114 ROSACES. (ROSE FAMILY.) 



4. S. tOllientosa, L. (HARDIIACK. STEEPLE-BUSH.) Stems and loicet 

 surface of the ovate or oblong serrate leaves very woolly ; flowers in short racemes 

 crowded in a dense panicle ; pods woolly. Low grounds ; commonest in New 

 England , July. Flowers rose-color. 



3. ULMARIA, Moench. Perennial herbs, with pinnate leaves and panicled 

 cyniose flowers : calyx reflexed : pods 5-8 in number, 1 - 2-seeded. 



5. S. lobata, Murr. ( QUEEN or THE PRAIRIE.) Glabrous (2 -8 

 high) ; leaves interruptedly pinnate ; the terminal leaflet very large, 7 - 9-partcd, 

 the lobes incised and toothed; stipules kidney-form; panicle compound-clus- 

 tered, on a long naked peduncle. Meadows and prairies, Perm, to Michigan, 

 Illinois, and Kentucky. June. Flowers deep peach-blossom color, handsome, 

 the petals and sepals often in fours ! 



4. ARUNCUS, Scringe. Perennial herbs, with dioecious whitish floioers, in 

 slender spikes disposed in a long compound panicle ; leaves thrice-pinnate ; the 

 stipules obsolete : pods 3-5, several-seeded : pedicels reflexed in fruit, 



6. S. AriincilS, L. (GOAT'S-BEARD.) Smooth, tall; leaflets thin, 

 lanceolate-oblong, or the terminal ones ovate-lanceolate, taper-pointed, sharply 

 cut and sen*ate. Rich woods, Catskill and Alleghany Mountains and west- 

 ward. June. (Eu.) 



S. FILIPENDULA, the DROPWORT ; S. ULM\RIA, the MEADOW-SWEET of 

 Europe; S. HYPERICIFC-LIA (ITALIAN MAY); and S. SORBIFOLIA, are com- 

 mon in gardens. 



3. GILLENIA, Moench. INDIAN PHYSIC. 



Calyx narrow, constricted at the throat, 5-toothed ; teeth erect. Petals 5, 

 somewhat unequal, linear-lanceolate, inserted in the throat of the calyx ; convo- 

 lute in the bud. Stamens 10-20, included. Pods 5, included, 2-4-seedcd. 

 Perennial herbs, with almost sessile 3-foliolate leaves, the thin leaflets doubly 

 serrate and incised. Flowers loosely paniculate-corymbcd, pale rose-color or 

 white. (Dedicated to an obscure botanist or gardener, A. Gille, or Gillenius.) 



1. O. trifoliata, Mcench. (BOWMAN'S ROOT.) Leaflets ovate-oblong, 

 pointed, cut-serrate ; stipules small, awl-shaped, entire. Rich woods, fjom 

 W. New York southward, and sparingly in the Western States. July. 



2. G. stiplllacea, Nutt. (AMERICAN IPECAC.) Leaflets lanceolate, 

 deeply incised ; stipules large and leaf-like, doubly incised. From W. Penn- 

 sylvania and New York to Illinois and Kentucky. June. 



4. AGRIMONIA, Tourn. AGRIMONY. 



Calyx-tube top-shaped, contracted at the throat, armed with hooked bristles 

 above, indurated arid enclosing the fruit ; the limb 5-cleft, closed after flowering. 

 Petals 5. Stamens 12-15. Achenia 2 : styles terminal. Seed suspended. 

 Perennial herbs, with interruptedly pinnate leaves and yellow flowers in slender 

 spiked racemes : br icts 3-cleft. (A corruption of Argemonia, of the same deri- 

 vation as .Argemone.) 



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