Hedyotis. RUBIACE.E. 317 



oblong, attenuated below into a petiole ; cymules 2 - 3-flowered, somewhat paniculate ; the 

 pedicels at first short, finally nearly equal, and longer than the fruit ; lobes of the calyx 

 subulate-lanceolate, mostly longer than the tube, but shorter ihan or scarcely exceeding the 

 nearly globose capsule ; corolla funnel-form. — Hook.fl. Bor.-Am. 1. j^- 286 (cxcl. syn. Michx.); 

 Torr. cj- Gr.fl. N. Am. 2. p. 40. Iloustonia longifolia, Gart.fr. 1. p. 226. t. 49./. 8 (fruit); 

 Willd. sp. 1. p. 583 ; Ell. sk. I. p. 192 ; Torr. Jl. \.p. 173 ; Bigel. jl. Bost. p. 53 ; Hook, 

 bat. mag. t. 3099; //. //. Eaton in Transylv . jour . med. March, 1832; Beck, hot. p. 243. 

 H. angustifolia, Pursh, jl. 1. p. 106, not of Michx. 



Stems 5 — 8 inches high, slender, usually several from one root, 4-sided, the angles promi- 

 nent. Leaves about three-fourths of an inch long, and 1-2 lines wide ; the pairs somewhat 

 approximated. Stipules short and broad, but rather acute, scarious. Flowers about 3 lines 

 long. Corolla about three times as long as the lobes of the calyx, pale purple, or sometimes 

 nearly white. Capsule about half free from the calyx; the cells about 10-seeded. 



Dry hill-sides, fields, etc. Catskill and Troy ; also abundant on Hempstead Plains, about 

 Oyster Bay, &c. Long Island. Fl. June - August. 



^ 2. Flowers all similar : corolla rotate, shorter than the calyx-teeth : capsule wholly adherent to the 

 calyx ; the cells many- (60 or more) seeded : herb annual. 



4. Hedyotis glomerata, EH. ~ Cluster-Jlowered Bluets. 



Stem erect or somewhat diffuse, hairy-pubescent, branching; leaves oblong or elliptical- 

 lanceolate, narrowed at the base or slightly pelioled, nearly smooth ; flowers mostly glomerate 

 in the axils ; tube of the calyx hairy, shorter than the lobes. — Ell. sk. 1. p. 187 ; Torr.fl. 1. 

 p. 171 ; DC. prodr. 4. p. 421 ; Beck, hot. p. 160; Torr. <J- Gr. Jl. N. Am. 2. p. 42. H. 

 auricularia, Walt.Jl. Car. p. 85, not of Linn. H. glomerata and Virginica, Spreng. syst. 1. 

 p. 412. Oldenlandia uniflora, Linn. sp. 1. p. 119. O. glomerata, Michx. Jl. l.p. 83; Pursh, 

 Jl. l.p. 102. 



Whole plant of a dull green color. Stem 2-4 inches high, at first simple and erect, at 

 length branching from the base, and assurgent. Leaves about half an inch long ; upper ones 

 nearly sessile and crowded. Stipules adnate to the short petioles, cleft into two subulate 

 divisions. Flowers sometimes solitary, or 2 - 3 together, but usually clustered ; when few 

 or terminal, they are mostly pedicellate. Calyx with ovate foliaceous segments. Corolla 

 white ; tube very short : segments ovate, generally spinulous, one-third the length of the 

 calyx. Stamens scarcely exserted : anthers somewhat globose. Style almost none : stigmas 

 oblong, obtuse. Capsule large for the size of the flower, globose-didymous, crowned with 

 the persistent teeth of the calyx. 



Moist and usually shady places. In a wet woods, Bloomingdale, on the Island of New- 

 York ; and on the borders of a swamp about a mile from Brooklyn, Long Island. Fl. August. 



