OF THE CALYX AND COROLLA. 



45 



times very singular. See these figures. Fig. 114 is tlie 

 form of the bifid petal of a Cerastiiuii; Fig. 115, the flower 

 of Mitella, with five pinnatifid petals; Fig. 117, the flower 

 of Sweet Cicely, wnth five petals inflected at the point ; Fig. 

 116, fringed, long-clawed petal of Silene stellata ; Fig. 118, 

 many-cleft petal of Mignonette; Fig. 119, rounded, short- 

 clawed petal of Crowfoot, showing its honey scale, or nec- 

 tary, at base. 



122 

 Fiff. 120. Larkspur, its petals and sepals separated: s, «, s, s, s, sepals; a, tne 



upper sepal spurred ; c, the petals all united into one, and produced backwards into 



a spur which is sheathed in the spur of the calyx. 

 Fiff. 121. Touch-me-not. Fiff. 122. Its petals and sepals displayed: p^p, the two 



double petals ; 5, s, s, y, the four sepals, y being in the form of a sack, with a spur. 



73. A nectary is found also in the petals of Columbine 

 (Fig. 361), Larkspur (Fig. 120), Touch-me-not (Fig. 121), &c., 

 distorting them into grotesque shapes, called spurs. 



74. 'Before us now is the flower of Pink (Fig. 123). The 

 calyx (c) appears as a green tube, with five notches or teeth 

 at the top. It is evident that this is made up of five sepals 



73 What is a nectary? Wliat is a spur ? Examples. 



