I40 PINK TO RED 



RED CLOVER 



Trit'oliitii! pratciise. Pea Family 



Stems: ascending, somewhat hairy: pistules broadly lanceolate, mem- 

 branaceous, nerved, setaceously acuminate. Leaves: leaflets obcordate, 

 nearly entire. Flowers: heads ovate, dense, nearly sessile, bracteate ; teeth 

 of the calv.x setaceous, hairy, the lower one much longer than the other 

 four ; petals purple-red, all united into a tube at the base. Not indigenous. 



Thoreau speaks of the fields blushing with Red Clover 

 "as the western sky at evening." Every one knows the 

 Clover. Every one has walked ankle-deep in meadows rich 

 with its red flowers. Some of iis are even fortimate enough 

 to " live in clover," — but not all ! It is a quaint conceit of 

 the Red Clover to fold its leaves in sleep each night, the two 

 side leaflets drooping downwards together and the terminal 

 one bowed over them. 



The name Clover probably comes from the Latin c/ava, 

 meaning "club," and refers to the possible resemblance 

 between the trefoil leaf and the three-headed club of Her- 

 cules. The "clubs " on playing cards are, no doubt, also an 

 imitation of the clover leaf. 



MACKENZIE'S HEDYSARUM 



Ih'ch'sannn Miukciizii. I'ea Family 



Stems: suberect, simple or branciied, minutely inibesccnt. Leaves: five 

 to eight pairs, oblong. Flowers: .seven to thirty, loo.sely flowered; bracts 

 subulate; teeth of the calyx as long as the tube. 



A bright rose-magenta wild Pea that grows to a height of 



two feet in thi- moimtain meadows. It is a large, s]:)reading, 



handsome plant. 



