126 CALYCANTHACK^E. (CAROLINA-ALLSPICE FAMILY.; 



Var. obloilgifolia ; a smaller tree or shrub ; leaves oblong, beneath, like 

 the branchlets, white-downy when young ; racemes and petals shorter. 



Var. rotundifolia ; with broader leaves and smaller petals than in the 

 first variety ; racemes 6 - 10-flowered. 



Var. aluifol i;i ; shrub, with the roundish leaves blunt or notched at both 

 ends, serrate towards the summit ; racemes dense and many-flowered. Chiefly 

 in the Western States, and westward. 



Var. oligoca i'|Kl ; shrub, with thin and smooth narrowly oblong leaves, 

 2 - 4-flowered racemes, the broader petals scarcely thrice the length of the calyx. 

 Cold and deep mountain swamps, northward. 



Cro6NiA VULOARIS, the QUINCE, and C. JAp6xiCA, the ornamental JAPAN 

 QUINCE, differ from the order generally in their many-seeded carpels. 



ORDER 40. CALYCANTHACE^E. (CAROLINA-ALLSPICE 



FAMILY.) 



Shrubs unth opposite entire leaves, no stipules, the sepals and petals similar 

 and indefinite, the anthers adnate and extrorse, and the cotyledons convolute : 

 otherwise like Rosacese. Chiefly represented by the genus 



1. CAL.YCANTHUS, L. CAROLINA ALLSPICE. SWEET 

 SCENTED SHRUB. 



Calyx of many sepals, united below into a fleshy inversely conical cup (wild 

 some leaf-like bractlets growing from it) ; the lobes lanceolate, mostly colored 

 like the petals ; which are similar, in many rows, thickish, inserted on the top 

 of the closed calyx-tube. Stamens numerous, inserted just within the petals, 

 short; some of the inner ones sterile (destitute of anthers;). Pistils several or 

 many, enclosed in the calyx-tube, inserted on its base and inner face, resembling 

 those of the Rose. Fruit like a rose-hip, but dry when ripe, and larger, en- 

 closing the large achenia. Shrubs, with opposite entire leaves, and large lurid- 

 purple flowers terminating the leafy branches. Bark and foliage aromatic ; the 

 crushed flowers exhaling more or less the fragrance of strawberries. (Name 

 composed of KOL\V, a cup or calyx, and avdos, flower, from the closed cup which 

 contains the pistils.) 



1. C. floritlllS, L. Leaves oval, soft-downy underneath. Virginia? and 

 southward, on hill-sides in rich soil. Common in gardens. April -Aug. 



2. C. IsevigiitllS, Willd. Leaves oblong, thin, either blunt or taper- 

 pointed, bright green and glabrous or nearly so on both sides, or rather pale be- 

 neath; flowers smaller. Mountains of Franklin Co., Pcnn. (Prof. Porter), 

 and southward along the Alleghanies. May -Aug. 



3. C. glaucilS, Willd. Leaves oblong-ovate or ovatc-lanceolute ; conspic- 

 uously taper-pointed, glaucous-white beneath, roughish above, glabrous, larger than 

 in the others (4' -7' long) ; the flowers also larger. Virginia? near the moun- 

 tains and southward. May - Aug. 



