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Excerpt from Wayside and Woodland Blossoms: A Pocket Guide to British Wild-Flowers for the Country Rambler
So widely distributed and well known is this plant that sur prise may be felt at its inclusion here but its perfect familiarity marks it as a capital type of the important natural order to which it belongs. What is commonly known as the ¿ower is really a corymb or level-topped cluster of many densely-packed ¿orets of two kinds. Those of the central yellow disc consist each of a tubular corolla, formed by the union of five petals, within which the five anthers unite to form a sheath round the central pistil. The outer or ray-¿orets have the corolla developed into an irregular white ¿ag, which at once renders the composite ¿ower conspicuous and pretty. These outer florets produce pistils only, as though the extra material necessary for the production of the white ¿ag had made economy in other directions a necessity, and had prevented the development of anthers and pollen.
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