PART I. 
GENERAL PHYTOLOGY; 
EMBRACING 
VEGETABLE ANATOMY AND VEGETABLE 
PHYSIOLOGY. 
32. Turs first part of our work we shall divide into six 
Sections. 
I. Ultimate Anatomy of Vegetables. 
Il. Anatomy of the Nutritive Organs. 
lif. Physiology of the Nutritive Organs. 
IV. Anatomy of the Reproductive Organs. 
V. Physiology of the Reproductive Organs. 
Vi. Chemical Composition of Vegetables. 
33. As the words of a language are made of varying com- 
Dinations of a few simple letters; as the chemist forms his — 
endless products of a few simple elements; so the varied 
organs of the vegetable are made up of a few simple struc- _ 
tures or tissues, to which, by continued dissection, they may — 
——. When we have arrived at these, we can go 
er" esteeas tissues oh gees — 
