Nyctanthes

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 Nyctanthes subsp. var.  
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[[]] > Nyctanthes var. ,


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Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture

Nyctanthes (night flower: blooms toward night and fls. fall at morning). Oleaceae,, One species, a small tree or shrub of India but now spontaneous in some other countries, sometimes planted in warm regions or grown under glass for its numerous white very fragrant flowers.

The species is N. Arbor-tristis, Linn., literally the "tree of sadness" because it blooms only at night; it is also known as the "night jasmine.” Nyctanthes is much like Jasminum and some of the early names belong under that genus; it differs in its capsular fr. Lvs. opposite, ovate, cordate, short-stalked, entire or dentate, scabrous: branches 4-angled: fls. few in a sessile involucrate cluster or head, which are disposed in dichotomous cymes; corolla whitish, the tube orange, salverform, the lobes 4-8; stamens (anthers) 2. nearly sessile near the top of the tube; ovary 2-cclled, the style short and stigma 2-Iobed: caps, roundish, ¾ in. long, with one erect seed in each of the 2 colls. B.M. 4900. B.R. 399.—It is an interesting plant, but little grown in our territory; blooms in summer; prop, by firm cuttings in sand with bottom heat. Reaches 30 ft. in India.


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