80 DIADELPHIA, DECANDRIA. 
H. glutinosum, Muhl. 
H. acuminatum, Mich. 
About a foot or two high. Flowers purple. In woods and 
thickets, common. Perennial. July. 
nudiflorum. 9, H. crcct. Simple, smoothish; leaves ternate, 
broad-oval, acuminate ; scape paniculate, gla- 
brousj joints of the loment subrotund-triangular, 
smoothish. — Willd. 
Resembles No. 8, very closely. Flowers like the preceding. 
Perennial. June to September. 
rotundifoii. 10. H. trailing, hirsute ; leaves ternate, orbicu- 
lar, every where hairy ; stipules rotund-cordate, 
reflexed ; racemes axillary and paniculate, ter- 
minal, few -flowered ; bractes cordate ; joints of 
the loment sub-rhomboid, reticulate, scabrous, 
and Fursh. 
H. canescens, Willd. ? 
Easily distinguished from any of the species of this elegant 
genus, by the round leaves. Flowers purple. In woods, on 
rocks and in dry copses ; common. Perennial. July. 
320. iESCHYNOMENE. Gen. pi. 1202. {Leguminos^e,) 
“ Stamina divided into 2 equal bodies.’’ 
Brown. Loment exserted, compressed^ 
one of the sutures straight, the other lobed ; 
articulations truncated, 1 -seeded. Calix 
bilabiate, labia dentate. — JSTwtt. 
iiispida. 1. JE. the erect stem and petioles tuberculate-his- 
pid ; leaves in many-pairs 5 folioles linear, ob- 
tuse ; stipules membranaceous, semi-saggittate ; 
racemes simple, few-flowered; loments hispid. 
— Willd, Sp. PL 3. p. 1163. 
Hedysarum Virginicum, Willd. Sp. PI. 3.p. 1212. 
A striking and elegant plant, about two feet high. Flowers 
yellow, veined with red. On the banks of the Delaware be- 
