Capsicum. XCIX. SOLANACE^. 447 



fields. It is a large, coarse herb, 2 — 5i' high, very branching. Leaves large, 

 oblong, decurrent. Corolla slightly lobed, pale blue, white and with 5 blue spots 

 in the centre^ July — Sept. t^ 



G. physAlis. 



Gr. ^Do-if, a bladder ; the inflated calyx enclosing the fruit. 



Calyx 5-cleft, jjersistent, at length ventricose ; corolla campanu- 

 late-rotate, tube very short, limb obscurely 5-lobed ; stamens 5, con- 

 nivent ; berry globose, enclosed within the inflated, 5-anglcd, colored 

 calyx. — Herbs, rarely shrubs, ivith axillary or supra-axillary Jioicers. 



1. P. visco.sA. Aikin. (P. viscosa, obscura, pubescens, Pennsylvanica and 

 Philadelphica, of aullims.') Yellovj Henbane. Ground Cherry. — Pubescent; 



St. decumbent, herbaceous ; branches somewhat dichotomous and angular ; h:$. 

 solitary or in pairs, ovate, more or less cordate, repand-toothed or entire ; Jls. 

 solitary, axillary, pendulous. — Dry fields, roadsides, &c. Stem more or less 

 decmnbent, about a foot high, often viscid as well a»the whole plant. Leaves 

 very variable in the same plant, 1 — 4' long, of i, f, or even of equal breadth, 

 acute, acuminate, or often obtuse at the apex, often abrupt at base, sometimes 

 nearly or quite entire on the matgin, twice as long as the petioles; when in 

 pairs one of them is much smaller. Corolla twice as long as the calyx, green- 

 ish-yellow, with 5 brownish spots at base inside. Fruit yellow or orange-colored, 

 not unpleasant to the taste, enclosed in the enlarged, inflated, angular calyx. Jl. 



a. Lvs. somewhat viscid, oval, subcordate, geminate. 



/?. (P. Penn.sylvanica. Linn.') Lvs. ovate and lance-ovate, subentire, nearly 

 smooth, geminate. ■ 



y. (P. obscura. Michx.) Lvs. pubescent, broad-ovate, subcordate, subsolilary. 



Obs. — Many other v;meties have been noticed as species, but having examined specimens in numerous 

 localities, I am but confirmed in concurring with Dr. Aiiiin in the above view. 



2. P. LANCEOLATA. Michx. Laucc-kavcd P/iysalis. 



Si. herbaceous, dichotomously branched, densely pubescent ; Ics. mostly 

 in pairs, ovate-lanceolate, acuminate, entire, unequal at base*; Jls. solitary, nod- 

 ding; cal. villose. — % Penn., AVestern States, S. to Ga. Stem 1 — 2i' high. 

 Leaves 3 — 6' by IJ — 3', often very unequal at base. Flowers nodding. Calyx 

 half-cleft, with lanceolate, acuminate segments. Corolla pale greenish-yellow, 

 with dark spots at base. Jl.- Darl. Fl. Cest., p. 139. — I strongly suspect this to 

 he only another variety of the preceding. 



P. Alkekengi. Winter Cherry. — St. somewhat branching below ; lis. in pairs, 

 entire, acute ; cal. of the fruit red or reddish. — Native of S. Europe, cultivated 

 for ornament. Plant about a foot high. Flowers white. Berries acid and 

 somewhat bitter, f 



7. CAPSICUM. Toiu-n. 



Ch'. KaiTTCO, to bite ; from the acridity of the fruit- 



Calyx erect, .5-cleft, persistent ; cor. rotate, tube very short, limb 

 plaited, 5-lobed ; anth. connivent ; fr. capsular, dry, inflated, 2 — 3- 

 celled ; seeds flat, very acrid. — A large genus of herbaceous or shrubby 

 plants, pervaded by a heating, acrid princivle. Lvs. often in pairs. 

 Fed. axillary, solitary. 



1. C. ANNUUM. Red Pepper. Cayenne Pepper. — Si. herbaceous, angular, 

 branching above; lvs. ovate, acuminate, entire, petiolate, glabrous; ped. s-mooth, 

 axillary; cal. angular, with short, acute lobes; cor. lobes spreading, longer than 

 the stamens; berry oblong or subglobose, red. — ® India. Cultivated for its 

 truit, whose stimulant properties are well known. — There are in gardens seve- 

 ral varieties in respect to the fruit, a. The long, or Cayenne, /?. the depressed- 

 globose or squash pepper, best for pickling, y. the cherry pepper, used for pep- 

 per-sauce and in seasoning meat, 6. the sweet Spanish pepper, used as a salad. — 

 Sown in March inhot-bed.s, transplanted in May. Kcnrick, Am. Orch., p. 374. % 



