256 BORAGE FAMILY. 



O. Virginianum. Clothed with harsh but appressed short bristles, 1 - 2 

 high, with oblong leaves, and lunce-awl-shaped lobes of narrow corolla spar- 

 ingly bristly outside. 



O. Carolinianum. From New York W. & S. : shaggy with rough and 

 spreading bristles, stout, 3 - 4 high, with lance-ovate or oblong-acute leaves, 

 and lobes of rather broad corolla triangular and thickly hairy. 



O. molle. Only \V. : hoary with softer and whitish appressed hairs, the 

 oblong-ovate bluntish leaves strongly ribbed, and lobes of the triangular-pointed 

 lobes of the narrow corolla thickly hairy outside. 



5. LITHOSPERMUM, CROMWELL, PUCCOON. (Name from 

 Greek, means stony seed.) Flowers in late spring and summer, at length 

 scattered or as if spiked, leafy-bracted. 



1. Corolla white or only yellowish in the wholly naked throat, scarcely longer than 



the calyx: nutlets ront/h-icrinkled and pitted, r/my and dull. (V) (2) 

 L. arvense, CORX GROMWELL. Nat. from Eu. in waste dry soil, 6' - 12' 

 high, roughish-hoary, with lanceolate or linear leaves and inconspicuous flowers. 



2. Corolla dull whitish, rather short, with little doinn/ scales or rather folds in 

 the throitt : nutlets smooth or ivith a few pores, often ivory-white. 2/ 



L. angUStifblium. River-banks from 111. S. & W. : minutely roughish- 

 hoary, branched, (}' - 15' high, with linear rigid leaves, short peduncles recurved 

 in fruit, and corolla not longer than calyx. 



L. offieinale, COMMON G. of Europe, a weed by some roadsides : l-2 

 high, branched above, with broadi.-h-lanecolate acute leaves rough above but 

 sort-downy beneath, and corolla longer than calyx 



L. latifdlium. From W. New York W. & S. : larger and rougher than 

 the last, ovate and lance-ovate pointed leaves 2' - 4' long and prominently 

 ribbed, those from the root larger and roundish ; corolla shorter than calyx. 



3. Coro'/n briijht ora/)f/c-ij<//i>/i\ sliotn/, lotiqer than calyx, almost salt' r-sha [>cd, 

 with little appendages in the throat evident : nut/ets smooth, usually ivory-white. 



L. hirtum, HAIRY Prccoox. Dry ground, chiefly S. & W. : l-2 

 high, roughish-bristly, with lanceolate or linear leaves, or those next the flowers 

 ovate-oblong and bristlv-ciliate, the crowded {lowers pedunclcd, tube of the 

 corolla scarcely longer than the breadth of the border (f'-l'j and woolly- 

 bearded at base inside. 



L. candscens, HOARY P. Mostly N. & W. : softer-hairy and somewhat 

 hoary, G'-l.V high, smaller-flowered than the preceding, and tube of corolla 

 smooth at base inside. 



L. longifldrum, only on prairies N. W., flas linear leaves, and tube of 

 corolla 1' or more long, many times longer than the eroded-toothed lobes. 



6. MYOSOTIS, FORGET-ME-NOT or SCORPION-GRAS. (Name 

 in Greek means mouse-ear, from the short soft leaves of some species.) Fl. 

 spring and summer. 



M. palustris, TRUE F., in gardens and some waste places, with loosely 

 branched steins ascending from a creeping base, rough-pubescent lance-oblong 

 leaves, moderately 5-cIeft calyx shorter than the spreading pedicels, its hairs 

 not hooked nor glandular, and its lobes open in fruit; corolla light blue with a 

 yellow eye. Var. LAXA, wild in wet places N., has smaller flowers on still 

 longer pedicels. 2/ 



M. arvensis. Not rare in fields, &c. : hirsute, with lancc-ob'ong acutish 

 leaves, racemes naked at base and stalked, small b'ue corolla, pedicels spreading 

 in fruit and longer than the 5-clcft equal calyx, the lobes of which are closed in 

 fruit, and the tube beset with some hooked or glandular-tipped hairs. (1) 



M. v6rna. Dry hills : bristly-hirsute, erect (4' -10 high), branched from 

 base, with oblong and blunt leaves, racemes leafy at base, very small mostly 

 white corolla, pedicels in fruit erect and appressed at base, but abruptly bent 

 outwards near the apex, and rather shorter than the unequal very bristly calyx, 

 some of its bristles hooked or glandular at their tip. (I) (2) 



