16 HOW PLANTS GROW FROM THE SEED. 
springing from the top of the first (Fig. 30). Meanwhile the root has grown 
deeper into the soil, and sent out branches. Having now more roots below, and, 
above, a pair of leaves besides the seed-leaves to work with, the seedling plantlet 
all the sooner makes veg- 
etable matter enough to 
form a third pair of leaves 
and raise them on a third 
joint of stem (as in Fig. 
81); and so it goes on, 
step by step. This nour- 30 
ishment in the embryo of the Red-Maple seed was.a few weeks before in the 
trunk of the mother tree, as a sweet sap, that is, as Maple-sugar. 
87. Variations of the Plan of Growth. In the Morning-Glory, after the pair of 
seed-leaves, only one leaf is found upon each joint of stem (see Fig. 23 and 4). 
In the Maple there is a pair of leaves to every joint ‘of stem, as long as it grows. 
In the Morning-Glory the food in the seed, for the growth to begin with, was 
stored up outside of the embryo; in the Maple it was stored up in @t, that is, in 
its seed-leaves. The plan is evidently the same in: both; but there are differ- 
