GARDEN BOTANY. 



with lance-oblong and smooth entire leaves, and small whiu flowers ; cult to 

 houses for the bright red berries, resembling cherries, ornamental in wintev , 



2. Lycopersicum esculentum, TOMATO. A hairy, rank-scented annual ; 

 "oaves interruptedly pinnate, their larger leaflets incised" or pinuatifid; flowers 

 yellowish ; berry red, by cultivation large, esculent. 



3. Capsicum, annuum, CAYENNE or RED PEPPER. A smooth annual, 

 with ovate entire leaves, small white flowers with a truncate calyx, and a dry 

 berrv (for which the plant is cultivated) either globose or oblong, sometimes 

 very large, red or green, most pungent and acrid. 



4. PhysallS Alkekengi, called STRAWBERRY TOMATO, is a cultivated 

 perennial GROUND CHERRY : stem not much branched; leaves deltoid-ovate, 

 tapering into a long petiole ; corolla yellowish ; fruiting calyx turning red. 



6. Datura. Besides the common STRAMONIUM, Man. p. 341, which has 

 erect fruit, the following more showy ones are cult, for ornament. 



D. Metel. Clammy -pubescent ; corolla white, limb 10-toothed, 4' broad, 

 fruit nodding. 



D. metGloid.es. Pale, almost glabrous ; corolla white or purplish, limb 

 5-toothed, 0' or 6' broad ; fruit nodding. Itecently introduced from New 

 Mexico ; very handsome. 



D. arborea is a greenhouse shrub or tree, with hanging white flowers 6' 

 or 7' long. 



6. A'tropa Belladonna, DEADLY NIGHTSHADE, of Europe, a smoothish 

 perennial, with ovate entire leaves, one-flowered nodding peduncles ; berry 

 poisonous. 



7. Petunia nyctaginiflora, the original PETUNIA of the gardens, with 

 clammy leaves and flowers ; the tuhc of the white corolla narrow and 3 or 4 

 times longer than the calyx. This is much crossed with 



P. violacea, now more common, with weaker stems and a violet or pur- 

 ple corolla, its shorter and broader ventricose tube hardly twice the length of 

 the calyx. 



8. Wierembergia gracilis. A low, slender, pubescent annual, with nar- 

 row spatulatc-linear leaves, and white corollas streaked with purple, violet iu 

 the throat, the almost thread-shape d tube 1' long. 



N. filicaulis is similar, but diffuse and spreading, glabrous; tube of 

 corolla shorter, limb broader, l' wide, lilac or white, with violet streaks and 

 yellow in the throat. 



9. Nicotiana Tabacum, COMMON TOBACCO. Clammy-pubescent, 4 to 

 6 high ; leaves lance-ovate, the lower 1 or '2 long, the upper lanceolate, 

 pointed, sessile, decurrent; flowers paniculate; corolla funnel form, 2' long, 

 greenish, with the limb rose-colored. Cultivated in fields as far north as lat. 

 42 or 43. 



10. Lycium VTllgare, MATRIMONY-VINE. A smooth shrub with long 

 and lirhc branches, trained against walls and buildings; leaves small, ohbin- 

 ceolate or spatulate; peduncles slender; corolla greenish and purple, bearded 

 in the throat. 



11. Oestrum nocturnum. A shrub of house-culture, with ovate-oblong 

 smooth leaves, and axillary clusters of yellowish green slender flowers, very 

 sweet-scented at night. 



