Genus 



ST. JOUN'S-WORT FAMILY. 



5. Hypericum aureum Bartram. Golden St. 

 John's-wort. Fig. 2885. 



Hypericum aiirciim Bartram, Travels 383. 1791. 



Perennial, shrubby, 2-4 high, tlie twigs 4-sided. 

 Leaves oblong, iirm in texture, I'-i long, obtuse and 

 mucronnlate at the apex, narrowed at the base, pale 

 beneath; petioles very short; flowers solitary or 2 

 or 3 together, sessile, i'-2' broad; sepals unequal, 

 shorter than the obovate oblique petals; stamens 

 very numerous; styles 3; capsules conic, incom- 

 pletely 3-celled, nearly i' long, long-pointed. 



River banks and bluffs. Soulh Carolina to Tennessee, 

 Kentucky and Texas. May-July. 



6. Hypericum galioides Lam. Beclstraw 

 St. John's-wort. Fig. 2886. 



Hypericum galioides Lam. Encycl. 4: 161. 17^7, 

 Perenm'al, somewhat woody, branching, l- 

 2^ high, the stems and branches nearly terete. 

 Leaves linear, linear-oblong or oblanceolate, 

 with smaller ones clustered in their axils, 

 obtusish, thick, spreading, .narrowed below, 

 i'-2j' long, l"-2" wide, involute in drying; 

 flowers short-pedicelled, z's" broad ; sepals 

 narrowly linear, foliaceous, resembling the 

 uppermost leaves, shorter than the pointed 

 oblique petals ; stamens numerous, distinct ; 

 styles 3 ; capsule 2."-j," long, incompletely 

 3-celled by the projecting placentae. 



In low grounds, Delaware to Florida, west to 

 eastern Tennessee and Louisiana. July-Sept. 



7. Hypericum adpressum Bart. Creep- 

 ing St. John's-wort. Fig. 2887. 



H. adpressum Bart. Comp. Fl. Phil. 2: 15. 1818. 

 Stem nearly simple, erect or ascending from 

 a perennial creeping or decumbent sometimes 

 spongy-thickened base, i-2 high, angled be- 

 low, 2-edged above. Leaves oblong or lanceo- 

 late, 1-2' long, 3"-s" wide, obtuse, ascending, 

 often with smaller ones fascicled in the axils; 

 cyme terminal, several-flowered, leafy only at 

 the base; pedicels i"-3" long; flowers 6"-9" 

 broad; sepals lanceolate, acute, about half the 

 length of the petals ; stamens numerous, dis- 

 tinct ; styles 3 or 4; capsule about 2" long, 

 incompletely 3-4-ceHed by the projecting pla- 

 centae. 



In low grounds, Nantucket, Mass., to New Jer- 

 sey and Pennsylvania, south to Georgia and 

 Louisiana. Recorded from Missouri and Arkan- 

 sas. July-Aug. 



