1. Gentiana verna.
  2. Silena acaulis.
  3. Draba frigida.[66]
  4. Draba fladnizensis.
  5. Cardamine bellidifolia.
  6. Cardamine resedifolia.
  7. Potentilla frigida.
  8. Phyteuma hemisphericum.
  9. Pyrethrum Alpinum.
  10. Erigeron uniflorum.
  11. Saxifraga bryoides.
  12. Saxifraga Groenlandica.
  13. Saxifraga muscoides.
  14. Saxifraga oppositifolia.
  15. Androsace Helvetica.
  16. Androsace pubescens.
  17. Lazula spicata.
  18. Festuca Halleri.
  19. Poa laxa.[67]
  20. Poa cæsia.
  21. Poa Alpina.
  22. Trisetum subspicatum.
  23. Agrostis rupestris.
  24. Carex nigra (Cariceæ).

The Pimpernel.

Accompany me to the corn-field; not for any discourse upon the state and prospect of the crops, or on the comparative value to man of wheat or barley, but for the sake of the little red flower which shines like a star among the growing harvest.

You cannot mistake it, for, with the exception of the tiny chaff-weed, the smallest wild plant which bears a distinct flower, it is the only scarlet blossom in the wheat-field, except, indeed, the red poppy, which every good farmer seeks to banish from his land. Mark me,—I say the only scarlet flower; for there are several—as, for instance, the pheasant's eye, or Adonis—of a deep crimson.

The pimpernel belongs to the Primrose family, or Primulaceæ. It has a five-cleft calyx, and a monopetalous corolla. Its stamens, of an equal number, are inserted on the corolla, opposite its segments. It is a meteoric flower; so-called, because it keeps itself shut during wet or cloudy weather. Hence, it is known among country people as "the shepherd's warning" or "poor man's weather-glass." And Darwin, enumerating the various signs of rain, says of it—

"Closed is the pink-eyed pimpernel;

In fiery red the sun doth rise,

Then wades through clouds to mount the skies:

'Twill surely rain, we see 't with sorrow;

No working in the fields to-morrow."