138 FIELD AND WOODLAND PLANTS 



toothed, smooth, usually about two inches long. The flowers are 

 not nearly so numerous as those of the last species, are only a little over 

 a third of an inch in diameter, and in a short, leafy panicle, drooping 

 while in the bud. The calyx is deeply divided into four sepals 

 about a sixth of an inch long ; the corolla consists of four notched 

 petals, a little longer than the sepals ; the stamens, ovary, fruit, 

 and seeds correspond in number and character with those of the 

 last species ; but the stigma is either entire or divided into four 



very short lobes. 



In the same order we have 



the EnchantpT-'- 



t n< • 



<ItI 



petals, 

 and pink stamens. The fruit 

 is a httle two-lobed capsule 

 with stiff, hooked hairs. 

 The Wood sanicle. The Cornel or Dogwood 



{Cornus sanguined), of the 

 order Cornacece, is a common shrub in woods and thickets, and is often 

 employed in the making of hedgerows. It grows from five to eight 

 feet high, and flowers during June and July. Its leaves are covered, 

 when young, with fine, silky hairs that lie close on the surface, but 

 these almost entirely disappear later ; and towards the end of the 

 summer the leaves assume a deep crimson or purple colour. The 

 flowers are very abundant, of a yellowish white colour, and are 

 arranged in dense cymes, about two inches across, without bracts. 

 The four-toothed calyx and the peduncle are both clothed with 

 a mealy down ; and the four petals, about a quarter of an inch 

 long, are narrow and pointed. The fruit is a purple-black, 



