POLYGONACEiE. (BUCK^V^EAT FAMILY.) 421 



oblong-lancftolale, rather obtuse, thickish, pale-green, the lowest often heart- 

 shaped at the base. — Wet swamps : common: 



■>-*■ •*-* Naturalized weeds : lower leaves mostly heart-sluiptd at the base. 



7. E.. cuispus, L. (CuuLED Dock.) Smooth; leaves luith strongly wavy- 

 curled iiiari/ins, lanceolate, acute, the lower truncate or scarcely heart-shaped at 

 the base ; whorls crowded in /iroloiiijed ivand-like racemes, lexijiess above ; valves 

 rontid-heart-ahaptd, obscurely denticulate or entire, mostly all of them grain-bearing. 

 — A very comiuon weed in cultivated and waste grounds. Stem 3° -4° high, 

 from a deep spindle-shaped yellow root. There is a hybrid of this with the 

 next. (Nat. from Eu.) 



8. R. ODTUSiFOLius, L. (Bitter Dock.) Stem roughish ; lowfst haves 

 ovate-heart-shaped, obtuse, rather downy on the veins underneath, somewhat wavy- 

 margined, the upper oblong-lanceolate, acute; whorls loose and distant ; valves ovate- 

 holberd-shipcd, and ivith some sharp awl-shaped teeth at the base, strongly reticulated, 

 one of them principally grain-bearing. — : Fields, &c. (Nat. from Eu.) 



9. E.. coxglomerXtus, Murray. (Smaller Green Dock.) Leaves oh- 

 'long, pointed, sliglitly wavy-margined, the lower heart-shaped at the base ; whorls 



distant, leafy ; pedicels very short; valves linear-oblong, raihtr broinhr next the base; 

 obtuse, entire, each bearing a single reddish grain. (R. acutus, jSmith.) — Moist 

 places; sparingly introduced. (Nat. from Eu.) 



10. R. SASGufNEUs, L. (Bloody-veined Dock.) Leaves lanceolate, wavy- 

 margined, the lowest heart-shaped at the base ; whorls distant, in long and slender 

 leajiess interrupted spikes ; pedicels very short ; valves narrowly oblong, obtuse, entire, 

 one at least grain-bearing ; veins of the leaf red, or, in var. viridis, green. — 

 Waste and cultivated grounds. (Nat. from Eu.) 



* * Annuals, low: valves bearing long awns or bristles. 



11. R. maritimus, L. (Golden Dock.) Minutely pubescent, diffusely 

 branched ; leaves lance-linear, wavy-margined, the lower auricled or heart-shaped 

 at base ; A\horls excessively crowded in leafy and compact or interrupted spikes ; 

 valves rhombic-oblong, lance-pointed, each bearing 2 -.3 long awn-like bristles 

 on each side, and a large grain on the back. (Also R. persicarioules, L.) — Sea- 

 shore, Virginia to Massachusetts : also Illinois and westward. — Plant 6' -12' 

 high ; remarkable for the crowded and almost orange-colored fruiting calyx, 

 the bristles usually longer than the width of the valves. (Eu.) 



§ 2. Sorrel. Flowers diacious, small, in a terminal naked panicle : herbage sour : 

 some kaves halherd-sha/ied : smooth perennials, flowering in spring. 



12. R. Engelmanni, Ledeb. Stem simple, l°-2° high; leaves nearly 

 as in the next ; pedicels jointed at or below the middle ; valves of the fruiting calyx 

 round-heart-shaped, thin, finely reticulated, naked, many times larger than the 

 acheninm. (R. hustnXiitns, Baldwin.) — S. W. Illinois, thence southward and 

 westward. 



13. R. AcETOSELLA, L. (FiELD or SiiEEP SoRREL.) Low (C - 1 2' high) ; 

 leaves lancc-halberd-form, at least those of the root, the narrow lobes entire ; 

 pedicels jointed with the flower ; valves scarcely enlarging in fruit, oittte, naked. — 

 An abundant weed in waste places and all sterile and worn fields. — The fertile 

 panicles usually turu reddish in summer. . (^at. from Eu.) 



