Edward Gillette Southwick , Mass.—Hardy Perennials 51 
1. Trillium cernuum 
2. Trillium nivale 
Group of Trilliums (see page 49) 
3. Trillium erythrocarpum 6. Trillium sfcylosum 
4. Trillium erectum album 7. Trillium grandiflorum 
5. Trillium recurvatum 
Trillium erythrocarpum. White flowers painted with 
purple at the base; delights in cold damp leaf- 
mold. 15 cts. each, $1.50 per doz. 
T. grandiflorum. ® Probably the prettiest of the 
genus, and most generally cultivated. It grows 8 to 
15 inches high, bearing a large, white flower, often 2 to 
2\ inches in length and 2 inches wide, turning to lilac- 
color with age. 10 cts. each, $1.00 per doz. $5.00 
per 100. 
T. nivale. m A low kind, with pure white flowers. 
Four to 6 inches high. 15 cts. each, $1.25 per doz. 
T. recurvatum. ® Leaves green, with white patches, 
flowers brown-purple. A most beautiful and easily 
grown Trillium. 15 cts. each, $1.25 per doz., $6.00 
per 100. 
T. sessile, m Four to 12 inches high. Flowers dark- 
purple. 15 cts. each, $1.50 per doz. $7.00 per 100. 
T. sessile, var. Californicum. es From the Pacific 
coast. 20 cts. each, $2.00 per doz. 
T. stylosum. A southern species with white or pink 
flowers, in early spring. 15 cts. each. 
Trillium sessile 
See page one for explanation of signs before description of plants. 
