3G2 BOUUAGIXACI-^E. (BOUAGE FAMILY.) 



4. ONOSMODIUM, Michx. False Gromwell. 



Calyx 5-parted ; the divisions linear and erect. Corolla tubular, or tubular- 

 runnel-form, naked in the throat (the sinuses minutely hooded-inflexed) ; the 5 

 acute lobes converging or barely spreading. Anthers oblong-linear or arrow- 

 shaped, mucrouate, inserted in the throat of the corolla. Style thread-form, 

 much exserted. Nutlets bony, ovoid, smooth, erect, fixed by the base; the scar 

 minute, not hollowed out, — Chiefly perennial herbs, coarse and hispid, with ob- 

 long and sessile ribbed-veined leaves, and white, greenish, or yellowish flowers, 

 in at length elongated and erect leafy raceme-like clusters ; in summer. — 

 Our species all belong to true Oxosmodium, having the anthers all included, 

 smooth, and on very short filaments ; the corolla only once or twice the length 

 of the calyx. (Named from the resemblance to the genus Onosma, which means 

 ass-smell. ) 



1. O. Virginianum, DC. Clothed all over with harsh and rigid oppressed 

 short bristles ; stems rather slender (l°-2°high); leaves narrowly oblong, or ob- 

 long-lanceolate (l'-2j' long), the lower narrowed at the base; lobes of the nar- 

 row corolla lance-awl-shaped, sparingly bearded outside with long bristles. (O. 

 hispidum, Michx. Lithospe'rmum Virginianum, L. .') — Banks and hillsides, S. 

 New England to Virginia and southward. 



2. O. Carolinianum, DC. (excl.syn.i1//cAa:.) Shaggy all over with long 

 and spreading bristly hairs; stem stout, upright (3° -4° high) ; leaves ovate-lance- 

 olate or oblong-lanceolate, acute ; lobes of the rather broad corolla ovate-triangular 

 or triangular-lanceolate, thickly hirsute outside. (0. molle, Beck, &c. Lithosper- 

 mum Carolinianum, Lam.) — River-banks, W. New York to Wisconsin and 

 southward. — Perhaps passes into the next. 



3. O. molle, Michx. Hoary with finer and soft mostly oppressed hairs ; leaves 

 oblong-ovate, obtusish, strongly ribbed, lobes of the rather narrow corolla triangu- 

 lar and sharp-jminted, thickly hirsute outside. — Dry grounds, Ohio to Illinois 

 and southward. 



5. LITHOSPERMUM, Tourn. Gromwell. Puccoon. 



Corolla funnel-form, or sometimes salver-shaped ; the open throat naked, or 

 with a more or less evident transverse fold or scale-like appendage opposite each 

 lobe; the spreading limb5-cleft; its lobes rounded. Anthers oblong, almost 

 sessile, included. Nutlets ovate, smooth or roughened, mostly bony or stony, 

 fixed by the base ; the scar nearly flat. — Herbs, with thickish and commonly 

 red roots and sessile leaves ; the flowers solitary and as if axillary, or spiked and 

 leafy-bracted : sometimes dimorphous as to insertion of stamens and length of 

 style. (Name formed of \ldos, stone, and aneppa, seed, from the hard nutlets.) 

 § 1. Nutlets tuberckd or rough-wrinkled and pitted, gray and dull: throat of the 

 (nearly white) corolla destitute of any evident folds or appendages. 



1. L. arvlnse, L. (Corn Gromwell.) Minutely rough-hoary annual 

 or biennial; stems erect (6' -12' high); leaves lanceolate or linear, veinless; 

 corolla scarcely longer than the calyx. — Sandy banks and roadsides. May- 

 Aug. (Nat. from Eu.) 



