408 SATUREJA, SILENE. 



contracted part of the base hardly as long as the inflated part Scape with 

 a single, large nodding flower. In marshes. 1 2 f. 5. 



131. SATUREJA. 42. 39. 



horten"sis (summer savory, b-w. Ju. ), peduncles axillary, somewhat in cyme; 

 leaves lanceolate, entire .- stem brachiate. 



74. SAURURUS. 2. 6. 



cer"nuus (lizard's tail, breast weed. W. Au. 4), stem angular, sulcate ; leaven 

 alternate, heart-oblong, acuminate. Rare in New York east of Cayuga 

 Lake abundant west of it. 12 f. 



102. SAXIFRAGA. 13. 84. 

 Leaves radical, undivided : stem nearly naked. 



virginien"sis (rock saxifrage. O. w. M. 4), minutely pubescent ; leaves oval 

 obtuse, crenate, decurrent into the petiole ; flowers sub-sessile on the di- 

 chotomous branches of an almost leafless scape. 1 15 i. S. 

 pensylva'nica (water saxifrage. O. y-g. M. J. 4), pubescent ; leaves oblong- 

 lanceolate, acute at each extremity, obsoletely toothed ; stem naked ; panicle 

 oblong, flowers fasciculate ; petals linear, longer than the calyx ; capsule 

 uperior. 1828 i. 



Exotic, 



sarmento'sa (beef-steak, creeping saxifrage w. Au. 4), leaves roundish, tooth- 

 ed, hairy ; sending off creeping shoots ; 2 petals in each flower elongated. 

 61. SCILLA. 10. 14. 



Exotic. 



marit"ima (squill, w). scape long, naked, many-flowered ; bracts bent back. 

 Root bulbous. 



132. SCROPHULARIA. 40. 40. 



marylan"dica (figwort. O. g-p. Ju. 4), leaves cordate, serrate, acute, rounded 

 at the base ; petioles ciliate below ; panicle fasciculate, loose, few-flowered ; 

 stem obtusely angled. 2 4 f. S. 



131. SCUTELLARIA. 42. 39. 



lateriftofra (mad-dog scull-cap, hood-wort. O. b. Ju. 4), branching, glabrous ; 

 leaves long-pet ioled, ovate, toothed ; cauline ones sub-cordate ; racemes 

 lateral, leafy. Damp. 12 f. *S. 



galericula'ta (scull-cap. O. b.J. 4\ branching ; leaves sub-sessile, lance-ovate, 

 sub-cordate at the base, crenate, a little white-downy beneath ; flowers axil- 

 lary, solitary or in pairs. Flowers large. Damp. 12 18 i. 



32. SECALE. 4. 10. 



cerea'le (rye. J. ), glumes and bristles scabrous-ciliate : corolla smooth. In- 

 troduced. 



105. SEDUM. 13. 83. 



terna'tum (false ice-plant. W. w. J. 4), small, creeping : leaves flat, round- 

 spatulate, ternate : flowers somewhat 3 spiked. Varies into the eighth class. 

 Cultivated. S. 



Exotic, 

 tetephium (orpine, live-forever, r. w. Ju. 4), leaves flattish, tooth-serrate, 



thickly-scattered ; corymb leafy ; stem erect. 



anacampr'sero* (stone-crop. 4), leaves wedge-form, entire, sub-sessile; stem 

 decumbent ; flowers corymbed. 



1213. SEMPERVIVUM. 13. 83. 



Exotic. 



tecto'rum (houseleek. Au. 4), leaves ciliate ; bulbs spreading ; nectaries wedge- 

 form, crenulate. 



arbo'reiun (tree houseleek), stem woody, smooth, branching ; leaves wedge- 

 form, glabrous, with soft spreading hairs. 



1512. SIDA. 37. 74. 



abu'tilon (indian mallows. E. y. Ju. @), leaves round-cordate, acuminate, 

 toothed, tomentose ; peduncles solitary, shorter than the petioles ; capsules 

 2 awned, truncate. 46 f. 5. 



103. SILENE. 22. 82. 

 pcnsylva'nica (pink-catchfly. p. M. J. 4), viscidly pubescent ; radical leaves 



