ls bid when} bee 
Ch. XIV.] INFLORESENCE. 83 
Fig. 57. 
336. 7tn. Corymb (Fig. 57, a) or false umbel, when the 
peduncles rise from different heights above the main stem, but 
the lower ones being longer, they form nearly a level or a con- 
vex top; as the Yarrow. 
8th. Fascicle (Fig. 57, b) flowers on little stalks variously 
inserted and subdivided, collected into a close bundle, level at 
the top; as the Sweet-William ; it resembles a corymb, but the 
flowers are more densely clustered. 
437. 9th. Head (Fig. 57, c) or tuft, has sessile flowers 
heaped together in a globular form; as in the Clover, and But- 
ton Bush. 
336. What is a corymb, and what is a fascicle 3 
337. What is a head 3 
