LXXX1I. PRIMULACEA1. 



383 



tree at the North, a tree of large dimensions at the South. Leaves 3 5' long, 

 entire, glaucous beneath. Flowers obscure, pale greenish-yellow, the fertile 

 ones succeeded by a round, orange-red Iruit as large as the garden plum, and 

 containing 6 8 stony seeds. They are rendered sweet and palatable by the 

 trostj altt^ugh very austere when green. The bark is tonic and astringent. Jn. 



ORDER LXXXI. STYRACACE^S. 



Tiees or shrubs with alternate, simple leaves destitute of stipules. 



fls. or racemes solitary, axillary, liracteate. 



Cal. 5, rarely 4-lobed, imbricated in aestivation. 



Cor. 5, rarely 4 or 6-lobed, imbricated in aestivation, 



Sta. definite or 00, unequal in length, usually cohering. Anth. innate, 2-celled. 



Oca. adherent, 2 5-cel!ed, the partitions ?-ometimes hardly reaching the centre. 



Fr. drupaceous, generally with but one fertile cell. Sds. 51. 



Genera 6, species 115, sparingly distributed through the tropical and subtropical regions of both conti- 

 nents, only a few in colder latitudes. Storage and benzoin, two fragrant gum resins, regarded as stimu- 

 lant and expectorant, are the products of two species of Styrax, viz. of S. officinale, a Syrian tree, and S. 

 benzoin, native of Malay and the adjacent Islands. 



HALESIA. Ellis. 



In honor of the learned and venerable Stephen Hales, D.D., F.R.S., 1730. 



Calyx obconic, briefly 4-lobed ; cor. inserted into the calyx, cam- 

 panulate, with a narrow base. 4-cleft or 4-parted ; sta. 8 12, connate 

 into a tube below ; sty. filiform, pubescent ; fruit dry, 4-winged, wings 

 equal or alternately smaller ; seeds 1 3. N. American shrubs. 



1. H. TETRAPTERA. Four-icinged Snowdrop Tree. 



Jjvs. elliptic-acuminate, serrulate; fascicles 3-flowered, lateral, leafless, 

 from the wood of the preceding year ; cal. subentire ; sta. 12 ; fr. with 4 equal 

 wings. Native of S. Car. to Flor., Miss E. Carpenter! Branches leafy at the 

 summit. Leaves thin, 2 5' by 1J 2', obtuse or acute at base. Flowers pen- 

 dulous, white, about 10" long, f 



2*H. DIPTERA. Two-winged Snowdrop Tree. 



Lvs. oblong-ovate, obtuse, acuminate at each 

 end, serrulate, softly pubescent beneath ; fascicles 

 2 3-flowered, lateral ; pedicels and cal. pubescent ; 

 sta. 8; fr. with the alternate wings half as large 

 or obsolete. Native in Car. and Ga. Leaves 

 somewhat larger than in the last, with rather 

 smaller flowers. Corolla white, f < 



ORDER LXXXII. PRIMULACE^E.-^ 



PttlMWORTS. 



Plants herbaceous, annual or perennial, sometimes suffruticose. 



Lvs. usually radical, otherwise mostly opposite. Stipules 0. 



Flu. on scapes and in umbels or variously arranged in the axils of 4. 



the leaves. -^ 



Cal. 5 (rarely 4) -cleft, inferior, regular, persistent. 

 Cor. 5 (rarely 4)-cleft, regular. 

 Sta. inserted on the tube of the corolla, as many as its lobes and 



opposite to them. 

 Ova. l-celled, with a free, central placenta. Styl* and Stigma 



Pimple. 

 Fr. Capsule many-seeded, the fleshy placenta attached only to 



the base of the cell. 



Genera 29, species 215, common in the northern temperate 

 resions, growing in swamps, groves, by rivulets and often among 

 the snow of cloud-capped mountains. Many are beautiful, and 

 highly prized in culture. Properties unimportant. 



. FIG. 49. i. Primula Mistassinioa. 2. A flower laid open, show- 

 ing the 5 stamens uiserted on the tube of the corolla. 4. Plan of 

 the flower. 6. Ovary and calyx. 5. Vertical section of the ovary, 

 showing the free central placenta. 



33 



