;,(> HYPERICACEjE. (ST. JOHN's-WORT FAMILY.) 



2. II. KalllinillllHI, L. Bushy, l-3 high; brandies 4-angled : 

 branchlcts 2-edgcd ; leaves crowded, glaucous, oblanceolate ; flowers few in a 

 cluster; pods ovate ^-celled. Wet rocks, Niagara Falls and Northern Likes. 

 Aug. Leaves 1 ' - 2 ' long. Flowers 1 ' wide. 



3. II. prolificuiil, L. (SHRUBBY ST. JOHN'S-WORT.) Branchlets 2- 

 edged ; leaves lanceolate-oblong, mostly obtuse, narrowed at the base ; flowers 

 numerous, in simple or compound clusters ; pods oblonq, 3-ccllcd, New Jersey 

 to Michigan, Illinois, and southward. July -Sept. Shrub l-4 high, with 

 long rather simple shoots, leaves 2' long and ' or more wide, and flowers %' - 1 

 in diameter. Varies greatly in size, &c. 



Var. clensifldrum. Exceedingly branched above, l-6 high, the 

 branches slender and crowded with smaller leaves; flowers smaller (^'-'iji 

 diameter) and more numerous, in crowded compound cymes. (H. densiflorurn, 

 & H. galioides, Pursh.) Pine ban-ens of New Jersey, and glades of Western 

 Maryland, Kentucky, and southward. 



* * Perennial herbs : styles (diverging] and cells of the pod 3 : petals and anthers 

 with black dots: calyx erect: stamens distinctly in 3 or 5 clusters. 



4. H. TERFORXTUM, L. (COMMON ST. JOHN'S-WORT.) Stem much 

 branched and corymbed, somewhat 2-edged (producing runners from the base) ; 

 leaves elliptical-oblong or linear-oblong, with pellucid dots ; petals (deep yellow) 

 twice the length of the lanceolate acute sepals ; flowers numerous, in open leafy 

 cymes. Pastures and meadows, c. June - Sept. Too well known every- 

 where as a pernicious weed, which it is difficult to extirpate. Its juices are very 

 acrid. (Nat. from Eu.) 



5. H. corymbosilin, Muhl. Conspicuously marked with both black 

 and pellucid dots ; stem terete, sparingly branched ; leaves oblong, somewhat 

 clasping ; flowers crowded (small); petals pale yellow, much longer than the 

 oblo-ng sepals. Damp places; common. July -Sept. Leaves larger and 

 flowers much smaller than in No. 4 ; the petals 2" - 3" long, marked with black 

 lines as well as dots. 



$ 3. Stamens very numerous, obscurely clustered : pod \-celled, or incompletely 3-celled, 

 the 3 placentae sometimes borne on short partitions, but not joined in the centre : 

 perennial herbs or low shrubs. 



* Sepals foliaceous and spreading, unequal : styles more or less united into one. 



6. II. elliptic-Hill, Hook. Stem simple, herbaceous (1 high), obscure- 

 ly 4-angled; leaves spreading, elliptical-oblong, obtuse, thin; cyme nearl/ naked, 

 rather few-flowered; sepals oblong ; pods ovoid, very obtuse, purple-, 1 -eel led. 

 Wet places, New England and Pennsylvania to Lake Superior and northward 

 July, Aug. Petals light yellow, 3" long. 



7. II. adpreSSUiii, Barton. Stem simple, herbaceous, or slightly wood) 

 at the base (l-2 high), obscurely 4-angled below and 2-edged above; leave* 

 ascending, lanceolate or linear-oblong, often acute, thin ; cyme leafy at the base, 

 few-flowered ; sepals linear-lanceolate ; pods ovoid-oblong, incompletel\ 3 - ^-celled. 

 Moist places, Rhode Island (Olney), New Jersey, Pennsylvania nnd southwest- 

 ward. July, Aug. Leaves l' long. Petals bright ye! 7 >w, 3 -5" long. 



