42 CROWFOOT FAMILY. 



i 



16.' AQUILE&IA,' COLUMBiLNE. ' )J (From Latin' aq&flegus, "water- 

 drdwinfy; of ob'scure application.) ■'% Well-known ornamental, herbs, 

 flowering in spring and early summer, with erect or dropping flowers of 

 Various colons./ Sepals 5, colored j petals 5, each produced into a loiig, 

 slender} Jsfrais!ro J or hooked spiir ;' pistils 5, forming! narrow pods. 

 Leayej^ternately compound or.^ei^jmpound. The species are mucli 

 modified by cultivation, and gawtu forms are rarely, typical. Often, 

 but erroneously, called Honeysuckle. 



"' *'* Corolla with long straight spurs; North American species. 



' *- Flowers pendulous, ihe spurs therefore ascending, often red. 



A. Canadensis, Linn!) Wild ,C. Flowers about 2'. long, pearlet and 

 orange, or light yellow inside, the' petals with a very short lip or blade, 

 and stamens projecting. Common on rocks. 



A. Skinneri, Hook. Mexican C, is taller, later, and considerably larger- 

 flowered than the last, the narrower acute sepals usually tinged greenish; 

 otherwise very similar. , ', 



A. truncata, Fisch. & Meyer (also known as A. Calif6bnica and A. 

 eximia), from California is l°-2° high,, with red, yellow-tinged flowers 

 l' f -ii' across, spreading or reflexed sepals,;'and petals truncate with a very 

 short limb ; spurs £'-f ' long, thick, and blunt. 



A, formbsa, Fischer. Flower carmine-red or scarlet, spurs about 

 equaling the wide-spreading sepals, only about twice the length of the 

 roundish yellow blade, the limb of the petals longer than in the last, and 

 extending upwards on the outer side. Eocky Mountains. 

 h- *- Flowers erect or becoming so, never red. 



A. caerulea, James. Long-spurred C, native of the Eocky Mountains, 

 has blue and white flowers, the ovate sepals often 1$', the very slender 

 spurs 2' long, the blade of the petals (white) half the length of the (mostly 

 blue) sepals, spreading. .-'<■' 



A. chry's'dntha, Gray, from New Mex. and Ariz., has bright yellow 

 flowers, the sepals lance-oblong I and about equaling the blade of the 

 petals'; spurs tang (2£'-3i). \j 



-■ " k'W-'G.otoila with hiioked' or incurved spurs; Old World. 



A. vulgaris, Linn. Common Garden C. Common in gardens, l°-3° high, 

 many-flowered ; spurs rather longer than the blade or rest of the petal ; 

 pods pubescent. Flowers varying from blue to purple, white, etc., greatly 

 changed by culture, often full double, with spur within spur, sometimes 

 all changed into a rosette of plane petals or sepals. . 



A. glandulosa, Fischer. Glandular C. A choice species, 6'-l° high, 

 with fewer, very showy deep blue flowers, the blade of the petals white or 

 white-tipped and twice the length of the short spurs ; pods and summit 

 of the plant glandular-pubescent. 



A. Siblrica, Lam. Siberian C. Equally choice with the last, and like 

 it ; but the spurs longer than the mostly white-tipped short blade, as well 

 as the pods, etc., smooth. 



17. DELPHINIUM, LAEKSPUE. (Latin: dolphin, alluding to the 

 shape of the flower.) The familiar and well-marked flower of this 

 genus is illustrated in iiessons, Figs. 239-241 ; the seed in Figs.- 421, 422. 



* Annuals; petals 2, united; pistil 1 ; the leaves finely and muoh divided ; 

 ^flowers summer and fait. «. k ' ■■ . ■ ."■! ■ " 



.0: Cohsdlida, Linn! Field L. Escape^' sparingly raio< roMsides and 

 fields, flowers scattered on the' spreading branches, blue, varying to pink 

 or white ; pod smooth. Eu, 



