LILY FAMILY. 347 



26. ALLIUM, ONION, LEEK, GARLIC, &c. (Ancient Latin name.) 



Taste and odor alliaceous. 



1. Wild species of the country, or one a naturalized weed. 



* Leaves bruad : flowers white, in summer : ovules and seeds single in each eel!. 



A. tricdccuin, WILL LEEK. Rich woods N. : bulbs clustered, large, 

 pointed, sending up in spring 2 or 3 large lance-oblong flat leaves, and after 

 they wither, in summer, a many-flowered umbel on a naked sca]> 



* * Leaves linear, grasr-like : ovules and seeds a pair in each cell : flowers rose 



color, in summer. 



A. c6rnuum, NODPING WILD ONION. Banks, through the Allegheny 

 region and N. \V. : scape angular, l-2 long, often nodding at tin- apex'; 

 pedicels of the loose many-flowered tunbel dropping; flowers light rose-color; 

 leaves linear, sharply keeled on the back, channelled. 



A. mutabile, CHANGEABLE WILD O. Dry sandy soil S. : scape 1 high, 

 terete, bearing an erect umbel of white flowers changing to rose-color; leaves 

 narrow, concave ; bult coated with a fibrous network. 



A. vineale, FIEL*> or CROW GARLIC. A weed from En. in gardens and 

 cult or waste low grounds ; slender scape sheathed to the middle by the hollow 

 thread-shaped leaves which are grooved down the upper side : flowers greenish- 

 rose-color ; often their place is occupied by bulblets. 



* * * Leaves narwi} -linear, grass-like: ouults and seeds several in each cell: 



flowers nearly white, in sprint/. 



A. Striatum. Low pine barrens and prairies, Virginia to Illinois and S. : 

 scape and leaves <>'- 12' high, the latter involute and striate on the back ; flowers 

 3- 10 in the umbel. 



2. Cultivated from the Old World : flowers in summer. 

 * Leai-esflat. 



A. Mbly, GOLDEN GARLIC. Cult, for ornament in some gardens : leaves 

 broadly lanceolate; scape 1 high; flowers numerous, large, golden yellow. 



A. sativum, GARDEN GARLIC. Bulbs clustered, pointed; Icnves lance- 

 linear, keeled ; flowers few, purple, or bulblets in their place ; filaments all 

 broad and 3-cleft. 



A. Pdrrum, GARDEN LEEK. Bulb elongated, single : leaves broadly linear, 

 keeled or folded ; flowers in a head, white, with some rose-colored stripes ; 3 of 

 the fiUments 3-forked. 



* * Leaves cylindrical, hollow: umbel globular, man t/- flowered. 



A. Ascalonicum, SCIIALLOTJ. Bulb with oblong offsets ; leaves awl- 

 shaped ; flowers lilac-purple; 3 of the filaments 3-forked. 



A. Schoenoprasum, CHIVES. Low, tufted; leaves awl-shaped, equal- 

 ling the scape; flowers purple-rose-color, its divisions lanceolate and pointed, 

 long; filament simple. 



A. Cepa, OVION. Bulb depressed, large; leaves much shorter than the 

 hollow inflated scape ; flowers white, or bulblets in their place. 



27. SCILLA, SQUILL. (The ancient name of S. MARITIMA of S. Europe, 

 the bulb of which is the officinal //////.) 



S. Fraseri, WILD S. called WILL HYU-IVTH at the W., (>IAM\<II. 

 Moist banks and prairies from Ohio W. ^ S. W. : seape and linear-keeled 

 leaves 1 high ; flowers pale blue, in a long loose raceme, in spring. 



S. amcera, S. vei'na, &c. are cult, from Europe ill some ehoiee collections, 

 for their ear'y bright blue flowers, but are rare. 



28. MUSCARI, GRAPE or GLOBE IIYACIN'TIL (Name from the 

 musky scent of the flowers in one species.) All from En. : tl. spn- 



M. botryoides, COMMON GRAPE-HYACINTH, of country gardens es- 

 caping into lawns and fields : a pretty little plant, sending up in early spring 



