134 PULSE FAMILY. 



34. iESCHYNOMENE, SENSITIVE JOINT VETCH. (Greek 

 ashamed, referring to tlie sensitive leaflets of some species.) Flowers 

 summer. 



SI. hispida, Willd. Stem rough-bristly, 20-4° high ; leaflets 37-51, 

 linear ; flowers yellow ; pod bristly, stalked ; joints 0-10. Low grounds, 

 Penn. S. ® 



35. CORONILLA. (Latin : a little crown.) Cult, from Eu. for orna- 

 ment, n 



C. vdria, Linn. Purple Coronilla. Hardy herb, spreading from 

 underground shoots, smooth, 2° high ; leaves sessile ; leaflets 15-21, obo- 

 vate-oval or oblong, small ; flowers pink-purple and white, all summer. 



C. glauca, Linn. Yellow Sweet-scented C. Greenhouse shrub ; 

 leaflets 5-9, glaucous, obovate, or obcordate, the terminal largest ; flowers 

 sweet-scented, yellow, the claws of the petals not lengthened. 



36. RHYNCHOSIA. (Greek: beaked; of no obvious application.) 

 Chiefly southern ; flowers summer. 2/ 



* Flowers in axillary racemes. 



•t- Calyx shorter than corolla, somewhat 2-lipped. 



R. minima, DC Along the coast from S. C, S. ; tomentose ; leaflets 

 small and broad ; racemes very slender, with 6-12 minute flowers. 



-,- +- Calyx nearly or quite as long as corolla, not lipped. 



R. toment6sa, Hook & Arn. Trailing and twining, pubescent ; leaflets 

 3, round or round-rhombic ; racemes axillary, few flowered, almost sessile. 

 Dry sandy soil, from Va. S. 



R. er^cta, DC Erect, more or less tomentose ; leaflets 3, oval to 

 oblong ; racemes short, on short peduncles. Del. S. 



R. renifdrmis, DC Dwarf, erect, pubescent ; leaflets solitary (rarely 

 3) round-reniform ; racemes sessile. Va. S. 



* * Flowers axillary, solitary or in pairs ; calyx shorter than corolla. 



R. galactoides, Endl. Bushy-branched, 2°-4° high, not twining, 

 liiinutely pubescent ; leaflets 3, small and rigid, oval, hardly any common 

 petiole ; standard reddish outside. Dry sand ridges, from Ala. S. 



37. PHASEOLUS, BEAN, KIDNEY BEAN. (The ancient name 



of the Kidney Bean.) Flowers summer and autumn. (Lessons, Figs. 



28—30 ^ 



■^ * Native species, small-flowered. 



P. per^nnis, Walt. Stems slender, climbing high ; leaflets roundish- 

 ovate, short-pointed ; racemes long end loose, often panicled ; flowers 

 small, purple ; pods drooping, scimitar-shaped, few-seeded. ;^ New 

 Eng. W. and S. 



* * Exotic species, cultivated mainly for food, all xoith ovate, pointed 



leaflets. ® 



P. vulgaris, Linn. Kidney Bean, String Bean, Pole Bean. Twin- 

 ing ; racemes of white or sometimes dull purplish or variegated flowers 

 shorter than the leaf ; pods linear, straight ; seeds tumid. Many varie- 

 ties, ranging from Bdsh Beans to climbers, and presenting many forms 

 and colors of seeds. Probably from tropical America. 



P. lunatus, Liim. Lima Bean, Sieva or Carolina B., etc. Twining; 

 racemes of small, greenish-white flowers shorter tiian the leaf; pods broad 



