382 I XXX. EBBNACEJE. DIOSPYROS. 



8f high. Leaves narrowed at base into a short petiole, uncinately serrate, with 

 prominent, pubescent veins beneath. Flowers white, dioecious," small, in im- 

 perfect umbels or heads, sometimes monoecious. Berries scarlet, in little 

 bunches (apparently verticillate), roundish, (j-celled and 6-seeded, permanent. Jl. 



2. P. AMBIGUUS. Michx. Dubioiis Winter Berry. 



Lvs. deciduous, oval, entire, aci/minate at both ends ; parts ofthejls. in 4s, 

 the sterile ones crowded, the iertile solitary. A shrub or small tree, 8 151' 

 high, in wet grounds, Mid. States. Bark whitish, smooth. Leaves elliptic-oval, 

 mucronate-pointed, petiolate, subpubescent beneath, 1 2' long and hall' as wide. 

 Flowers polygamous, 4 5-clelt, the fertile ones on long peduncles. June. 



3. P. LJEVIGATTJS. Pursh. 



Lvs. deciduous, lanceolate, appressed-serrulate, glabrous on both sides 

 shining above, minutely pubescent on the veins beneath ; Jls. hexamerous, O 

 axillary, subsessile, ^ scattered,pedicellate. In swamps and marshes, Northern 

 and Western States ! S. to N. J. Shrub G 91 high, with grayish and warty 

 branches. Leaves 2 3' by 8 12", acute at each end; petioles (J 10" long. 

 Flowers mostly solitary, the sterile on pedicels near 1' long, the fertile pedicels 

 scarcely J as long. Berries large, red. June. 



4. P. LANCEOLATUS. Pursh. 



Lvs. lanceolate, acute at each end, finely and remotely serrulate, glabrous 

 both sides; tf flowers aggregated, triandrous, 9 generally in pairs, peduncu- 

 late, 6 numerous ; berries small, scarlet. Barrens and marshes, Western (Rid- 

 dell) and Southern States ! Shrub 6 8i' high. 1 am wholly unacquainted with 



long, of the iertile \' long. June. 



5. P. GLABER. Ink Berry. Evergreen Prinos. 



Lvs. evergreen, coriaceous, cuneate-lanceolate, glabrous, shining, serrate 

 at the end. A beautiful shrub 3 4f high, found in swamps, Mass. ! R.I.I to 

 N. Y. and Car. Leaves very smooth, leathery, shining, 1 1^' by 5 7", broad- 

 est above the middle. Pedicels subsolitary, 1 3-flowered. Flowers white, 

 mostly 6-parted. Berries roundish, black and shining. June, July. 



ORDER LXXX. EBENACEJE. EBONADS. '^ ; . . 



Trees or shrubs without milky juice and with a heavy wood. 



Lvs. alternate, exstipulate, coriaceous, entire. Inflorescence axillary. 



Fls. by abortion diojclosu, seldom perfect. Cal. free, 3 6-cleft, divisions nearly equal, persistent. 



Cor. regular, 3 6-cleft, often pubescent, imbricate in aestivation. 



Rta. twice or four times as many as the lobes of the corolla. 



Ova. with 3 or more cells. Style with as many divisions. 



FT. a fleshy, oval or globose berry. 



Genera 9, species 160, mostly natives of the Indies and the tropics, one only being found as far north as 

 New York. 



Properties. Diospyrus is remarkable for the hardness and dark color of the wood. Ebony is the wood 

 of D. Ebenus, Ebenaster, and other species, natives of Africa. The fruit of the species below is eatable 

 when fully ripe, although extremely bitter and astringent before maturity. The bark is eminently febri- 

 fugal and astringent. v_ 



DIOSPYROS. 



Gr. Atoj Trvpo?, the fruit of Jove ; the fruit, although excellent, hardly merits the name. 



Fls. c?9. Cal. 4 Globed; cor. tubular or campanulate, 4 6- 

 cleft, convolute in aestivation. cT sta. 8 50, 'mostly 16 ; fil. shorier 

 than the anthers ; ova. abortive ; sty. 0. 9 sta. mostly 8, without 

 anthers; sty. 2 4-cleft; berry ovoid or globose, 4 12, mostly 8- 

 celled, cells 1 -seeded* A large genus of shrubs or trees, mostly tropical. 



D. VIRGINIANA. Persimmon ^Tree. \ 



Dos. elliptic, abruptly acuminate, entire, smooth, petiole,, veins and mar- 

 gin puberulent ; roc. axillary, 3 l-flowered ; pedicels shorter than the flowers ; 

 ccl. 4-parted ; sta. 8. In woods, lat. 42 to La., frequtent. A shrub or small 



