Campanula. CAMPAXULACE.E. 13 



leaves linear : flower-buds erect on the slender pedicel : campanulate corolla from lialf to 

 even an inch long: calyx-lobes setaceous-subulate. — Fl. IJan. t. boj & liisij. — C.jietiolata, 

 A. DC. 1. c, is apparently this rather than the foregoing. — Hocky banks through the sub- 

 arctic regions, and common northward, ranging south to the Alleghany Jlountains, Xew 

 Jlexico, and the northern borders of California. Calyx-lobes from a third to half the 

 length of the bright blue corolla, and erect or spreading ; or sometimes nearly equalling it, 

 almost filiform, and widely spreading after the flower opens. (Eu., N. -\sia.) 



= = Peduncles when several cymose or paniculate, erect in blossom and fruit: angles of the 

 weak stem and midrib or margins of leaves commonly retrorsely scabrous: flowers small. 



' C. aparinoides, Pursh. Stem a foot or two liigh, almost filiform, equally leafy to the 

 top ; its sharp angles rough with almost prickly short retrose bristles : so also the midrib 

 beneath and the margins of the lanceolate or linear sessile leaves : fiower-buds droopmg : 

 corolla open-campanulate, deeply 5-cleft (the lobes 2 lines long or less) : calyx-lobes tri- 

 angular, short, about equalling the tube of the pale blue or whitish corolla. — Fl. i. 159. 

 C. erinoides, Muhl., Xutt., cStc, not L. — Wot grassy grounds, Canada to Georgia, and from 

 the Saskatchewan to the mountains in Colorado. Leaves varying from linear, and 20 

 lines long by one wide, to lanceolate-oblong, less than an inch long and 'i lines wide. 



C. Ploridana, ^T^atson, in herb. Glabrous and smooth throughout: stems filiform, 

 simple or sparingly branched, a span high; leaves from oblong to linear-lanceolate, re- 

 motely serrulate, almost sessile, about half an inch long: flowers few, terminating the 

 stem or branches : corolla 5-parted, blue, somewhat rotate ; the divisions ovate-lanceolate, 

 equalled by the slender lanceolate-linear smooth and spreading calyx-lobes. — E. and S. 

 Florida : Pease River, Dr. Feay ; and Indian Eiver, &c., Dr. E. Palmer. Caljx lobes 2 to 

 at length 4 lines long. 



C. linnEeif olia, Gray. A span to a foot high, simple or sparingly branched at summit : 

 leaves from roundish to ovate-oblong, obtuse, crenately serrate, nearly sessile, half inch or 

 less long ; the margins and the sharp angles of the stem retrorsely hispid-ciliate : flowers 

 solitary terminating the branches : corolla pale blue, campanulate, ij-cleft (barely half inch 

 long), its tube somewhat exceeding the broadly lanceolate calyx-lobes, which are retrorsely 

 ciliolate like the leaves: capsule globular. — Proc. Am. Acad. vii. 360, & Bot. Calif, i. 448. 

 Wtiltlenbmjia Califomica, Kellogg, Proc. Calif. Acad. ii. 158? — Swamps, Mendocino Co., 

 California, Bolander, &c. 



* * Style filiform and straight, exceeding tlie narrow campanulate corolla : capsule hemispherical 

 or sliort-turbinate, the openings near tlie middle or base : leaves sharply or laciuiately serrate : 

 root perennial : inflorescence centrifugal, 



-)— Eacemiform. Pacific species. 

 " C. Scouleri, Hook. Glabrous or a little pubescent, stems slender, a span to a foot or so 

 long, at length spreading, often brandling : leaves from ovate to lanceolate, mostly taper- 

 ing at base into a margined petiole: flowers more or less panicled, on long filiform pedicels : 

 corolla oblong in the bud, rather longer than the slender calyx-lobes, somewhat deeply 

 5-cleft (4 lines long) ; its lobes ovate-oblong. — A. DC. Camp. 312 ; Hook. Fl. ii. 2^, t. 12-3. 

 — Open coniferous woods, Puget Sound to the mountains in X. California. 

 C prenanthoides, Durand. Glabrous or roughish-puberulent : stems more erect, a 

 foot or two high : leaves more numerous and shorter (half to an inch or so long), more 

 copiously and sharply serrate, from ovate-oblong to lanceolate ; the cauline mainly sessile : 

 flowers racemose, scattered or clustered, generally numerous, short-pedicelled : corolla 

 slender-cylindrical in the bud, twice the length of the slender calyx-lobes (5 or 6 lines 

 long), almost 5-parted ; its lobes narrowly lanceolate and 2 to 4 times the length of the 

 tube. — Jour. Acad. Philad., n. ser. ii. 93; Gray, Proc. Am. Acad., 1. i;. & Bot. Calif, i. 448. 

 C. fliflora, Kellogg, Proc. Calif. Acad. ii. 5. ' C. Roedi, Kegel, Aniniad. PI. Hort. Petrop. 

 1872, 6. — Coniferous woods and open grounds, California, along the coast from !Monterey 

 to Jlendocino Co., and through the northern part of the Sierra Nevada. Capsule thin- 

 walled, and with broad and refuse base. 



-K- •*— Effusely paniculate. Alleghany species. 



C. divaricata, Michx. Glabrous : stems paniculately branched, 1 to 3 feet high, slender : 



leaves oblong to linear-lanceolate, acuminate at both ends, strongly or laciniately serrate in 



the middle, slightly petioled (2 or 3 inches long) : panicle very open and compound : filiform 



pedicels as long as the flowers : corolla pale blue, campanulate, barely 3 lines long ; its 



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