50 OBJECT LESSONS IN BOTANY. 



or corolla they are said to be perigynoiis (a Greek word, 

 meaning " around the pistil"). Otherwise, when free, they 

 are said to be hypSgynous, meaning '' under the pistil." 



84:. ]N"ow study attentively these figures, or rather, the 

 ^lowers themselves. The figures are sections, i. e., show the 

 flowers as if split. Fig. 132 (the Yiolet) shows the stamens 

 hypogynous and the organs all free. Fig. 133 (the Pear) 

 shows the stamens perigynous, adhering to the calyx. Fig. 

 131 (the Saxifrage) shows the stamens perigynous and the 

 calyx half adherent. Do not fail to examine many flowers 

 until these troublesome terms become familiar, for these 

 distinctions are very important. 



LESSON XIV. 



FORMS OF PERIANTH. 



85. While all flowers agree in certain general characterig- 

 tics, so that you are never at a loss to recognize any one of 

 them as a flower, yet in form and fashion they appear in 

 inflnite variety, each form endowed with its own peculiar 

 grace. It is impossible to describe or name every form, but 

 we will endeavor to reduce them to a few classes of forms. 



86. ITotice first that all forms are either polypetalous or 

 gamopetalous, as already described (§ 75). Again, they are 

 either regular or irregular. Compare the flower of Flax 



83. When are tlie stamens said to be perigynous ? WHien hypogynous ? 



84. How are they in Saxifrage ? in Pear ? in the Rose ? the Violet ? 



86. "Wliat is the first division of the corolla forms ? What is the second 

 division ? When is a flower said to he regular ? irregular ? 



