CROWFOOT FAMILT. 39 



10. ACTJSA, BANEBERRY. (The old Greek name of the Elder, from 

 some likeness in the leaves. ) 1|. Fl. in spring, ripening the berries late in 

 summer ; growing in rich woods. Leaflets of the thrice-ternate leaves ovate, 

 sharply cleft, and cut-toothed. 



A. spic&ta, var. rtlbra. Red Banebekry. Flowers in a very short 

 ovate raceme or cluster, on slender pedicels ; berries red. 



A. ^Iba, White Baneberry. Taller than the other, smoother, and 

 flowering a week or two later, with an oblong raceme ; pedicels in fruit very 

 thick, turning red, the berries white. 



11. CIMICIFITGA, BUGBANE. (Latin name, meaning to driv.e away 

 bugs.) 1|. Like Baneberry, but tall, with very long racemes (1° - 3°), and 

 dry pods instead of berries ; fl. in summer. 



C. racemdsa. Tall B. or Black Snakekoot. Stem with the long 

 raceme 4° - 8° high ; pistil mostly single, with a flat-topped stigma ; short pod 

 holding 2 rows of horizontally flattened seeds. Rich woods. 



C. Americ^a, American B. More slender, only 2° - 4° high ; pis- 

 tils 5, with slender style and minute stigma ; pods raised from the receptacle 

 on slender stalks, flattish, containing few scaly-coated seeds. Alleghanies from 

 Penn. S. ; fl. late summer. 



12. PALTHA, MARSH-MARIGOLD. (Old name, from a word mean- 

 ing goblet, of no obvious application. ) H. One common species, — 



C. palustris, Marsh-Marigold, wrongly called Cowslips in the 

 country. Stem l'-2° high, bearing one or more rounded or somewhat kid- 

 ney-shaped entire or crenate leaves, and a few flowers with showy yellow calyx, 

 about 1^' across ; followed by a cluster of many-seeded pods. Marshes, iu 

 spring ; young plant boiled for " greens." 



13. TROLLIUS, GLOBE-FLOWER. (Name of obscure meaning.) 

 Flower large, like that of Caltha, bat sepals not spreading except in our 

 wild species ; a row of small nectary-like petals around the Stamens, and tha 

 leaves deeply palmately cleft or parted, U Fl. spring. 



T. 14xus, Wild G. Sepals only 5 or 6, spreading wide open, yellowish 

 or dull greenish- white ; petals very small, seeming like' abortive stamens. 

 Swamps, N. & W. 



T. Europseus, True or EuKOP.a:AN G. Sepals bright yellow (10-20) 

 broad and converging into a kind of globe, the flower appearing as if semi- 

 double. Cult, from Eu. 



T. Asi^ticus, Asiatic G. Like the last, but flower rather more open 

 and deep orange yellow. Cult, from Siberia. 



14. C6PTIS, goldthread. (From Greek word to cut, from the 

 divided leaves.) 11 The only common species is, — 



C. trif6Ua, Three-leaved G. A delicate little plant, in bogs and damp 

 cold woods N., sending up early in spring single white flowers (smaller than 

 those of Wood Anemony) on slender scapes, followed by slender-stalked leaves 

 of three wedge-shaped leaflets ; these become bright-shining in summer, and last 

 over winter. The roots or underground shoots are of long and slender yellow 

 fibres, used as a popular medicine. 



15. HELLEBOKUS, HELLEBORE. (Old Greek name, alludes to the 

 poisonous properties.) H. European plants, with pedate leaves and pretty 

 large flowers, in early spring. 



H. viridis, Green H., has stems near 1° high, bearing 1 or 2 leaves and 

 2 or 3 pale yellowish-green flowers : run wild in a few places E. 



H. niger, Black H., the flower called Christmas Rose (because flow- 

 ering in warmer parts of England in winter), has single large flowers (2' -3' 

 across, white, turning pinkish, then green), on scapes shorter than the shining 

 evergreen leaves, in earliest spring. Rare in gardens. 



