chap. xcv. fhymela'ceje. da'phne. 1307 



Da'phne L. Calyx inferior, somewhat salver-shaped ; in most, of some other 

 colour than that of the leaves, and, from its shape and colour, resembling 

 a corolla: segments of its limb 4, deep, ovate, or oblong, imbricate in aesti- 

 vation. Stamens 8, in two rows; the filaments with but a short part distinct 

 from the tube of the calyx ; the anthers not prominent beyond it. Ovary 

 solitary. Ovule solitary, pendulous. Style very short. Stigma capitate. 

 Fruit an ovate carpel, pulpy externally. Seed 1, pendulous. Shrubs. 

 Inner bark silky. Most of the kinds evergreen. Leaves entire, in most 

 alternate ; if not alternate, opposite. Flowers terminal or axillary, mostly 

 in groups, highly fragrant. The whole plant, in most, perhaps in all, intensely 

 acrid and dangerous. (Smith Eng. Flora ; Lindl. Nat. St/st. ; Brown Prod., 

 and observation.) 



Di'rca L. Calyx inferior, funnel-shaped, ending in 4 (Du Hamel has stated 

 in the " essential character" 5) unequal teeth : it is of a pale yellow colour, 

 and hence, and from its figure, resembles a corolla. Stamens 8, arising 

 from the middle of the calyx, and prominent beyond its tip, unequal. 

 Ovary solitary. Style thread-shaped, extending a little beyond the sta- 

 mens. Stigma a simple point. Fruit a dry carpel. Seed 1, pendulous. 

 D. palustris L. is the only species described ; and is a low shrub, that has 

 upright branches, a very tough bark, and flowers 3 together. (l)u Ham., 

 Bot. Beg., Lindl. X. S., and observation.) 



Genus I. 



DAPHNE L. The Daphne. Lin. St/st. Octandria Monogynia. 



Identification. Lin. Gen., 192. ; Juss. Gen. PI., 77. ; Lam. 111., t. 290. ; Smith Eng. Flora, 2. p. 228. 



Synonyme. Thymela; v a Town. Inst., t. 366., Gairtn., t. 39. 



Derivation. Daphne is asserted by Lindley, andsome other botanists, to have been the Greek name 

 of the/fuscus racemosus, or Alexandrian laurel, into which it is fabled that Daphne was changed. 

 " Why the name has been applied to the shrubs now called Daphne, it is not easy to say." {Lindl. Bot. 

 Reg.,t. 1177.) It is stated in Rees's Cyclopcedia, under Xaurus, that L. nobilis "is certainly 

 the Daphne of Dioscorides, and, consequently, the classical laurel. It is still called by the same 

 name among the modern Greeks ;" this is also the popular belief (See St. Pierre's E'tudes de la 

 Nature, Lempriere's Class. Diet., &c. &c.) Supposing the Daphne to have been the iaurus no- 

 bilis, or bay tree, it is easy to account for its being applied to this genus, the D. Mezereum 

 being formerly called the dwarf bay in England; and nearly all the species retaining the names of 

 laureole and laureola in France and Italy. 



Description, fyc. Undershrubs, evergreen and deciduous, natives chiefly of 

 Europe, but partly also of the cooler parts of Asia, including Japan and 

 China. The odour of some of the species is very agreeable ; and the bark of 

 all of them is acrid. They are all beautiful, and rather difficult to propagate, 

 except by seeds. The price of plants, in the London nurseries, is from Is. 

 to 2s. 6d. for all the sorts, except D. Mezereum, and D. Laureola, which 

 are 6d. each. 



A. Leaves deciduous. 



& 1. D. Meze^reum L. The Mezereon Daphne, or common Mezereon. 



Identification. Lin. Sp. PL, p. 5C9. ; Willd. Sp. PI , 2. p. 415. ; Mill. Diet., n. 2. ; Smith Eng. 

 Flora, 2. p. 228. ; Lodd. Cat., ed. 1836. 



Synonymes. Spurge Olive, Spurge Flax; Flowering Spurge, Parkinson-, Dwarf Bay, Gerard; 

 Laureole femelle, Bois gentil, Mezereon, Bois joli, Fr. ; gemeiner Seidelbast, or Kellerbalz, 

 Ger. ; Peperachtige Daphne, Dutch ; Laureola femina, Biondella, Camelia, Ital. ; Laureola hem- 

 bra, Span. 



Derivation. Mezereum and Mezereon are said to be derived from madzaryon, the Persian name for 

 this shrub. 



Engravings. Eng. Bot., t. 1381. ; CEd. Fl. Dan., t. 268. ; and our fig. 1180. 



Spec. Char., Sj-c. Leaves lanceolate, deciduous. Flowers distributed over 

 the branches in threes mostly, and in pairs and fours, expanded before the 

 leaves are protruded. A native of the woods of northern Europe. ( Willd., 

 Smith, and obs.) Found in woods, but rare, in the south and west of 



