PULSK FAMILY. 101 



6. LABUBNUM. (Ancient Latin Tiame. Genns separated from Cytisus 

 from the different appeai'ance, and the seeds destitute of strophiole or append-' 

 age at the scar.) 



L. vulg^e. Common Laburnum, Golden-Chain, or Bean-Tkefoil- 

 Tbee of Europe. Planted for ornament, a low tree, with smooth green bark, 

 slender-petioled leaves of 3 oblong leaflets (2' -3' long), and pretty large showy 

 golden-yellow flowers hanging in long racemes, in late spring ; pods with one 

 thicker edge. 



6. TBIGOimXiIiA. (Old name, from Greek word for triangular, from the 

 shape of the corolla or the seeds.) Low herbs. T. o-ERtrLEA is the plant 

 used in Switzerland for imparting the flavor like that of Melilot to certain 

 kinds of cheese.) 



T. FoBnum-Grfeoum, Fenugreek. Occasionally cult, in gardens, in 

 Europe a forage and popular medicinal plant, strong-scented ; with wedge- 

 oblong leaflets, one or two nearly sessile small flowers in the axils, yellowish or 

 whitish corolla, and a linear long-pointed and somewhat curved pod 2' -4' long, 

 with veiny sides. iX) 



7. MEDIC AGO, MEDICK. (The old name of Lucerne, because it came 

 to the Greeks from Media. ) All natives of the Old World : a few have run 

 wild here. El. all summer. 



* Flowers violeC-purple or bluish. "H, 



M. satlva. Lucerne or Spanish Trefoil. Cultivated for green fodder, 

 especially S. : stems erect, l°-2° high, from a long deep root; leaflets obovate- 

 oWong ; racemes oblong ; pod several-seeded, linear, coiled about S turns. 

 » » Flowers ydlow. ®.® < 



M. lupullna, Black Medick, Nonesuch. A weed or pasture plant, in 

 dry or sandy fields, &c. : low, spreading, downy, with wedge-obovate leaflets, 

 roundish or at length oblong heads or spikes of small flowers, and little kidney- 

 shaped 1-seeded pods turning black when ripe. 



M. maoul&ta, Spotted M. Waste sandy places, S. & E. : spreading or 

 trailing ; with broadly inversely heart-shaped leaflets marked with a dark spot, 

 3 - 5-flowei-ed peduncles, and a flat pod compactly coiled three or more turns, 

 its tliickish edge beset with a double row of curved prickles. 



M. dentictllata, like the last, but rarer, with pod of looser coils, sharp 

 edge,, and mostly shorter prickles. 



M. scutellata, Snail Medick, Beehive. Cult, occasionally in gardens 

 for its curious pods, which are pretty large, coiled up like a snail-shell, in many 

 turns, smooth and even. 



8. MELILOTUS, MELILOT, SWEET CLOVEE. (From Greek 

 words for honeii and Lotus, i. e. Sweet Lotus : foliage sweet-scented, especially 

 in drying.) Natives of the Old World ; somewhat cult, in gardens', &c., and 

 running wild in waste or cultivated ground : fl. all summer. ® @ 



M. Mba, White M., Bokhara or Tree Clover. Tall, 3° - 6° high, 

 branching, with obovate or oblong leaflets truncately notched at the end, and 

 loose racemes of white flowers. Has been ciilt. for green fodder. 



M. officinalis, Yellow M. Less tall, 2° -3° high, with merely blunt 

 leaflets and yellow flowers. 



9. TEIPbLIUM, CLOVER, TREFOIL. (Latin name: three lea/lets.) 



* Ljow, insignificant weeds, nat.froin Europe in dry waste fields, ^c. ® 

 ■1- Flowers yellow, in round heads, produced through late summer and autumn, 



rejiexed and turning chestnut-brown, dry and papery with age. 

 T. agr^rium, Yellow Hop-C. Smoothish, 6' - 12' high, with obovate- 

 oblong leaflets all nearly sessile on the end of the petiole ; heads rather largo. 



T. proc^mbens. Low Hop-C. Smaller, spreading, rather downy, the 

 wedge-obovate leaflets notched at the end, the middle one at a littla distance 

 from the others. 



