MONOECIA, *7i 



5. Tentandrla. XautJditm, Ambrosia, Xe- 

 phelium, Varthcnium, Iva and Cllbadlum 

 -all partake, more or^less accurately, of the 

 nature of compound flowers, but their an- 

 thers not beinp; united, they could not be 

 referred to the Class Sijnge)iesia ; particu- 

 larly Xanlhium and Ncphclium, whose 

 fertile flowers have no resemblance to that 

 Class. Amarantlius, an extensive dung- 

 hill genus in warm countries, analogous to 

 our Chenopodium, follows next* Leea is 

 the same with Aquilicia, and belongs to 

 Tentandria Monogynia, the former name 

 being retained for the sake of the highly 

 meritorious botanist and cultivator whom 

 it commemorates. The Gourd tribe, Cu- 

 curbita, Cucumis, Bri/ojiia, Engl. Bot. 

 t. 439, might be brought hither from the 

 abolished Order Syngenesia^ unless it 

 should be thought better to consider them 

 as polyadelphous, to which I am most in- 

 clined, 



6. Hexandria. Zizania, Tr. of Limu Sec, 

 V. 7. t. 13; and Pharus, Brozmes Ja^ 

 viaica, /, 38, both grasses, compose this 



