BACCHARIS-BELLIS. 
81 
fete-oblong:, or oval, smooth or pubescent, uniform-coloured ; nerves on the 
upper side downy, and beneath bristly ; margin ciliate ; flowers abundant, 
not viscous; their tubes longer than their divisions; teeth of the calyx 
short, oval, sub-rounded; stamens very much exsert. A variety, coccinea^ 
has scarlet flowers, and minute calyx ; another, co.tnea, has pale red flow- 
ers, with red bases and leafy calyx ; another, alba, has white flowers, with 
a middling calyx ; another, papilionacea, has red flowers, with the lower 
divisions white, calyx leafy; anoxhev, partita, has flesh-coloured flowers, 
5-parted to the base ; dLnother, poiyandria, has rose-coloured flowers, with 
from 10 to 20 stamens. Woods. 2-6 f. 
visco'sa, {white honeysuckle, w. J. T-2.) leafy; branches hispid; leaves oblong- 
obovate, acute, glabrous, and one-coloured; flowers viscous, tube twice as 
long as the divisions ; teeth of the calyx very short, rounded. Flowers 
very sweet-scented, 
procuvi^bens, (Ju. ^2. r.) stems diffusely procumbent; leaves opposite, ellipti- 
cal, glabrous, revolate on the margins; corolla bell-form, glabrous; fila- 
ments enclosed, equal. High mountains. Northern. Flov/ers small, ia 
small terminal umbels or corymbs, 3-4 i. 
SACCIIARIS. 17—2. (CorymbifercR.) [Dedicated to Bacchus.] 
halimefo'lia, (w. S. T^.) leaves obovate and oval, incisely toothed near the sum- 
mit ; panicle compound, leafy ; heads of flowers peduncled. Egret of the 
fertile florets hairy, twice as long as the corolla. The whole plant is cov- 
ered with a whitish dust. 6-12 f. Groundsel-tree. 
S^OMYCES. 21-5. <^Z^cb.) 
ros"mt5, crust uniform, warty, white; peduncle (podetia) short, cylindric; 
receptacle sub-globose, pale" red. On the earth. 
SALLOTA. 13—1. {Labiates,.) [From ballo, to put forth, Gtos, the ear.] 
ni'gra, (black horehound, T^.) leaves undivided, ovate, serrate ; calyx dilated 
above, sub-truncate, with spreading teeth. Flowers purple or white, in ax- 
illary whorls. 2-3 f. 
SAPTISIA. 10—1. {LeguminoscB.) [From bapto, to dye.l 
tincto'ria, (wild indigo, y. Ju. %. ) very glabrous and branching; leaves telr- 
nate, sub-sessile ; leafets wedge-obovate, round-obtuse, becoming black in. 
drying ; stipules obsolete, oblong-acute, much shorter than the petioles; ra- 
cemes terminal ; legumes ovate, long stiped. 2-3 f. 
'HV'ba, (w. J. %.) branches spreading; leaves ternate, petioled ; leafets lance- 
olate, wedge-form at the base, obtuse, mucronate, glabrous ; stipules subu- 
late, shorter than the petioles; racemes terminal. 2 f . S. 
BARB ARE A. 14—2. (CrucifercE.) 
vulga'ris, {J. %. y.) ]owev \esLves lyrate, the terminal lobes roundish; upper 
ones sessile, obovate, toothed ; pod 4-sided, tapering into a slender style. 
Flowers in corymbs, small. Bitter winter-cress ; found in old fields. 12- 
18 i. 
SARTSIA. 13—2. (^Scropkularia.) 
paV'lida, (white painted cup, w-y. Au. %.) leaves alternate, linear, undivided; 
upper ones lanceolate; floral ones sub-oval, sub-toothed at the summit ; all 
are 3-nerved ; teeth of the calyx acute. 
SATSCniA. 5—1. iBoraginem.) [In honour of Batsch, a German.] 
canes^cens, (puccoon, Ju. %.) whitish-villose; leaves all oblong; calyx short, 
divisions of the corolla entire. Hills. Flowers axillary, crowded near 
the top of the stem, bright orange. The root is used by the Indians as ,a 
red dye. 
SEJARIA. 12 — 1. (Rhodendra.) [In hoaour of a Spanish botanist.] 
racemosa, (w-r. J. I^.) leaves lance-ovate, glabrous; flowers in a panicled 
raceme, terminal ; stem hispid. 3 f. Sandy plains. ^S. 
8ELLIS. 17—2. (Corijmbiferoi.) [From bellus, handsome.] 
peren"ms, (daisy, w. and p. Ap. Q]..) leaves obovate, crenate; scape naked, 1- 
flowered. Ex. 
