[15.] Blossoming. In Flax the flowers make their appearance at the end of the stem and branches. The growth, which otherwise might continue them farther or indefinitely, now takes the form of blossom, and is subservient to the production of seed.

Fig. 9. Flax-flowers about natural size. 10. Section of a flower moderately enlarged, showing a part of the petals and stamens, all five styles, and a section of ovary with two ovules or rudimentary seeds.

[16.] The Flower of Flax consists, first, of five small green leaves, crowded into a circle: this is the Calyx, or flower-cup. When its separate leaves are referred to they are called Sepals, a name which distinguishes them from foliage-leaves on the one hand, and from petals on the other. Then come five delicate and colored leaves (in the Flax, blue), which form the Corolla, and its leaves are Petals; then a circle of organs, in which all likeness to leaves is lost, consisting of slender stalks with a knob at summit, the Stamens; and lastly, in the centre, the rounded body, which becomes a pod, surmounted by five slender or stalk-like bodies. This, all together, is the Pistil. The lower part of it, which is to contain the seeds, is the Ovary; the slender organs surmounting this are Styles; the knob borne on the apex of each style is a Stigma. Going back to the stamens, these are of two parts, viz. the stalk, called Filament, and the body it bears, the Anther. Anthers are filled with Pollen, a powdery substance made up of minute grains.

17. The pollen shed from the anthers when they open falls upon or is conveyed to the stigmas; then the pollen-grains set up a kind of growth (to be discerned only by aid of a good microscope), which penetrates the style: this growth takes the form of a thread more delicate than the finest spider's web, and reaches the bodies which are to become seeds (Ovules they are called until this change occurs); these, touched by this influence, are incited to a new growth within, which becomes an embryo. So, as the ovary ripens into the seed-pod or capsule (Fig. [1], etc.) containing seeds, each seed enclosing a rudimentary new plantlet, the round of this vegetable existence is completed.


Section III. MORPHOLOGY OF SEEDLINGS.