Order 30.— LINACE^E. 2*75 



5 C. Medica L. Citron* Tree. Petioles not at aU winged; If. oblong, acute; 

 stam. 40 ; fr. oblong-spheroid, rugous, with an acid pulp. — Commonly about 8f 

 high. Fr. 6' in length, fragrant, f 



Obs. In a splendid work entitled "The Natural riistory of Oranges," written in French by 

 Risso, of Nice, in 1818, there arc described HJ9 varieties, and 105 of them figured. They are 

 arranged as sweet oranges, of which there are described 42 varieties ; bitter and sour oranges, 

 32 ; Bergamots, 5 ; Limes, S ; Shaddocks, 6 ; Luines, 12 ; Lemons, 40 ; Citrous, 17. The most 

 successful methods of cultivation are by cuttings. 



Order XXIX. MELIACE.^. 



Trees or shrubs with exstipulate, often pinnate leaves. Fls. 3 — 5-merous, stamens 

 6 — 10, coherent into a long tube witli sessile anthers. Disk hypogynous, sometimes 

 cup-like ; style 1. Ovary eompound, several-celled, cells 1 — 2, 4-ovuled. Fruit 

 fleshy or dry, often 1-celled by abortion. Seeds neither winged nor axillate. 



Genera 33, species 150, natives of the hotter parts of the globe. 



MELIA, L. Pride of India. (Gr. [ieXi, honey; the name was 

 first applied to the Manna Ash.) Sepals small, 5, united ; petals 

 spreading; stamen tube 10-cleft at summit with 10 anthers in the 

 throat; ovary 5-celled, 10-ovuled ; style deciduous; drupe with a 

 5-celled, bony nut, cells 1-seeded. — Trees with bipinnate lvs. and 

 panicles of delicate flowers. 



M. Azedarach L. Lvs. deciduous, glabrous, lfts. obliquely lance-ovate, acuminate, 

 serrate. — Southern States, common. A large tree 30 — 40f high, with light 

 foliage and a profusion of lilac-colored fls. Drupes as large as cherries, with a 

 poisonous pulp, hanging in clusters through the winter. The bark is esteemed as 

 a vermifuge, but narcotic. Dwarfed specimens are frequent in green houses at the 

 North. 



Order XXX. LINACEJS. Flaxworts. 



Herds with entire, simple leaves and no stipules ; with flowers regular, symme- 

 trical, and perfect, 5-(rarely 3 or 4-)merous. Calyx strongly imbricated in the bud, 

 corolla convolute, hypogynous ; stamens definite, hypogynous, alternate with tho 

 petals ; styles distinct with capitate stigmas, and each cell of the capsule more or 

 less divided by a false dissepiment into two 1-seeded compartments. Seeds with 

 little or no albumen, attached to axile placentas. 



Genera 3, species 90. A very important order in tho arts. The Linum has a very tenacious 

 fiber in its bark, which is wrought into thread and cloth, forming the linen of commerce. Soma 

 epecics are cathartic, and yield from their seeds a fine mucilage. Only one genus need be men- 

 tioned here, viz: — 



LINUM, L. Flax. (Celtic Ilin, a thread ; hence Gr. Xivov, Eng. linen, 

 flax.) Sepals, petals, stamens and styles 5, the latter rarely 3 ; cap- 

 sules 5-celled ; cells nearly divided by a false dissepiment ; seeds 10, 

 suspended, mucilaginous. — Herbs with a bark of strong fibers, and sim- 

 ple, sessile lvs. 



* Flowers blue (—red, No. 7.) Nos. 1, 2 



* Flowers yellow.— Sepals ciliate. Lvs. linear Nos. 3,4 



— Sepals entire. Lvs. lanceolate Nos. 5, 6, 8 



1 L. usitatissimum L. Common Flax. St. branching above ; lvs. alternate! 

 linear-lanceolate, acute ; panicle corymbous ; sep. ovate, acute, 3-veined at the 

 base, membranous on the margin ; petals crenate. — CD Introduced and some- 

 what naturalized in fields. St. 1 to 2f high, with 3-veined leaves, and many 

 large, handsome, blue flowers. Jn., Jl. — This important plant has been cultivated 

 from remote antiquity (see Gen. xli. 42), for the strong fibers of the bark, whic> 

 are manufactured into linen. The seeds yield linseed oil, so extensively used in 

 mixing paint, printers' ink, etc. They are also medicinal. § f 



