156 XI. PAPAVERACEiE. Meconopsis. 



longer ; stamens 00 ; stigma 1 — 2-lobed, sessile ; capsule pod-like, 

 oblong, 1 -celled, 2-YalYed, acute at each end, many-seeded. — % Juice 

 orange red. 



S. Canadensis. Blood-root. 



An interesting flower of woods, groves, &c., appearing in early spring. 

 Rhizoma flesh'y, tuberous, and when broken or bruised exudes a blood-colored 

 fluid, as also does every other part of the plant. From each bud of the root- 

 stalk there springs a single large, glaucous leaf, and a scape about 6' high, with 

 a single flower. Whole plant glabrous. Leaf kidney-shaped, with roundish 

 lobes separated by rounded sinuses. Flower of a quadrangular outline, white, 

 scentless, and of short duration. The juice is emetic and purgative. Apr. May. 



2. CHELIDONIUM. 



[ita departure. 

 Gr. X£\iS(j)v, the swallow ; being supposed to flower with the arrival of that bird, and to perish with 



Sepals 2, suborbicular ; petals 4, suborbicular, contracted at base ; 

 stamens 24 — 32, shorter than the petals; stigma 1, small, sessile, 

 bifid; capsule silique-form. linear, 2-valved, 1 -celled; seeds crested. — 

 % with yellow juice. 



C. MAJUS. Celandine. 



Lis. pinnate ; If/s. lobed, segments rounded ; Jls. in umbels. — A pale green, 

 fleshy herb found under fences, by road-sides, &c., arising 1 — 2f high. Leaves 

 smooth, glaucous, spreading, consisting of 2 — 4 pairs of leaflets with an odd 

 one. Leaflets 1§— 2^' long, | as broad, irregularly dentate and lobed, the par- 

 tial stalks winged at base. Umbels thin, axillary, pedunculate. Petals ellip- 

 tical, entire, yellow, and very fugacious, like every other part of the flower. 

 The abundant bright yellow juice is used to cure itch and destroy warts. 

 May. — Oct. ^ 



3. ARGEMONE. 



Gr. apycfia, a disease of the eye, which this plant was supposed to cure. 



Sepals 3, roundish, acuminate, caducous ; petals 6, roundish, 

 larger than the sepals ; stamens 00, as short as the calyx ; stigma 

 sessile, capitate, 6-lobed ; capsule obovoid, opening at the top by 

 yalves. — ® Herbs with yellow juice. 



A. Mexicana. Horn Poppy. 



Lvs. repand-sinuate or pinnatifid, with spiny teeth ; Jl. solitary, erect, 

 axillary; cal. prickly; caps, prickly, 6- valved. — A weed-like plant, native at the 

 south and west, ^ at the north. Stem 2 — 3f high, branching, armed with 

 prickly spines. Leaves 5 — T or 8' long, sessile, spinose on the margin and 

 veins beneath. Flowers axillarj^ and terminal, on short peduncles, about 2' 

 diam., yellow. The juice becomes in air a line gamboge-yellow, and is 

 esteemed for jaundice, cutaneous eruptions, sore eyes, fluxes, &c. July.^ 

 p. Ms. ochroleucous. — y, Ms. larger, white. 



4. MECONOPSIS. Viguier. 

 Gr. fiT]K(i)v, a poppy; oipis, resemblance. 



Sepals 2 ; petals 4 ; stamens 00 ; style distinct ; stigmas 4 — 6, 

 radiating, convex, free ; cap.sule obovate, 1 -celled, opening by 4 valves 

 at apex. — %Herbs with a yellow juice. 



M. DiPHYLLA. DC. (Chclidonium. Michx. Stylophorum. Nutt.') 

 Lvs. pinnately divided, glaucous beneath, segments 5 — 7, ovate-oolong, 

 sinuate, cauli7i€2, opposite, petiolate ; ped. aggregated, terminal ; caps. 4-valved, 

 echinate-setose. — Woods, Western States ! Plant 12-— 18' high. Leaves large, 

 8' by 6', on petioles about the same length ; terminal segments .somewhat con- 

 fluent. Peduncle about 3' long. Petals deep yellow. May. 



