152 



PINK TO RED 



Milton in Lycidas speaks of "the well-attir'd woodbine," 

 and truly, for no "gadding vine" was ever graced with finer 

 or more fragrant flowers. 



Spenser calls it by the older name of Caprifolc, or Goat -leaf, 

 because, like the mountain goat, it climbs over almost inac- 

 cessible crags ; the French and Italian names are also similar, 

 being respectively CJicvrc-fcnilk and Caprifoglio. 



ROUGH FLEABANE 



Erigeron glabcUus. Composite Family 



Perennial by a woody root. Stems : simple or branched above, some- 

 times hirsute. Leaves: pubescent, entire, the basal ones spatulate; stem- 

 leaves oblong-lanceolate, obtuse or acute. Flowers: heads several or 

 solitary, involucre hemispheric, hirsute: rays very narrov.^, about one 

 hundred or more. 



This charming P'leabane grows in dry soil and bears flow-ers 

 of many hues, — pink, mauve, cream, and w^hite. It has long 

 narrow leaves, which, together wdth the stalks, are hairy. 



PINK EVERLASTING 



Antoinaria par^'ifoUa 7'ar. rosea. Composite Family 



Floccose-woolly, surculose, forming broad patches. Leaves : basal ones 

 spatulate or obovate, white-canescent on both sides ; stem-leaves linear, 

 sessile. Flowers: heads in a terminal capitate or corymbose cluster. 



The Pink Everlasting is so conspicuous by reason of its 

 rosy crackling flowers, with their white silky centres and white 

 woolly stems and leaves, that it requires little definite descrip- 

 tion for identification. It has a tuft of procumbent foliage at 

 the base, and all the w^ay up the stem there cling many tiny 

 narrow leaves. Growing from two to twelve inches high, this 

 plant will be found in the same localities as the white species. 



