144 I.INNA.AN ARTIFICIAL SYSTEM. 



97. Siliculosa : The plants of this order are fur- 

 nished with that particular species of seed-vessel, which 

 is called a silicic or little pod. (F. 61.) 



The gold-of-pleasure, cole-wort, woad, awlwort, whitlow grass, 

 pepper-wort, shepherd's-piir?e, penny-cress, scurvy-grass, swinc's- 

 cress, candy-tuft, tuadwort, and honesty, are all of this order. 



98. Siliquosa: The plants of the second order, in- 

 stead of having a little pod, have a siliqite or very long 

 pod. (F. 65 ) 



Here we shall meet with the common wall-flower and common 

 stocks of our gardens. We shall likewise find numerous other illus- 

 trations, as the cuckoo-flower, water-cress, water-radish, dames- 

 violet, cole seed or rape, turnip, charlock, and the different tribes rf 

 dentaria, lady's-smock, winter-cress, lady's-mustard, sea-rocket, 

 rorket, wall-cress, tower-mustard, cabbage, mustard, radish, and 

 a few others. 



CLASSES ESTABLISHED ON A CONSIDERATION OF THE UNION 

 OF THE STAMENS. 



09. In this division we shall explain those classes 

 of plants, which have flowers with the stamens unitrd to 

 each other, either by their filaments, as in monadelphia, 

 diadelphia, and polyadelphia, or hy their anthers, as in 

 syngenesia; or on the other hand, hy the union of the 

 stamens and the pistils, as in the class gynaudria. 



CLASS XVI. MONADU.riHA. 



100. Character : 'I his vast and interesting class, 

 embraces those plants, the flowers of which have all 

 their stamens uniti-d Mnu; that is by their filaments, 



