LOBELIACE^E. (LOBELIA FAMILY.) 283 



* Flowers deep red, large : stem simple. 



1. Ii. ; cardinalis, L. (Cardinal-flower.) Tall (2° -4° high), smooth- 

 ish ; leaves oblong-lanceolate, slightly toothed ; raceme elongated, rather 1-sided ; 

 the pedicels much shorter than the leaf-like bracts. — Low grounds: common. 

 — Perennial by offsets, with large and very showy intensely red flowers, — rarely 

 varying to rose-color ! (Plymouth, Mr. Gilbert), or even to white ! 



* * Flowers blue, or blue variegated with white. 

 \- Stems leafy to the top, simple (l°-3° high) from a perennial root ; leaves oblong yt 

 ovate-lanceolate: sinuses of the cahjx with conspicuous deflexed auricles: flowers 

 crowded in a long spike <>r dense raceme. 



2. L. syphilitica, L. (Great Lobelia.) Somewhat hairy; leaves thin, 

 amie at both ends (2' -6' long), irregularly serrate; flowers (nearly l'long) pedi- 

 celled, longer than the leafy bracts ; calyx hirsute, the lobes half the length of 

 the corolla, the short tube hemispherical. — Low grounds: common. — Mowers 

 light blue, rarely white. 



3. L. puberilla, Michx. Finely soft-pubescent; leaves thickish, obtuse [V - 

 2' long), with small glandular teeth ; spike rather 1 -sided; calyx-lobes {and ovate 

 bracts) little shorter than the corolla, the hairy tube top-shaped. — Moist grounds, New 

 Jersey to Illinois and southward. — Corolla bright blue, jt' long. 



4. L. leptOStaehys, A. DC. Smooth above ; leaves obtuse, denticulate, ob- 

 long-lanceolate, the upper gradually reduced to awl-shaped bracts ; raceme spike 

 like, long and dense; lobes of the calyx nearly equalling the corolla, the auri- 

 cles in the form of 10 awl-shaped appendages as long as the hemispherical tube. — 

 Sandy soil, Illinois and southward. — Corolla 3" - 4" long. 



■*- -t- Stems leafy, -mostly simple (1°- 2|° high) from a perennial root: leaves lanceo- 

 late or oblong-lanceolate : calyx-tube hemispherical, the sinuses destitute of auricles: 

 flowers pretty large (§'- 1' long) and showy, in a loose nearly 1-sided raceme', 

 anthers sometimes bearded on the back. 



5. L. glanduldsa, Walt. Sparingly pubescent : leaves, bracts, and usu- 

 ally the lobes of the calyx strongly glandular-toothed ; calyx-tube densely hispid, 

 rarely sparsely so, or smoothish. — Moist places, Virginia and southward. 



6. L. amoena, Michx. Glabrous (rarely minutely pubescent) ; leaves and 

 bracts usually glandular-toothed ; calyx-lobes entire and slender. — Shady moist 

 places, Virginia and southward. 



*- •*- +- Stems leafy : calyx with no auricles or appendages at the sinuses : flowers 

 small i f —%' long, racemed : roots slender, annual or biennial, or perhaps some- 

 times perennial. 



++ More or less pubescent, at least below : leaves oblong or ovate : stems angled or 

 striate : racemes spike-like : corolla pale blue. 



7. L. inflata, L. (Indian Tobacco.) Stems paniculately much branched 

 from an annual root, pubescent with spreading hairs (9'- 18' high) ; leaves 

 ovate or oblong, toothed, gradually diminishing into leaf-like bracts, which ex- 

 ceed the lower short-pedicelled flowers, calyx-tube ovoid, the pod inflated. — Dry 

 open fields: common. — Corolla only l^" - 2" long. Plant poisonous and a 

 noted quack medicine- 



