440 LILY FAMILY. 



11. UVULARIA, BELLWORT. (Name from the Latin uvula or 

 palate ; from the hanging flowers.) Stems 6'-2° high, naked below, 

 leafy above ; flowers spring. All in rich woods. 



IT. grandifldra, Smith. The common one from W. N. Eng., W. and 

 S.; with pale, greenish-yellow flower 1^' long and smooth, or nearly so 

 insiile ; stamens exceeding the styles ; plant not glaucous. 



U. perfoliita, Linn. Smaller, with sharper tips to the anthers, and 

 parts of the barely yellowish perianth granular-roughened inside ; stamens 

 shorter than the styles ; plant glaucous throughout. N. Eng., W. and S. 

 (Lessons, Fig. 162.) 



12. OAKESIA. (Named for Williain Oakes, an early New England 



botanist.) 



O- seasilifblia, Watson. Common, especially N. ; 6'-12' high, with 

 pale, lance-oblong, sessile or somewhat clasping leaves, which taper at 

 each end and are glaucous beneath, and whitish, cream-colored flower |' 

 long ; pod stalked. 



6. pub^rula, Watson. Slightly puberulent ; leaves oval and rounded 

 at base, shining, the edges slightly rough ; pod not stalked. Va., S. 



13. TRILLIUM, THREE-LEAVED NIGHTSHADE, WAKE-ROBIN, 



BIRTHR(JOT. (Latin: triplum, triple, the parts throughout being in 



threes.) Low stem from a short tuber-like rootstock (Lessons, Figs. 



100, 226, 227), bearing a whorl of three green, conspicuously netted- 



veined, ovate or rhomboidal leaves, and a terminal flower, in spring. 



All grow in rich or moist woods, or the la.st in bogs. 



» Flower sessile; petals and sepals narrow, the former spatulate, dull 



purple. 



T. sessile, Linn. From Penn. to Minn., and S.; leaves .se.ssile, often 

 blotched, ovate, or rhomboidal ; petals sessile, rather erect, turning 

 greenish, long-persisting. 



T. recurvatum, Beck. Differs in having the ovate or obovate leaves 

 narrowed at base into a petiole, sepals reflexed, and pointed petals with 

 a narrowed base. O., W. and N.W. 



* * Flov:er raised on a peduncle ; petals withering away soon after flow- 

 ering. 



t- Peduncle erect or inclined; leaves rhombic-ovate, sessile by a wedge- 

 shaped base, abruptly taper-pointed; petals flat. 



T. erectum. Linn. Purple T. or Birthroot. Not so large as the 

 next ; the petals (varying from dull dark purple to white or pink) ovate, 

 widely spreading, little longer than the sepals, I'-U' long; stigmas stout 

 and spreading or recurved ; flowers ill-scented. N. Eng., W. and S. 



T. grandifldrum, Salisb. Great-flowerep White T. Flowering 

 rather late ; handsome, the obovate petals *2'-2i' long, much larger than 

 the sepals, gradually recurving from an erect base, pure white, in age 

 becoming rose-colored ; stigmas very slender and erect, or nearly so. 

 Common N. 



1- ^- Peduncle recurved from the first binder the short-petioled or almost 

 sessile leaves, not longer than the ovary and recurved white petals. 



T. c^rnuum. Linn. Noddim; T. Leaves rhombic-ovate ; petals oblong, 

 ovate, ariitc, A'-ij' long; styles separate. N. Eng., W. and S. 



T. 8tyl6suin, Nutt. Upper country N. Car. to Fla. ; leaves oblong, 

 tapering to both ends ; petals oblong, tinged with rose-color, much longer 

 and broader than the sepals ; styles united at base. 



