Gentiana. GENTIANACEiE. 109 



6. Gentiana crinita, Frosl. Large Fringed Gentian. 



Stem branching, leafy ; the branches elongated, naked above, one-flowered ; leaves oblong- 

 lanceolate or lanceolate, rounded or cordate at the base , upper ones acute , the radical and 

 lower obovate, obtuse ; flowers tetramerous ; lobes of the corolla without intermediate plicae, 

 cuneate-obovate, conspicuously ciliate, particularly on the sides; stigmas roundish - ovate ; 

 seeds scaly-hispid. — Fral. Gent. p. 112 ; Bot. mag. t. 2031 ; Pursh, fl. 1. p. 185 ; Ell. 

 sk. 1. p. 341 ; Bigel. fl. Bost. p. 105 ; Bart. fl. N. Am. t. 80 ; Torr. fl. 1. p. 288 ; Beck, 

 bot. p. 240 ; Darlingt. fl. Cest. p. 166 ; Griseh. in Hook. fl. Bor.-Am. 2. p. 65, and Gent, 

 p. 256. G. fimbriata, Bot. rep. t. 509. 



Biennial or annual. Stem 1-2 feet high, erect, terete below, somewhat 4-angled above, 

 branching at the summit. Radical leaves clustered, less than an inch long, obovate, and 

 narrowed at the base : upper leaves about two inches long and 6 — 8 lines wide, obscurely 

 nerved. Peduncles 2-5 inches long, quadrangular. Calyx smooth, acutely 4-angled ; the 

 angles winged : inner segments lanceolate ; outer ones ovate, with a long tapering point ; the 

 midrib slightly rough. Corolla bright blue, about two inches long, beautifully fringed at the 

 top and upper part of the sides. Anthers linear-oblong. Capsule tapering to a short stipe at 

 the base. Seeds hispid with brown scales. 



Woods, low grounds, etc. ; frequent. September - October. A very beautiful plant, but 

 a biennial or annual, and not easily raised from seed. It has, however, been cultivated in 

 England. 



2. ERASER A. Walt. fl. Car. p. 87 ; Endl. gen. 3534 ; Griseb. Gent. p. 328. frasera. 



[ In honor of John Fraser, an indefatigable collector of North American plants.] 



Flowers tetramerous. Corolla rotate, deciduous, deeply 4-parted, with one or two fringed 

 glands on each lobe. Styles united : stigmas 2. Capsule 1-celled, compressed. Seeds 

 few, large, winged, attached to the sutures of the valves. — Leaves opposite and whorled. 

 Flowers in a terminal leafy panicle formed of numerous pedunculate cymules, and axillary 

 in the upper part of the stem. 



1. Frasera Carolinensis, Walt. American Cohimbo. 



Stem smooth ; leaves opposite and whorled ; panicle elongated ; calyx nearly as long as 

 the corolla ; glands oval- orbicular, one on each lobe of the corolla. — Walt. fl. Car. p. 87 

 Pers. syn. 1. p. 137 ; Torr. fl. 1. p. 187 ; Griseh. in Hook. fl. Bar-Am. 2. p. 66, and 

 Gent. p. 329. F. Walteri, Michx. fl. I. p. 67 ; Pursh, fl. 1. p. lOl ; Ell. sk. 1. p. 205 

 Bart. veg. mat. med. t. 35 ; Beck, bot. p. 241. F. verticillata, Muhl. cat. p. 17. 



Root biennial. Stem 3-5 feet high, erect, obtusely 4-angled. Leaves oblong-lanceolate 



