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ations in half shade. Massachusetts, West Virginia, and Virginia. Our lowland or southern lady fern flourishes in the southern states, comes up the Atlantic Coast until it meets the upland or northern species in Pennsylvania and southern New England, and their identification can hardly fail to awaken in the student a keen interest. Our American botanists are inclined to think that the real _Athyrium filix-femina_ is not to be found in the northeastern United States, but is rather a western species, with its habitat in California and the Rocky Mountain region and identical with _Athyrium cyclosorum_. But whatever changes may occur in the scientific name of the old _Athyrium filix-femina_, the name lady fern will not change, but everywhere within our limits it will hold its own as a familiar term. Underwood, writing of the lady fern under the genus _Asplenium_, mentions the form "_exile_, small, starved specimens growing in very dry situations and often fruiting when only a few inches high." He also mentions Eaton's "_angustum_," and alludes to the "Remaining sixty-three varieties equally unimportant that have been described of this species." The lady fern is common in moist woods, by walls and roadsides, and at its best is a truly handsome species, although, like Mrs. Parsons, we have noticed that in the late summer it loses much of its delicacy. "Many of its forms become disfigured and present a rather blotched and coarse appearance." The lady fern has inspired several poems, which have been quoted more or less fully in the fern books. The following lines are from the pen of Calder Campbell: "But not by burne in wood or dale Grows anything so fair As the palmy crest of emerald pale Of the lady fern when the sunbeams turn To gold her delicate hair." Referring, perhaps, to the fair colors of the unfolding crosiers revealing stipes of a clear wine color in striking contrast with the delicate green of the foliage. In identifying this fern the novice should bear in mind the tendency of the curved sori of youth to become straightened and even confluent with age, although such changes are rather unreliable. Possibly the suggestion of the poetic Davenport may be helpful to some that there is "An indefinable charm about the various forms of the lady fern, which soon enables one to know it from its peculiarly graceful motion by merely gently swaying a frond in the hand." Spores ripen in August. The l
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