130 
PENTANDRIA, DIGYNIA. 
androssemifo. 1, A, Icaves ovate, glabrous ; cymes terminal and 
^ lateral ; tube of the corolla longer than the ca- 
lix. — Brown. 
Icon, Dod- mem. t. 50. (Pursh.) 
Common l)og^s-bane. Tutsan4eaved Dog^s-hane. 
From two to three feet high. Flowers pale red, and striped. 
On the borders of cultivated fields, frequent. Perennial. 
July. 
caimabinum. £, A. steui upright, leaves oblong-oval, with hoa- 
ry pubescence underneath; panicle pubescent ; 
the limb of the corolla erect. — Willd. and Fursh. 
A. Cannabinum, Mich. Willd. Pursh, not of Brown 
and Elliot. 
A. pubescens. Brown, and Elliot following him. 
Icon. Pluk. aim. t. 13. f. 1. 
Indian Hemp. 
Resembles No. 1. Easily distinguished, however, by the 
leaves and flowers, which are greenish-white, or yellowish- 
green, and smaller than those of No. 1. In similar places with 
the preceding. Perennial. June, July. 
bypericifoii- 3. A. stcm somcwhat procumbent, leaves cordate- 
oblong; smooth, cymes shorter than the leaves. B. 
A. Sibiricum. Jacq. hort. 3. t. 66. (Pursh.) 
St. John^S’Worideaved Dog^s-bane. 
This species has very much the aspect of hypericum, as 
regards its foliage. On the sandy low shores of the Delaware 
above Kensington, on the Pennsylvania side; and nearly op- 
posite Gloucester point on the Jersey side. Rare. PerenniaL- 
July. 
123. GONOLOBUS. Mich. Fl. Am. 1. p. 119. (Jpocyne<e.) 
Corolla rotate, 5-parted. Lepanthium (or 
nectary) simple, cyliudric, subcarnose, 5- 
lobed, depressed, exactly equal with the 
antheridium (antheroid cells) discoid, pen- 
