296 2 CAMPANULACEAE. Vor, III. 
5. Campanula glomerata L. Clus- 
tered Bellflower. Dane’s Blood. 
Fig. 4019. 
Campanula glomerata L. Sp. Pl. 166. 1753. 
Perennial by short rootstocks; stem stout, 
simple, erect, pubescent, leafy, 1°-2° high. 
Leaves pubescent on both sides, crenulate, 
the lower and basal ones gblong or ovate, 
mostly obtuse, sometimes cordate, slender- 
petioled, 2’-4’ long, the upper lanceolate or 
ovate-lanceolate, acute, sessile or clasping, 
smaller; flowers about 1’ long, sessile, erect 
and spreading in terminal and axillary glom- 
erules; corolla campanulate, blue, rather 
deeply 5-lobed; calyx-lobes lanceolate, acu- 
minate; capsule ovoid or oblong, erect, about 
3” high, opening near the base. 
In fields and along roadsides, eastern Massa- 
chusetts and Quebec. Naturalized from Eu- 
rope. Sometimes called canterbury bells, a 
name more properly belonging to C. medium 
and C. Trachelium. June-Aug. 
6. Campanula aparinoides Pursh. Marsh 
or Bedstraw Bellflower. Fig. 4020. 
Campanula aparinoides Pursh, Fl. Am. Sept.159. 1814. 
Perennial; stems very slender or filiform, weak, 
reclining or diffuse, rough with short retrorse bris- 
tles, leafy, paniculately branched, 6’-2° long. 
Leaves lanceolate, or linear-lanceolate, sessile, 
sparingly crenulate with low teeth, or entire, 
rough on the margins and midrib, acute at both 
ends, #’-13’ long, 1-3” wide; flowers leafy- 
paniculate, 23-4” long; pedicels filiform, diver- 
gent; buds drooping; corolla spen-campanulate, 
deeply 5-cleft, white or bluish-tinged, 24’”-4” long, 
its tube equalling or longer than the triangular- 
lanceolate acute calyx-lobes; style included; cap- 
sule subglobose, opening near the base. 
In grassy swamps, Maine to Georgia, Kentucky and 
Colorado. Called also slender bellflower. June-Aug. 
7. Campanula uligindsa Rydb. Blue Marsh 
Bellflower. Fig. 4021. 
Campanula uliginosa Rydb.; Britton, Man. 885. 1901. 
Perennial; similar to the preceding but branches less 
spreading; stem 1°-2° long, retrorsely hispidulous on 
the angles. Leaves linear, 1’-23’ long, 3°’-23” wide, 
retrorsely hispidulous on the margins and midribs, 
acute, minutely denticulate with callous teeth or entire; 
corolla blue with darker veins, cleft to below the mid- 
dle into lanceolate lobes; capsule subglobose, about 23” 
long and nearly as broad, opening near the base. 
In wet meadows, New Brunswick to Saskatchewan, New 
York, Indiana and Nebraska. June-Aug. 
