OCTANDRIA— MONOGYNIA. Acer. §31 



lobes to the leaves, which are more or less glaucous beneath ; 

 but this latter circumstance, like the degree of hairiness of the 

 stamens, is a variable character. 



2. A. campestre. Common Maple. 



Leaves five-lobed, obtuse, somew^hat cut. Clusters corym- 

 bose, erect. 



A, campestre. Linn. Sp. PL 1497. WiUd. Sp. PL v. 4. 989. FL Br. 



422. E72gL Bot.v. 5. t. 304. Hook. Scot. 120. FL Dan. t. 1288. 

 A. campestre et minus. Bauh. Pin. 431. Duham. Arh. v. 1. 28. 



t. 10./. 7. 

 A. n. 1029, 6. HalL Hist. v. 1. 443. 



A. minus. Raii Sijn. 470. Ger. Em. 1484./. Dod. Pempt. 840./. 

 Acer. Trag. Hist. 1123. f. 

 Massholdei- Tragi. Gesn. Fasc. 1. 16. t. 9./ 19. 

 /3. Acer campestre et minus, fructu rubente, FailL Par. 2. DHL in 



Raii Syn. 470. 



In hedges and thickets common j rare in Scotland, and the north 

 of England. 



Tree. May, June. 



A rather small tree, of much more humble growth than the preced- 

 ing, with more spreading branches ; the bark corky and full of 

 fissures J that of the branches smooth. Leaves about 1-^ inch 

 wide, downy while young, like their footstalks, obtusely 5-lobed, 

 here and there notched, sometimes quite entire^ Clusters ter- 

 minating the young shoots, hairy, erect, short and somewhat 

 corymbose. FL green, not unlike those of the preceding. Anth. 

 hairy between the lobes. Caps, downy, horizontally spreading 

 nearly in a right line, with smooth, oblong, reddish wings. 



The wood is compact, of a fine grain, sometimes beautifully veined, 

 celebrated among the ancient Romans for tt^bles, though now 

 superseded by Mahogany, and even our native Oak, 



