TABLE OF CONTENTS

[325—Justicia nasuta.]
[326—Mesembryanthemum viridiflorum.]
[327—Chrysanthemum indicum.]
[328—Trifolium incarnatum.]
[329—Ononis natrix.]
[330—Sida Cristata.]
[331—Kalmia angustifolia.]
[332—Oenothera fruticosa.]
[333—Cerinthe major.]
[334—Hypericum monogynum.]
[335—Ononis rotundifolia.]
[336—Lotus hirsutus.]
[337—Prunella grandiflora.]
[338—Allamanda cathartica.]
[339—Arum trilobatum.]
[340—Polygala Heisteria.]
[341—Scilla amæna.]
[342—Erica persoluta.]
[343—Antholyza Cunonia.]
[344—Aspalathus pedunculata.]
[345—Polygala bracteolata.]
[346—Protea mellifera.]
[347—Oenothera rosea.]
[348—Calceolaria Fothergillii.]
[349—Solanum laciniatum.]
[350—Erica ventricosa.]
[351—Saxifraga mutata.]
[352—Oenothera purpurea.]
[353—Mahernia incisa.]
[354—Mimulus aurantiacus.]
[355—Oenothera pumila.]
[356—Erica Massoni.]
[357—Briza maxima.]
[358—Erica baccans.]
[359—Convolvulus althæoides.]
[360—Hibiscus speciosus.]
[INDEX—Latin Names of the Plants.]
[INDEX—English Names of the Plants.]
[INDEX—Latin Names of the Plants contained in the first Ten Volumes.]
[INDEX—English Names of the Plants contained in the first Ten Volumes.]
[INDEX—Hardy Trees contained in the first Ten Volumes.]
[INDEX—Hardy Shrubs contained in the first Ten Volumes.]
[INDEX—Hardy Herbaceous Perennial Plants contained in the first Ten Volumes.]
[INDEX—Annual and Biennial Plants contained in the first Ten Volumes.]
[INDEX—Greenhouse Plants contained in the first Ten Volumes]
[INDEX—Stove Plants contained in the first Ten Volumes]
[INDEX—Plants contained in the first Ten Volumes arranged according to the System of Linnæus]

[325]

Justicia Nasuta. Dichotomous Justicia.

Class and Order.

Diandria Monogynia.

Generic Character.

Cor. ringens. Caps. 2-locularis: seminum retinaculis 2-valvis: valvis longitudinalibus unciculatis. Stamina anthera solitaria.

Specific Character and Synonyms.

JUSTICIA nasuta foliis lanceolato-ovatis integerrimis pedunculis dichotomis. Linn. Sp. Pl. Ed. 3. p. 23. Syst. Vegetab. ed. 14. Murr. p. 63.

PULCOLLI Rheed. Mal. 9. p. 135. t. 69.

No. 325

This species of Justicia, long since figured in the Hortus Malabaricus, and described in the Species Plantarum of Linnæus, has been introduced to the Royal Garden at Kew, since the publication of the Hortus Kewensis, by Mr. Aiton: it is a stove plant, producing, almost the year through, abundance of flowers, distinguished not less for their singularity than their snowy whiteness; the following description, taken from the living plant, is fuller than that of Linnæus in the Sp. Pl.

Descr. Stalk shrubby, somewhat angular, three feet or more in height, green, very much branched, slightly pubescent; Leaves opposite, standing on short footstalks, ovato-lanceolate, running out to a short blunt point, entire, veiny, a little downy; Peduncles from the alæ of the leaves, alternate, dichotomous, two small bracteæ are placed at each bifurcation; Flowers pure white, inodorous; Calyx composed of five lanceolate, entire leaves, continuing; these, as well as the whole of the plant, are beset with minute transparent globules, visible with a magnifier. Corolla deciduous, tube linear, grooved, pale green, slightly villous, bending a little upward; upper lip very narrow, bent back, bifid at the extremity, the edges toward the base rolled back, so as to make it appear in that part almost tubular; lower lip depending, trifid, segments equal, obtuse at the base, round the mouth of the tube marked with fine purple dots; Filaments two, short, projecting from the mouth of the tube, finally bending back; Antheræ at first yellow, afterwards livid; Germen oblong, smooth; Style capillary, slightly hairy; Stigma bifid.

The plant is increased by cuttings; in the Hort. Malab. the bruised leaves are described as in use for the cure of cutaneous eruptions.


[326]

Mesembryanthemum Viridiflorum. Green-Flowered Fig-Marigold.

Class and Order.

Icosandria Pentagynia.

Generic Character.

Cal. 5-fidus. Petala numerosa linearia. Caps. carnosa infera polysperma.

Specific Character and Synonyms.

MESEMBRYANTHEMUM viridiflorum foliis semicylindraceis papuloso-pilosis, calycibus quinquefidis hirsutis. Ait. Kew. v. 2. p. 196. Haworth Mesemb. p. 199. Syst. Nat. ed. Gmel. p. 848.

No. 326

Of the seventy species of Mesembryanthemum described in the Hortus Kewensis, this is the only one with green flowers.

Mr. Masson introduced it from the Cape in 1774.

The flowers are not only remarkable for their colour, but the extreme fineness of the florets; they begin to come forth in July, and continue to be produced till the end of September; the plant is easily increased by cuttings, is of ready growth, and blows freely.

In Mr. Haworth's Observations on the Genus Mesembryanthemum, lately published, there is a very ample description of it, to which we refer such of our readers as wish for more minute information respecting it.

[327]

Chrysanthemum Indicum. Indian Chrysanthemum.

Class and Order.

Syngenesia Polygamia Superflua.

Generic Character.

Recept. nudum. Pappus marginatus. Cal. hemisphæricus, imbricatus: squamis marginalibus membranaceis.

Specific Character and Synonyms.

CHRYSANTHEMUM indicum foliis simplicibus ovatis sinuatis angulatis serratis acutis. Linn. Syst. Vegetab. ed. 14. Murr. p. 773. Spec. Pl. 1253. Thunb. Jap. p. 320.

TSJETTI-PU. Rheed. Mal. t. 44.

MATRICARIA sinensis. Rumph. Amb. p. 259. t. 91.

MATRICARIA japonica maxima flore roseo sive suave rubente pleno elegantissimo. Breyn. Prod. p. 66?

KIK, KIKF, vel KIKKU. Kœmpf. Amæn. Ex. p. 875.

No. 327

We rejoice in the opportunity afforded us, of presenting our readers with the coloured engraving of a plant recently introduced to this country, which, as an ornamental one, promises to become an acquisition highly valuable.

This magnificent species of Chrysanthemum, which we have hitherto seen only in the collection of Mr. Colvill, Nurseryman, King's-Road, Chelsea, began to flower with him early in November last, 1795; and as there were many buds on the plant, at that time, yet unopened, it appeared as if it would continue to flower during the early part of the winter at least.

It is a plant of strong growth; the stem rising to the height of two or three feet, somewhat woody, much branched, beset with numerous leaves, having some resemblance to those of Mugwort, of a greyish hue; the flowers, on being smelt to, discover an agreeable fragrance, they are produced on the summits of the branches in a loose sort of cluster (those which terminate the main stem, grow to the size of a large carnation) of a dark purple colour; they are, it is to be observed, double, or rather between semidouble and double; the florets of the radius at first perfectly tubular or quilled, as they advance split gradually downward on the inside, their outside is of a greyish tint, which being visible in most of the florets, especially the younger ones, gives them a particoloured appearance; these florets do not so completely occupy the receptacle but that room is left for a few others in the centre, of a different form, and yellow colour, which, on examination, appear to have their parts perfect, as indeed do those of the radius; the receptacle is beset with membranous paleæ or chaffy scales, a circumstance which would lead us to consider this plant rather as an Anthemis than a Chrysanthemum, of which it has the calyx, with the foliage of Mugwort.

New as this plant is to us, it appears to have been cultivated in China for ages: Linnæus, who describes it in his Species Plantar. refers us to a figure in the Hortus Malabaricus; this figure, and the description accompanying it, agree generally with our plant, but the flowers are more double, much smaller, less clustered, and do not correspond in point of colour, yet there can be no doubt but our plant is a variety of the same; it is there described as growing in sandy situations, and having green petals.

Rumphius, in his highly interesting work, the Herbarium Amboinense is much more minute in his information; he observes, that these plants were originally brought from China, where they flower in May and June; that there are two sorts principally cultivated in India, the white and yellow-flowered, and a third sort, differing only in the colour of its flowers which are red (the variety, as we suppose, here figured) began to be known among them at Amboyna; the flowers there do not expand well, owing to their being produced at the rainy season, and they decay without producing any seed.

He tells us further, that it is cultivated chiefly for pleasure; that the natives and the Dutch plant it only in the borders of their gardens, in which it does not succeed so well as in pots; and that, if it remains more than two years in the same spot, it degenerates, becomes less woody, and often wholly perishes; that the Chinese, by whom it is held in high estimation, pay great attention to its culture; they set it in pots and jars, and place it before the windows of their apartments, and that it is not unusual for them when they invite their friends to an entertainment to decorate their tables with it; on those occasions, he that produces the largest flower, is considered as conferring the greatest honour on his guests; besides these three varieties already mentioned, they have a fourth, which is more rare, whose flowers are of a greenish ash colour (is not this the var. figured in the Hort. Malab.?) all these varieties growing in separate pots, they place in certain quarters which they particularly wish to decorate, and the effect they produce is highly pleasing: in the cultivation of this plant they spare no pains, the shorter it is and the larger its flowers, the more it is esteemed; to make it dwarfish, and at the same time productive of flowers, they check its growth; for, if suffered to grow rude, it assumes a wild nature, and produces little but leaves when it is coming into flower, of the three blossoms which usually terminate each branch, they pluck off two, and thus the remaining flower grows larger; by this, and other management, they cause the flowers to grow to the breadth of one's hand: he enumerates still a fifth sort with white flowers, which is extremely rare, and smaller than the others, called Tsehuy say si, that is the drunken woman; its flowers morning and evening flag, and hang down as if debilitated by intoxication, in the middle of the day they become erect, and follow the course of the sun; but this (most probably a distinct species) is not exported from China. Finally, he remarks, that the Chinese and Malays are so attached to these flowers, that they even decorate their hair with them.

Thunberg, in his Flora Japonica, enumerates it among the natives of that country, and describes it as growing spontaneously in Papenberg, near Nagasaki, and elsewhere, observing, that it is cultivated for the extreme beauty of its flowers in gardens and houses throughout the whole empire of Japan, and that the flowers vary infinitely in point of colour, size, and plenitude. Kæmpfer's account of it in his Amæn. Exot. is very similar.

This Chrysanthemum appears to be a hardy greenhouse plant, and it is highly probable that, like the Camellia and Aucuba, it will bear the cold of our mild winters without injury.

As it flowers so late, there is but little prospect of its producing seeds with us, but it may be increased by cuttings, and parting of the roots.


[328]

Trifolium Incarnatum. Crimson Trefoil.

Class and Order.

Diadelphia Decandria.

Generic Character.

Flores subcapitati. Legumen vix calyce longius non dehiscens deciduum.

Specific Character and Synonyms.

TRIFOLIUM incarnatum spicis villosis oblongis obtusis aphyllis, foliolis subrotundis crenatis. Linn. Syst. Vegetab. ed. 14. Murr. p. 689. Ait. Kew. v. 3. p. 87.

TRIFOLIUM spica rotunda rubra. Bauh. Pin. p. 328.

LAGOPUS maximus flore rubro. The greatest Haresfoot. Park. Th. p. 1106. f. 1.

TRIFOLIUM album incarnatum spicatum f. Lagopus maximus. Bauh. Hist. 2. p. 376.

No. 328

Of the annual species of Trifolium cultivated by the curious here, this is one of the largest, as well as one of the most shewy; the blossoms in the plants which we have had an opportunity of observing, have been of a bright crimson colour, and have therefore corresponded badly with the name of incarnatum, originally applied to the plant by some of the old botanists, and adopted by Linnæus; like other Trefoils with red flowers, the blossoms are doubtless found with different shades of colour, and sometimes wholly white.

It is a native of Italy, a hardy annual, cultivated here by Parkinson in 1640, flowers in July, and readily ripens its seeds, by which it is easily raised. It appears to have been lost out of this country since its first introduction, as it is not mentioned by Miller; Mr. Aiton enumerates it among the productions of Kew-Garden, and we last summer saw several plants of it raised from foreign seeds flowering in the garden of John Symmons, Esq. Paddington-House, Paddington, who has to boast a collection of hardy herbaceous plants superior to most in this country; his readiness to oblige me with specimens for drawing on this occasion, and his various acts of kindness exerted in the promotion of my botanical views, I have to acknowledge with much gratitude.


[329]

Ononis Natrix. Yellow-Flowered Rest-Harrow.

Class and Order.

Diadelphia Decandria.

Generic Character.

Cal. 5-partitus: laciniis linearibus. Vexillum striatum. Legumen turgidum sessile. Filamenta connata absque fissura.

Specific Character and Synonyms.

ONONIS Natrix pedunculis unifloris aristatis, foliis ternatis viscosis stipulis integerrimis caule fruticoso. Linn. Syst. Vegetab. ed. 14. Murr. p. 653. Ait. Kew. v. 3. p. 24.

ANONIS viscosa spinis carens lutea major. Bauh. Pin. 389.

No. 329

The Ononis Natrix, a plant usually to be met with in all general collections of greenhouse plants, is a native of Spain, and the South of France, where it is said to grow wild in the corn-fields.

The general practice sanctioned by that of Mr. Aiton, is to consider this species as tender; Mr. Miller says it is very hardy, and recommends it to be planted in the open border, a treatment likely to suit it in mild winters; there is, however, one part of his account evidently erroneous, he describes the root as perennial, and the stem as herbaceous, this is not only contrary to Linnæus's specific description, but to fact, the stalk being undoubtedly shrubby.

As this plant in the course of a year or two is apt to grow out of form, it is advisable either to renew it frequently by seed, which it produces in abundance, or to keep it closely cut in.

It flowers from the middle of summer till towards the close, and is propagated readily either by seeds or cuttings.

Is no novelty in this country, having been cultivated by Mr. James Sutherland in 1683[1].


[330]

Sida Cristata. Crested Sida.

Class and Order.

Monadelphia Polyandria.

Generic Character.

Cal. simplex, angulatus. Stylus multipartitus. Caps. plures 1-spermæ.

Specific Character and Synonyms.

SIDA cristata foliis angulatis, inferioribus cordatis, superioribus panduriformibus, capsulis multilocularibus. Sp. Pl. ed. 3. p. 964. Syst. Veg. ed. 14. Murr. p. 623. Ait. Kew. v. 2. p. 444. Cavanill. Diss. 1. t. 11. f. 2.

ABUTILON Lavateræ flore, fructu cristato. Dill. Elth. t. 2.

ANODA hastata. Linn. Syst. Nat. ed. Gmel. p. 1040.

No. 330

Dillenius has figured and described this plant in his Hortus Elthamensis as an Abutilon: Linnæus in his Sp. Pl. has ranked it with the Sida's, in which he has been followed by Prof. Murray, Messrs. Aiton and Cavanille; but Prof. Gmelin, in the last edition of Linnæus' Syst. Nat. has made another new genus of it, by the name of Anoda; as his reasons for so doing are by no means cogent, we join the majority in continuing it a Sida.

It flowered in the garden of Mr. Sherard, at Eltham, in 1725, and was introduced from Mexico, where it is a native: Mr. Aiton considers it a stove plant, as he does the Tropæolum majus, and other natives of South-America; strictly speaking they may be such, but if raised early, and treated like other tender annuals, this plant will flower and ripen its seeds in the open ground, as we have experienced at Brompton.

It grows to the height of three feet, or more, producing during the months of July and August a number of blossoms in succession, which are large and shewy; the stigmata in this flower are curious objects, resembling the heads of Fungi in miniature.


[331]

Kalmia Angustifolia. Narrow-Leav'd Kalmia.

Class and Order.

Decandria Monogynia.

Generic Character.

Cal. 5-partitus. Cor. hypocrateriformis, limbo subtus quinque corni. Caps. 5-locularis.

Specific Character and Synonyms.

KALMIA angustifolia foliis lanceolatis, corymbis lateralibus. Linn. Syst. Veget. ed. 14. Murr. p. 404. Ait. Kew. v. 2. p. 64. Gronov. Fl. Virg. p. 65.

CHAMÆDAPHNE sempervirens, foliis oblongis angustis, foliorum fasciculis oppositis e foliorum alis. Catesb. Carol. app. t. 17. f. 1.

LEDUM floribus bullatis fasciculatim ex alis foliorum oppositis nascentibus, foliis lanceolatis integerrimis glabris. Trew. Ehr. t. 38.

No. 331

In this work we have already given three different species of Kalmia, two commonly, and one more rarely cultivated with us, we mean the hirsuta, and which indeed we are sorry to find is scarcely to be kept alive in this country by the most skilfull management; to these we now add another species, a native also of North-America, introduced by Peter Collinson, Esq. in 1736, two years after he had introduced the latifolia; Catesby mentions its having flowered at Peckham in 1743; it is a low shrub, rarely rising above the height of two feet, growing spontaneously in swampy ground, and flowering with us from May to July; there are two principal varieties of it, one with pale and another with deep red flowers; these two plants differ also in their habits, the red one, the most humble of the two, not only produces the most brilliant flowers, but those in greater abundance than the other; Mr. Whitley, who has these plants in great perfection, assures me that it usually blows in the autumn as well as summer.

This shrub is extremely hardy, thriving best in bog earth, and is propagated most commonly by layers.

Like the latifolia, it is regarded in America as poisonous to sheep.


[332]

Oenothera Fruticosa. Shrubby Oenothera.

Class and Order.

Octandria Monogynia.

Generic Character.

Calix 4-fidus. Petala 4. Capsula cylindrica infera. Semina nuda.

Specific Character and Synonyms.

OENOTHERA fruticosa foliis lanceolatis subdentatis, capsulis pedicellatis acutangulis, racemo pedunculato. Linn. Syst. Veget. ed. 14. Murr. p. 358. Ait. Kew. v. 2. p. 4. L'Herit. Stirp. nov. t. 2. t. 5.

OENOTHERA florum calyce monophyllo, hinc tantum, aperto. Gron. virg. 42.

LYSIMACHIA lutea caule rubente, foliis salicis alternis nigro maculatis, flore specioso amplo, vasculo seminali eleganter striato insidente, Clayt. n. 36.

No. 332

Most of the Oenothera tribe are annual, have large yellow flowers, which open once only, and that in the evening, displaying their beauty, and exhaling their fragrance at a time which will not admit of their being much enjoyed; the present species in some respects deviates from many of the others, the root is perennial, the flowers which are large and shewy, though they open in the evening, remain expanded during most of the ensuing day; the flower-buds, the germen, and the stalk are enlivened by a richness of colour which contributes to render this species one of the most ornamental and desirable of the tribe.

It is a hardy perennial, growing to the height of three or four feet, with us altogether herbaceous, and therefore improperly called fruticosa; a native of Virginia, flowering from June to August: was cultivated in 1739 by Mr. Miller.

May be propagated by seeds, by parting of the roots, and also by cuttings.


[333]

Cerinthe Major. Great Honey-wort.

Class and Order.

Pentandria Monogynia.

Generic Character.

Corollæ limbus tubulato ventricosus: fauce pervia. Semina 2, bilocularia.

Specific Character and Synonyms.

CERINTHE major foliis amplexicaulibus, corollis obtusiusculis patulis. Linn. Syst. Vegetab. ed. 14. Murr. p. 187. Ait. Kew. v. 1. p. 183.

CERINTHE glaber foliis oblongo-ovatis glabris amplexicaulibus, corollis obtusiusculis patulis. Mill. Dict. ed. 6. 4to.

CERINTHE flore ex rubro purpurascente. Bauh. pin. p. 258.

CERINTHE major. Great Honiewoort. Ger. Herb.

No. 333

Ancient writers on plants, supposing that the flowers of this genus produced abundantly the material of which bees form their wax, gave it the name of Cerinthe, which rendered into English would be wax-flower or waxwort, not honeywort, by which the genus has long been, and is now, generally called.

Of this genus there are only two species known, the major and the minor, both happily distinguished by the different form of their flowers, a part from which it is not common to draw specific differences, though in some instances they afford the best.

The major varies much, the leaves being sometimes spotted, very rough, and the flowers of a more yellow hue; this is the sort figured by Gerard in his Herbal, who mentions its growing in his garden (1597). Miller considers this as a species but Linnæus, Haller, Aiton, and others, regard it as a variety; our figure represents the Cerinthe glaber of Miller.

This is an annual, remarkable for the singular colour of its foliage; its flowers, though not very brilliant, possess a considerable share of beauty; both combined render it worthy a place in our gardens, more especially as it is a plant of easy culture, coming up spontaneously from self-sown seeds, and being a native of Switzerland, as well as the more southern parts of Europe, seedling plants produced in the Autumn rarely suffer by our winters. It flowers in July, August, and September.


[334]

Hypericum Monogynum. Chinese St. John's-Wort.

Class and Order.

Polyadelphia Polyandria.

Generic Character.

Cal. 5-phyllus. Petala 5. Nect. 0. Capsula.

Specific Character and Synonyms.

HYPERICUM monogynum floribus monogynis, staminibus corolla longioribus, calycibus coloratis, caule fructicoso. Linn. Syst. Vegetab. ed. 14. Murr. p. 702. Hort. Kew. v. 3. p. 108.

No. 334

Of this genus 28 species are enumerated in the Hortus Kewensis of Mr. Aiton, 42 in Prof. Murray's ed. of the Systema Vegetab. and 64 in Prof. Gmelin's 13th ed. of Linn. Syst. Nat. of the latter number 14 are described with 5 styles, 46 with 3, 2 with 2 styles, and 2 with 1; when the term monogynum was first applied to this species, it was a proper one, there being then only one in that predicament, another having since been discovered it ceases to be so now; some have indeed doubted the propriety of using the word monogynum at all, alleging that in reality there are five styles, which manifestly shew themselves above, though they coalesce below; such is the opinion of my friend, Dr. Gwyn; this is a point on which Botanists will think differently.

This elegant native of China, now common in our greenhouses, appears from Mr. Miller to have been first introduced to this country in 1753, by Hugh, Duke of Northumberland; he tells us, that the plants were raised in his Grace's curious garden at Stanwick, from whence the Apothecaries garden at Chelsea was furnished with it.

Mr. Miller has given us a minute description of this plant, which he observes is the more valuable, as it continues in flower great part of the year; he observes further, that if planted in a very warm situation, it will live in the open air, but that those plants which stand abroad will not flower in winter, as those do which are removed into shelter in autumn.

It may be propagated by slips from the root, or by layers.


[335]

Ononis Rotundifolia. Round-Leaved Rest-Harrow.

Class and Order.

Diadelphia Decandria.

Generic Character.

Cal. 5-partitus: laciniis linearibus. Vexillum striatum. Legumen turgidum sessile. Filamenta connata absque fissura.

Specific Character and Synonyms.

ONONIS rotundifolia fructicosa, foliis ternatis ovatis dentatis, calycibus triphyllo-bracteatis, pendunculis subtrifloris. Linn. Syst. Vegetab. ed. 14. Murr. p. 653. Ait. Kew. v. 3. p. 25.

ONONIS rotundifolia fructicosa, pedunculis trifloris, calycibus triphyllo-bracteatis, foliis ternatis subrotundis. Linn. Sp. Pl. ed. 3. p. 1010.

CICER sylvestre latifolium triphyllum. Bauh. Pin. 347.

CICER sylvestre tertium. Dod. Pempt. 525.

No. 335

Prof. Jacquin, and most modern writers on Botany, consider the Ononis here figured, as the rotundifolia of Linnæus; it accords certainly with the figure of Dodon. to which that author refers, but is irreconcileable with his description; the leaves for example are neither parva, integerrima, nor glabra, the words by which Linnæus describes them; they are indeed evidently serrated in the figure of Dodon. which he quotes: by the name of rotundifolia, however, this plant is now very generally known in our nurseries, to which its beauty has gained it admission. Lobel tells us in his Adversaria, printed in 1576, that the plant was then growing in the garden of a Mr. Morgan; as it is not enumerated in Mr. Miller's Dictionary, ed. 6, 4to,[2] we suspect that it has been lost out of the country and re-introduced.

Baron Haller informs us, that it is found wild in abundance at the bottom of the Alps in Switzerland; it is found also in other parts of Europe.

It flowers in our open borders from May to July, in which it ripens its seeds, by which it is in general propagated, as also by slips; it grows to about the height of a foot and a half, is very hardy, and easy of culture.


[336]

Lotus Hirsutus. Hairy Bird's-Foot-Trefoil.

Class and Order.

Diadelphia Decandria.

Generic Character.

Legumen cylindricum striatum. Alæ sursum longitudinaliter conniventes. Cal. tubulosus.

Specific Character and Synonyms.

LOTUS hirsutus capitulis subrotundis, caule erecto hirto, leguminibus ovatis. Linn. Syst. Vegetab. ed. 14. Murr. p. 691. Ait. Kew. v. 3. p. 93.

LOTUS polyceratos frutescens incana alba, siliquis erectis crassioribus et brevioribus rectis. Moris. Hist. 2. p. 177. s. 2. t. 18. f. 14.

LOTUS pentaphyllos siliquosus villosus. Bauh. Pin. 332.

No. 336

The Lotus hirsutus, according to Linnæus, is a native of the South of France, Italy, and the East.

In mild winters it will bear the open border with us, but it is more generally kept in the greenhouse, of which indeed it has long had possession, being cultivated, according to Mr. Aiton, in 1683, by Mr. James Sutherland.

It flowers from June to August.

Its blossoms are of a white colour, which being contrasted with the redness of the calyx, gives them a pleasing appearance; Casp. Bauh. informs us, that they are purple also.

This shrub will acquire the height of several feet; its flowers are usually succeeded by seed-vessels, which in favourable situations produce perfect seeds, by which the plant is easily propagated, as also by cuttings.


[337]

Prunella Grandiflora. Great-Flowered Self-Heal.

Class and Order.

Didynamia Gymnospermia.

Generic Character.

Filamenta bifurca; altero apice antherifera. Stigma bifidum.

Specific Character and Synonyms.

PRUNELLA grandiflora foliis omnibus ovato oblongis subserratis, calicis labio superiore profunde trilobo. Linn. Syst. Nat. ed. 13. Gmel. p. 920. Jacq. Fl. Austr. v. 4. t. 377.

PRUNELLA prima. Clus. Hist. xlii.

PRUNELLA cærulea magno flore. Bauh. Pin. 261.

No. 337

The plant here figured, which we have several years cultivated in our garden at Brompton, without discovering in it the least disposition to vary, is undoubtedly the same as is figured by Prof. Jacquin, in his Fl. Austr. under the name of grandiflora; he regards it as a distinct species, and as such it is introduced in Prof. Gmelin's ed. of the Syst. Nat. of Linnæus: Mr. Aiton, in his Hort. Kew. following Linnæus, makes it a variety of the vulgaris, a common English plant, which we have never seen to vary much in the size of its flowers.

Prof. Jacquin informs us, that it grows wild, mixed with the laciniata (a kindred species with yellowish flowers) on the Alps; it is found also in similar situations in various other parts of Europe.

In July and August, it puts forth its large shewy blossoms, of a fine purple colour.

Such as are partial to hardy herbaceous plants, of ready growth, which are ornamental, take up but little room, and are not apt to entrench on their neighbours, will be induced to add this to their collection.

It is propagated by parting its roots in autumn.


[338]

Allamanda Cathartica. Willow-Leav'd Allamanda.

Class and Order.

Pentandria Monogynia.

Generic Character.

Contorta. Caps. lenticularis erecta echinata 1-locularis polysperma. Semina bractæata.

Specific Character and Synonyms.

ALLAMANDA cathartica. Linn. Mant. p. 214. Suppl. p. 165. Syst. Vegetab. ed. 14. Murr. p. 252. Ait. Kew. V. 3. p. 489.

ORELIA grandiflora. Aubl. Guian. p. 271. t. 106.

No. 338

This beautiful stove plant (a native of Cayenne and Guiana, where it is said to grow by the sides of rivers) was introduced to this country in 1785, by Baron Hake[3]; it has since flowered in many of our collections, usually in June and July.

Stem or trunk shrubby, upright, climbing to a considerable height; bark of the old wood pale brown, of the young wood green and smooth; leaves generally growing four together, sometimes only two, and those opposite, sessile, smooth and glossy above, paler green beneath, the midrib on the underside evidently villous, veiny, veins as in Plumeria, terminating before they reach the margin, chewed discovering little taste; flowers very large, produced even on young plants, of a fine yellow colour, and somewhat spicy smell, not terminal, but growing from the sides of the branches, sometimes singly, more frequently three or four together, standing on short footstalks; calyx composed of five leaves, lanceolate, smooth, unequal, short compared with the flower; corolla mono-petalous, funnel-shaped, tube nearly cylindrical, limb dilated below and bellying out, on the inside striped with orange-coloured veins, above divided into five segments, which roll over each other before they open, when Open broad, somewhat truncated, one side rounded, the other terminating in a short point; at the base Of the divisions the yellow colour on the inside of the flower becomes nearly white, forming so many spots; the mouth of the tube is perfectly closed with villi converging to a point, and which serve as a covering or species of thatch to five long, pointed, rigid, arrow-shaped antheræ beneath them, which sit on the top of so many ridges, projecting from the inside of the tube, and which just beneath the antheræ are villous; germen nearly round, with a slight ridge on each side of it, surrounded at its base by a greenish glandular substance; style filiform, the length of the tube of the corolla, enlarging as it comes near to the stigma; stigma divisible into three distinct parts, the lowermost of a yellowish hue, in the form of a rim turning downwards, the middle of a dark green colour, secreting honey in considerable quantity; the summit, which perhaps is the true stigma, a short conical point, rising from the centre of the middle part, bifid at top with a furrow running down each side of it; seed-vessels according to the figure in Aublet, are very large and prickly.

Of this genus, which has a considerable affinity with that of Vinca and Plumeria, only one species is described in Linnæus's works, and this is usually increased by cuttings.


[339]

Arum Trilobatum. Three-Lobed Arum.

Class and Order.

Gynandria Polyandria.

Generic Character.

Spatha monophylla cucullata. Spadix supra nudus, inferne femineus, medio stamineus.

Specific Character and Synonyms.

ARUM trilobatum acaule, foliis sagittato trilobis, flore sessili. Linn. Syst. Veget. ed. 14. Murr. p. 828. Ait. Kew. V. 3. p. 316. Mill. Icon. t. 52. f. 2.

ARISARUM amboynicum. Rumph. Amb. 5. p. 320. t. 110. f. 2.

No. 339

Mr. Miller in his figure of this plant, to which Linnæus refers, has been more happy in his representation than in that of many others; Rumphius' figure and description accord also with our plant, some of his leaves indeed are more perfectly three-lobed than any we have seen here on the living plant and to this variation, he informs us, they are subject.

We learn from Mr. Miller, that roots of this Arum were brought from Ceylon in the year 1752. It flowers in May and June, and is regarded both by Mr. Miller and Mr. Aiton as a stove plant; we have seen it succeed very well with the treatment of a tender greenhouse plant.

It is one of the least of the tribe; its root is like that of the common Arum, and extremely acrid: but the plant is more particularly distinguished by the rich, brown, velvety appearance of its flowers; the length of its tapering spadix, which on its lower part is full of little cavities, and resembles a piece of metal corroded by long exposure; and by the intolerable stench which the whole of the flower, but more especially the spadix, sends forth.

It is a native of Amboyna, as well as of Ceylon. Rumphius informs us that the roots, sometimes eaten raw by mistake, cause violent inflammations of the mouth and throat, and that they do not lose their acrimony even when boiled.

The plant increases freely by offsets from its roots.


[340]

Polygala Heisteria. Heath-Leaved Milkwort.

Class and Order.

Diadelphia Octandria.

Generic Character.

Cal. 5-phyllus: foliolis 2 majoribus alæformibus, ante maturitatem seminis coloratis. Capsula obcordata 2-locularis, Semina solitaria.

Specific Character and Synonyms.

POLYGALA Heisteria floribus imberbibus lateralibus, caule arborescente, foliis triquetris mucronato-spinosis. Linn. Syst. Veg. ed. 14. Murr. p. 639. Ait. Kew. v. 3. p. 6.

SPARTIUM africanum frutescens ericæ folio. Comm. Hort. 2. p. 193. t. 97.

THYMBRA capensis nepetæ Theophrasti foliis aculeatis flore parvo purpureo. Pluk. Alm. 366. t. 229. f. 5.

HEISTERIA. Hort. Cliff. 352.

No. 340

After receiving various names, this plant has been finally placed by Linnæus among the Milkworts; it retains the trivial name of Heisteria, instead of the generic one previously bestowed on it, in honour of Prof. Heister, the celebrated German Surgeon.

In Holland it appears to have been long since known; but was a stranger here, till introduced from the Cape, by Mr. Masson, in 1787. Ait. Kew.

In the course of a few years it becomes a shrub of considerable size, equalling a small furze bush, to which, in its habit, it bears a distant resemblance; and furze-leaved, in our humble opinion, would have been a more expressive name than heath-leaved, which Mr. Aiton has given it in accordance with Commelin's idea.

The purple of the flowers is brilliant in the extreme, and as those are plentifully produced almost the year through, it has very generally obtained a place in collections of greenhouse plants about London.

It is commonly increased by cuttings, but not easily.


[341]

Scilla Amæna. Byzantine Squill.

Class and Order.

Hexandria Monogynia.

Generic Character.

Cor. 6-petala patens, decidua. Filamenta filiformia.

Specific Character and Synonyms.

SCILLA amæna floribus lateralibus alternis subnutantibus, scapo angulato. Linn. Syst. Veg. ed. 14. Murr. p. 328. Ait. Kew. v. 1. p. 444. Jacq. Fl. Austr. v. 3. t. 218.

HYACINTHUS stellaris cæruleus amænus. Bauh. Pin. 46.

HYACINTHUS stellaris Bizantinus. Hort. Eyst. Vern. 2d. ord. fol. 13.

HYACINTHUS stellatus Byzantinus alter sive flore Boraginis. The other Starry Jacinth of Constantinople. Park. Parad. p. 128. t. 131. f. 4.

HYACINTHUS stellaris, caulibus pluribus ex eodum bulbo ortis singulis pluribus floribus oneratis. Moris. Hist. 2. p. 374. s. 4. t. 12. f. 17.

No. 341

The Scilla amæna, a hardy bulbous plant of small growth, is a native of the Levant, and has long been cultivated in this country for ornament, being introduced about the year 1600, by Ed. Lord Zouch, (vid. Park. Parad. & Lobel. Avers.); when it grows luxuriantly, many flowering stems will spring from the same root, which, when the plant is in flower, are altogether upright; as the seed-vessels advance in size and weight, they bend down, the blossoms are violet-colored, and the germen in the centre of each is distinguished for the paleness of its colour, a character which did not escape the observation of Parkinson.

It flowers early in May, and, in favourable situations, ripens its seeds in the beginning of June.

Is usually increased by offsets, which are produced in tolerable abundance; will grow in almost any soil or situation; but will succeed best if planted in a sandy loam, and a warm sheltered part of the garden.

Its seeds are of a pale amber colour, and drop soon.

Though Professor Jacquin figures it in his Fl. Austriaca, he suspects that it had originally been introduced from Constantinople.


[342]

Erica Persoluta. Blush-Flowered Heath.

Class and Order.

Octandria Monogynia.

Generic Character.

Cal. 4-phyllus. Cor. 4-fida. Filamenta receptaculo inserta. Antheræ bifidæ. Caps. 4-locularis.

Specific Character and Synonyms.

ERICA persoluta antheris aristatis inclusis, corollis campanulatis, calycibus ciliatis, foliis quaternis. Linn. Mant. p. 230. Ait. Kew. v. 2. p. 17.

ERICA subdivaricata. Berg. Cap. 114.

ERICA persoluta aristata foliis ternis quaternisque trigonis glabris, floribus umbellatis, calice ciliato. Thunb. Prod. Pl. Cap. p. 73.

No. 342

The different species and varieties of the African Heaths are now become so numerous, that there is scarcely any period of the year in which some of them may not be found to delight the eye with their blossoms: the persoluta here figured is one of those which flower early in the spring; through the months of March, April and May, its branches are loaded with a profusion of bright purple flowers, which, joined to the lively verdure of its foliage, places it among the most desirable of the tribe.

If suffered to grow, it will form a shrub of considerable height: there is a variety of it, called alba, whose flowers are nearly white, yet not wholly divested of a red tinge; to this variety the term blush-coloured, which Mr. Aiton has given to the species, seems most applicable.

This heath was introduced, from the Cape, by Mr. Masson, in 1774. Ait. Kew.

It is increased without much difficulty from cuttings, and is more easily preserved than many of the others.


[343]

Antholyza Cunonia. Scarlet-Flowered Antholyza.

Class and Order.

Triandria Monogynia.

Generic Character.

Cor. tubulosa irregularis recurvata. Caps. infera.

Specific Character and Synonyms.

ANTHOLYZA Cunonia corollis rectis, labii quinquepartiti lobis duobus externis latioribus adscendentibus. Linn. Sp. Pl. ed. 3 p. 54. Ait. Kew. v. 1 p. 66.

ANTHOLYZA Cunonia corollis subpapilionaceis: labii lobis duobus externis latioribus adscendentibus. Linn. Syst. Veg. ed. 14. Murr. p. 87.

ANTHOLYZA Cunonia foliis ensiformibus glabris striatis, spica oblonga disticha. Thunb. Prod. Pl. Cap. p. 7.

CUNONIA floribus sessilibus spathis maximis. Butt. cun. 211. t. 1.

CUNONIA Antholyza. Mill. Dict.

No. 343

Amidst that variety of tender bulbous plants which the Cape affords, there are none whose flowers can boast a richer scarlet, than the Antholyza here figured; in their form also, there is a great singularity, and in their mode of growth much elegance; to us indeed it is matter of surprise that this plant should not be more generally cultivated, especially as its culture is attended with so little trouble: Mr. Miller, who grew it in 1756, has minutely described it in his Dictionary; he informs us, that it is easily propagated by offsets, or raised from seeds; the latter, as the plant flowers in April and May, ripen about the middle of June, and should be sown about the middle of August; the plant with the pot in which it has grown, after it has ripened its seeds, should be set by the shed or some dry place, and in the autumn the largest roots should be selected, and three of them planted in a pot of a moderate size, keeping them in an open frame till the approach of winter, when they are to be removed into the house with other greenhouse plants.

This species is found wild in Persia as well as at the Cape.


[344]

Aspalathus Pendunculata. Small-Leaved Aspalathus.

Class and Order.

Diadelphia Decandria.

Generic Character.

Cal. 5-fidus: lacinia superiore majore. Legumen ovatum muticum subdispermum.

Specific Character and Synonyms.

ASPALATHUS pendunculata foliis fasciculatis subulatis glabris, pedunculis filiformibus folio duplo longioribus. L'Herit. Sert. Angl. t. 26. Ait. Kew. v. 3. p. 16.

No. 344

Of the five species of Aspalathus enumerated in the Hortus Kewensis, four are natives of the Cape; of those, three have been introduced by Mr. Masson: the albens and candicans in 1774, the present species in 1775.

This is one of the plants figured by Mons. L'Heritier, in a work of his, entitled Sertum Anglicum, containing new species observed by him during his excursion to this country a few years since, most of which flowered in the royal garden at Kew.

It will grow to the height of several feet, produces abundance of blossoms, which open during most of the summer months, and is propagated by cuttings.


[345]

Polygala Bracteolata. Spear-Leaved Milkwort.

Class and Order.

Diadelphia Octandria.

Generic Character.

Cal. 5-phyllus: foliolis alæformibus coloratis. Legumen obcordatum biloculare.

Specific Character and Synonyms.

POLYGALA bracteolata floribus cristatis racemosis, bractæis triphyllis, foliis lineari-lanceolatis, caule fruticoso. Linn. Syst. Veget. ed. 14. Murr. p. 638. Berg. Cap. 182. Buxb. Cent. 3. p. 4. t. 71. Ait. Kew. v. 3. p. 4.

No. 345

To the vast number or ornamental plants introduced from the Cape of Good Hope by Mr. Masson, we here add another, imported in 1787; when Mr. Aiton published his Hortus Kewensis, it most probably had not flowered with him, as he does not notice its particular time of blowing: we now see it in most of the Nurserymen's collections of greenhouse plants, flowering from May to July. It is a plant of great singularity and beauty, the purple of its flowers is brilliant in the extreme.

It is increased by cuttings.


[346]

Protea Mellifera. Honey-Bearing Protea.

Class and Order.

Tetrandria Monogynia.

Generic Character.

Cor. 4-petala: interdum basi vel apice coherentibus. Antheræ lineares vel oblongæ petalis infra apicem insertæ. Cal. propius 0. Nux supera, 1-locularis, evalvis.

Specific Character and Synonyms.

PROTEA mellifera foliis lanceolato-ellipticis capituloque terminali oblongo glabris. Thunb. Prot. n. 37. Linn. Syst. Veget. ed. 14. Murr. p. 139. Ait. Kew. vol. 1. p. 127.

LEUCADENDRON repens foliis lanceolatis, floribus oblongis, calycum squamis glabris. Linn. Sp. Pl. ed. 3. p. 135.

LEPIDOCARPODENDRON foliis angustis brevioribus salignis, calycis squamis elegantissimi ex roseo aureo albo atro rubro variegatis, florum plumis albis. Boerh. Lugd. 2. p. 187.

No. 346

To a magnificent appearance, the blossom of the Protea joins a structure extremely curious and interesting; but, at the same time, difficult to be understood by students, who are apt to consider the whole as one great simple flower, while in reality it is composed of a number of florets enclosed within a common calyx formed of numerous leaves or scales placed one over the other, and sitting on one common receptacle, being in fact what Botanists term an aggregate flower, approaching indeed near to a compound one, there being in the structure and union of the antheræ a considerable similarity to those of the Syngenesia class, much more so than in the flowers of Plantain, Scabious, Teasel, and others.

The florets of the present species correspond extremely well with the character of the genus Leucadendron in the sixth edition of the Genera Pl. of Linnæus, but not with that of Protea, as given in the Hort. Kew. and Gmel. ed. Linn. Syst. Nat. to which it is now united; the corolla being most evidently composed of two (not four) petals, the largest of these is trifid at top, each segment of it, as well as the summit of the smaller petal, terminates in a twisted kind of plume, not peculiar to this species; of the antheræ, which are long, linear, and form a kind of cylinder, three are attached to the largest petal, the fourth (which appears to be less perfect than the others) to the smaller petal; the germen is enveloped with numerous orange-coloured hairs, having the gloss of the richest sattin; the antheræ terminate in small appendages of a brown colour.

This magnificent shrub, a principal ornament of the Cape-House at Kew, is a native of the Cape of Good Hope, from whence it was introduced by Mr. Masson, in 1774 (Ait. Kew.); it flowers chiefly in the Spring, and often during the Summer; is propagated principally by layers.

Our drawing was made from a plant raised from Cape seeds, which flowered this season, among a number of others equally curious, in the collection of Mr. Barr, Nurseryman and Florist, near Ball's-Turnpike, Kingsland.


[347]

Oenothera Rosea. Rose-Coloured Oenothera.

Class and Order.

Octandria Monogynia.

Generic Character.

Cal. 4-fidus. Petala 4. Caps. cylindrica infera. Sem. nuda.

Specific Character and Synonyms.

OENOTHERA rosea foliis ovatis dentatis, inferioribus lyratis: capsulis clavatis. Ait. Kew. v. 2. p. 3.

OENOTHERA rosea. L'Herit. Stirp. Nov. tom. 2. t. 6.

No. 347

Of the several different species of this genus growing in our garden at this present writing (eleven in number) two only are of a red or purple colour, the one here figured, and another with a larger flower, which we purpose soon to publish under the name of purpurea.

The present species, Mr. Aiton informs us, was introduced in 1783 by Mons. Thouin, from Peru.

It has been considered as a greenhouse plant, and a perennial; we find it to be more hardy than greenhouse plants in general, and scarcely entitled to the distinction of a perennial.

It may be increased by cuttings and seeds, the latter of which are plentifully produced. It rarely exceeds a foot in height; its rose-coloured flowers expand during the whole of the day, and are produced during most of the Summer months.

To guard against accidental severity of weather, sow its seeds in the Spring with tender annuals; when the plants have acquired a proper age and the season is favourable, plant them out singly in the open border.


[348]

Calceolaria Fothergillii. Fothergill's Slipper-Wort.

Class and Order.

Diandria Monogynia.

Generic Character.

Corolla ringens inflata. Capsula 2-locularis, 2 valvis. Calyx 4-partitus æqualis.

Specific Character and Synonyms.

CALCEOLARIA Fothergillii foliis spathulatis integerrimis, pedunculis scapiformibus unifloris. Ait. Kew. v. 1. p. 30. tab. 1. Linn. Syst. Nat. ed. 13. Gmel. p. 39.

No. 348

To this species of Calceolaria the trivial name of Fothergillii has been given in honour of Dr. John Fothergill, who introduced it in 1777 with several other rare plants from Falkland-Islands, where it is a native.

In the Hortus Kewensis of Mr. Aiton it was first figured, and minutely described.

This plant of great singularity and beauty particularly merits a place in the collections of the curious; its principal flowering season is in May, but it will often blossom much later in the Summer.

It is not to be had in perfection, nor even preserved, without great attention, joined to a peculiar treatment; several times it has been nearly lost from this country. Mr. Aiton makes it a biennial greenhouse plant; it, no doubt, is one of those plants which are liable to be killed in very severe weather, and therefore it is necessary to keep a pot of it at least, during the Winter, either in the greenhouse or a well-secured frame; but the plant will be found to succeed best in the open ground, provided it be planted in bog-earth, in a situation that is moist and moderately shady; with us it has proved perfectly perennial.

With care it can be propagated by layers and cuttings, but with most certainty in the former mode; possibly it may be raised from seeds, they ripen here, but are as fine as dust.


[349]

Solanum Laciniatum. Cut-Leav'd Nightshade.

Class and Order.

Pentandria Monogynia.

Generic Character.

Corolla rotata. Antheræ subcoalitæ, apice poro gemino dehiscentes. Bacca 2-locularis.

Specific Character and Synonyms.

SOLANUM laciniatum caule fruticoso inermi glaberrimo, foliis pinnatifidis: laciniis lanceolatis acutis, paniculis axillaribus binis ternisve. Ait. Hort. Kew. v. 1. p. 247.

No. 349

Mr. Aiton in his Hort. Kew. mentions this plant as being a native of New-Zealand, on the authority of Sir Joseph Banks, and that it was introduced in 1772; he regards it as a stove plant; it has been since found to be more hardy than he imagined, and not to require more heat than the greenhouse affords; in the Summer it will stand abroad, and even ripen its fruit in the open air.

It is a plant of some beauty, but is more remarkable for having its antheræ separating widely from each other, and thereby losing the character of a Solanum, so far as it depends on that circumstance. The berries when ripe are of the size of a small plum, and of a yellowish green hue; their pulp is sweet, in some small degree resembling that of a fig, whether it be so innocent we do not take on us to assert.

It flowers during most of the Summer, and is easily increased by cuttings or seeds.


[350]

Erica Ventricosa. Porcelain Heath.

Class and Order.

Octandria Monogynia.

Generic Character.

Calyx 4-phyllus. Corolla 4-fida. Filamenta receptaculo inserta. Antheræ bifidæ. Caps. 4-locularis.

Specific Character and Synonyms.

ERICA ventricosa mutica, foliis quaternis trigonis ciliatis, floribus ventricosis glabris. Thunb. Prod. Cap. p. 71.

No. 350

Of the many new Heaths which have been introduced within these few years, none have excited greater admiration than the present one; its blossoms, though they cannot boast the grandeur or richness of colour so strikingly displayed in the cerinthoides, and some others, please more on a near inspection, they have indeed a delicacy and beauty which are indescribable; we have given to it the English name of Porcelain Heath, as the flowers have somewhat the appearance of porcelain, or enamel.

This species has been introduced from the Cape, since the publication of the Hortus Kewensis; we saw it in blossom many years since, in the Royal Garden at Kew; several varieties of it have been raised from Cape seeds by Mr. Loddiges, Nurseryman, at Hackney, differing in the hairiness of their leaves, size and colour of their blossoms; but the best variety we have seen is the one here represented.

In point of form the blossoms resemble those of the ampullacea, but they are not so large, and have no viscidity; the stigma is enclosed within the mouth of the flower, and the peduncles are usually naked; in some very luxuriant specimens we have observed a scale or two on them.

It is with Heaths, in some respects, as it is with fruit trees: one season they will produce blossoms most abundantly, they seem indeed to overblow themselves, the next few appear; in different years the blossoms of the same heath will vary also considerably in size. The ventricosa is a free blower, and will in general produce flowers in abundance, for two or three months, from June to September.

Those who possess the knack of striking heaths, raise it by cuttings without much difficulty.


[351]

Saxifraga Mutata. Saffron-Colour'd Saxifrage.

Class and Order.

Decandria Digynia.

Generic Character.

Calyx 5-partitus. Corolla 5-petala. Caps. 2-rostris 1-locularis polysperma.

Specific Character and Synonyms.

SAXIFRAGA mutata foliis radicalibus aggregatis lingulatis cartilagineo-serratis, caule racemoso folioso, calyce villoso et viscido. Linn. Syst. Vegetab. ed. 14. Murr. p. 411. Jacq. Ic. Pl. rar. Fasc. 9.

No. 351

Linnæus has arranged several distinct species of Saxifrage under the Saxyfraga Cotyledon, but very properly separates this; though in the general form of its foliage it is as nearly related to it as most of the others; from four of them it is indeed perfectly distinct, instead of the sawed cartilaginous edge, it has only fine soft hairs, more especially towards the base; towards the extremity there is some appearance of little teeth, but widely differing from those of the others. The whole plant is covered with viscid hairs; the stalk about a foot high, is much branched; but the great peculiarity of this plant consists in its flowers, the petals being long, narrow, and pointed, and of a saffron colour, of a deeper tint when they first open, and gradually changing to a pale yellow; the beauty of the flowers is heightened by a glandular substance in the centre of each, which when the flower expands is of a bright purple colour.

This rare species of Saxifrage is a native of the Alps of Switzerland and Italy; we raised it with difficulty from seeds sent us by Mr. Daval, of Orbe, in Switzerland; it was three years before the plants flowered; those now in bloom in my garden, June 15, bid fair to produce seeds in abundance; the plant may also be produced from offsets, in the same way as the Saxifraga Cotyledon, vulgarly called Pyramidal Sedum, and requires a similar treatment; though an Alpine plant, it must be sheltered from much wet and severe frosts.

Baron Haller describes it with spots on the petals; those certainly did not exist on our plants.


[352]

Oenothera Purpurea. Purple Oenothera.

Class and Order.

Octandria Monogynia.

Generic Character.

Cal. 4-fidus. Petala 4. Caps. cylindrica infera. Sem. nuda.

Specific Character and Synonyms.

OENOTHERA purpurea foliis ovato-lanceolatis glaucescentibus integerrimis, capsulis sessilibus, stigmate atro-purpureo.

No. 352

The species of Oenothera here figured is the one we mentioned in treating of the rosea, a very ornamental species, introduced to the Royal Garden at Kew, from the western coast of North-America, in 1791.[4] We have given to it the name of purpurea, it being the only one in our gardens with purple flowers.

It is distinguished by three principal characters, the glaucous appearance of its foliage, the purple hue of its blossoms, and the dark colour of its stigma.

It flowers during the months of July and August, and ripens its seeds in September; is an annual of ready growth, and worthy of being more generally introduced to the flower-garden; its seeds should be sown in the spring, with other tender annuals, and the seedlings when of a proper age planted out singly in the open border, where they will acquire the height of two feet, and produce abundance of blossoms which, like those of the rosea, open during the day as well as in the evening.


[353]

Mahernia Incisa. Cut-Leav'd Mahernia.

Class and Order.

Pentandria Pentagynia.

Generic Character.

Calix 5-dentatus. Petala 5. Nect. 5 obcordata filamentis supposita. Capsula 5-locularis.

Specific Character.

MAHERNIA incisa caule hispidulo, foliis lanceolatis incisis, stipulis integerrimis.

No. 353

In point of size and mode of growth, this beautiful species comes near to the pinnata already figured in this work; but differs essentially in the singular hispidity of its stalks, the form of its leaves, and the colour of its flowers.

The stalks to the naked eye discover a manifest roughness, a magnifying glass shews this roughness to be of a singular kind, that they are beset on every side with little protuberances, from whence issue tufts of pellucid hairs, and here and there a single hair is discoverable with a small red viscid globule at its extremity; a portion of the stalk, when highly magnified, somewhat resembles that of the creeping Cereus. The leaves, which are not so manifestly hairy as the stalk and calyces, are deeply jagged on the edges, and bear some little affinity in their appearance to those of the Pelargonium tricolor. The flowers, when in bud, are of the richest crimson imaginable; as they open they incline to a deep orange, and finally become of a yellowish hue.

As this plant produces abundance of blossoms, they may be seen in all their states during most of the Summer and Autumnal months.

The plant from whence our drawing was taken, flowered this Summer with Mr. Colvill, Nurseryman, King's-Road, it requires the same treatment as the pinnata, is probably a native of the same country, and may be propagated by cuttings in the same manner.


[354]

Mimimulus Aurantiacus. Orange Monkey-Flower.

Class and Order.

Didynamia Angiospermia.

Generic Character.

Calyx 4-dentatus prismaticus. Cor. ringens: labio superiore lateribus replicato. Caps. 2-locularis polysperma.

Specific Character.

MIMULUS aurantiacus caule erecto fruticoso tereti, foliis ovato-lanceolatis obtusiusculis.

No. 354

The present species of Mimulus, equal in point of shew to most of the inhabitants of our greenhouses, to which situation it is adapted, flowered this Summer with Mr. Colvill, Nurseryman, King's-Road.

Stalk about three feet high, much branched, shrubby, round, the young wood green, with a tinge of purple toward the lower part of each joint, slightly viscid, as it becomes older changing to a light brown colour, and discovering manifest fissures; branches alternately opposite, flower-bearing quite to the base; leaves opposite, sessile, slightly connate, ovato-lanceolate, somewhat blunt at the extremity, this bluntness is particularly apparent when contrasted with a leaf of the ringens, toothed or slightly sawed on the edge, smooth, veiny; flowers inodorous, large, nearly twice the size of those of the ringens, uniformly pale orange, growing in pairs from the alæ of the leaves, standing on footstalks about half the length of the calyx; calyx five-angled and five-toothed, tube of the flower within the calyx, narrow, cylindrical, pale yellow, bent a little downward, gradually expanding, and dividing into two lips, the upper lip divided into two, the lower lip into three segments, all of them irregular, the two uppermost very much so; at the base of the middle segment of the lower lip are two prominent ridges, of a somewhat deeper colour; stamina four, two long, two short; antheræ deep orange, cruciform, within the flower; stigma white, two-lip'd, lips closed or expanded according to its age; style filiform; germen oblong; at the base of the germen is a gland of considerable size which secretes much honey.

This plant flowers during most of the Summer, and is increased by cuttings. We know not with certainty of what country it is a native.


[355]

Oenothera Pumila. Dwarf Oenothera.

Class and Order.

Octandria Monogynia.

Generic Character.

Cal. 4-fidus. Petala 4. Caps. cylindrica infera. Sem. nuda.

Specific Character and Synonyms.

OENOTHERA pumila foliis lanceolatis obtusis glabris subpetiolatis, caulibus prostratis, capsulis acutangulis. Linn. Syst. Vegetab. ed. 14. Murr. p. 358. Ait. Kew. v. 2. p. 4.

OENOTHERA foliis radicalibus ovatis caulinis lanceolatis obtusis, capsulis ovatis obtusis. Mill. Ic. t. 188.

LYSIMACHIA siliquosa glabra minor mariana angustioribus foliis. Pluk. Mant. 123.

No. 355

From all the species of Oenothera with yellow flowers hitherto introduced to this country, the present one is distinguished by the inferiority of its size; in its most luxuriant state it rarely exceeds a foot in height, and as it commonly grows it is far more humble: from a perennial root it sends out many flowering stems, which are productive of blossoms in regular succession from April to July: these are open in the morning as well as in the evening, which renders the plant more ornamental and desirable: for the border of a small garden, or for rock-work, it is extremely suitable, if not so shewy as some others; it is very hardy, of ready growth, not apt to encroach, flowers during most of the summer months, and is readily propagated by seeds, cuttings, or dividing of the roots in autumn.

Is a native of North-America, and was cultivated here by Mr. Miller in 1757. Ait. Kew.

The stalks cannot be considered as prostrate, though Linnæus describes them as such; adscendentibus would be a more appropriate term.


[356]

Erica Massoni. Masson's Heath.

Class and Order.

Octandria Monogynia.

Generic Character.

Cal. 4-phyllus. Cor. 4-fida. Filamenta receptaculo inserta. Antheræ bifidæ. Caps. 4-locularis.

Specific Character and Synonyms.

ERICA Massoni antheris muticis inclusis, corollis cylindricis grossis, floribus capitatis, foliis octofariis imbricatis pubescentibus. Linn. Suppl. p. 221. Ait. Kew. v. 2. p. 23.

ERICA Massoni foliis quaternis oblongis serratis villosis, floribus cylindricis viscosis. Thunb. Prod. Cap. p. 71.

No. 356

This very magnificent African Heath is first described in the Suppl. Pl. of the younger Linnæus, and named in honour of Mr. Masson, whose exertions at the Cape, where he resided many years as collector of the natural productions of that fertile spot, have so eminently contributed to render the royal collection at Kew, in this tribe of plants especially, rich in the extreme.

This Heath grows to a considerable height, and becomes much branched, the branches are long and upright, covered closely with numerous hoary leaves, nearly cylindrical, most of these terminate in a large umbel of flowers, which continue a long while in bloom, and are so extremely viscous that scarcely a winged insect can settle on them and escape with its life; the formidable wasp sometimes becomes its victim, as we once had an opportunity of seeing.

When the Hort. Kew. was first published, this species had not flowered with Mr. Aiton, it has since done so in many collections near town, and no where in greater perfection than at Messrs. Lee and Kennedy's, Hammersmith, on some one or other of whose plants blossoms may be seen during most of the summer.

It is raised from cuttings with extreme difficulty, is not so easily kept as some others, and is more susceptible of injury from moisture.


[357]

Briza Maxima. Great Quaking Grass.

Class and Order.

Triandria Digynia.

Generic Character.

Cal. 2-valvis, multiflorus. Spicula disticha: valvulis cordatis, obtusis: interiore minuta.

Specific Character and Synonyms.

BRIZA maxima spiculis cordatis, flosculis septendecim. Linn. Syst. Veget. ed. 14. Murr. p. 115. Ait. Kew. v. 1. p. 103.

GRAMEN tremulum maximum. Bauh. Pin. 2.

PHALARIS pratensis altera. Pearle Grasse. Ger. emac. p. 87. f. 3.

No. 357

The Grasses are in general more regarded for utility than ornament, yet in the latter point of view many of them have engaged the attention of the curious, and long held a place in the flower-garden, to which they have a twofold claim, as they not only decorate the garden when fresh, but the mantle-shelf when dry; to these purposes the present species of Briza has long been applied: Johnson tells us, in his time, 1633, "it was sowen yearlely in many of the London gardens."

This species, a native of Spain and Italy, blossoms in June and July, and ripens its seeds in August.

Where it has once seeded it comes up spontaneously, without the trouble of sowing it; autumnal seedlings make the strongest plants, they are liable however to be cut off in very severe seasons; should that happen, sow more seed in the spring with your other annuals.


[358]

Erica Baccans. Arbutus-Flowered Heath.

Class and Order.

Octandria Monogynia.

Generic Character.

Cal. 4-phyllus. Cor. 4-fida. Filamenta receptaculo inserta. Antheræ apice bifidæ pertusæ. Caps. 4-locularis. 4-valvis polysperma.

Specific Character and Synonyms.

ERICA baccans antheris cristatis inclusis, corollis globoso-campanulatis calyce colorato inclusis, foliis imbricatis. Linn. Mant. p. 233.

ERICA baccans antheris cristatis, corollis globoso-campanulatis tectis, stylo incluso, foliis ternis imbricatis. Linn. Syst. Veget. ed. 14. Murr. p. 366. Ait. Kew. v. 2. p. 18.

ERICA baccans cristata foliis quaternis linearibus serrulatis, floribus umbellatis calyce ovato æquante. Thunb. Prod. p. 74.

ERICA Africana glabra fruticosa arbuti flore. Seb. Mus. 1. p. 32. t. 21. f. 3.

No. 358

Seba, a Dutch writer, appears first to have noticed this Heath; he figures it in his Museum, and distinguishes it by the name of Arbutus-flowered, which Mr. Aiton has retained.

This very elegant and ornamental species grows to a considerable height, and in favourable situations produces abundance of flowers early in the summer, which are remarkable, though not peculiarly so, for being enveloped with a calyx of same colour.

It is a native of the Cape, and was introduced by Mr. Masson in 1774[5].

Is raised from seeds, which it ripens with us more freely than most of the African Heaths, a fortunate circumstance, as it is scarcely possible to strike its cuttings.

Seedling plants rarely flower till they are three years old.


[359]

Convolvulus Althæoides. Silky-Leaved Convolvulus.

Class and Order.

Pentandria Monogynia.

Generic Character.

Cor. campanulata plicata. Stigmata 2. Caps. 2-locularis: loculis dispermis.

Specific Character and Synonyms.

CONVOLVULUS althæoides foliis cordatis sinuatis sericeis: lobis repandis; pedunculis bifloris. Linn. Syst. Vegetab. ed. 14. Murr. p. 202. Ait. Kew. v. 1. p. 211. var. [Greek: b].

CONVOLVULUS argenteus Althææ folio. Bauh. Pin. p. 295.

CONVOLVULUS Althææ folio. Clus. Hist. p. xlix. fig.

PAPAVER cornutum luteum minus. Ger. Herb. p. 294. f. 4.

CONVOLVULUS argenteus elegantissimus foliis tenuiter incisis. Tournef. Inst. 85.

No. 359

The name of Althæoides and the description of Linnæus accord much better with the figure of this plant, as given by Clusius, than with the plant itself as cultivated in our gardens: whether the foliage of our plant becomes smaller and more finely divided by cultivation; whether it be a distinct species, as Miller affirms, or a permanent variety, as Mr. Aiton makes it, we have not been able satisfactorily to ascertain; the former gives no description of the radical leaves of his elegantissimus, and we have not found in any of our gardens a variety different from the one here figured. This species of Convolvulus, though cultivated here by J. Tradescant in 1656, is far from being common, which is the more surprising, as the plant is easy of culture and productive of flowers at once large and beautiful, and peculiarly interesting from the extreme variableness of its silky foliage, expanding into the most elegant forms imaginable.

Mr. Stevens, of Camerton-House, near Bath, informs me that it grows abundantly on the mountains near Victri, southeast of Naples, and in the Isle of Capri, mixed with Convolvulus Cneorum, Lithospermum fruticosum, &c. and in the adjacent islands and continent, forming a beautiful ornament to the shrubs it entwines: Clusius observed it in Spain and Portugal.

It flowers with us in June and July, and is increased without difficulty by parting its roots, which are of the creeping kind, in spring or autumn. It is usually kept in the greenhouse, but will succeed very well in the open border, guarding it against the unusual severity of weather.


[360]

Hibiscus Speciosus. Superb Hibiscus.

Class and Order.

Monadelphia Polyandria.

Generic Character.

Cal. 2-plex: exterior polyphyllus aut multifidus. Caps. 5-valvis, 5-locularis: loculis polyspermis ramis 1-spermis.

Specific Character and Synonyms.

HIBISCUS Speciosus foliis glabris palmatis: laciniis lanceolatis serratis, caule pedunculis calicibusque lævibus. Ait. Hort. Kew. 2. p. 456. Linn. Syst. Nat. ed. Gmel. p. 1063.

No. 360

Those who "admire Nature's clocks more than her watches," will view, we presume, with some pleasure our representation of this very superb species of Hibiscus, a native of Carolina, and cultivated here by Dr. John Fothergill, in 1778.

This species is altogether herbaceous, and from a perennial root yearly throws up a stem to the height of many feet, clothed with foliage of a beautiful form and smoothness, and supporting at its summit several flowers, distinguished for their grandeur and richness of colour; these usually blossom in August, and if the plant be kept in the stove, as it most commonly is, are followed by ripe seeds, by which it is most commonly propagated.

In the Hort. Kew. it is marked as a greenhouse plant; it may no doubt be preserved in the greenhouse; there is even no impediment to its growing in the open border, if placed in a warm and sheltered situation; and the only motive for keeping it in the stove is its being found to flower there more advantageously, and to ripen its seeds with more certainty.


INDEX.

In which the Latin Names of the Plants contained in the Tenth Volume are alphabetically arranged.

Pl.
[338]Allamanda cathartica.
[343]Antholyza Cunonia.
[339]Arum trilobatum.
[344]Aspalathus pedunculata.
[357]Briza maxima.
[348]Calceolaria Fothergillii.
[333]Cerinthe major.
[327]Chrysanthemum indicum.
[359]Convolvulus althæoides.
[358]Erica baccans.
[356]—— Massoni.
[342]—— persoluta.
[350]—— ventricosa.
[360]Hibiscus speciosus.
[334]Hypericum monogynum.
[325]Justicia nasuta.
[331]Kalmia angustifolia.
[336]Lotus hirsutus.
[353]Mahernia incisa.
[326]Mesembryanthemum viridiflorum.
[354]Mimulus aurantiacus.
[332]Oenothera fruticosa.
[355]—— pumila.
[352]—— purpurea.
[347]—— rosea.
[329]Ononis natrix.
[335]—— rotundifolia.
[340]Polygala Heisteria.
[345]—— bracteolata.
[346]Protea mellifera.
[337]Prunella grandiflora.
[351]Saxifraga mutata.
[341]Scilla amæna.
[330]Sida Cristata.
[349]Solanum laciniatum.
[328]Trifolium incarnatum.

INDEX.

In which the English Names of the Plants contained in the Tenth Volume are alphabetically arranged.

Pl.
[338]Allamanda willow-leaved.
[343]Antholyza scarlet-flowered.
[339]Arum three-lobed.
[344]Aspalathus small-leaved.
[336]Bird's-foot Trefoil hairy.
[327]Chrysanthemum indian.
[359]Convolvulus silky-leaved.
[326]Fig-marigold green-flowered.
[342]Heath blush-flowered.
[350]—— porcelain.
[358]—— Arbutus-leaved.
[356]—— Masson's.
[360]Hibiscus superb.
[333]Honey-wort great.
[325]Justicia dichotomous.
[331]Kalmia narrow-leaved.
[353]Mahernia cut-leaved.
[340]Milkwort heath-leaved.
[345]—— spear-leaved.
[354]Monkey-flower orange.
[349]Nightshade cut-leaved.
[355]Oenothera dwarf.
[332]—— shrubby.
[347]—— rose-coloured.
[352]—— purple.
[346]Protea honey-bearing.
[357]Quaking grass great.
[329]Rest-harrow yellow-flowered.
[335]—— round-leaved.
[351]Saxifrage saffron-coloured.
[337]Self-heal great-flowered.
[330]Sida crested.
[348]Slipper-wort Fothergill's.
[341]Squill Byzantine.
[334]St. John's-wort Chinese.
[328]Trefoil crimson.

INDEX.

In which the Latin Names of the Plants contained in the first Ten Volumes of the Botanical Magazine are alphabetically arranged.

Vol.Pag.
4134Adonis vernalis.
9295Agrostemma Cœli rosa.
124—— coronaria.
5173Aitonia capensis.
10338Allamanda cathartica.
7251Allium descendens.
4125Alstrœmeria Ligtu.
4139—— Pelegrina.
4126Alyssum deltoideum.
3101—— halimifolium.
5159—— saxatile.
4130—— utriculatum.
7239Amaryllis Atamasco.
9305—— equestris.
247—— formosissima.
9290—— lutea.
9294—— sarniensis.
4129—— vittata.
5161Amygdalus nana.
9319Anagallis Monelli.
110Anemone Hepatica.
4123—— hortensis.
254—— sylvestris.
6207Antirrhinum alpinum.
399—— purpureum.
6200—— sparteum.
374—— triste.
9324—— triphyllum.
9318Anthericum Liliastrum.
10343Antholyza Cunonia.
3108Anthyllis tetraphylla.
8280Apocynum androsæmifolium.
7246Aquilegia canadensis.
7226Arabis alpina.
7243Argemone mexicana.
10339Arum trilobatum.
10344Aspalathus pedunculata.
6199Aster alpinus.
133—— tenellus.
5180Azalea nudiflora, var. coccinea.
7228Bellis perennis, var. major fl. pl.
8276Blitum virgatum.
8274Borbonia crenata.
10357Briza maxima.
134Browallia elata.
7217Buchnera viscosa.
5174Buddlea globosa.
5153Bulbocodium vernum.
117Cactus flagelliformis.
10348Calceolaria Fothergillii.
241—— pinnata.
4117Campanula carpatica.
7252—— grandiflora.
3102—— Speculum.
242Camellia japonica.
9291Capparis spinosa.
3107Cassia Chamæcrista.
4131Catesbæa spinosa.
9293Catananche cærulea.
6210Celsia linearis.
262Centaurea glastifolia.
377—— montana.
10333Cerinthe major.
5166Cheiranthus maritimus.
6195—— mutabilis.
7233Chironia baccifera.
237—— frutescens.
10327Chrysanthemum indicum.
7249Cineraria Amelloides.
253—— lanata.
8264Cistus formosus.
243—— incanus.
4112Cistus ladaniferus.
265Clematis integrifolia.
381Colutea arborescens.
6181—— frutescens.
10359Convolvulus althæoides.
9289—— linearis.
6188—— Nil.
4113—— purpureus.
127—— tricolor.
5156Coreopsis verticillata.
113Coronilla glauca.
6185—— valentina.
8258—— varia.
9321Cotyledon orbiculata.
135Crepis barbata.
245Crocus vernus.
14Cyclamen Coum.
244—— persicum.
17Cynoglossum Omphalodes.
6192Cypripedium acaule.
6216—— album.
8271Cyrtanthus angustifolius.
5176Cytisus Laburnum.
8255—— sessilifolius.
5147Dais cotinifolia.
9313Daphne Cneorum.
6207Dianthus barbatus.
239—— Caryophyllus, var.
125—— chinensis.
9297—— superbus.
8273Diosma uniflora.
7218Disandra prostrata.
112Dodecatheon Meadia.
5170Draba aizoides.
6214Dracocephalum denticulatum.
5152Epidendrum cochleatum.
376Epilobium angustissimum.
9303Erica ampullacea.
10358—— baccans.
7220—— cerinthoides.
6189—— grandiflora.
111—— herbacea.
10356—— Massoni.
10342—— persoluta.
10350—— ventricosa.
9310Erinus alpinus.
15Erythronium Dens Canis.
8261Erodium incarnatum.
7241Fagonia cretica.
4144Ferraria undulata.
263Fragaria monophylla.
6194Fritillaria imperialis.
397Fuchsia coccinea.
7232Fumaria cava.
5179—— glauca.
7231Fumaria solida.
9314Genista triquetra.
252Gentiana acaulis.
6203Geranium angulatum.
6206—— anemonefolium.
256—— lanceolatum.
120—— peltatum.
255—— striatum.
118—— Reichardi.
395—— Radula.
386Gladiolus communis.
4135—— cardinalis.
8272—— tristis.
8263Glycine bimaculata.
8270—— coccinea.
8268—— rubicunda.
9300Gnaphalium eximium.
8287Goodenia lævigata.
390Gorteria rigens.
8282Hedysarum obscurum.
7227Helianthus multiflorus.
4141Heliotropium peruvianum.
13Helleborus hyemalis.
272—— lividus.
18—— niger.
119Hemerocallis flava.
264—— fulva.
9299Hermannia alnifolia.
9307—— althæifolia.
9304—— lavandulifolia.
5158Hibiscus Rosa sinensis.
10360—— speciosus.
383—— syriacus.
6209—— Trionum.
5157Hyacinthus botryoides.
4133—— comosus.
4122—— racemosus.
387Hyoscyamus aureus.
4137Hypericum balearicum.
5146—— calycinum.
5178—— Coris.
10334—— monogynum.
4124Iberis gibraltarica.
3106—— umbellata.
6198Indigofera candicans.
7221Ipomœa coccinea.
7244—— Quamoclit.
261Iris ochroleuca.
11—— persica.
19—— pumila.
5168—— pavonia.
250—— sibirica.
258—— spuria.
391Iris susiana.
6187—— sambucina.
116—— variegata.
121—— versicolor.
8265Ixia Bulbocodium.
5171—— chinensis.
6184—— crocata.
4127—— flexuosa.
8256—— longiflora.
5169Ixora coccinea.
131Jasminum officinale.
8285—— odoratissimum.
10325Justicia nasuta.
10331Kalmia angustifolia.
5177—— glauca.
4138—— hirsuta.
5175—— latifolia.
382Lachenalia tricolor.
5172Lamium Orvala.
396Lantana aculeata.
8253Lathyrus articulatus.
260—— odoratus.
4115—— sativus.
3100—— tingitanus.
4111—— tuberosus.
4109Lavatera trimestris.
246Leucojum vernum.
136Lilium bulbiferum.
130—— chalcedonicum.
8259—— Catesbæi.
8278—— candidum.
4116Limodorum tuberosum.
7234Linum arboreum.
9312—— flavum.
8275Liriodendron Tulipifera.
9325Lobelia Cardinalis.
7225—— surinamensis.
8254Lopezia racemosa.
10336Lotus hirsutus.
379—— jacobæus.
5151—— tetragonolobus.
4140Lupinus luteus.
6202—— perennis.
7223Lychnis coronata.
8257—— chalcedonica.
3104Lysimachia bulbifera.
10353Mahernia incisa.
8277—— pinnata.
9322Manulea tomentosa.
9301Melianthus minor.
6208Melissa grandiflora.
8262Mesembrym. aureum.
270—— barbatum.
259—— bicolorum.
132—— dolabriforme.
267—— pinnatifidum.
10326—— viridiflorum.
8260Metrosideros citrina.
7219Michauxia campanuloides.
9302Mimosa myrtifolia.
4110—— verticillata.
10354Mimulus aurantiacus.
8283—— ringens.
5145Monarda fistulosa, var.
373Monsonia speciosa.
7250Myrtus tomentosa.
6193Narcissus angustifolius.
6197—— biflorus.
388—— Bulbocodium.
4121—— incomparabilis.
115—— Jonquilla.
251—— major.
16—— minor.
378—— odorus.
248—— triandrus.
122Nigella damascena.
10332Oenothera fruticosa.
10347—— rosea.
10352—— purpurea.
10355—— pumila.
9317Ononis fruticosa.
10329—— Natrix.
10335—— rotundifolia.
9298Origanum Dictamnus.
6190Ornithogalum aureum.
8269—— nutans.
9306Othonna pectinata.
7237Oxalis caprina.
5155—— versicolor.
257Papaver orientale.
9292Passerina grandiflora.
266Passiflora alata.
128—— cærulea.
8288—— ciliata.
3103Pelargonium acetosum.
5148—— betulinum.
6201—— bicolor.
5165—— cordifolium.
9315—— ceratophyllum.
9309—— echinatum.
4143—— glutinosum.
4136—— tetragonum.
7240—— tricolor.
5163Phlox divaricata.
7224Phylica ericoides.
7230Plumbago rosea.
8279Plumeria rubra.
10345Polygala bracteolata.
9316—— chamæbuxus.
10340—— Heisteria.
6213Polygonum orientale.
8286Portlandia grandiflora.
375Potentilla grandiflora.
7229Primula acaulis, fl. pl. carn.
6191—— marginata.
114—— villosa.
10346Protea mellifera.
10337Prunella grandiflora.
5160Pulmonaria virginica.
8267Pyrus spectabilis.
6204Ranunculus aconitifolius.
6215—— acris, florepleno.
8266—— amplexicaulis.
5164—— gramineus.
129Reseda odorata.
9311Robinia hispida.
269—— Rosa muscosa.
8284—— semperflorens.
4132Rubus arcticus.
9323—— odoratus.
12Rudbeckia purpurea.
6182Salvia aurea.
5162Sanguinaria canadensis.
5154Saponaria Ocymoides.
6196Saxifraga crassifolia.
10351—— mutata.
392—— sarmentosa.
7247Scabiosa atropurpurea.
10341Scilla amæna.
4128—— campanulata.
4142Scorzonera tingitana.
4118Sedum Anacampseros.
6211—— populifolium.
6186Selago ovata.
268Sempervivum arachnoideum.
393—— monanthes.
9296Sempervivum tortuosum.
7238Senecio elegans.
10230Sida cristata.
4114Silene pendula.
394Sisyrinchium iridioides.
5167Sophora tetraptera.
10349Solanum laciniatum.
249Soldanella alpina.
385Spartium junceum.
380Spigelia marilandica.
126Stapelia variegata.
271Statice sinuata.
4119Strelitzia Reginæ.
7222Struthiola erecta.
6183Syringa vulgaris.
5150Tagetes patula.
6212Tanacetum flabelliforme.
7245Teucrium latifolium.
3105Tradescantia virginica.
10328Trifolium incarnatum.
240Trillium sessile.
7235Trollius asiaticus.
123Tropæolum majus.
398—— minus.
8281Turnera angustifolia.
384Tussilago alpina.
7236Verbascum Myconi.
9308Verbena Aubletia.
7242Veronica decussata.
238Viburnum Tinus.
7248Vinca rosea.
389Viola pedata.
5149Zinnia multiflora.

INDEX.

In which the English Names of the Plants contained in the first Ten Volumes of the Botanical Magazine are alphabetically arranged.

Vol.Pag.
4134Adonis spring.
5173Aitonia cape.
10338Allamanda willow-leaved.
5161Almond dwarf.
4125Alstrœmeria striped-flowered.
4139—— spotted flowered.
4130Alyssum bladder-podded.
4126—— purple.
3101—— sweet.
5159—— yellow.
9305Amaryllis Barbadoes.
9294—— Guernsey.
247—— Jacobean.
4129—— superb.
9290—— yellow.
254Anemone Snow-drop.
4123—— star.
9318Anthericum Savoy.
10343Antholyza scarlet-flowered.
8267Apple tree Chinese.
5174Archangel balm-leav'd.
10339Arum three-lobed
10344Aspalathus small-leaved.
6199Aster alpine.
133—— bristly-leaved.
5180Azalea scarlet.
6208Balm great-flowered.
4117Bell-flower Carpatian.
7252—— great-flowered.
4113Bindweed purple.
6181Bladder-senna scarlet.
381—— common.
8276Blite strawberry.
377Blue-bottle greater.
8274Borbonia heart-leaved.
4132Bramble dwarf.
385Broom Spanish.
134Browallia tall.
7217Buchnera clammy.
5174Buddlea round-headed.
5153Bulbocodium vernal.
242Camellia rose.
4124Candy-tuft Gibraltar.
3106—— purple.
9291Caper Shrub.
3107Cassia dwarf.
9293Catananche blue.
4114Catchfly pendulous.
4131Catesbæa thorny.
6210Celsia linear-leaved.
243Centaurea woad-leaved.
117Cereus creeping.
7233Chironia berry-bearing.
237—— shrubby.
10327Chrysanthemum indian.
7249Cineraria blue-flowered.
253—— woolly.
8264Cistus beautiful.
4112—— gum.
243—— hoary, or rose.
265Clematis, or Virgin's-bower, entire-leaved.
124Cockle rose.
9295—— smooth-leaved.
384Colts-foot alpine.
7246Columbine Canadian.
6188Convolvulus azure.
9289—— narrow-leaved.
127—— small.
10359—— silky-leaved.
5156Coreopsis whorled.
386Corn-flag common.
8272—— square-leaved.
4135—— superb.
8258Coronilla purple.
6185—— rue-leaved.
113—— sea-green.
6203Crane's-bill angular-stalked.
5148—— birch-leaved.
4143—— clammy.
8261—— flesh-coloured.
5165—— heart-leaved.
9315—— horn leaved.
3103—— sorrel.
6201—— two-coloured.
7240—— three-coloured.
135Crepis bearded.
245Crocus spring.
5164Crow-foot grass-leaved.
6204—— mountain.
8266—— plantain-leaved.
6215—— upright double.
6194Crown imperial.
9300Cudweed giant.
14Cyclamen round-leaved.
244—— Persian.
8271Cyrtanthus narrow-leaved.
8255Cytisus common.
251Daffodil great.
16—— lesser.
4121—— peerless.
248—— reflexed.
5147Dais cotinus-leaved.
7228Daisy great double.
9313Daphne trailing.
264Day-lily tawny.
119—— yellow.
8273Diosma one-flowered.
7218Disandra trailing.
9298Dittany of Crete.
112Dodecatheon Mead's.
15Dog's tooth.
8280Dog's-bane tutsan-leav'd.
5170Draba sengreen.
6214Dragon's-head toothed.
5152Epidendrum two-leaved.
9310Erinus alpine.
7241Fagonia cretan.
122Fennel-flower garden.
4144Ferraria curled.
270Fig-marigold bearded.
8262—— golden.
10326—— green-flowered.
132—— hatchet-leaved.
267—— jagged-leaved.
259—— two-coloured.
7234Flax tree.
9312—— yellow.
239Franklin's Tartar.
397Fuchsia scarlet.
5179Fumitory glaucous.
7232—— hollow-rooted.
7231—— solid-rooted.
7251Garlick purple-headed.
9314Genista triangular-stalked.
252Gentian large-flowered.
6200Geranium anemone-leaved.
118—— dwarf.
120—— ivy-leaved.
9309—— prickly-stalked.
395—— rasp-leaved.
255—— striped.
256—— spear-leaved.
4136—— square-stalked.
7245Germander broad-leaved shrubby.
7235Globe-flower Asiatic.
8268Glycine dingy-flowered.
8263—— purple.
8270—— scarlet.
8287Goodenia smooth.
390Gorteria rigid-leaved.
10358Heath Arbutus-leaved.
10342—— blush-flowered.
9303—— flask.
6189—— great-flowered.
111—— herbaceous.
7220—— honeywort-flowered.
10356—— Masson's.
10350—— porcelain.
8282Hedysarum creeping-rooted.
18Hellebore black.
272—— livid or purple.
13—— winter.
387Henbane golden-flowered.
110Hepatica.
9299Hermannia alder-leaved.
9304—— lavender-leaved.
9307—— marshmallow-leaved.
6209Hibiscus bladder.
5158—— China rose.
383—— Syrian.
10360—— superb.
10333Honey-wort great.
268House-leek cobweb.
393—— dwarf.
9296—— gouty.
5157Hyacinth grape.
4122—— starch.
4133—— two-coloured.
123Indian-cress greater.
398—— small.
6198Indigo white-leaved.
115—— Jonquil common.
378—— great.
7221Ipomœa scarlet.
7244—— winged-leaved.
391Iris chalcedonian.
19—— dwarf.
6187—— elder-scented.
11—— persian.
121—— particoloured.
5168—— peacock.
250—— Siberian.
258—— spurious.
261—— tall.
116—— variegated.
4127Ixia bending-stalked.
5171—— Chinese.
8265—— crocus-leaved.
8256—— long-flowered.
6184—— saffron-coloured.
5169Ixora scarlet.
131Jasmine common.
8285—— sweet.
10325Justicia dichotomous.
5175Kalmia broad-leaved.
5177—— glaucous.
4138—— hairy.
10331—— narrow-leaved.
5176Laburnum common.
382Lachenalia three-coloured.
3108Ladies-finger four-leaved.
6192Ladies-slipper two-leaved.
6216—— white-petal'd.
396Lantana prickly.
4115Lathyrus blue-flowered.
8253—— jointed-podded.
4111—— tuberous.
4109 Lavatera annual.
238Laurustinus common.
7230Lead-wort rose-coloured.
6183Lilac common.
7239Lily Atamasco.
8259—— Catesby's.
130—— chalcedonian.
136—— orange.
8278—— white.
4116Limodorum tuberous-rooted.
7225Lobelia shrubby.
9320—— scarlet.
8254Lopezia Mexican.
3104Loosestrife bulb-bearing.
379Lotus black-flowered.
5151—— winged.
10336—— hairy.
5160Lungwort Virginian.
6202Lupine perennial.
4140—— yellow.
5163Lychnidea early-flowering.
7223Lychnis Chinese.
8257—— scarlet.
10353Mahernia cut-leaved.
8277—— winged.
9322Manulea woolly.
5150Marigold French.
9301Melianthus small.
8260Metrosideros harsh-leaved.
7219Michauxia rough-leaved.
129Mignonet.
9316Milkwort box-leaved.
10340—— heath-leaved.
10345—— spear-leaved.
9302Mimosa myrtle-leaved.
4110—— whorled-leaved.
5145Monarda crimson.
8283Monkey-flower narr. leaved.
10354—— orange.
373Monsonia large-flowered.
7236Mullein borage-leaved.
7250Myrtle woolly-leaved.
388Narcissus hoop-petticoat.
6193—— narrow-leaved.
6197—— two-flowered.
17Navel-wort blue.
9321—— round-leaved.
10349Nightshade cut-leaved.
10355Oenothera dwarf.
10352—— purple.
10347—— rose-coloured.
10332—— shrubby.
6190Ornithogalum golden.
4118Orpine evergreen.
9306Othonna wormwood-leaved.
9292Passerina great-flowered.
128Passion-flower common.
8288—— fringed-leaved.
266—— winged.
260Pea sweet.
3100—— Tangier.
7248Periwinkle Madagascar.
6213Persicaria tall.
7224Phylica heath-leaved.
9319Pimpernel Italian.
125Pink China, or Indian.
9297—— superb.
8279Plumeria red.
257Poppy eastern.
7243—— prickly.
8286Portlandia great-flowered.
375Potentilla large-flowered.
7229Primrose lilac double.
114Primula mountain.
6191—— silver-edged.
10346Protea honey-bearing.
5162Puccoon Canada.
10357Quaking-grass great.
7238Rag-wort purple.
9323Raspberry flowering.
10335Rest-harrow round-leaved.
9317—— shrubby.
10329—— yellow-flowered.
129Reseda sweet-scented.
8284Rose ever-blowing.
269—— moss.
9311Robinia rough-stalked.
12Rudbeckia purple.
6182Sage golden.
6196Saxifrage oval-leaved.
10351—— saffron-coloured.
392—— strawberry.
7247Scabious sweet.
4142Scorzonera Tangier.
6186Selago oval-headed.
10337Self-heal great-flowered.
10330Sida crested.
394Sisyrinchium Iris-leaved.
10334St. John's-wort Chinese.
5178—— heath-leaved.
5146—— large-flowered.
4137—— warty.
10348Slipper-wort Fothergill's.
241—— pinnated.
246Snow-flake spring.
5154Soap-wort basil.
249Soldanella alpine.
5167Sophora winged-podded.
7242Speedwell cross-leaved.
380Spigelia Maryland.
4128Squill bell-flowered.
10341—— Byzantine.
126Stapelia variegated.
8269Star of Bethlehem Neapolitn.
5166Stock Mediterranean.
6211Stone-crop poplar-leaved.
263Strawberry one-leaved.
4119Strelitzia Canna-leaved.
7222Struthiola smooth.
7227Sun-flower perennial.
6207Sweet william.
6212Tansey fan-leaved.
271Thrift purple-cup'd.
6205Toad-flax alpine.
6200—— branching.
374—— black-flowered.
399—— purple.
9324—— three-leaved.
3105Tradescantia virginian.
10328Trefoil crimson.
240Trillium sessile.
8275Tulip-tree common.
8281Turnera narrow-leaved.
4141Turnsole peruvian.
9308Vervain rose.
389Violet cut-leaved.
7226Wall-cress alpine.
6195Wall-flower changeable.
376Willow-herb narrowest-leavd.
5155Wood-Sorrel striped-flowered
7237—— goat's-foot.
5149Zinnia many-flowered.

INDEX

To the Hardy Trees contained in the first Ten Volumes of the Botanical Magazine.

Vol.Pag.
5176Cytisus Laburnum.
131Jasminum officinale.
8275Liriodendron Tulipifera.
128Passiflora cærulea.
8267Pyrus spectabilis.
6183Syringa vulgaris.

INDEX

To the Hardy Shrubs contained in the first Ten Volumes of the Botanical Magazine.

Vol.Pag.
5161Amygdalus nana.
5180Azalea nudiflora, var. coccin.
4112Cistus ladaniferus.
381Colutea arborescens.
8255Cytisus sessilifolius.
9313Daphne Cneorum.
111Erica herbacea.
9314Genista triquetra.
383Hibiscus syriacus.
10331Kalmia angustifolia.
5177—— glauca.
4138—— hirsuta.
5175—— latifolia.
9317Ononis fruticosa.
10335—— rotundifolia.
9316Polygala Chamæbuxus.
9311Robinia hispida.
269Rosa muscosa.
9323Rubus odoratus.
385Spartium junceum.
238Viburnum Tinus.

INDEX

To the Hardy Herbaceous Perennial Plants contained in the first Ten Volumes of the Botanical Magazine.

Vol.Pag.
4134Adonis vernalis.
124Agrostemma coronaria.
7251Allium descendens.
4126Alyssum deltoideum.
5159—— saxatile.
4130—— utriculatum.
9290Amaryllis lutea.
110Anemone Hepatica.
4123—— hortensis.
254—— sylvestris.
9318Anthericum Liliastrum.
6207Antirrhinum alpinum.
399—— purpureum.
8280Apocynum androsæmifolium.
7246Aquilegia canadensis.
7226Arabis alpina.
6199Aster alpinus.
7228Bellis perennis, var. maj.
5153Bulbocodium vernum.
4117Campanula carpatica.
7252—— grandiflora.
9293Catananche cærulea.
262Centaurea glastifolia.
377—— montana.
265Clematis integrifolia.
5156Coreopsis verticillata.
8258Coronilla varia.
245Crocus vernus.
14Cyclamen Coum.
17Cynoglossum Omphalodes.
6216Cypripedium album.
6192—— acaule.
6207Dianthus barbatus.
239—— Caryophyllus, var.
112Dodecatheon Meadia.
5170Draba aizoides.
6214Dracocephalum denticulatum.
376Epilobium angustissimum.
9310Erinus alpinus.
15Erythronium Dens Canis.
263Fragaria monophylla.
6194Fritillaria imperialis.
7232Fumaria cava.
7231—— solida.
252—— Gentiana acaulis.
6203Geranium angulatum.
255—— striatum.
386Gladiolus communis.
8282Hedysarum obscurum.
7227Helianthus multiflorus.
13Helleborus hyemalis.
272—— lividus.
18—— niger.
119Hemerocallis flava.
264—— fulva.
5157Hyacinthus botryoides.
4133—— comosus.
4122—— racemosus.
5146Hypericum calycinum.
261Iris ochroleuca.
11—— persica.
19—— pumila.
6187—— sambucina.
391—— susiana.
250—— sibirica.
258—— spuria.
116—— variegata.
121—— versicolor.
8265Ixia Bulbocodium.
5171—— chinensis.
5172Lamium Orvala.
4111Lathyrus tuberosus.
246Leucojum vernum.
136Lilium bulbiferum.
8278—— candidum.
130—— chalcedonicum.
9312Linum flavum.
9320Lobelia cardinalis.
6202Lupinus perennis.
8257Lychnis chalcedonica.
3104Lysimachia bulbifera.
6208Melissa grandiflora.
8283Mimulus ringens.
5145Monarda fistulosa, var.
6193Narcissus angustifolius.
6197—— biflorus.
388—— Bulbocodium.
4121—— incomparabilis.
115—— Jonquilla.
251—— major.
16—— minor.
378—— odorus.
248—— triandrus.
10332Oenothera fruticosa.
10355—— pumila.
8269Ornithogalum nutans.
257Papaver orientale.
5163Phlox divaricata.
375Potentilla grandiflora.
7229Primula acaulis, v. carnea.
6191—— marginata.
114—— villosa.
10337Prunella grandiflora.
5160Pulmonaria virginica.
6215Ranunculus acris, v. pl.
6204—— aconitifol. pl.
8266—— amplexicaulis.
5164—— gramineus.
4132Rubus arcticus.
12Rudbeckia purpurea.
5162Sanguinaria canadensis.
5154Saponaria Ocymoides.
6190Saxifraga crassifolia.
10351—— mutata.
392—— sarmentosa.
10341Scilla amæna.
4128—— campanulata.
4118Sedum Anacampseros.
6211—— populifolium.
268Sempervivum arachnoideum.
249Soldanella alpina.
380Spigelia marilandica.
3105Tradescantia virginica.
240Trillium sessile.
7235Trollius asiaticus.
384Tussilago alpina.
7236Verbascum Myconi.
389Viola pedata.

INDEX

To the Annual and Biennial Plants (or, if not strictly such, requiring to be frequently renewed from Seed) usually cultivated in the open Borders, contained in the first Ten Volumes of the Botanical Magazine.

Vol.Pag.
9295Agrostemma Cœli rosa.
3101Alyssum halimifolium.
3108Anthyllis tetraphylla.
6200Antirrhinum sparteum.
9324Antirrhinum triphyllum.
7243Argemone mexicana.
8276Blitum virgatum.
10357Briza maxima.
3102Campanula Speculum.
10333Cerinthe major.
5166Cheiranthus maritimus.
6188Convolvulus Nil.
4113—— purpureus.
127—— tricolor.
135Crepis barbata.
125Dianthus chinensis.
9297—— superbus.
5179Fumaria glauca.
6209Hibiscus Trionum.
3106Iberis umbellata.
7221Ipomœa coccinea.
8253Lathyrus articulatus.
260—— odoratus.
4115—— sativus.
3100—— tingitanus.
4109Lavatera trimestris.
5151Lotus tetragonolobus.
4140Lupinus luteus.
122Nigella damascena.
10352Oenothera purpurea.
10347—— rosea.
6213Polygonum orientale.
129Reseda odorata.
7247Scabiosa atropurpurea.
4142Scorzonera tingitana.
7238Senecio elegans.
4114Silene pendula.
5150Tagetes patula.
10328Trifolium incarnatum.
123Tropæolum majus.
398—— minus.
5149Zinnia multiflora.

INDEX

To the Greenhouse Plants contained in the first Ten Volumes of the Botanical Magazine.

Vol.Pag.
5173Aitonia capensis.
4139Alstrœmeria Pelegrina.
7239Amaryllis Atamasco.
9294—— sarniensis.
9319Anagellis Monelli.
374Antirrhinum triste.
10343Antholyza Cunonia.
10344Aspalathus pedunculata.
133Aster tenellus.
8274Borbonia crenata.
7217Buchnera capensis.
5174Buddleja globosa.
117Cactus flagelliformis.
10348Calceolaria Fothergillii.
242Camellia japonica.
9291Capparis spinosa.
6210Celsia linearis.
6195Cheiranthus mutabilis.
7233Chironia baccifera.
237—— frutescens.
10327Chrysanthemum indicum.
7249Cineraria Amelloides.
253—— lanata.
8264Cistus formosus.
243—— incanus.
6181Colutea frutescens.
10359Convolvulus althæoides.
9289—— linearis.
113Coronilla glauca.
6185—— valentina.
9321Cotyledon orbiculata.
244Cyclamen persicum.
8271Cyrtanthus angustifolius.
5147Dais cotinifolia.
8273Diosma uniflora.
7218Disandra preferata.
9303Erica ampullacca.
10358—— baccans.
7220—— cerinthoides.
6189—— grandiflora.
10356—— Massoni.
10342—— persoluta.
10350—— ventricosa.
8261Erodium incarnatum.
7241Fagonia cretica.
397Fuchsia coccinea.
6206Geranium anemonefolium.
256—— lanceolatum.
120—— peltatum.
118—— Reichardi.
395—— Radula.
4135Gladiolus cardinalis.
8272—— tristis.
8263Glycine bimaculata.
8270—— coccinea.
8268—— rubicunda.
9300Gnaphalium eximium.
8287Goodenia lævigata.
390Gorteria rigens.
9299Hermannia alnifolia.
9307—— althæifolia.
9304—— lavandulifolia.
387Hyoscyamus aureus.
4137Hypericum balearicum.
5178—— Coris.
10334—— monogynum.
8285Jasminum odoratissimum.
4124Iberis gibraltarica.
6198Indigofera candicans.
5168Iris pavonia.
6184Ixia crocata.
4127—— flexuosa.
8256—— longiflora.
382Lachenalia tricolor.
8259Lilium Catesbæi.
7234Linum arboreum.
8254Lopezia racemosa.
10336Lotus hirsutus.
379—— Jacobæus.
7223Lychnis coronata.
10353Mahernia incisa.
8277—— pinnata.
9322Manulea tomentosa.
9301Melianthus minor.
8262Mesembrym aureum.
270—— barbatum.
259—— bicolorum.
132—— dolabriforme.
267—— pinnatifidum.
10326—— viridiflorum.
8260Metrosideros citrina.
7219Michauxia campanuloides.
9302Mimosa myrtifolia.
4110—— verticillata.
10354Mimulus aurantiacus.
373Monsonia speciosa.
10329Ononis Natrix.
6190Ornithogalum aureum.
9298Origanum Dictamnus.
9306Othonna pectinata.
7237Oxalis caprina.
5155—— versicolor.
9292Passerina grandiflora.
3103Pelargonium acetosum.
5148—— betulinum.
6201—— bicolor.
5165—— cordifolium.
9315—— ceratophyllum.
9309—— echinatum.
4143—— glutinosum.
4136—— tetragonum.
7240—— tricolor.
7224Phylica ericoides.
10345Polygala bractæolata.
10340—— Heisteria.
10346Protea mellifera.
8284Rosa semperflorens.
6182Salvia aurea.
6186Selago ovata.
393Sempervivum monanthes.
9296—— tortuosum.
10330Sida cristata.
394Sisyrinchium Iridioides.
10349Solanum laciniatum.
5167Sophora tetraptera.
271Statice sinuata.
7222Struthiola erecta.
6212Tanacetum flabelliforme.
7245Teucrium latifolium.
9308Verbena Aubletia.
7242Veronica decussata.

INDEX

To the Stove Plants contained in the first Ten Volumes of the Botanical Magazine.

Vol.Pag.
10338Allamanda cathartica.
4125Alstrœmeria Ligtu.
9305Amaryllis equestris.
247—— formosissima.
4129—— vittata.
10339Arum trilobatum.
134Browallia elata.
241Calceolaria pinnata.
3107Cassia Chamæcrista.
4131Catesbæa spinosa.
5152Epidendrum cochleatum.
4144Ferraria undulata.
4141Heliotropium peruvianum.
5158Hibiscus Rosa sinensis.
10360—— speciosus.
7244Ipomœa Quamoclit.
5169Ixora coccinea.
10325Justicia nasuta.
396Lantana aculeata.
4116Limodorum tuberosum.
7225Lobelia surinamensis.
7250Myrtus tomentosa.
266Passiflora alata.
8288—— ciliata.
7230Plumbago rosea.
8279Plumeria rubra.
8286Portlandia grandiflora.
126Stapelia variegata.
4119Strelitzia Reginæ.
8281Turnera angustifolia.
7248Vinca rosea.

INDEX.

In which the Plants contained in the first Ten Volumes of the Botanical Magazine are arranged according to the System of Linnæus, as published by himself.

Monandria.

Monandria Monogynia.

Lopezia racemosa.

Monandria Digynia.

Diandria.

Diandria Monogynia.

Triandria.

Triandria Monogynia.

Triandria Digynia.

Tetrandria.

Tetrandria Monogynia.

Pentandria.

Pentandria Monogynia.

Pentandria Digynia.

Pentandria Trigynia.

Pentandria Pentagynia.

Hexandria.

Hexandria Monogynia.

Hexandria Trigynia.

Heptandria.

Heptandria Monogynia.

Octandria.

Octandria Monogynia.

Octandria Trigynia.

Decandria Monogynia.

Decandria Digynia.

Decandria Trigynia.

Decandria Pentagynia.

Dodecandria.

Dodecandria Trigynia.

Dodecandria Dodecagynia.

Icosandria.

Icosandria Monogynia.

Icosandria Pentagynia.

Icosandria Polygynia.

Polyandria.

Polyandria Monogynia.

Polyandria Pentagynia.

Polyandria Polygynia.

Didynamia.

Didynamia Gymnospermia.

Didynamia Angiospermia.

Tetradynamia.

Tetradynamia Siliculosa.

Tetradynamia Siliquosa.

Monadelphia.

Monadelphia Pentandria.

Monadelphia Heptandria.

Monadelphia Octandria.

Monadelphia Decandria.

Monadelphia Polyandria.

Diadelphia.

Diadelphia Hexandria.

Diadelphia Octandria

Diadelphia Decandria.

Polyadelphia.

Polyadelphia Dodecandria.

Polyadelphia Polyandria.

Syngenesia.

Syngenesia Polygamia Æqualis.

Syngenesia Polygamia Superflua.

Syngenesia Polygamia Frustranea.

Syngenesia Polygamia Necessaria.

Syngenesia Monogamia.

Gynandria.

Gynandria Diandria.

Gynandria Triandria.

Gynandria Pentandria.

Gynandria Polyandria.

Polygamia.

Polygamia Monoccia.