Loudon's Hortus britannicus : a catalogue of all the plants indigenous, cultivated in, or introduced to BritainPart IThe Linnaean arrangement : part IIThe Jussieuean arrangement . Icdonuiu plant. n, . vi-ssfl 494 NATURAL AIUIANGEMKNT. (ttat U, dowrn l\triu»hc\l rithrr «ilh tUnitua, or |ii«tilhiin, or bollO, wliirli will always provont tlu>ir Iumiir•Oaib«llMl(ir>i ti N ^ , i ( i lltilllrr*. Emdifemt$,ot .W»Mt>/v «r«- the tir»t remove fVum lVllul^rc>*, ami hoUl an intirnnMliatc rank bHawu tb*TO ami .•>«i»kj plant*, in wliioli vcKH/ition acquires U« hi({lust form of ili-vo.


Loudon's Hortus britannicus : a catalogue of all the plants indigenous, cultivated in, or introduced to BritainPart IThe Linnaean arrangement : part IIThe Jussieuean arrangement . Icdonuiu plant. n, . vi-ssfl 494 NATURAL AIUIANGEMKNT. (ttat U, dowrn l\triu»hc\l rithrr «ilh tUnitua, or |ii«tilhiin, or bollO, wliirli will always provont tlu>ir Iumiir•Oaib«llMl(ir>i ti N ^ , i ( i lltilllrr*. Emdifemt$,ot .W»Mt>/v «r«- the tir»t remove fVum lVllul^rc>*, ami hoUl an intirnnMliatc rank bHawu tb*TO ami .•>«i»kj plant*, in wliioli vcKH/ition acquires U« hi({lust form of ili-vo. lo^MMtlL Itirjr werr loi: tl liy having it ^inKlo (-t\l(-ii. hut tliiH circuinKtanco ii* not only not ahtululr, but airtliull ..I .!• t. I oxifiit nrti-r minulo anulykii. Tlip real (Urtbreiiee in the Hewl <.(tiMB wmI Lhi-vtyUxluiu u thU, that in Munoiot)Uxlon« tliere it only one rut)kHton (Jig. 3. «); or, if two, that. q, TnuuTrnc wrtion of « monocolvlctlonoun Hem. t, Ri-ctlon of a f^^rminatinK embryo of a emu, lo nhow the two r, (irrmliuitian of a monocoljlrdoiumt krvfl. alli niate rot\lo<lonii of tini-ack and front lolic« «, S« of ditto, to kl>ow the cotjletlon rcmoiuing in the rrprewnt tlnne, the middle lol*c-In the )iUii>uila. MM*. u, Stem and leaves of a monocot>ledonous plant. they arc alternate with each other (i), while in Dicotylwlons they arc always opposite, and more than one,sometime* several, m in Plima [fig. 4. y). The physiological structure of the two classes is, however, that t)ywhich they are familiarly dititinKuished, and exhiliifs a beautiful proof of the harmony that exists between thegreat features of vegetation and their first princij)le, the seed from which they originate. In EnMgenes, orMimocofi/li-dons, there is no distinction between wood and bark [^fig. ) ; in Kxdgrn/^ or DicotylcdonSy thewikkI and bark are distinctly se


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1830, booksubjectbotany, bookyear1839