220 WEEDS AND USEFUL PLANTS. 



sole of the foot, and ago, to act, or exercise. It is rather a worthless 

 weed, but is not much inclined to spread, or be troublesome, on farm 

 lands. The leaves are a convenient and popular dressing for blisters, 

 and other sores ; a fact which seems to have been known in the time of 

 SHAKSPEARE as we may learn from his Romeo and Juliet, Act I, Sc. 2. 



" Rom. Your Plantain leaf is excellent for that. 

 " Ben. For what, I pray thee ? 

 " Ram. F<Jr your broken sMn." 



** Pod 2-sceded. 



2. P. lanceola'ta, L. Leaves lanceolate, acute at each end ; scape 

 sulcate-angled, long and slender ; spike ovoid-cylindric, short ; calyx 

 deeply 3-parted ; capsule 2-seeded. 



LANCEOLATE PLANTAGO. Eibgrass. English Plantain. Buckhorn Plan- 

 tain. 



Root perennial. Leaves -8 or 10 inches long, hairy, narrowed gradually at base to a 

 petiole 2-5 or 6 inches in length. Scapes several, 1-2 feet high, somewhat pilose with 

 appressed hairs. Spike 1 - 2 inches long, at first ovoid-oblong, finally nearly cylindric, 

 dense-flowered. Bracteoles ovate, acuminate, scarious on the margins and at apex the 

 slender goint at length reflexed. Calyx deeply 3-parted (or rather of 3 sepals), the 

 outer or lower segment or sepal oval, truncate, emarginate, with 2 green keel-like lines 

 the lateral segments or sepals rather longer, boat-shaped, acute,. keel green, fringed with 

 hairs near the apex. Corolla dirty white. Stamens several times longer than the corolla ; 

 angers greenish-white. Seeds oblong, convex on one side concave on the other, shining, 

 brown or amber-colored. 



Pastures and upland meadows : introduced. Native of Europe. Fl. May - August. 

 Fr. July -September. 



Obs. This species, also, is extensively naturalized, and is particularly 

 abundant in upland meadows, or clover grounds. The seeds being nearly 

 the same size and weight as those of the red clover, they cannot readily 

 be separated and thus the two plants are disseminated together, in the 

 culture of clover. Nearly all kinds of stock eat this Plaintain freely, and 

 it has even been cultivated expressly for a Sheep-pasture ; but it is gene- 

 ' rally much disliked, in Pennsylvania. I do not, however, perceive any 

 mode of getting rid of it, or even of arresting its progress, unless it can 

 be choked down by heavy crops of Clover and the valuable Grasses. 



ORDER XLVI. BIGNONIA'CE^. (BIGNONIA FAMILY.) 



Woody or sometimes herbaceous plants, with mostly opposite, simple or compound leaves, 

 and didynamous or diandrous flowers. Calyx 2-lipped or 5-cleft ; corolla tubular or bell- 

 shaped, 5-lobed, somewhat irregular and 2-lipped, deciduous ; ovary free, 2-celled by the 

 projection of the placenta ; capsule coriaceous or woody, 2-valved, many -seeded ; seeds 

 large, flat, often winged, destitute of albumen. 



SUB-ORDER 1. BIGNOXEJE. 



Woody plants with 1 - 2-celled and 2-valved gads. Seeds flat and winged. 



1. TE'OOMA, Juss. TRUMPET- FLOWER. 



[Name abridged from the Mexican.] 



Calyx bell shaped, 5-toothed. Corolla funnel-form 5-lobed, a little irre- 



