DOGWOOD FAMILY. 107 



leaf of 5 orate or oval serrate leaflets on each of the 3 divisions of the petiole, 

 and a short peduncle with 2-7 umbels. 



§ 2. Ginseng. Sterile and fertile flowers on separate simple-stemmed plants, in 

 a single slender-stalked umbel, below it a single whorl of digitate leaves : 

 styles and cells of the fruit 2 or 3. 



A. quinquefolia, Ginseng. iRich woods N. : root spindle-shaped, warm- 

 aromatic, 4' - 9' long ; stem 1 ° high ; leaflets 5 at the end of each of the 3 

 petioles, slenderrSt^Hced, thin, obovaterjjblong, pointed, serrate; fl. in summer; 

 fruit red. 



A. trifdlia. Dwarf G. or GuouNp-NnT., Low woods, N. : 4' -8' high 

 from a deep globular pungent-tasted root ; leaflets 3 or sometimes .5 sessile on 

 the end of each, of the 3 petioles, riarrow-oblong and obtuse : fl. in spring ; fruit 

 orange-yellow. , ' ?. 



2. HEDEBA, IVY. (The ancient Latin name.) ^M. late summer.' 



H. Hfelix, True or English Ivy, from Europe. Woqdy climber, with 

 evergreen glossy rounded heart-shaped or kidney-shaped and 3-lobed or 3-angled 

 leaves, or in some varieties more deeply 3 - 7-clcft, yellowish-green flowers, and 

 blackish berries ; covers shaded walls, &c., adhering by, its rootlets, but scarcely 

 stands far N. without some protection. ■ • 



56. CORNACE^, DOGWOOD FAMILY. 



Shrubs, trees, or one or two mere herbs, with simple leaves, small 

 flowers, calyx-tube in the perfect or pistillate ones coherent with the 

 surface of the 1 — 2-celled ovary, which is crowned with the small 

 calyx-teeth or minute cup, bearing the petals (valvate in the bud) 

 and stamens of the same number: style and stigma single : ovule 

 and seed solitary in the cells, hanging from the summit: fruit a 

 small drupe or berry. 



Gakrta elliptica, a sipgul^r Californian shrub, with thick op- 

 posite leaves, and dioecious greenish flowers in hanging catkin-like 

 spikes, is rarely cultivated or planted. 



1. CORNDS. Flowers perfect, in cymes, close clusters, or heads (with or with- 



out a corolla-like involucre). Minute teeth of the ciilyx, petals, and sta- 

 mens .4. .Sfyle slender: stigma terminal. Berry-like little drupe with a 

 2-celled 2'-seeded stone. Leaves entire, opposite except in one species, 

 deeidtious. Bark very bitter, tonici 



2. AUCIJBA. FJowers dioecious, dull purple, in axillary panicles. Teeth or lobes 



of the calyx arid petals 4. Stamens in the sterile flowers 4, with short fila- 

 ments and oblong anthers. Fertile flowers with a 1-celled ovary, becoming 

 an oblong red berry in fruit: style short: stigma capitate. Leaves opposite, 

 coriaceous and glossy, evergreen, smooth, more or less toothed. 



3. NYSSA. Flowers polygamous or dioecious, greenish, crowded or clustered"on 



the summit of an axillary peduncle, the sterile ones numerous, the fertile 

 .?-8 in a bracted .cluster, or rarely .solitary. , Calyx of 6 or more Ipbes, 

 or teeth.* Petals small and narrow, or minute, or none. , Style slender or 

 awl-shaped, bearing a stigma down the whole length. of one side, revolute. 

 Ovary and stone of the drupe 1-oelIed and 1-leeded. 'Trees, with deciduous 

 alternate leaves, often crowded on the end of' the Brstnchlets, either fentire, 

 angled, or few-toothed. ' 



1. CbKNITS, CORNEL or DOGWOOD. (T^fame from cornu, horn, from 

 the hardness pf the wood.) Fl. late spring and early summer. 



§ 1. Flowers greenish, crowded in a head or close cluster, which is surrounded Jy 

 a showy corolla-like (white or rarely pinkish) i-leaved involucre: fruit 

 bright red. ' ' ' r ' m ; r 



C. Canadensis, Dwarf Coenel, Bdnch-berrt. Damp woods N. : 

 a low herb, the stems springing from creeping slender subterranean shoots' 



