96 COMMON CANADIAN WILD PLANTS. 



1. M WE A, Gronov. TWIN-FLOWER. 



L. borealis, Gronov. Cool mossy woods and swamps. 

 2. SYMPHORICAR'PITS, Dill. SNOWBEKKY. 



1. S. Paeemo'sus, Michx. (SNOWBERRY.) Corolla bearded 

 inside. Flowers in. a rather loose spike. Var. paueiflo'rus, 

 Robbing, is low, diffusely branched, and spreading, with two 

 or three flowers only, in the axils of the uppermost leaves. 

 Dry rocky hill-sides. 



2. S. oeeidentalis, Hook. (WOLFBERRY.) Flowers in 

 denser spikes than the last, and with larger and more funnel- 

 form corolla and longer stamens. Corolla much bearded 



3. I.OMI i: u.i, L. HONEYSUCKLE. WOODBINE. 



1. L. parviflo'ra, Lam. (L. glauca,' Hill, in Macoun's 

 Catalogue.) (SMALL HONEYSUCKLE.) Twining shrub, 2-4 feet 

 high, with smooth leaves which are glaucous beneath, the 

 upper ones connate-perfoliate ; corolla yellowish-purple. 

 Rocky banks. 



2. L. hipsu'ta, Eaton. (HAIRY HONEYSUCKLE.) Stem 

 tunning high. Leaves not glaucous, very large, downy-hairy, 

 the upper ones connate-perfoliate. Flowers in close whorls ; 

 corolla greenish -yellow, clammy-pubescent. Deep thickets. 



3. L. Sullivan'tii, Gray. Tunning. At length glaucous- 

 whitened. Leaves oval and-ovate-oblong, mostly connate on 

 the flowering stems. Corolla pale yellow. N.W. 



4. L. Cilia'ta, Muhl. (FLY-HONEYSUCKLE.) A branch- 

 ing, straggling shrub, with thin oblong-ovate ciliate leaves. 

 Peduncles axillary, filiform, shorter than the leaves, each 

 2 -flowered at the top. Corolla greenish -yellow, almost 

 spurred at the base. The two berries separate. Damp 

 woods. 



5. L. esepu'lea, L. (MOUNTAIN F.) Smaller (1-2 feet 

 high), and with upright branches. Leaves oval. Ovaries 

 united into one berry, Eastward and northward. 



