156 



WEEDS AJ^D USEFUL PLAXTS. 



largo iimljellulate panicles ; peduncles pubescent. Iiivcluccls of several snort subulate 

 leaflets. Calyx with 5 small acute teeth. Pdals greenish white, ^tijles united below • 

 stigmas diverging or recurved. Berries small, not torosc, dark purple vrhen mature. 



Rich woodlands : Canada to Georgia ; and in gardens, cultivated. Fl. July. Fi: Sep- 

 tember. 



Obs. This plant is native in our rich woodlands ; but has been long 

 introduced into gardens, as a jDopular medicine. The root, and berries, 

 infused in alcohol, made a favorite tincture, in times past, for those 

 who indulged in the perilous habit of taking such stomachics. 



2. A. spino'sa, L- Shrub or low tree ; stem and petioles prickly ; 

 leaves bipinnately compound ; umbels in a very large much-branched 

 panicle. 



Peicklt Aealia. Angelica Tree. Hercules' Club. 



stem unbranched, prickly below, 10-20 and even 60 feet high. Leaves crowded at the 

 summit of the stem, 2-4 feet long ; leaflels ovate, acuminate, serrate, somewhat glaucous 

 below. Flowers white. 



Pennsylvania, South and West. June -August. 



Obs. This striking species is sometimes seen in cultivation ; at the 

 North it is a low tree, but in the Southern States it sometimes attains 

 the height of 40 or even 60 feet, its unbranched stems bearing the 

 crowded leaves at their summits, having a palm-like appearance. The 

 bark, root, and berries, have been used in medicine ; they are aromatic 

 and stimulant like those of the preceding species. ^ 



3. A, nudicau'lis, L. Stem very short, scarcely rising above ground ; 

 bearing a single long-stalked leaf, and a shorter naked scape, with 2-7 

 umbels. 



Naked-stem Aealia. Sarsaparilla. False Sarsaparilla. 



Boot creeping, thickish and long, somewhat aromatic but mawkish. Stem scarcely 

 more than the crown of the root. Leaf on an erect petiole 6-12 inches long. .3-parted at 

 summit ; each division 2-5 inches in length, and bearing 5 odd-pinnate subsessile leaflets. 

 Scape 4-8 inches high, divided at summit into 2-7 smoothish p&Juncles, about 2 inches 

 long, each bearing a naked, many-flowered, globose umbel, an inch or an inch and a hall 

 in diameter. Berries torulose, purplish black when mature. 



Obs. The root of this is sometimes used as a substitute for the Sarsa- 

 parilla of the shops, (a species of Smilax.) I believe both the original 

 and the substitute to be rather innocent medicines, — provided tbe^ dis- 

 ease be not serious ! 



^ 2. GiNSEXG. Flowers diceciously polygamous ; styles and cells of the 

 (red or reddish) fruit 2 - 3 ; stem herbaceous, low, simple, bearing at its 

 summit a whorl of 3 palmately 3 - 1 foliolate leaves (or perhaps rather a 

 single sessile tio ice-compound leaf,) and a single umbel on a slender naked 

 peduncle. 



4. A. quinqusfo'lia, Gray. Koot fusiform, often branched ; leaflets 

 mostly in fives, obovate, acuminate, unequally serrate, petiolulate ; pe- 

 duncle of the umbel rather shorter than the common petioles ; styles 2 

 fruit succulent, 2-celled, 2-seeded. 



Five-lea VED Panax. Ginseng. 



