BELL-FLOWERS AND DAISIES £7} 
energy to spare for making pollen, and in the Guelder 
Rose we find neither pistils nor stamens in these showy 
parts. Their work is simply to attract the fertilising 
insects to their working brethren. 
The Honeysuckle itself needs no description, with its 
long, scented, tubular flowers, half-full of honey; but there 
are two points to which I would draw your attention. 
Though the tubes are quite separate, two of them 
often share a common calyx, and in many varieties 
two adjacent fruits grow together to form a single berry. 
The second peculiarity is that our English honeysuckle 
flowers twice in the year, in the early summer and then 
again in autumn. 
