236 ONAGRACE.f:. CEnothera. 



Biennial ? Stem a foot high, purplish, smooth above. Leaves 1 - Ij inch long and 3-5 

 lines veide, narrowed below into a short slender petiole. Flowers smaller than in CE. jruticosa, 

 bright orange-yeUow. Capsules somewhat pyriform, tapering into a slender stipulate base ; 

 the wings narrow, not decurrent on the pedicel : intermediate ribs very prominent. 



Near Oswego [Dr. Kniesktrn) ; Niagara Falls {Mr. J. Carey). June - July. I fear not 

 sufficiently distinct from the following. 



5. CEiNOTHERA PUMiLA, Linn. Dwarf Evening Primrose. 



Minutely pubescent ; stem ascending ; leaves lanceolate, mostl}' obtuse, entire, acute or 

 attenuate at the base, the radical ones obovate-spatulate ; flowers (small) in a loose elongated 

 leafy spike, the apex nodding before expansion ; tube of the calyx shorter than the ovarj^ and 

 about the length of the segments ; petals obcordate, scarcely longer than the calyx-segments 

 and stamens ; capsules oblong-clavate, almost sessile, the alternate angles narrowly winged. 

 — Linn. sp. (ed. 2.) 1. p. 493 ; Bot. mag. t. 335 ; Pursh,fl. I. p. 262 ; Torr.Jl. \.p. 390 ; 

 DC. prodr. 3. p. 51 ; Hook. Jl. Bor.-Am. \. p. 212; H. H.Eaton in Transylv. joum. med. 

 1832; Beck, bot. p. 119; Torr. ^ Gr. jl. N. Am. 1. p. 498. CE. pusilla, Micluc. Jl. 1. 

 p. 225. 



Biennial. Stem 6-12 inches high, simple or sometimes sparingly branched, somewhat 

 canescent with very short crisped hairs. Leaves 1 — IJ inch long and 3-4 lines wide, 

 strigosely pubescent. Flowers, when fully expanded, scarcely half an inch in diameter. 

 Sepals lanceolate, with a very short abrupt acumination. Petals pale yellow. Stamens 

 somewhat declined. Raceme elongated in fruit. Capsules nearly smooth when mature ; 

 the lower ones often with a short pedicel. 



Dry fields ; not uncommon, particularly in the northern and western part of the State. On 

 Long Island (Dr. Knieskern.) June - July. 



3. GAURA. Linn.; Etidl. gen. 6131. GAURA. 



[ So named from its showy flowers ; gauros, in Greek, signiiying superb.] 



Tube of the calyx much prolonged above the ovary, deciduous : segments 4 (rarely 3), re- 

 flexed. Petals 4 (rarely 3), clawed, somewhat unequal or one-sided. Stamens mostly 8. 

 Ovary usually 4-celled, with 1-2 suspended ovules in each cell : stigma 4-lobed. Fruit 

 4-angled, by abortion mostly 1 -celled, dry and indehiscent, 1 - 4-seeded. Seeds naked. — 

 Herbaceous or suffruticose plants, with mostly sessile, alternate leaves. Flowers in terminal 

 spikes or racemes. Petals white or rose-color. 



1. Gaura biennis, Litin. Biennial Gaura. 



Stem herbaceous, hairy ; leaves lanceolate, acute, repandly denticulate or toothed ; segments 



