■WAYSIDE WEEDS. 119 



better exemplified in the leaf of the common turnip j 

 and this cutting up into- segments, without 'the leaf 

 being compound, appears, strongly in the wild 

 chamomile (Fig. 43) . Then we have shield-shaped, 

 and arrow-shaped, and spear-shaped leaves (as in 



I'iG.7S.'— Leaf of Com Poppy, deeply cat, pinnatiSd, not compound. ' 



Fig. 71), lobed leaves of all varieties, and many 

 others which it would not come within the scope of 

 these papers to enumerate and illustrate, and which 

 will best be studied from the ciillings of the way- 



