114 PULSE FAMILY. 



remarkable for hanging edgewise. Flowers in early summer ; ripening in late 

 autumn, the large and indurated pod 5' - 10' long and 1 j' - 2' wide ; the seeds 

 over ^' across. 



54. GLEDITSCHIA, HONEY-LOCUST. (Named for the early Ger~ 

 man botanist, Glediisch.) Fl. early summer, inconspicuous, ripening the pods 

 late in autumn. Thorns simple or compound ; those on the branchlets above 

 the axils. Leaves on growing shoots of the season twice pinnate ; those in 

 clusters on spurs mostly once pinnate. 



G. triacanthos, THREE-THORXED ACACIA or COMMON H. Wild in 

 rich soil from Pcnn. S. & W., also commonly planted for shade, sometimes used 

 for hedges : a rather tall tree, with light foliage, large often very compound 

 thorns tlattish at the base and tapering, small lance-oblong leaflets, and linear 

 flat pods 9' -20' long, often- twisted or curved. A var. IXEKMIS has very few or 

 no thorns. 



G. Gliionsis, CHINESE II., occasionally planted, has stouter conical thorns, 

 and broader oval leaflets. 



G. monosp6rma, OXE-SEEDED or WATER II. Swamps from Illinois 

 S. W. : small tree, with slender thorns, ovate or oblong leaflets, and oval 1 -seeded 

 pods, containing no pulp. 



55. MIMOSA, SENSITIVE-PLANT. (From Greek word to mimic, \. c. 

 the movements imitating an animal faculty.) There arc wild shrubby species 

 in Texas and farther S. The following are herbs, procumbent or trailing, 

 with bristly short pods. 



M. pudica, COMMON S. Beset with spreading bristly hairs and somewhat 

 prickly ; the leaves very sensitive to the touch, of very numerous linear leaflets 

 on 2 pairs of branches of the common petiole, crowded on its apex, so as to 

 appear digitate ; flowers rose-purple, in slender-peduncled heads, in summer. 

 Cult, from South America. (T) 



M. Strigillbsa, WILD S. Rough with apprcsscd stiff bristles, not prickly ; 

 leaves with 5 or G pairs of branches of the common petiole, each bearing 10- 14 

 pairs of oblong-linear leaflets; flowers rose-color; oblong head on very long 

 peduncle. Wild on river-banks far S. : fl. summer. 2/ 



56. SCHRANKIA, SENSITIVE-BRIER. (Named for a German bot- 

 anist, Schrank.} Two species wild in dry sandy soil, S. W., spreading on 

 the ground, appearing much alike, with leaves closing like the Sensitivc- 

 Pjant, but only under ruder handling: flowers rose-purple, small, in globular 

 heads on axillary peduncles, in summer. 2/ 



S. tmcinata. Stems, petioles, peduncles, and oblong-linear short-pointed 

 pods beset with rather stout hooked prickles ; leaflets elliptical, reticulated Avith 

 strong veins underneath. 



S. angustata. Prickles scattered, weaker, and less hooked ; leaflets oblong- 

 linear, not reticulated ; pods slender, taper-pointed. 



57. DESMANTHUS. (Greek-made name, meaning that tho flowers are 

 botutd together : they are merely crowded in a head. A few species very far 

 S., and the following W. 



D. bracliylobus. Prairies from Illinois S. W. : nearly smooth, l-4 

 high, erect, with 6-15 pairs of partial petioles, each bearing 20-30 pairs of 

 very small narrow leaflets, one or more glands on the mam petiole, small heads 

 of whitish flowers, followed by short 2 G-seedcd pods ; stamens 5. 2/ 



53. ALBIZZIA, SILK-FLOWER. (Named for an Italian botanist.) 



A. Jtilibrissin, SILK-FLOWER or SILK-TREE, from Asia, planted for 

 ornament S. : a small tree, with leaves of numerous pairs of partial petioles, 

 each bearing about GO oblong acute leaflets, which appear as if halved, and with 

 panicked heads of rather large pale rose-purple flowers, the long and lustrous 

 filaments, like silky threads in tufts (giving tho popular name), being mainly 

 conspicuous ; pod 5' - 6' long, oblong-linear, very flat and thin. 



