LILT FAMILY. 343 



9. VERATRUM, FALSE HELLEBORE. (Old name, from Latin teie 

 ater, truly black.) Mostly piibescent stoat herbs; the roots yield the acrid 

 poisonous verairin. Flowers summer. 



v. viride, Amekican White Helleboke, or Indian Poke. Swamps, 

 mostly N. : stout stem 2° - 4° high, thickly beset with the broadly oval or ovate 

 strongly plaited sheath-clasping leaves ; panicle of spike-like racemes pyramidal ; 

 flowers yellowish-green turning greener with age. 



V. parviflorum, along the Alleghanies, is' slender, 2° - .5° high, with scat- 

 tered oval or lanceolate scarcely plaited leaves below, and a long and loose pan- 

 icle of greenish small flowers turning dingy or brownish with age. 



10. MELANTHIUM. (Name, from the Greek, means black flower, the 

 perianth turning darker, yet not black.) El. summer. 



M. Virginieum, Bunoh-flower. Moist grounds, from S. New York 

 S. & W. ; 3° -5,° (high; lowest leaves sometimes 1' wide, the upper few and 

 small ; flowers rather large. 



U. ZYGADENUS. (Name in Greek means yoWs/anrfS.) Fl. summer. 



Z. glab^'rrimus. Pine barren bogs S. : 1°- 3° high, from a running root- 

 stock; leaves rather rigid, keeled, nerved, tiiper-pointed ; panicle many-flowered; 

 divisions of perianth ^' long, a pair of round spots above the narrowed base. 



Z. glatlCUS. Bogs along our N. borders : l°-3° high, from a bulb ; leaves 

 flat, pale ; flowers rather few ; base of perianth coherent with that of the ovary, 

 the (^visions marked with an inversely heart-shaped spot. 



12. UVULABIA, BELLWOBT. (Name from the Latin wrofa, or palate; 

 the application obscure.) Stems 6' -2° high, naked below, leafy above: fl. 

 spring. All in rich woods. •' - .• 



* Leaves ohlonq, the base clasping round the stem which seems to run through the 



blade just above its base (Lessons,ip. 67, fig. 131) : pod S-lobed: rootstock 

 very snort and erect. 

 XT. grandiflbra, the common one from W. New England W. : with pale 

 greenish-yellow flower 1 J' long and smooth or nearly so inside. 



U. perfoli&ta, common E. & S. : smaller, with sharper tips to the an- 

 thers, and the partis of the barely yellowish perianth granular-roughened inside. 

 U. fl^va, chiefly N. E., with bright yellow flower about 1' long, and nearly 

 smooth.inside., -,•■■••.. 



* « Leaves not surrounding the stem, rmrely sessile: rootstock creeping: pod 



I ' sharply triatigular. 



U. sessilifolia, common, especially N. : 6'-12'_high, with pale lance-bb- 

 long leaves, and whitish cream-colored flower f long'; pod stalked. 



13. CLINTOTTIA. (Named for DeWitt Clinton of New York.) Cold 

 moist woods : flowers early summer. 



C. bpredlis. Only N. and along the, mountains; flowers 2-7, greenish 

 yellow, over i' long ; berry rather many-seed.ed( 



C. umbellata. Along the Alleghanies ; flowers numerous,. J' long, white 

 speckled with green or purplish dots ; seeds only 2 in each cell. 



14. FROSABTES. (Na.me from Greek word meaning Aan^rinsr.) 



P. lanugindsa. Rich woods the whole length of the Alleghany region to 

 Canada : branches widely spreading ; leaves ovate-oblong, pointed, rounded or 

 slightly heart-shaped at the sessile base; flowers |' long, greenish; style with 3 

 stigmas : fl. late spring. 



15. STREPTOPTJS, TWISTED-STALK (which the name denotes in 

 Greek). In cold damp or wet woods N.-: flowers in late spring and early 

 stimmer, small, barely ^' long. 



