CHAP. XCIII- 



ZALIRa'cE^. iAU'KUS. 



1301 



^^^^. 



introduced in 1821. Tlie leaves arc alternate, petiolated, of a ycl- 

 lowish or appie green on the upper side, and very glaucous on the 

 under, with the three nerves uniting a little above the insertion of the 

 petiole, and terminating short of the point of the leaf The young shoots 

 are axillary, and come out from among the flowers, and are furnished 

 with several membranaceous slightly coloured scales, or a sort of sti- 

 pules, which are very deciduous. It is rather tender; but, from the lo- 

 cality, where it is indigenous, it would probably succeed with very little 

 protection against a conservative wall. 



h./a'^tcns Ait, L. madeirensis Lam., Pirsea. focHens Spirng., is a native 

 of Madeira, and the Canary Islands, introduced in 176U, and producing its 

 greenish yellow flowers from March to October. In its native country it 

 forms a small tree 20ft. high; but in British gardens it is commonly kept 

 in a green-house, or in a cold-pit. The jilant, however, in the Horticultural 

 Society's Garden, has stood out as a bush since 1831, and is now upwards of 

 4 ft. high. There can be little doubt that this, and the other species enu- 

 merated as half-hardy, would stand against a wall with very little protection. 



L. M/7*'/(a Lour, is a nativeof China, which has stood against a wall in the 

 Horticultural Society's Ciarden since 18.S2. It is generally injured more or 

 less when the winters are severe ; but it always springs up again, and grows 

 vigorously during summer. jj^, ; -^ 



L. indica L. is an evergreen tree, with noble foliage, which lives and "^^J j, 

 attains a considerable size in our conservatories and green-houses ; and 



there can be little doubt that in the south of England it would live against a conservative wall, at 

 least as well as the orange and the lemon. 



C Leaves deciduous, 

 t 5. L. Sa'ssafjias L. The Sassafras Laurel, or Sassafras Tree. 



Idi-ntification. Lin. Hort. Cliff., 151. , Gron. Virg., 45. ; Kalm It., 2. p. 270. 434. ; Mill. Diet., No. 7. ; 



Trew Khret, t. 59, 60. ; Willd. Sp. PI., 2. p. 485. ; Lodd. Cat., ed. 183(3. 

 Synonynies. C'ornus mas odorata, folio trifido, margine piano. Sassafras dicta. Pink. Aim., 120, t. 222 



f. a, Catcsh. Car., l.p. 55. t. 55.. Seligm. Av. Ic, 2. t. 10. ; Sassafras arbor, ex Florida, ticulneo 



folio, Bauh. Pin., 431. ; Sdssa/ras sp. C. G. Nees Von Esenbeck ; Persea Sassafras Spreng. ; Laurier 



Sassafras, Fr. ; Sassafras Lorbeer, Gcr. 

 Engravings. Trew Ehret, t.59, 60. ; Blackw. Herb., t. 267. ; Giesecke Ic, fasc. 1. No. 9. ; Pluk. 



Aim., t. 222. f. 6. ; Catesb Car., 1. t. 55. ; Seligm. Av. Ic, 2. t. 10. ; and plates in our last Volume. 



Sj^cc. Char., c^c. Sexes dioecious. Habit arborescent. Both leaves and 

 flowers are produced from the same buds. Buds, younger branches, and 

 the under surface of the leaves, pubescent. Leaves entire, or with 2 — 3 

 lobes. Veins prominent on the under side. Flowers in corymbose con- 

 glomerate racemes. Anthers with 4 unequal cells. In the female flower, 

 additionally to the pistil, are 6 gland-like bodies, like those in the male 

 flowers. {Niitt. Gen., i. p. 259.) A deciduous tree, from 40 ft. to 50 ft. 

 high, A native of North America. Introduced in 1633, and flowering in 

 April and May. 



Varieties. Nuttall states {Gen. Sf Cat. N. A. P.) that the inhabitants of North 

 and South Carolina distinguished two kinds of sassafras, the red and the 

 white, calling the latter, also, the smooth. The red he identifies with the 

 iy., subgenus Euosmus Kutt., Sassafras L.; and the white or smooth he con- 

 siders a species belonging to the same subgenus, which he calls L. E. lilbida 

 Kutt., and of which he has adduced the following characteristics. Its buds 

 and younger branches are smooth and glaucous ; its leaves are every wliere 

 glabrous and thin, and the veins are obsolete on the under surface; the 

 petiole is longer. He had not seen it in flower. The root is much more 

 strongly cami)horated than the root of the red sort (L. Sassafir/s), and is 

 nearly white. This kind is better calculated to answer as a substitute for 

 ochra (//ibiscus esculentus) than the L. Sassafras, from its buds and young 

 branches being much more mucilaginous. It is abundant in North and 

 South Carolina, from the Catawba Mountains to the east bank of the 

 Santee, growing with L. Sassafras, wiiich, in North Carolina, is less abun- 

 dant. (A'^ut. Gen., i. p. 259, 260.) 



Description, ^c. The sassafras tree often grows, even in England, to the 

 height of40 ft. or 50 ft. (See plate of the tree at Syon, in our last Volume.) 

 The leaves, which vary very much in size and shape, are covered, when they 

 first appear, with a soft woolly down ; they are generally deeply lobed, on 

 long footstalks, and of a pale green; they fall oft' early in autumn. The 

 flowers are of a greenish yellow, and but slightly odoriferous ; the berries 

 are oval, of a bright but deep blue, and contained in small dark red cups, 



4 Q 4 



