94 CARYOPHYLLACE^E. (PINK FAMILY.) 



transposed by Linnaeus, and by continental botanists ever since.) — Stamens 

 often 5. — The var. 1 semidecandeum, which has more lengthened fruit-bearing 

 pedicels, is here hardly met with. (Nat. from Eu.) 



2. C. viscdsuM, L. (Larger M.) Perennial; stems clammy-hairy, 

 spreading (6'- 15' long) ; leaves oblong ; upper bracts scarious-margined ; flowers 

 at first clustered, the fruiting pedicels longer, the earlier ones mostly much longer 

 than the obtuse sepals ; petals equalling the calyx. — Fields and copses : common, 

 perhaps indigenous to the country. May- July. (Nat. from Eu.) 



3. C. nutans, Raf. Annual, very clam my -pubescent; stems erect, slen- 

 der, grooved, diffusely branched (6'- 20' high); cyme loose and open, many- 

 flowered; leaves oblong-lanceolate, acute, the lowest spatulate ; peduncles mostly 

 elongated ; petals longer than the calyx ; pods nodding on the stalks, curved up- 

 wards, thrice the length of the calyx. — Moist places, Vermont to Minnesota and 

 southward. May - July. — Var. brachypodum, Engelm., W. Illinois and 

 soil th westward, has pedicels shorter than the pods. 



4. C. oblongifolium, Torr. Perennial; stems ascending, villous (6'- 

 12' high), man ij -flowered ; leaves oblong-lanceolate and ovate; peduncles clammy- 

 hairy; petals (2-lobed) and ripe pods about twice the length of the calyx. — Rocky 

 places, New York to N. Virginia and Illinois: rare. May -July. — Stouter 

 and larger flowered than the following species. 



5. C. arvense, L. (Field Chickweed.) Perennial; stems ascending 

 or erect, tufted, downy, slender' (4'- 8' high), naked and few - several-flowered at 

 the summit ; / aves linear ; petals obcordate, more than twice the length of the 

 calyx ; pods scarcity longer than the calyx. Dry or rocky places, New England 

 to Wisconsin and northward. May -July. (Eu.) 



§ 2. MCENCHIA., Ehrhart. Petals entire or merely refuse: the parts of the flower 

 commonly in fours : pod ovate, not longer than the calyx. 



6. C. quaternellum, Fenzl. Smooth and glaucous annual ; stem simple, 

 erect (2' -4' high), 1 - 2-flowered ; leaves lanceolate, acute; petals not exceed- 

 ing the calyx ; stamens 4. (Sagina ereota, L. Mcenchia quaternella, Ehrh.) 



— Near Baltimore,. in dry ground. (Adv. from Eu.) 



10. SAGINA, L. Peaklwort. 



Sepals 4 or 5. Petals 4 or 5, undivided, or often none. Stamens as many 

 as the sepals, rarely twice their number. Styles as many as the sepals and al 

 ternate with them. Pod many-seeded, 4-5-valved to the base; valves opposite 

 the sepals. — Little, matted herbs, with thread-like or awl-shaped leaves, no 

 stipules, and small flowers terminating the stems or branches ; in summer. 

 (Name from sagina, fattening ; of dubious application.) 



* Parts of the flower in fours, rarely with some few in fives. 



1. S. prOGUmbens, L. Perennial, depressed or spreading on the ground, 

 glabrous ; leaves linear- thread-shaped ; apex of the peduncle often hooked soon 

 after flowering ; petals shorter than the broadly ovate obtuse sepals, sometimes none. 



— Springy places and damp rocks, coast of Maine to Pennsylvania. (Eu. ) 



2. S. ap&tala, L. Annual, erect, with more slender leaves, narrower sepals, 

 and petals none or obsolete. — Dry "soil, New York and Pennsylvania to Illinois.* 

 scarce, seemingly native' (Eu.) 



