376 LXXVIIL. ERICACEA. RHODODENDRON. © 
Flowers fragrant, in terminal umbels, on hairy pedicels, not appearing until 
the leaves are fully grown. Calyx minute and ciliate. Corolla white, tube an 
inch in length, clothed with glandular hairs, and very clammy, limb unequal. 
Stamens and style declined, the latter longest. May, June. 
B. glaucum. Ph. (Azalea glauca. Lam.) Luws. glabrous, glaucous beneath. 
3. R. niripum. Torr. (Azalea nitida. Linn.) Shining Swamp Pink. 
Lvs. oblanceolate, coriaceous, smooth both sides, shining above, margins 
revolute ; fls. accompanied with leaves, viscid ; tube much longer than the seg- 
ments; sta. exserted—In mountain swamps, N. Y. Storrs! to Va. Shrub 3—6f 
high, with nearly smooth branches. Leaves dark green above, 1—2’ in length, 
4 as wide, roundish and submucronate above, tapering at the base into very short 
petioles, midvein hispid beneath. Flowers large, pale pink, fragrant. Tube 
an inch or more long, glandular-hairy. Pedicels 4’ long. Calyxsegments ob- 
solete. Style 2’long. Jn. Jl. 
4. R. caLENDULACEUM. Torr. (Azalea calendulacea. Mz.) Flame Azalea. 
Branchlets subvillose ; dvs. oblong, attenuated to the base, mucronate, pu- 
beseent both sides, ciliate on the margin; corymés nearly leafless; cal. teeth 
oblong; tube of the cor. hirsute, not viscid, shorter than the lobes —A splendid 
flowering shrub, in mountains and woods, Penn. to Ohio, Sullivant! and Ga. 
Stems 3—6f high. The leaves at flowering time are about 3/ by 13’ or smaller. 
Flowers large and numerous, the corolla 23’ in length, limb expanding nearly 
2’, usually yellow and bright crimson, showing at distance like flame. May.— 
Cultivation has produced numerous varieties, of every shade from golden-yel- 
low to dark crimson, single and double. + 
5. R. arporescens. Torr. (Azalea arborescens. Ph.) Tree Azalea. 
Branches smooth ; lvs. obovate, obtuse, both sides glabrous, glaucous be- 
neath, margin ciliate, veins nearly glabrous; corymbs leafy; cal. lobes oblong, 
acute; cor. tube not viscid, longer than the lobes; sta. and sty. exsert—Rivulets 
near the Blue Mts., Penn., Pursh. Shrubs 10—20f high. Flowers large, rose 
color, scales of the flower-buds large, yellowish-brown, with a fringed, white 
border. May—Jl. 
6. R. nispipum. Torr. (A. hispida. Ph.) Hispid Azalea. 
Branches hispid; Ivs. lanceolate, acuminate at each end, hispid above, 
glabrous beneath, glaucous both sides, ciliate, midvein beneath hispid; corymbs 
leafy ; pedicels glandular-pilose ; cal. teeth oblong, obtuse; cor. very viscid, tube 
scarcely longer than the lobes; sta. and sty. exsert—Shrub of a bluish appear- 
ance, very upright, 10—15f high, mountains and lake shores, N. Y. and Penn. 
Pursh. Flowers white, bordered with red, tube reddish-white. Stamens often 
10. Jl. Aug. 
7. R. rLavum. Don. (Azalea pontica. Linn.) Yellow Azalea.—Lvs. oblong- 
obovate ; rac. corymbose, with deciduous bracts; cor. viscid-pilose without, not 
leafy ; sta. exsert, declinate——Native of the Caucasian Mts. <A splendid shrub, 
with golden-yellow flowers, varying to orange, copper-color or ochroleucous. f 
§ 2. Corolla campanulate, tube short, smooth, lobes rounded-obtuse, spread- 
ing. Leaves coriaceous, evergreen. 
8. R. maximum. American Rose Bay. ; 
Lws. obovate-oblong, smooth, coriaceous, discolored beneath, subrevolute 
on the margin; corymés terminal; cor. somewhat campanulate, unequal; pet. 
roundish—A splendid flowering shrub, not uncommon in N. England, but most 
abundant in the Middle States. The stems are crooked, 6—15f or more in 
height. The young leaves are downy, becoming very smooth when full grown 
and 4—7’ long, entire, thick and leathery, permanent, remaining on the stem 2 
or 3 years. Corymbs 15—20-flowered, in the midst of the evergreen leaves. 
At first each cluster appears in the form of a large compound bud enveloped in 
numerous bracts. These bracts are near an inch long, abruptly acuminate. 
Corolla pink or rose-colored, sometimes dotted with yellow, 13—2/ diam. The 
wood is hard and fine grained. July, Aug. 7 
B. album. Ph. (R. Purshii. Don.) Cor. white, segments oblong-obtuse. 
