44 YIOLACE.E. (VIOLET FAMILY.) 



sides, Maine to Ohio and Kentucky ; rare. June, July. Spur ' long. An 

 ther-spurs also very long. 



13. V. ftlulileiibcrgii, TOIT. ' (AMERICAN DOG VIOLET.) Steins 

 ascending (3' -7' long), at length with creeping branches; leaves round-heart- 

 shaped, or the lowest kidney-form, crenatc, the uppermost slightly pointed; 

 stipules lanceolate, fringe-toothed; spur cylindrical, about half the length of the 

 pale violet petals, the lateral ones slightly bearded ; stigma beaked. Shaded wet 

 places ; common. May, June. 



14. V. striata, Ait. (PAI-E VIOLET.) Stems angular, ascending, 

 branching (6' -10' high) ; leaves heart-shaped, finely serrate, often acute; sti- 

 pules oblong-lanceolate, large, strongly fringe-toothed ; spur thickish, much shorter 

 than the cream-colored petals, the lateral ones bearded, the lower striped with 

 purplish lines; stigma beaked. Low grounds ; common, especially westward. 

 April -Oct. 



15. V. Canadcnsis, L. (CANADA VIOLET.) Upright (l-2 high) ; 

 leaves heart-shaped, pointed, serrate ; stipules ovate-lanceolate, entire ; petals white 

 or whitish inside, the upper ones tinged with violet beneath, the lateral bearded ; 

 spur very short ; stigma beakless, hairy on each side. Rich woods ; common 

 northward and along the Alleghanies. May - Aug. 



*- - Stems mostly simple, erect, naked below, and 2 - 4-leaved above : stipules nearly 

 entire : flowers yellow : stigma not beaked, but bearded on each side. 



16. V. pubescens, Ait. (DOWNY YELLOW VIOLET.) Softly pubes- 

 cent (6' -12' high) ; leaves very broadly heart-shaped, toothed, somewhat pointed; 

 stipules ovate or ovate-lanceolate, large ; spur extremely short ; lower petals 

 veined with purple. Woods ; common. May - Aug. 



Var. eriocarpa, Nutt. More pubescent, stout, l-2 high; pods wool- 

 ly. (V. eriocarpa, Schwein.} Common westward. 



Var. scabriuscula, Torr. & Gray. Smaller and greener, slightly 

 pubescent; stems often decumbent (4' -10' high). Rhode Island to Ohio and 

 Kentucky. 



17. V. liastata, Michx. (HALBERD-LEAVED VIOLET.) Nearly gla 

 brous, slender (4' -10' high); stem-leaves halberd-shaped, slightly serrate, acute; 

 stipules ovate, small ; spur very short. Mountains of Pennsylvania and south- 

 ward. June. 



* * * Leafy-stemmed annuals or biennials : the 4 upper petals ascending. 



18. V. TRfcoLOR, L. (PANSY. HEART'S-EASE.) Stem angled and 

 branched ; leaves roundish, or the upper oval and the lowest heart-shaped, cre- 

 nate or entire; stipules very large and leaf-like, lyrate-pinnatifid; petals vari- 

 able in color or variegated (yellow, whitish, violet-blue and purple) ; in var. 

 ARVENSis shorter or rather longer than the calyx. Dry or sandy soil, New 

 York to Kentucky and southward : doubtless only a small state of the Garden 

 Pansy run wild. (Nat. from Eu.) 



V. ODORXTA, the SWEET VIOLET of Europe, which far excels all the Amer- 

 ican species in fragrance, sometimes grows spontaneously near dwellings. 



