POLEMONIUM FAMILY. 261 



2. If. Wild in mostly dry or rocky ground, also common in gardens, where the 

 species are much crossed and varied. 



# Stems erect : flowers in oblong or pyramidal panicle, with short peduncles and 



pedicels : lobes of corolla entire, pink-purple, and with white varieties. 

 Wild from Pennsylvania S. and W. : fl. summer. 



P. paniculata. Smooth, or some varieties roughish or soft hairy, 2 - 4 

 high, stout ; leaves oblong or ovate-lanceolate and mostly with tapering base ; 

 panicle broad ; calyx-teeth sharp-pointed. 



P. maculata. Smooth; stem slender, l-2high, purple-spotted lower 

 leaves lanceolate, upper lance-ovate from a rounded or somewhat heart-shaped 

 base ; panicle long and narrow, leafy below ; calyx-teeth hardly pointed. 



# * Stems ascending or erect, but often with a prostrate base, 1 -3 high: whole 



plant smooth, not clammy nor glandular : flowers corymbed : lobes of corolla 

 round and entire. Wild chiefly W. and S., seldom cult. : fl. summer. 

 P. Carolina. Leaves varying from lanceolate to ovate, or the upper heart- 

 shaped ; flowers crowded, short-peduncled, pink ; calyx-teeth acute. 



P. glaberrima. Slender; leaves often linear-lanceolate, 3' -4' long; 

 flowers fewer and loose, pink or whitish ; calyx-teeth sharp-pointed. 



# # * Flowering stems ascending, or in the first erect, low, terminated by a loose 



corymb, 'which is clammy-pubescent more or less, as well as the t/iinnish 

 leaves : flowers mostly ]>edice//ed : calyx-teeth very slender : fl. late spring. 



P. pildsa. From N. Jersey to Wisconsin & S. : mostly hairy ; erect 

 stems 1 or so high ; leaves lanceolate or linear and tapering to appoint (l'-2 ; 

 long) ; flowers loose, with spreading awn-pointed calyx-teeth ; lobes of pink, 

 rose, or rarely white corolla obovate and entire. 



P. amcfena. Barrens from \jrg. to 111. & S. : pubescent, spreading 

 from the base, G' 1 high, leaves lanceolate, or broadly oblong or ovate on 

 sterile shoots, short ; flowers in a crowded leafy-bracted corymb, with straight 

 hardly awn-pointed calyx-teeth ; corolla purple, pink, or nearly white. 



P. reptans. Moist woods from Penn. and Kentucky S. : spreading by 

 long runners, which bear round-obovate often smoothish leaves, those of the low 

 flowering stems oblong or ovate (about ^' long) ; flowers few but crowded ; lobes 

 of the deep pink-purple corolla round-obovate, large (!' broad). 



P. divarieata. Moist woods from N New York W. & S. : soft-pubescent; 

 stems loosely spreading ; leaves ovate-oblong or broad-lanceolate (l'-2' long) ; 

 flowers loosely corymbed and peduncled ; corolla large, pale lilac, bluish, or 

 lead-colored, the lobes wedge-obovate or commonly inversely heart-shaped and 

 as long as the tube. 



# * * * Stems creeping and tufted, rising little above the ground, almost woody, 



persistent, as are the rigid and crowded glandular-pubescent leaves : flowers 



few in the depressed clusters, in early spring. 



P. subulata, GROUND or Moss PINK. Wild on rocky hills W. & S. of 

 New England, and common in gardens, forming broad mats ; leaves awl-shaped 

 or lanceolate, at most long ; corolla pink-purple, rose with a darker eye, or 

 varying to white, the wedgc-obovate lobes generally notched at the end. 



2. GILIA. (Named for one Gil, a Spanish botanist.) Species abound 

 from Texas and Kansas to California. Several are choice annuals of the 

 gardens : fl. summer. 

 G. coronopif61ia, or IPOMOPSIS, called CYPRESS GILIA from tho 



foliage resembling that of Cypress- Vine : wild S. and cult. ; has erect wand- 

 like stem 2 -3 high, thickly clothed with alternate crowded leaves pinnately 

 divided into thread-like leaflets, and very long and narrow strict leafy panicle 

 of showv flowers ; the corolla tabular-funnel form, light scarlet with whitish 

 specks on the lobes inside, 1^' long. (Lessons, p. 101, rig. 201.) @ 



G. aildrosacea, or LKPTOHIPHOX ANDIJOSACKI-S, of California; low and 

 slender, with opposite leaves palmately cleft into 5-7 narrow linear divisions, 

 a head-like cluster of flowers with very long and slender but small salver-shaped 

 corolla, lilac or whitish with a dark eye. Q) 



