136 
S ALI CORN 1A— SAN I CtTL A. 
tate; lobes ovate, slightly acuminate, straight. Var. major, leaves large, 
abruptly acute; scape sub ramose- 1-2 f. 
fieteropkyl"la , (w. An. flj..) leaves simple, linear, and lanceolate, acute atqach 
end, or elliptical and sagittate, with the lobes linear and divaricate; scape 
simple, few-flowerqd; fertile flowers sub-sessile; bracts short, sub-orbicu- 
late. 1 f. \ 
tSALICORNIA. 1—1. (Alriplices.) [From sal, salt, and cornu , a horn.] 
herba'cea , (samphire, glass wort, Au. <v>.) herbaceous, spreading; joints com¬ 
pressed at the apex, emargin ale-bifid. Var. virgirdca , has the branches 
undivided, and the jointed spikes long. The fructification is very obscure, 
but it may be known by its leafiess, nearly cylindric, jointed branches. It 
grows in salt marshes along the seaboard. Onondaga salt springs. 12-18 L 
’ SALIX. 20—2. (Amentacece.) [From sa£, near, and As, water.] 
vi’mina'lis , (osier, basket-willow, Ap. T?.) branches slender and flexible ; fila¬ 
ments yellow, anthers orange; aments appear before the leaves; leaves 
white, silky beneath. Banks of streams'. Middle sized tree. Introduced, 
babylo'nica, (wllping-willow, M. ?y) branch lets pendent; leaves lanceolate, 
acuminate, serrate, glabrous, upper and lower sides of different colours; 
stipules roundish, contracted; aments flower as soon as the leaves appear ; 
germs sessile, ovate, glabrous. Supposed to be the willow on which the 
Israelites hung their harps when captive in Babylon. Introduced. 
BALSOLA. 5—2. ( Atriplices .) [From sal, salt; so called on account of its saline properties.] 
kadi, (prickly salt-wort, Ju. ©.) decumbent; leaves subulate, rough; stem 
bushy ; flowers solitary. Sea shore. Burnt for the alkaline salts which it 
contains. 
soda, (salt-wort,) smooth, ascending. 
SALVIA. 2—1. ( Labiates .) [From salvo, to save ; so Called in reference to its qualities.] 
lyra'ta , (wild sage, b. M. flj-.) stem nearly covered with reflexed hairs ; radi¬ 
cal leaves Jyrate-dentate; upper lip of the corolla very short; flowers 
about 0 in a whorl. Woods. 1 f. 
clayto'ni, leaves cordate, ovate, sinuate, toothed, rugose; flowers violet, in 
whorls. Woods. 8-12 i. 
%rtic%fiQ'Ua, viscous and villose; leaves ovate-oblong, very pubescent; flow¬ 
ers blue, viscous, in remote whorls. Mountains. 
officina'lis, (sage, b. J. 9f or I 7 .) leaves lance-ovate, crenulate ; whorls few- 
flowered; calyx mucronate. Ex. 
sda'ra, (clarry, $.) leaves rugose, cordate, oblong, villose, serrate; floral 
bracts longer than the calyx, concave, acuminate. Ex. 
BAMBIJCUS. 5—3. (Caprifoliai.') [From Sabucca , (Hebrew.) the name of an ancient music¬ 
al instrument, made from the wood of this shrub.] 
canaden"sis , (black-berried elder, w. J. T 7 ) branchlets and petioles glabrous ; 
leafets about in 4 pairs, oblong-oval, glabrous, shining, acuminate; cyme 
lax, divided into about 5 parts. 8-15 f. 
pubes" cens, (red-berried elder, w. M. fi>.) bark warty ; leafets in 2 pairs, 
lance-oval, pubescent beneath ; flowers raceme-panicled, or in a crowded 
bunch. 6-12 f. 
SANGITINAItlA. 13—1. {Papaveracec e.) [From sSiguis, blood; so named either from the 
colour of its root, or its use in stopping haemorrhages.] 
canaden"sis , (blood-root, w. Ap. QJ-.) leaves sub-reniform, sinuate-lobed , scape 
1-flowered. A variety, slenopdala , has linear petals. 6-10 i. 
SANGUISOItBA. 4—2. ( Rosacea .) [From sangais, blood, and sorbeo, to absorb ; so named 
from its medicinal qualities.] 
canaden"sis, (burnet saxifrage, .w. Ju. %.) flowers in a long, cylindric spike; 
stamens several times longer than the corolla. The leaves resemble the 
burnet. 3-5 f. 
me'dm, stipes shorter then the preceding, and tinged with red. Wet mea¬ 
dows; chiefly on mountains. 
BAKICITLA. 5—2. ( UmbclUferai.) [From sano, to heal; so called from its virtues in heal¬ 
ing.] 
marylan' / dica, (w. June-Au. 9|.) leaves all digitate; leafets oblong, deeply 
serrate; staminate flowers numerous, pedicelled. 2 f. 
