LILIACE^E. (LILY FAMILY.) 471 



* * Flowers nodding, bell-shaped, the sessile sepah revolute. 



3. It. Cail.ideiise, L. (WILD YELLOW LILY.) Leaves remotely whorled, 

 lanceolate, strongly 3-rierved, the margins and nerves rough, flowers few, long- 

 peduncled, oblong-bell-shaped, the sepals recurved-spreadittg above the middle, yel- 

 low, spotted inside with purple. Moist meadows and bogs ; common, especially 

 northward. June, July. Stem 2 -3 high. Flower 2' -3' long. 



4. It. superb 11 ill, L. (TQRK'S-CAP I<ILY.) Lower leaves whorled, lan- 

 ceolate, pointed, 3-nerved, smooth ; flowers often many (3-20 or 40) in a pyram- 

 idal raceme ; sepals strongly revolute, bright orange, with numerous dark purple 

 spots inside. Rich low grounds ; rather common. July, Aug. Stem 3 - 7 

 high : sepals 3' long. L. Caroliuianum, Michx., is apparently a variety of this. 



L. CANDIDUM, the WHITE LILY, and L. BULBIFERUM, the ORANGE BULB- 

 BEARING LILY, are most common in gardens. 



11. ERYTIIRONIUM, L. DOG'S-TOOTH VIOLET. 



Perianth lily-like, of 6 distinct lanceolate sepals, recurved or spreading above, 

 deciduous, the 3 inner usually with a callous tooth on each side of the erect 

 base, and a groove in the middle. Filaments 6, awl-shaped : anthers oblong- 

 linear. Style elongated. Pod obovate, contracted at the base, 3-valved. Seeds 

 rather numerous, ovoid, with a loose membranaceous tip. Nearly stemless 

 herbs, with 2 smooth and shining flat leaves tapering into petioles and sheathing 

 the base of the 1 -flowered scape, rising from a deep solid-scaly bulb. Flower 

 nodding, vernal. (Name from epvdpos, red, which is inappropriate as respects 

 the American species.) 



1. E. Ameri< amiflsi, Smith. (YELLOW ADDER'S-TONGUE.) Leaves 

 elliptical-lanceolate, pale green, spotted with purplish and dotted ; perianth pale 

 yellow, spotted near the base ; style club-shaped ; stigmas united. Low copses, 

 &c. ; common. May. Scape 6' - 9' high : flower 1' or more long. E. BRAC- 

 TEATDM, Boott, from the Camel's Rump Mountain, Vermont, is probably only 

 an accidental state of this species. 



2. E. ;tll>idiiaai, Nutt. (WHITE DOG'S-TOOTH VIOLET.) Leaves el- 

 liptical-lanceolate, spotted, not dotted; perianth white or bluish-white; sepals nar- 

 rowly lanceolate, the inner without lateral teeth; style thread-like and club- 

 shaped; stigma 3-cleft. Low thickets from Albany, New York, and W. Penn- 

 sylvania to Wisconsin, and southward. April, May. 



12. Y IT CCA, L. BEAR-GRASS. SPANISH BAYONET. 



Perianth of G petal-like (white) oval or oblong and acute flat sepals, wither- 

 ing-persistent, the 3 inner broader, longer than the 6 stamens. Stigmas 3, ses- 

 sile. Pod oblong, somewhat 6-sided, 3-celled, or imperfectly 6-celled by a par- 

 tition from the back, fleshy, tardily 3-valved at the apex. Seeds very many in 

 each cell, depressed. Stems woody, either very short, or rising into thick and 

 columnar palm-like trunks, clothed with persistent rigid linear or sword-shaped 

 leaves, and terminated by an ample compound panicle of showy (often polyga- 

 mous) flowers. (An aboriginal name.) 



