308 WILLOW FAMILY. 



« * Flowers sligUly earlier than the leaves but rather late in spring, on lateral 

 catkins which have i or & leafy bracts at their base. . 



S. COrdilta. A common wild species along streams, badly named, as the 

 leaves are seldom heart-shaped at base and generally lanceolate, often tapering 

 to both ends, sharply serrate, smooth, pale or whitish beneath ; stipules on 

 young shoots conspicuous, ovate or kidney-shaped ; ovary slender-stalked, 

 tapering, smooth. 



« « » Flowers in loose catkins terminating leafy lateral shoots of the season, there- 

 fore later than the leaves, in late spring or early summer. 



S. longifblia, Long-leaved W. Wild on river-banks N. : low shrub or 

 low tree, with very long lance-linear nearly sessile sparsely denticulate leaves 

 grayish-hairy when young ; catkins with nan-ow yellowish scales ; the stalked 

 silky-downy ovary bearing large stigmas. 



S. Babylonica, Weeping W. Planted from the Orient : a familiar tree, 

 with very slender drooping branches, and linear-lanceolate leaves white beneath ; 

 in the monstrous variety called annularis, Hoop W., curved into a ring. 



S, 41ba, White W., commonly the var. vitellIna, with yellow twigs : 

 planted from Eu. ; a familiar tree ; leaves lanceolate, serrate, white-silky under- 

 neath ; stipules lanceolate ; ovary nearly sessile and smooth. 



S. fr^gilis. Brittle W., from Eu. (so called because the twigs, used for 

 basket-work, &c., break off readily from their base, as in several other species) ; 

 large tree, with lanceolate taper-pointed leaves white but smooth beneath, half 

 heart-shaped stipules, and nearly sessile smooth ovary. 



§ 3. Stamens 3-5 or more, separate : catkins late flowering, terminating leafy 

 branches of the season as in the preceding species : stamens hairy : ovary 

 smooth : scales deciduous : leaves serrate, smooth. 



S. nigra, Black W. Low river-banks : wild tree, with rough black bark, 

 narrow-lanceolate taper-pointed leaves, 3-6 stamens, and short-ovate pods. 



S. peut&ndra, Bat W. A handsome tree, planted from Eu. for the deep 

 green very glossy lanceolate taper-pointed leaves, of the same hue both sides, 

 the large staminate catkins of golden yellow flowers also handsome : stamens 

 4-12, commonly 5 ; pods tapering. 



S. iticida, American Bat W. Wild in wet ground N. : very like the 

 last, but a shrub, with shorter catkins on a less leafy short branch. 



2. POPULITS, POPLAE, ASPEN. (Classical Latin name.) Fl. spring. 



§ 1. Buds not glutinous : leaves cottony, at least beneath, even when old. 



P. &lba, Abele or White P. Tree planted from Eu., with spreading 

 branches, roundish slightly heart-shaped wavy-toothed or lobed leaves soon 

 green above, very white-cottony beneath : spreads inveterately by the root. 



§ 2. Buds not glutinous : leaves cottony when developed, but soon smooth and 

 green both sid'rs : bark smooth and close, greenish-white. 



P. tremuloldes, American Aspen. Small tree, common in woods N. ; 

 with small roundish-heart-shaped leaves beset with small regular teeth ; scales 

 of the catkin cut into 3 or 4 linear lobes, fringed with long hairs. 



P. grandidentkta. Larger Americas Aspen. Middle-sized tree, com- 

 mon in woods : the larger roundish-ovate leaves mth coarse and irregular blunt 

 teeth ; scales unequally 5 - 6-cleft, slightly fringed. 



P. heterophylla. Downy Poplar. Wet grounds, common only W. & 

 S. : tree 40° -60° high; leaves round-ovate or heart-shaped with the sinus 

 closed by the overlapping lobes, obtuse, serrate with incurved teeth, 3' -5' long, 

 white wool deciduous only with age, leaving traces on the veins beneath and on 

 the petioles ; fruiting catkins smooth. 



§ 3. Buds glutinous with aromatic resin or balsam: leaves smooth from the first. 



P. dilat&ta, Lome arpt P. Stiff spiry tree, with closely appressed branches, 

 and small broadly triangular pointed leaves, formerly much planted, from the 

 Old World, — thought to be a remarkable state of 



