no PENTANDRIA, MONOGYNIA. 
Horse-nettle% 
About eighteen inches or two feet high. Flowers large, 
light blue. Fruit yellow. At the south bottom of the rocky 
bluff at Gray’s ferry, tolerably abundant In neglected fields 
near Gray’s ferry and the Woodlands. Rare. Perenniah 
May, July. 
103. PHYSALIS. Gen. pi. 336. fSolanea.J 
Berry 2-celled, covered by the inflated calix. 
Corolla campanulate-rotate ; tube marked 
with five diaphanous concave impressions. 
Stamina connivent. — Nutt. 
okscura. 1 , P. leaves somewhat cordate, orbiculate, acumi- 
nate, unequally de-ntate ; stem herbaceous, diva- 
ricate, very much branched ; branches angled. — 
Mich. 
P. pubescens. 
In sandy fields near Woodbury, Jersey. Rare. Corolla yel- 
low, with purplish-livid spots. Perennial. July, August. 
Permsyivani- 2. P. leaves ovatc, somewhat repand, obtuse, naked ; 
stem herbaceous, branching; peduncles solitary, 
a little longer than the petioles. — Willd. and Pursh. 
P. tomentosa, Walt. ? 
Pennsylvanian Winter-cherry. 
A very ordinary -looking plant, growing among rubbish, on 
neglected way sides, and sometimes on the borders of culti- 
vated fields. Common. Annual, July. 
104. NICANDRA. Adanson. Juss. Gen. pi. 140. f Solaneae.J 
Calix 5-parted, with 5 angles, angles com- 
pressed, segments sagittate. Corolla cam- 
panulate. Stamina incurved. Berry 3 to 
5-celled, covered by the calix. — Nutt. 
