WEEDS AND USEFUL PLANTS. 



quently that insect rarely alights on the heads, but leaves them to the 

 more amply provided Humble Bee. I have met with a number of in- 

 stances in which the corolla was replaced by five distinct green leaflets 

 with other modifications of the flower, which finely illustrated Goethe's 

 theory of retrograde metamorphosis. The nearly related Zigzag Clover 

 (T. medium), which has entire and spotless leaflets and larger, deeper 

 purple, and mostly stalked heads, is naturalized in B. Massachusetts. 



** Florets pedicellate in umbel-like round heads ; corolla white or rose- 

 color, turning brownish in fading ; the short pedicels rejlexed when old. 



3. T. re'pens, L. Stems creeping, diffuse ; leaflets roundish-obovate 

 and emarginate, or almost obcordate, denticulate ; heads depressed-glo- 

 bose, on very long axillary peduncles ; legumes about 4-seeded. 



CREEPING TRIFOLIUM. White Clover. Dutch Clover. 



Fr. Triolet. Trefle blanche. Germ. Weisser-Klee. Span. Trebol bianco' 



Root perennial. Stem 4-12 or 15 inches long, smooth, procumbent, radicating, diffusely 

 branching from the base. Leaflets half an inch to an inch long ; common petiole 1 or 2-6 

 or 8 inches long. Heads of flowers on erect sulcate naked peduncles which are from 2-8 

 and twelve inches in length. Corolla white, withering and becoming a pale dirty brown. 

 Legume %- % of an inch long, torulose,2 or 3-5-seeded. Seeds irregularly ovoid, reddish- 

 brown. 



Pastures, woodlands, &c., throughout the United States. Fl. May -September. Fr. 

 July -October. 



Obs. The pedicellate florets are somewhat corymbose forming de- 

 pressed-globose or vertically flatted heads. The outer or lower florets 

 open first, and are successively reflexed, so that, during the process of 

 flowering, the heads appear horizontally divided between the withered 

 and the young or opening florets. This species is everywhere common 

 and in some years very abundant, though rarely cultivated. Its flowers 

 are a favorite resort of the Honey Bee ; and the plant is esteemed, as 

 affording an excellent pasture in the cooler portions of the country 

 though Mr. ELLIOTT speaks unfavorably of it, in the South. TOEREY 

 and GRAY consider the White Clover as indigenous, while others be- 

 lieve it to have been introduced from Europe. JONATHAN DICKINSON, 

 in 1719 (vide Watson's Annals), writing from Pennsylvania, says, "the 

 white clover already tinges the roads as a natural production." KALM, 

 in 1748, spoke of it as being abundant, here. T. reflex'um, L., 

 (Buffalo Clover), which has ascending pubescent stems, and very 

 large heads of red and white flowers, and the nearly related T. 

 stoloniferum, Muhl. (Running Buffalo Clover), with long runners, 

 are common at the West. But little is known of their agricultural 

 value. Two introduced, .annual species, are found in old fields and 

 along road-sides ; they have both yellow flowers, which are reflexed and 

 become chestnut-brown with age, viz. : T. agranum, L., (Yellow 

 or Hop Clover), which is mostly erect, with leaflets all from the same 



