72 



THE STEM. 



interrupted from any cause, a circular airangement is the consequence, — an 

 arrangement so conspicuous in the organs of the flower (61, a, b, c), and in the 

 leaves of the Stellatae, and other plants. 



175. ^Vlien a si?tgle leaf arises at a node the arrangement is 

 more obviously spiral, and is said to be alternate. When tivo 

 arise at each node they are placed opposite to each other, and at 

 right angles to the adjacent pairs. When three or more arise at 

 each node they are disposed, of com'se, in a circle, and axe said 

 to be verticillate, or whorled. 



176. In like manner, the aiTangement of the branches, when 

 divested of all disturbing causes, is found to be spiral ; that is, 

 alternate in most plants, cypposite in the ash, &c., or verticillate 

 in the pine, &c. 



FIG. 22. — 1, Buds, terminal and lateral, with their scaly envelopes ; 2, the scaly bulb of 

 the lily, showing its analogy to the bud ; 3, vertical section of the same. 



a. The ascending axis is exceedingly various in form, size, position, and struc- 

 ture, existing in every j)lant under some one or other of its modifications. It has 

 already been stated, that although its tendency is at first upwards, it does not 

 always arise above the surface. Hence the prunary di-vision of this organ into 

 subterranean and aerial. 



111. The SUBTERRANEAN STEM was deemed a root by the ear- 

 lier botanists, and those plants Avhich possessed such stems only 

 were called acaulescent or stemless, terms still in use, denoting 

 merely the absence of aerial stems. The principal modifica- 

 tions are the bulb, corm, tuber, rhizoma, and creeper. 



