LILIACEA:. (LILY FAMILY.) 533 



the slightly lobed sessile stigma, loculicidal, many-seeded. Seeds ascending, 

 appendaged at each end with a long bristle-form tail. Kootstock creeping, 

 bearing linear equitant leaves, and a simple stem or scape, terminated by a 

 simple dense bracteate raceme ; pedicels bearing a linear bractlet. (Name an 

 anagram of Anthericum, from avdtpiKos, supposed to have been the Asphodel.) 

 1. N". Americanum, Ker. Stem 1 high or more; leaves 1" wide, 

 7-9-nerved; raceme dense (l-^long); perianth-segments narrowly linear 

 (2-2^" long), scarcely exceeding the stamens. (N. ossifragum, var. Ameri^ 

 cauum, Gray.) Sandy bogs, pine-barrens of N. J. June, July. 



29. MELAWTHIUM, Linn. 



Flowers monoeciously polygamous. Perianth of 6 separate and free widely 

 spreading somewhat heart-shaped or oblong and halberd shaped or oblanceolate 

 sepals, raised on slender claws, cream-colored or greenish, the base marked with 

 2 approximate or confluent glands, or glandless, turning greenish brown and 

 persistent. Filaments shorter than the sepals, adhering to their claws often to 

 near the summit, persistent. Anthers heart-shaped or kidney-shaped, conflu- 

 ently 1-celled, shield-shaped after opening, extrorse. Styles 3, awl-shaped, 

 diverging, tipped with simple stigmas. Capsule ovoid-conical, 3-lobecl, of 3 

 inflated membrauaceous carpels united in the axis, separating when ripe, and 

 splitting down the inner edge, several-seeded. Seeds flat, broadly winged. 

 Stems tall and leafy, from a thick rootstock, roughish-downy above, as well as 

 the open and ample pyramidal panicle (composed chiefly of simple racemes), 

 the terminal part mostly fertile. Leaves linear to oblanceolate or oval, not 

 plaited. (Name composed of /ue'Aas, black, and av6os,jloicer, from the darker 

 color which the persistent perianth assumes after blossoming.) 



* Sepals with a conspicuous double-gland at the summit of the chtir. 



1. M. Virginicum, L. (BUXCH-FLOWEB.) Stem 3-5 high, leafy, 

 rather slender; leaves linear (4-10" wide); sepals flat, ovate to oblong or 

 slightly hastate (2|-4" long) ; capsule 6" long; seeds 10 in each cell, 2-3" 

 long. Wet meadows, X. Eng. to N. C., west to Minn, and Tex. 



2. M. latifolium, Desrouss. Leaves more oblanceolate, often 2' broad ; 

 sepals undulate (2-3" long), the very narrow claw nearly equalling the orbicu- 

 lar or ovate blade ; capsule 6 - 8" long ; styles more slender ; seeds 4 - 8 in each 

 cell, 3-4" long. (M. racemosum, Michx.) W. Conn, to S. C. 



* * Sepals oblanceolate, without glands. 



3. M. parviflorum, Watson. Stem rather slender (2-5 high), spar- 

 ingly leafv, naked above; leaves oval to oblanceolate (2-4' wide), on long 

 petioles ; sepals 2-3" long, oblanceolate or spatulate, those of the sterile flow- 

 ers on claws ; stamens very short ; capsule 6" long ; seeds 4 - 6 in each cell, 4" 

 long. ( Yeratrum parviflorum, J/Vc/i.r.) In the Alleghanies, Va. to S. C. 



30. VERATKUM, Tonrn. FALSE HELLEBORE. 



Flowers monceciously polygamous. Perianth of 6 spreading and separate 

 obovate-oblong (greenish or brownish) sepals, more or less contracted at the 

 base (but not clawed), nearly free from the ovary, not gland-bearing. Fila- 

 ments free from the sepals and shorter than they, recurving. Anthers, pistils, 



