Z PREFACE. 



Probably the time is now not far distant when, as the result especially 

 of the labors and investigations of PROF. TUPKERMAN upon our Lichenes, 

 of the REV. DR. CURTIS upon our Funfii, and of PROF. HARVKY upon 

 our Ahja', as well as of Messrs. Sri.uvANT and LE8QUEREUX upon our 

 Mosses, all our Cryptogamia may be in a similar manner presented to the 

 student, in the form of a supplementary volume, separate tVoni that com- 

 prising the Phffinogamoua or Flowering Plants. 



I have omitted from this edition tlie concise Introduction to Botany, and 

 the Glossary, prefixed to the first; supplying their place with a more 

 extended, familiar, and copiously illustrated elementary work, especially 

 intended for beginners (First Lessons in Botany), and which may, when 

 desired, be bound up with the present volume. Or the student may use 

 the author's Botanical Text-Book tor the same purpose. Jn either of these, 

 all the technical terms employed in this volume are explained and illus- 

 trated. Having prepared this Manual for students rather than for learned 

 botanists, I have throughout endeavored to smooth the beginner's way by 

 discarding many an unnecessary technical word or phrase, and by casting 

 the language somewhat in a vernacular mould, perhaps at some sacrifice 

 of brevity, but not, I trust, of the precision for which botanical language is 

 distinguished. 



Botanists may find some reason to complain of the general omission of 

 synonymes ; but it should be considered that all synonymes are useless to 

 the beginner, whose interests I have particularly kept in view, while 

 the greater part are needless to the instructed botanist, who has access to 

 more elaborate works in which they are plentifully given. By discarding 

 them, except in case of some original or recent changes in nomenclature, I 

 have been able to avoid abbreviations (excepting those of author's names, 

 and some few customary ones of States, &c.), to give greater fulness to the, 

 characters of the species, and especially of the genera, (a point in which I 

 conceive most works of this class are deficient,) arid also to add the deriva- 

 tion of the generic names. 



The Natural Orders are disposed in a series which nearly corresponds, 

 in a general way, with De Candolle's arrangement, beginning with the 

 highest class and ending with the lowest; and commencing this first and 

 far the largest class (of Dicotyledonous <>r Exogenous Plants) with those 

 orders in which the flowers are mostly provided with double floral enve- 



Mr. Oakes in tin; White Mountains, of Fen.llrr in \r-w Mexico, and of Wright in Texas. The 

 title of the work is " Musci Boreali-Americani, sive Speciinina Exsierata Muscorum in Ameri- 

 cac Rebuspublicis Foederatis detcctorum, conjunctis studiis W. S. SULLIVANT et L. LESQUEREUX, 

 1856." Mr. Sullivant's connection with the work extends no further than to a joint and equal 

 responsibility in the determination of the .species. This most extensive and valuable collec- 

 tion ever insult- of Ainrri<-:in Mosses, which has cost much labor and expense, aud comprises 

 nearly 400 specie* mid marked varieties, is published at '20 for each set, and will doubtless 

 be eagerly .sought after by Bryological stu<lfnt.>. 



