108 PULSE FAMILY. 



28. WISTARIA. (Named for Prof. Wistar of Philadelphia.) Very orna 

 mcntiil woody twiners : fi. spring. 



W. frutescens, AMERICAN* W. Wild along streams W. and S., and 

 cult, for ornament; soft-downy when young, with 9-15 iance-ovate leaflets, 

 a dense raceme of showy blue-purple flowers, the calyx narrowish, wing-petals 

 each with one short and one verv long appendage at the base of the blade, and 

 a smooth ovary. 



W. Sindnsis, CHINESE W. Cult, from China or Japan, barely hardy in 

 New England, faster growing (sometimes 20 in a season) and higher climbing 

 than the other, with longer and more pendent racemes, wing-petals appendaged 

 on one side only, and a downy ovary. Often flowering twice in the season. 



29. APIOS, GROUND-NUT, WILD BEAN. (Name from Greek word 

 for /war, from the shape of the tubers.) 11 



A. tuber6sa. Wild in low grounds ; subterranean shoots bearing strings 

 of edible farinaceous tubers l'-2' long; stems slender, rather hairv ; leaflets 

 ovate-lanceolate; flowers brownish-purple, violet-scented, crowded in short and 

 thick racemes, in late summer and autumn. 



30. ERYTHRINA. (From Greek, word for red, which is the usual color 

 of the flowers.) 



herbacea. WHd in sandy soil near the coast S. ; sending up herba- 

 2 A' 1 ' ceous stems 2 -4 high from a thick woody root or base, some leafy, the leaf- 

 lets broadly triangular-ovate ; others nearly leafless, terminating in a long^erect 

 raceme of narrow scarlet flowers, of which thtTstraight and folded lanceolate 

 standard (2' long-) is the only conspicuous part ; seetfs scarlet : fl. spring. 



E. Crista-galli. Cult, in conservatories, from Brazil ; with a tree-liko 

 trunk, oval or oblong leaflets, and loose racemes of crimson large flowers, the 

 keel as well as the broad spreading standard conspicuous, the rudimentary wings 

 hidden in the calyx. 



31. PHASEOLUS, BEAN, KIDNEY BEAN. (An ancient name of 

 the Bean.) Fl. summer anil autumn. 



# Native species, small-flowered. 



P. perdnnis. From Connecticut and Illinois S. in woody places; slender 

 stems climbing high ; leaflets roundish-ovate, short-pointed ; racemes long and 

 loose, often panicled ; flowers small, purple ; pods drooping, scimitar-shaped, 

 few-seeded. ^ 



P. diversifblius. Sandy shores, &c. : spreading on the ground, -with 

 rough hairy stems, ovate entire or commonly 3-lobcd or angled leaflets, pedun- 

 cles twice the length of the leaves, hearing a small cluster of purplish or at length 

 greenish flowers, and linear nearly terete straight pods. (f) 



P. h^lvolus. Sandy soil, from New Jersey and Illinois S. : more slen- 

 der than the preceding, sometimes twining a little, with the ovate or oblong 

 leaflets entire or obscurely angled, peduncles several times surpassing the leaves, 

 flowers pale purple, and pods narrower. 2/ 



P. pauciflbrus. River-banks W. & S. : spreading over the ground, also 

 twining more or less, slender, pubescent, with small oblong-lanceolate or linear 

 leaflets, few and small purplish flowers on a short peduncle, the keel merely 

 incurved, and the straight flat pod only 1' long. <T) 



# # Exotic species, cult i ratal innhi/ij for food, till with ovate pointed leaflets. (7) 



P. Vlllgaris, COMMON KIDNT.V, STI;IN<;, and POLK BKAV. Twining, 



with racemes of white or sometimes dull purplish or variegated (lowers shorter 

 than the leaf, linear straight pods, and tumid seeds. Many varieties, among 

 which may l>e reckoned the next. 



P. lianus, DWAIM- or FII:I.I> Hi. AN ; low and bushy, not twining; seeds 

 very tumid. 



P. llinatus, LIMV P>I:AN, Sn.v\ P>.. Xe. Twining, with racemes of 

 small greenish-white (lowers shorter than the leaf, and broad and curved or 

 ficimitjir-bliiiped pods, containing few large and flat seeds. 



