1414 



ARliORE-rUM AND FRUTICETUM. 



PART III. 



which is edible, and, though small, is remarkably sweet, and said to be very 

 wholesome. ISomc of tiie species, according to Descemet, are very orna- 

 mental ; particularly C. crassilolia, the branches of which assume the character 

 of a fan ; and C. occidentalis, the branches of which droop like a parasol. 

 The wood of C. aiistr^lis is valuable ; but that of most of the other species is 

 too weak to be of any use in the arts. The leaves of all the species, like 

 those of all the species of 7>)iospyros, drop off' almost simultaneously, and thus 

 occasion very little trouble to the gardener in sweeping them up. Propa- 

 gated by layers or seeds. Plants, in the London nurseries, are \s. 6d. each ; 

 at BoUwyller, 1 franc ; and at New York, 50 cents. 



S I.e. AUSTRA^Lls L. The southern Celtis, or European Nettle Tree. 



Identification. Lin. Sp. PI., 1478. ; Mill. Diet., No. 1. ; Willd. Sp. PI., 4. p. 993. ; Du Ham. Arb., ed. 



iiov., 2. p. 34. t. 8. : Lam. 111., t. 884. f. 1. ; Flore Fran?., 3. p. 313. ; Duby et Dec. Bot. Gallic, 



1. p. 421. ; Koein. et Schult. Syst. Veg., 6. p. 305. ; WaU. Dend. Brit., t. 105. 

 Synunifjites. 7,6tus arbor Lob. Jc, 2. p. 186. ; Z,6tU8 sive t'eltis Cam. £pil., 155. ; Lote tree; Mico- 



coulier austral, Mieocoulier de Provence, Fabrecoulier, Fabreguier des Provengaux (see N. Du 



Ham.) ; Lotu, llal. 

 Engravings. Cam. Epit, ic. ; Lam. 111., t. 884. f. 1. ; Scop. Del. Flor. Insubr., t. 18. ; St. Hilaire 



Livr., 27. t. 7. ; Du Ham. Arb., ed. nov., 2. t. 8. ; Wats. Dend. Brit., t. 105. ; and our fig. 1252. 



Sjjec. Char.y ^c. Leaves ovate-lanceolate, oblong-lanceolate, or acuminate, 

 argutely serrated, unequal at the base, rough on the upper surface ; soft, 

 from down, on the under one. Flowers solitary. Fruit black. Indigenous 

 to the south of Europe and the north of Africa ( ]Villd. Sp. PL, and Rceni. 

 et Sclndt. Syst. Veg.), also to the west of Asia. A tree, growing to the 

 height of 40 ft. Introduced in I79G; flowering in May, and ripening its 

 fruit in October. 



Variety. Brotero, in his Flora Liisitaniea, mentions a variet\-, with variegated 

 leaves, that was found wild in Portugal. 



Description. A tree, from 30 ft. to 40 ft. high, with a straight trunk and 

 branched head. The branches are long, slender, and flexible, with a grey 

 bark, spotted with white, and covered with a slight down at the extremities. 

 The bark of the trunk is dark brown. The 

 leaves are of a dark green, marked strongly 

 with the nerves on the lower side, and, when 

 young, covered with a yellowish down. 

 They are oval-lanceolate, terminating in a 

 point at the summit, and at the base having 

 one side prolonged down the petiole. The 

 flowers are small, greenish, and inconspi- 

 cuous ; and are produced at the same time 

 as the leaves. The fruit, which, when ripe, 

 is blackish, and resembles a very small 

 withered wild cherry, is said not to become 

 edible till the first frost (see N. Du Ham., 

 vol. ii. p. 35.) ; and it hangs on till the fol- 

 lowing spring. It is remarkably sweet, and' 

 is supposed to have been the //Otus of the 

 ancients, the food of the Lotophagi ; which 

 Herodotus, Dioscorides, and Theo|)hrastus 

 describe as sweet, pleasant, and wholesome ; 

 and which Homer says was so delicious, 

 as to make those who ate it forget their 

 country. (See Odyssey, lib. ix. v. 93.) The 

 berries are still eaten in Spain ; . and Dr. 

 Walsh says that the modern Greeks are very foml of them. According 

 to Dr. Sibthorpe, they are called, in modern Greek, honey berries. (See Hogg 

 on the Classical Plants of Sicily, in the Journ. of Bot., 2d ser., p. 204.) The tree 

 grows rapidly, more especially when once established, and afterwards cut 

 down ; sometimes |)roducing shoots, in the climate of London, G ft. or 8 ft. in 

 length. It bears pruning remarkably well, at every age. Its leaves are very 



