KINDS OF STEMS. IIQ 



alafo, t. 66, Sec. and Bryonia dioica, 

 Ked-berried Bryony, EngL Bot.t. 439 ; 

 or by adhesive fibres, as in the preced- 

 ing paragraph. 



Volubills, twining round other plants by its 

 own spiral form, either from left to right, 

 /. 20, supposing the observer in the cen- 

 tre, (or in other words, accordhig to the 

 apparent motion of the sun,) as the Black 

 Bryony, Tamus communis, Engl. Bot. 

 t. 91, the Honeysuckles, Lonicera Ca- 

 prifoUum, t. 799, and Periclymeniim, 

 t. 800, and the Polygonum Convolvulus, 

 t. 941 ; or from right to left, /. 21, con- 

 trary to the sun, as the Great Bindv/eed, 

 Convolvulus sepium, t. 313, the French 

 Bean, Phaseolm vulgaris, Gcr. em. 

 1212, Jig. 1, .&c.— Figures of plants be- 

 ing sometimes reversed by the engraver, 

 in that case give a wrong representation 

 of the circumstance in 'question, wit- 

 ness Lonicera Periclymenum in Curtis's 

 Flora Londiiiensis, fasc. 1. 1. 1 5,2Lndm<iny 

 instances might be pointed out of its not 

 being attended to at all. 



Flagelliformi^ long and pliant, like the 



