POPULAR FLORA. 
145 
2. Carolina V. Smooth; leaflets 8 to 12, oblong; flowers many, whitish, tipped with blue, rather 
scattered on the peduncle, in spring. Banks, &c., common. V. Caroliniana. 
3. American V. Smooth; leaflets 10 to 14, oval or oblong, very veiny; flowers 4 to 8 on the pe¬ 
duncle, purplish or bluish, in summer. N. V. Americana. 
* * Annual: flowers large, one or two together, sessile in the axils of the leaves. 
4. Common Tare. Leaflets 10 to 14, narrow; flowers violet-purple. Cultivated fields, V. sativa. 
Bean. Phas'eolus. 
Keel of the corolla (with the- included stamens and style) twisted or coiled, so as to form a ring, or 
one or more turns of a spiral coil. Stamens diadelphous. Pod flat or flattish, several-seeded. Seeds 
flattish. Plants twining more or less, in one cultivated variety short and erect. Leaves of three 
leaflets, the end leaflet some way above the other two (i. e. pinnate of 3 leaflets): and they have stipels 
or little stipules to the leaflets. FI. summer. 
* Wild species: mostly found South and West. 
1. Perennial Bean. Climbing high; leaflets round-ovate, pointed; flowers in long panicled racemes, 
purple; pods curved. Wooded banks, &c. - P. perennis. 
2. Trailing Bean. Annual, spreading on the ground ; leaflets 3-lobed or angled ; flowers few, 
crowded at the end of a long erect peduncle, purplish; pods narrow, straight. Sandy places. 
P. diversifolius. 
* * Cultivated Beans. 
3. Common or Kidney Bean. Known by its straight pods, pointed by the hardened lower part of the 
style, and the thick rather kidney-shaped seeds. The Dwarf or Bush Bean is a low and 
small variety which does not twine. The Scarlet Runner is a free climbing variety, gen¬ 
erally red-flowered. P. vulgaris. 
4. Lima Bean. Known by its broad ancUflat, curved or scymitar-shafed pods, with few and large flat 
seeds. The Civet Bean is a small variety of it. P. lunatus. 
False-Indigo. Baptisia. 
Flowers generally in racemes. Standard erect, with the sides rolled back: keel-petals nearly sepa¬ 
rate and straight, like the wings. Stamens 10, separate! Pod stalked in the calyx, bladdery, but 
rather thick-walled, pointed, containing many small seeds. — Perennial herbs, erect and branched, 
with palmate leaves of 3 leaflets. — The commonest are the following: — 
1. Yellow False-Indigo. Glaucous, bushy-branched; leaves almost sessile; leaflets small, wedge- 
obovate; flowers few at the ends of the panicled branchlets, yellow, produced all summer. Dry 
grounds, common. B. linctoria. 
2. Blue F. Tall and stout; stipules lance-shaped, as long as the petiole; leaflets wedge-oblong; 
flowers many, large, blue, in a long'raceme, in spring or early summer. (Fig. 354, 355.) Rich 
soil; common W. & S. and also cultivated in gardens. B. australis. 
Senna. Cassia. 
Calyx of 5 sepals. Petals 5, spreading, not papilionaceous, but a little irregular. Stamens 10, but 
those on one side of the blossom commonly shorter, or without anthers; the anthers open at the top 
by two chinks or holes. Pods many-seeded. — Leaves simply and abruptly pinnate. The common 
species are herbs, with yellow flowers, in summer. 
