Then the parts are said to be free, or to be inserted on the receptacle. So itis in the Buttercup, Lily, Trillium (Fig. 162), Flax,&e. But in many flowers one set of organs grows fast to an- other set, or, as we say, is inserted on it. | For instance, we may have the Petals and Stamens inserted on the Calyx, as in the Cherry and all the Rose family. Fig. 193 Bs gee Cuerey-thiutl is a flower of a Cherry, cut through the middle lengthwise, to- show the petals and stamens growing on the tube or cup of the calyx. The meaning of it is that all these parts have grown together from their earliest formation. Next we may have the Calyx cohering or grown fast to the Ovary, or at least its cup or lower part grown to the ovary, and forming a part of the thickness of its walls, as in the Currant and Gooseberry, the Apple and Hawthorn. Fig. : 194 is a flower of Hawthorn cut through | | oo gc. tia a lengthwise to show this. In such cases ce . ~ ___all other parts of the blossom appear to grow on the ovary. So the ovary is said | to be znferior, or, which is the same thing, the calyx (i.e. its lobes or border) and the rest of the blossom, superior. Or else we say “calyx coherent with the ovary,’ which ____ is best, because it explains the thing. : Stamens inserted on the Corolla. The _ stamens and the corolla generally go to- gether. And when the corolla is of one piece (i. e. monopetalous, 213), the stamens ) almost always adhere to it within, more or less; that is, are borne or “inserted on the 195. Morning-Glory. 76 HOW PLANTS ARE PROPAGATED. corolla.” Fig. 195 is the corolla of Morning-Glory laid open, to show the stamens inserted on it, i.e. grown fast to it, towards the bottom. We may even have the Stamens inserted on the Style, that is, united with it even up to the stigma. It is so in the Orchis family. 218. Gymnospermous or Open and Naked-seeded Pistils. This is the very peculiar pistil which belongs to Pines, Spruces, Cedars, and all that family of plants; and it is the simplest of all. For here the pistil is an open leaf or scale, bearing two or three ovules on its upper or inner surface. Each scale of a Pine-cone is an open pistil, and the ovules, instead of being enclosed in an ovary which forms a pod, are naked, and exposed to the pollen shed by the stamen-bearing flowers, which falls directly upon them. Fig. 196 is a view of the upper side of an open pistil or scale from a forming Larch-cone, at flowering-time, showing the two ovules borne on the face of it, one on each side near the bottom. Fig. 197 is the same grown larger, the ovules becoming seeds. When ripe and dry, the scales turn back, and the naked seeds peel off and fall away. 219. Plants which have such open scales for pistils accordingly take the name of Gymnospermous or Waked-seeded. 'The Pine family is the principal example of the kind (see p. 201). All other Flowering plants are ANGIOSPERMOUS, that is, have their ovules and seeds produced in a bal -vessel of some sort. Analysis of the Section. 168. Arrangement of Flowers, or Inflorescence. 169. Situation of Flower-buds : terminal and axil- lary. 170. Solitary flowers. 171. Flower-clusters. 172. Bracts and Bractlets. 178, 174. Flower- stalks: Peduncle and Pedicels. 175. Kinds of flower-clusters. 176. Raceme; order of opening of the blossoms. 177. Corymb. 178. Umbel. 179. Comparison with Raceme, &c. 180. Head. 181. Com- parison with the Umbel, and, 182. the Spike. 188. Catkin or Ament. 184. Spadix. 185. Its Spathe. 186. Involucre. 187. Compound Clusters: Umbellets; Involucel. 188. Panicle; Thyrse. 189. Cyme. 190. Fascicle. 191. Flowers: their parts illustrated by the Stonecrop: 192. A pattern flower. 193. Leaves of flower or Perianth. 194. Petal; its Blade and Claw. 195. Stamen; its parts. 196. Pollen ; its structure and use. 197. Pistil ; its parts. 198. Nature of the flower; its parts answer to leaves. 198°. How a stamen answers to a leaf. 199. How a pistil answers toa leaf: Placenta. 200. Sorts of Flowers: one general plan: 201. Varied in several ways. 202. Complete flower. 208. Perfect flower. 204. Incomplete flower: apetalous; naked. 205. Imperfect or separated flowers: staminate or sterile ; pistillate or fertile; monoecious, dioecious, or polygamous. 206. Neutral flowers. 7 nt lO FRUIT. 77 207. Symmetrical flowers. 208. Unsymmetrical flowers. 209. Regular flowers. 210. Irregular flowers. 211. Flowers with the parts distinct. 212. With their parts grown together. 213. Monopetalous corolla, &c.: its varieties in form. 214. Stamens united ; syngenesious, monadelphous, diadelphous, triadelphous, and polyadelphous. 215. Pistils united into a Compound Pistil: illustrations. 216. Those with two or more cells and placentas in the centre; of one cell with placentas parietal or on the walls. 217. Flowers with one set of organs united with another; as petals and stamens with the calyx; the tube or cup of the calyx with the ovary; stamens with the corolla; or with the style. _ 218. Gymnospermous or Naked-seeded Pistil of Pines, &c. 219. Division of plants on this account. ry Secrion IV. — Fruit and Seed. § 1. WSeed- Vessels. 220. ArrerR the flower comes the Fruit. The ovary of the flower becomes the Seed-vessel (or Pericarp) in the fruit. The ovules are now seeds. ' 221. A Simple Fruit is a seed-vessel formed by the ripening of one pistil (with whatever may have grown fast to it in the flower, such as the tube of the calyx in many cases, 217). Simple fruits may be most conveniently classified into Pleshy Fruits, Stone Fruits, and Dry Fruits. 222. The principal sorts of fleshy fruits are the Berry, the Pepo, and the Pome. 223. A Berry is fleshy or pulpy throughout. Grapes, tomatoes, gooseberries, currants, and cranberries are good ex- amples. (Fig. 198 shows a cranberry cut in two.) Oranges and lemons are only a kind of berry with a thicker and leath- ery rind. 224. The Pepo or Gourd Fruit (such as a squash, melon, cu- Be, Be cumber, and bottle-gourd, Fig. 199) is only a sort of berry with a harder rind. 225. A Pome or Appte-Fruit is the well-known fruit of the Apple, Pear, Quince, and Hawthorn. It comes from a compound pistil with a coherent calyx-tube (that is, from such a flower as Fig. 194), and this calyx, 199. Pepo, 18 HOW PLANTS ARE PROPAGATED. growing very thick and fleshy, makes the whole eatable part or flesh of the fruit in the haw and the quince. The real seed-vessels in the quince (Fig. 201), 201 Pome. nut. So the Stone (or Putamen, as the botanist terms it) does not belong to the seed, but to the fruit. It has the seed in it, with coats of its own. 227. Dry Fruits are those that ripen without flesh or pulp. They are either dehiscent or indehiscent. Dehis- cent seed-vessels are those which split or burst open, in apple (Fig. 200), and the like, consist of the five thin, parchment- like cells of the core, containing the seeds. In the quince, all the flesh is calyx. But in the pear and apple the flesh of the core, viz. all inside of the circle of greenish dots which are seen on cut- ting the apple across (Fig. 200), belongs to the receptacle of the flower, which here rises so as to surround the real seed-vessels. Cutting the apple lengthwise, these dots come to view as slender greenish lines, separating what belongs to the core from what be- longs to the calyx: they are the vessels which in the blossom belong to the petals and the stamens above. In the haw, the cells become thick and stony, and so form a kind of 226. Stone-Fruit or Drape, Plums, cherries, and peaches (Fig. 202) are the commonest and best examples of the stone-fruit. It is a fruit in which the outer part becomes fleshy or pulpy, like a berry, while the inner part becomes hard or stony, like a some regular way, to discharge the seeds. Jndehiscent ieee seed-vessels are those that remain closed, retaining the seed until they grow, or until the seed-vessel decays. -All stone fruits and fleshy fruits are of course indehiscent. 228. The sorts of indehiscent dry fruits that we need to distinguish are the Akene, the Grain, the Nut, and the Key. 229. The Akene includes all dry, one-seeded, closed, small fruits, such as are generally mistaken for naked seeds; such, for instance, as the little seed-like fruits of Buttercups. (Fig. 203 is one of these, whole, a good deal enlarged; Fig. 204, one with part of the wall cut away.) FRUIT. ~ 79 _ That they are not seeds is plain from the way they are produced, and from their bearing a style or stigma, at least when young. They are evidently pistils ripened ; and on cutting them open, the seed is found whole within (Fig. 204). 230. A Grain (or Caryopsis) is the same as an akene, except that the thin seed- vessel adheres firmly to the whole surface of the seed. Indian corn, wheat, rye, and all such kinds of grain are examples. 231. A Nut is a hard-shelled, one-seeded, indehiscent fruit, like an akene, but on a larger scale. Beechnuts, chestnuts, and acorns (Fig. 205) are familiar examples. In all these the nut is surrounded by a kind of involucre, called a Cupule or Cup, which, however, is no part of the fruit. In the Oak, the cupule is a scaly cup; in the Beech and Chestnut, it is a kind of bur; in the Hazel, it is a leaf-like cup or covering; in Hop-Hornbeam, it is a thin and closed bag. The fruit of the Walnut, Butternut, and the like, is between a drupe and a nut, having a fleshy outer layer. - both from one flower (Fig. 208). regular way, take the general name of their inner edge, namely, that which answers to the united mar- gins of the pistil-leaf. Compare Fig. 160 with Fig. 209: the latter is the simple pod of a Marsh- Marigold open after ripening, and the seeds fallen, so becoming a leaf again, as it were. Some such i, - pods also split down the back as Key. Pair of Keys. well as down the inner side; that 6 205 Nut and Cupule, 232. A Key or Key-Fruit (called by botanists a Samara) is like an akene or nut, or any other indehiscent, one-seeded fruit, only it is winged. The fruits of the Ash (Fig. 206) and of the Elm (Fig. 207) are of this kind. That of the Maple consists of two keys partly joined at the base, 233. Dehiscent Fruits, or dry fruits which split or burst open in some 234. Pods. These generally split lengthwise when ripe and dry. Pods formed of a simple pistil mostly open down Opened Follich. is, along what answers to the midrib of the leaf; as do pea-pods (Fig. 211). ie 80 HOW PLANTS ARE PROPAGATED. 235. A Follicle is such a simple pod which opens down one side only. The pods of Peony, Columbine, and Marsh-Marigold (Fig. 210) are follicles. 236. A Legume is a pod of a simple pistil, which splits into two pieces. It is the fruit of the Pea or Pulse family. Fig. 211 is a legume of the Pea, open, separated into its two valves. 237. A Capsule is the pod of any compound pistil. | When capsules open regularly, they either split through jane the partitions, or where these would be, as in the pod of St. John’s- wort (Fig. 212); this divides them into so many follicles, as it were, which open down the inner edge: or else they split open into the back of the cells, as in the pods of the Lily, the Iris WN (Fig. 213), &e. 211 238. The pieces into which a pod splits are called ie its Valves. So a follicle (Fig. 210) is one-valved ; a legume (Fig. 211), two-valved ; the cap- sules in Fig. 212 and 2138, both three-valved, &c. 239. Two or three forms of capsule have peculiar names. The principal sorts are the Szlique, the Silicle, | and the Pyzxvs. 240. A Silique (Fig. 214) is the pod of the Cress family. It is slender, and splits into two valves or pieces, leaving behind a partition in a frame which bears the seeds. 241. A Silicle or Pouch is only a silique Capmitle:y open not much longer than broad. Fig. 215 is the silicle of Shepherd’s Purse; Fig. 216, the same with one valve fallen. 242. A Pyxis is a pod which opens crosswise, the top separating as a lid. Fig. 217 shows it in the Common Purslane; the lid falling off. 214 l ° itique: siliele: 243. There remain a few sorts of Wg fruits which are more or less compound or complex. ‘They may be 217, Pyxis, : classed under the heads of Aggregated, Accessory, and Multiple fruits. | FRUIT. 81 244. Accrecated Fruits are close clusters of simple fruits all of the same flower. The raspberry and the blackberry are good examples. In these, each grain is a drupelet or stone-fruit, like a cherry or peach on a very small scale. f 245. Accessory Fruits are those in which the flesh or conspicuous part belongs to some accessory (i. e. added or altered) part, separate from the seed-vessel. So that what we eat as the fruit is not the fruit at all in a strict botanical sense, but a calyx, receptacle, or something else which surrounds or accompanies it. Our common checkerberry is a simple illustration. Here the so-called berry is a free or separate calyx, which after flowering be- comes thick and fleshy, and encloses the true seed- vessel, as a small pod within. Fig. 218 shows the young pod, partly covered by the loose calyx. Fig. 219 is the ripe checkerberry, cut through the middle lengthwise, the calyx now thick, juicy, and eatable, and enlarged so as to enclose the small, dry pod. 246. A Rose-hip (Fig. 220) is a kind of accessory fruit, looking like a pear or a haw. But it consists of the tube of the calyx, lined by a hollow receptacle, which bears the real fruits, or seed-vessels, in the form of bony akenes. Fig. 221, a rose-hip when in flower, cut through length- wise, shows the whole plan of it: the pistils are seen attached to the sides of the urn-shaped receptacle, and their styles, tipped with the stigmas, project a little from the cavity, near the stamens, which are borne on the rim of the deep cup. 247. A Strawberry is an ac- eessory fruit of a different shape. Fig. 222 isa forming one, at flowering time, divided lengthwise: below is a part of the ealyx; above this, a large oval or conical receptacle, its whole surface covered with little pistils. In ripening this grows vastly larger, and becomes juicy and delicious. So that, in fact, what is called a berry is only the receptacle of the flower, or the end of the flower-stalk, grown very large and juicy, and not a seed-vessel at all, but bearing plenty of one-seeded dry seed-vessels (akenes, 229), so small that they are mistaken for seeds. Rose-hip. 222, Young Strawberry. 82 WOW PLANTS ARE PROPAGATED. 248. Multiple Fruits are masses of simple or accessory fruits belonging to differ- ent flowers, all compacted together. Mulberries (Fig. 223) are of this sort. They look like blackberries, but each grain belongs to a separate flower; and the eatable pulp is not even the seed-vessel of that, but is a loose calyx grown pulpy, just like that of Checker- berry, and surrounding an akene, which is generally taken fora seed. The pine-apple is much like a mulberry on a large scale. A fig is a multiple fruit, being a hollow flower-stalk grown pulpy, the inside lined by a great number of minute flowers. 249. So, under the name of fruit very different things are eaten. In figs it is a hollow flower-stalk ; in pine-apples and mulberries, clusters of flower-leaves, as well as the stalk they cover; in straw- berries, the receptacle of a flower; in blackberries, the same, though smaller, and a cluster of little stone-fruits that cover it; in raspberries, the little stone-fruits in a cluster, without the receptacle. In checkerberries, quinces, and (as to all but the core) apples and pears, we eat a fleshy enlarged calyx; in peaches and other stone-fruits, the outer part of a seed-vessel; in grapes, gooseberries, blueberries, and cranberries, the whole seed-vessel, grown rich and pulpy. 250. The Cone of Pine (Fig. 224) and the like is a sort of multiple fruit. Each scale is a whole pistillate flower, con- sisting of an open pistil leaf, ripened, and bearing on its upper face one or two naked seeds, —as explained at the end of the last section (218, 219). Fig. 225 shows the upper side of one of the thick scales taken off, bearing one seed; the other, removed, is shown, with its wing, in Fig. 226. 223 Mulberry. Pitch-pine Cone. § 2. Seeds. 252. A Seed is an ovule fertilized and matured, and with a germ or embryo formed in it. 253. In the account of the growth of plants from the seed, at the beginning of the book (Chapter I. Section I.), seeds have already been considered sufficiently SEEDS. 835 for our purpose. As the pupil advances farther in his botanical studies, he will learn much more about them, as well as about fruits and flowers, in the Lessons in Botany, and other works. 254. A seed consists of its Coats and its Kernel. Besides the true seed-coats, which are those of the ovule, an outer loose covering, generally an imperfect one, is occasionally superadded while the seed is growing. This is called an Aril. Mace is the aril of the nutmeg. The scarlet pulpy covering of the seeds of the Strawberry-tree and the Staffl-tree or Waxwork is also an aril. 255. The Seed-Coats are commonly two, an outer and an inner; the latter gen- erally thin and delicate. The outer coat is sometimes close and even, and fitted to the kernel, as in Morning-Glory (Fig. 227) ; some- times it is furnished with a tuft of long hairs, as in Milkweed (Fig. 229), or else is covered with long woolly hairs, as in the Cotton-plant, where they form that most useful material, Cotton-wool. In some cases the outer coat is extended into a thin border or wing, as in the Trumpet-Creeper (Fig. 228). Catalpa-seeds have a fringe-like wing or tuft at each end. The seeds of Pines are winged at one end (Fig. 226). All these tufts and wings are contrivances for rendering such seeds buoyant, so that, when shed, they may be dispersed by the wind. Thistle-down, and the like, is a similar con- trivance on the fruit or akene. 256. The seed is often supported by a stalk of its own, the Seed-stalk. Where the seed separates, it leaves a mark, called the Scar or Hilum. This is conspicu- ous in a bean and a pea, and is remarkably large in a horsechestnut. 257. The Kernel is the whole body of the seed within the coats. It consists of the Hmbryo, and of the Albumen, when there is any. 258. The Albumen is a stock of prepared food, for the embryo to live upon at the outset, in those cases where it has not a similar supply laid up in its cotyledons (32-35, 45). In Fig. 17, 44, and 49, the seeds have albumen. In Fig. 25, 32, 40, and 42, they have none, but the whole kernel consists of 259. The Embryo, or rudimentary plantlet in miniature, the body in the seed which grows. To this the seed, the fruit, and the blossom are all subservient. The albumen of the seed, when there is any, is intended to nourish the embryo when it 84 HOW PLANTS ARE PROPAGATED. grows, until it can provide for itself; the seed-coats to protect it, especially after it is shed; the seed-vessel, to protect it and to nourish it while forming; the stamens and pistil, to originate it. 260. The embryo consists of its Aadicle or original stemlet, from one end of which the root starts, from the other the stem is continued; also of one or more Cotyledons or Sced-leaves, and often of a Plumule or bud for continuing the stem upwards. How the embryo grows into a plant, was fully explained at the com- mencement of this book. Analysis of the Section. §1. TasiLe or Kinps or Fruit. Paragr. ( 1. Srmpue: seed-vessels of one pistil, : ; : : ~ 221 | 2. AGGREGATED: clusters of seed-vessels all of tele same dowen : 244 Fruits are { 3. AccEssory: the flesh, &c. external to and separate from the pistil, 245-247 | 4. MULTIPLE: composed of the simple or accessory fruits of more than [ one flower, . : : . - ; : 5 : - - 248 BERRY, 223 ( Fleshy Fruits (222), such as the PEPO, 224 PoME, 225 | Stone-Fruits, or the . : ° : : 3 : , DRUPE, 226 i ( AKENE, 229 ° Simple Fruits are GRAIN, 230 ( Indehiscent, 228, Nut, 231 | | Key, 232 | Dry Fruits, 227, ¢ Of a Simple FOLLICLE,235 | Pistil, LrecumE, 236 [ ( CAPSULE, 237 | Dehiscent, or Pods, 233, | of a Compound | SiniquE, 240 l Pistil, SILICLE, 241 | Pyxts, . 242 / ol . 9 Multiple Fruits are j eae IOspes mous, or closed, 219, 248. { Gymnospermous, or naked-seeded, 218, 219, . . : i Cone, 250 §2. SrEps. —252. What a seed is. 253. Its nature already considered. 254. Its parts; Aril occasionally met with. 255. Its coats, and the appendages, wings, &c. 256. Seed-stalk, and scar. 257. Kernel. 258. Albumen, sometimes present; its office. 259. Embryo, to which all the other parts of the seed, the fruit, and the flower are subservient. 260. Parts of the Embryo: Radicle, or Stem- let; Cotyledons, or Seed-leaves; Plumule, or Bud. CH A P TEaa ie & WHY PLANTS GROW, WHAT THEY ARE MADE FOR, AND WHAT THEY DO. 261. We have now become acquainted with all the organs of plants, both those concerned in their life and growth, or vegetation, and those concerned in multiplying théir numbers, that is, in reproduction. The first being the root, stem, and leaves ; the second, the flowers (essentially the stamens and pistils), with their result, frun and seed. We have learned, also, how plants grow from the seed, produce part after part, branch after branch, and leaf after leaf, and at length blossom and go to seed. We see that plants, with their organs, that is, ¢nstrwments, are a kind of liy- ing machines at work; and it is now time to ask, How they operate, What they bring to pass, and What is the object or the result of their doings. Such questions as these, young people, with their curiosity awakened, would be likely to ask, and they ought to be answered. To understand these things completely, one must know something of chemistry and vegetable anatomy,* — which we do not propose here to teach. But a general account of the matter may be given in a simple way, which shall be perfectly intelligible, and may give a clear idea of the purpose which plants were created to fulfil in the world, and how they do it. Let us begin by considering | 262. The Plant in Action, Take any living plant, —it matters not what one, — and consider what it is doing. For greater simplicity, take some young plant or seedling, where vegetation goes on just as in a full-grown herb or tree, only ona smaller scale. The plant is 263. Absorbing, or drawing in what it lives upon, from the soil and the air. This is moisture, air, and other matters which the rain, as it soaks into the ground, may have dissolved on its way to the roots. It is by the roots, lodged in the damp soil, that most of the moisture which plants feed upon is taken in, and with this they always get some earthy matter. This earthy matter makes the ashes which are left after burning a piece of wood, a leaf, or any part of a plant. Moisture is * After studying this chapter, the pupil will be ready to learn more of the subject in the Lessons in Botany and Vegetable Physiology. Lessons 22, 23, 24, and 25 treat of Vegetable Anatomy; and Lesson 26, of the Plant doing its work. SS ae a: Sy tn a ta a A ee Ce ae ee. ee ee — 86 - WHY PLANTS GROW, also absorbed by the leaves, either from drops of rain or dew, or from the vapor of water in the air. Air is largely absorbed by the leaves, and some also by the roots, either as dissolved in water, or else directly from the crevices and pores of the soul, which are filled with air. 264. Plants absorb their food by their surface. Animals have an internal cavity, — a stomach,—to hold their food; and from the stomach it is taken into the system. Plants have nothing of this kind. They absorb their food by their sur- face, —by the skin, as it were; and when very young and with the whole sur- face fresh and thin, by one part almost as much as another. But as they erow older and the skin hardens, they absorb mostly by their fresh rootlets and the tips of the roots, and by the leaves, —the former spread out in the soil, the latter spread out in the air. For while the skin or bark of the older parts of the roots is hard- ening, new tips and rootlets are always forming in growing plants, with a fresh sur- face, which absorbs freely. And as to the leaves, they are renewed every year (even evergreens produce a new crop annually, and the old ones fall after a year or two); and the skin of every leaf, especially that of the under side, is riddled with thousands of holes or little mouths (called Lreathing-pores), which open into the chambers or winding passages of the pulp of the leaf, so that the air may cir- culate freely throughout the whole. 265. Plants absorb their food all in the fluid form. They are unable to take in anything in a solid state. They zmbc¢be or drink in all their food, in the form of water, with whatever the water has dissolved, and of air or vapor, by one or both ot which their leaves and roots are surrounded. The reason they imbibe only fluid is this. ‘The roots, leaves, and all the rest of the plant, under the microscope, are seen to be made up of millions of separate little cavities, each cut off from the surrounding ones by closed partitions of membrane. All that the plants take into their system has to pass through these partitions of membrane, — which fluid (air or moisture) alone can do. 266. The common juices of plants are called Sap. What they take in from the soil and the air, not being digested or made into vegetable matter, is called Crude Sap. All that the roots imbibe has to be carried up to the leaves to be digested there. ‘So while the roots are absorbing, the stem is 267. Conveying the Crude Sap to the Leaves, ‘There is no separate set of vessels, and no open tubes or pipes for the sap to rise through in an unbroken stream, in the way people generally suppose. The stem is made up, like the root, of cavities, AND. WHAT THEY DO. 87 or cells divided off by whole partitions ; and to rise an inch the sap generally has to pass through several hundred such partitions. When there is much wood, the sap rises mostly through that. Now the fibres and the vessels of the wood are tubes, most of them several times longer than wide; but their ends do not open into each other; a closed partition divides each cavity from the next, which the sap has to get through some way or other. How it gets through so readily, we do not altogether know; but there is no doubt about the fact. 268. Carried into the leaves, and distributed through their broad surface, the erude sap is exposed to the light and air. f Si 323 326 323. American Linden, in flower. 324. Magnified cross-section of a flower-bud. 325. A tft of stamens with the petal-like scale. 326. Pistil. 327, Fruit cut in two. Linden or Basswood. Tilia. Sepals 5, thick, valvate (the margins edge to edge) in the bud, falling off after flowering. Petals 5, cream-color. Stamens very many, on the receptacle, in 5 clusters: anthers 2-celled. Pistil one: ovary 5-celled, with two ovules in each cell; in fruit woody, small, closed, mostly one-seeded. — Large, soft- wooded trees, with heart-shaped leaves, often oblique at the base. Flowers in a small cluster on a slender and hanging peduncle from the axil of a leaf, and united part way with a narrow leaf-like bract. (Also called Lime-trees.) 134 POPULAR FLORA. 1. AMERICAN LINDEN or BAsswoop. Leaves green, smooth, or in some varieties downy underneath; a petal-like body in the middle of each of the 5 clusters of stamens. T. Americana. 2. EUROPEAN LINDEN. Leaves smooth or nearly so; stamens hardly in clusters, no petal-like bodies with them. Cultivated in cities, &c. as a shade-tree. T. Européea. 19. CAMELLIA FAMILY. Order CAMELLIACEZ. Shrubs or small trees, with alternate and simple leaves, not dotted; large and showy flowers, with a persistent calyx of 5 overlapping sepals, and very many stamens, their fila- ments united at the bottom with each other and with the base of the petals. Anthers 2-celled. Fruit a woody pod of 3 to 6,cells, containing few large seeds. To this belongs the grateful TEA-PLANT of China, and the CAMELLIA, of our green-houses, Camellia Japonica. LosBLoLiy-Bay, of swamps in the Southern States, Gordonia Lasvanthus. 20. ORANGE FAMILY. Order AURANTIACEA. Like the last, this family hardly claims a place here, being only house-plants, except far south. Known by having 20 or more stamens in one row around a single pistil, and the leaves having a joint between the blade and the winged or margined footstalk : they (and the fra- grant petals) are punctate with transparent dots, looking like holes when held between the eye and the light, which are little reservoirs of fragrant oil. Jruit a berry with a thick rind. ORANGE, Citrus Aurantium. LEMON, — Citrus Limonium. 21. FLAX FAMILY. Order LINACEZ. Herbs with tough fibres in the inner bark, simple leaves, and oily seeds with a mucilagi- nous coat; consisting only of the Flax genus, which is known by the following marks : — 328. Common Flax. 329. Half of a fiower, enlarged. 330. Pod, cut across. Flax. Linum. Sepals 5, overlapping, persistent. Petals 5, on the receptacle. Stamens 5, united with each other at the bottom. Styles 5. Pod 10-celled and splitting when ripe into 10 pieces with one seed in each. Flowers opening only for one day. i a ee POPULAR FLORA. 135 1. Common FuaAx. Root annual; leaves lance-shaped; flower blue. Cultivated. L. usitatissimum. 2. VirGINIA FLAX. Root perennial; leaves oblong or lance-shaped; flowers very small, yellow. Dry woods. L. Virginianum. 22. WOOD-SORREL FAMILY. Order OXALIDACEZ. Small herbs with sour juice, compound leaves of three leaflets, and flowers nearly as in the Flax family, but with 10 stamens, a 5-celled pod, and two or more seeds in each cell. One genus, viz. WoodsSorrel. Ovzalis. Sepals, petals, and styles 5. Stamens 10; filaments united (monadelphous) at the base. Pod thin, 5-lobed. Leaflets obcordate. Flowering in summer. 1. Common W. One-flowered scape and leaves rising from a scaly rootstock, hairy; petals large, white with reddish veins. N. in cold and moist woods. O. Acetosella. 2. VioteT W. Several-flowered scape and leaves, from a scaly bulb; petals violet. O. violacea. 3. YELLow W. Stems ascending, leafy; flowers 2 to 6 on one peduncle, small, yellow. O. stricta. 23. GERANIUM FAMILY. Order GERANIACEZ. Herbs or small shrubs, with scented leaves, having stipules, the lower ones opposite. Roots astringent. Sepals 5, overlapping. Petals 5. Stamens 10, but part of them in some cases without anthers: fila- ments commonly united at the bottom. Pistils 5 grown into one, that is, all united to a long beak of the receptacle (except the 5 stigmas) ; and when the fruit is ripe the styles split away from the beak and cujl up or twist, carrying » 331. Leaf, and 332. Flowers of Wild Geranium. 333. Stamens and pistil. 334. Fruit bursting. with them the five lit- 335. Seed. 336 Same, cut across. tle one-seeded pods, as shown in Fig. 334. — There are three genera, viz. GERANIUM or Cranesbill; Eropium, which differs in having only 5 stamens with anthers, and the fruit-bearing styles bearded inside ; and PELARGONIUM, which has the corolla more or less irregular, generally 7 stamens with anthers, &c. The latter are the House Geraniums, from the Cape of Good Hope, of several species and many varieties. We describe only the wild species of true Ae 6. 136 POPULAR FLORA. Geranium or Cranesbill. Geranium. Petals all alike. All 10 stamens with anthers, every other one shorter. — Herbs. 1. Spotrep G. Stem erect, from a perennial root; leaves 5-parted, also cut and toothed, often whitish-blotched; petals pale purple. Borders of woods; fl. in spring and summer. G. maculatum. 2. CAROLINA G. Stems spreading from a biennial or annual root; leaves 5-parted, and cut into nar- row lobes; flowers small; petals flesh-color, notched at the end. Waste places. G. Carolinianum. 8. Hers-RoBerT G. Stems spreading; leaves 3-divided, and the divisions twice pinnately cleft; flowers small, purple. Moist woods and ravines; fl. summer. G. Robertianum. 24. INDIAN-CRESS FAMILY. Order TROPZOLACES. Twining, climbing, or trailing herbs, with a watery juice of a sharp taste like Mustard, alternate leaves, and showy irregular flowers, as in Indian-Cress (commonly called NAsturtium). Tropeolum. Calyx projecting into a long hollow spur behind, petal-like, 5-cleft. Petals 5, of two sorts, two of them borne on the throat of the calyx, the 3 others with claws. Stamens 8, unequal. Fruit 8-lobed, separating into 3 thick and closed one-seeded pieces. 1. Common I. or NAsturtTiumM. Very smooth; leaves roundish, shield-shaped; flowers large; petals orange-yellow, the claws of 3 of them fringed. Cult. very common. T. majus. 2. CANARY-BIRD I. Climbing high; leaves deeply lobed; petals pale yellow, cut-fringed. Cult. T. peregrinum. 25. BALSAM FAMILY. Order BALSAMINACEA. Tender annuals, with a bland watery juice and very irregular flowers; such as those of the principal genus, Balsam (or JEWEL-WEED). Jmpatiens. Calyx and corolla colored alike and diffi- cult to distinguish, in all of 6 pieces, the largest one extended backward into a large and deep sac ending in a little spur; and the two innermost unequally 2-lobed. Stamens on the receptacle, 5, very short, united over the pistil. This forms a thick-walled pod, which when ripe suddenly bursts with con- siderable force, or falls into 5 coiling pieces at the touch, scattering the rather large seeds. — Leaves simple, alternate. ITlowers showy, produced all summer. 33 337. Flower of No. 2. 358. Calyx and “fete displayed. 1. Garpren BAtsAm. Flowers very showy, white, red, or pink, often double, clustered in the axils of the crowded lance-shaped leaves. Garden annual. I. Balsamina. 2. PALE JEWEL-WEED. Flowers pale-yellow, sparingly spotted, the hanging sac broader than long; leaves ovate or oblong. Common in rich and shady or wet soil. I, pallida. 8. SrorreD JEWEL-WEED. Flowers orange, spotted with reddish-brown; sac longer than broad. I. fulva. POPULAR FLORA. Toe 26. RUE FAMILY. Order RUTACEZ. Strong-scented, sharp-tasted, and bitter-acrid plants, the leaves dotted with transparent dots like punctures (which are filled with volatile oil) ; the stamens on the receptacle, as many or twice as many as the petals. Herbs, very strong-scented, with perfect flowers. . Stamens 8 or 10. Leaves decompound. Flowers yellow: petals concave. [od roundish, (Ruta) * Rux. Leaves pinnate. Flowers white or purple, large: petals slender: stamens long. Pods 5, flattened, slightly united, (Dictamnus) * FRAXINELLA. Shrubs or trees. Stamens 4 or 5, only as many as the petals. Flowers dicecious. Pistils 2 to5, making fleshy pods with one or two black seeds. Leaves pinnate. Stems prickly, (Zanthoxylum) PRickLy-Asi. Flowers polygamous. Pistil 1, making a 2-celled, 2-seeded key, winged all round. Leaflets 3. Stems not prickly, (Pitélea) Hop-TREE. 27. SUMACH FAMILY. Order ANACARDIACEZ. Trees or shrubs with a milky or a resinous-acrid juice (in some cases poisonous), and al- ternate leaves : — of which we have only the genus Sumach. hus. Flowers small, greenish-white or yellowish. Sepals, petals, and stamens 5; the latter borne on an en- largement of the receptacle which fills the bottom of the calyx. Styles or stigmas 3, on a one-celled ovary, which makes a one-seeded little stone-fruit with a thin flesh. Fl.summer. Nos. 4 and 5 are poisonous to most people when touched. 1. Stracnorn SumaAcnH. Small tree; branches and stalks velvety-hairy; leaves pinnate, pale be- neath; flowers and crimson-hairy sour fruit very many, in a great crowded panicle. A. typhina. 2. Smootir S. Shrub; branches and stalks very smooth, pale: otherwise like the last. f. glabra. 38. DwarF S. Shrub 1° to 4° high; branches and stalks downy; leaves pinnate, with the stalk wing- margined between the shining leaflets; fruits red and hairy. R. copallina. 4. Porson S. or Docwoop. Shrub smooth; leaves pinnate; leaflets 7 to 13, entire; panicles slender in the axils; fruit smooth. Poisonous to most people. Swamps. ft. venenata. 5. Porson Ivy. Smooth; stems climbing by rootlets; leaflets 3, large, ovate, either entire, notched, or lobed, variable on the same stem. Poisonous like the last. R. Toxicodendron. 6. VENETIAN S. or SMOKE-TREE. Shrub, with simple oval or obovate leaves; branches of the panicle lengthening after flowering, and feathered with long hairs, making large light bunches. Cult. ft. Cotinus. 28. GRAPE FAMILY. Order VITACEZ. Shrubby plants with a watery and sour juice, climbing by tendrils; known by having a minute calyx with scarcely any lobes, the petals valvate (edge to edge) in the bud and fall- ing off very early, and the stamens (5 or 4) one before each petal ! — Only two genera. Grape. Vitis. Petals 5, cohering slightly at the top while they separate at the base, and generally thrown off with- out expanding. Berry with 4 bony seeds. Leaves lobed. Flowers polygamous in the wild species, and having the fragrance of Mignonette. 138 POPULAR FLORA. 1. EuROoPEAN GRAPE. Flowers all perfect; leaves deeply and sharply lobed. Cult. in several varie- ties, viz. Sweetwater Grape, Black Hamburg, &c. V. vinifera. 2. NorTHERN Fox-GRAPE. Leaves very woolly when young, remaining rusty-woolly beneath; ber- ries large, purple or amber-colored. — Improved varieties of this, without the foxy taste and the tough pulp, are the Isabella and the Catawba Grapes. V. Labrusea. 38. SUMMER GRAPE. Leaves with loose cobwebby down underneath, smoothish when old ; panicles of fertile flowers very long and slender; berries small, ripe with first frost. V. estivalis. 4. Frost GRAPE. Leaves thin, heart-shaped, never woolly, not shining, sharply and coarsely toothed, little or not at all lobed ; panicles loose ; berries blue or black with a bloom, sour, ripening late. Common along river-banks, &c. V. cordifolia. 5. MUSCADINE or SOUTHERN Fox-Grape. Bark of the stem close, not thrown off in loose strips, as in the others; leaves round-heart-shaped, shining, not downy, very coarsely toothed; panicles small, with crowded flowers; berry large, musky, with a very thick and tough skin. A variety is the Scuppernong Grape. Common 8. V. vulpina. Virginia=Creeper. Ampeldpsis. Petals 5, thick, opening before they fall. Leaves palmate with 5 leaflets (Fig. 74). Berries small, blackish. A very common tall- \ he climbing vine, wild and culti- \ Oe / ‘vated. A. quinquefolia. Pe enn A CIR a 2 : — 340. Floweropening. 341. Same, with the 339. Twig of Grape-vine. petals fallen. 29. BUCKTHORN FAMILY. Order RHAMNACE. Woody plants, with simple alternate leaves, known by having the stamens as many as the small petals (4 or 5) and one before each of them, both inserted on the calyx or on a fleshy cup which lines the tube of the calyx; the lobes of the latter valvate, i.e. edge to edge in the bud. Fruit of 2 to 5 cells, and one large seed in each. 342, Flowers of a Buckthorn, 343. Same, cut through lengthwise. I Calyx free from the ovary, greenish. Petals shorter than the calyx, ornone, (hamnus) BUCKTHORN. ti Calyx below adherent to the ovary, its lobes petal-like (white in our species) and bent inwards, shorter than the stamens and long- clawed petals, (Ceanothus) New-JERSEY TEA. POPULAR FLORA. 139 30. STAFF-TREE FAMILY. Order CELASTRACE ZX. Woody plants, with simple alternate or opposite leaves; the divisions of the calyx and the petals both overlapping in the bud; the stamens as many as the petals (4 or 5) and alternate with them, inserted on a thick expansion of the receptacle (disk) which fills the bottom of the calyx. Pod colored, of 2 to 5 mostly one-seeded cells, showy when ripe in autumn, especially when they open and display the seeds enveloped in a pulpy scarlet aril. Flowers polygamous or nearly dicecious, white, in racemes: disk cup-shaped: style long. Pod globular, orange-yellow. Leaves alternate. Our only species is a twin- ing shrub, sometimes called BITTERSWEET, ( Celastrus) WAXWoRK. Flowers perfect, flat, dull green or dark purple, in axillary racemes: disk flat, covering the ovary, and bearing 4 or 5 very short stamens, the short style just rising through it. Pods red, lobed. Shrubs: leaves opposite, (ELudnymus) BURNING-BUSH Pods smooth, strongly lobed, or SPINDLE-TREE. Pods roundish, rough, (Eudnymus) STRAWBERRY-BUSH. $1. SOAPBERRY FAMILY. Order SAPINDACEX. The proper Soapberry family belongs mostly to warmer climates; but we have shrubs and trees belong- ing to three of its sub families : I. BLADDERNUT Scus- FAMILY. Flowers regular and perfect. Stamens 5, asmany as the petals, and alternate with them. Seeds bony. Leaves opposite, pinnate or with 3 leaflets, having stipules, and also little stipules (stzpels) to the leaflets. Shrub: flowers white inracemes. Fruit of 3 bladdery pods united. (Staphyléa) BLUADDERNUT. Il. HORSECHESTNUT Susramity. Flowers po- lygamous, some of them having no good pistil, mostly irregular and unsymmetrical. Calyx bell-shaped or tubular, 5-toothed. Petals 4 or 5, with claws, on the receptacle. Stamens generally 7, long. Style one. Ovary 3-celled, with a pair of ovules in each cell, only one or two ripening in the fruit; which becomes 344. Red Buckeye, reduced in size. 245. Flower. 346. Same, & leathery 8-valved pod. Seeds very large, like chest- Peery one tyopetalstuken away. 347. Magnified ovary, nots. Fine ornamental trees, with opposite palmate divided Jensthwise. 348 Same, divided crosswise, showing the two ovules in each cell. 349 Same, partly grown, ouly one seed leaves, and flowers in thick panicles. growing. 350. Ripe pod bursting. ’ s Petals 5, spreading; stamens declined: fruit prickly. Leaflets 7, (dEsculus) *HorsECHESTNUT. Petals 4, unlike, with long claws in the calyx. Leaflets generally 5, (sculus, § Pavia) BUCKEYE. 10 A nS ——=== In all, the ovary is ~ one-celled and one seeded, and makes an akene in fruit. The corolla being on the ovary, the latter is of course covered by the 403. Head of Cichory-flowers, divided lengthwise and enlarged. tube of the calyx adherent to it. Sometimes there is no limb or border to the calyx; then the akene is naked, as in that of Mayweed (Fig. 406). When the limb of the calyx is present in any form on the ovary or akene, it is named the pappus (which means seed- down). In Cichory the pappus or calyx is a ring or cup crowning the akene (Fig. 407) ; in Sunflower it consists of two chaffy scales, which fall off early (Fig. 408); in Helenium 166 ' POPULAR FLORA. there are five chaffy and pointed scales (Fig. 409). But more commonly the pappus con- sists of bristles, or downy hairs (as its name_ denotes). Asters, Groundsels, and especially Thistles, afford most familiar examples of such a hairy or downy pappus; those of Thistles, &c. in autumn sailing about in every breeze. Fig. 411 shows the very soft downy pappus of Sow- Thistle. Fig. 410, that of the Dandelion; this is raised upon a long beak to the akene, which lengthens greatly after flowering. This family contains about an eighth or tenth : part of all Flowering plants. But it is too dif_i- 404. Half of a head of flowers of Coreopsis. cult for the beginner. So we here barely men- tion a few of the common plants which belong to it. \ b Ray-flower, Ray-flower, neutral. neutral. 405. Slice of the same, enlarged, with one ray-flower, and part of another, and one pefioue Aik Albroee (a), with its bract or chaff (6). 1. Among those which have no rays, or strap-shaped corollas, are Thistles, Burdock, Everlasting and Cudweed, Wormwood, Thoroughwort or i Eupatorium, Button-Snakeroot, and Ironweed. 2. With rays or strap-shaped corollas at the margin (either neutral or pistillate), and tubular flowers in the centre; Coltsfoot, Aster, Fleabane, Daisy, Golden-rod, Sunflower, Coreopsis, Mayweed, Chamomile, §c. 3. With all the flowers strap-shaped and perfect (and 410 ail in this division the plants have a milky juice): Cichory or Succory (Fig. 402), Salsify, Hawkweed, Sow-thistle, Dandelion, and Lettuce. POPULAR FLORA. 167 51. LOBELIA FAMILY. Order LOBELIACE. Herbs with milky (acrid-poisonous) juice, alternate leaves, and scattered flowers, the stamens free from the peculiarly irregular corolla, which is split down on one side (Fig. 184), and borne with it on the many-seeded ovary. We have only one genus, viz. : — Lobelia. Lobelia. Calyx with its short tube adherent to the 2-celled ovary, and with 5 slender teeth or lobes. Corolla unequally 5-lobed, and split down to the bottom on the upper side! Stamens 5, united into a tube both by their filaments and their anthers! Style one. Pod opening at the top. The following are the commonest wild species (all but Nos. 3 and 4 in low grounds); fl. summer and fall. 1. CARDINAL-FLOWER L. Tall, smooth, with a raceme of large, brilliant red flowers. L. cardinalis. 2. GREAT BuuE L. Rather hairy, 1° or 2° high; leaves lance-oblong; flowers 1' long, crowded in a leafy raceme, light blue. L. syphilitica. 8, SprkED L. Stem simple, straight, and slender, 1° to 3° high, including the long and naked spike- like raceme of small pale-blue flowers; lowest leaves obovate or oblong. L. spicata. 4. InpIAN-ToBAcco L. Branching, 8! to 18' high; leaves ovate-oblong; flowers very small, in irregular leafy racemes, pale blue; pods inflated. Open places. L. inflata. 52. CAMPANULA FAMILY. Order CAMPANULACES. Like the last family in all general respects, except that the showy corolla is regular, 5-lobed; the 5 stamens separate ; the stiomas and the cells of the pod 3 or 5. Juicemilky. The principal genus is Campanula or Bellflower. Campanula. So called from its generally campanulate or bell-shaped corolla (Fig. 179 and 412). The following are the commonest species. * Wild species: stigmas and cells of the pods 3. 1. HAREBELL C. A slender and very pretty plant, growing on shaded cliffs, 5! to 12' high; root-leaves round or heart-shaped, long-stalked, toothed ; stem-leaves very narrow, entire; flowers nodding, the bright blue corolla bell-shaped, 4' or more long. C. rotundifolia. 2. Marsa C. Aslender plant growing among grass, in wet places, with rough-angled stem and lance-shaped leaves; a few small pale flowers on diverging peduncles. C. aparinoides. 3. TALL C. Stem tall, leafy, ending in a leafy loose spike (1° or 2° long) of blue flowers; corolla wheel-shaped; style long and curved. Rich low ground. C. Americana. * * Garden species: stigmas and cells of the pod 5. 412 Havebell. 4. CANTERBURY BELts. Hairy, with stout stems, very large blue (or w ets) flowers, and broad appendages of the calyx covering the pod. C. Médiun. — oe See 168 POPULAR FLORA. 53. HEATH FAMILY. Order ERICACE. Distinguished generally by the anthers opening by a pore or small hole at the top of each cell, and from all the other orders with a monopetalous corolla, except the two foregoing, by having the stamens free from the corolla, as many or twice as many as its lobes. But the petals are sometimes entirely separate, especially in the third and fourth sub-families. Fruit several-celled. Style one. This large order comprises four very distinct sub-fami- lies, viz. :— 413. Half of a Cranberry-blossom, magnified. 414. A Checkerberry plant, or Aromatic Wintergreen. 415. Slice across the ‘‘ berry,’’ and the pod in- side. 416. Wintergreen, No. 3. 417. A flower, natural size, 418. A sta- men, 419. Pod cut across. 420. A pisiil. 421. A seed. I. HUCKLEBERRY Supraminy. Teeth of the calyx, corolla, and stamens on the ovary, the tube of the calyx coherent with its surface. Style and stigma one. Anthers of two nearly separate cells, tapering upwards into a tube or tip, which opens at the end. Shrubs, &c. Ovary 10-celled with one ovule in each cell; berry with 10 largish seeds, or rather stones, in a circle, (Gaylussacia) HUCKLEBERRY. POPULAR FLORA. 169 _ Ovary with many ovules in each cell, making small seeds. Stamens 10, rarely 8, included in the cylindrical or cblong-bell-shaped 5-toothed corolla. Berry blue or black, sweet, many-seeded, (Vaccinium) BLUEBERRY. : Stamens 10, longer than the open bell-shaped 5-cleft corolla. Berry ripening few ; seeds, mawkish, ( Vaccinium stamineum) DEERBERRY. Stamens 8, much projecting beyond the deeply 4-parted reflexed corolla. Berry 4-celled, many-seeded, red, sour, ( Vaccinium, § Oxycdccus) CRANBERRY. II. HEATH Supramity. Calyx, corolla (generally monopetalous), and stamens free from the ovary, inserted on the receptacle. Shrubby plants (except Checkerberry), sometimes small trees. 1. Corolla remaining dry after blossoming. Stems covered with very small and narrow leaves. Only house-plants in this country, (Erica) *HEATH. 2. Corolla falling off after blossoming. Fruit a berry or berry-like. Trailing small-leaved evergreen. Corolla roundish, (Arctostaphylos) BEARBERRY. Fruit a dry pod enclosed in a berry-like calyx, (Gaulthéeria) CHECKERBERRY.* Fruit a naked dry pod. Corolla salver-shaped, with a slender tube. A trailing, scarcely woody ever- — green, with round-heart-shaped leaves, (Zpige@a) MAY-FLOWER.T Corolla ovate or oblong-cylindrical, 5-toothed, (Andromeda) ANDROMEDA. Corolla of 5 separate petals, regular, white. Flowers in panicled racemes, appearing in summer, (Clethra) SWEET-PEPPERBUSH. Flowers in umbels. Leaves rusty-woolly beneath, (Ledum) LABRADOR-TEA. Flowers irregular, rose-purple, two of the petals nearly separate, (d/thodora) RHopoRA. Flowers bell-wheel-shaped, 5-lobed, with 10 pouches, (Kalmia) AMERICAN LAUREL. Flowers bell-shaped or short funnel-shaped without pouches, 5-lobed. Stamens 10. Leaves evergreen, (Rhododendron) RYODODENDRON. Stamens 5. Leaves falling in autumn, (Azalea) AZALEA. Ill. WINTERGREEN or PYROLA Supramity. Calyx, &c. free from the ovary; the 5 separate petals and 10 stamens on the receptacle. Low and herbaceous, or nearly so, and with evergreen leaves. Flowers inaraceme. Petals not widely spreading. Style long, (Pyrola) WINTERGREEN. Flowers in a general corymb or umbel, or only one or two. Style very short, ( Chimdphila) PirsissEWwa. IV. INDIAN-PIPE SusrAminy. Low herbs growing in leaf-mould in woods, destitute of green foliage (parasitic on roots), having white or flesh-colored scales in place of leaves. Flower one, nodding at first. Calyx of 2 to 4 scales: petals of 5 spatulate scales: stamens 10, (Monotropa) INDIAN-PIPE. Flowers several in a scaly raceme; the terminal blossom with 5 petals and 10 stamens, all the others with only 4 petals and 8 stamens, (Hypopitys) PINESAP. * Called WINTERGREEN in the country in most places; also BOXBERRY or PARTRIDGE-BERRY; but the latter name rightly belongs to Mitchella, and that of Wintergreen to Pyrola, which is so named in _ England. 7 Also called TraAtLinc-ArbBuTus and GRouND-LAUREL. Nearly the earliest-flowering plant in the _ Northern States, prized for the rich spicy fragrance of its pretty rose-colored blossoms. a * iad r ‘ 9 ° —- ¥ i” ig a i ir > ts. a A , 170 POPULAR FLORA. Huckleberry. Gaylussacia. Differing from Blueberries in the rather spicy and sweet berry having 10 large seeds, or rather small stones. The foliage and young shoots in the common species are sprinkled with waxy or sticky dots. Flowers purplish in racemes. 1. Buack or Common H. Branches, leaves, &c. clammy when young; racemes and pedicels short; fruit black, without any bloom. Very common, furnishing the principal huckleberries of the market, ripe late in summer. G. resinosa. 2. PALE H. or BLuE-TANGLE. Leaves and fruit glaucous; pedicels long and drooping. G.frondosa. 8. Dwarr H. Branches rather hairy ; leaves thickish and shining ; racemes long, with leaf-like bracts. E. near the coast. G. dumosa. Blueberry. Vaccinium. Flowers white or tinged with pink, in short clusters, rather earlier than the leaves. Berries blue or black, and generally with a bloom, many-seeded. Leaves deciduous. 1. Common BLUEBERRY. Stem 5° to 10° high; leaves ovate, oval, or oblong. Swamps. V. corymbdsum. 2. Low B. Stems 1° high, and obovate or oval glaucous leaves smooth. V. vacillans. 3. DwarF B. Stems 2° to 1° high, smooth, leaves lance-oblong, fringed with fine bristle-pointed teeth, smooth, shining both sides. Dry woods, &c. This is the earliest blueberry or blue huckleberry in the market. V. Pennsylvanicum. 4. CANADA B. Stems 1° or 2° high; branchlets and lance-oblong leaves downy: otherwise much like the last. N. ; V. Canadense. Cranberry. Vaccinium, § Oxycoccus. Slender, almost herbaceous, creeping or trailing, growing in bogs, with their small leaves rather crowded, entire, thickish, and evergreen, whitened beneath. Flowers single, nodding on the summit of a slender stalk, pale rose-colored, the corolla almost divided into 4 long and narrow petals turned back. Berries ripe in autumn. 1. LARGE CRANBERRY. Stems 1° to 8° long; leaves oblong, blunt, nearly flat, almost 4! long; berries z' to 1' long, deep red (the principal cranberry of the market). V. macrocarpon. 2. SMALL CRANBERRY. Stems hardly 1° long; leaves ovate, acute, not half as large as those of No.1, the margins more rolled back; berries much smaller, often speckled. N. and in mountain bogs. V. Oxycéccus. Kalmia or American Laurel. Kdlmia. Flowers (in early summer) showy, in corymbs or umbels: an anther is at first lodged in each of the 10 pouches of the corolla. Leaves evergreen, very smooth. 1. Mounrarn L. or K. Leaves lance-ovate, bright green both sides; flowers large, pale or deep rose- color, in terminal corymbs; pedicels, &c. clammy. Stems 4° to 10° high. K. latifolia. 2. SHEEP L. or LAMBKILL. Leaves lance-oblong, blunt, pale beneath, petioled, mostly opposite, flowers small, purple; the corymbs becoming lateral; shrub 1° or 2° high. K. angustifolia. 8. PALE L. Leaves oblong, sessile, opposite, white-glaucous beneath; flowers few, large, lilac-purple. Swamps, N. K. glauca. Rhododendron (or RosesBay). Rhododendron. Calyx very small or obscure. Corolla large, 5-lobed. Stamens 10, more or less bent to one side, slender. Shrubs or low trees, with evergreen leaves and a corymb or umbel of large and handsome flowers from a terminal scaly bud, in early summer. We have only one common species, viz.: — POPULAR FLORA. 171 GREAT R. or LAUREL. Leaves lance-oblong, 4! to 10’ long, green both sides; flowers 1’ wide, pale rose or white, greenish, and spotted in the throat. Damp, deep woods. R. masimum. Azalea. Azalea. Shrubs, like Rhododendron, but with thin and deciduous leaves; the long stamens only 5. Our two common wild species (wrongly called Honeysuckle) grow in swamps. 1. Purpie A. or PINXTER-FLOWER. Flowers rather earlier than the leaves; corolla funnel-shaped with long recurved lobes, pink-purple or rose-color. A, nudiflora. 2. CLAMMyY or WuiTE A. Flowers white, clammy, sweet-scented, later than the leaves, which are whitish or pale beneath. Common E. A. viscosa. Wintergreen (or Shin-leaf). Pyrola. Leaves evergreen, rounded, all next the ground, around the base of a scape bearing a raceme of greenish-white (or rarely rose-colored) nodding flowers. Petals 5, all separate, not spreading. Stamens 10: filaments awl-shaped, naked. Style long. Pod 5-lobed. * Style turned down and curved. 1. Rounn-LEAvED W. Leaves orbicular, thick, shining ; raceme many-flowered ; calyx-lobes lance- shaped. Moist woods. P. rotundifolia, 2. OVAL-LEAVED W. Leaves broadly oval, thin; flowers many; calyx-lobes ovate, short. /P. elliptica. 3. SMALL W. Leaves roundish, thick, small; flowers few; cells of the anther pointed. P. chlordntha. ' * *& Style straight. 4. ONE-SIDED W. Leaves thin, ovate; flowers small, all on one side of the raceme. P. secinda. Pipsissewa. Chimaphila. Leaves evergreen, oblong or lance-shaped, toothed, crowded or scattered on short ascending stems, which bears at the summit from 1 to7 fragrant flesh-colored flowers in a corymb or umbel. Petals orbicular, widely spreading. Stamens 10; their filaments enlarged and hairy in the middle. Style very short: stigma broad and flat. Dry woods; fl. early summer. 1. UMBELLED P. (or PRINCE’s-PinE). Leaves Jance-shaped with a tapering base, serrate, bright green, not spotted; flowers 4 to 7. C. umbellata. 2. SpoTTED P. Plant smaller, 3’ to 5’ high: leaves lance-ovate, obtuse at the base, blotched with white, flowers 1 to 4. C. maculata. 54. HOLLY FAMILY. Order AQUIFOLIACE. Trees or shrubs, with alternate leaves, and small regular (often polygamous) flowers in the axils; the minute calyx and the 4-6-parted (greenish or white) corolla free from the ovary. Stamens 4 to 6, attached to the very base of the corolla, alternate with its divisions. Anthers opening lengthwise. Stigmas nearly sessile. Fruit a berry-like drupe, containing 4 to 6 small seedlike stones. — Consists mainly of the genus Holly. lez. Containing several species, some with deciduous, others with evergreen leaves. 1. AMERICAN Hotty. Leaves thick and evergreen, spiny-toothed, oval ; parts of the blossom ir fours; fruit red. — Tree with ash-colored bark and white wood. I. opaca. 12 er ee So ee 172 POPULAR FLORA. 2. WINTERBERRY H. or BLAcK ALDER. Leaves thin and deciduous, serrate, veiny, obovate or ob- long; peduncles very short; parts of the blossom often in sixes; fruit red. Shrub: low grounds. This belongs to the section Prinos. I. verticillata. 55. EBONY FAMILY. Order EBENACEZ. Of this small family, we have only one species, a tree, which deserves notice, viz. : — 423 Persimmon. Dvospyros. Tree with alternate thickish leaves; LINO LE in their axils some trees bear clustered ; Ve staminate flowers, with a 4-cleft corolla \ if } f 4 and about 16 stamens; others single and Yes A larger perfect flowers, with a 4-lobed f corolla and 8 stamens. Calyx 4-cleft, rather large, thickish. Corolla pale yel- low. Pistil one, with 4 styles: the ovary ripening into a plum-like fruit, which is very astringent when green, but sweet and yellow and eatable after frosts, con- ios ice ios taining 8 large and bony flat seeds. 422. Fertile flower. 423. Corolla and stamens of the same, laid open. D. Vir giniana. 424. Fiuit. 425. Section of the same. 56. PLANTAIN FAMILY. Order PLANTAGINACEA. Consists mainly of the genus of low stemless herbs called Plantain (or RibeGrass). Plantago. Flowers greenish, on a scape, -in a close spike. — Calyx of 4 persistent sepals. Corolla salver-shaped, thin, withering on the pod, 4-lobed. Stamens 4, generally with very long and weak filaments, borne on the corolla. Style and stigma one, slender. Pod 2-celled, opening crosswise, the top falling off as a lid, the loose partition falling out with the seeds. Leaves generally with strong ribs. 1. Common PLANTAIN. Leaves ovate or slightly heart-shaped, several-ribbed; seeds 7 to 16. P. major. 2. VireintA P. Small (2' to 7! high), hairy; leaves oblong, 3-5-ribbed; seeds 2. P. Virginica. 8. Enerisn P. or Rrepte-Grass. Hairy, with long lance-shaped or linear leaves, : \ and a short and thick spike or head, on \ aria a scape 1° or 2° high; seeds 2. Com- said mon E. P. lanceolata. ji) 4, SEAsiIpE P. Smooth; leaves linear, thick 428 427 429 426 and fleshy ; seeds 2. Salt marshes can the 426. Young spike of common Plantain. 427. A flower magnified. 428. Pis- coast. P. maritima. a of the same. 429. Fruit, opening by a lid; the withered corolla on the 1 . POPULAR FLORA. 173 57. LEADWORT FAMILY. Order PLUMBAGINACE 2. Familiar to us in two plants only, viz. Marsu-RoseMARY on the coast, and THRIFT in gardens; known by having a dry and scaly funnel-shaped calyx, and 5 petals united only at their base, with a stamen before each, and 5 styles on a single one-seeded ovary. Flowers (rose-color) in a round head on a long and naked scape: leaves very narrow, all in a close tuft at the root, | (Arméria) THRIFT. Flowers (lavender-color) spiked or sessile along the branches of a forking panicle: leaves spatulate, thickish, on petioles, nearly all of them from the stout rootstock, (Statice) MArsH-ROSEMARY. 430. Calyx and corolla of Thrift; separated. 431. Pistil of the same, with its 5 styles: also the lower part of an ovary more magnified, cut across. 58. PRIMROSE FAMILY. Order PRIMULACE. Herbs, with regular perfect flowers; completely distinguished by having the stamens of the same number as the lobes to the corolla and one before each, inserted on the tube; the pistil with a one-celled ovary or pod, with one large placenta rising from its base, and bear- ing many or few seeds. Leaves under water pinnately divided into thread-like divisions; flowering stems hollow, and inflated between the joints, (Hottonia) FEATHERFOIL. : Leaves simple and entire or barely toothed. ' Calyx with its tube coherent with the base of the ovary. Flowers very small, white, ‘ in racemes. Leaves alternate, (Samolus) BROOKWEED. i Calyx and corolla free, inserted on the receptacle. : Leaves all at the root: flowers in an umbel. ‘ Calyx tubular: corolla salver-shaped: stamens included, (Primula) PRIMROSE. ; Calyx and corolla 5-parted, turned back: anthers long, and filaments very short, connected, (Dodecatheon) DoDECATEEON. : Leaves several in a whorl at the summit of the slender stem. Calyx and corolla é; 7-parted, wheel-shaped, with narrow divisions, ( Trientalis) STAR-FLOWER. Leaves (mostly opposite or whorled) borne along the whole length of the stem: corolla 5-parted. Corolla wheel-shaped, yellow, (Lysimdchia) LOoSESTRIFE. Corolla wheel-shaped, blue or purple: pod opening by a lid, (Anagadllis) PIMPERNEL. Loosestrife. Lysimdchia. This is the only genus in the Primrose family of which we have more than one common wild spe- cies. The 5 stamens have their filaments a little monadelphous at the base, and often unequal. Fl. in summer. 1. Stricr L. Leaves opposite or scattered, lance-shaped: stem ending in a long raceme leafy at the base; divisions of the corolla lance-oblong. Low grounds. L. stricta. ES Se LUmUmUmltC~C ———— eee 174 POPULAR FLORA. 2. Four-LEAVED L. Stem simple; leaves lance-ovate, in whorls of 4 (sometimes of 8 or 6); flowers long-stalked from the axil of the leaves. Sandy grounds. L. quadrifolia. 8. CiLIATE L. Leaves opposite, lance-ovate, with a rounded or heart-shaped base, on long ciliate footstalks; flowers long-stalked from the upper axils; divisions of the corolla ovate, pointed, and with wavy or slightly toothed margins. Low grounds. L. ciliata. 4. LANCE-LEAVED L. Leaves lance-shaped, oblong, or linear, narrowed into a short margined foot- stalk; flowers, &c. nearly as in No. 3. 8S. & W. in low grounds. L. lanceolata. 59. BIGNONIA FAMILY, Order BIGNONIACEZ. Plants with mostly opposite leaves, and large and showy flowers: the corolla 2-lipped or rather irregular, bearing on its tube 4 stamens (2 long and 2 short) or only 2, often with rudiments of the other one or three. Fruit a large 2-celled pod, with many large seeds: the whole kernel is a flat embryo. Calyx free and corolla on the receptacle, as it is in all the following families with mono- petalous corolla. Woody plants, with winged seeds, in long pods. Vine climbing by rootlets: leaves pinnate. Calyx 5-toothed. Corolla funnel-shaped, 5-lobed: sta- mens 4, . (YZécoma) TRUMPET-CREEPER. 432. Corolla of Catalpa laid open, with the stamens. Tree, with simple heart-shaped leaves, 433. Winged seed of Trumpet-Creeper. and white flowers (purple-tinged or dotted) in large panicles. Calyx 2-lipped. Corolla bell-shaped and 2-lipped: stamens generally 2, with vestiges of one or three others, ( Catalpa) CATALPA. Rank clammy herb (cult. and wild S. W.) with wingless seeds in a large and long-pointed fruit, the outer part of which is fleshy and falls off from the inner fibrous-woody part: this is crested and long-beaked, the beak at length splitting into 2 hooked horns. Corolla dull-colored: stamens 2 or 4, perfect, _(Martynia) UNICORN-PLANT. 60. BROOM-RAPE FAMILY. Order OROBANCHACE. Herbs parasitic on the roots of trees, &c., readily known by their irregular monopetalous corolla, 4 stamens, in two pairs; the ovary one-celled with innumerable small seeds on the walls. Also, like other parasitic plants, they are entirely destitute of green herbage, i: lowish or brownish throughout, and with scales in place of leaves. Stems slender and branched, with few and small scales and many flowers scattered along the branches, (Zpiphéegus) BEECH-DROPS. Stems short and thick, covered with broad scales, so that the plant resembles a fir-cone Flowers under the upper scales: stamens projecting, ( Condpholis) SQUAW-ROOT. Stems or naked and 1-flowered scapes slender, from a scaly base: stamens included in the curved and salver-shaped corolla, (Aphyllon) NAKED BROOM-RAPE. POPULAR FLORA. 175 61. FIGWORT FAMILY. Order SCROPHULARIACEE. Herbs with a 2-lipped or more or less irregular monopetalous corolla, and 4 stamens 434. Corolla of a Pentstemon, laid open, showing the 4 perfect stamens and the fifth as a sterile naked filament. 435. Stamens (with a piece of the corolla) of another Pentste- mon, with the sterile filament bearded. 436. Piece of Purple Gerardia. 437. Corolla Jaid open, showing the 4 stamens in pairs. 438. Style and calyx of the same. 439. Part of a pod. 449. Flower of Toadflax. 441. Plant of Hedge-Hyssop. _ 442, Flower laid open; one pair of good stamens ; one pair of ster- ile filaments. in pairs (2 long and 2 short), or only 2 perfect stamens; rarely all 5 present: style 1: the ovary 2-celled and making a many-seeded pod (few-seeded in some Speed- wells and Cow-wheat). Flowers often showy. Two lobes always belong to the upper lip, three to the lower. * Corolla wheel-shaped or with a very short tube, the lobes more or less unequal. Calyx and corolla 5-cleft: stamens 5, some of them rather imperfect, (Verbascum) MULLEIN. Calyx and corolla 4-parted: stamens 2, (Verdnica) SPEEDWELL. * * Corolla more or less tubular, bell-shaped and irregular, or 2-lipped. + Upper lip or lobes covering the lower in the bud (except sometimes in Monkey-flower). Corolla with its 2-lipped mouth closed by a palate, i. e. an inward projection of the lower lip: stamens 4. Corolla with a slender spur at the base on the lower side, (Linaria) TOADFLAX. * Corolla sac-like at the base on the lower side, (Antirrhinunm) SNAPDRAGON. Corolla 2-parted: the lower lip sac-shaped in the middle; the short tube with a protuber- ance at the base on the upper side: stamens 4, ( Collinsia) COLLINSIA. ,! ‘ U \ 176 POPULAR FLORA. Corolla ovoid, small, dull greenish purple, with 4 short unequal erect lobes, and one small recurved one (the lower). Stamens4 and arudiment, (Scrophularia) Figwort. Corolla shaped like a turtle’s head, the mouth closed or nearly so, without a palate. Sta- : mens 4 with woolly anthers; and asterile filament besides, ( Chelone) TURTLEHEAD. Corolla open at the irregular or 2-lipped mouth. Stamens 4, and a sterile filament besides (Fig. 484, 435), (Pentstemon) PENTSTEMON. Corolla 2-lipped; the upper lip with the sides turned back, the lower lip turned down. Stamens 4, no vestige of the fifth. Calyx elongated, 5-angled, 5- toothed. Stigmas with 2 broad lips, (Mimulus) MoNKEY-FLOWER. Corolla somewhat 2-lipped, open. Stamens only 2 perfect. Calyx 5-parted. Sterile filaments included, or none. Corolla yellow or whitish, (Gratiola) Hepcr-Hyssor. Sterile filaments long, protruding from the purple or blue corolla, (Zlysdnthes) FALSE-PIMPERNEL. + + Lower lip or the side lobes covering the others in the bud. Corolla (large, purple or white) tubular, open; the border slightly 5-lobed, (Digitalis) *FoxGLove. Corolla salver-shaped. Flowers in a spike. Stamens 2, projecting, longer than the 4 lobes of the corolla, ( Verdnica Virginica) CULVER’S-ROOT. Stamens 4, included: lobes of the corolla 5: calyx tubular, 5-toothed, (Buchnera) BLUE-NEARTS. Corolla bell-shaped or funnel-shaped, somewhat irregularly 5-lobed. Stamens 4, (Gerdrdia) GERARDIA. Corolla tubular, decidedly 2-lipped, the narrow upper lip erect or arched, enclosing the 4 stamens. Flowers inaspike. Pod many-seeded. Bracts large and colored, scarlet in our species. Calyx tubular, ( Castillena) PAINTED-CUP. Bracts green, small. Leaves pinnatifid, (Pedicularis) LousEWoRT. Mullein. Verbdscum. Flowers in a long terminal spike or raceme. Corolla 5-parted, almost regular. Stamens 5, unequal, but generally all with anthers. Root biennial. 1. Common M. Tall, woolly throughout; the simple stem winged by the prolonged bases of the leaves; flowers yellow, in a long thick spike; two of the filaments smooth. Fields, &c. V. Thapsus. 2. Morn M. Green, smoothish; stem 2° or 8° high; leaves toothed; flowers yellow or white in a loose raceme; filaments all bearded with yellow wool. Road-sides. V. Blattaria. Speedwell. Veronica. Flowers small; one or two of the lobes of the 4-parted border of the corolla always smaller than the others. Stamens 2, protruding. Pod flattened, many-seeded in the common species. § 1. Corolla salver-shaped, the tube Jonger than the border. Pod not notched at the end. 1. CULVER’s-rooT §. A tall perennial, with lance-shaped pointed leaves in whorls, and whitish flowers crowded in clustered spikes. Woods, W. and 8., and cultivated in gardens. V. Virginica. §2. Corolla wheel-shaped, tube very short, pale blue or white. Pod notched at the end. Leaves opposite. * Flowers in single racemes from the axils of the leaves. 2. WATER S. Smooth; stems rooting at the creeping lower part, then erect; leaves sessile by a heart- shaped base, ovate-lanceolate; corolla pale blue with darker stripes. Brooks. V. Anagallis. 3. Brook S.or BRooKLIME. Leaves ovate or oblong, on petioles; otherwise like the last. V. Americana. 4. Marsu S. Smooth, slender; leaves sessile, linear, acute; raceme zigzag, loose. V. scutellata. 5. Common S. Downy; stems creeping; leaves wedge-oblong, serrate; raceme dense. Dry ground, in open woods. V. officinahs. | ; t POPULAR FLORA. 177 * * Flowers in a terminal loose raceme. 6. THYME-LEAVED S. Smooth and small, 2! to 4! high from a creeping base; leaves ovate or oblong, the lowest petioled and rounded. Fields, everywhere. V. serpyllifolia. * * * Flowers in the axils of the upper leaves. Root annual. 7. PuRSLANE S. or NECKWEED. Smooth, branching, erect; lower leaves oval or oblong, toothed, and petioled; uppermost oblong-linear, sessile, and entire. Cult. grounds, &e. V. peregrima. 8. Corn S. Hairy; lower leaves ovate, crenate, petioled; the unper sessile, lance-shaped, and entire. Cultivated grounds. V. arvensis. Toadflax. Linaria. 1. Common T. (BuTTER-AND-EcGs, RAmsTrEeD). Stems branching, crowded with the pale linear leaves; flowers crowded in a close raceme, large and showy, pale yellow with the palate orange- colored. A weed in fields and road-sides. L. vulgaris. 2. Witp T. Stem very slender, simple, with scattered linear leaves; prostrate shoots at the bottom with broader leaves; flowers very small, blue, in a slender raceme. Sandy soil. L. Canadensis. Gerardia. Gerardia. Plants with large and showy somewhat leafy-racemed flowers; the corolla a little irregular, but hardly 2-lipped. Stamens woolly or hairy; the 4 anthers approaching in pairs. Fl. late summer and autumn. * Corolla rose-purple: calyx bell-shaped, with 5 short teeth: plauts low and bushy-branched. 1. Purrpte G. Leaves linear, rough-margined; fiowers 1' long, short-stalked. G. purpurea. 2. SLENDER G. Leaves linear; flower about #' long, on a long and slender stalk. G. tenuifolia. * * Corolla yellow, with a rather long tube, woolly inside: calyx 5-cleft, leaf-like. 3. Downy G. Stem (3° or 4° high) and oblong or lance-shaped leaves clothed with a fine close down, upper leaves entire, lower ones sinuate or pinnatifid. Woods. G. flava. 4. SmootH G. Smooth throughout and glaucous, 3° to 6° high; lower leaves twice pinnatifid, upper once pinnatifid or entire. Rich woods. G. quercifolia. 5. Cur-LEAVED G. Rather downy, bushy-branched, 2° or 3° high, very leafy; leaves pinnatifid, the crowded divisions cut and toothed. G. pedicularia. 62. VERVAIN FAMILY. Order VERBENACEX. Herbs or shrubby plants, with opposite leaves, a 2-lipped or unequally 5- (or rarely 4-) lobed corolla, and 4 stamens in pairs (1. e. 2 long and 2 short ones): the pistil with a single ovary and only one seed in each cell; the fruit either berry-like with 4 stones, or dry and splitting into 2 or 4 akenes, or in Lopseed consisting of a single akene. This family is in- termediate between the foregoing order and the next. The two following are the com- monest genera. Calyx cylindrical, 2-lipped. Corolla 2-lipped. Ovary 1-celled, simple. Herb, in woods, with small whitish flowers in slender and loose spikes; the calyx containing the akene, turned down in fruit, (Phryma) Lopsrep.. Calyx tubular, 5-toothed. Corolla salver-shaped, with 5 slightly unequal lobes. Flowers | in spikes or heads, summer and autumn, (Verbena) VERVAIN. 178 POPULAR FLORA. Vervain. Verbena. * Snowy VERBENAS: low and showy-flowered species, in gardens in summer, the greater part from South America, viz. V. Afelindes (red) and others, now much mixed. And there is one species of this sort wild in Western prairies, viz.: — Le AUBLET’s VERBENA. Rather hairy; leaves pinnatifid or cut; spikes flat-topped in blossom, like a corymb; corolla light purple, &c. V. Aubletia. * * CoMMON VERVAINS: weeds or weed-like plants, in fields and road-sides, with small flowers in long spikes, which are generally panicled. . Common Y. Erect, slenderly branched, 1° to 8° high; leaves sessile, cleft or pinnatifid and cut- toothed; spikes very slender; flowers very small, purplish. V. officinalis. bo 3. WuirE V. Leaves petioled, ovate or oval, serrate; spikes of white flowers very slender. V. urticifolia. 4. BLUE VY. Leaves petioled, lance-shaped or lance-oblong, the lower often cut or 2-lobed at the base; spikes of blue flowers thick and close; stem 4° to 6° high. V. hastata. Low VY. Stems 4° to 1° high; leaves lance-linear, sessile, scarcely toothed; spikes one or few, thickish; flowers purple. S. and W. V. angustifolia. 63. SAGE or MINT FAMILY. Order LABIATZ. Herbs with square stems and opposite aromatic leaves, a 2-lipped (or rather irregular) corolla, 4 stamens in pairs (2 long and 2 shorter), or else only 2 sta- mens, and a 4-parted ovary, in fran making 4 akenes around the base of the single style. That is, among the families with 2-lipped or irregular monopetalous corollas this is at once known by the 4- lobed ovary, making 4 akenes. ‘The leaves are commonly more or less dotted with small glands, which contain a volatile oil, peculiar to each species. This gives the warm aromatic properties which all plants of this family possess. By distillation, the oil is extracted from several species, as from Peppermint and Spearmint, Lavender, Pen- nyroyal, &c. Or the dried foliage is used for seasoning or for herb drinks in the case of Summer-Savory, Marjoram, Thyme, Catnip, [Al 443 444 3 . ° 143 Flower of Garden Saze. and Sage. The following are the common genera or kinds of this 444. Pistil of the same, the 4- am lobed ovary in the bottom of large family. the calyx, half of which is cut away. * Stamens 4, turned down so as to rest upon the lower lip of the corolla. Flowers in racemes, white: calyx soon reflexed, its upper lobe large and round: upper lip of the corolla 4-cleft, the lower entire. Leaves ovate, fragrant, (Ocimum) *SwEEtT-BAsIL. Flowers in a naked and peduncled spike, pale blue: calyx narrow, 5-toothed: the 5 lobes of the corolla almost equal: stamens short: leaves narrow, hoary, (Lavdndula) *LAVENDER. * * Stamens 4, ascending, and projecting from the upper side of the corolla. Akenes veiny. Corolla cleft down the upper side, the lower lobe much larger than the other 4. Flowers purplish, rarely white, in a spike, (Teiicreum) GERMANDER. Corolla with the border cleft into 5 almost equal lobes, blue. Stamens very long, curved: lobes of the corolla turned rather forward, ( Trichostéma) BLUE-CURLS. Stamens slightly projecting from the equally 5-lobed corolla, - (Jsdnthus) FALsE-PENNYROYAL. P 4 POPULAR FLORA. 179 * * * Stamens 4 or 2, not turned down, and not protruding from the upper side of the flower. Corolla scarcely at all two-lipped, almost equally 4-lobed. Flowers small. Stamens 4 with anthers, almost equal in length, (Meniha) Minr. Stamens only 2 with anthers. Flowers in dense axillary whorls, (Lycopus) WATER-HorEHOUND. Corolla evidently 2-lipped: stamens 2, or only 2 with anthers. Upper lip nearly flat or spreading, 2-lobed or notched at the end. Calyx equally 5-toothed, bearded in the throat. Cymes terminal, (Cunila) Dirrany. Calyx 2-lipped: upper lip 3-toothed, the lower 2-cleft. Throat of the calyx bearded: corollasmall: 2 sterile filaments, (edeoma) PENNYROYAL. Throat of the calyx naked; that of the large corolla bearded; the middle lobe of its lower lip large and hanging, fringe-toothed, ( Collinsonia) Horse-BALM. Upper lip of the corolla arched, entire or slightly notched, holding the stamens. Calyx equally 5-toothed, tubular: lips of the large corolla long and narrow. Flowers crowded in close and leafy-bracted heads, (Monarda) Horse-Mrnv. Calyx 2-lipped. Upper lip with 3 bristle-pointed teeth. Flowers in heads, (Llephilia) BuEPHivtia. Upper lip entire or 3-toothed. Anthers with only one cell, on the end of a long connective astride the end of the filament, (Sdlvia) SAGE. Corolla 2-lipped: stamens 4, all with anthers. Upper and inner pair of stamens longer than the lower or outer pair, And curved downwards. Flowers spiked, small. Herbs tall, (Lophanthus) Giant-Hyssop. Both pairs of stamens ascending under the upper lip. Flowers in terminal spikes or clusters, (Nepeta) CATNIP. Flowers few in the axils of kidney-shaped leaves, (Glechoma) GRounD-lvy. Upper pair of stamens shorter than the lower or outer pair. Upper lip of the corolla flat and open, or barely concave. | Stamens distant or diverging, not approaching under the upper lip. | Calyx tubular, equally 5-toothed, 15-nerved. Stamens long, (Hyssopus) *Hyssop. | Calyx 10 to 13-nerved, ovate, bell-shaped, or short tubular. . Calyx naked in the throat. Flowers in dense heads or clusters, (Pycnanthemum) MountTatn-MIntT. Flowers clustered in the axils or spiked, (Satureia) *SUMMER-SAVORY. Calyx hairy in the throat. Flowers spiked, and with large colored bracts, (Origanum) MARJORAM. Flowers loosely clustered: bracts minute, (Thymus) *THYME. * ‘ 7 ¢ Stamens with their anthers approaching in pairs under the upper lip. Calyx tubular. Flowers in a head-like cluster, surrounded with awl- shaped bracts, ( Clinopodium) BAstu. Calyx tubular-bell-shaped and 2-lipped: corolla curved upwards. Flowers few in loose clusters, (Melissa) *BALM. Upper lip of the corolla concave, the whole throat inflated and funnel-shaped. , Flowers large in naked spikes, (Physostégia) FALSE-DRAGONHEAD. Upper lip of the corolla arched or hood-like. Calyx 2-lipped, closed over the fruit, and Very veiny, the lips toothed: flowers in a bracted short spike, (Brunella) SELF-HEAL. Not veiny, becoming helmet-shaped; lips entire, Scutellaria) SCULLCAP. | | \ f eee cs oe a 180 POPULAR FLORA. Calyx not 2-lipped, 10-toothed. Clusters axillary, head-like, (Marrubium) Horrrnounn. Calyx not 2-lipped and only 5-toothed, Funnel-shaped and much larger than the corolla, (Moluccélla) *Mo.tucca-BALM. Bell-shaped or top-shaped, much shorter than the corolla. Anthers opening crosswise: calyx-teeth spiny-pointed, (Galedpsis) Hiemp-NETTLE. Anthers opening lengthwise. Corolla not enlarged in the throat: stamens turned down after shed- ding their pollen, (Stachys) HrpGE-NETTLE. Corolla enlarged in the throat: calyx-teeth not spiny, (Lamiwm) DkAp-NETTLE. Corolla not enlarged in the throat: calyx top-shaped with spiny teeth. Akenes 3-angled. Leaves cleft and cut, (Leonwrus) MOTHERWORT. Mint. Mentha. Herbs with sharp-tasted leaves and small whitish or purplish flowers: upper lobe of the short co- rolla either entire or notched. 1. Wi~p Mint. Flowers in head-like clusters around the stem in the axils of the petioled leaves; plant hairy, or in one variety smoothish. Wet places. M. Canadensis. 2. PEPPERMINT. Smooth; clusters of flowers crowded in short spikes; leaves petioled, oblong or ovate. M. pipérita. 8. SPEARMINT. Nearly smooth; spikes panicled; leaves lance-ovate, almost sessile. M. viridis. Hiorse-Mint. Monarda. Herbs with mostly simple stems, and rather large flowers in close head-like clusters at the summit of the stem, and around it in the axils of the upper leaves, surrounded by large bracts. ! * Root perennial: upper lip of the narrow corolla entire, the 2 stamens projecting from it: leaves lance-ovate or slightly heart-shaped. 1. Baum H. or OswEco TEA. Green, rather hairy; corolla long, bright red; uppermost leaves and bracts tinged with red. Moist banks, N., and in gardens. M. didyma. 2. Common H. Pale, smoothish or soft downy; flowers purplish or whitish, smaller. WM. fistulosa. * * Root annual: upper lip of the corolla notched: stamens not projecting. 8. Dorrrp H. Leaves lance-shaped; bracts yellowish and purple; corolla yellowish, purple-spotted. Sandy soil, S. M. punctata. Sculleap. Scutellaria. Well marked by the tubular ascending corolla (mostly blue or bluish-purp'e) with a strongly arched upper lip; the calyx with two short entire lips, closed after the corolla falls, and having an enlargement on the back, the whole becoming of the shape of a helmet. Fl. summer. * Flowers small, in axillary one-sided racemes. 1. MAp-poe §. Smooth, branched, slender; leaves lance-ovate or oblong, pointed, serrate, on slender stalks. Wet places. S. latertflora. * * Flowers in terminal racemes. 2. LARGER S. Hairy and rather clammy, 1° to 8° high; leaves heart-shaped or ovate, wrinkled- veiny; upper lip of the corolla blue, the lower pale and purple-spotted. S.and W. _ S. versicolor. 8. Harry S. Hairy, 1° to 3° high, slender; leaves ovate, crenate, obtuse, veiny. S. pilosa. | | | POPULAR FLORA. 181 4. NARROW-LEAVED §. Minutely hoary or downy, slender, 1° or 2° high; leaves lance-oblong or linear, entire; raceme short, as in the foregoing. I. and S$. S. integrifolia. * * * Flowers single, in the axils of the leaves. 5. Dwarr S. Minutely downy, 3! to 6' high; leaves round-ovate or the upper lance-ovate, entire, 4’ long. Dry or sandy banks of rivers, &e. S. parvula. 6. SLENDER S. Slender, 1° or 2° high; leaves lance-ovate, serrate, with a roundish or slightly heart- shaped base, sessile; flowers 3! long. Wet woods. S. galericulata. 64. BORRAGEH FAMILY. Order BORRAGINACE. Herbs with alternate entire leaves, not aromatic, commonly rough: the flowers regular, with a 5-leaved calyx, 5-lobed corolla, 5 stamens on the tube, one style, and a 4-lobed ovary, making 4 akenes. Flowers generally in one- sided raceme-like clusters, coiled up at the tip, and unfolding as the blossoms expand. Innocent mucila- ginous and _ slightly bitter plants, the roots of some 449 species yielding a red dye. 445. Branch of Forget-me-not, in flower. 446. The corolla laid open, with the stamens, magnified. 447. The pistil with its 4-lobed ovary ; calyx, &c. cut away. 448. Two of the ripe akenes in the calyx; the two sepals towards the eye and two of the akenes removed. 449. Akene cut through lengthwise, magnified ; the whole kernel embryo. 450. Flowers of Comfrey. 451. Corolla enlarged, laid open, show- ing the sharp scales inside, and the stamens, 450 * Ovary 4-parted, making 4 akenes around the base of the style. Akenes or lobes erect, fixed by the lower end, separate from the style, not prickly. Corolla somewhat irregular (the lobes rather unequal), funnel-shaped (blue or purple). Its throat naked and open: stamens protruding, rather unequal, (Echium) Vierr’s-BuGLoss. Its throat closed by 5 blunt scales; tube curved: stamens included, (Lycopsis) BuGtoss. Corolla, &c. perfectly regular. Its throat closed by 5 converging scales, one before each lobe. Corolla wheel-shaped; its lobes acute. Plant rough-bristly, (Borrago) *BORRAGE. Corolla tubular and somewhat funnel-shaped, 5-toothed, (Symphytum) COMFREY. Its throat open, naked or with 5 small projections. Akenes mostly stony. Lobes of the tubular corolla acute and erect, (Onosmodium) FALSE-GROMWELL. Lobes of the trumpet-shaped corolla spreading, rounded, short. Akenes fleshy. Plant very smooth, (Mertensia) LuNnGwort. ———— 182 POPULAR FLORA. Lobes of the salver-shaped or funnel-shaped corolla spreading, rounded. Each with one edge outside and one inside in the bud: corolla very short, (Myosotis) SCORPION-GRASS or FORGET-ME-NOT. Two lobes covering the others in the bud. Corolla short, white or whitish, funnel-shaped, (Lithospérmum) GROMWELL. Corolla long, orange-yellow, salver-shaped, (Lithospéermum, § Batschia) Puccoon. Akenes or lobes of the ovary prickly, fixed by their side or upper end to the base of the style. Corolla salver-shaped, with 5 scales in the throat. Erect, prickly on the margins only. Flowers snrall, _ (Echinospéermum) STICKSEED. Oblique or flattened from above, short-prickly or rough allover, (Cynogléssum) HounD’s-TONGUE. * *& Ovary not lobed, but splitting when ripe into 4 akenes: corolla short, (Heliotropium) *HELIOTROPE. ¢ 65. WATERLEAF FAMILY. Order HYDROPHYLLACES. Herbs with lobed, compound, or toothed and mostly ‘alternate leaves; the regular flowers much like those of the Borrage Family, except as to the ovary, which is globular and only one-celled and bears the few or many ovules and seeds on the walls (pari- etal), or on two projections from them. In Waterleaf, Nemophila, &c., the two placentas, bearing the few seeds, broaden and make 5 . i or} id “4 . . « i e S ~ s Sy 452. Flower of eon Waterleaf. 453 Corolla laid open, and stamens a kind of linine to the 454. Calyx and young pod, with the style. 2 pod. Corolla bell shaped or wheel-shaped ; its lobes and the stamens always 5. -Style 2-cleft above. The Water- leaf furnishes our principal plants of the family that are common wild. But some Ne- mophilas and Phacelias, from Texas and California, are showy garden annuals. Leaves opposite, at least the lower ones. Stamens not projecting beyond the corolla. Calyx without appendages or teeth between the divisions, large in fruit, (Ellisia) ELuista. Calyx with 5 reflexed teeth between the divisions, — (Nemophila) *NEMOPHILA. Leaves alternate: appendages of the calyx none or minute: stamens long. Mostly annuals: seeds on the walls of the pod, or two narrow placentas, (Phacélia) PHACELIA. Perennials, with scaly-toothed rootstocks. Seeds 1 to 4, enclosed in a membrane which lines the pod. Flowers white or bluish, clustered: filaments bearded below, (Hydrophyllum) WATERLEAF. Waterleaf. Hydrophyllum. 1. VireintA W. Smoothish, 1° or 2° high; leaves pinnately divided into 5 or 7 narrow and toothed or cleft lobes; calyx hairy. Rich woods. I. Virginicum. 2. CANADA W. Smoothish; leaves rounded, palmately lobed, longer than the peduncle; calyx smooth. Rich woods. Hl. Canadeénse, POPULAR: FLORA. 183 66. POLEMONIUM FAMILY. Order POLEMONIACEZ. Herbs, not twining (but Cobza climbs by tendrils), with regular flowers, all the parts in fives, except the pistil, which is 3-celled and the style 3-cleft at the top, the 5 spreading lobes of the corolla convolute in the bud, i. e. overlapping so that one edge of each is outside of that behind it, but inside of the next one. Flowers generally handsome. All the kinds here given are cultivated ; but the Phloxes are wild in this country (especially W. and S.), and so is one Polemonium. Gilias are pretty garden annuals from California, &e. Cobsea, which is placed here, though very different from the rest, is a great- flowered vine from Mexico. ~ 457 ~ 455. Flowers of Phlox. 456. Flowers of Polemonium. 437. Pod of Polemorium, cut across. Climbing by tendrils on the pinnate leaves: flowers axillary, single: calyx leafy: corolla bell-shaped, large, but dull-colored, (Cobéa) *CoBmA. Not climbing: flowers in panicled cymes or clusters. Stamens inserted at very unequal heights: on the long tube of the salver-shaped corolla, short, included: calyx narrow, 5-angled: seeds only one in each cell. Leaves all entire, sessile, and opposite, except the uppermost, (Phlox) PHwuox. Stamens all inserted-at the same height. Leaves mostly alternate and compound. Corolla almost wheel-shaped (light blue): stamens turned towards the lower side of the flower: leaves pinnate, (Polemonium) POLEMONIUM. Corolla funnel-shaped or salver-shaped: stamens not turned to one side: seeds several... Leaves once to thrice pinnately divided, (Gilia) GILIA. Phlox. Phlox. * Perennial herbs, growing in open woods, and in gardens. 1. PANICLED P. Stem stout, 2° to 4° high; leaves lance-oblong and ovate-lanceolate, pointed, taper- ing or the upper ones heart-shaped at the base; panicle large and broad; corolla pink or white, the lobes entire. Fl. summer. P. paniculata. 2. SpoTTED P. Stem 1° or 2° high, slender, simple, purple-spotted; lower leaves lance-shaped, upper- most lance-ovate, tapering upwards from the rounded or slightly heart-shaped base; panicle narrow; calyx-teeth rather blunt; corolla pink-purple, or varying to white in gardens, the lobes entire. Fl. summer. P. maculata. 8. Harry P. Stems slender, ascending, 1° or 2° high, clammy-hairy; leaves lance-shaped or Jance- linear; cyme flat; calyx-teeth long, awn-pointed; lobes of the rose-pink corolla entire. FI. early summer. P. pilosa. 4. RuNNING P. Spreading by creeping runners, bearing roundish and thickish smooth leaves; flow- ering stems 4’ to 8' high, with oblong leaves; flowers few and large; lobes of the red-purple corolla round and entire. Fl. early summer. P. réeptans. ———— Se et ee _—w — = SS ee Ee Ee eee _—————— ee 184 POPULAR FLORA. . SPREADING P. Stems ascending, 9! to 18’ high, rather clammy; leaves ovate-oblong or broad lance-shaped; cyme loosely-flowered; lobes of the pale lilac or bluish corolla generally obcordate and rather distant from each other. Fl. spring, N. & W. P. divaricata. 6. GrounpD P. or Moss-Pinx. Plant creeping and tufted in flat mats; leaves awl-shaped or lance- linear, small, crowded; corolla pink or rose-color, with a darker eye, sometimes white. FI. spring, in sandy or rocky soil. S.& E. P. subulata. qn * * Garden annual from Texas. 7. DRumMoND’s P. Rather clammy, branched; leaves: lance-oblong, the upper heart-shaped at the base; corolla crimson, purple or rose-color, lobes entire. P. Drummondii. Polemonium. Polemdniwm. 1. Buuz P. (Called in gardens Jacob’s Ladder or Greek Valerian.) Stem erect, 1° or 2° high, leafy; leaflets many; seeds several. Gardens. P. cerileum. 2. Wixp P. Stems weak, spreading; leaflets 7 to 11; flowers few. Woods, W.& 5S. P. reptans. 67. CONVOLVULUS FAMILY. Order CONVOLVULACEAE Twining or trailing herbs, often with some milky juice, with alternate leaves and regular flowers: calyx of 5 sepals: corolla 5-plaited or 5-lobed. Stamens 5. Pistil making a round pod, with 2 to 4 cells and one or two large seeds erect from the bottom of each cell. (For illustrations see Fig. 4 to 7,13 to 22.) Dodders are leafless parasitic plants of the family. Plants with foliage, and bearing large flowers, open only for one day. Style one. Stamens protruded beyond the mouth of the tubular or trumpet-shaped and crimson or scarlet corolla, ( Quamoclit) QUAMOCLIT. Stamens included in the tube of the almost entire corolla. Stigma thick, 2-lobed: corolla bell-shaped: pod 4-celled, 4-seeded, (Latatas) SWEET-POTATO. Stigma capitate, thick, with 2 or 3 lobes: corolla funnel-form: pod with 2 or 3 cells, and 2 seeds in each cell, ([pomea) MORNING-GLORY. Stigmas 2, long, linear or oblong. [BINDWEED.* Calyx naked at the base: corolla bell-shaped, ( Convolvulus) *CONVOLYVULUS or Calyx covered by 2 large bractlets: corolla funnel-form, ( Calyst¢gia) BRACTED-BINDWEED. Plants with leafless whitish, reddish, or yellowish thread-like stems, twining over other plants, and attaching themselves to their bark, on which they feed: flowers in clus- ters: corolla bell-shaped, with 5 scales inside the stamens: pod 2-celled, cells 2-seeded: embryo spiral, without any cotyledons, ( Ciscuta) DoppEr. Quamoclit. Quamoclit. 1. CYPRESS-VINE Q. Leaves narrow, pinnately dissected into thread-shaped divisions; limb of the corolla rather deeply 5-lobed. Garden annual. Q. vulgaris. 2. SCARLET Q. Leaves heart-shaped, entire or nearly so; corolla scarcely lobed, Q. coccinea. * The low THREE-COLORED ConvoLvuLus (C. tricolor) is a garden annual. ; POPULAR FLORA. 185 Morning-Glory. Jpoméa. 1. Common M. Annual; stem hairy, the hairs bent downwards; leaves heart-shaped, entire; flowers 8 to 5 on the peduncle; flowers purple or pink varying to white, opening early in the morning, closing in bright sunshine; pod 8-celled. Cult. &c. I. purpurea. 2. Witp M. (or MAN-oF-THE-EARTH). Smooth; root huge, perennial; leaves heart-shaped, entire or some of them narrowed in the middle; flowers 1 to 5 on a peduncle, white with purple in the tube, opening in sunshine. Sandy banks. I. pandurdatus: 68. NIGHTSHADE FAMILY. Order SOLANACEZ. Herbs, or sometimes shrubs, with a colorless bitter or nauseous juice (often poisonous) ; alternate leaves; and regular flowers, with 5 (or in cultivated plants sometimes 6 or 7) mostly equal stamens and one pistil. Ovary with 2 or more cells, in fruit becoming a many-seeded berry or pod. Corolla plaited in the bud, or valvate, 1. e. the lobes placed edge to edge. 459 458. Upper part of the corolla of Stramonium (Fig. 177) in bud. 459. Cross-section of the same, to show how it is plaited and folded. 46). Flower of Tobacco. 461. Its podand calyx. 462. Same, with the upper part cut away. 463. Flowers and berries of Bittersweet Nightshade. 464. Flowerof Henbane. 465. Pod of the same, opening by a lid. Corolla wheel-shaped: stamens closely converging or united around the style (Fig. 182, 183). Fruit a berry. Anthers longer than the very short filaments, and Connected with each other, opening lengthwise. Berry several-celled, ( Lycopérsicum) * TOMATO. Not grown together, opening at the top by two pores, (Solanum) NIGHTSHADE. Anthers shorter than the filaments, heart-shaped, separate, opening lengthwise. Berry pod-like, inflated, the pulp very pungent (Cayenne or Red Pepper), ( Capsicum) *CAPSICUM. 186 POPULAR FLORA. Corolla between wheel-shaped and bell-shaped, or very open and short funnel-shaped, with an almost entire border: anthers separate, shorter than the filaments: ca- lyx enlarged and enclosing the berry. Calyx 5-lobed, becoming a bladdery bag around the (eatable) berry, (Physalis) GRounD-CHERRY. Calyx 5-parted, the divisions becoming heart-shaped: berry dry, (Nicandra) *APPLE-OF-PERU. Corolla funnel-shaped, bell-shaped, or tubular: stamens separate: filaments slender. Calyx 5-parted, leafy, spreading: stamens curved or unequal. Corolla bell-shaped : stamens curved: fruit a black berry (deadly poi- sonous), (.Atropa) *DEADLY NIGHTSHADE. Corolla funnel-shaped: stamens unequal: fruit a pod, (Petunia) *PETUNIA. Calyx 5-toothed or 5-lobed. Shrubby, with vine-like branches and narrow leaves: corolla funnel-shaped, small: fruit a berry, (Lycitum) *MATRIMONY-VINE. Herbs (annuals), unpleasant-scented, mostly large-flowered. Fruit a pod. Corolla (dull and veiny) and stamens rather irregular: pod in the urn-shaped calyx, opening at the top by a lid (Fig. 465), (Hyoscyamus) HENBANE. Corolla perfectly regular, generally long funnel-shaped. Calyx 5-angled, long, falling away after flowering: pod large and prickly, 2-celled and becoming 4-celled, 4-valved. (Flower, Fig. 177, 458), (Datura) STRAMONIUM. Calyx not angled, remaining around the smooth pod, which opens by several slits at the top, (Nicotiana) *ToBacco. The only genus which needs to have the species enumerated is the Nightshade. Solanum. * Anthers blunt: plants not prickly. 1. Common NicutTsHapE. A very common low, much-branched, homely weed, in damp or shady grounds ; root annual; leaves ovate, wavy-toothed; flowers very small, white; berries black, small, said to be poisonous. — S. nigrum. 2. BirreRSwEET N. Stem rather shrubby, climbing; leaves ovate and heart-shaped, some of them halberd-shaped or with an ear-like lobe at the base on one or both sides; flowers blue-purple, in small cymes; berries bright red. Around dwellings, &c. (The flowers are represented in Fig. 182, as well as Fig. 463.) S. Dulcamara. 3. JERUSALEM-CHERRY N. A low tree-shaped shrub, with lance-oblong and smooth entire leaves, scattered and small white flowers, succeeded by large bright red berries like cherries. Cultivated in houses, &c. S. Pseudo- Capsicum. 4. Poraro or TusErous N. Shoots under ground bearing tubers (Fig. 60); leaves interruptedly pinnate; the leaflets very unequal, some of them minute; corolla only 5-angled (Fig. 183), white or blue. Cultivated. S. tuberosum. * %* Anthers long and taper-pointed: stems and leaves prickly. 5. Ecc-PLAnt N. Leaves ovate, wavy or somewhat lobed, downy; berry oblong, purple or whitish, from the size of an egg to that of a melon, eatable when cooked. Cult. S. Melongena. 6. Horse-Netrie N. Leaves ovate or oblong, wavy or angled, hoary-hairy; corolla bluish; berry yellow. with the ova y divided to show the ovule hanging from the top. 488, Leaf and cluster of fruit. representatives. $89. Lower half of fruit, cut across. Flowers perfect : stamens 9, with good anthers, and 8 sterile ones. Tree, with entire oblong leaves; common South, (Persea) Rep-Bay. Flowers dicecious or nearly so, greenish-yellow: stamens 9, about 8 of them with yel- low glands at the base of the filaments (Fig. 486). Anthers 4-celled and 4-valved. Tree: flowers in stalked corymbs, appearing with the leaves; some of the latter 3-lobed, (Sassafras) SASSAFRAS. Anthers 2-celled and opening by a single valve to each cell. Shrub: flowers in ses- sile clusters, appearing earlier than the entire leaves, (Bénzoin) SpIcEBUSH. POPULAR FLORA. 195 81. MEZEREUM FAMILY. Order THYMELEACE. Shrubs, with very tough and acrid bark; entire generally alternate leaves; and perfect flowers, with a tubular calyx colored like a co- rolla, bearing 8 or 10 stamens, free from the simple pistil. Ovary one- celled, one-ovuled, mak- ing a berry in fruit.—We have one wild plant of the family ; Daphne Me- zereum is a hardy low shrub in gardens, and D. odora in houses. Flowers appearing earlier than the leaves. 490. Flowering tranchlet of Leath- erwood. 41. Branch with foliage and fruit. 492. A flower, magnified. 493. Same, more magnified, the calyx laid open. Calyx salver-shaped or funnel-shaped, generally rose-color, the border 4-lobed: stamens 8, in two sets, included; filaments hardly any, (Daphne) * DAPHNE. Calyx tubular, pale yellow, with no spreading border, obscurely 4-toothed: stamens 8, with long protruded filaments, (Dirca) LEATHERWOOD. 82. NETTLE FAMILY. Order URTICACEZ. Moneecious, dicecious, or barely polygamous herbs, shrubs, or trees, with stipules, and a recular calyx, free from the ovary, which forms a one-seeded fruit. Divides into four dis- tinct subfamilies which might be reckoned as families, viz. : — I. ELM Supramity. Trees, with alternate simple leaves, and polygamous or often nearly perfect flowers: styles or long stigmas 2. Ovary 2-celled, a hanging ovule in each cell: stamens 4 to 9. Flowers earlier than the leaves. Fruit a thin key, winged all round, one-seeded (Fig. 207), (Ulmus) Exo. Ovary one-celled, with one hanging ovule: stamens 5 or 6. Fruit asmalldrupe. Leaves ovate or heart-shaped, (Celtis) HACKBERRY. Il. BREADFRUIT Susramiry. Trees, with a milky or colored juice, and alternate leaves; the flowers in heads or catkin-like spikes, the fertile ones fleshy in fruit, or both kinds in a fleshy receptacle. Styles 1 or 2: ovary becoming an akene in fruit. Inner bark often tough and fibrous. Flowers, of both kinds mixed, enclosed in a pear-shaped fleshy receptacle like a rose-hip which is pulpy when ripe, (Ficus) *Fie. as 196 POPULAR FLORA. Flowers moncecious, both kinds in separate catkin-like spikes; the calyx, &c. in the fer- tile sort becoming fleshy and eatable, making a berried multiple fruit (248, Fig. 223). Stamens 4. Styles 2, (Morus) MuLBERRY. Flowers dioecious: the fertile ones collected in a close and round head which is fleshy in fruit. Stamens 4. Style 1. Sterile flowers in spikes. Leaves round-ovate or heart-shaped, rough above, soft- downy beneath, some of them palmately lobed, (Lroussonetia) *PAPER-MULBERRY. Sterile flowers in racemes. Leaves oblong, smooth above, entire; branchlets spiny, (Maclura) *OsAGE-ORANGE. III. NETTLE Susraminry. Herbs (in this country), with opposite or alternate leaves, a tough fibrous bark, and a colorless juice. Flowers moncecious or dicecious, in spikes, racemes, &c., not in catkins. Stamens of the same number as the sepals. Ovary one-celled, and style or stigma only one; fruit an akene. Plants beset with stinging bristles. Leaves opposite: sepals 4 in both kinds of flowers: stigma a little tuft, (Urtica) NETTLE. Leaves alternate: sepals 5 in the sterile, 4 unequal or 2 in the fertile, flowers: stigma awl-shaped, (Laportea) Woov-NETTLE. Plants destitute of stinging hairs, and ; Very smooth: leaves opposite: sepals 3 or 4, separate: stigma a tuft, (Pilea) CLEARWEED. Smooth or hairy: leaves often alternate: calyx in the fertile flowers a cup with a narrow mouth enclosing the ovary. Stigma long and thread-shaped: flower-clusters naked, in spikes, (Behméria) FALSE-NETTLE. Stigma a little tuft: flowers in axillary cymes or clusters, accompanied by leafy bracts, (Parietaria) PELLITORY. IV. HEMP SusraAmity. Herbs, with dicecious flowers, a colorless juice, fibrous tough bark, and opposite, or sometimes alternate, palmately-lobed or compound roughish leaves. Sterile flowers in compound racemes or panicles, with 5 sepals and 5 stamens. Fertile flowers crowded, and with only one sepal, which embraces the ovary and akene: stigmas 2, long. Herb erect, annual: leaves of 5 to 7 lance-shaped toothed leaflets. Stamens drooping. Fertile flowers in spiked clusters, each with a narrow bract, (Cannabis) Hemp. Herb twining: root perennial: leaves heart-shaped and lobed. Fertile flowers in short and scaly catkins, with broad and thin bracts, in fruit making a sort of membranaceous cone, (Himulus) Hop. 83. PLANE-TREE FAMILY. Order PLATANACE, This consists only of the genus Plane-Tree. Pldtanus. Flowers moncecious, in separate round catkin-like heads. No calyx nor corolla to either kind. Sterile flowers consisting of short stamens and club-shaped scales intermixed: fertile flowers, of little scales and ovaries, which become club-shaped akenes, covered below with long hairs. Style awl- shaped, simple. Trees, with colorless juice, alternate palmately-lobed leaves and sheathing stipules. Only one species in this country, viz.: — AMERICAN P., SycAmMoRE, or Burronwoop. A well-known tree by river-banks.. P. occidentalis. POPULAR FLORA. 197 84. WALNUT FAMILY. Order JUGLANDACE. Timber and nut trees, with alternate pinnate leaves, no stipules; the sterile flowers in hanging catkins and with an irregular calyx; the fertile ones single or few together at the end of a shoot; their calyx coherent with the ovary, and 4-toothed at its summit. Fruit akind of stone-fruit; the outer part becoming dry when ripe, and forming a husk, the stone incompletely 2-celled or 4-celled, but with only one ovule and seed. The whole kernel is a great embryo, with the cotyledons separated, lobed, and crumpled. — Only two genera : — Catkins of the sterile flowers single; the bracts or scales united with the calyx: stamens 8 to 40. Fertile flowers with 4 small petals between the teeth of the calyx: short styles and stigmas 2, fringed: husk of the fruit thin, and not separating into valves or regular pieces. Bark and bruised leaves strong-scented and staining brown. Leaf- buds nearly naked, (Juglans) WALNUT. Catkins 3 or more on one peduncle: stamens 3 to 8; anthers almost sessile. No petals in the fertile flowers: stigma large, 4-lobed. Husk of the fruit splitting into four pieces or valves, which separate from the smooth stone or shell. Wood very hard and tough. Leaf-buds scaly (Fig. 55), (Carya) HicKxory. Walnut. Juglans. 1. Buack WAtNutT. Leaves and stalks smoothish; leaflets many, lance-ovate, taper-pointed; fruit round, the thin husk drying on the very rough stone. Common W. J. nigra. 2. BUTTERNUT, or GRAY-BARKED W, Leaves, stalks, and oblong fruit clammy-downy when young, the stone with more ragged ridges, and tree smaller than No. 1. J. cinerea. 8. TRUE or EncuisH W. Smooth; leaflets only about 9, oblong; fruit round; husk separating from the thin and nearly smooth stone. Cultivated, from the South of Europe. J. regia. Hickory. Carya. * Fruit and stone round or roundish. 1. SHAGBARK H. (also called SHELLBARK or SweEET H.) Bark on the trunk shaggy and scaling off; leaflets generally 5, three of them lance-obovate, the lower pair smaller and oblong-lanceolate, finely serrate; husk thick; stone roundish, thick or thin; seed very sweet: furnishes the hickory- nuts of the market. C. alba. 2. Mockernur H. Bark cracked on the larger trunks ; leaflets 7 to 9, roughish-downy beneath, slightly serrate, oblong-lanceolate; catkins hairy; husk and stone very thick; seed sweetish but small. Common S. and W. C. tomentosa. 8. Prcnut H. Bark close and smooth; leaflets 5 to 7, smooth, lance-ovate, serrate; fruit pear-shaped or obovate, the husk and stone rather thin; seed sweetish or bitterish, small. C. glabra. 4. BirrERNut or SwAmp H. Bark of trunk smooth; buds little scaly: leaflets 7 to 11, lance-oblong, smooth; husk and stone of the fruit thin and tender; seed very bitter. Wet woods. C. amara. * * Fruit and thin stone narrowly oblong: husk thin. 5. PecAN-Nut H. Leaflets 13 or 15, oblong-lanceolate, oblique, serrate; stone olive-shaped, thin; seed very sweet. W.&S, C. oliveformis. . 198 POPULAR FLORA. 85. OAK FAMILY. Order CUPULIFER. Trees or shrubs, with alternate and simple straight-veined leaves, deciduous stipules, and moneecious flowers; the sterile flowers in slender catkins (or in head-like clusters in the Beech) ; the fertile flowers surrounded with an involucre which forms a cup, bur, or bag around the nut. Fertile flowers scattered, or 2 or 3 together, their Involucre one-flowered, of many little scales, forming a cup around the base of the hard and roundish nut or acorn (Fig. 205), ( Quercus) OAK. Involucre containing 2 or 3 flowers, becoming a very prickly and closed bur enclos- ing the nuts, and splitting into 4 thick pieces. Nuts 1 to 3, roundish or flattish, thin-shelled. Sterile catkins long, (Castanea) CuEsTNUT. Nuts 2, sharply 3-angled. Sterile catkins like a head-like cluster, (Fagus) BEECH. Involucre a leafy cup, lobed or torn at the end, longer than the bony nut, ( Corylus) HAZEL. Fertile flowers also collected in a kind of catkin. Nut small like an akene. Involucre an open 3-lobed leaf, 2-flowered, (Carpinus) HoRNBEAM. Involucre a closed bladdery bag, one-flowered, the whole catkin making a fruit like a hop in general appearance, ( Ostrya) Hop-HoORNBEAM. Oak. Quercus. * Acorn ripening the first year, therefore borne on shoots of the season: cups stalked, except in No. 2: kernel generally sweet-tasted. 1. OveRcuP or Bur Oak. Leaves obovate, sinuate-pinnatifid, whitish-downy beneath; acorn 1’ or 1z' long, in a deep cup with a mossy-fringed border. Q. macrocarpa. 2. Post Oak. Leaves oblong, pale and rough above, grayish-downy beneath, pinnatifid, with 5 to 7 blunt lobes; cup saucer-shaped, much shorter than the acorn. Small tree. Q. obtusiloba. 38. WHITE OAK. Leaves smooth when full grown, pale beneath, pinnatifid; the lobes 5 to 9, oblong or linear, entire; cup much shorter than the oval or oblong acorn. Rich woods. Q. alba. 4. Swamp CHEsTNUT-OAK. Leaves obovate, whitish-downy beneath, coarsely and bluntly toothed or sinuate; cup thick, hemispherical, with stout or pointed scales; acorn oval, 1' long. Q. Prinus. 5. YELLOW CuHEstTNUT-OAK. Leaves lance-oblong, or oblong, acute, whitish, but scarcely downy beneath, rather sharply and evenly toothed; cup thin, and acorn smaller than in No. 4. Rich woods. Q. Castanea. 6. CurnquaPiIn OAK. Much like No. 4, but a mere shrub, 2° to 6° high, with a thin cup and a smaller acorn. Sandy, barren soil. Q. prinoides. * * Acorn ripening in the autumn of the second year; ripe fruit therefore on wood two years old, sessile: kernel bitter. «— Leaves entire or nearly so, narrow. 7. Live OAK. Leaves thick, evergreen, hoary beneath, oblong, small. Sea-coast, S. Q. virens. 8. WiLLow Oak. Leaves light green, smooth, lance-linear, tapering, 5' or 4’ long. S.& W- Q. Phellos. 9. SHINGLE or LAUREL OAk. Leaves shining above, rather downy beneath, lance-obiong, thickish; cup saucer-shaped; acorn globular. Common S. & W. | Q. émbricaria. POPULAR FLORA. 199 4- 4 Leaves or some of them a little lobed, broader upwards. 10. WATER OAK. Leaves smooth and shining, spatulate or wedge-obovate, with a tapering base; cup very short; acorn globular. Swamps, 8. Q. aquatica. 11. Buackx-JAcK OAK. Leaves thick and large, broadly wedge-shaped, and with 3 or 5 obscure lobes at the summit, shining above, rusty-downy beneath, the lobes or teeth bristle-pointed. Small tree, in barrens. Q. nigra. a- + + Leaves pinnatifid or lobed, long-stalked, the lobes or teeth bristle-pointed. 12. BEAR or ScruB OAK. Leaves wedge-obovate, slightly about 5-lobed, whitish-downy beneath. A crooked shrub, 38° to 8° high; in barrens and rocky woods. Q. ilicifolia. 18. SpANIsH OAK. Leaves grayish-downy beneath, narrow above, and with 3 to 5 irregular and nar- row often curved lobes; acorn very short. Dry soil, S. & E. A fine tree. Q. falcata. 14. QuERcITRON OAK. Leaves rusty-downy when young, becoming nearly smooth when old, oblong- obovate, sinuate-pinnatifid; cup top-shaped, coarse-scaly; acorn globular or depressed. Large tree; the inner bark thick and yellow, used for dyeing. Q. tinctoria. 15. ScARLET OAK. Very like the last, but the oval or oblong leaves smooth and shining, deeply pin- natifid (turning deep scarlet in autumn), the lobes cut-toothed; acorn rather longer than wide. Large tree, common in rich woods. Q. coccinea. 16. Rep Oak. Leaves smooth, pale beneath, oblong or rather obovate, with 4 to 6 short lobes on each side; acorn oblong-oval, 1' long, with a short saucer-shaped cup of fine scales. Common tree in rocky woods, &c. Q. rubra. 17. Prin or SwAmp SPANISH OAK. Leaves smooth and bright green on both sides, deeply pin- natifid, oblong ; the lobes diverging, cut and toothed, acute; acorn globular, only }! long. Low grounds, N. Q. palustris. 86. BIRCH FAMILY. Order BETULACE. Monecious trees, with simple serrate leaves, and both kinds of flowers in scaly catkins (Fig. 146), two or three blossoms under each scale. Sterile flowers each with 4 stamens and a small calyx: fertile flowers with a 2-celled ovary bearing 2 long stigmas, and in fruit becoming a scale-like akene or small key. Only two genera: — Sterile flowers with a calyx of one scale: fertile flowers 3 under each 3-lobed bract; each consisting of a naked ovary, in fruit becoming a broad-winged little key. Bark and twigs aromatic, (Betula) Brrcn. Sterile flowers generally with a 4-parted calyx: fertile catkins short and thick, with hard scales, not falling off: fruit generally wingless, (Alnus) ALDER. Birch. Betula. 1. WurrEe Biren. A small and slender tree, with white outer bark; leaves triangular, very taper- pointed, on long and slender stalks. Common E. B. alba. 2. PapeR B. A large tree, with white outer bark, peeling off in papery layers, and ovate or heart- shaped leaves. Common N. B. papyracea. 3. River B. Tree, with ovate and angled acutish leaves, on short stalks, a brownish close bark, and short woolly fertile catkins. Common S. & W. B. nigra. 200 POPULAR FLORA. 4. CHERRY or SwExET B. Tree, with heart-ovate and pointed leaves, downy on the veins beneath, and a close bark, bronze-colored on the twigs, which are spicy-tasted, like the foliage of Check- erberry. Common N. B. lenta. 87. SWEET-GALE FAMILY. Order MYRICACE. Shrubs (generally low), with fragrant alternate leaves; and with catkins much as in the Birch family, but short and with only one naked blossom under each scale; the ovary forming a little nut or dry drupe. Flowers moneecious: fertile catkins round and bur-like: fruit a smooth little nut. Leaves lance-linear, pinnatifid. Fern-like, whence the common name, (Comptonia) SWEET-FERN. Flowers dicecious: scales of the fertile catkins falling off, and leaving only the small round fruits, which are incrusted with wax, and so appear like drupes. Leaves entire or serrate, (.Myrica). One species in wet grounds, N., with wedge-lanceolate pale leaves, (4. Gale) SwWEET-GALE. One on the sea-coast with lance-oblong, shining leaves, and waxy fruit, (Jf cerifera) BAYBERRY. 88. WILLOW FAMILY. Order SALICACEZ. Dicecious trees or shrubs, with both kinds of blossoms in catkins (often earlier than the foliage); the flowers naked (without any calyx or corolla), one sort of two or more stamens under a scaly bract; the other of a one-celled pistil with two styles or stigmas, making a many-seeded pod: the seeds bearing a long tuft of down. Leaves alternate and simple: wood soft and light: bark bitter.— The Willows are of very many species, and are much too difficult for the beginner. 494. Shoot and catkin of sterile flowers of the Com- mon White Willow. 495. A scale separated, with its fiower, consisting of two stamens and a little gland, magnified. 496. Shoot and fertile catkin of the same. sa - pistillate flower with its scale and gland, mag- nified. Scales of the catkins entire: stamens 2 to 6: stigmas short: leaves narrow, (Salix) WILLow. Scales of the catkins cut-lobed: stamens 8 to 40: stigmas long: leaves broad. Scaly leaf- buds covered with a resinous varnish, — (Pédpulus) Poruar. eS le hl: ee? POPULAR FLORA. 201 89. PINE FAMILY. Order CONIFERZ. The only familiar family of Gymnospermous plants (218, 250), consisting of trees or shrubs, with resinous juice, mostly awl-shaped or needle-shaped leaves, and moneecious or dicecious flowers of a very simple sort, and collected in catkins, except in Yew. In that the fertile flower is single at the end of the branch. No calyx nor corolla, and no proper pistil. Ovules and seeds naked. Sterile flowers of a few stamens or anthers, fixed to a scale. Cotyledons often more than one pair, some- times as many as 9 or 12, in a whorl. — For illustrations, see Fig. 49, 50, 134, 196, 197, 224 to 226, and 498, 499.— This family comprises some of our most important timber-trees, and the principal evergreen forest-trees of Northern climates. It 498, Fertile flowers, or young cone, : 7° of Arvor-Vite, enlarged. 499. Inside consists of three well-marked subfamilies : — " view of one of the scales and its pair of naked ovules, more magnified. I. PINE Susramity. Fertile flowers many in a catkin, which in fruit becomes a strobile or cone (250); the scales of which are open pistils (each in the axil of a bract), with a pair of ovules or seeds borne on the base of each. Seeds scaling off with a wing. Cones ovate or oblong. Leaf-buds scaly. Flowers moneecious. Leaves 2 to 5 in a cluster, from the axil of a thin scale, evergreen, neonates: Cone with thick or sometimes thin scales, (Pinus) PINE. Leaves many in a cluster (Fig. 184) on side spurs, and also scattered along the shoots of the season, needle-shaped, falling in autumn. Cone with thin scales, (Lariz) LARCH. Leaves all scattered along the shoots, evergreen, linear or needle-shaped. Cone with thin scales, | (Abies) Fir. II. CYPRESS Susramity. Fertile flowers few, in a rounded catkin, formed of scales which are generally thickened at the top, and without any bracts, bearing one or more ovules at the bottom. Leaves scale-like or awl-shaped. Leaf-buds without any scales. Flowers moneecious. Cone dry, opening at maturity. Leaves deciduous and delicate, linear, 2-ranked. Cone round and woody, each shield- shaped scale 2-seeded, (Taxodium) BALD-CYPREsS. Leaves evergreen, small, scale-like and awl-shaped (of two shapes). Cone woody and round; the scales shield-shaped, ( Cupréssus) CYPRESS.* Cone of a few oblong and nearly flat loose scales (Fig. 498), (Thuja) ARBOR-VITZ.* Flowers dicecious, or sometimes monececious. Fruit composed of a few closed scales, which become pulpy and form a sort of false berry, (Juniperus) JUNIPER. Ill. YEW Supramity. Buds scaly: leaves linear. Fertile flower single at the end of a branch, ripening into a nut-like seed. This is enclosed in an open and at length pulpy, berry-like red cup, in our only genus, viz. ( Fosus) YEw. * Our only Cupressus is C. thyoides, the WHITE CEDAR, rather common South. The ARBor-VIT#, Thuja occidentalis, so common North, and cultivated for evergreen hedges, is also called WHITE CEDAR. Our Rep CEDAR is a Juniper. 202 POPULAR FLORA. Pine. Pinus. * Leaves 2 or 3 ina sheath, rigid: bark of tree rough: scales of the cones woody, thickened on the back at the end, and commonly tipped with a prickly point. 1. JERSEY or ScRUB PINE. Leaves in twos, only about 2’ long. A straggling tree, S. & E. P. inops. 2. RED PinE (wrongly called Norway Pine); leaves in twos, 5! or 6! long; scales of the cones not pointed. A large tree, N. P. resinosa. 3. YELLOW PINE. Leaves slender, in twos or threes, 3’ to 5' long; cones small, their scales tipped with a weak prickly point. P. mitis. 4. Pircu Pine. Leaves rigid, dark green, in threes, 3’ to 5! long; cones with a stout prickly point (Fig. 224). Common N. P. rigida. 5. LoBLOLLY PINE. Leaves in threes, 6’ to 10’ long, light green; cones 3! to 5' long. Light or ex- hausted soi]. 8. P. Teda. 6. LONG-LEAVED PINE. Leaves in threes, 8’ to 11! long, dark green; cones 6! to 8! long. Common S.& E. P. australis. * * Leaves 5 together, slender: bark of young tree smooth: scales of cone naked and not thickened. 7. WHITE PinE. Leaves pale green; cones narrow, 4' or 5! long, hanging. 181 131, 147, 131, 173 152 152 152 196 164 163 Mis 117 119 216 152 131 151 132 131 119 140 140 180 131 113 173 174 186 229 Matthiola, 125 _May-Apple, 120 May-flower, 169 Maypop, 155 May weed, 166 Maywreath, 148 Meadow-Rue, 113, 114 Meadow-sweet, 147, 148 Medeola, 207 Medicago, 142, 144 Medick, 142, 144 Melanthacee, 209 Melanthium, 209 Melilot, 142, 144 Melilotus, 142, 144 Melissa, 179 Melon, 154 Menispermacex, 119 Menispermum, 119 Mentha, 179, 180 Menyanthes, 187 Mertensia, 181 Mezereum, 195 Mezereum Family, 195 Mignonette, 126 Mignonette Family, 125 Milk-Pea, 142 Milkweed, 188 Milkweed Family, 188 Millet, 216 Mimosa, 143 Mimosa Family, 143 Mimulus, 176 Mint, 179, 180 Mint Family, 178 Mirabilis, 191 Mirabilis Family, 191 Mitchella, 164 Mitella, 157 Mitrewort, 157 Mockernut, 197 Mock-Orange, 157, 158 Molucca-Balm, 180 Molucella, 180 Mollugo, 130 Momordica, 154 Monarda, 179, 180 Monkey-flower, 176 Monkshood, 116 Monocotyledons, or Mono- cotyledonous Plants, 97, 203 Monopetalous Division, 161 Monotropa, 169 Moonseed Family, 119 Morning-Glory, 184, 185 Morus, 196 Mosses, 216 230 Motherwort, Mountain-Ash, Mouse-ear Chickweed, | Mulberry, Mullein, Muscari, Mushrooms, Muskmelon, Musquash-root, Mustard, Myosotis, Myrica, Myricacee, Naked Broom-Rape, Napa, Narcissus, Nasturtium, Neckweed, Nelumbium, Nelumbo, Nemophila, Nepeta, Nerium, Nesza, Nettle, Nettle Family, New-Jersey Tea, Nicandra, Nicotiana, Nigella, Nightshade, Nightshade Family, Nuphar, Nyctaginacee, Nymphea, Nympheacee, Nyssa, Oak, Oak Family, Oats, Ocimum, (£nothera, Oldenlandia, Oleacez, Oleander, Olive Family, Okra, Onagracee, Onion, Onosmodium, Opuntia, Orache, Orange, Orange Family, Orchidacez, Orchis, Orchis Family, 125, 185, 210, INDEX TO THE Origanum, Ornithogalum, Orontium, Orpine, Osage-Orange, Osmorrhiza, Ostrya, Oswego Tea Oxalis, Oxalidacee, Oxybaphus, Peeonia, Painted-Cup, | Palme, Palmetto, | Palm Family, Pancratium, Pansy, Papaver, Papaveracee, Papaw, Paper-Mulberry, Pardanthus, Parietaria, Parsley, Parsley Family, Parsnip, Partridge-berry, 186 | Partridge-Pea, Passiflora, Passifloraceee, Passion-flower, Passion-tlower Family, Pastinaca, Pavia, Peach, Pea, Peanut, Pear, Pear Family, Pearl wort, Pecan-Nut, Pedicularis, Pelargonium, Pellitory, Peltandra, Pennyroyal, Penthorum, Pentstermmon, Peony, Peperidge-tree, Peppergrass, Periwinkle, Persea, Persica, Persimmon, Petaloideous Division, 164, 179 210 205 156 196 159 198 180 135 135 191 113 176 205 205 205 213 127 122 122 118 196 214 196 159 158 159 169 146 155 154 155 154 159 139 146 142 142 147 147 1380 197 176 135 196 205 Wie) 156 176 113 160 125 188 194 146 172 206 Petilium, Petroselinum, Petunia, Phacelia, Phzenogamous Plants, Phaseolus, Philadelphus, Phlox, Phryma, Physalis, Physostegia, Phytolaccea, Phytolaccacezz, Pickerel-weed, Pickerel-weed Family, Pignut, Pilea, Pimpernel, Pine, Pine Family, Pinesap, Pink, Pink Family, Pinweed, Pinxter-flower, Pipe-vine, Pipsissewa, Pisum, Pitcher-Plant, Plane-tree, Plantaginacee, Plantago, Plantain, Plantain Family, Platanaces, Platanus, Plum, Plumbaginacee, Podophyllum, Poison-Hemlock, Poison-Ivy, Poke, Pokeweed, Pokeweed Family, Polemoniacezx, Polemonium, Polemonium Family, Polianthes, Polyanthus, Polygonaceez, Polygonum, Polygonatum, Polypetalous Division, Pond-Lily, Pontederia, Pontederiaces, Poplar, 142, 145 210 159 186 182 97, 105 157 183 177 186 179 191 191 | 208 208 197 196 173 - 201, 202 201 169 130 129 127 171 190 169 142 121 196 172 172 172 172 196 196 146, 148 178 120 159 137 209 191 191 183 183, 184 183 218 218 192 193 210 112 121 208 208 2.00 Poppy, ie Family, Populus, Portulaca, Portulacacee, Potato, Potentilla, Poterium, Prickly-Ash, Prickly-Pear, Prickly-Poppy, Primrose, Primrose Family, Primula, Primulacee, Prince’s-Feather, Prince’s-Pine, Prinos, Prunus, Psoralea, Ptelea, Puccoon, Pulse Family, Pumpkin, Purslane, Purslane Family, Pycnanthemum, Ranunculacee, Ranunculus, Raphanus, Raspberry, Rattlebox, Red-Bay, Red-bud, Red-Cedar, Reseda, Resedacee, Rhamnacee, Rhamnus, Rheum, Rhododendron, Rhodora, Rhubarb, Rhus, Ribes, Rib-Grass, Rice, Robinia, Rock-Cress, 147, 146, 147, 147, POPULAR FLORA. 2 | Rocket, 2 | Rosa, Rose-Acacia, Rosacee, Rose, Rose-Bay, Rose Family, Rowan-tree, Rubia, Rubiacee, Rue, Rue Family, Rubus, Rumex, Rush, Rush Family, Ruta, Rutacee, ye, Sabbatia, Sage, Sage Family, Sagina, Sagittaria, Salad-Burnet, Salicacez, Salix, Salicornia, Saltwort, Salsify, Salsola, Salvia, Sambucus, Samolus, Samphire, Sand-Spurrey, Sandwort, Sanguinaria, Sanguisorba, Sanicle, Sanicula, Saponaria, Sarsaparilla, Sarracenia, Sassafras, Satureia, Savin, Savory, Saxifraga, Saxifragacee, Saxifrage, Saxifrage Family, Scabiosa, Scabious, Scarlet-Runner, Schrankia, Scilla, 147, 161, 125 | Scorpion-Grass, 150 | Scrophularia, 143 | Scrophulariacee, 146 | Scullcap, 150 | Scutearia, 170 | Seaweeds, 146 | Sedge Family, 151 | Sedum, 164 | Self-heal, 163 | Senna, 137 | Sempervivum, 137 | Sensitive-Brier, 149 | Sensitive-Plant, 193 | Shadbush, 216 | Shagbark, 215 | Sheep-berry, 137 | Shellbark, 143, 130 | Sidesaddle-Flower Family, 206 | Silene, 147 | Silver-weed, 200 | Sinapis, 200 | Sisymbrium, 192 | Sisyrinchium, 192 | Sium, 166 | Skunk-Cabbage, 192 | Smartweed, 179 | Smilacez, 162 | Smilacina, 173 | Smilax, 192 | Smoke-tree, 130 | Smoke-vine, 130 | Snakeroot, 122 | Snapdragon, 147 | Snowball, 159 | Snowberry, 159 | Snowdrop, 130 | Snowflake, 160 | Soapberry Family, 121 | Soapwort, 194 | Solanacez, 179 | Solanum, 202 | Solomon’s-Seal, 179 | Sorbus, 157 | Sorrel, 157 | Sow-thistle, 157 | Spadiceous Division, 157 | Sparganium, 164 | Speedwell, 164 | Spergula, 145 | Spergularia, 143 | Spice-bush, 210 | Spiderwort, 210, 185, 175, 121 121 125 125 214 208 211 208 137 213 213 186 210 193 166 205 206 176 207 232 Spiderwort Family, Spikenard, Spinach, Spinacia, Spindle-tree, Spirea, Spring-Beaunty, Spruce, Spurrey, Squash, Squaw-root, Squill, Squirrel-Corn, Stachys, Stafi-tree, Staff-tree Family, Staphylea, Star-flower, Star-Grass, Star-of-Bethlehem, Statice, Stellaria, Stickseed, Stock, Stonecrop, Stonecrop Family, St. John’s-wort, St. John’s-wort Family, St. Peter’s-wort, Stramonium, Strawberry, Strawberry-bush, Streptopus, Stylophorum, Succory, Sumach, Sumach Family, Summer-Savory, Sunflower, Sunflower Family, Sweet-Alyssum, Sweet-Basil, Sweet-brier, Sweet-Cicely, Sweet-Clover, Sweet-Fern, Sweet-Flag, Sweet-Gale, Sweet-Gale Family, Sweet-Pea, Sweet-Potato, Sycamore, Symphytum, Symplocarpus, Symphoricarpus, Syringa, Tare, 147, 158, 210 173 130 182 156 156 128 128 128 186 147 139 209 122 166 137 137 179 166 164 125 178 150 159 144 200 205 200 200 144 184 196 181 205 161 189 144 INDEX Taxus, Tea-Plant, Tear-Thumb, Teasel, Teasel Family, Tecoma, Tephrosia, Teucrium, Thalictrum, Thallophytes, Thimbleberry, Thistle, Thorn, Thoroughwort, TO THE 113, 98, Three-leaved Nightshade, Thrift, Thuja, Thyme, Thymus, Thymeleacez, Tiarella, Tick-Trefoil, Tiger-flower, Tigridia, Tilia, Tiliacese, Toadflax, Tobacco, Tomato, Tradescantia, Trailing-Arbutus, Trefoil, Trichostema, Trientalis, Trifolium, Trilliaceae, Trillium, Trillium Family, Trollins, Trumpet-Creeper, Trumpets, Tuberose, Tulip, Tulipa, Tulip-tree, Tupelo, Turnip, Turtlehead, Toothwort, Twinflower, Twinleaf, T wist-stalk, Typha, Typhacee, Umbelliferse, Umbrella-tree, Unicorn-Plant, 175, 142, 113, 207 169 143 178 173 143 206 206 206 115 174 121 213 210 210 Dig 160 125 176 125 161 120 209 206 206 158 118 174 Urtica, Urticacer, Uvularia, Vaccaria, _ Vaccinium, , Valerian, Valeriana, Valerianacez, ' Valerian Family, Veratrum, | Verbena, | Verbenacee, Verbascum, | Veronica, Vervain, _Vervain Family, Vetch, . Vetchling, ' Viburnum, i Vicia, : Vinea, eS eS Viola, Violacese, Violet, Violet Family, Viper’s-Bugloss, Virginia Snakeroot, . Virgin’s-Bower, Virginia Creeper, Vitis, Vitaceze, Waldsteinia, Wake-Robin, Wallflower, Walnut, Walnut Family, Water-Cress, Water-Hemlock, Water-Horehound, Waterleaf, Waterleaf Family, Water-Lily, Water-Lily Family, Watermelon, Water-Parsnip, Water-Pepper, Water-Plantain, Water-Plantain Family, Watershield, Wheat, White-Bay, White-Cedar, White-Thorn, White-Hellebore, Whitlow-Grass, Wild-Ginger, Willow, 169, 177, 175, 175, 177, 161 ~~ 120, 196 195 209 130 170 164 164 164 164 209 178 177 176 176 178 177 142 144 162 142 188 126 126 126 126 181 190° 112 138 137 137 147 206 125 197 197 125 159 179 182 182 121 120 154 159 193 206 206 121 216 Any 201 151 209 125 199 200 POPULAR FLORA. 233 Willow Family, 200 | Wistaria, 142 | Wood-Sorrel Family, 135 Willow-herb, 153 | Wood, 125 | Wormwood, 166 Winterberry, 172 | Wolfsbane, 116 | Wythe-rod, 162 Winter-Cress, 125 | Woodbine, 162 | Yucca, 210 Wintergreen, 169, 171 | Wood-Nettle, 196 | Yew, 201 Wintergreen Family, 169 | Wood-Sorrel, 135 | Zanthoxylum, 137 THE END. che ar: Nol eee le , } F y, < .: = cd rie 4 a Ly Ween 7? & ' * ‘i a 4 ‘ me | :¥ A +e hw 'y : ‘ ; — = of J ‘ a : as put, a ‘ Beet i ; . ’ ‘. << ” + uF a ee ® a (. 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