30 THE ROOT, OR DESCRIPTIVE AXIS. 



plants firmly upon other plants or trees, while they derive their nour- 

 ishment wholly from the air. The long-moss (Tillandsia) and Conop- 

 seum arc examples. 



144. Parasites — three classes. Very different in nature are the 

 roots of those plants called parasites, which feed upon the juices of 

 other plants or trees. Such roots penetrate the hark of the nurse-plant 

 to the cambium layer beneath, and appropriate the stolen juices to their 

 own growth, as the dodder and misseltoe. Other parasites, althougli 

 standing in the soil, arc fixed upon foreign roots, and thence derive 

 either their entire sustenance, as the beach-drops and other leafless, col- 

 orless plants ; or a part of their sustenance, as the cow-wheat (Melam- 

 pyrum), Gerardia. 



145. Sdbteeranean stems. As there are SBrial roots, so there are subterranean 

 stems. These are frequently mistaken for roots, but may be known by their habit- 

 ually and regularly producing buds. Of this nature are the tubers of the Irish po- 

 tato, the root-stock of the sweet flag, the bulb of the tulip. But even the true 

 root may sometimes develop buds — accidentally as it were, in consequence of soma 

 iojury to the upper axis, or some other unnatural condition. 



CHAPTER V. 



THE STEM, OR ASCENDING AXIS. 



146. Definition. That part of the plant which originates with the 

 plumule, tends upward in its growth and expands itself to the influence 

 of the air and the light, is called the stem or ascending axis. 



147. The general idea of tiie axis is the central substantial portion of the 

 plant, bearing the appendages, viz., the root below and the leai-organs above. 

 Although not marked by gay coloring or fantastic forms, yet we regard the stem 

 with a lively interest for its substantial value, its gracefulness and lofty propor- 

 tions, its infinite gradation of form and texture from the tender speedwell crushed 

 beneath the foot to the strong forest oak. 



8S. Procumbent stem— Chiogenes hispidiila. 



148. Direction op its growth. Although the first direction of 

 the stem's growth is vertical in all plants, there are many in which this 

 direction does not continue, but changes into the oblique or horizontal, 

 either just above the surface of the ground, or just beneath it If the 



