GARDEN BOTANY. 



ORDER BOE,RAGIK"ACE-ffi3. BOSKAGE FAMILY. 

 Manual, p. 319. A number of species are cultivated for ornament. 



OTary deeply 4-lobed (the style rising from the centre between the 



lobes), each in fruit forming a distinct nutlet. 



Corolla rather irregular, blue : the stamens exserted. . Man. p. 319. ECHIUM. 

 Corolla regular, and 



Trumpet-shaped, no scales in the throat : smooth plants. Man. p. 323. MERTENSIA. 

 Tubular, enlarged above, with long scales closing the throat: 



rough and coarse plants. Man. p. 320. SYMPIIYTUM. 



Rotate, with scales closing the throat : rough-bristly plants. . 1. BORRAGO. 

 Short salver-form or very short funnel-form, throat partly closed 



by short scales : delicate plants. 

 Nutlets or lobes of the ovary attached by their base only, 



erect, smooth and even 2. MYOSOTIS. 



Nutlets or lobes of the ovary fixed to the base of the style, 



cnpped when full grown 3. OMPHALODES. 



Ovary not lobed, the style or stigma borne on its summit. . . 4. HELIOTROPIUM. 



1. BorragO officinalis, BORRAGE. A rough, hairy annual or biennial 

 of country gardens, with oblong or lanceolate leaves, and rather large flowers ; 

 corolla exactly rotate, 5-parted, blue, with dark projecting anthers. 



2. Myosotis, FORGET-ME-NOT. The cultivated sorts are varieties of No. 1, 

 in Manual, p. 323, and of 



M. sylvatica, with a rather stout perennial root, bright-blue corolla, 

 and 5-parted calyx, erect when in fruit, its hairs spreading and minutely hooked. 



3. Omphalodes verna, BLUE NAVELWOHT. Flowers like those of a 

 Forget-me-not, but larger, produced in early spring, bright azure-blue ; leaves 

 ovate, the radical ones cordate and long-petioled ; plant spreading by runners 

 and creeping rootstocks. 



4. Heliotropium Peruyianum, SWEET PERUVIAN HELIOTROPE. The 

 common shrubby species of house cultivation, with vanilla-scented pale blue- 

 purple flowers, and ovate-lanceolate rugose-veiny leaves. 



H. COrymbosum, cultivated with the other, has rougher leaves and 

 deeper-colored and larger flowers, of much less fragrance. 



ORDER HYDROPHYLLACE.SJ. WATERLEAF FAMILY. 



The synopsis of the genera, Man. p. 326. will serve, adding the following spe- 

 cies, cultivated for ornament : also Whitlavia, nearly all Californian annuals. 



1. Nemo'phila insignis. Flowers bright blue, 1 in diameter, very long- 

 peduncled ; leaves deeply pinnatifid. 



N. atomaria. Flowers smaller, white, finely spotted with chocolate. 

 !N. maculata. Flowers white, with a large violet blotch on each lobe. 



2. Phacelia COngesta, from Texas ; pubescent, with irregular pinnate 

 leaves, the leaflets ovate or oblong, incised ; flowers in a compact cyme, small, 

 blue; stamens scarcely exserted. 



P. tanacetifolia, from California, is taller, bristly-hairy ; the leaflets 

 linear-oblong and pinnatirtd ; flowers larger, crowded ; stamens long-exserted. 



P. (EutOCa) viscida, from California ; clammy-pubescent, leaves ovate, 

 serrate ; flowers large, deep blue, in a loose raceme ; pod many-seeded. 



