Obdeh 66.— CAPEIFOLIACE^ 395 



1 L. cili&ta MnU. Fly Honbtsuckle. Lvs. ovate, suboordate, cCiate ; cor. 

 limb with short and subequal hbes ; tube saccate at base ; sty. exaerted ; berries 

 disiinct, red. — A braucliing, erect shrab, 3 to 4f higb, found in woods, Me. to 

 Ohio and Can. Lvs. tliin, oblong-ovate, ofDen cordate at liie base, somewhat cili- 

 ate on the margin, and villous beneath when young. Fls. pale straw-yellow, in 

 pairs at the top of the peduncle, with an obtuse spur turned outwards at the base. 

 Berries ovoid, red, in pairs, but not connate, 3 to 5-aeeded. Jn. 



2 L. oblongifolia Hook. Lvs. oblong or oval, velvety-pubescent beneath, cjt. 

 limb deeply bilabiate ; tube gibbous at base ; ped. long, filiform, erect ; berriea 

 connate or united into one, globous, purple, bi-umbilionte. — A shrub, 3 to 4f high, 

 in swamps. Car. and K. Y. Lvs. almost sessile, 1 to 2' long, ped. of equal length. 

 Cor. hairy, greenish-yellow outside, purplish inside, the lower lip nearly entire, 

 the upper one 4-lobed, erect. Berries marked with the remains of the two 

 calyces. Jn. 



3 L. coerJilea L. Lvs. oval-oblong, ciliate, obtuse, villous both sides, at length 

 smoothish ; ped. short, reflexed in fruit ; bracts longer than the ovaries ; cor. gib- 

 bous at base, lobes short, svhequal ; berries connate or united into one, deep blue.— 

 A low shrub in rocky woods, Mass. and N. T. north to Hudson's Bay. St. 2f 

 high, with small lvs. and pairs of small, yellow fls., which are longer than their 

 peduncles. Lvs. ovate, oval, obovate and oblong, ending abruptly. May, Jn. 



4 L. Tartarioa L. Tabtaeian Honeysuckle. Sts. erect, much branched; 

 lvs. ovate, cordate, obtuse, smooth, shining, and dark green above, paler beneatli, 

 entire, on short petioles; ped. axillary, solitary, 2-flowered; segm. of the cor. ob- 

 long, obtuse, equal. — An elegant and much admired shrub, from Russia. Grows 

 from 4 to lOf high. Lvs. 1 to 2' by J to IJ', coriaceous. Fls. small, pale purple, 

 varying to pure white, fragrant. Apr. — Jn. f 



5 L. Japomoa L. Chinese Honeysuckle. Sts. soit-pubescent; lvs. ovate 

 and oblong, minutely pointed, all distinct, petiolate; ped. axillary, 2-bracted and 

 2-flowored ; cor. limb ringent, tube equal at base, slender, downy ; stam. and 

 sty. exserted. — From China. Sts. flexuous, climbing 15f high, bearing a profusion 

 of orange-colored fls. f South. 



6 L. Pericl^menum Toom. Woodbine. Lvs. deciduous, all distinct, 

 olKptical, rather acute, on short petioles ; Jls. in dense, imbricate, terminal heads ; 

 cor. ringent. — A woody climber, native of Europe, cultivated and nearly natui^ 

 alized. Fls. yellow and red, fragrant, succeeded by red berries. Variety querci- 

 folium has sinuate lvs. May — Jl. f 



7 L. aemperwirens Ait. Trumpet Honeysuckle. Lvs. oblong, evergreen, the 

 upper ones connate-perfoliate ; fls. in nearly naked spikes of distant whorls; 

 cor. trumpet-shaped, nearly regular, ventricous above. — In moist groves and bor- 

 ders of swamps, N. Y. (near the city), to Fla. and La. St. woody, twining with 

 the sun. The distinct lvs. in the wild plant are elliptical or almost linear ; the 

 connate, but 1 or 2 pairs. Cor. nearly 2' long, of a fine scarlet without and yel- 

 low within. Mar, Apr. (S.) — May — Jl. (N.) f . 



8 L. fl^va Sim. Yellow Honeysuckle. Lvs. ovate, glaucous both sides, upper 

 pair connate-perfoliate ; spikes terminal, of about 2 close whorls ; cor. smootli, 

 tube slender, not gibbous at base, limb somewhat ringent; stam. exserted, 

 smooth. — Shrub scarcely twining, N. Y. to Ga., W. to Wise. Lvs. deciduous, 

 abruptly contracted at base, except the upper perfoliate pair. Fls. in heads of 

 about 10, fragrant Cor. an inch or more in length, the tube much longer than 

 the lips, bright yellow ; upper lip much broader than the lower, in 4 segm. May, 

 Jl.t 



9 Ii. gr^ta Ait. Evergreen Honeysuckle. Lvs. evergreen, obovate, smootli, 

 glaucous beneath, the upper pair connate-perfoliate ; fds. in sessile, terminal and 

 axillary whorls ; cor. ringent, tube long, slender, not gibbous at base. — Damp 

 woodlands, N. Y., Penn., and W. States. St. climbing many feet. Lva oppo- 

 site or in 3s, margin revolute. Fls. large and very fragrant, 5 or 6 in each whorl. 

 Cor. whitish, becoming yellowish within, reddish without. Sta. exserted. Ber- 

 ries red. Jn. -f 



10 L. Caprifdlinm L. Common or Italian Honeysuckle. Lvs. decidu- 

 ous, the upper pair perfoliate-eonnate ; fls. in a single fermival verticil ; cor. rin- 



