THE SHAPES OF FLOWERS. 147 



found some in which conformity to the general law is not 

 obvious. The discussion of these apparent anomalies would 

 carry us too much out of our course. A clue to the explana 

 tion of them will, I believe, be found in the explanation 

 presently to be given of certain kindred anomalies in the 

 forms of individual flowers. 



233. The radially- symmetrical form is common to all 

 individual flowers that have vertical axes. In plants which 

 are practically if not literally uniaxial, and bear their flowers 

 at the ends of upright stalks, so that the faces open hori 

 zontally, the petals are disposed in an all-sided way. Cro 

 cuses, Tulips, and Poppies are familiar examples of this struc 

 ture occurring under these conditions. A Ranunculus flower, 

 Fig. 228, will serve as a typical one. Similarly, flowers 

 which have peduncles flexible enough to 

 let them hang directly downwards, and 

 are not laterally incommoded, are also 

 radial ; as in the FucJma, Fig. 229, as 

 in Cyclamen, Hyacinth, &c. These rela 

 tions of form to position are, I believe, 

 uniform. Though some flowers carried at the ends of up 

 right or downright stems have oblique shapes, it is only when 

 they have inclined axes or are not equally conditioned all 

 round. No solitary flower having an axis habitually ver 

 tical, presents a bilateral form. This is as we should expect, 

 since flowers which open out their faces horizontally, 

 whether facing upwards or downwards, are, on the average, 

 similarly affected on all sides. 



At first it seems that flowers thus placed should alone 

 be radial ; but further consideration discloses conditions under 

 which this type of symmetry may exist in flowers otherwise 

 placed. Remembering that the radial form is the primitive 

 form that, morphologically speaking, it results from the 

 contraction into a whorl, of parts that are originally arranged 

 in the same spiial succession as the leaves; we must expect 



