RANUNCULACEyE. (CROWFOOT FAJWLY.) 45 



name is not appropriate, as it is to the European Globe flower of the gardens, 

 nor is the blossom showy, being pale greenish-yellow, or nearly white. 



11. COPTIS, Salisb. Goldthread. 



Sepals 5-7, petal-like, deciduous. Tetals 5-7, snir.ll, elnl.-.sli;ipcd, hollow 

 at the apex. Stamens 15-25. IMstils ;j-7, on skiider .-stalks. I'ods diver- 

 gent, membranaceous, j)ointed with the style, 4 - 8-scedcd. — Low smooth per- 

 ennials, with ternately dividerl root-leaves, and small white flowers on scapes. 

 (Name from kotttw, to cut, alluding to the divided leaves.) 



1. C. trif61ia, Salisb. (TiiKEE-LEAVED Goldthread.) Leaflets 3, 

 obovate-wedge-form, sharjjly toothed, obscurely 3-lobc(l ; scape 1 -flowered. — 

 Bogs, abundant northward ; extending south to Maryland along the moun- 

 tains. May. — Koot of long, bright yellow, bitter fibres. Leaves evergreen, 

 shining. Scape naked, slender, .3' -5' high. (Eu.) 



12. HELLEBORUS, L. Hellebore. 



Sepals 5, petal-like or greenish, persistent. Petals 8-10, ver\^ small, tubu- 

 lar, 2-lippcd. Pistils 3- 10, sessile, forming coriaceous many-seeded pods. — 

 Perennial herbs of the Old AVorld, with ample palmate or pcdate leaves, and 

 large, solitary, nodding, early vernal flowers. (Name from eXelv, to injure, and 

 ^opd, food, from their well-known poisonous properties.) 



1. H. viRiDis, L. (Green Hellebore.) Root-leaves glabrous, pedatc, 

 calyx spreading, greenish. — Near Brooklyn and Jamaica, Long Island, and 

 Bucks Co., Penn., Martindale. (Adv. from Eu.) 



1.3. AQUILEGIA, Tourn. Columbine. 



Sepals 5, regular, colored like the petals. Petals 5, all alike, with a short 

 spreading lip, produced backwards into large hollow spurs, much longer than 

 the calyx. Pistils 5, with slender styles. Pods erect, many-seeded. — Peren- 

 nials, with 2 - 3-ternately compound leaves, the leaflets lobed. Flowers large 

 and showy, terminating the branches. (Name from aquila, an eagle, from some 

 fancied resemblance of the spurs to talons.) 



1. A. Canadensis, L. (Wild Columbine.) Spurs nearly straight; 

 stamens and styles longer than the ovate sepals. — Rocks, common. April - 

 June. — Flowers 2' long, scarlet, yellow inside (or rarely all over), nodding, so 

 that tiic spurs turn upward, but the stalk becomes upright in fruit. — More 

 graceful than the 



A. A'ulg.Xris, L., the common Garden Columbine, of Europe, with 

 hooked spurs, wliich is beginning to escape from cultivation in some places. 



14. DELPHINIUM, Tourn. Larkspur. 



Sepals 5, irregular, ])Ctal-like ; the upper one prolonged into a spur at the 

 ba.se. Petals 4, irregular, the upper pair continued backwards into long spurs 

 which are enclosed in the spur of the calyx, the lower pair with short claws : 



