CURTIS'S BOTANICAL MAGAZINE COMPRISING THE plants; of tbt ftopal <§arfcens; of &*to, AND OF OTHER BOTANICAL ESTABLISHMENTS IN GREAT BRITAIN; WITH SUITABLE DESCRIPTIONS; AND A SUPPLEMENT OF BOTANICAL AND HORTICULTURAL INFORMATION ; BY SIR WILLIAM JACKSON HOOKER, K.H., D.C.L. Oxon, LL.D., F R.S., and L.S., Vice-Preaident of the Linnean Society, and Director of the Royal Gardens of Kcw. VOL. 111.0 OF THE THIRD SERIES; (Or Vol. LXXIU. of the Wlwh Work.) • No chilling cold deforms the beauteous year,^ The springing flowers no coming winter fear." LONDON: REEVE, BENHAM & REEVE, KING WILLIAM STREET, STRAND. 1847. uars, mix * iuti, ""W *"» MMOM o» MBHM loin, IIHO WILLIAM ItUII, MBAJO. 4v TO CAPTAIN SIR EVERARD HOME, BART., R.N WHO HAS LARGELY CONTR1BVTF l>. BOTH PO TI1K LIVING COLLECTION AND TO THE MUSLIM OT TBI THE BOTANICAL RESULTS OF HIS LONG AND DISTANT VOYAGES, THE PRESENT VOLUME IS DEDICATED, WITH SENTIMENTS OF REGARD AND ESTEEM BY HIS FAITHFUL FRIEND AND SERVANT, THE AUTHOR. Royal Gardens, Ken-. IW. 1st, 1847. \ \ Tab. 4275-4278. VICTORIA REGIA. Victoria Water-Lily. Nat. Ord. Nymph.eace.e. § Euryale^:. — Polyandria Polygynia. Gen Char. Victoria, Lindl. Calycis tubus subglobosus, ovario adherens, ad oram in torum expansus, limbo 4-partito deciduo colorato. Petala numerosa, fauci seu toro calycis inserta ; exteriora patentissima, calycem superantia, inte- riora sensim angustiora acuminata rigida staminiformia ; omnia basi in annulum v. torum connata. Stamina plurima, subdupbci serie inserta, fertiba ; jilamenta subulata petaloidea, sed rigida firma basi inoiiadelpba, demum erecta : antherce introrsse, infra apicem inserta?, lineari-elongata?, adnatse. Filamenta interiora subbiserialia stenlia, basi monadelpha. Ovarium inferum globosum, vertice con- cavo-campanulatum radiatum centro rostratum, multiloculare, loculis uniseriatim regulariter in circulum dispositis, pluriovulatis, ovulis parietalibus, funiculis reti- cularis affixis : stylis nullis (in campanulam sulcatain tubum calycis vestientem connatis, Lindl.); stiff ma tibus maximis tot quot loculis, ad marginem verticis campanulati quasi articulatim insertis, lato-lanceolatis compressis carnosis erectis, medium versus ad angulum innexis deciduis dorso stigmatosis. F met us bacca- tus globoso-campanulatus v. cyatbiformis, truncatus, supra campanulatus, intus rostratus, plurilocularis, loculis polyspermis. Semina ovali-^Jfobosa, nucamentacea. Herba ingens, aquatica, Jtuvios placidos Cisanduios America australis habitans. Radix perennis ? fobis giganteis, natautibits, orbiculatis, peltatis, planis, margine ubique elevatis, radiatim atque reticidatim nervosis, nereis subtus valde elevatis ; floribus maximis speciosis albo-roseis, pedunculis longe extantibus ; petiolis, pedun- cubs, ovariis, nervisque subtus insig niter aculeatis. Victoria regia. (Tab. nostr. 4275-4278.) Victoria regia, Lindl. Monogr. Vict. 1837, ined. cumic. Bot. Beg. Mm. 1838. p. 9. D'Orbigny, in Ann. des Sc. Nat. v. 13. p. 57. Walp. Repert. 1. p. 1 06, Schomburgk, hi Views in the interior of Guiana, p. 2. frontispiece. Victoria Regina, Gray in Mag. of Zool. and Bot. v. 2. 1838. p. 440. Nymph^a Victoria, Schomburgk in litt. Euryale Amazonica, Poepp. in Froriep, Notizen, 35. p. 9. Beise, v. 2. p. 432. Victoria Cruziana, D'Orbigny, I. c.p.hl (" foliis utrinque concoloribus, petalis cunctis concoloribus roseis.") It has always been our endeavour to commence a New Year in this Magazine with some eminently rare or beautiful plant ; but never had we the good fortune on any occasion to devote a Number to a production of such pre-eminent beauty, rarity, and we may add celebrity, as that now presented to our Subscribers ; worthy, as we have no doubt they will agree with us in thinking : JANUARY 1ST, 1846. B to occupy the entire Number. Seldom has any plant excited such attention in the botanical world ; the interest being spe- cially enhanced by the name it is privileged to bear. If it could be said, in reference to the royal ancestor of Queen Victoria, the Consort of His Majesty, < teorge III., that the Streliizia was peculiarly appropriated to Her, because of the patronage which she gave to Botany, by improving and embellishing the Royal Gardens of Kew, much more does the name of Victoria claim to be handed down to posterity on similar grounds; seeing that Her present Majesty has been graciously pleased to make these Gardens available to the public enjoyment, and even to endow them with a liberal provision for that "especial purpose. It is true that the Victoria has not yet produced its blossoms in England; but we have growing plants in the Royal Gardens of Kew, which germinated from seeds brought from Bolivia by Mr. Bridges. These have hitherto made satisfactory progress ; although we have our fears that the plant being possibly annual and the season late (December), they may not survive the winter; or, at any rate, may not produce perfect flowers Many are the disappointments and delays of Science ! It was not till after Tea had been used as a beverage for upwards of a century in England, that the shrub which produces it was brought alive to this country. More than one botanist had embarked for the voyage to China,— till lately a protracted and formidable undertaking,— mainly m the hope of introducing a growingTea-tree to our Greenhouses. No passage across the Desert, no Waghorn- facihties, no steam-ship, assisted the traveller in those ° days Phe distance to and from China, with the necessary time spent in that country, generally consumed nearly three years ! Once had the lea-tree been procured by Osbeck, a pupil of Linnaeus, m spite of the jealous care with which the Chinese forbade its exportation ; and, when near the coast of England, a storm ensued, winch destroyed the precious shrubs. Then, the plan of obtaining berries was adopted and frustrated by the heat of the tropics, which spoiled the ofly seeds and prevented their germination: The Captain of a Swedish vessel hit upon a good scheme : having secured fresh berries, he sowed these on board ship, and often stinted himself of his daily allowance of water, for the sake of the young plants; but just as the ship entered the English Channe an unlucky rat attacked his cherished charge and de- voured them all! We have, however, no reason to despair of being able to raise the Victoria regia and of seeing it bloom in this country. The time is not long, since we first heard of this gorgeous Water-Lily ; and the facilities of communicating with foreign countries are very different now from what they were in the days of Linnaeus and of the first importation of the Tea-Shrub ! Of the Victoria we have the good fortune to possess flowering specimens, gathered by Sir Robert Schomburgk ; and blossoms, both preserved in spirits and dried, collected by Mr. Bridges. These, with coloured drawings executed on the spot by'Sir Robert, enable us to present, in the accompanying figures, all the more important analyses necessary to illustrate the genus and species of the plant. Although to our own country belongs the honour of first fully detailing, in 1837, the particulars relative to this extraordinary Water-Lily, and clearly defining its generic distinctions, yet the earliest mention of it in print, so far as we can find, was in 1832,* in a work to which we have not at this moment access, ' Froriep's Notizen ', vol. xxxv. p. 9. It is there described as a new species of Eur yah, under the name of E. Amazon ica ; so called by Dr. Poeppig, from the circumstance of that distinguished botanist and traveller having found it in the Amazon River of South America. After- wards (in 1836) he alludes to it, in the 2nd vol. of his 'Reise in Chile, Peru, &c.' p. 432 ; but only says, " In the Igaripes, which are branches of the Amazon River, bearing no peculiar appellation, yet worthy to rank, from their size, with rivers of the second magnitude in Europe, grow some aquatic plants, whose almost fabulous dimensions may vie with the celebrated Bafflesia of India ; while they excel that wonderful production in beauty of inflorescence." Then, in a note, he specifies the Eur y ale Amazo- nica, as belonging to the family of Nymjohaaccce, " whose wonder- fully large leaves are deeply channelled below and traversed with veins beset with prickles, their width equalling six feet, while the flower is lovely snow-white externally, and crimson within, and measures from ten to eleven English inches across." " This," he says, " is the most magnificent plant of its tribe, though far from common ; I only saw it in one Igaripe, near the confluence of the Teffle river with the Amazons. The flowers appear in December and January. It is called Murura." Previously, however, to this period, f M. D'Orbigny, in 1828, sent specimens of this gigantic Water-Lily to the Museum of Natural History in Paris. He had gathered them in the Province of Corrientes, in a river tributary to the Rio dc- la Plata. The evident analogy between the foliage of this plant and that of Euryale, induced the French botanists also to rank it as a species of that genus. The dried flowers and fruit, which M. D'Orbigny * Guillemin, in 'Ann. des Sciences Naturelles ,' v. xiii. p. 51. f Guillemin, I. c. b2 had transmitted, wore unfortunately neglected, and nothing mainedof his specimen! but a single leaf, of immense dimensions and somewhat injured, which had been folded for insertion in the Herbarium. In 1835, the following notice of what M. D'Orbigny is dis- posed to consider a species of the genus distinct from our plant, appeared in that author's ' Voyage dans I'Amerique Meridionale.' " I resumed my descent of the Parana on the 3rd of March, and arriving at the junction of a small river called the San Jose, which spreads into a wide marsh before falling into the Parana, I found one of the most beautiful flowers that America can produce. The plant seems to belong to the family X'/mphteacea, and is certainly much allied to the Nuphar, but its dimensions are gigantic. The people of Guiana call it Irope, deriving this name from the shape of its leaves, which resemble the broad dishes used in the country, or the lids of their large round baskets. A space, more than a mile broad and nearly a mile long, is covered with the large floating leaves, each of which has a raised edge two inches high. The foliage is smooth above and furrowed below with numberless regular compartments, formed by the projecting, thick, hollow nerves, the air in which keeps the leaf upon the surface of the water. Leaf-stalks, flower-stalks, and ribs of the leaves, are alike cellular and coveted with long prickles. Amid this expanse of foliage rise the broad flowers, upwards of a foot across, and either white, pink, or purple ; always double, and diffusing a delicious odour. The fruit, which succeeds these flowers, is spherical, and half the size, when ripe, of the human head, full of roundish farinaceous seeds, which give to the plant the name of Water-Maize (Mai's del Agua), for the Spaniards collect the seeds, roast and eat them. I was never weary of admiring this Colossus of the Vegetable Kingdom, and reluctantly pursued my way the same evening to Corrientes, after collecting specimens of the flowers, fruits, and seeds." Thus much for the earlier discoverers and first notices of this magnificent aquatic : we shall have occasion to return to M. D'Orbigny ; but in the meanwhile it is only justice to mention in this place, that Sir Robert Schomburgk detected the plant in British Guiana, when travelling on account of the Royal Geogra- phical Society of London, aided by Her Majesty's Government ; his object being to examine the natural productions of that portion of the British Dominions. The following account of this discovery was given in a letter addressed to the Geographical Society.* * Another, and similar but more brief, account, contained in a letter addressed "It was on the 1st of January, 1837, while contending with the difficulties that nature interposed in different forms, to stem our progress up the River Berbice (lat. 4° 30' N., long. 52° W.), that we arrived at a part where the river expanded and formed a currentless basin. Some object on the southern extremity of this basin attracted my attention, and I was unable to form an idea what it could be ; but, animating the crew to increase the rate of their paddling, we soon came opposite the object which had raised my curiosity, and, behold, a vegetable wonder ! All calamities were forgotten ; I was a botanist, and felt myself rewarded ! There were gigantic leaves, five to six feet across, flat, with a broad rim, lighter green above and vivid crimson below, floating upon the water; while, in character with the wonderful foliage, I saw luxuriant flowers, each consisting of numerous petals, passing, in alternate tints, from pure white to rose and pink. The smooth water was covered with the blossoms, and as I rowed from one to the other, I always found something new to admire. The flower-stalk is an inch thick near the calyx and studded with elastic prickles, about three quarters of an inch long. When expanded, the four-leaved calyx measures a foot in diameter, but is concealed by the expansion of the hundred- petaled corolla. This beautiful flower, when it first unfolds, is white with a pink centre; the colour spreads as the bloom increases in age j and, at a day old, the whole is rose-coloured. As if to add to the charm of this noble Water-Lily, it diffuses a sweet scent. As in the case of others in the same tribe, the petals and stamens pass gradually into each other, and many petaloid leaves may be observed bearing vestiges of an anther. The seeds are numerous and imbedded in a spongy substance. "Ascending the river, we found this plant frequently, and the higher we advanced, the more gigantic did the specimens become ; one leaf we measured was six feet five inches in diameter, the rim five inches and a half high, and the flowers a foot and a quarter across. A beetle {Trichius sp. ?) infests the flowers to their great injury, often completely destroying the inner part of the disc ; we counted sometimes from twenty to thirty of these insects in one flower." This highly interesting Narrative was made the groundwork of a more full history of the plant, accompanied by a splendid figure, in a separate memoir of Atlas-folio size, by Dr. Lindley. Only twenty-five copies were printed for private distribution, in 1837, to us, was published, with further remarks, in the { Annals of Natural History for 1838,' p. 65. and shortly after, this gentleman published the same account, with important additions, in the ItjsoeUanj | the 'Botanical Register ', whence copbufl extracts appeared in nume- rous papers and journals. Ni-vertln-le>s that able botanist had to acknowledge, that the specimens in the p of the (no- graphical Society, from which his generic- and Sj haracter (aided by Schomburgk's coloured drawing- hid been drawn up, were in a very decayed condition, owing to the manner in which they had been packed. They were, however, botamcally examinable; and such he' has proved them to be by the accuracy of his descriptive character, and bv the correct result at which he arrived, viz., that the Ficbria is truly and genencally distinct from E«n/aJp, which in its similar habit* infe- rior gennen, and the prickly nature of the foliage, petioles, pedun- cles, and ovaries, it so completely resembles, that, as has been previously observed, both Poeppig and Guillemin unhesitatil referred it to that genus. ° Stdl it is obvious that, as far as the public was concerned u ith the exception of individuals versed in scientific Botany hardly anyone could be gratified with the sight of a Bgore, and still fewer with that of a specimen of this wonderful production The former was only known in the portfolio of the ' London Botanical feociety where we believe the original drawing, made bj Sir R Schomburgk is deposited, along with a letter* addressee! to that body, and published by Mr. Gray in the 22nd vol. of the ' Ma* azme of Zoology and Botany (Edinburgh, 183S, p |. H) )'. : ,U ?^ T tWe !! ty " fi T e C ° pieS ° f the beautif u\ but unpublished pi, ot Dr. Lmdley, above mentioned ; to which we must add a splendid private delineation of the plant, of the natural size, placed in the alcove of a greenhouse at Chiswick, which has more than once been thrown open to public view by the noble proprietor, on the days of the Horticultural Society's fetes; while, with regard to spe- cimens actually none existed, save the imperfect ones already tS^XAlST^ * *» G ^ P hical But before proceeding to speak of the fortunate circumstance, which gave us possession of specimens, and with them the power IXtT !?! , n , blG Ph ?h ll iS °^ ^ to mention what the French botanists have written upon the subject. Dr. Lind- * Underthetitleof-Dr.Robt.H.Schomburgk'sdescriptionof Victoria Reaina Gray _: but unaccompanied by any botanical definition . £ JA^^Sc name is "r&a and this appears to have been published in a ™l nSS of the Botanical Register for 1838 '; while Sir Grav's na^ « 2 si . nun ? bei in a later number of the 'Magazine of ^i^™%J^^#«* ley's excellent description was the means of directing their atten- tion to those specimens especially winch had been sent to Paris by M. D'Orbigny from Corrientes. In the 13th volume of the Annales des Sciences Naturelles (1840), M. Guillemin has published his ' Observations sur les Genres Euryale et Victoria? but he throws no new light whatever upon the subject ; nor could it be expected, from the condition of the specimens in the Museum of Paris. Nor would he probably have criticised the view taken of the genus by Dr. Lindley as he has done, had he been acquainted with the article on Victoria regia, above quoted, in the miscellaneous matter of the Botanical Register, vol.24, p. 9. This notice by M. Guillemin is, however, followed in the same volume by a more interesting but popular account of Victoria, by M. A. D'Orbigny, who claims to himself the priority of disco- very; while, strangely enough, he alludes at the same time to Haenke (who travelled about 1801), and then to Bonpland, as the first persons to meet with this splendid aquatic. Our readers will be glad to peruse his own words, which we here give, trans- lated from the ' Annales ', only omitting a little expression of vexation that a botanist belonging to another country should have the privilege of first laying a scientific description of this gorgeous plant before the world. " If there exist in the Animal Kingdom creatures, whose size, compared with our own, commands admiration by their enor- mous stature ; if we also gaze with wonder on the giants of the Vegetable Kingdom, we may well take especial pleasure in surveying any peculiarly wonderful species of those genera of plants which are already known to us only in more moderate dimensions. I shall endeavour to express not only my own feelings, but those of M.M.Bonpland and Haenke, for we were all alike struck with profound emotion, on beholding the two species of Victoria which form the subject of this note. " For eight months I had been investigating, in all directions, the province of Corrientes, when, early in 1827, descending the river Parana, in a frail Pirogue, I arrived at a part of this majestic stream, where, though more than 900 miles distant from its junction with the Bio Plata, its breadth yet nearly attained a league. The surrounding scenery was in keeping with this splen- did river ; all was on a grand and imposing scale, and being my- self only accompanied by two Guarani" Indians, I silently con- templated the wild and lovely view around me ; and I must confess that, amid all this watery waste, I longed for some vege- tation on which my eye might rest ; and longed in vain ! " Ere long, reaching a place called the Arroyo de San Jose, I observed that the marshes on either side the river were bordered with a green and floating surface ; and the Guaranis told me that they called the plant in question " Yrnpe ", literally water-platter: from//, water, and ntpS, a dish. Its general asped reminded me of our Nenuphar, belonging to the family Nympiaacea. Nearly a mile of water was overspread with huge round mar- gined leaves, among which shone, sprinkled here and there, the magnificent flowers, white and pink, scenting the air with their delicious fragrance. I hastened to load my Pirogue with leaves, flowers and fruits : each leaf, itself as heavy as a man could cany, floats on the water by means of the air-cells con- tained in its thick projecting innumerable nerves, and i like the flower-stalks and fruit, with long spines. The ripe fruit is full of roundish-black seeds, white and mealy within. " When I reached Corrientes, I hastened to make a drawing of this lovely water-lily, and to show my prize to the inhabitants ; and they informed me that the seed is a valuable article of food, which, being eaten roasted like maize, has caused the plant to be called Water-Maize ('Mais del Agua'). I afterwards Beard from an intimate friend of M. Bonpland, the companion and fellow- labourer of the famous Humboldt, that having visited accidentally, eight years previously to my visit, a place near the little rivet called Riochuelo, he had seen from a distance this superb plant, and had well nigh precipitated himself off the raft into the river in his desire to secure specimens; and that M. Bonpland had been able to speak of little else for a whole month. I was so fortunate as to get dried leaves, flowers and fruits, and also to put other specimens in spirits ; and about the end of 1827, I had the delight of sending them, with my other Botanical and Zoolo- gical collections, to the Museum of Natural History at Paris. " Five years afterwards, when travelling in Central America, in the country of the wild Guarayos, a tribe of Guaranis or Caribs, I made acquaintance with Father La Cueva, a Spanish Mis- sionary, a good and well-informed man, beloved for his patri- archal virtues, and one who earnestly devoted himself to the con- version of the natives. The traveller, after spending a year among Indians, may easily appreciate the privilege of meeting with a human being who can understand and exchange senti- ments with him ; and I eagerly embraced the opportunity of con- versing with this venerable old man, who had passed thirty years of his life among savages. In one of our interviews he happened to mention the famous botanist Haenke, who had been sent by the Spanish government to investigate the vegetable productions of Peru, and the fruit of whose labours has been unfortunately 9 lost to science. Father La Cueva and Haenke were together in a Pirogue upon the Rio Mamore, one of the great tributaries of the Amazon river, when they discovered in the marshes by the side of the stream, a plant which was so surpassingly beautiful and extraordinary, that Haenke, in a transport of admiration, fell on his knees and expressed aloud his sense of the power and mag- nificence of the Creator in His works. They halted, and even encamped purposely near the spot, and quitted it with much reluctance. "It was some months after this interview with Father La Cueva that I was investigating the province of Moxos, the only means of travelling from one part of which to another is by water, and while I was going up the Rio de Madeiras towards the source of the Mamore, and often thinking over in my mind the anec- dote which the good old man had related to me, I beheld in an immense lake of stagnant water, which had a communication with the river, a plant of such extraordinary aspect, that I instantly concluded it must be the same as Haenke had seen. I also per- ceived that it was allied to the Water-Maize, already mentioned as found at Corrientes. Great was my delight to observe that this gigantic vegetable, though of the same genus, still differed specifically from that which 1 had seen before. The underside of the foliage and the crimson sepals were quite peculiar. Like Haenke, I made a perfect harvest of leaves and flowers ; but sub- sequent illness, caused by alternate exposure to the blazing sun and drenching rains of these flooded plains, brought on such langour and exhaustion that I lost my specimens of this second species, and was thus deprived of the satisfaction of carrying the plant to Europe. " The honour of naming the original and first-found plant has been forestalled by Dr. Lindley, who calls it Victoria regia ; but to the one subsequently detected at Corrientes, I propose giving the name of Victoria Cruziana, in testimony of my obligations to General Cruz, whose kindness mainly contributed to the successful issue of my journey to Bolivia." At the conclusion of M. D'Orbigny's interesting narrative, he goes on to define this so-called second species of Victoria j but as the sole difference pointed out by him lies in the colour of the underside of the leaves and of the flowers {V regia, "foliis subtus purpureis, petalis exterioribus virgineis, interioribus roseis," contrasted with " foliis utrinque concoloribus, petalis cunctis con- coloribus roseis v. albis," of V. Cruziana) we may, I think, with- out doing violence to nature, or showing any disrespect to M. D'Orbigny, consider V Cruziana as a mere variety, if it even 10 deserve such a distinction, of V. regia. No one can June examined the aquatic plants, either of our own or of foreign n unit hex, without remarking that those parts whicli come in contact with the fluid are apt to turn purple, without any apparent cause for such change. It now only remains, before completing the historical narra- tive of this plant, to say that the specimens from winch the ac- companying analyses are made, are exclusively derived from Mr. Bridges. On his return from his journey through Bolivia, of whicli some particulars are given at p. 571. of vol.4, of our ' London Journal of Botany', Mr. Bridges detected the Victoria regia in considerable abundance, and brought home, in 1846, seeds in wet clay and well-dried foliage ; also flowers, preserved in spirits. It is to be regretted there were no ripe capsules (ours is drawn from the figure of Sir R. Schomburgk), and of the seeds the majority were decayed; so that out of twenty -two which we purchased, only two have germinated, the rest being in fl state equally unfit for examination and description. We lament extremely that Mr. Bridges' severe illness puts it totally out of his power to give any information respecting his collecting this plant, or indeed of its exact locality.* We have always understood the latter to be in some part of the Republic * Happily the improved state of Mr. Bridges' health has enabled him to com- municate to us the following information ; but which has only come, as it were, at the twelfth hour, after our whole description had been corrected and made ready for press. We are therefore compelled to give it in the form of a note. " During my stay at the Indian town of Santa Anna, in the province of Mora, B^public of Bolivia, during the months of June and Jidy, 1845, I made daily shooting excursions in the vicinity. In one of these Iliad the good fortune (whilst riding along the woody banks of the river Yacuma, one of the tributary rivers of the Mamore) to come suddenly on a beautiful pond, or rather small lake, embosomed in the forest, where, to my delight and astonishment, I dis- covered, for the first time, " the Queen of Aquatics," the Victoria regia ! there were at least fifty flowers in view, and Belzoni could not have felt more rapture at his Egyptian discoveries than I did in beholding the beautiful and novel sight before me, such as it has fallen to the lot of few Englishmen to witness. Fain would I have plunged into the lake to procure specimens of the magnificent flowers and leaves ; but knowing that these waters abounded in Alligators, I was deterred from doing so by the advice of my guide, and my own experience of similar places. I now turned over in my thoughts how and in what way flowers and leaves might be obtained, and I clearly saw that a canoe was necessary, and therefore promptly returned to the town, and communicated my discovery and wants to the Correjidor or Governor, Don Jose Maria Zarate, who with much kindness immediately ordered the Cacique to send Indians with a yoke of oxen for the purpose of drawing a canoe from the river Yacuma to the lake. Bein«- apprised that the canoe was in readiness, I returned in the afternoon, with several Indians to assist in carrying home the expected prize of leaves' and flowers The canoe being very small, only three persons could embark ; myself in the middle, and an Indian in the bows and stern. In this tottering little bark we 11 of Bolivia ; perhaps the very spot where it was first found by Haunke, and afterwards by D'Orbigny. Seeing, indeed, that V. regia has been detected in Bolivia (Rio Mamore), in the Ama- zons; in Berbice and in Corrientes (Parana) rivers; the first rowed amongst magnificent leaves and flowers, crushing unavoidably some, and selecting only such as pleased me. The leaves being so enormous I could find room in the canoe for but two, one before me and the other behind ; owing to their being very fragile, even in the green state, care was necessary to transport them ; and thus we had to make several trips in the canoe before I obtained the number required. Having loaded myself with leaves, flowers, and ripe seed- vessels, I next mused how they were to be conveyed in safety ; and determined at length upon suspending them on long poles with small cord, tied to the stalks of the leaves and flowers. Two Indians, each taking on his shoulder an end of the pole, carried them into the town ; the poor creatures wondering all the while what could induce me to be at so much trouble to get at flowers, and for what purpose I destined them now they were in my possession. " This splendid plant has, undoubtedly, a very extensive geographical range ; the town of Santa Anna is situated between the 13th and 14th parallels of south latitude, which I consider about its most southern limit, because I sought in vain for it farther south, in the department of Santa Cruz de la Sierra. May we not justly suppose that it is also found as far north of the Equator ? thus occu- pying about 28° of northern and southern latitude. Dr. Weddel, the botanist of the French expedition across the American Continent, informed me that he had found it about the same latitude in Brazil. It occupies, without doubt, many of those immense lakes lying between the rivers Mamore, Beni and the Amazons ; that central part of the ('out iuent, yet but little known. The Indians are well acquainted with the plant ; the Moimas or natives of Santa Anna call it in their language " Morinqua "; and the neighbouring nation, the Cayababas, natives of the town of Exaltacion, know it under the name of "Dachocho." The leaves are round, varying considerably in size, the largest about four feet in diameter. They float on the surface of the water ; the colour is a very bght green, in age inclining to yellow, some of them even when young possess a yellow hue. The margins of the leaf are turned upwards, giving the leaf a singular appearance, somewhat like a floating dish ; this margin and the under surface of the leaf are of a dark brown colour, while the part under water often assumes a purple tinge. The costse are of the same colour. The spines incline to the interior of the leaf, and in some leaves are nearly white. " The Victoria grows in 4-6 feet of water, producing leaves and flowers, which rapidly decay and give place to others. From each plant there are seldom more than four or five leaves on the surface, but even these in parts of the lake where the plants were numerous, almost covered the surface of the water, one leaf touching the other. I observed a beautiful aquatic bird, (Parra sp. ?) walk with much ease from leaf to leaf, and many of the MuscicapidrE find food and a resting- place on them. The plant occupies almost exclusively the water, with the ex- ception of a few floating aquatics of small dimensions, amongst which I saw a beautiful Utricularia. " The blossoms rise six and eight inches above the surface, expanding first in the evening, when they are pure white ; changing finally (and by exposure to the sun) to a most beautiful pink or rose colour, flowers may be seen, at the same time, partaking of every tinge between the two hues, the recently expanded being pure white and the adult rosy, almost sinking under water to ripen its seed and produce a new race of plants when required. The largest flowers I saw measured from ten inches to one foot in diameter. 12 and last being separated (at their embouchures) by thirty-five degrees of longitude, we must conclude that this magnificent Water-lily is, like the generality of Aquatics, a plant of wide dis- tribution, and probably a not uncommon inhabitant of the still waters of all those great rivers which intersect the immense plains eastward of the Andes. " I had an opportunity of experiencing the fragrance of the flowers. Those I collected for preserving in spirits were unexpanded, but on the point of opening; on arriving at the Government House, in the town, I deposited them in my room, and returning after dark, I found to my surprise that all had blown and were exhaling a most delightful odour, which at first I compared to a rich Pine-apple, afterwards to a Melon, and then to the Cherimoya ; but indeed it resembled none of these fruits, and I at length came to the decision that it was a most deticious scent, unlike every other, and peculiar to the noble flower that produced it. " The calyx is green, darker than the leaves, as is the seed-vessel. " With the assistance of the Indians we got out of the water two entire plants, and from their appearance I shoidd say the Victoria is decidedly perennial. Each plant had from twenty to thirty foot-stalks of flowers and leaves, in all stag some nearly decayed to the base, others half-way down the stem, whilst Others had just lost the floating portion. The same was observed in the petioles ; some bearing the seed-vessel perfect, with ripe seed; others the expanded flower; and near the crown or centre of the plant was just issuing the tender flower-bud. With a knife we cut or trimmed the foot-stalks, when the trunk (if 1 may use the comparison) somewhat resembled a Zamia, and in length was about eighteen inches or two feet. At the base and between each foot-stalk protrudes a mass or cluster of fleshy, hollow roots, about the size of a straw, or larger, and varying in colour from brown to white, or nearly so ; a succession of these roots is formed, as the new leaves are thrown out from the centre of the plant ; nature having made a beautiful and wise provision for this plant, as in all her other works. The base of the trunk, or rather stem, situated in the soft mud, appears to decompose in proportion as new leaves and flowers issue from the centre, keeping the plant from elevating itself above water, which but for such an arrangement, might be the case, from the rapidity of its growth. " From what I observed of the nature and habits of this most interesting plant, I conclude that it cannot and does not exist in any of the rivers, where the immense rise and fall, of twenty feet, would leave it dry, during many months of the year, especially in the season when there is no rain. The lagoons, being subject to little variation in the height of their waters, are the places where it grows in all its beauty and grandeur. " The Victoria appears to delight in parts of the lake fully exposed to the sun, and I observed that it did not exist where the trees overshaded the margins. " The vegetation surrounding the locality of the Victoria was not of that splendid character that I could have wished. It wanted those noble Palms, the Mutacu and Talma real, which so beautifully adorn the banks of the Mamore, to have made a perfect and enchanting picture with the Victoria in the waters'. The trees belonged to genera new to me and peculiar to this level part of the country. Amongst the shrubs I observed two species of Bauhinia, and a fine purple-flowered Bignonia, climbing even to the summit of the trees." Thomas Bridges. Prospect Place, Bristol. December, 16th. 1846. 13 The following are the recorded stations for V. regia : Bolivia, at Rio Mamore, upper tributary of the Amazons, found there by Haenke, about 1801 , and some time afterwards seen byBonpland ; Igaripe, a branch of the Amazons, Poeppig (1832); Parana and Riochuelo rivers, province of Corrientes, on the frontier of Paraguay, D'Orbigny (1827); Rio Madeiras, near the sources of the Mamore, between the confluence of the rivers Apere and Tijamuche, province of Moxos, Bolivia, D'Orbigny (1832); Berbice river, British Guiana, SirR. Schomburgk (1837): and also in the Rupununi, a tributary of the Essequibo* (1842); Bolivia, Rio Yacuma, tributary of the Rio Mamore, Bridges (1844). The Mamore is a tributary of the Amazons, as the Parana is of the Rio Plata, and both consequently empty themselves into the Atlantic Ocean. It does not appear that the Victoria regia has been found in any water flowing into the Pacific; probably because of the rapid movement of those streams. Of the difference between the genera Eitryale and Victoria our more perfect specimens enable us to add some particulars beyond those already indicated by Dr. Lindley j and the subjoined tabular view of their discrepancies will put the matter in the clearest light. EURYALE. VICTORIA. Sepals persistent. Sepals deciduous. Petals 20-30, apparent ly in 3-4 Petals very numerous, in several series, smaller than the calyx, dimi- series, longer than the calyx, the inner nishing in size towards the interior, gradually narrower, acuminated, and but all free, uniform in shape, in no indurated, passing into the stamens (as way changed in form or in texture. in Nympluea) and united with them into an elevated ring, forming a pro- longation of the torus. Stamens numerous, uniform and all Stamens united at the base in several fertile and free ; the inner ones gene- series, the free portions subulate, fleshy, rally smaller. Filaments filiform, deli- firm, bearing the elongated antJier-cells cate, short. Anthers terminal, oval, below the acuminated point, and adnate obtuse, free, not apparently adnate with with the filaments. Innermost stamens the filaments. (Eox6.fi/.) united into a monadelphous body and sterile. Ovary oval, " 6-8-celled? cells irre- Ovary turbinate, with a deep cavity gularly (?) placed and each containing at the top and a central projecting 6-10 seeds, attached to the partitions column. Around the cavity, and placed and to the exterior angles of the cells," with great regularity, are from 27-30 * In the same year Sir R. H. Schomburgk had the gratification of showing this plant in its native waters to the officers of the 1st West India Regiment, when proceeding up that river to take mditary possession of Pirara, at which time it was in full flower. The Rev. Thomas Youde, Sir Robert informs us, made several attempts to bring plants from the interior to the coast, but they never survived manv weeks. 14 Roxb. ; concave at the top, the edge cells, immersed in a pulpv rabctanoe alone slightly aud very obscureK lobed, and partly below the Imllmv, tin- p.i- and this concavity cqacwuUu g the rk-tesofwWh have reticulated funiculi, stigma, destitute of central projecting bearing 10-12 ovules ; — upon the edge column. No style nor evident stigmas, of this cavity, in a circle within tli. mens, are situated as many verv large stigmas. Fruit a nearly round berry, swelling Fruit a turbinate truncated berry, out in various places, by the growth of with a deep hollow disc and persistent the seeds within, and crowned with the central column, even and regular on the connivent persistent sepals. outside. We do not attempt to contrast the structure of tl but the above distinctive characters are surely abundant] v sufficient to prove the correctness of Dr. Lindley's \ u\\ s, in establishing the genus Victoria. Descr. Aquatic? Root perennial?" large and tuberous, provided with numerous filiform, or cylindrical fibres, which abound along their whole length with air-tabes. The tuber resembles the thick rhizoma of some Jspidium, and is of a brown colour externally, white within, but when cut through the internal substance soon changes to purple," (Schomburgk in litt). Stem none. Petiole* long, terete, radical, clothed with copious prickles ; " they assume a diagonal direction when the water is low, and rise with tin- water so as to be perpendicular, and during the floods, the leaf, as well as the petiole, is entirely submerged. Leaves' (usually) floating, of prodigious size, four to six and a half feet in diam< (twelve to nineteen feet in circumference), at first oval with a deep narrow cleft or sinus at one end, in age almost exactly orbicular, peltate, plane but with a considerable depth of margin, which is two to four or five inches broad, and turned up so as to form an elevated rim, like that of a tea-tray ; the upper side of this vast leaf is a full green, marked with numerous reticulations which form somewhat quadrangular areolae ; the underside deep purple, some- times green, according to D'Orbigny, clothed with a short spongy pubescence, furnished with copious very prominent flat veins radiating from the point of insertion of the petiole and extending to, and through the raised margin, but there becoming less ele- vated, till they disappear at the very edge ; these are united by other deep flattened nerves, and they again by cross ones of less ele- vation, and all are more or less beset with prickles varying in length, sharp and horny, subulate, that is, swollen at the base very much like the sting of a nettle in shape. Peduncle or scope radical, longer than the petiole and risino- above the surface of the water when in flower, terete, prickly varying in size, in the recent plant sometimes' an inch thick 15 single-flowered. Flower of the same gigantic dimensions in proportion with the leaf; in M pear-shaped (Tab. 4277. f. 1); when expanded our specimen here figured (Tab. 4276) measured rather more than a foot in diameter, (giving a circumference of thirty nine inches) ; but specimens in their native rivers, have been ascertained to be fifteen inches in diameter (forty-five in circumference), fragrant. The calyx is deeply quadrifid ; the tube turbinate, tawny-coloured, very prickly, adnate with the ovary ; the segments or sepals large, oval, purple-brown, concave, deci- duous, a little prickly on the outside towards the base, rather shorter than the petals. From within, the mouth of the tube of the calyx (at the very base of the segments) extends itself into an annular torus, which bears the petals and stamens. Petals very numerous, the outer ones spreading and longer than the calyx, oblong, concave, obtuse, white, the inner ones gradually becoming narrower, much acuminated and insensibly passing into the filaments and becoming deeply coloured with purple or full rose. Stamens (perfect ones) in about two series, large, subulate, fleshy, gracefully incurved below, the rest erect; anther -cells double, linear, introrse, occupying the inner face of the filament, below the apex. Within these fertile stamens is another annular circle bearing a double series of abortive filaments only ; these, with their lower portion, form an arch over the stigmas, the upper half being erect. Ovary adnate with the whole length of the prickly tube of the calyx, and therefore turbinate like it, with a deep radiated depression or cavity at the top, and in the centre an elevated umbo or short pyramidal column : it may be therefore termed cup-shaped, with a thick fleshy base, having air-cells or cavities extending downwards into the peduncle ; in the upper part of this substance, forming, as it were, the rim of the cup, there stand in a circle, placed with the greatest regularity, about twenty- six to thirty compressed cells, their parietes bearing several ovules attached to reticulated funiculi. From the inner edge of the cavity, just beneath the inner crown of sterile stamens, and arti- culated, as it were, at their base (or the base of the torus) rises a circle of stigmas, as many as there are cells in the ovary, large, fleshy, ovate, acuminated, laterally compressed, but geniculated, so to speak, in the middle ; that is, the lower half of them is erect, and the upper half bent at an angle so as to lie horizontally over the cavity at the top of the ovary, and parallel or on the same plane with the base of the sterile stamens : the back of these stigmas is slightly grooved and is the stigmatic surface. I much regret I can say nothing of the fmit from my own 16 observation ; but judging from the figure given of it by Sir Robert Schomburgk (see our Tab. 4278. f. 6), it is a large cyathiform, truncate, fleshy, green, prickly deny, the margin even; bearing many oval, dark brown, almost black seeds. Tab. 4275. An exceedingly reduced representation of the plant, in situ, chiefly done from Sir K. H. Schomburgk's scene in his ' Views in British Guiana '; 'showing the flower, unexpanded bud, and fully formed leaves and fruit. Tab. 4276. This plate exhibits a flower of the natural size, delineated from a very perfect spe- cimen in spirits, in the author's possession, brought by Mr. Bridges from Bolivia. A portion of the leaf is given, supposed to be a transverse section taken near the petiole, but so much fore-shortened (to allow of its being introduced at all) as to convey little idea of the magnificence of the entire foliage ; drawn from a fine dried specimen in the author's possession, obtained from Bolivia. Tab. 4277. Fig 1. Exhibits an unexpanded flower (from Bolivia) -.—natural she. Fig. 2. A portion of the underside of the leaf (natural size) showing more particularly the remarkable venation. Fig. 3. A vertical section of the inferior ovary, with the stamens (sterile and fertile), and exhibiting the mode of union of the bam of the petals and stamens on the elevated rim (or torus), at the mouth of the calycine tubes. This section is through two of the many cells of the ovary in which are seen the parietal reticulated funiculi, with the attached ovule* * The tower part of the ovary contains air cavities. The upper part shows the radiated cavity oi the top of the germen, with the central column or umbo, and the curious stigmas at the edge of said cavity : — natural size. Tab. 4278. Fig. 1. Vertical section (natural size) of a portion of the torus or elevated run, at the inside of the tube of the calyx and which bears a 'portion of a calycme segment, and petals which gradually pass into stamens • within is an inner circle or crown of sterile stamens, united at their base into an arched ring over the stigmas. Fig. 2. Stamen -.-slightly magnified. Fig. 3. Transverse section of an ovary through the centre of the cells-, showing the position of those cells with relation to the cavity, in which latter is seen the central umbo or column. ±ig. 4. Iwo ovules attached to the funiculus -.— much magnified Fie 5 Sti-ma (natural size) showing its stigmatic surface on the back. Fig. 6 Outline sketch of a fruit (natural size), copied from Schomburgk. (The colouring of the above is done in part from Sir Robert Schomburgk's figures, and in part from description.) & 27S Tab. 4279. CORDYLINE Rumphii. Rumphius' Cordyline. Nat. Ord. Asphodeles: (J5r.).— Hexandria Monogynia. Gen. Char. Perianthium campanulatum, 6-fidum, aequale, deciduum. Stamina 6, fauci inserta. Tdamenta subulata, glabra. Anthem versatiles basi bifida?. Ovarium loculis polyspermis. Stylus 1. Stigma parvum, trilobum. Bacca globosa, trilocularis. Semina plurima (vel abortione solitaria), umbilico strophio- lato. Embryo axilis, radicula centripeta.— Caudex fruticosus. 'Eo'li&elongalo- lanceolata, nervoso-striata. Panicula terminate, e spiels alternis multifions. Flores bibracteati, bractea altera interiore. Pedicelli, dum adsunt, cum perianthw arti- culati. Br. Cordyline Rumphii; foliis lineari-canaliculatis longe acuminatis marginatis re- flexis, panicula terminali ampla erecta, filamentis mcrassatis hinc rugosis, bacca tri-abortu di-monosperma. Sanseviera fruticosa. Bl. " Enum. Ft. Jav. v. 1. p. 11" Roem. et Sch. v. 7. p. 361 and 1679. Terminalia angustifolia. Rumph. Herb. v. 5. p. 81. t. 35. A greenhouse plant of graceful habit, which has long been an inhabitant of a cool stove in Kew Gardens, where it bears its copious greenish-white flowers, succeeded by the orange berries, in July; but whence introduced, is not recorded. Ihe figure of Rumphius, above quoted, leaves no doubt of that being the same plant; it is consequently a native of Amboyna Blume s description and reference to Rumphius make it equally certain that our plant is the Sanseviera fruticosa of that author, and consequently a native of the ' mountains of Java ; but equally certain is it, that neither in habit, nor in essential character, can it be referred to Sanseviera. Its place is near Bracana and Cordyline. If D. Draco be the type of the former genus, I should be unwilling to associate this with the true 'Dragons blood ; with Cordyline it sufficiently accords in habit and inessential characters, save that the seeds are, in the state of the ovules even, always solitary in each cell, whereas they ought to be nume- rous, as shown in hrauma aiistralis (Bot. Mag. Tab 2835) now referred to Cordyline. In all probability, this plant will constitute February 1st, 1847. a new genus, in which the inflated and rugose filaments of the stamens contribute to afford characters. In this rasped it dii from Draeana reflexa, Lam. {Con{ I immei8.)j and from D. cernua, J acq., both of which bear a considerable resemblance to our plant. Descr. Stem simple, terete, shrubby, two to three feet high, marked with the scars of fallen leaves, and bearing foliage only at the summit. Leaves a foot and a half Ion g, linear-lanceolate, much and gradually acuminate, dark green, with a pale narrow car- tilaginous edge or margin, all channelled, and more or less reflexed. Panicles terminal, large, branched from the very base. PedioeU bracteated. Perianth streaked green and white ; the tube slightly swollen at the base ; segments linear, as long as the tube, soon reflexed. Filaments much exserted from the mouth of the tube, club-shaped, inflexed, transversely wrinkled or puckered, and suddenly coming to a point, which bears the small oblong versa- tile anthers. Guar// on a short, thickened stipes, obovate, tliree- lobed. Berry orange, globose or didymous, bearing one or two (rarely more) kidney -shaped, smooth, yellowish seeds. Fig. 1. Entire plant, much reduced. — 2. Apex of leaf. 3. Portion of a panicle : — natural size. 4. Perianth laid open. 5. Ovary cut through transversely. (L Berries: — natural size. 7. Berry with two, and 8, berry with one seed, laid open. 9. Seed. 10. The same laid open : — magnified. Tab. 4280. EXOGONIUM Purga. Purga, or True Jalap. Gen. Char. Sepala quinque. Corolla tubulosa. Stamina exserta. Stylus 1. Stigma capitatum, bilobum. Ovarium biloculare, loculis biovulatis. Chois. Exogonium Purga ; foliis cordatis acuminatis integerrimis utrinque glabris, peduneulia 2-3-floris, tubo corollae calycem obtusum quadruplo superante, limbo hypocraterimorpho, lobis obtusis subemarginatis. Chois. Exogonium Purga. Benth. PI. Hart. p. 46, andE. dumosum,* ejusd. Ipomcea Purga. Wenderoth, PI. Central, v. 1. p. 457. Choisy, in DC Prodr. v. 9. p. 374. Lindley, Tlor. Med. no. 809. Pot. Peg. Misc. 1839, n. 836. Nees ah Esenbeck, PI. Off. Suppl. v. 3. t. 13. Hayne, Barstell. undBeschreib. Arz- neikund ' gebraiechlich PJlanzen, 1833, t. 33, 34. Ipomcea Schiedeana. Zuccarsini, Ab/iand. de Bagn. Acad, du WissenscJiaft. 1S32. Ipomcea Jalapa. Nutt.andCoxe, Amer. Joum. of Med. Science, Feb. 1830, /. 7. Boyle III. Him. p. 308 (non Pursh.). Convolvulus Jalapa. Schiede in Linnaa, 1830, p. 473. (non Linn.) Although Jalap has been used in European medicine for nearly two centuries and a half, it is only within a few years that its botanical source has been correctly ascertained. The plant long cultivated as yielding the true Jalap, in the stoves of Europe, and among the rest in the Botanic Gardens of Edinburgh, is the Convolvulus Jalapa of Linnaeus and Willdenow, or Ipomcea macrorhiza, of Michaux, a native of Vera Cruz. But, between the years 1827 and 1830, it was proved by no fewer than three independent authorities, M. Ledanois, a French druggist, resi- dent at Orizaba, in Mexico, Dr. Coxe, of Philadelphia, through information supplied by Mr. Eontanges, an American gentleman, who lived at Jalapa, and Schiede, the botanical traveller, from personal examination, that the drug of commerce is obtained, not from the hot plains around Vera Cruz, but from the cooler hill country near Jalapa, about 6,000 feet above the level of the sea, where it is exposed to frost in winter-time ; and that the plant * Choisy is no doubt right in referring Mr. Bentham's E.dumosum to E. Purga ; but surely wrong in transferring these plants from Exogonium (corolla tubulosa, stamina exserta), to Ipomcea (corolla campanulata, stamina inclusa!). FEBRUARY 1ST, 1847. C 2 which yields it is an entirety tea Schiede introduced the plant for the first time into England : and it has been culti- vated in various Botanic Gardens of Germany. In this country, it was pi first grown in the Botanic Garden of Edinburgh, from a tuber, scut by Dr. Coxe of Philadelphia to Dr. Christison, in 183S. The late Dr. Graham could not describe it at that time, because, owing to ignorance of its habits, it was forced in the stove, and died the same year, after showing number- less flower-buds, of which one only became partially deve- loped. In 1S44, a plant, from the Chelsea Botanic Garden, cultivated in a cold frame during the winter and spring, and uncovered during summer and autumn, flowered luxuriantly in the Edinburgh Garden, in the month of September. But the crown of the tuber was injured by frost the subsequent winter, and the tuber was thus killed. A drawing was made by Dr. Graham, but it has not been found among his papers. Fortu- nately, Mr. M'Xab, on removing specimens for the Herbarium, resolved to try whether the plant could be raised from ^lip^, and the experiment has. proved completely successful. A tuber of the size of a hasel-nut, formed in the course of three months. The stem made little progress the next summer, but when re- moved to the cold frame last spring, formed the plant from which the description and drawing have been taken. The plant belongs to the genus Eawyomvm of Choisv, as defined in De Candolle's ' Prodromus,' although the author places it under the genus Ipomoea, from which it is at once distinguished by its exserted stamens. It grows on the Mountains of Mexico. Schiede found it at a great elevation, on the eastern slope of the Mexican Andes, near Chiconquinaco ; and also on the eastern slope of Cofre de Perote. He gives an account of his discovery in the 'Linnaea' for 1830. Hartweg gathered it in Mexico, and it has been described by Bentham, from his specimens. Descr. Tuber roundish, becoming as large as a moderate-sized turnip, brown externally, whitish internally, giving rise to nume- rous rootlets and stems. Stem twining from right to left, spirally twisted, glabrous, marked with numerous ridges and furrows (twenty or more), branching more or less, purple-red, extending ten or twelve feet. Leaves alternate, exstipulate, petiolate, cordate or sagittato-cordate, deeply lobed at the base, acuminate, entire, glabrous on both sides, slightly rugose, dull green above, pale or subglaucous below, reticulated ; veins radiating at the base, prominent on the lower surface of the leaf and channelled on the upper. Petioles about two inches long, shorter than the leaves, thick, grooved above, rounded below. Peduncles reddish, axil- lary, erect, twisted, wiry, about one inch and a half long, two- to three-flowered (rarely one-flowered) with a small triangular bractlet at the base of the pedicels or partial flower-stalks, which are about three quarters of an inch long, and thickened upwards. On making a section of the pedicel, near its upper part, the cel- lular tissue in the centre was seen, under the microscope, to be arranged in a stellate manner. Inflorescence centrifugal. Calyx glabrous, of five, somewhat elliptical, obtuse, concave, adpressed sepals, membranaceous at their margins, the two outer ones smaller. Corolla shining, glabrous, between funnel- and salver- shaped ; of a purplish-red colour ; tube slightly contracted at its juncture with the limb, then widening, and ultimately tapering downwards, about two inches long, four times the length of the sepals, purplish-red outside, whitish within ; limb expanded, two and a half inches across, somewhat rugose or undulated, of five blunt slightly notched lobes and shallow sinuosities between them. Beautiful spiral vessels may be seen in the corolla under the microscope. ^Estivation contorted. Stamens five, colourless, ex- serted beyond the tube, and, towards one side of the throat, shorter than the limb ; filaments unequal in length, from two to two and a half inches long, inserted near the base of the tube of the corolla, where they are flattened, with scattered hairs or tooth-like pro- jections towards their lower half ; anthers two-lobed, opening lon- gitudinally, innate, introrse. Pollen spherical, exteriorly marked with numerous prominent processes. Pistil rather longer than the longest stamens; stigma colourless, two-lobed, capitate, tubercular, i. e. covered with numerous projecting cellular pro- cesses. Style about three inches long, slender, tapering. Ovary superior, conical, gradually ending in the style, surrounded at the base by a thickened annular disc of a yellowish colour, two- celled, with two ovules in each cell ; ovules somewhat triangular, anatropous. For the medical history of the plant, and the account of its introduction into the country, I am indebted to the kindness of Professor Christison. J. PI. Balfour. Tab. 4281. BEGONIA fuchsioides. Fuchsia-like Begonia, or Elephant's Ear. Nat. Ord. Begoniace^e. — Moncecia Polyandria. Gen. Char. {Vide supra, Tab. 4172). Begonia fuchsioides ; subdioica, caule erecto ramoso glaberrhno, foliis semiovatis obliquis subfalcatis acutis serratis ciliatis, paniculis in ramos terminahbus floribusque pendentibus ; masc. sepabs 4 in globum conniventibus quorum 2 int. oblongis minoribus, 2 ext. majoribus ovatis carnosis cymbiformibus ; fern, petalis 5 ovatis conniventibus, ovario fructuque trialato ala unica multo majore, pedicellis triquetris. A most lovely new Begonia, detected by Mr. Purdie on the Ocana mountains of New Grenada, during his mission for the Royal Gardens of Kew. It is easily propagated by cuttings, grows rapidly, bears small but copious foliage, and is a plant to which he particularly requested our attention, on account of the copious elegant, drooping, red flowers, at first sight resembling those of a Fuchsia ■ and because it is much eaten to allay thirst by the Arrieros (mule-drivers) of the country. He also observes that the globular buds (meaning, probably, the buds of the fertile blossoms, which are globular) contain a fluid, which, together with the acid of the flowers, proves highly grateful in the dry season and where there are no rivers. It has bloomed during the autumn months with Mr. Veitch of Exeter, and he has at this time (December 18th) one plant three feet high loaded with the richly-coloured flowers. It has been three months m bloom, and has abundance of buds yet to expand. Our plants are now, at mid-winter, beginning to flower. It is singular that, as tar as they have yet blossomed, the plants have proved only male-flowered, except the tall one of Mr. Veitch, which has one cluster ot female flowers at the top, and of which two are represented at fig. 2. Descr. Stem erect, two to three feet high, terete, succulent, glabrous, slightly tinged with red. Leaves copious, distichous, alternate, rather small, about an inch and a half long, dark foil green, obliquely oblong-ovate, slightly falcate, acute, serrated, FEBRUARY 1ST, 1847. glabrous, the margins obscurely ciliated, often tinged with ml. Stipules oblong, obtuse, coloured. Flower* on dicnotomouflly branched, pendent panicles, dioecious, rarely monceaoiii i all of a rich deep scarlet colour. Pedicels bracteated ; dracteas lanceo- late, acuminate, opposite. Male flowers- Sepals four, almost closed over the stamens ; two ovate, large and boat-shaped, thick and fleshy, opposite and external; the other two smaller, oblong or approaching to obovate, slightly concave, of a thinner, almost membranaceous texture : column of stamens forming an ovate mass. Female flowers : Sepals five, rarely spreading, oval, nearly equal, concave. Stigmas six, erecto-patent, subulate, waved. Ovary of young fruit white, broadly obovate, triangular, the angles winged; two wings very short and one long, divergent , all red, and decurrent, so as to form a triangular pedicel. Fig. 1. Male flower, with one (inner) sepal removed .—magnified. 2 Female flowers -.-natural size. 3. Pistil (or young fruit) :— slightly magnified. Tab. 4280. EXOGONIUM Purga. ~Purga, or True Jalap. Gen. Char. Sepala quinque. Corolla tubulosa. Stamina exserta. Stylus 1. Stigma capitatum, bilobum. Ovarium biloculare, loculis biovulatis. Chois. Exogonium Purga ; foliis cordatis acuminatis integerrimis utrinque glabris, pedunculis 2-3-floris, tubo corollse calycem obtusum quadruplo superaute, limbo hypocraterimorpho, lobis obtusis subemarginatis. Chois. Exogonium Purga. Benth. PI. Hart. p. 46, sWE. dumosum,* ejusd. Ipom(EA Purga. Wenderoth, PI. Central, v. 1. p. 457. Choisy, in DC. Prodr. v. 9. p. 374. Idndley, Flor. Med. no. 809. Pot. Peg. Misc. 1839, n. 836. Nees ah Esenbeck, PI. Off. Suppl. v. 3. t. 13. Hayne, Darstell. und Beschreib. Arz- neikund ' gehraiechlich Pflemzm, 1833, t. 33, 34. Ipomgea Schiedeana. Zuccarsini, Abliand. de Bagn. Acad, du Wissenschaft. 1832. Ipomcea Jalapa. Nutt.andCoxe, Amer. Journ. of Med. Science, Feb. 1830, t. 7. Boyle III. Him. p. 308 («o« Pursh.). Convolvulus Jalapa. Schiede in Limma, 1830, p. 473. (wo« Linn.) Although Jalap has been used in European medicine for nearly two centuries and a half, it is only within a few years that its botanical source has been correctly ascertained. The plant long cultivated as yielding the true Jalap, in the stoves of Europe, and among the rest in the Botanic Gardens of Edinburgh, is the Convolvulus Jalapa of Linnaeus and Willdenow, or Ipomcea macrorhiza, of Michaux, a native of Vera Cruz. But, between the years 1827 and 1830, it was proved by no fewer than three independent authorities, M. Ledanois, a French druggist, resi- dent at Orizaba, in Mexico, Dr. Coxe, of Philadelphia, through information supplied by Mr. Pontanges, an American gentleman, who lived at Jalapa, and Schiede, the botanical traveller, from personal examination, that the drug of commerce is obtained, not from the hot plains around Vera Cruz, but from the cooler hill country near Jalapa, about 6,000 feet above the level of the sea, where it is exposed to frost in winter-time ; and that the plant * Choisy is no doubt right in referring Mr. Bentham's E.dumosum to E. Purga ; but surely wrong in transferring these plants from Exogonium (corolla tubulosa, stamina exserta), to Ipomcea (corolla campanulata, stamina inclusa!). FEBRUARY 1ST, 1847. C * which yields it is an entirely new species. Schiede introduced the plant for the first time into England ; and it has been culti- vated in various Botanic Gardens many. In this country, it was pi irst grown in the Botanic Garden of Edinburgh, from a tuber, sent by Dr. Coxe of Philadelphia to Dr. Ghristison, in 16 'in. 1 late Dr. Graham could not describe it at that time, because, owing to ignorance of its habits, it was forced in the stove, and died the same year, after showing number- less flower-buds, of which one only became partially deve- loped. In 1S44, a plant, from the Chelsea Botanic Garden, cultivated in a cold frame during the winter and spring, and uncovered during summer and autumn, flowered luxuriantly in the Edinburgh Garden, in the month of September. But the crown of the tuber was injured by frost the subsequent winter, and the tuber was thus killed. A drawing was made by Dr. Graham, but it has not been found among his papers. Fortu- nately, Mr. M'Xab, on removing specimens for the Herbarium, resolved to try whether the plant could be raised from slips, and the experiment has proved completely successful. A tuber of the size of a hasel-nut, formed in the course of three months. The stem made little progress the next summer, but when re- moved to the cold frame last spring, formed the plant from which the description and drawing have been taken The plant belongs to the genus Exogonium of Choisy, as defined in De Candolle's ' Prodromus,' although the author places it under the genus Jpomcea, from which it is at once distinguished by its exserted stamens. It grows on the Mountains of Mexico. Schiede found it at a great elevation, on the eastern slope of tin- Mexican Andes, near Chiconquinaco ; and also on the eastern slope of Cofre de Perote. He gives an account of his discovery in the 'Linnaea' for 1830. Hartweg gathered it in Mexico, and it has been described by Bentham, from his specimens. Descr. Tuber roundish, becoming as large as a moderate-sized turnip, brown externally, whitish internally, giving rise to nume- rous rootlets and stems. Stem twining from right to left, spirally twisted, glabrous, marked with numerous ridges and furrow r s (twenty or more), branching more or less, purple-red, extending ten or twelve feet. Leaves alternate, exstipulate, petiolate, cordate or sagittato-cordate, deeply lobed at the base, acuminate, entire, glabrous on both sides, slightly rugose, dull green above, pale or snbglaucous below, reticulated ; veins radiating at the base, prominent on the lower surface of the leaf and channelled on the upper. Petioles about two inches long, shorter than the leaves, thick, grooved above, rounded below. Peduncles reddish, axil- lary, erect, twisted, wiry, abont one inch and a half long, two- to three-flowered (rarely one-flowered) with a small triangular bractlet at the base of the pedicels or partial flower-stalks, which are about three quarters of an inch long, and thickened upwards. On making a section of the pedicel, near its upper part, the cel- lular tissue in the centre was seen, under the microscope, to be arranged in a stellate manner. Inflorescence centrifugal. Calyx glabrous, of five, somewhat elliptical, obtuse, concave, adpressed sepals, membranaceous at their margins, the two outer ones smaller. Corolla shining, glabrous, between funnel- and salver- shaped ; of a purplish-red colour ; tube slightly contracted at its juncture with the limb, then widening, and ultimately tapering downwards, about two inches long, four times the length of the sepals, purplish-red outside, whitish within ; limb expanded, two and a half inches across, somewhat rugose or undulated, of five blunt slightly notched lobes and shallow sinuosities between them. Beautiful spiral vessels may be seen in the corolla under the microscope. ^Estivation contorted. Stamens five, colourless, ex- serted beyond the tube, and, towards one side of the throat, shorter than the limb ; filaments unequal in length, from two to two and a half inches long, inserted near the base of the tube of the corolla, where they are flattened, with scattered hairs or tooth-like pro- jections towards their lower half ; anthers two-lobed, opening lon- gitudinally, innate, introrse. Pollen spherical, exteriorly marked with numerous prominent processes. Pistil rather longer than the longest stamens ; stiff ma colourless, two-lobed, capitate, tubercular, i. e. covered with numerous projecting cellular pro- cesses. Style about three inches long, slender, tapering. Ovary superior, conical, gradually ending in the style, surrounded at the base by a thickened annular disc of a yellowish colour, two- celled, with two ovules in each cell ; ovules somewhat triangular, anatropous. For the medical history of the plant, and the account of its introduction into the country, I am indebted to the kindness of Professor Christison. J. H. Balfour. Tab. 4281. BEGONIA fuchsioides. Fuchsia-like Begonia, or Elephant's Ear. Nat. Ord. Begoniace.e. — Moncecia Polyandria. Gen. Char. {Vide supra, Tab. 4172). BEGomx fuchsioides; subdioica, caule erecto ramoso glaberrinio, foliis semiovatis obliquis subfalcatis acutis serratis ciliatis, paniculis in ramos terniinalibus floribusque pendentibus ; masc. sepalis 4 in globum conniventibus quorum 2 int. oblongis minoribus, 2 ext. majoribus ovatis carnosis cymbiformibus ; foem. petalis 5 ovatis conniventibus, ovario fructuque trialato ala unica multo majore, pedicellis triquetris. A most lovely new Begonia, detected by Mr. Purdie on the Ocafia mountains of New Grenada, during his mission for the Royal Gardens of Kew. It is easily propagated by cuttings, grows rapidly, bears small but copious foliage, and is a plant to which he particularly requested our attention, on account of the copious, elegant, drooping, red flowers, at first sight resembling those of a Fuchsia ; and because it is much eaten to allay thirst by the Arrieros (mule-drivers) of the country. He also observes that the globular buds (meaning, probably, the buds of the fertile blossoms, which are globular) contain a fluid, which, together with the acid of the flowers, proves highly grateful m the dry season and where there are no rivers. It has bloomed during the autumn months with Mr. Veitch of Exeter, and he has at this time (December 18th) one plant three feet high loaded with the richly-coloured flowers. It has been three months m bloom, and has abundance of buds yet to expand. Our plants are now, at mid-winter, beginning to flower. It is singular that, as far as they have yet blossomed, the plants have proved only male-flowered, except the tall one of Mr. Veitch, which has one cluster of female flowers at the top, and of which two are represented at fig. 2. Descr. Stem erect, two to three feet high, terete, succulent, glabrous, slightly tinged with red. Leaves copious, distichous, alternate, rather small, about an inch and a half long, dark full green, obliquely oblong-ovate, slightly falcate, acute, serrated, FEBBUARY 1 ST, 1847. glabrous, the margins obscurely ciliated, often tinged with red. Stipules oblong, obtuse, coloured. Mower* on dichotuas, snow, in allusion to the snowy white blossoms. The present species, evidently of the same genus, and preserving the same character in the pure white of its flowers, was discovered by Mr, Purdie, on moist banks, near Laguneta, Ocana, in New Grenada. The curious scaly roots, resembling those of Achimenes coccinea, were sent to the Royal Gardens in 1845, and quickly came to perfection, being planted in pots with a mixture of loam, peat, and leaf-mould, and placed in the tropical propagating house. By a little manage- ment in the periods of planting these roots, by which the plant readily increases, it may be made to bloom at almost all seasons of the year; and although the flowers do not display any gaudy colours, like many of the Gesneriacete, yet the purple-tipped calyces contrast prettily with the snowy white of the corollas, and the leaves, with their rich purple green hue marked with white lines upon the costa and nerves, are always beautiful. Our figure was drawn in October. Descr. The root is fibrous, and in reality annual, but it pro- duces those curious elongated scaly tubers, denominated " radix squamosa," each fleshy excrescence or scale of which is capable of forming a new plant. Stem erect, a span or more high, simple, rounded, hairy, herbaceous, green. Leaves opposite, on long foot- FEBRUARY 1ST, 1847. stalks, ovate, acute, cren at o- serrate, often purple beneath, above rich velvety green, marked with white lines on the costa and pinnated nerves. Inter nodes elongated, except at the summit, where the leaves are more crowded. Peduncles crowded from the axils of the upper leaves, forming a sort of umbel, simple, single-flowered, hispid. Calyx hispid ; the tube short, admit e with the ovary: the segments broad, rounded. Corolla rotate or nearly BO ; tube very short; limb of five concave, nearly regular, rounded, de- noted lobes, white. Stamens short, four, with the rudiment of a fifth. Fig. 1. Flower. 2. Calyx, laid open to show the ovary, style, and stigma. 3. Corolla, laid open to show the stamens. 4. Ovary, cut through trausver.-tlv to display the placentas and ovules : — magnified. pc Ltli. Tab. 4283. SMITHIA PURPUREA. Purple -flowered Smithia. Nat. Ord. Leguminosjs. — Diadelphia Decandria. Gen. Char. Calyx basi bracteolis duabus persistentibus, bilabiato-bipartitus, labiis aequalibus, integris v. obsolete partitis. Corolla papibonacea? vexillum subrotundum, patens, aim oblongse, transversim pbcata?, carina petala dorso apice leviter cohserentia. Stamina 10, in phalanges pentadelpbas coalita ; antherce conformes. Ovarium sessile, quadri-sex-ovulatuni. Stylus filiformis adscendens ; stigma simplex. Legume* eompressum pbcato-4-6-(pluri-)articu- latum, calyce inclusum, articulis orbicularibus, delabentibus, monospennis. Semma corapresso-reniformia. — Herbre procumientes, in Asia et Nova Hollaudia tropica indigence ; foliis abrnpte pinnatis, paucijugis, foliolis ciliatis, adpresse setosis ; sti- pulis semisagittatis ; racemis axillaribus, paucifioris, floribus fiavis (v.purpureis). Endl. SMITHIA purpurea ; caule ereeto ramoso glabro, foliolis oblongis longe apiculatia cibatis subtusqne ad costam submarginalem prsecipue setuloso-strigosis, stipulis adnatis ovatis seta terminatis, racemis terminakbus lateralibusque, peduncubs setosis fohum sequantibus, bracteis ovatis calycis labiisque integris striatis ciliatis, corolla purpurea (vexillo rotundato absque macula alba notatis) alis vexilloque patulis basi superne unidentatis, ovario bneari pluri- ovulato basi cupulato. Five species of Smithia are described, all natives of India, and all having yellow flowers. Our valued friend J. S. Law, Esq., has discovered in Bombay a sixth species, having purple flowers, the vexillum and alae being moreover each marked with a conspicuous white spot. Seeds of this lovely little plant (and dried native specimens) were forwarded to us by Mr. Law, and the former soon germinated and blossomed in the stove of the Royal Gardens, in October, 1846. It differs in no respect from the generic character of Smithia, except that it has more seeds in each legume than had been attributed to the Genus. Descr. Moot annual ? Stem erect, filiform, branched, terete, glabrous. Leaves sessile, closely pinnated, with ten to twelve opposite, oblong, acute, ciliated leaflets, the apex terminated by a hair. Stipules subulate, brown. Racemes terminal, few- (two to five) flowered, bracteated. Pedicels hispid. Bracteas and sepals of the calyx ovate, striated, green, ciliated : the former con- FEBRUARY 1ST, 1847. duplicate, ciliated at the keel. Corolla deep and rich purple. Standard rotundate, pale at the back, the upper half white; the inside with a white spot and white streaks at tin- base. Wing* with a clear spot towards the apex. Carina uniform purple. Stamens monadelphous, cleft above. Ovary linear, many-seeded, inserted into auhypogynous gland or cup. Style subulate. Stigma acute. Fig.l. Flower. 2. Standard. 3. Win-, i. Keel. 5. Stamens and pistil. 6. ristd: — magnified. Tab. 4284. CHIRITA Sinensis. Chinese Chirita. Nat. Ord. Cyrtandrace.e, DC. (Gesneriace.e CyrtandracEjE, Br.) — DlDYXAMIA ANGIOSPERMIA. Gen. Char. {Vide supra, Tab. 4182.) Chirita Sinensis; acaulis, foliis elliptico-ovatis crenatis in petiolum crassum trigonum attenuatis, pedunculis erectis rufo-villosissiinis pilis patentissimis, corymbis multifloris basi bracteis 2 membranaceis, corollas lobis 2 sup. brevioribus tubo iuferne subtus carinato, intus caUis duobus buearibus, supra callo lato bilobo, ovario glanduloso-hirsuto. Chirita Sinensis. Lindl.Bot. Reg. 1844, t. 59. The introduction of this charming plant from China is due to the Horticultural Society. Mr. Fortune sent home flowering- plants in 1844. Mr. Backhouse (of the York Nursery), to whom we owe the possession of the specimens here figured, and who has been eminently successful in the cultivation and increase of it, speaks of it as follows : — " The largest we had this season had a succession of upwards of twenty flower-stems, and some of the strongest of these had as many flowers opening in succession ; the panicles being dicho- tomous and flowering in the axil of each fork. Some of the stems were nine inches high. The plant is easily propagated in moist sand in a warm, humid atmosphere ; any portion of a leaf will emit leaves and roots. The young plants will however be pro- bably a year in flowering, and the progress of the scape is at first very slow. The plants succeed best in a moist stove, near the glass, but require to be shaded when the sun is hot, other- Avise their leaves are sometimes scorched. By having plants in different temperatures the flowering may be kept up for many months ; but a common greenhouse scarcely brings them to per- fection. We have not ripened seed, the capsules having been removed to keep up the flowering." Its habit is that of some stemless Gloxinia, and it continues flowering for many months. FEBRUARY 1ST, 181?. Dsscb. Stem none. Leaves springing directly from the root. Petioles short, but very thick and triquetrous, expanding into an elliptical ovate blade, the outer ones the longest, all hairy, crenate, obtuse, wrinkled, pale, and with very prominent veins beneath. Scape a span and more high, at first curved down- wards, then erect, stout, terete, clothed with copious, patent, red hairs and terminating in a subtrichotomous, compound corymb, having at the base two large deciduous membranaceous bracteas. Peduncle and pedicels with coarse spreading hairs. Calyx small, with five ovate segments. Corolla large, lilac-purple, yet varied with red and white; the tube inflated, but with a sudden com- pression towards the base beneath, forming a carina ; faux open; limb two-lipped, upper lip of two, lower of three rounded lobes ; within the corolla, on the lower side, are two linear, orange- coloured callosities ; above at the faux, a broad two-lobed one of the same colour. Stamens two, fertile, with the anthers two- lobed, firmly united to each other; two sterile filaments, and one rudimentary filament. Ovary linear, glanduloso-pilose. Style short. Stigma one-lipped, bifid. Fig. 1. Corolla, laid open. 2. Pistil. 3. Trausversc section of ovary : — mag- nified. Tab. 4285. NEPENTHES Rafflesiana. Sir Stamford Baffles Pitcher-Plant. Nat. Ord. Nepenthace.*:. — Dicecia Monadelphia. Gen. CJiar. Mores dioici. Masc. Perigonium calycinum, profunde quadri- fidum. Stamina in columnam centralem connata; anthera 16, in capitulum subsphasricum congestee, biloculares, longitudinabter dehiscentes. FffiM. Peri- gonium maris. Ovarium liberum, subtetragonum, quadriloculare. Ovula plurima, septorum parietibus adscendentim aflixa, anatropa. Stigma sessile, discoideum, obsolete quadrilobum. Capsula quadriloeularis, loculicido-quadrivalvis, valvis medio septiferis. Semina pluriraa, setaceo-fusiformia, adscendentia, imbricata : testa membranacea, utrinque relaxata ; nucleo centrali inverso, subgloboso. Em- bryo in axi albuminis carnosi cylindricus, ortbotropus ; radicnla brevi, infera. — SufFrutices in Asia tropica et in Madagascaria indigeni ; petiolis alternis, basi brevissime vaginantibus, foliaceo-dilatatis, apice cirrhosis, cirrho ascidiophoro, lamina articulata ascidium claudente ; jloribus racemosis vel panictdatis. Endl. Nepenthes Rafflesiana ; foliis petiolatis inferiorum ascidiis ventricoso-campauu- latis antice late membranaceo-alatis alis longe ciliatis superiorum infundi- buliformibus nudis, omnium ore pulcherrime pectinato-striato oblique postice assurgente. Nepenthes Rafflesiana. Jack, in Hooker, Comp. toBot. Mag. p. 270. Korthals, Pot. Ind. Batav. p. 35. To Dr. Jack is due the discovery of this remarkable species of Nepenthes, in the island of Singapore. It was our privilege, in the first volume of the ' Companion to the Botanical Magazine ', to publish the letters of that distinguished botanist so early lost to science. He relates the circumstance of finding this pitcher- plant in one of his many valued communications, addressed to his family at Aberdeen. Writing from Singapore, June 20th, 1819, Dr. Jack says, " My last letter from hence was sent by way of Penang; this goes home via Bengal. It is impossible to con- ceive anything more beautiful than the approach to Singapore, through the Archipelago of islands that he at the extremity of the Straits of Malacca, Seas of glass wind among innumerable islets, clothed in all the luxuriance of tropical vegetation, and basking in the full brilliancy of a tropical sky. The island of St. John's, which forms the western point of the bay of Singapore, would, if fortified, command with cannon the straits, through which every vessel passes to China and all the eastern settlement*. A more convenient site and more formidable DoeitJOE could not possibly be selected; and it is really astonishing that it should have remained so long unnoticed, 'it was the capital of the Malays in the twelfth century ; but they were obliged to abandon it, during the unfortunate wars with the Javan Empire of Maja- pulait, and retire to Malacca, and when the latter was taken by the Portuguese, they settled at Johore ; and Singapore has, till now, been almost forgotten. I have no doubt it will soon rise to more than its ancient consequence. I have just arrived in time to explore the woods, before they yield to the' axe, and have made many interesting discoveries, particularly of two new and splendid species of Pitcher-Plant {N<>pr„thes Rqfiesiana and N. ampullaria), far surpassing any yet known in Europe. I have completed two perfect drawings of them, with ample descriptions. Sir S. Raffles is anxious that we should give publicitv tb OUT researches, in one way or other, and has planned bringing out something at Bencoolen. He proposes lending home tl Pitcher-plants, that such splendid things mav appear under all the advantages of elegant execution, by way of attracting attention to the subject of Sumatran botany." Many of 1 >r. Jack's plants did appear in the Malayan Miscellany, published at Bencoolen ; but no plants of the Nepenthes Rajjh^lmm ever reached Europe alive ; till the Royal Gardens was supplied with a case of them, through the kindness of Capt. Bethune, R.N., who, oi his return from his scientific mission to Borneo, had a Wardian case filled with them ; and so well were the plants established in the case. and so great was the care taken of them overland from India, that they were as healthy on their arrival at Kew in 1845 as the day they were transplanted from their native glen in Singa- pore. It was the very year in which Dr. Jack writes, that, as is well known, at the suggestion of his friend and patron, Sir Stamford Raffles, the island of Singapore was purchased by the India Company of the Sultan of Johore. Mr. Crawford was its first Governor and historian : since that period, it has become a settlement of vast importance to our country, and being much frequented by our ships, both mercantile and of the navy it is to be hoped its vegetable productions will soon be familiar to us. Dr. Jack, with the modesty which was a striking feature in his character gives the credit of the discovery of this plant m the forests of Singapore, to Sir Stamford Raffles- probably m order that the name might be considered more appropriate. Singapore, however does not appear to be the only station for this pant; Korthals, if we read his high Dutch correctly, gives Bmtang, off the coast of Sumatra, as another habitat Our plants, on their arrival, were soon removed into pots according to their sizes, and placed in a pan frequently filled with water, having moist moss covering the earth : with this treatment, a fine spike of male flowers was thrown up in the autumn of the same year. The spike is large and handsome, from the rich colour of the copious perianths and the numerous yellow heads. The pitchers, or ascidia, are not only remarkable in their shape, and from their different form in different parts of the plants, but for the richness of the colour and spots, and the elongated mouth with the curiously striated margin : the striae terminate internally in teeth, and give a beautifully pectinated appearance to the inner edge. We possess fine dried specimens from the East India Company, distributed by Dr. Wallich (and our capsule is drawn from one of these) ; and we have other specimens for which we are indebted to Mr. Veitch, also received from Singapore, and gathered by Mr. Lobb. Dr. Jack well observes " this is the largest and most magnificent species of the genus, being adorned with two kinds of urns, both elegant in their forms, and brilliant in their colouring." We cannot, indeed, we think, do better than copy the description drawn up from native living specimens, by Dr. Jack himself; for we can offer nothing more accurate. Descr. The root is fibrous. Stem ascending at the base, becoming erect and supporting itself on the neighbouring trees : the young parts covered with a deciduous tomentum or down. Leaves alternate, petiolate, the lower ones crowded and lanceolate, the upper more remote and oblong : the adult foliage is smooth ; all the leaves are entire, having inconspicuous lateral nerves, and the mid-rib elongated into an urn-bearing cirrhus or tendril. The cirrhi of the lower leaves are not twisted, but hang straight from the apex ; they terminate in larger ventricose and highly- coloured ascidia or urns, fringed along the interior angles with two membranaceous fimbriate wings, somewhat contracted at the mouth, which opens obliquely, rising much higher and slightly recurved behind, where the operculum, or lid, is inserted. The tendrils of the upper leaves are twisted into one or two spires at the middle, and terminate in long ascending funnel- shaped urns, flattened anteriorly, but not winged, and gracefully turned at the mouth like an antique vase or urn. Both have the inverted margin beautifully and delicately striated and varie- gated with parallel stripes of purple, crimson, and yellow. The opercula, or lids, are incumbent, membranaceous, ovate marked with two principal longitudinal nerves, and cuspidate behind the hinge. The racemes of flowers are at first terminal ; but the stem begins, after a time, to shoot beyond them and they become lateral, and are always opposite to a leaf, which differs from the 2 D others in being sessile, and its coital never bearing an urn at its extremity. The pedicels are one-flowem I \faie Ffowere: Cah/v deeply four-parted, tomentose on the outer surface, smooth, red, and punctate on the inner ; segments oblong, obtuse, reflexed. Corolla none. The staminous column is central, thick, erect, red. Anthers numerous, yellow, contorted into I round terminal head. Female flowers : Calyx as in the male. Ovary superior, oblong, four-sided, erect. Style none 5 a sessile, peltate, four-lobed. Capsule oblong, somewhat curved, four-angled, deeply furrowed at the sides, four-celled, four-vahed; the valves septiferous in the middle, many-seeded. Seeds oblong, linear, membranaceous, and acute at both ends ; arranged longitudinally, and affixed by the base to the partitions. — Wm.Jack. Fig. 1. Male flower. 2. fruit: — natural tizt. Tab. 4286. SIPHOCAMPYLOS microstoma. Small-mouthed Siphocampylos . Nat. Ord. Lobeliaceae. — Pentandria Monogynia. Gen. Char. {Vide supra, Tab. 4178). Siphocampylos (Eusiphocampylos) microstoma ; suffruticosus erectus ramosus, ramis teretibus, foliis alternis brevi-petiolatis ovatis acutis glanduloso-serratis glabris, floribus umbellatis terminalibus Miosis, calycis tubo turbinato angulato brevi, laciniis longioribus linearibus obtusis patentibus, corollae pubescentis tubo elongato clavato superne ventricoso laterabter compresso angulato ore contracto, lobis subsequalibus parvis Uneari-obtusis conniven- tibus pilosis, staminibus subinclusis, antheris 2 inf. barbatis. Among many fine species of Siphocampylos, detected by Mr. Purdie in New Grenada, few, if any, can vie with this, in the size of the flowers and richness of their colour. It seems also to produce its blossoms early and freely, and they continue a long time in perfection ; so much so, that though our plants were only raised from seed twelve months ago, they have been gay with flowers throughout the whole autumn and winter months, and have proved a great acquisition to our stoves, during this dreary season. In the summer, a greenhouse will be a better situation for it, and from the successions of buds that are forming, it seems to be one of those plants which one may reckon on having in bloom, at all times of the year. Some of our plants have the stems and branches deeply tinged with pur- ple ; and the corollas are occasionally of a deeper and sometimes a paler scarlet, always produced in a compact leafy terminal umbel. Descr. Perennial. Stems erect, rounded, branched, two to three feet high, glabrous. Leaves alternate, petiolate (petioles short), ovate, acute, glabrous (the younger ones slightly downy), serrated, each serrature tipped with, or rather constituted, by a pale gland. Flowers umbellate ; that is, they seem each to spring from the axil of a leaf, which then becomes so reduced in size, they forming so compact a mass, that the foliage here may rather be called bracteas, and the pedicels, placed in an umbel, an umbellate- corymb ; at rirst these flowers are erect, soon spreading. Caljj.r- tube short and broad, turbinate, angled ; limb of five, spreading, linear-obtuse segments. Corolla rich scarlet, downy, two and a half inches long, monopetalous ; the tube elongated, club-shaped, slightly curved and ventricose above, laterally compressed, and angular. The mouth of the tube is small and contracted : the segments small, nearly equally hairy, connivent only when old, the lower ones spreading. Stamens scarcely protruded, two lower ones bearded. Fig. 1. Calyx and pistil. 2. Anthers: — magnified. Tab. 4287. BRUNFELSIA nitida ; £. ? Jamaicensis. Shining-leaved Brunfehia ; Jamaica var.? Nat. Ord. ScROPHULARINEiE. DlDYNAMIA ANGIOSPERMIA. Gen. Char. Calyx 5-dentatus v. 5-fidus. Corolla hypocraterimorpha, tubo apice vix dilatato, limbo ultra medium 5-fido, lobis latis rotundatis, sestivatione bilabiato sinubus subplicatis. Stamina fertilia 4; anther* apice confluentes. Stylus apice incurvus dilatato-bilobus : lobis subsequalibus intus stigmatosis. Capsula coriacea aut carnosa, valvulis integris, vel rarius indehiscens ? crassissima, subdrupacea ; dissepimeutum tenue sub placentis carnosis reconditum. Semma plurima, majuscula, pulpa vel placentis carnosis plus minus immersa. Embryo leeviter incurvus. — Frutices arboresve parvce, America; australis v. Antillarum incolce. Folia alterna, integerrima, exobovato-oblonga, sa>pe nitida. Cymae termi- nates, nunc dens* capituliformes, nunc laxiuscule paucifiorx, vel ad florum umcum reducta. Bractese porta. Flores speciosi, scepissime suavolentes, pallide violacei, cterulei vel albidi, rarius ochroleuci aut albi. Be Cand. Brunfelsia nitida; glabra, foliis obovato-oblongis acutis, flonbus solitarus, calyce campanulato profunde 5-fido, corolla? tubo calyce 8-10-ies longiore, limbo planiusculo capsular valvulis coriaceo-carnosis. Bentk. Brunfelsia nitida. Beuth. in Be Cand, Prodr. v. 10. p. 200. j3. ? Jamaicensis ; floribus majoribus, fructu ignoto. Beuth . I. c. The genus Brunfehia was so named by Plumier in honour of Otto Bunfels or Brunfels, of Mete, who is described by Waller as one of the restorers of botany, on account of his work ' Herbarum vivse Icones', published in three vols, folio, between the years 1530-36. Two species of the original genus were detected by the older botanists, B. Americana, and B. mdulata ; a thud sup- posed species is described by Mr. Don, from Peru, B.grandijtora ; and a fourth, by Mr. Bentham above quoted, B. nitida, from Havanah; to which he has referred var. 0. Jamaicensis, trom Air. Purdie's specimens in our Herbarium. With these large yellow flowered species, Mr. Bentham has united the blue-flowered Fran- ciscecs (of Pohl) as not generically distinct : similar dry fruits being found in some of the yellow-flowered ones, ihe plant Here figured, is the var. Jamaicensis of B. nitida, of Mr. Bentham, being what corresponds with the specimens sent by Mr. Purdie from Jamaica ; but as I am in ignorance of the fruit, I cannot remove Mr. Bentham's doubts, respecting its identity with that species. It is a very handsome plant, flowering during the sum- mer months copiously, in a cool stove, and easily increased by cuttings. Descr. An erect shrub, four to five feet high, when fully grown, glabrous, with terete stems and branches. Leaves alter- nate, but crowded about the setting on of the younger branches, obovato-oblong or obovato-lanceolate, broadest above the middle, coming to a sharp point, tapering below into a short brown or purple petiole, quite entire, subcoriaceous, glossy. Flowers solitary from the axils of the upper leaves, on short peduncles. Calyx campanulate, glabrous, deeply five-lobed, the lobes reaching as far as the middle, ovato-obtuse. Corolla very large, yellow. Tube long, cylindrical, downy. Limb oblique, of five obovato-rotundate slightly waved spreading lobes. Stamens filiform ; style included. Fig. 1. I'istil: — slightly magnified. Tab. 4288. TILLANDSIA bulbosa ; var. picta. Bulbous Tillandsia ; coloured var. Nat. Ord. Bromeliace^e. — Hexandria Monogynia. Gen. Char. Perigonii liberi sexpartiti lacinia exteriores catycina, aequales basi co- haarentes spiraliter convolutae, duo altius inter se connatae, tertia minor, interiores petahideas inferne in tubulum convolutae v. connatae, superne patentes, basi intus nudae v. rarius squamosa3. Stamina 6, hypogyna ; jilamenta linearia, alterna, saepius perigonii laciniis interioribus adhaerentia; anthera incumbentes, basi sagittato-emarginatae. Ovarium liberum, triloculare. Ovula in loculorum angulo centrab prope basin plura, biseriata, adscendentia, anatropa. Stylus fibformis ; stigma trifidum, lobis abbreviatis v. filiformibus aut apice dilatatis, rectis v. con- tortis. Capsula cartdaginea, linearis v. ovata, trilocularis, loculicido-trivalvis, valyis endocarpio mox soluto dupbcatis, explanatis v. tortis. Semina plurima e basi dissepimentorum erecta, lineari-clavata, stipitata, stipite pibs papposis cincto, testa dura, chalaza terminab mamillari. Embryo in basi albuminis farinosi rectus, extremitate radiculari infera. — Herbae in America tropica et extra-tropica cali- diore indigent ; utplurimum pseudo-pat -asitica, lepidotee, caulibus foliosis simplici- bus v. rarius ramosis,fioribus spicatis v.paniculatis, rarius solitariis, bracteatis. Endl. Tillandsia bulbosa ; foliis (subpaucis) e basi latissima circa bulbum vaginata longe subulatis rigidis coriaceis tereti-convolutis, superioribus basi angus- tioribus (in /3. coloratis), spica ramosa bracteata bracteis ovatis distichis (saepe coloratis), petalis acuminatis purpureis brevioribus,staminibus exsertis, filamentis infra apicem dilatatis. Tillandsia bulbosa. Hook, in Exot. Ft. 1. 173. 0. picta; major, foliis superioribus bracteisque coccineis. (Tab. nostr. 4288.) Few persons, who have the opportunity of comparing this richly coloured plant with the figure above quoted, in the ' Exotic Flora,' would at first sight perhaps consider them to represent the same species ; yet, except that this is a better grown specimen, with a more perfect spike, and that the upper leaves and bracteas are of a bright scarlet hue, tinged with yellow, I see no difference, and am bound to consider them the same. The original plant was transmitted from Trinidad, by the late Baron de Schack ; our Garden is indebted for this splendid variety to the mission of Mr. Purdie, who sent healthy specimens from Jamaica, which on being simply suspended by a piece of wire, from the beam of a moist stove, flowered in the winter of 1S4G-7. In proof that the highly coloured leaves afford no permanent character, these became, after flowering, of the same uniform green as the rest of the foliage. The Tillandsias exhibit strange forms, and many of them highly beautiful inflorescence ; but they are very unintelligible, when studied in the Herbarium, and little sought after by those who send home living plants ; so that our knowledge of the species is but imperfect. It is to be regretted, too, that they are difficult to keep long in a state of cultivation, generally dying soon after flowering, more frequently without blossoming at all. Descr. Plants clustered, two or more united at the base, and sometimes growing in two opposite directions, and in the instance here represented, slightly attached to the branches of trees by slender feathery fibres. Stem simple, leafy at the base, immediately swollen and bulbiform. Leaves a span or more long, subulate, coriaceous, rigid, waved and somewhat spirally twisted, terete from the singularly incurved or almost convolute sides, dark green, naked, the bases of the lower ones singularly dilated into very broad membranaceous sheathing bases to the bulb, pale- coloured with a red margin, dotted ; the upper leaves gradually smaller and almost bracteiform, richly tinged with scarlet and yellow. Spike racemose, the branches compressed, and clothed w r ith distichous, scarlet, imbricated bracteas, entirely concealing the flower-buds. Flowers protruded beyond the bracteas. Calyx of three green convolute sepals. Corolla of three linear-lanceo- late, purple, acuminated petals, twice as long as the calyx. Stamens and style exserted. Filaments dilated below the apex. Stigmas three, cuneate, fringed at the edge. Fig. 1. Flower. 2. Pistil: — magnified. Tab. 4289. PHARBITIS CATHARTICA. Purging Pharbitis. Nat. Ord. Convolvulace.e. — Pentandria Monogynla. Gen. Char. Calyx 5-sepalus. Cor. campantilata aut campanulato-infundibuli- formis. Stylus 1. Stigma capitato-granulatum. Ovarium 3- rarius 4-loculare, locnlis dispermis. — Herbae volubiles elongate speciosee, perplurima ornamenti gratia in hortis culta ; pleraque Americana, retr or sum pilous. Chois. in DC. Pharbitis cathartica ; caule glabro contorto, foliis glabris cordatis aut ssepius cordato-trilobis, lobo intermedio ovato-acurainato basi saepius dilatato, late- ralibus brevioribus acutis, petiolo longo, pedunculis 1-2-floris petiolis supe- rantibus, bracteis 6-8 lineas longis bilineari-lanceolatis apice (tructis) acu- minata reflexis hirsutulis, corolla speciosa purpurea. Pharbitis cathartica. Chois. in Be Cand. Prodr. v. 9. p. 342. I pom/ea cathartica. Poir. Encycl. Suppl. v. 4. p. 633. Convolvulus Portoricensis. Spr.Syst. Feget. v. I. p. 595. Var. floribus roseis. Convolvulus pudibundus. Lindl. Bol. Beg. t. 999. Ipom^ea pudibunda. Boh, in Mill. Bid. v. 4. p. 276. A native of St. Domingo, Porto Rico, and Mexico, according to Choisy. we may further add Sta. Martha, in New Grenada; whence Mr. Purdie sent seeds in 1845, which flowered at Syon Gardens, in November of the same year, and made a very lovely appear- ance. The colour of the corolla is particularly vivid, varying from deep reddish-purple to rich violet-blue. The Convolvulus pudibundus of Dr. Lindley, above quoted, is doubtless the same species, with rose-coloured flowers. The ' Flore Medicale des Antilles ' states that M. Bauduit, a rich proprietor of St. Do- mingo, discovered in this milky plant a resinous juice, which coagulates and proves to be profusely purgative. He formed of it a much approved syrup, which, in the French colonies, bears his name. This syrup is very active, and requires, on account of its drastic properties, to be used with great caution. Descr. Stem apparently annual, terete, glabrous, twining, slender, branched. Leaves alternate, remote, broadly cordate, sometimes entire, but more usually (altogether so in our speci- men) three-lobed, glabrous ; the lobes broad, rounded, suddenly acute, or rather acuminated, especially the middle lobe. Petiole as long as the leaf, slender. From the axil of the leaf or petiole, a solitary peduncle appears, about as long as, or longer than, the petiole, in our plant bearing one Jlower, with an articulation, and two small bracts, not unfrequently two or even three flowers : the upper joint or pedicel slightly incrassated upwards, about three quarters of an inch long. Calyx of five lanceolate, acuminated sepals, slightly hairy at the back, the apices more or less spreading. Corolla with the tube funnel-shaped, white below, rose-purple above; limb spreading, slightly five-lobed, the lobes rounded, with a small point in the sinus, the colour varying from reddish to deep blue-purple. Stamens five, unequal, included. Filaments hairy below. Style filiform, included. Stigma large, capitate, granulated. In fruit, the pedicel is bent at the joint or genicu- lated, and is much dilated below the persistent calyx. Fig. 1. Portion of the corolla, with stamens. 2. Pistil : — magnified. Tab. 4290. SCUTELLARIA cordifolia. Heart-leaved Skull-cap. Nat. Orel. Labiate. — Didynamia Gymnospermia. Gen. Char. {Vide supra, Tab. 426S.) Scutellaria cordifolia ; canle erecto ramoso ramisque obtuse tetragonis race- misque (nunc ramosis) longissimis pubescenti-glanduloso-pilosis, foliis longe petiolatis meinbranaceis pallide Iuteo-viridibus molbbus rotundato-cordatis copiose rugoso-reticulatis acutis pubescenti-pilosis grosse sinuato-dentatis, floribus subverticillatis glanduloso-pubescentibus, bracteis angustis cito deci- duis, calyce parvo, corolla (coccinea) gracili calyce multoties longiore, labio superiore 3-fido lobo intermedio breviore emarginato. Scutellaria cordifolia. Benth. in De Cand. Prodr. ined. Perilomia cordifolia. SchlecM. in Linntea, v. 6. p. 3 74. Scutellaria splendens. Klotzsch, Ic. PL Rar. Berol.p. 31. t. 13. For this beautiful Scutellaria, the Royal Gardens of Kew are indebted to Messrs. Rollisson, of Tooting, who had received it from the Continent, under the name of Scutellaria splendens; and as such the species is described in the beautiful work of my friend Dr. Klotzsch, above quoted. It is, however, assuredly the S. cordifolia, Benth. {Perilomia, Schlecht.), and a native of Misantla and other parts of Mexico. The brilliant red colour, the size and general form of the flowers, indicate an affinity with S. Ventenatii; but the hue is more inclined to orange-red, the corolla is longer and more slender, the flowers are not secund or distichous, but subverticillate, and pointing in all direcfions ; it has shorter stems, and very different foliage in colour, form, texture and reticulation. It flowers in the stove in September and October. Descr. Stem nearly erect, branched ; with the branches diva- ricated, four-sided, pubescent with glandular hairs. Leaves opposite, large, downy, cordate, membranaceous, coarsely and almost sinuato-dentate, pale green, reticulated and wrinkled with the copious venations. Petioles an inch and a half long, pilose. Racemes very long, terminal upon the branches, simple, or ramose, many -flowered. Pedicels short, subverticillute, with small deciduous bractem at the base. Calyw as in the genus, glandu- loso-pilose, tinged with purple, having the dorsal Bcale much en- larged in fruit. Corolla orange-scarlet, glanduloso-pilose, very long, many times longer than the calyx, the tube much curved, slender in the lower half, gradually widening upwards, so as to be funnel-shaped : the mouth inclining downwards : the limb of two lips, the lower lip ovate, acute, entire, deflexed, the upper much shorter, galeate, obtuse, three-lobed, middle lobe emargi- nate. Stamens and style included. Ovaries glandular, situated on a large conical gland or gynophore. Fig. 1. Flower: — magnified. ./'.','// Tab. 4291. ANIGOZANTHOS fuliginosa. Sooty Anigozanthos. Nat. Ord. Hemodoeace^e. — Hexandria Monogynia. Gen. Char. (Fide supra, Tab. 4180.) Anigozanthos fuliginosa; caule angulato elato superne paniculato, inferne foliisque aequitantibus lineari-acuminatis subfalcatis striatis glaberrimis, spicis paniculatis secundifloris, pedunculis pedicellis parteque inferioris florum pilis plumosis fusco-brunneis ftdiginosis, perianthii straminei tomen- tosi laciniis lanceolato-acuminatis tubum curvatum superantibus, staminum filamentis lacinias Bequantibus, antheris apiculatis. This is one of the few plants, figured in the ' Botanical Maga- zine ', of which no living specimen yet exists in our Gardens. It is here given to show how much it merits cultivation; also because, from its peculiarly dry, or " everlasting " character, it exhibits so much of its beauty in the Herbarium, that we can vouch for the accuracy of the figure, both in form and colour. It is, too, among the rarest of the genus yet found in Australia, and is thus noticed, in conjunction with another species, A. pul- cherrima, figured in this work, Tab. 4180, in a letter from Mr. J. Drummond, published in the ' London Journal of Botany', vol. iii. p. 263. "By a ship now about to sail, I send two fine species of Anigozanthos, collected by my son (since killed by the natives), in the vicinity of the Moore River. Of the golden- flowered kind (A. pulcherrimd), I gave some account before (vol. i. of Lond. Journ. of Bot. p. 627, 8). The dark-flowering one, of which but two specimens have ever been found in bloom, is a real mov/rning flower ; the upper portions of its stem, and lower portion of the corolla being covered, as it were, with black velvet : the corolla is deeply cleft, and expands about two inches. The species is not allied to any other yet discovered in the Swan River Settlement." The flower alone, independent of the curious sooty tomentum of the upper part of the plant, is indeed quite sufficient to distinguish this species ; being much deeper cleft, with far larger and longer laciniae, and longer filaments to the E stamens than any known .[.tries. We do not despair of seeing this plant ere long in our greenhouses. Descr. Root a creeping eauclex, thicker than the linger. Leaves chiefly radical, or from the verv base of the stem, and fasciculate, sheathing, equitant, linear-ensifomi, acuminate, striated, quite glabrous, shorter than the stem, much tinged with brown- purple. Stem erect, herbaceous, angled and furrowed, two to four feet high, bearing three or four leaves, similar to those of the stem the uppermost less equitant. This stem branches above, and becomes a panicle, dichotomously divided, with a small leaf-like bractea at the forks, clothed with a dense dark-red brown or sooty, coloured tomentum, which, when seen under a microscope, is found to consist of beautiful plumose hairs. The ultimate branches, or peduncles of the pan icle, bear a spike of large, tomentose, lemon-coloured Jhwera, the lower portion of the flower and the ovary being covered with the same fuliginose tomentum as the panicle, but which gradually becomes more scattered and inconspicuous towards the upper portion of the flower. Ovary globose. Perianth with the tube sightly curved, scarcely an inch long, a little dilated upwards ■ the month very oblique ; the limb of six spreading lanceolate acuminate segments (clothed withm, as well as without, with pale yellow tomentum), which are much longer, especially the upper ones, than the tube. filaments subulate, as long as the segments of the perianth, their bases united into a membrane, or ring, at the mouth of the tube. Anthers small, oblong, pale-coloured, tipped with a Tbb d mucro ' 8tyle longer than the coro,,a - m * ma \ %st Tab. 4292. MARTYNIA fragrans. Fragrant Martynia. Nat. Ord. Sesames, DC. Tribe II. Pedalineje, Br.— Didynamia Angiospekmia. Gen. Char. Calyx subaequaliter 5-fidus, basi 2-3-bracteolatus. Corolla irre- gularis campanulata, basi gibba, limbo 5-lobo insequali. Stamina 5, uno rudi- mentario sterili, 4 didynamis nunc omnibus nunc 2 tantum antheriferis. Stigma bilamellatum. Corolla coriacea lignosa, ovata aut longior apice rostrata, rostro inflexo bicorni, anterius sulcato-dentata, intus 4-5 ?-locularis (1) sed vix apice dehiscens, septis coriaceis. Semina pauca, crassa, secus septum in loculis uniserialia, pendula, subbaccata, demum tuberculato-rugosa. — Herbse ex America calidiore orta, seepius ramosa, piloso-viscosee. Folia opposita aut suprema subalterna, petiolata, cordata, subrotunda. DC. Martynia fragrans ; foliis (plerisque) oppositis petiolatis cordatis v. oblongo- cordatis trilobis angulato-sinuatis, racemo terminali, calycibus inflato-cam- panulatis obliquis plicatis, bracteolis ad basin calycis 2 plano-convexis, floribus tetrandris, fructibus supeme aristatis rostris capsula subduplo longioribus apice uncinatis. Martynia fragrans. Lindl. Bot, Reg. 1840. Misc. n. 206. 1841, tab. 6. The curious capsules of this very beautiful and highly fragrant annual, containing ripe seeds, were received at the Royal Gardens of Kew, in the spring of 1846, from Mr. Ropper, at the Real del Monte mines, in Mexico. Treated as half-hardy plants, they nourished during the summer months, in a cool greenhouse, and were universally admired, no less for their large and highly coloured flowers, than for their delicious odour. There can scarcely be a doubt but this species will bear our summers in the open air; a bed entirely filled with it would have a rich effect, and would contribute greatly to ornament the flower garden. Descr. Plant one to three feet high, everywhere clothed with soft glandular down. Stem terete, erect, flexuose. Leaves op- posite, or usually so, petiolate, cordate, sometimes approaching to oblong-cordate, three-lobed, lobes rounded, angulato-sinuate, the middle one the longest. Raceme terminal, of from three to sixjloivers, which are large, handsome and fragrant. Pedicels 2 E as long as the flowers. Culi/t largo, -ubeampanulate, inflated ; the mouth oblique, plaited and striated ; the teeth short, famished at the base with two appressed hYshv bracts. Corolla with the tube scarcely longer than the calyx, the mouth oblique, the limb of four spreading lobes, of which the upper and lower are the largest, the former bifid, all of them rounded. The general colour of the corolla is a rich purplish-red, the throat yellow, with dark dots. Stamens and style included. Fruit an oblong dark-brown capsule, curved upwards, wrinkled, crested above, terminating in two incurved beaks, much longer than the capsule, and hooked at the end. Fig. 1. Capsule: — natural me. -1X90 Tab. 4293. iECHMEA discolor. Two-coloured, or Crab's eye JEchmea. Nat. Ord. Bromeliaci^e. — Hexanpria Monogynia. Gen. Char. Bracteee sub singulo flore cyathiformes. Perigonii superi sex- partiti lacinice exteriores calycince, aequales, spiraliter convolutse, aristatae v. muticae, apice hinc oblique dilatatae, interiores petaloidea, exterioribus multo longiores, inferne convolutae, basi intus squamosa? v. rarius nudae. Stamina 6, imo perigonio inserta : filamenta filifonnia, tria laciniarum interiorum basi adnata; antherce ovatae, dorso affixae, subincumbentes. Ovarium inferum trilo- culare. Ovula plurima, e loculorum angulo centrak" pendula, anatropa. Stylus filiformis : stigmata 3, linearia v. petaloidea, spiraliter convoluta. Bacca oyato- subglobosa, trilocularis. Semina plura ex apice loculorum pendula, testa coriacea fusca, umUlicofilo brevi gracili appendiculato. Embryo minimus, rectus, in basi albuminis dense farinacei, extremitate radiculari umbilicum attingente, supera.— Herbae Americana tropica, seepe in arborum truncis pseudo-parasitica ; foliis radicalibus ligulatis v. ensiformibus, crassis, coriaceis, integerrimis v. spinuloso- serrulatis ; scapo ramoso paniculato, xwtis.flexuosa, bracteis sub singulo fore cyatU- formibus spinoso-aristatis integerrimis v. tricrenatis, floribus terminalibus abortivis. Endl. zEchmea discolor; foliis ligulatis striatis obscure fasciatis serrulato-dentatis subtus discoloribus, bracteis lanceolatis membranaceis, floribus in panicu- lam sessilibus bracteatis, bracteis lanceolatis caducis, calycibus ovario adha> rentibus conico-ovatis coccineis dentibus obtusis atris, corolla calyce bre- viore. jEchmea discolor. Hort. A singularly attractive plant, from the rich coral-red of the panicle, the flowers being of the same bright vermilion colour, and the calyx tipped with black; also from the great length of time the plant continues in blossom, through the whole of the winter months. The unexpanded buds have a most striking resemblance to the well-known beads, commonly called " Crab's eyes ", which are the seeds of Abrus precatoria, only that they are much larger. The species is probably a native of Brazil; but I know nothing respecting its history, further than that it was received at the Royal Gardens of Kew, under the name here retained, from Messrs. Henderson, and from the Pans gardeu Descr. Leaves radical, erecto-patent, ligulato-obtuse, grooved above, and there green and transversely banded with furfnraceous lines ; the underside purple, the margin dentato-serrate. Scape twice as long as the leaves, terete above, branched into a panicle, of a rich scarlet colour, bearing a few membranaceous lanceolate pale brownish bracts. Flowers sessile, furnished with large ob- long, membranaceous, deciduous bracts. Calyx, including the adherent ovary, conical-ovate, bright red, the connivent teeth obtuse, black. Petals twisted, closed, at first red, afterwards purple, boat-shaped, with two scales within at the base. Stamens included ; and the style also. Stigma capitate. Fig. 1. Vertical section of the calyx and ovary. 2. Petal, scales, and stamen. 3. Flower. 4. Transverse section of germen : — magnified. 44t»4 -itcilcLc. t^eeve U Tab. 4294. COLUMNEA AUREO-NITENS. Golden Columnea. Nat. Ord. Gesneriace^e. — Didynamia Gtmnospermia. Gen. Char. Calyx liber, 5-partitus. Corolla tubulosa, rectiuscula, basi postice gibba, ringens, lobis superiore erecto fornicato, inferiore trifido patente. Sta- mina 4 didynama, antheris comiexis, quinti r postici rudimentura. Glandula 1-5 circa basin ovarii. Baeca 1-locularis, placentis 2 parietalibus bilobis. Semina oblonga. — Frutices Americani jlexiles, erecti aid scandentes. Folia oppo- sita brevi-petiolata crassimcula subserrata, hirmita vel pubescentia. Pedunculi axillares solitarii out covferti. CorollaB coceinea. DC. Coltjmnea aureo-nitem ; fruticosa erecta subsimplici tota aureo-sericea, foliis oppositis subsessilibus distichis, altero obovato oblongo acuminato denticu- lato serrato basi valde inaequilatera hinc decurrente, altero multoties minore ovato-acuminato insequilatero sessili, floribus sessilibus aggregatis (2-3) bracteatis deorsum versis, bracteis sepalisque appressis lanceolatis longe acixminatis laciniatis, corolla tubulosa calyce duplo longiore compresso- subangulata, paululum ventricosa basi inflata curvataque, limbi parum decurvi laciniis 5 sequalibus erecto-incurvis. From the Royal Gardens of Kew, where it flourishes in a moist stove, producing its blossoms sometimes in autumn, some- times in early spring. These flowers and nearly the whole plant, but especially the younger portions, are densely covered with a rich gold-coloured clothing of silky hairs. We owe the posses- sion of it to Messrs. Hendersons, Pine- Apple Place, Edgeware Road. Native specimens are in our Herbarium from Columbia. Descr. Our tallest plant is a foot and a half high, sufiruticose, but succulent, erect, or nearly so, scarcely branched, everywhere of a golden hue from the copious golden-coloured silky shaggy hairs, most abundant in the young parts. Leaves opposite, but of two kinds ; one of each pair is from four to six inches or more long, on a short footstalk, ovato-oblong, acuminate, serrated, deeply penninerved, the veins very prominent beneath, the base very unequal, one side terminating very abruptly, the other decurrent to the base of the petiole ; the other opposite leaf is very small, scarcely an inch long, sessile, ovate, acuminate, and also unequal at the base. Flowers axillary, fascicled, directed towards the back of the plant, on short petioles, bracteated. Bracteas lan- ceolato-laciniated. Calyx of five lanceolate, appressed sepals, equally with the bracteas laciniated. Corolla tubular, about an inch and a half long, slightly curved, yellow, but aureo-nitent from the golden hairs ; slightly curved, the base above gibbose, a little ventricose near the middle, the mouth oblique ; limb of five obtuse, erect, nearly equal, segments. Stamens four, didyna- mous, included. Filaments united into a tube, split on one side. Anthers subglobose, connate. Ovary ovate, hairy, with five glands, of which two at the back are large, and bifid, the three others small, clavate. Style shorter than the tube. Stigma two- lipped. Fig. 1. Flower, with the calyx expanded : — slightly magnified. 2. Stamens. 3. Pistil and hypogynal glands. 4. Ovary and three of the glands cut through transversely : — magnified. Tab. 4295. ANGRtECUM funale. Cord-like Angrcecum. Nat. Ord. Orchide*. — Gynanbria Monandria. Gen. Char. Perianthium patens. Sepala et petala subsequalia, libera. La~ helium sessile, cum basi columnse continuum, carnosum, indivisum, petalis multo latius ; calcare recto cornuto, ssepius subcylindraceo, perianthio multo longiore, raro obconico. Columna nana subteres, raro elongata, semiteres. Anthera 2- locularis, truncata. PoU'mia 2, bipartibilia, caudicula brevi angusta, glandula triangulari. — Epiphytse caulescentes. Folia coriacea ligulata, apice obliqua. Flores solitarii v. racemosi, albi nunc citrini v. herbacei. Lindl. Angrcecum funale; subacaule aphvllum, radicibus copiosis elongatis crassis cylindraceis hie iUic articulatis" pedunculis subbifloris, sepalis petahsque oblongo-lanceolatis reflexis, labello trilobo, lobis laterahbus parvis erectis, intermedio maximo lato obcordato-bifido, calcare filiformi perianthio bis longiore. Angr^cum funale. Lbtdl. in Gard. Chrou. CEceoclades funalis. Lindl. Gen. et Sp. Orchid, p. 237. Epidendrxjm funale. Sw. Prodr.p. 126. Limodorum funale. Stc. PI. hid. Occ. v. 3. p. 1521. Willd. Sp. PI. v. 4. p. 127. One of the rarest and least known of the West Indian Orchi- deous plants, which though referred by Lindley in the ' Genera et Species Orchid.', to CEceoclades, that excellent botanist has since acknowledged it (in a recent number of the ' Gardeners Chronicle') to be a true species of Angracwm. We adopt accordingly the latter name, and find that the characters quite agree with those which may be considered to belong to the type of the genus, A. ebumeum. Our plant, together with A. JUiforme, Lindl. (of Hispaniola), are the only species yet detected in the New World, and both are aphyllous, the rest bemg all natives of tropical Eastern Africa and adjacent isles (Madagascar, Bourbon and Mauritius). A. funale grows on the trunks of trees, in the mountains of Jamaica, and was first detected by Swartz, and well described by him : recently it has been sent to the Royal Gardens of Kew by our collector, Mr. Purdie. Attached to • a block ot wood, and freely supplied with moisture, it produced its highly fragrant blossoms in the winter of 1846, and continued some time in blossom. Descr. The plant may be said to consist of a very short caudex, throwing out, in all directions, copious, long, flexuose, cylindrical, partially articulated, greenish, fleshy roots, about as thick as a goose-quill. The same caudex gives rise to one or more slender peduncles, simple and one-flowered, or divided and two-flowered, bearing two or three small brown appressed bracteas. Flower large, highly fragrant. Sepals and petals pale green, oblong- lanceolate, reflexed. Lip very large, white, three-lobed, the two side lobes turned up so as to be applied to the column, interme- diate one very large, obcordate, two-lobed • spur very long, slender, filiform. Column short. Fig. 1. Lip, with the spur. 2. Column. 3,4. Pollen-masses -.—magnified. lUfiti Tab. 4296. ECHINOCACTUS Williamsii. Mr. Williams Echinocactus. Nat. Ord. Cacte^:. — Icosandria Monogynia. Gen. Char. {Vide supra, Tab. 4190.) Echinocactus Williamsii; humilis caespitosus turbinatus inferne teres trans- versim cicatricatus cinereo-fuscus superne mnbilicato-depressus glaucus 6-8-costatus, costis latis convexis parce tuberculatis inermibus pulvilligeris, pulvillis e pUis fasciculatis densis erectis fonnatis, floribus pamdis subsoli- tariis albo-roseis. Echinocactus Williamsii. " Lemaire, ex Salm-Dyck in Otto et Dietr. Allgem. Gartenzeit, xiii. p. 385." Walp. Repert. v, 5. p. 816. A neatly-formed species, which has a very pretty appearance when its starry blossoms are expanded. We received several plants of it at the Royal Gardens of Kew, through the favour of the Real del Monte Company, from the rocky hills of their district of mines in Mexico, with many other treasures. It flowers in the summer months. Descr. Our largest plants do not much exceed the size re- presented. They grow in a tufted manner and are often pro- liferous, as in the instance here shown: the parent plant being, as it were, stifled or subdued by its offspring. Each individual is turbinate : from the base to the crown, or summit, terete, of an ashy brown colour, and scarred with close transverse lines occasioned, it would appear, by the progressive withering and contraction of the tubercles : the summit is broadly convex, but with a deep depression in the centre, glaucous, traversed from the centre outwards by 6-8 furrows, and thus divided into as many convex ridges, and these again, transversely, but more or less deeply, into rather large, rounded, more or less confluent unarmed tubercles, each of which has a dense tuft or short pencil of compact erect hairs :— no aculei. Mowers proceed from a young tubercle, near the centre of the crown. The base of the calyx is downy. The petals lanceolate, rather numerous, white, externally tipped with pale green, and having a rose- coloured line down the centre. Stamens yellow. Stigma of four spreading rays. / 297 Tab. 4297. PHALiENOPSIS amabilis. Indian Butterfly -Plant. Nat. Ord. Orchideje. — Gtnandria Monandria. Gen. Char. Perianthium explanatum, patens, sepalis Kberis, petalis majoribus dilatatis. Labellum cum basi paulo producta columnse connatum, liberum, basi callosum, trilobum ; lobis lateralibus ascendentibus petaloideis, intennedio an- gustiore bicirrboso. Columna in ovarium recumbens, semiteres ; rostello gladiato. Anihera bilocularis. Pollinia 2, subglobosa, caudicula plana spatbulata, glandula maxima cordata. — Herba epiphyta. Caules radicantes, simplices. Folia rigida, lato-lanceolata, apice oblique retusa. Mores paniculati. Lindl. Phaljenopsis amabilis. PHALiENOPSis amabilis. Blume, Bijdr. p. 294. Rumphw, tf. 194. Lindl. Bot. Reg. 1838. t. 84. Gen. et Sp. Orchid, p. 213. Epidendrum amabile. Linn. Sp. PI. p. 1351. Swartz, Orchid, p. 184. Angrjscum album majus. Rumph. Herb. Anib. v. 6. p. 99. t. 43. This noble Orchidaceous plant, though introduced to our Stoves ten years ago, by Mr. Cuming from Manilla, is still perhaps the choicest and most highly prized of the family. Indeed, there is not a more chaste or lovely flower among all the OrcMdea ; and it has the merit of continuing a long time in blossom, one single plant at the Royal Gardens of Kew having been in bloom through the whole of' the present winter (1846-7). There is, indeed, a danger of its flowering too freely, and so exhausting itself; and we have on that account been obliged to nip off" some of the flowering branches ; especially as we do not find the species to increase readily. The species was first detected at Amboyna, by Rumphius. In Java, and probably in the Malayan Islands generally, it seems abundant. It grows freely, attached to a piece of wood, together with a little moss, suspended from a rafter of the stove. The graceful racemes and branches, having a pendent character, frequently display their blossoms in front of the dark green foliage, which sets them off to great advantage. The generic name, Phalanopsis, was given to the plant from a fancied resemblance to a moth or butterfly : Qabawa, a moth, and 6%fns, resemblance. may 1st, 1847. F Descr. An Epiphyte, attaching itself to the trunks of trees in the Indian forests, by stout fleshy whitish fibres. Pseudo-bulk none. Leaves large, dark green, distichous, very thick and coriaceous, elliptical-lanceolate, obliquely retuse. Peduncle long, drooping. Mowers racemose, distichous, large, the ground of the purest white imaginable, becoming tinged with cream, or a yel owish hue m age : the lip only streaked and spotted with red and yellow Perianth spreading almost exactly horizontally. Sepals uniform, elliptical-oyate : the petals large, subrhomboid, and in the broadest part nearly as broad as long. Labelhm connate with the produced base of the column, smaller than the petals, free, three-lobed, with a callosity at the base: the side- lobes ascending, broad, petaloid, the intermediate one trowel- shaped, bearing two curious incurved twisted cirrhi. Column semi-terete. Anther two-celled. Pollen-masses two, subglobose. 429S Fitclv dfileLlith He eve imp Tab. 4298. RUELLIA Purdieana. .]//■. Purdies Buellia. Nat. Ord. Acauthacejs. — Didynamia Angiospermia. Gen. Char. Calyx 5-partitus, laciniis gequalibus v. subeequalibus. Corolla hypogyna, infundibuliformis, limbi quinquefidi sequabs laciniis patentibus obtusis. Stamina 4, corolla? tubo inserts, didynama, inclusa ; anther* oblongse, biloculares, loculis parallelis, sequalibus, muticis v. basi mucronulatis. Ovarium biloculare, loculis 3-4-ovulatis. Stylus simplex; stigma subulatum, dorso canabculatum, basi denticido auctum. Capsula oblongo- sub 4-angularis, 2-loculans, 6-8-sperma, loculicide 2-valvis, valvis medio septiferis. Semina retinaculis suffulta.— Herbse tropica et subtropical, caulescentes, piloses ; foliis oppositis ; spicis azillanbus v. terminalibus,foliaceo-bracteatis, bracteolis parvis v. nullis ; floribus medweribus. Midi. Ruellia Purdieana ; fruticosa glabriuscula, ramis subteretibus folns ovato-acumi- natis subundulatis sublonge petiolatis integerrimis, floribus bmis termina- libus braeteis 2 flores subtequantibus foUiformibus suffultis, calyce protunde 5-fido laciniis subulatis, corolla? tubo valde elongato curvato 5-angulato infundibuliformi, limbo 5-lobo patente, lobis rotundatis undulatis subaequa- libus, antheris ultra tubum exsertis. A desirable Acanthaceous plant for cultivation in the stove. It strikes freely from cuttings, blossoming at an early period and at different seasons of the year,and the flowers are a foil deep crimson- lilac. When the Acanthacea of De Candolle's ' Prodromus sha have been published by Professor Nees von Esenbeck we shall know something of the characters for distinguishing the genera of this extensive and difficult family. I place the present species, with some confidence, in Buellia, because of its great similarity in habit and flowers to the Buellia bracteata of Mr. Brawn Irom New Holland, as figured by Endlicher in his valuable Icono- graphia'. Prom that, however, our present species is readily recognized by the different form of the corolla, and by its glabrous stem and leaves. . 7 , , Descr. A fruticose, or rather perhaps suffruttcose, plant, erect, 1-li foot high, glabrous, branches obtusely tetragonal, nearly cylindrical, g?een Leaves opposite, petiolate, ovato-acummate penninerved, entire ■ transverse nervelets connect the principal may 1st, 1847. F nerves. Flowers terminal, apparently in pairs, and each remark- able for a very large pair of bracteas, resembling the leaves at the base, much smaller than the stem-leaves, indeed, but nearly as long as the flower. Calyx small, deeply cut into five subulate erect segments. Corolla of a fine deep crimson-lilac colour, with the tube much elongated, curved, gradually enlarging upwards : limb of five nearly equal spreading waved segments. Stamens four, didynamous. Anthers sagittate, white, protruding a little beyond the tube. Ovary oblong, seated on a fleshy base, two- celled. Style as long as the tube. Stigma cleft : the subulate segments unequal. Fig. 1. Calyx and Pistil. 2. Anther. 3. Ovary. 4. The same cut through transversely : — magnified. 4*99 Fitei. dffLet lith. Reeve Tab. 4299. MARSDENIA maculata. Spotted-leaved Marsdenia. Nat. Ord. Asclepiadeje. — Pentandkia Digynia. Gen. Char. Calyx 5-partitus. Corolla subcampanulata, v. rotata, v. rarissime urceolata, 5-fida, laciniis patulis v. rarius reflexis contortis, tubo introrsum glabro, v. superne pilis inflexis instructo. Corona staminea 5-phylla, fob'obs gynostegio insertis, simplicibus, ovatis v. inferne rotundatis et in acumen v. in ligulam bnearem attenuatis. AntJieree membrana terminata?. Massa pollinis ovoidea?, processu subdilatato affixa?, erecta?. Stigma umbonatum muticum v. rostratum obscure bifidum. Folliculi la?ves. Semina comosa. — Suffrutices in India orientali, Moluccis, Nova Hollandia, rarius in America tropical, v. Antillis et in Europa orient, crescentes; foliis oppositis, planis; peduncubis interpetiolaribus ; floribus cymosis v. thyrsoideis. DC. Marsdenia maculata ; volubilis glabra, foliis lato-ellipticis membranaceis acutis (rarius obtusis) maculatis basi cordatis, petiolis ad costa? basin pulvinigeris, umbellis densifloris subsessilibus, sepalis ovato-ellipticis subcibatis, corolla? limbo ciliato, corona? staminea? foliobis ovatis cum antheris confluentibus, stigmate subapiculato. This has been long cultivated in the stove of the Royal Gardens of Kew, as a new Asclepiadeous plant which had been sent by the late Mr. Lockhart of Trinidad, and we have received flowering plants from Messrs. Lucombe, Pince and Co., of the Exeter Nursery. In 1834 living plants were again transmitted to the Royal Gardens, by our Collector Mr. Purdie, from the plain of Santa Martha, New Grenada. It seems to be a true Marsdenia, and is remarkable for its large foliage, spotted with pale yellow, somewhat like the leaves of Jucuba Japonica, but with the spots more regular, more equi-distant, and less confluent. It is a great climber, and flowers readily in June : the flowers are of a dark purplish or liver colour, greenish when young, and thus the dense umbels have a mottled appearance. Their texture is rather fleshy, like those of Eoya. Descr. A strong climbing plant, nearly glabrous in every part. Stems and main branches as thick as as a swan's quill. Leaves opposite, large, petiolate, broadly elliptical, membrana- ceous, acute (rarely obtuse), the base cordate, the whole surface may 1st, 1847. marked with pale yellowish spots, of various sizes, but of an irregular orbicular form. The costa sends off several strong lateral parallel and almost horizontal nerves, and these are more or less united by transverse nervelets. Petioles stout, varying in length from one to two inches, the two opposite ones connate at the base around the stem and branch, the apex on the upper side, at the setting on of the leaf, and forming the base of the costa, has a cushion-like tuft. Flowers rather large, numerous, collected into a dense hemispherical almost sessile umbel, variegated, pale green, and purplish-brown. Pedicels and calyx brownish with indistinct down. Sepals elliptical-ovate. Corolla, with the tube, as long as the calyx ; segments of the limb rather longer, rounded, ciliated. Segments of the staminal crown ovate, fleshy, not forming an apex distinct from the anther, but gradually passing into it. Stigma rather acute. Fig. 1. Flower. 2. Staminal crown. ftv WO Tab. 4300. CALCEOLARIA amplexicaulis. Clmping-leaved Calceolaria, or Slider-wort. Nat. Ord. Scrophularinb. fl 'T 3 Tab. 2306. acacia celastrifolia. Celastrus-leaved Acacia. Nat. Ord. Leguminos.e. — Polygamia Polyandria. Gen, Char. Mores polygami. Calyx 4-5-dentatus. Petala 4-5, nunc libera nunc in corollara 4-5-fidam coalita. Semina numero varia 10-100. Legumen continuum exsuccum bivalve. — Frutices aut arbores, Jiabitu et foliatione vaUe varia. Acacia celastrifolia ; glaberrima, v. junior glauco-pruinosa, ramulis angulato- triquetris, phyllodiis oblique ovatis obovatisve calloso-mucronatis basi angustatis crasso-coriaceis marginatis infra medium glanduliferis nervo parum incurvo, racemis phyllodio paulo longioribus, capitulis brevissime pedunculatis, ovario glabro. Benth. Acacia celastrifolia. Benth. in Hook. Lond. Journ. of Bot. v. 1. p. 349. Walp. Repert. Bot. v. 1. p. 895. Plant. Preiss. p. 14. If a gracefully formed, much branching evergreen shrub, with rather dense and broadish, bright glaucous-green leaves {phyl- lodia), whose ultimate branches are literally bowed down with the abundance of yellow heads of highly fragrant flowers for nearly two months of the year, and those almost of the winter season, can have any claim to cultivation, then may Acacia celas- trifolia be confidently recommended. We raised it from Swan River seed, sent by Mr. Drummond, and our plant is now nearly six feet high ; so loaded with fragrant blossoms, that it would be in itself sufficient to scent the entire house. While it was in perfection, March, 1847, Messrs. Lucombe, Pmce and Co. sent us a noble specimen from their Greenhouse at the Nursery, Exeter. The odour a good deal resembles that of White-thorn, but is more delicate. Although very different it will rank near A. myrtifolia. Descr. Shrub five to six feet or more high, glabrous m every part, the younger shoots glaucous and angled. Phjllodia alter- nate, oblong, elliptical or subovate, acute, slightly tapering at the base, with a callous mucro at the point, margined all round, a strong nerve running through the centre ; on the upper margin below the middle is a conspicuous oval glandular depression. A few June 1st, 1847. obscure nerves branch off obliquely from the costa. At the bottom of the leaf the bases of the mid-rib and of the incrassated margins unite and form a thickened portion or short petiole, which is jointed upon the branch. Peduncles racemose, longer than the phyllodia, and articulated in their axils ; although soli- tary, they spring from every upper phyllodium, and form a great leafy panicle of the most fragrant flowers, and of a palish yellow colour. Capitula rather large, but each of few flowers. Stamens innumerable in each corolla. Fig . 1. Base of a leaf. 2. Flower: — magnified. frbch. del k hlh. P_ e0 ve.inip- Tab. 4307. GARDENIA malleifera. Clapper-bearing Gardenia. Nat. Ord. Rubiace^:. — Pentandria Monogynia. Gen. Char. Cal. tubus ovatus saepe costatus, limtm tubulosus truneatus dentatus fissus partitusve. Corolla infundibuliformis aut hypocraterimorpha, tubo calyce multo longiore, limbo per sestivationem contorto patente 5-9-partito. Anthera 5-9 lineares ad faucem subsessiles. Stigma clavatum bilobum aut bidentatum, lobis crassis erectis. Ovarium dissepimentis incompletis 2-5 semi-divisum, 1-loculare. Bacca carnosa calyce coronata intus chartacea aut nucleata incom- plete 3-5-locularis. Semina minuta, placentis parietablbus carnosis immersa. Embryo albuminosus vagus. — Arbores aut frutices, inermes aut spinescentes. Folia opposita raro verticillata, ovalia. Flores axillares aut terminates, plerumque tolitarii albi, demum fuscescentes, scepius odori. Be Cand. Gardenia malleifera ; foliis obovato-lanceolatis acuminatis glabris in petiolum brevem attenuatis, floribus solitariis subterminabibus vel in axillis dichoto- miarum speciosis, calycis tubo fusco-pubescenti superne bbero pentagono, laciniis longe subulatis erectis flexuosis, corollae (albae v. ochroleuese) extu« pubescenti-tomentosis tubo elongato graciH fauce ampHato latissime campa- nulato, limbi magni laciniis ovato-rotundatis patentibus, antheris inclusis, stylo superne flexuoso exserto, stigmate maximo malleiformi. My first knowledge of this fine plant, with its large and fra- grant flowers (not unlike the odour of primroses), and extraordi- narily large and clapper-shaped stigma, so large and so heavy that it rests as it were on the lower side of the flower, was from dried specimens sent to me by Miss Turner, daughter of the then Governor of Sierra Leone : and I have long had what I consi- dered the same plant but with rather broader, thinner, and green leaves from Senegambia, gathered by Haudelot (n. 809). Again, in 1843, Mr. Whitfield gave me dried specimens which he brought from Sierra Leone, and the same year he enriched the stoves at Knowsley with living specimens. Our plant, which, as far as I know, is the first to have flowered in this country, is derived from the same source, and we gladly illustrate another fine species of a group of Rubiacea peculiar to tropical western Ame- rica. The Gardenias of that country have been little understood and ill-defined. In describing the truly superb G. Stanleyana JTTVi? 1 t"B ~l O A rt June 1st, 1847. (Tab. nostr. 4185) we had to lament the being obliged to leave it uncertain whether it was the same as the Rot/uua/inia longifiora of Salisbury or not. A tine species of Randia (or rather, perhaps, Gardenia, for the two genera even are by no means clearly dis- tinguished), R. Bowieana (Bot. Mag. t. 3409), was sent to us from Kew in 1815, as a plant derived from "Brazil"; but the accurate Mr. J. Smith, at the Royal Gardens, has long since found it necessary to correct that error, and has satisfied himself that it was one of the few plants collected by Mr. Lockhart in Tuckey's Voyage to the Congo. Again, a noble Randia is given by Mr. Salisbury in the ' Paradisus Londinensis ', t. 93, under the name of Randia longifiora, Salisb. (not of Lam.); this is the Gardenia longifiora of ' Ait. Hort. Kew ' ed. 2. v. i. p. 368 (not of * Fl. Peruv.') the Randia macrantJia of De Cand., and Gardenia macrantha, Roeni. and Sch. Yet the plant was supposed to be only known from the figure in the ' Paradisus.' Lastly, we have in the 'Bot. Register,' 1846, tab. 63, a Gardenia from Mr. Whit- field equally introduced by Lord Derby, dedicated to one of the noblest patrons of Botany, His Grace the Duke of Devonshire. A comparison is drawn in favour of this really fine species, as contrasted with our Gardenia Sianleyana given not long pre- viously in the Bot. Mag. above quoted : how far correctly, it being a mere matter of taste, the public may judge. Be that as it may, we cannot but express our opinion that this Gardenia De- voniana is identical with Randia longifiora, Salisb., of which there was a plant six feet high in Mr. Hibbert's collection in 1808, and with Randia Bowieana, which was at Kew before 1815, and is there still, at this moment copiously in flower (April, 1847). The earliest specific name must of course be preferred for that plant. With regard to the present species, warned by former errors, I have taken the greatest pains to see if it is anywhere described; but no published Randia or Gardenia accords with it : indeed, it seems scarcely possible for any one to describe this species without directing attention to the stigma (for so I here denominate the whole upper swollen part of the style) which really looks more like some diseased thing than the usually delicate extremity of a pistil. I may observe, indeed, that I possess from the Hort. Society of London a fruiting specimen of a Gardenia gathered by Mr. G. Don, at Sierra Leone, probably the same and which may be that taken up in Don's edition of ' Miller's Gard. Diet'. under the name of G. ? longifolia : but when it is known that all that is said of this is, ' shrubby,' branched, unarmed ; leaves long, broad, lanceolate, acuminated, entire, membranous, petiolate ; flowers terminal, solitary, sessile ; fruit largish, roundish, smooth,' we may be well excused from coming to any conclusion about it, especially too, seeing that Mr. Don separates it from the ' Euclinice ' of Randia, (where he has placed the long-flowered Sierra Leone species) and puts it in Gardenia, and further remarks, " perhaps a species of Pomatium." Gardenia mallei/era loves heat and moisture, and planted in a good sized pot, with a mixture of peat and loam, makes rapid progress, and begins to flower when only two or three feet high. It would seem in its native country to form a large shrub. We believe at least one other large flowered Gardenia from Sierra Leone, brought also by Mr. Whitfield, is in our collection ; but has not yet flowered. Descr. A shrub four to six feet high, often proliferously branched from the axils of the leaves. Leaves opposite or ternate, from five and six to nine inches long, obovato-lanceolate, glabrous, between membranaceous and coriaceous, quite entire, dark green above, paler beneath, penninerved, shortly acuminated at the apex, the base attenuated into a short and rather broad petiole, brown and transversely cracked. Stipules persistent, small, triangu- lar, acuminate, rigid, brown. Flowers solitary, terminal, or upon a short scaly stalk, or very small branch between the upper pair of petioles, and which sometimes bears two or even three leaves just below the calyx. Calyx rather large, conspicuous, clothed with rusty down ; the tube long, five-angled, the lower half adnate with the germen, the upper free, and embracing the base of the corolla; segments long (sometimes an inch in length), longer than the tube, subulate, flexuose, rigid, erect. Floioer-bud club- shaped ; the segments of the corolla in that state lapping over each other laterally. Corolla a span long, white or cream- white,* soon, in age, changing to tawny ; the outside clothed with a short woolly down : the tube four inches long, as thick as a goose-quill, curved, thin, at the top rather suddenly expanding into a broad campanulate mouth : the limb of five broad ovato- rotundate, slightly wavy, large, spreading segments. This cam- panulate mouth contains the five sessile linear anthers, acute at both ends, placed alternately with the segments, and scarcely projecting beyond the base of the limb. Style filiform, longer than the tube, beyond the mouth singularly enlarged into a club, or rather clapper-shaped stigma, two and a half inches long and half an inch broad in the thickest part, white, solid, fleshy, streaked in the upper extremity longitudinally with impressions of the anthers, which were applied there in the state of the bud. * The Randia Bowieana (Gardenia macrantha, Roem. and Sch.) is figured in Bot. Mag. with yellowish-buff flowers : this is in consequence of the journey the specimen had to make from Kew to Glasgow. All those large-flowered Sierra Leone Gardenia soon change from a pure white, or cream-colour, to buff and tawny, and when dry generally become black. The real stigmatic surface, however, is upon this swollen part, and is distinguished by a cleft on each side the apex, and that cleft is surrounded by a yellow waxy glutinous substance, as shown in our figure. Fig. 1. Anther: — slightly magnified. 2. Pistil: — natural size. del kMx. Tab. 4308. BERBERIS ilicifolia. Holly-leaved Berberry. Nat. Ord. Bebbebide^e. — Hexandbia Monogynia. Gen. Char. Sepala 6 squamis 3 extus stipata. Petala 6 intus biglandulosa. Stamina edentula. Bacca 2-3-spenna. Semina 2, rarius 3, ad basin laterality inserta, erecta, oblonga, testa Crustacea, albumine carnoso, cotyledonibus foliaceis ellipticis, radicula longa apice capitellata. — Ymticesf oliis primariis abortivis et in tpinam scepius mutatis secundariis in axillis fasciculatis. Flores in omnibus fiavi. BC Berbebis ilicifolia; erecta, spinis tripartitis, foliis obovatis acutis coriaceis grosse spinoso-serratis, racemis folio subbrevioribus 4-6-floris, pedicelbs elongatis subcorymbosis, floribus majusculis globosis aurantiacis, baccia late ovatis lagenaeformibus. Berbebis ilicifolia. Forst. Comm. v. 9. p. 28. Linn, f I. Suppl. p. 210. WilU. Sp. PI. v. 2. p. 228. Be Cand. Prodr. v. 1. p. 107. Spreng. Syst. Veget. v. 2. p. 119. Hooh.fil. Fl. Antarct. v. 2. p. 230. t. 86. Berbebis lagenaria. Poir. Bict. v. 8. p. 619. Of this rare and beautiful Berberry, hitherto known only to the hardy adventurer on the coasts of Fuegia, beyond the Straits of Magalhaens, living plants were sent home by the Officers of the Antarctic Voyage, under Capt. Sir James Ross, to the Royal Gardens, with other treasures of those Antarctic regions. So much did they suffer during their perilous voyage, that, of the Berbens, only one could be successfully reared, and that has, during the monthof March, 184 7, produced its deep orange-coloured blossoms which, taken in conjunction with its bright, glossy, holly-leaved foliage, induced Dr. Hooker to consider it, and justly so, the hand- somest known species bf the genus. The wood is pale yellow affordinga gamboge-coloured dye. The berries are of a deep steel blue colour, and remarkable for their gourd-shape form. We trust tobe able to increase it, and to prove that the climate of Britain is suitable to it. Hitherto, on acccount of its variety, we have given it the protection of a cold frame in winter ; and in summer it requires to be well screened from the sun. Descr. It is described as forming a straggling bush in its june 1st, 1847. native country, about eight feet high. Young wood yellow-brown, Stems angular. Spines three-parted, each segment subulate, spreading, often curved. Leaves obovate, petiolate, acute, cori- aceous, dark shining green, especially above, paler beneath ; the margin coarsely and distantly serrated, and each serrature armed with a distinct spur. Racemes axillary, subcorymbose. Pedicels elongated, slender. Mowers globose ; calyx, as well as corolla, of a uniform full golden-yellow or orange colour. Filaments with the anthers bursting by two lateral valves. Ovary subglobose, tapering upwards into the style and that surmounted by a peltate stigma, depressed in the centre. The shape of the entire pistil is that of the bottle-gourd (lageniform). Fig. 1. Petal and stamen. 2. Pistil: — magnified. Tab. 4309. PUYA Altensteinii ; var. gigantea. Altensteins Put/a ; gigantic variety. Nat. Ord. BBOMELIACEiE. — Hexandria Monogynia. Gen. Char. Perigonii liberi sexpartiti lacinice exteriores calycitue, aequales, subconvolutse, interiores petaloideee, inferne convolute, apice patentim renexye marcescendo spiraliter convolutae. Stamina 6 hypogyna ; filamenta subulata, anthera incumbentes, lineares, basi emarginatse. Ovarium liberum, trigonum, triloculare. Ovula plurima, in loculorum angulo centrali biseriata, horizontalia, anatropa. Stylus filiforrais ; stigmata 3, linearia, spiraliter contorta. Capsula cartilaginea, pyraraidato-trigona, trilocularis, loculicido-trivalvis. Semina plurima, compressa, hinc auguste membranaceo-marginata. — Herbse in America tropica et australi extratropica monticolce, caule simplici interdum subarboreo folioso, foliis angmtis spinosis, spick bracteatis solitariis v. panicuhtis. Lhdl. Puya Altemteinii ; caule brevi erecto, foliis inermibus distichis angustis longis- sirais arcuato-pendulis acuminatis nervosis integerrimis aridis margine undulatis in petiolo conduplicato-equitantia attenuatis, spica solitaria pe- dunculata strobiliformi, bracteis inferioribus fobaceis lanceolato-acummatis basi semi-amplexantibus superioribus amcene puniceis oblongo-acutis eon- cavis enerviis sessdibus erectis, floribus sessdibus candidis longe exsertis, foliolis perianthii versus apicem ochraceis, staminibus sequdongis. Puya Altensteinii. Link, Kl. et Otto, Ic. PL Mar. Berol. v. \.t.\. Pitcairnia undulatifolia. Hortulan. Hook. Pot. Mag. t. 4241. /3. gigantea ; 5-6-pedalis, foliis spica triplo majoribus. Some time ago, we received at the Royal Gardens of: Kew a plant, under the name of " Pitcairnia undulatifolia," which was published at Tab. 4241 of the present work. The same was afterwards sent from Berlin under the name of Puya Alten- steinii*-. those two plants were identical, and our figure above quoted represents as accurately the one as the other. In the spring of the present year, 1847, we were astonished by the splendour of a plant, liberally presented to the Gardens by Messrs. Lucombe, Pince, and Co., of the Exeter Nursery, of so * Let it be observed, too, that the figure, in Link, Klotzsch, and Otto's 1 Icones ' above quoted, is as dwarfish as, and in every respect resembles, the Bot. Mag. representation of Pitcairnia undulatifolia. July 1st, 1847. H gigantic a size, with such large leaves and such a massy spike of flowers, with innumerable richly-coloured bracteas, that positively neither I nor those who first saw it with me, could recognize it as the Pitcairnia undulatifolia of Bot. Mag., or the Puya Altensteinii of the Prussian botanists. Yet a rigid com- parison has satisfied me that they are the same, and there is no reason to doubt that, whoever will give the plant plenty of heat, light, moisture, and pot-room, may have it growing in the like perfection with Messrs. Lucombe and Pince. Any one can now assure himself, by looking at the accompanying figure, that I ought not to be satisfied with representing the small state alone of the plant, with the observation that it is a very showy species, and no collection should be without it. The var. gigantea is truly magnificent: its flowering season has hitherto been February and March ; when one such specimen (standing as it does five feet high from the ground) gives effect to a large portion of a stove. The description, given under P. undulatifolia, tab. 4241, will suffice for the present species. lei LlU-i. Tab 4310 HYPOCYRTA leucostoma. White-mouthed Hypocyrta. Nat. Ord. Gesneriace2E. — Didynamia Angiospermia. Gen. Char. Calyx liber, profunde 5-partitus, lobis lanceolatis integerriniis. Corolla tubulosa, basi postice gibba, tubo antice ventricoso, limbo 5-lobo aut 5- dentato subsequali. Stamina 4 didynama cum quinti postici rudimento ex ima basi tubi. Antherae per paria cohserentes. Annulus hypogynus et glandula postica. Stigma bilobum aut infundibuliforme indivisum. Bacca globosa succosa 1-locularis, placentis 2 parietialibus bilobis. Semina oo oblonga aut ovata. — Fruticuli Brasilienses extend et radicantes, rarius erecti. Folia opposita crassiuscula. Flores axillares solitarii aut aggregati. Corolla} coccinece rosea alba aut ochroleucce. DC. Hypocyrta leucostoma ; erecta tota pubescenti-tomentosa, caule herbaceo ob- tuse tetragono, foliis oppositis petiolatis oblongo-lanceolatis insigniter rugosis crenato-sen-atis, pedicellis axillaribus aggregatis petiolum sub- a3quantibus, floribus nutantibus, corollee subvillosse tubo aurantiaco latera- liter compresso antice sursum insigniter ventricoso dorso basi gibboso, ore contracto, limbi albi laciniis rotundatis suba3qualibus. A Gesneriaceous plant, received by Mr. Purdie from New Grenada ; and which I think I am not incorrect in referring to Martius' genus Hypocyrta, the first extra-Brazilian species yet described. The genera of Gesneriacece may still, however, be said to be in a very unsettled state. It bears its pretty drooping axillary flowers in the moist stove in April. Descr. Plant about a foot high, erect, obtusely tetragonal, clothed in every part with a short copious but rather rigid covering of woolly hairs. Leaves on lateral compressed petioles, opposite, oblong, or subovato-lanceolate, acuminate, crenato-serrate, penninerved: the nerves united by closely interwoven reticulations, so as to give a nettle-like roughness to the surface (densely rugose). Petioles nearly half an inch long. Peduncles about the length of the petiole, axillary, erect, hairy, aggregated, simple, bearing each a solitary drooping flower. Calyx of five nearly equal, oblong, acute sepals. Corolla three quarters of an inch long : the tube slightly hairy, tawny July 1st, 1847. H ^ orange, laterally compressed, beneath, near the limb, very ven- tricose, at the base above gibbose : this gibbosity varies in our specimens, sometimes forming a spur; but in that particular corolla, on the opposite side, is a petaloid strap-shaped appendage. Stamens inclosed, four, didynamous, with a minute abortive fifth. Ovary ovate, silky, the base surrounded by an annular disc. Distinct glands obsolete. Style included, articulated upon the ovary. Stigma subinfundibuliform, oblique. Fig. 1. Flower. 2. Corolla laid open. 3. Pistil. 4. Ovary cut through transversely : — magnified. ,.vj Tab. 4311. ECHINOCACTUS hex^drophorus. Hewcedron- Echinocactus. Nat. Ord. Cacte^e.— Icosandria Monogtnia. Gen. Char. {Fide supra, Tab. 4190.) Echinocactus hexadrophorus ; globosus vertice planus saturate glaucus mammillarie tuberculatus tuberculis plane hexsedris in duplicem senem altemantibus (verticalem et spiralem), areolis immersis albido-tomentosis sursum elongatis, aculeis septem radiantibus insequahbus, centrah nno validiori et duple- longiori, omnibus teretibus subulatis stnatis. Lam. Echinocactus hexaadrophorus. Lemaire, Cact. Nov. Gen. et Sp. p. 27. Walp. Repert.Bot. v. 2. p. 322. This handsome Cactus has long been cultivated at Kew, under the name here given, and it is said by the authority for that name to be a native of Tampico. It is of a nearly globose form and remarkable for its large tubercles, which are obscurely six-sided, whence the specific appellation is derived. Lemaire further says that the direction of these tubercles is in a double series, vertical and spiral; the double series in our plant is not an evident character, though it may sometimes be discerned. Its flowering season is June, and the blossoms are lively and pretty. Descr. Entire plant subglobose or turbinate, flattened at tne top, divided into large six-sided depressed mammillae, the lower and older part compressed and brown, the rest of a glaucous tint, the tubercles or mammillae arrayed in spiral lines with deep furrows between them. The areola is indicated by a linear depression in the disc of the tubercle, from which the cluster of spines springs. The spines are from four to seven in number, varying in length from half an inch to nearly an inch; the central one is the longest and strongest : all of them are rather stout, of a reddish-brown, subulate, more or less spreading. Flowers 2—3 from the crown of the plant. Calyx gradually passing into the numerous delicate, spreading, closely imbricated, July 1st, 1847. linear petals, white, streaked with pink or deep rose on the outside, and sometimes faintly so within : their base is yellow. Stamens numerous, compact, full yellow. Stigma of 9 — 11 white spreading rays. ,w jve.uf Tab. 4312. ACHIMENES cupreata. Copper-leaved Achimenes. Nat. Ord. Gesnebiace^e. — Didynamia Angiospermia. Gen. Char. Calycis tubus ovario adnatus, limbus 5-partitus, Iobis lanceolatis. Corolla tubuloso-infuncbbidiformis basi hinc sa3pe gibba, limbo piano 5-fido, lobis subsequalibus subrotundis. Stamina A, didynama, antheris non cohserentibus. Rudimentum statu, quinti corollae basi. inferne impositum. Nectarium glandu- losum annulare tenue. Stylus in stigma vix incrassatum obliquum aut sub- bilobum abeuns. Capmla semibilocularis bivalvis, placentis parietalibus sub- sessikbus. — Herbse Americana erecta villosce. Folia opposita aut ternato-verti- cittata petiolata dentata. Pedicelli unijlori axillares. Corollae coccinea aut purpurea. DC. Achimenes cupreata ; repens stolonifera undique pubescenti-hirsuta, foliis ellip- ticis petiolatis serratis reticulatim mgosis coloratis, pedunculis axillaribus solitariis petiolo longioribus uuifloris, calycis laxi profunde 5-partiti, laciniis subspatbulatis insequalibus, corollae tubo calycem subduplo superante curvato intus maculato ore fimbriato limbi patenti laciniis rotundatis planis ciliato-dentatis, staminibus styloque inclusis, ovario hirsuto hinc basi nni-glanduloso. A new and highly interesting species of Achimenes, remarkable for the dark-copper colour on the upper side of its rather large, elliptical leaves (not unlike, in hue, those of the copper-coloured beech), purplish-rose beneath, and the rich scarlet flowers, with the segments of the limb, beautifully toothed and ciliated. It was detected by Mr. Purdie, on moist banks, near Sona, New Grenada, and from seeds sent by him in September, 1845, to the Royal Gardens, plants were reared which flowered in April, 1847. It requires the same treatment as other species of Achi- menes. A shallow pan is soon filled with it owing to the extraordinary stoloniferous nature of the plant ; among the dark coppery leaves the bright flowers have a very pretty effect. Bescr. Boot a much-jointed rhisoma. Stems varying in length, creeping, branched, and stoloniferous, sending out radicles abundantly from the procumbent branches. A main branch rises erect a few inches from the ground, and this portion seems to bear the flowers and the largest leaves. Leaves hairy, July 1st, 1847. with rather short dense down, as is almost every part of the plant, elliptical and obtuse, reticulato-venose, wrinkled, serrate, above rather glossy and dark copper-coloured, beneath purplish- rose. Peduncles erect, solitary, axillary, longer than the petioles, single-flowered. Flower inclined almost horizontally. Calyx however, erect, divided to the base into five, lax, spathulate lobes, of which one is smaller than the rest and more spreading, forced back, as it were, by the gibbous base of the corolla! Corolla rich scarlet, hypocrateriform ; tube hairy, twice as long as the calyx, yellow, spotted with red within, mouth fimbriated. Limb oblique, of five rounded, dentato-ciliate, spreading segments. Stamens four, didynamous. Filaments united at the base. Anthers combined. Ovary hairy, with a large yellow gland corresponding with the spur of the corolla. Style included. Stigma capitate, with an oblique perforation. Fig. 1. Calyx and pistil. 2. Corolla laid open. 3. Ovary and gland. 4. Section of ditto : — magnified. Tab. 4313. ANGULOA Clowesii, var. Mr. Clowes' Angoloa, variety. Nat. Ord. Orchide^e. — Gynandria Monandria. Gen. CJiar. Flores subglobosi, nunquam patentes. Sepala lateralia invicem imbricantia, basi valde convexa, nee in cornu producta ; alteram nunc anticum nunc posticum, conforme, basi planum. Petala sepalo dorsali sequalia, et simiba. Labellum coriaceum, unguiculatum, subconvolutum, trilobum, lamina camosa lata plana supra medium auctum, basi quasi bilabiatum. Colunma teres, clavata, Hbera; cbnandrio nunc mutico, nunc lacinia acuta porrecta utrinque aucto. Anther a galeata, valvis membranaceis nunc in lacinulas acutas productis. Pollinia 4, plana, insequalia, caudicula longa lineari, et glandula acuta. — Herbae tee Granatenses et Peruvianae, Lycastis/«eie. DC. Anguloa Clowesii; pedunculo unifloro radicab laxe squamato, flore carnoso (resupinato, Lindl.) sepalis petalisque ovatis convexis conniventibus, labelli trilobi lobo medio pilose- infundibulari bilabiato tridentato, columna integra. Anguloa Clowesii. Lindl. Bot. Reg. 1144. Misc. 29. et tab. 63. Var. floribus flavis, labelli lobo medio aurantiaco. Notwithstanding some very trifling discrepancies in structure, and more marked ones in the colour of the flower, I cannot consider this fine plant other than a var. of Anguloa Cloivesii, figured by Dr. Lindley in the ' Botanical Register ' above quoted. Our flowers have, indeed, the ordinary position of those of Orchi- dece generally, and are not " resupinate ", as Dr. Lindley's flower was, according to his acceptation of the term ; but probably much stress cannot be laid on that character. The plant here figured was sent by Mr. Purdie to the Royal Gardens of Kew, and bloomed in the collection at Syon (whence our figure is derived) under the skilful management of Mr. Carton, in May, 1847. The blossoms are fragrant. Desc. Pseudo-bulbs, when old, leafless, oblong, broadest above the base, obscurely furrowed. Leaves several, broadly obovato- lanceolate, membranous, striated, arising from scarcely-formed pseudo-bulbs, which are surrounded by green scales or im- perfect leaves. Scapes single-flowered, from the base of the pseudo-bulbs, about twice the length of them, erect, stout, July 1st, 1847. partially clothed with sheathing green bracteas, the largest one embracing the ovary. Flower large, handsome, fragrant, sub- globose, almost entirely of an uniform yellow colour. Petals and sepals uniform, except that the former are smaller, broadly orbicular, ovate, acute, very concave. Lip rather shorter than the rest of the perianth, ovate, concave at the base, three-lobed, lateral lobes acute, yellow, glabrous, intermediate one hairy, orange-coloured, subdeltoid, three-toothed (middle tooth very large), two-lipped, upper lip subobcordate, much shorter than the acuminated lower one. Column large, wingless. Caudicula of the pollen-masses toothless in this variety. Pig. 1. Labellum 2. Pollen-masses : — magnified. 4314. Tab. 4314. LEUCOTHOE pulchra. Elegant Leucothoe. Nat. Ord. Etuce^e. — Decandkia Monogynia. Gen. Cliar. Calyx 3-lobus, lobis nee demum carnosis nee sensim auctis. Corolla ovata aut cylindracea, rarius ovato-campanulata, ore plus minus contracto 5-dentato. Stamina 10 inclusa, filam. subdilatatis complanatis seepe villosis, antheris ovatis truncatis muticis apice biporosis. Stylus filiformis. Stigma simplex capitatum. Capsula depresso-globosa, 5-locul., 5-valvis, loculicido- dehiscens, suturis nullo modo ut in Lyonia valvaeformibus. Semina ovato- angulato.— Frutices elegantes Americani aut Asiatici. Folia sempervirentiaaut decidua, integra aut dentata. Flores albi aut rarius coccinei, dispositione varii. Leucothoe pulchra ; erecta glaberrima, ramis angulatis, foliis brevissime petio- latis elliptico-cordatis obtusis retusis mucronatis coriaceis marginatis siccitate pracipue reticulatis subtus nervis prominentibus, racemis folia longe superantibus axillaribus sobtariis pendentibus, floribus secundis, corollis ovato-cylindraceis, limbi dentibus parvis erectis. Leucothoe pulchra. De Cand. Prodr. v.l.p. 604. Andbomeda pulchra. Cham, et Schlecht. in Linnaa, v. 1. p. 521. et v. 8. p. 507. (non Arrab.) Aganota pulchra. Bon, Card. Diet. v. 3. ^.837- Received at the Royal Gardens of Kew, from Mr. Makoy of Liege, as a " Vaccinium " from Caraccas. It will now merge in the genus Leucothoe as restricted by De Candolle, and is unques- tionably the Andromeda {Leucothoe) pulchra of Chamisso and Schlechtendal, of which we have authentic specimens from Brazil, chiefly gathered by Sellow. L. pulchella (Androm. Cham, et Schlecht.) is probably not different ; and L. crassifoha and L. cre- nifolia are perhaps mere forms of the same species. This plant flowers in a cool green-house in May, and is equally handsome in foliage and in flower. Descr. A shrub, two or more feet high, glabrous in every part. Branches erect, many-angled, pale brown. Leaves rather closely placed, alternate, on very short petioles, an inch or rarely more long, elliptical-cordate, coriaceous, obtuse, mucronate, reticu- lated with small areola?, principally seen when dry, and parti- JULY 1st, 1847. cularly on the underside : the primary nerves have there frequently a conspicuous gland, at a little distance from the mid-rib. Racemes four inches or more long, consequently much longer than the leaves, axillary, solitary, pendent. Pedicels shorter then the flower, bracteolated. Flowers numerous, unilateral, pointing downwards. Calyx articulated upon the pedicel, fleshy at the base, with five short broad, acute, slightly ciliated lobes. Corolla between ovate and cylindrical, greenish- white, with a pale obscure reddish band near the middle -. mouth small, with five small erect teeth. Stamens ten. Filaments dilated below, hairy, with a double curve below the anther, which latter is ovate, muticous, opening by two pores, the pore or mouth two-lipped. Ovary globose. Style straight, included. Fig. 1. Flower. 2. Pistil. 3. Stamen : — magnified. '*315 Tab. 4315. LIEBIGIA speciosa. Showy Liebigia. Nat. Ord. Cyrtandrace,e. — Didynamia Angiospermia. Gen. Char. Calyx tubulosus 4-5-fidus lobis subasqualibus. Corolla infundi- buliibrmis sursum ampbata limbo insequali 5-lobo subbilabiato. Slam. 4 inclusa quorum 2 antherifera. Antherce biloculares cohserentes, loculis insertione sequa- libus. Stigma subbilamellatum. Capsula siliquaeformis elongata pseudo-4 locularis bivalvis, septi contrarii lobis in margine revoluto seminiferis. Semina minuta pendula basi in alam membranaceam expansa. — Frutices Javani seu Moluccani, erecti aut radicardes. Folia opposita eequalia aut ineequalia serrata. Pedunculi elongati axillares. — Genus Didymocarpo affine, seminibus saltern basi membranaceo-alatis distinctissimum. DC. Liebigia speciosa ; elata, erecta, pubescenti-scabra, foliis oppositis inaequalibus ovato-ellipticis acuminatis serratis supra hirsuto-asperis, pedunculis axillaris bus aggregatis bifidis dicbotomisvc, floribus diandris. Liebigia speciosa. Be Cand. Prodr. v. 9. p. 259. Tromsdorffia speciosa. Blume, Bijdr. p. 762. This is a lovely plant, well deserving the name of "speciosa ", and, in its genus, equally worthy to bear the name of the most distinguished Chemist of the present day. It was discovered in Java by Blume, and in the work above quoted is published as a new genus under the name of Tromsdorffia ; but there being already a genus of Martius bearing that appellation, that given by Endlicher is here adopted. The species was imported from Java through the means of that zealous collector, Mr. Thos. Lobb ; and we had the gratification of receiving the fine specimens here figured in February, 1847, from Messrs. Veitch and Son of Exeter. Descr. Stem herbaceous, a foot and a half to two feet high, terete, rough with harsh down. Leaves large, opposite, the pairs unequal in size, spreading, petiolate, rough with harsh down, and the upper side still more rough with rigid hairs ; the form between ovate and elliptical, acuminate, serrated, penninerved and reticulated. Peduncles axillary, aggregated, much shorter than the leaves, forked or dichotomous, the upper ones almost panicled or corymbose, the pedicels bracteated. Flowers drooping, AUGUST 1st, 1847. T Calyx tubular, subcylindrical, tapering at the base, the mouth cut into five erect, nearly equal teeth. Corolla tubular ; limb spreading, oblique, of five nearly equal lobes, pale yellow-white, with a purple tinge above near the base. Filaments four, (with an imperfect fifth), of which two are abortive, terminated each by a lax tuft of hairs : the longer ones are fertile and have also a short tuft of hair beneath the anthers. Ovary linear- terete, arising from a fleshy ring. Stigma obscurely two-lobed, depressed in the centre. Pig. 1. Stamens. 2. Pistil: — magnified. M16. Tab. 4316. abelia floribunda. Copious-flowering Abelia. Nat. Ord. Caprifoliace^:. — Didyjjamia Angiospermia. Gen. Char. Calycis tubus oblongus, limbus 2- vel 5 -partitas foliaceus, laciniis oblongis. Corolla tubuloso-infundibubformis 5-loba, lobis ovatis subaequalibus. Stamina 4 didynama vel subsequalia. Stigma capitatum. Ovarium 3-loculare, loculis 2 polyspermis abortientibus, tertio monospermo fertili. Pericarpium 1-spermum indehiscens calycis limbo foliaceo aucto coronatum. — Frutices de- cumbentes v. debiles glabri. Folia petiolata dentato-crenata. Pedunculi modo terminates indivisi. Involucrum bi-multiflorum, foliolis sex pluribusve. DC. Abelia Jtoribunda ; fruticosa erecta, foliis brevi-petiolatis ovatis obtusis reticu- laris glabris ciliatis, pedunculis subtenninabbus axillaribus 1-3-floris bi- bracteolatis, involucro minimo 1-5-dentato, calycis laciniis lineari-oblongis foliaceis ciliatis, corollis nutantibus (magnis) longe tubulosis, tubo inferne constricto superne dilatato intus hirsuto, limbi laciniis rotundatis subaequa- libus patentibus, filamentis hirsutis styloque exsertis. Abelia noribunda. " Decaisne, MS. in Van Houtte, Fl.der Gewachshdus. und Garten, v. 2. t. 4." Walpers, Repert. Bot. St/st. v. 6. p. 3. Vesalea noribunda and Vesalea hirta. Mart, et Galeot. Bullet, de VAcad. Brux. xi. No. 3. p. 31. From the Royal Gardens of Kew, to which it was presented by M. Van Houtte. It is a Greenhouse plant, and bears its lovely flowers during the spring months, continuing a long time in great beauty. The species has attracted much attention, and has been exhibited at the Horticultural shows with the generic name variously written, and sometimes corrupted into Russeha. Martens and Galeotti assure us, in the Bulletin above quoted, that it is cultivated in the Gardens of Belgium under the name of Fuc/mcs sp. Mexic. Vesalea, however, is the name originally given to it by Martens and Galeotti, in compliment to a distin- guished anatomist, Vesale (" in honorem celeberrimi Belgici Anatomici Vesalei). In constituting this new genus of Capri- foliacea, they notice, indeed, its affinity with Abelia of Brown, and Decaisne is quite correct in removing it to Abelia itself. All the other Abelias are Chinese or Japanese, even A. n/pestris, AUGUST 1st, 1847. Lindl. (the " Chamoo hills ", where it was found by Mr. Fortune, being situated in China, not the East Indies as stated by Walpers), with the exception of Dr. Wallich's Abelia triflora, which is from Kamoun in Northern India. The Mexican species was discovered by Galeotti in the Cordillera of Oaxaca and Vera Cruz (there also by Linden), on the peak of Orizaba ; elevations between 9—10,000 feet. Descr. Our Plant is between two and three feet high, shrubby, branched, erect, but of rather straggling growth, the younger branches pubescent. Leaves opposite, ovate, sometimes broadly so, small, obtuse, crenate, glabrous, minutely ciliated at the margin, much veined and reticulated, more so beneath, and there of a paler colour. Flowers axillary, but from the extremity of the branches, large, handsome, pendent. Peduncles with two small bracteas, short, one-, two-, or three-flowered. Ovary inferior, almost fusiform, flattened on one side: a transverse section exhibits two small (abortive?) cells, and one large (fertile ?) one : this ovary is inserted in a very minute irregularly- toothed involucre. Ca^a?-segments five, very large, linear-oblong, erecto-patent, foliaceous, veiny, ciliated, two generally more or less combined. Corolla two inches or more long, purple-red : the tube long, narrow at the base, gradually enlarging upwards, a little curved, hairy within ; limb nearly regular, of five obtuse, rounded lobes. Stamens four, slightly didynamous. Filaments a little exserted, hairy, inserted above the base of the corolla. Anther oblong. Style slender, filiform, exserted a little beyond the stamens. Stigma dilated. Fig. 1. Calyx and pistil. 2. Corolla laid open. 3. Inferior ovary cut through transversely : — magnified. usn. Tab. 4317. DRYANDRA carduacea ; var. angustifolia. Thistle-like Dryandra ; narrow-leaved variety. Nat. Ord. Proteace^e. — Tetrandria Monogynia. Gen. Char. Perianthium 4-partitum v. 4-fidum. Stamina apicibus concavis laciniarum immersa. Squamula hypogynae 4. Ovarium triloculare, loculis monospermis. Folliculus ligneus : dissepimento libero, bifido. Receptaculum commune planum, floribus indeterminatim confertis : paleis angustis, raro nullis. Involucrum commune imbricatum. — Frutices plerumque humiles. Kami dum adsint sparsi v. umbellati. Folia sparsa, pinnatifida v. incisa, plants juvenilis conformia. Tnvolucra solitaria, terminalia, raro lateralia, sessilia, foliis confertis, interioribus quandoque nanis obvallata, hemispharica, bracteis adpressis, in qui- busdam apice appendiculatis. Stylus seepe perianthio vix longior. Br. Bryandra carduacea ; ramis pubescentibus, foliis lanceolatis remote sinuato- spinoso-dentatis versus basin nunc spinoso-pinnatifidis, supra glabris subtus niveo-tomentosis, involucri glabri (floribus triplo minoris) foliolis arete imbricatis erectis subulatis exterioribus latioribus nunc basin versus spinosis interioribus longioribus apice ciliatis, perianthiis sericeis, stylo basi glabro, stigmate parvo oblongo obtuso. Bryandra carduacea. Lindl. Swan River Bot. p. xxxiii. Meum. in PL Prehs. ^?.591. fi. angustifolia; foliis angustioribus. Tab. nostr. 4317. A Swan River species of Bryandra, discovered by Mr. Drum- mond, and reared in the Royal Gardens of Kew from seeds sent by that indefatigable and most successful botanist. Our living plants in the Proteaceous House only differ from dried ones in having narrower leaves. It flowers in the spring months. Descr. Our Plants are three feet high, erect, much branched; the branches terete, the young ones downy, leaves scattered, rather distant, sessile, lanceolate, in our variety linear-lanceolate, spreading and recurved, harsh and rigid, remotely sinuato- dentate, the teeth broad, decurrent, tipped with a sharp spine or mucro, and the leaf terminated by the same : the base is some- times entire, sometimes almost pinnatifid with rather long spinous teeth: the upper surface is indistinctly veined, dark green, glabrous, the underside clothed with compact white down Ihe capitula terminate short branches, and are surrounded, as it were, august 1st, 1847. by a rosule of spreading leaves. Involucre of many closely-imbri- cated, mostly subulate scales, the outer ones shorter and broader, and sometimes spinous at the margin ; the inner ones longer and narrower and ciliated at the tips. Florets numerous, the segments of the perianth linear-spathulate, clothed with yellowish silky hairs. Anthers sunk in the hollow of the spathulate apex. Style longer than the flower, tipped with a rather small cylindrical glabrous stigma. Fig. 1. Floret : — magnified. US18. Tab. 4318. SALVIA LEUCANTHA. White-flowered Salvia. Nat. Ord. Labiate. — Decandria Monogynia. Gen. Char. Calyx bilabiatus, labio superiore integro v. tridentato, inferiore bilobo. Corolla bilabiata, labio superiore erecto fornicato v. falcato, inferiore patente trifido. Stamina fertilia 2, sub labio superiore ascendentia. Momenta brevissima, tubo inclusa. Anthem dimidiatse ; connectivo elongato filiformi incurvo, postice sfepius clavato, rarius antherse loculura alteram gerente. Stylus apice bifidus, lobo superiore saepius breviore. Achenia sicca. Benth. Salvia leucantha ; fruticosa, foliis breviter petiolatis anguste oblongo-lahceolatis acutis crenato-serratis supra rugosis nudiusculis subtus albo-lauatis, racemo elongato, verticillastris multifloris infimis remotis, calycibus subsessilibus ovatis pulcberrime dense violaceo-lanatis, labio superiore integro dentibusque labii inferioris ovatis acutis, corollis calyce duplo longioribus albis lanatis tubo exserto ampliato subventricoso, labiis abbreviatis superiore erecto integro inferioris lobis lateralibus rotundatis medio emarginato, connectivo postice lineari-dilatatis deflexis comiatis, stylo barbato. Salvia leucantha. Cavan. Ic. v. 1. p. 16. t. 24. Benth. Lab. p. 275. Sprang. Syst. Veget. v. 1. p. 58. This rare and remarkable Salvia possesses in its numerous flowers, in the rich violet or lavender coloured tomentum of the calyx, and the pure white of the corollas, a beauty which cannot well be represented on paper. It is a native of Mexico, and has now been first introduced to the Greenhouse of this country, from a garden at Nice, by Lady Smirke, Great Stanmore, Middlesex ; in whose collection it flowered in June, 1847. Descr. Plant a foot and a half to two feet high : branches rather obtusely four-angled, elongated, woolly, chiefly while young. Leaves narrow, oblong-lanceolate, on short petioles acute, rugose and almost glabrous, dark green above, beneath clothed with greenish white woolly down. Spile or raceme very much elongated : the rachis clothed with violet-coloured wool. Pseudo-whorls rather distant below, naked or subtended by subulate deciduous bracteas. Floivers six to eight or more m a whorl, crowded, nearly sessile. Calyx ovato-cylindrical clothed with dense violet or lavender-coloured wool, paler and almost august 1st, 1847. white beneath ; upper lip entire •. lower, in three short, ovate segments. Corolla about twice the length of the calyx, white and woolly, tube (the exserted portion) thick, curved upwards, with a contraction on the underside below the mouth : limb bifid : lips short, upper one erect, entire, helmet-shaped, covering the anthers ; lower one three-lobed ; lateral lobes almost obsolete, rounded ; intermediate one short, emarginate. Stamens included, the posterior portions of the connectivum linear-dilatate, deflexed and connate. Below the two fertile stamens are two very minute abortive ones. Style included, clavate, bearded above. Stigma bifid ; segments subulate, unequal. Tig. 1. Flower. 2. Corolla laid open. 3. Pistil: — magnified. Titdli.lel- • ^.eevt Tab 4319 PENTSTEMON Gordoni. Mr. Gordon s Pentstemon. Nat. Ord. ScuophularinejE. — Didynamia Angiospermia. Gen. Char. Cat. 5-partitus. Cor. ventricoso-tubulosa, limbi labio superiore nunc basi concavo apice bilobo, nunc usque ad basin bipartite, rarius elongato emarginato ; inferiore patente trifido basi intus barbato v. nudo. Stamina fer- tilia basi declinata, apice adscendentia ; anthera varise. Stamen quinti filamenti sterile subulatum, apice saepe dilatatum barbatum v. nudum, cseteris sequilongum vel vix dimidio brevius. Stylus apice capitato-stigmatosus. Capsula septicide biYalvis, valvulis integris bifidisve. Semina numerosa, immarginata, nunc ovoideo- triquetra incurva, nunc apice truncata angulis acutis. — Herbae America borealis, basi perennes v. fruticosa, ramosts, ramis fioriferis s&pius erectis simplicibus, rarius diffusis ramosis. Folia opposita, radicalia et infima petiolata, gradatim infioralia amplexicaulia decrescentia . Peduncudi dichotome pluriflori ad ramificationes bracteati, in paniculam sen thyrsum terminaleni basi sapius foliatum dispositi, rarius tmiflori subjlore oppositi bibracteolati et articulati in racemum simplicet??, dispositi. Corollae speciosa>, rubra violacece ccprulece albida v. rarius ochroleucrp. Pentstemon Gordoni ; elatus, viridis, Mis radicalibus oblongo-spathulatis pe- tiolatis, caulinis lato-lanceolatis sessibbus subamplexicaubbus integerrimis, pedunculis plurifloris axillaribus paniculam spicatam foliosam formantibus, sepalis parvis ovatis apicidatis imbricatis margine membranaceis, corolla? caerulese tubo superne ampliato, limbi bilabiati lobis inaequalibus, antheris filamentoque sterili hirsutis. For the opportunity of figuring this charming species of Pentstemon I am indebted to Edward Leeds, Esq., of Manchester, who raised it from seeds given him by Mr. Shepherd of the Botanic Gardens, Liverpool, and which had been collected by Mr. Gordon in the valley of the Platte River, on the east side of the Rocky Mountains. I possess native specimens from the same traveller, gathered in the same locality, and also from Mr. Geyer, collected in the " Upper Platte ", on slate hills near the junction of the Horse and Laramie Rivers. In many respects it approaches the Pentstemon speciosus, an inhabitant exclusively of the Oregon territory, west of the Rocky Mountains ; but that has much narrower leaves, a less leafy panicle, deeper coloured flowers, a larger calyx, and, above all, the anthers and sterile august 1st, 1847. filaments glabrous. The present species seems to be quite hardy, but, Mr. Leeds observes, is impatient of too much moisture, and it should be kept quite dry from November until February. It flowers in June, when the large sky-blue flowers render the plant a very beautiful object. Descr. Plant varying from 8-10 inches to a foot or a foot and a half high under cultivation, glabrous. Stem erect, herba- ceous, terete, tinged with purple. Boot-leaves spathulate, entire, those of the stem broadly lanceolate, sessile, subamplexicaul, also entire, acuminate ; the upper ones gradually becoming bracteas. The axils of the leaves of the upper half or more of the plant bear many-flowered peduncles, the whole forming a leafy elongated panicle. Flowers large, handsome, a rich ama- thystine blue. Calyx very small in proportion to the size of the flowers j their segments ovate, subaristato-acuminate. Tube of the corolla infundibuliform, ventricose above : limb two-lipped ; upper cut into two short, erect lobes ; lower, into three reflexed, deeper ones, of which the middle is the smallest and most reflexed. Sterile filament bearded at the apex on the upper side. Fig. 1. Root-leaf; and 2, lower stem and leaves: — natural size. 3. Stamens. 4. Pistil: — magnified. >3Z0. Tab. 4320. tESCHYNANTHUS speciosus. Shoioy JEschynanthus. Nat. Ord. Cyrtandrace^:. — Didynamia Gymnospermia. Gen Char. ( Vide supra, Tab. 4236.) ^Eschynanthus speciosus ; ramis junioribus subtetragonis, foliis oppositis v. ternatis supremis (floriferis) verticillatis ovato-lanceolatis camosis obsolete serratis acuminatis, floribus terminalibus numerosis fasciculatis puberulis, pedunculis erectis unifloris, calycis 5-partiti laciniis liiteari-subulatis erectis appressis, corolla; tubo longissimo clavato superne curvato dorso convexo subtus concavo-canaliculato, ore obliquo 4-lobo lobis patentibus rotundatis superiore bifido, fllamentis styloque exsertis. This, in our opinion at least, was the most charming of the many tine plants exhibited at the Regent's Park Garden Show in May 1847 and is unquestionably the most beautiful species, yet known to us, of a genus eminent for the rich colouring of its blossoms. Judging, however, from the dried specimens of another kind {jfisch. lonaifloriis) which has yet flowered but imperfectly with Messrs. Veitch and Son, we shall soon have the opportunity of figuring one which will yie with the pre- sent, if it does not exceed it, in the size of the flowers and m depth of colouring. To the two species in question, the charac- teristic given by Blume of M longifiorm is almost equally app i- cable : but the term " folia acuminatissima , accords better with the plant last mentioned than with that now before > us^ Mr. Thos. Lobb, from whom the seeds were received by Messrs. Veitch and Son, detected this plant, in Java, on Mount Asapan near Bantam, attached to the trunks of forest trees. It requires the same treatment as tropical Orchideous plants. Descr. Stems about two feet long, according to Mr. Lobb ; the lower part woody: the upper and young branches subtetra gonous and herbaceous. Leaves opposite or ternate, mostly nearly sessile, the uppermost ones beneath the flowers m a whorl of four to six or eight ; the form is between ovate and lanceolate, acuminate, the texture very fleshy, the margin obscurely serrated. august 1st, 1847. Flowers in terminal fascicles of from six to ten and even twenty, large, handsome, showy, slightly pubescent. Peduncle erect, short, single-flowered. Calyx cut to the base in five deep almost subulate, erect segments. Corolla between three and four inches long, full orange, with the extremity scarlet: the tube clavate, curved downward at the extremity, and there convex at the back, concave or canaliculate beneath (within glandular) : the mouth oblique, four-lobed, the lobes patent, rounded, the upper one bifid : each lobe bears a lunulate, black line, forming the boundary between the orange and red colour. Stamen and style exserted. Ovary linear, inserted in a fleshy gland or cup. Stigma transversely grooved. Fig. 1. Pistil: — magnified. Tab. 4321. MEDINILLA speciosa. Shoioi/ Medinilla. Nat. Ord. Melastomace^e. — Octandria Monogynia. Gen. Char. Calycis tubus obovatus ecostatus, limbus cylindricus tubo con- tinuus exacte truucatus persistens. Petala 4 ovata obtusa subcoriacea. Stamina 8 agqualia, antberis elongatis acutis uniporosis basi obtuse biauriculatis. Ova- rium superne truneatum. Stylus filiibrmis. Stigma punctum prurnosum. Capsula baccata lagenaria nempe globosa calycis tubo coronata 4-locularis. Semina ovoidea lsevia. — Frutex glaber. Hamuli tetragoni. Folia 3-4 verticillata ! pi-tiolata ovalia mucronata triplinervia integerrima. Cyrnse %-5-florce axillares, ped/mculo petiolum vix super ante. Flores albo-rosei. DC. Medinilla speciosa ; ramulis alato-tetrahedris, foliis subsessilibus verticillato- -(tevnis)-quaternisque raro oppositis ovali-oblongis uti'insecus attenuatis basive obtusis 7-9-uerviis (raro quintuplinerviis), paniculis tenninalibus axillaribusque nutantibus, floribus 6-10-audris. Bl. Medinilla speciosa. Bl. in Flora, oder Bot. Zeit. v. 14. p. 515. Walpers, Repert. v. 2. p. 142. Melastoma eximium. BL Bijdr.p. 1072. (nou Jack). M. speciosa. Reiuiv. in Bl. The genus Medinilla, remarkable for the beauty of the foliage, and the delicacy of the flowers, was established by Gaudichaud, in the Botany of Freycinet's Voyage, in honour of Don Jose de Medinilla y Pineda, Governor of the Marianne Islands, in which group the first species (M. rosea) was disco- vered. Blume has since increased the number of species very considerably, and no less than twenty five stand recorded by Walpers. M. speciosa, as its name would imply, is among the most beautiful, and perhaps exceeds them all in the fine panicle of delicate rose-coloured flowers, gracefully drooping from among the rich green and ample foliage. It is an inhabitant of Java, and is among the treasures of that island sent home to Messrs. Veitch and Son by Mr. Thos. Lobb. The noble flowering specimen from which our drawing is made, was exhibited at the Chiswick Horticultural fete in July, 1847. The species is also n- 836 of Mr. Cuming's specimens from the Philippine Islands. SEPTEMBER 1ST, 1847. K Descr. A shrub about tour feet and a half high in the present instance, erect, branched : the branches di- or tri-chotomous, tri- or tetragonous, the angles winged, glabrous as is the whole plant. Leaves in our plant rarely opposite, mostly in whorls of from three to four, large, handsome, nearly sessile, oval, or oval- oblong, often waved on the surface, usually obtuse at the base, acuminate at the point, quite entire, five- or seven-nerved, the nerves beneath and often the margin red. Where the leaves have fallen away a circle of harsh wiry hairs surrounds the stem, especially at the setting on of the branches. Panicle terminal, branched almost to the base, and so dense as to form a thrysus a span long, drooping, main peduncle and branches red : the secondary branches in whorls : ultimate pedicels short. Calyx urceolate, pale red, truncate, deepest coloured towards the margin. Petals four to five, ovate, acute, spreading, delicate rose. Stamens eight to ten : f laments subulate : anther longer than the filament, curved, subulate, with two blunt anterior horns at the base and a short spur there behind. Style filiform, shorter than the stamens, curved. Fig. 1. Flower. 2. Calyx and pistil. 3. Stamen : — magnified. teZZ. Tab. 4322. GARDENIA longistyla. Long-styled Gardenia. Nat. Ord. Rubiacete. — Pentandria Monogynia. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tab. 4185.) Gardenia longistyla ; inermis fruticosa, foliis ovalibus apiculatis pubescenti- villosis, floribus terminalibus fasciculatis, calycis pubescentis tubo cylin- draceo, lirabi laciniis subulatis erectis, corollas hypocrateriformis tubo lon- gissime exserto, stigmate magno globoso didymo. Randia longistyla. Be Cand. Frodr. v. 4. p. 388. Another beautiful Gardenia, as I consider it to be, rather than a Randia, from tropical western Africa: for the intro- duction of which our stoves are indebted to Mr. Whitfield. For the fine flowering specimen we are obliged to Messrs. Lucombe, Pince, and Co., of the Exeter Nursery,, in whose houses its cluster of blossoms was produced in June, 1847, for the first time, we believe, in this country. It is a handsome and most distinctly marked species, with long flowers and a style twice the length of the corollas, terminated by a large globose stigma. It requires, we need hardly say, the heat of the stove for its successful cultivation, and does not seem shy of flowering. Desce. This appears to form a large shrub, with terete, brown branches, the young ones downy. Leaves opposite, oval, of a rather soft and membranous texture, hairy on both sides (espe- cially beneath) and at the margin, wavy, apiculate, on rather short petioles. Flowers terminal, and there forming a large cluster or fascicle, inclining to one side. Peduncles short. Calyx downy : the tube adnate with the ovary, cylindrical : the limb of five, erect, subulate teeth. Corolla rather large, hypocrateri- forni: the tube about two inches or more long, cylindrical, green: the limb of five, oval, spreading segments, greenish without, white within. Anthers sessile, linear, inserted at the mouth of the tube. Style peculiarly long and not slender, SEPTEMBER 1ST, 1847. K ^ twice the length of the tube of the corolla. Stigma very large inclined, globose, didymous, the lobes striated. Fig. 1. Calyx and pistil: — magnified. \z&. Tab. 4323. TROPtEOLUM speciosum. Showy Indian-Cress. Nat. Ord. Trop.eole^j. — Octandria Monogynia. Gen. Char. Calyx 5-partitus, lobo superiore calcarato. Petala 5 insequalia, 3 inferiora minora aut evanida. Stamina 8 ab ipsa basi libera. Carpella 3 sub- erosa reniformia indehiscentia. Semina magna exalbuminosa. Embryo magnus ; cotyledonibus 2 rectis crassis. DC. Trop^eolum speciosum ; volubile, fobis subpeltatis sex-foliolatis, fobolis oblongo- obovatis obtusis brevi-petiolatis, subtus caule stipulisque tri- 6-partitis pilosiusculis, pedunculis folio 3-plo longioribus, petalis cordatis bilobis stipitatis calycem longe calcaratum superantibus, superioribus duplo mi- noribus obcordatis cuneato-attenuatis. Trop.eolum speciosum. Midi, et Poepp. Gen.et 8p.Pl\Chil. et Peruv. v. I. p. 22. t. 35. Walp. Repert. Bot. v. 1. p. 466. This is a charming addition to our species of the handsome genus Tropaohm, a little known one to botanists, imported by Messrs. Veitch and Sons of Exeter, through the intervention of their excellent collector, Mr. W. Lobb. Being a native of Chiloe, no wonder it bears our climate through all the summer months ; but whether it will endure the winter in the open air in England remains to be ascertained. Poeppig discovered the species in the subandine regions of South Chili and in the province of Antuco. It will certainly prove equally hardy with and more ornamental than most of our Tropaola. In Messrs. Veitch's Garden at Exeter it produced its richly coloured blossoms in June, 1847 : the plant was soon after exhibited at the Chiswick Horticultural show. Descr. Stems many feet long, slender, twining, herbaceous, branched. Leaves alternate, on short wavy petioles, subpeltate, cut to the base into six, obovato-oblong, very obtuse leaflets, green, the younger ones tinged with red. Stipules small, divided much in the same way as the lamina of the leaf, into three to six, narrow, almost linear segments. Peduncles one-flowered, axillary, solitary, flexuose, almost cirrhose, red, twice or thrice SEPTEMBER 1ST, 1847. as long as the petioles and leaves. Calyx of five, deep, ovato- acuminate segments, the three upper ones prolonged behind into a large and long, attenuated, curved spur. Petals five, longer than the calyx-segments, two upper ones small, obcordato- cuneate, attenuated, three lower ones more than twice as large, cordate, two-lobed on a longer slender claw or stipes : all rich vermillion red, yellowish towards the claw. Stamens eight. Fig. 1. Flower deprived of petals : — magnified. Tab. 4324. LISIANTHUS ACUTANGULUS Sharp-angled Lisianthus. Nat. Ord. G-entiane^. — Pentandria Monogynia. Gen. Char. Calyx 5-partitus v. 5-fidus, segmentis imbricatis exalatis, concavis v. planiusculis. Corolla infundibuliformis v. hypocraterimorpha, nuda, tubo supra fundum ampliato, fauce saepius cum limbo 5-partito confluentc. Stamina 5, corollse tubo interne inserto, filamentia elongatis saspius insequalibus. Anthem incumbentes, rarius erectae, plerumque demum recurvae, counectivo ssepius in apiculum producto. Ovarium annulo basilari destitutum, valvulis introflexis biloculare, ovulis angulo centrali utrinque insertis. Stylus distinctus, persistens, stigmate bilamellato, lameUis subrotundis v. augustioribus. Capsula bivalvis septicide bilocularis, placeutis margini interno valvarum insertis simplicibus ▼. duplicibus, loculis approximatis demum sejunctis et rima interna deorsum dehis- centibus. Semina placentis immersa. — Herbae v. frutices Americas tropica?, cyma laxe dichotoma, floribus scepe pulchre coloratis. Griseb. LISIANTHUS (Cbelonantbus) acutangulus ; caule elato subsimplici tetragono angubs subulatis, foliis ovatis penninerviis basi petiolatis supenonbus pracipue remotis sessilibus 3-5-nerviis, panicula terminah laxa dichotoma, floribus secundis racemosis, pedicellis brevibus. calyce hemispliaerico 5-lobo lobis ovato-rotundatis obtusis, corolla; viridis late-infundibuhiormis campa- nulataa basi contract* inde sursum curvatae ore oblicpio 5-lobo lobis ovatis demum revolutis, staminibus inclusis declinatis inaequahbus, filamentis basi dilatatis, stylo corollas longitudine, capsula elliptica stylo acuminata calyce 3-plo longiore. Lisianthus acutangulus, Ruiz, et Pav. M. Per. v. 2. p. 14. t. 122 a (excl. the fruit). Spreng. Syst. Veg. v. 1. p. 586. L.trifidus. H.B.K. Nov. Gen. Am. v. 3. p. 142. Griseb. Gent. p. 185. et in Be Cand. Prodr. L. tetragonus. Benth. Plant. Hartweg. n. 496. There cannot be the smallest doubt of this being the L. acu- tangulus of Ruiz and Pavon. The figure is excellent, save that the large fruit, apparently belonging to L. revolutus of the same writers is added gratuitously. Those authors found the L. acutangulus in Chinchoa of Peru, in mountain districts ; Mathews gathered it at Casapo (n. 209G) ; Humboldt and Bonpland in New Grenada, between Maraquita and Santanna; Moritz at Menda and m the province of Truxillo ; Purdie on the Sierra Nivada, feierra SEPTEMBER 1ST, 1847. Nigra, and other mountains about Santa Martha ; Mr. Hartweg also in Colombia; Mr. Skinner in Guatemala (n. 1:240); at Talea in Mexico, Hartweg (n. 496). From seeds sent by Mr. Purdie our plants were raised in the Royal Gardens of Kew in a warm stove, and kept in a Greenhouse during the period of flowering, the summer months. The species appears to be biennial, and is remarkable for the unusually green hue of the flowers. Descr. Stem erect, two to three feet or more high, nearly simple, till it forms the panicle, tetragonous, the angles very sharp, slightly winged. Leaves rather large, opposite, ovate, acute, the lower ones on short petioles, penninerved, the upper- most ones sessile, shorter and broader, three- to five-nerved, the upper pair very distant from the rest. Panicle lax, dichotomous, its branches terete. Flowers green, in second racemes, on short bracteated pedicels. Calyx small, with five rather gibbous, ovate, obtuse segments. Corolla rather campanulate than infun- dibuliform, the base contracted and thence curved upwards : mouth oblique, limb of five ovate, acute segments, soon revolute, at length withering and closing over the mouth, while the rest of the corolla is green. Stamens and style shorter than the corolla. Ovary inserted on a large gland or torus. Kg. 1. Stamens. 2. Pistil: — magnified. 63 Z< 5 Tab. 4325. IXORA Griffithii. Mr. Griffith's Ixora. Nat. Orel. RuBlACE.fi. — Tetraxdiua Monogynia. Cat. tubus ovatus, limbus parvus, 4-dentatus. Corolla hypocraterimorpha, tubo gracili tereti lobis longiore, Umbo 4-partito patcnte. Anthem 4 ad faucem subsessiles. Stylus tubo corollae a?qualis aut paulo longior (lobis nempe corol- linis brevior) apice bifidus, stigmatis cruribus divergentibus aut revolutis. Bacca drupacea calyce persistente coronata subglobosa bdocularis. Tyrenm cbartaceffl intus plana? aut concavse dorso gibba? monospermy. Albumen cartilagincum. Embryo dorsalis erectus iucurvus, cotyl. ibliaceis, radicula longa. — Frutices inter* dum arbor -escentes, ex Asia, rarlus ex Africa aquinoctiali. Folia opposite. Stipulse basi lata apice acuta aut in aristam setaceam desiueiites. Corymb] terminates sapius trichotmii. Flores coccinei rosei jtamniei aut albidi sa>pefragrantes. DC. Ixora Griffithii; glabra, folds amplis oblongo-ovatis acuminatis basi acutis brevi-petiolatis reticdatim venosis, stipidis brevibus latis acuminatis, cyraa ftmpla densa composita, calyce parvo brevi obtuse 4-dentato, corollae tubo elongate gracili, limbi lobis rotundatis obtusissimis pateutibus, antbens lineari-subulatis horizontali-patentibus, stylo paulo exserto stigmatis ramis brevissimis. Ixora Griffithii. Hook. Herb. The ample foliage, the large, compact cyme of very rich yellow and orange-coloured flowers, with the long slender tube of the corolla and the almost orbicular segments, together with the blunt and short-toothed calyx, distinguish this from the nume- rous species hitherto known to us of the present genus. It is from the collection of Messrs. Lucombe, Pince, and Co., Exeter Nursery, and was by them exhibited at the Regents Park Garden, in July, 1847, when the first prize being awarded to it, as the best new plant, it could not fail to be much noticed. It was introduced from Singapore by the son of Mr. Low, of the Clapton Nursery, and has been, we believe, disposed of by him under the unpublished and scarcely appropriate name of I. kydrangeaformi*. Its present name serves to commemorate its first discoverer, the late Mr. Griffith ; from whom I possess specimens gathered at Mergui. It is a really noble species and will prove invaluable to our stoves, where it requires the same treatment as our tavountes SEPTEMBER 1ST, 1817. of the genus, I. coccinea and striata : to both of which it is superior in the size of the inflorescence and the large leaves, some of which are a foot in length. Descr. This seems to form a large shrub in its native country, branched : the branches terete, rich brown. Leaves among the largest of the genus, oblong-ovate, acuminate, somewhat cuneate at the base, tapering into a short stout petiole, penninerved, with numerous transverse veinlets, glabrous, as is every part of the plant. Stipules broad, short, acute. Cyme large, broad, nearly flat at the top, compound, with innumerable richly coloured floivers, and subtended by two small leaves. Calyx very small, with four short, blunt teeth. Corolla hypocrateriform, at first orange-yellow, then red-orange : the tube long, slender, the limb of four rotundate, very obtuse, spreading lobes. Anthers sessile, inserted at the mouth of the tube, and lying horizontally between the lobes. Style a little longer than the tube : stigma bifid. Fig. 1. Flower : — magnified. tsze. Tab. 4326. ECH1N0CACTUS cinnabarinus. Cinnabar-flowered Echinocactus. Nat. Ord. Cactace^. — Icosandkia Monogynia. (Jen. Char. (Vide supra, Tab. 4124.) Echinocactus chmabarinus ; atro-viridis globoso-depressus centro umbili- catus, tuberculis spiraliter dispositis basi tetragonis dorso verticaliter pro- fun.de carinatis, areolis parvis tomentosis ad .sunimum apicem tuberculi sitis, aculeis rigidis mediocribus gracdi-subulatis exterioribus radiatis subuni- formibus, centrali erecta dimidio longiore, floribus solitariis sparsis, calycis viridis tubo lanato sepalis inferioribus minutis acutis superioribus spathu- latis, petalis numerosis cinnabarinis. A neat species in regard to the form and arrangement of its tubercles, and very striking when in flower, from the numerous rich cinnabar-coloured petals, which spread to a diameter of three inches. The species is among the many rare ones from Bolivia, purchased for the Royal Gardens from Mr. Bridges. It flowers in a cool greenhouse in July. Descr. Our specimens grow solitary and are globose, but depressed and umbilicated in the centre, six to seven inches in diameter and three or four inches in height. The surface is formed of copious dark green mamitta or tubercles, closely packed and arranged in spiral oblique lines ; they are four-sided at their base, and dilated at the back into a deep, vertical, rather short keel, on the top of which the areola is situated ; this areola is small, woolly, and bears a cluster of about' twelve, pale brown, narrow, subulate or acicular, but rather strong aculei : those of the circumference are nearly equal in length, and form a circle, 2~f of an inch long: the central one is longer and stronger than the rest, all slightly curved. Flowers scattered, solitary, large in proportion to the size of the plants. Calyx green ; the tube short, woolly, the folioles, or sepals, of the lower portion, small, short, acute, the superior ones large, spathulate, and resembling the petals except in colour, and seeming gradually to pass into petals. Petals numerous, spathulate, obtuse, OCTOBER 1st, 1847. L spreading, of a rich cinnabar colour. Filaments red. Anthers yellow. Bays of the stigma (in the few flowers I have seen) erect and approximate. Fig. 1. Keel of a tubercle with, a cluster of aculei : — magnified. , 'tSZl. Tab. 4327. CHIRITA Walkers. Mrs. Walker s Chirita. Nat. Ord. Didymocarpe,i\ — Diuyn.uha Angiostek.uia. Gen. Char. {Vide supra, Tab. 4182.) Chirita Walkeria ; caule suffruticoso ramoso, ramis teretibus villoso-tomentosis, foliis ternatim verticillatis petiolatis ovato-lanceolatis basi acutis apice acuminatis minute glanduloso-dentatis utrinque pubescenti-tomentosis, pe- dunculis axillaribus solitariis folio brevioribus 3—1-noris, lobis calycinis lineari-lanceolatis acuminatis tomentosis, corolla extus puberula. Chirita Walkerue. Gardner, in Mem. on Didymocarpea of Ceyl. p. 26. Mrs. General Walker detected this fine species of Chirita m Ceylon, in 1830, and her specimens are deposited in my Herbarium. It remained for Mr. Gardner, the able Director of the Botanic Garden, Peradenia, Ceylon, to send the seeds to us, m 1845, and to establish it as a new species, with a full and accurate character, in the work above quoted. In 1846 our plants blossomed, and proved the species to be well worthy of a place in every collection, from the beauty of the flowers and their continuing long in perfection. Indeed there is scarcely a month throughout the year that it does not produce blossoms. With bottom heat it becomes a luxuriant plant and it must always be considered an inhabitant of the stove. Descr. Stem shrubby but succulent, stout, branched, downy, especially the young shoots and branches, which are herbaceous. Leaves ternately whorled, soft and downy on both sides, ovato- lanceolate, acuminate, penninerved, acute at the base, the mar- gins denticulate with glandular teeth. Petioles about an inch long, thick, succulent. Peduncles axillary, solitary, slender, bearing from two to three flowers, which are drooping, shorter than the leaf. Calyx half the length of the corolla, downy or tomen- tose, tube almost cylindrical, the teeth equal in length with the tube, linear-subulate, erect. Corolla twice as long as the calyx, between infundibuliform and campanulate: the tube downy, OCTOBER 1ST. 1847. L ~ pale: the limb spreading, deep purple, two-lipped, wavy, the upper lip two-, the lower three-lobed, the lobes subrotund: within the mouth, below, is a deep yellow line. Stamens five, of which two are perfect, their lobed an fliers cohering ; two other are small, imperfect, with hairy abortive anthers ; and one is the rudiment of a stamen. Ovary linear, inserted in a cup- shaped gland or torus. Style hairy. Stigma oblique. Young fruit narrow, siliquose, four to five inches long, curved. Fig. 1. Calyx and pistil. 2. Base of the corolla, seen from within. 3. Pistil and hypogynous cup : — magnified. Tab. 4328. JESCHYNANTHUS longiflorus. Long-flowered JEschynanthns. Nat. Ord. Cyrtandracb^. — Didynamia Angtospkhmia. Gen. Char. {Vide supra, Tab. 4236.) -/Eschynanthus speciostis ; ramis pendulis subteretibus, foliis oppositis lato- lanceolatis acuminatissimis integerrimis, floribus ereetis numerosis termi- nalibus fasciculatis, pedunculis unifloris, calycis 5-partiti laciniis iineari- subulatis ereetis appressis, corollse tubo longissimo clavato superne curvato dorso convexo subtus canaliculato, ore oblique- contracto 4-lobo lobis rotun- datis ereetis superiore bifido, filamentis longe styloque minus exsertis. Eschynanthus longiflorus. Bhtme, in Be Cand. Prodr. v. 9. p. 262. Lysionutus longiflorus. Blums, Bijdr. p. 766. When describing the JEschynanthus speciosus (Bot. Mag. t. 4320), we gave our readers reason to expect that another species would soon be represented, which would vie in beauty with that eminently" handsome plant; and we now keep our pledge. Closely as the two species are allied, they are unques- tionably distinct ; and the differences are equally apparent in the dried native specimens as in the living ones. Much of the beauty of jE. speciosus is due to the varied colour (red and yellow) of the corolla ; in the present, to the rich uniform puce of the entire flower. Here, the mouth of the corolla is much contracted, with the segments or lobes erect, the style scarcely exserted beyond the corolla, the stamens very much so:— in jffl. speciosus the style is very much exserted, the stamens scarcely so at all. Messrs. Veitch and Son, of Exeter, have equally the credit of introducing this as the one last mentioned, through their East Indian Collector, Mr. Thomas Lobb, from Java: it is probably derived from the locality mentioned by Blume, "mountain-woods, Province of Bantam." It flowered with Messrs. Veitch in August, 1847. Descr. Stem procumbent, or pendent from branches of trees, and said to be rooting, terete, or nearly so, the younger shoots green. Leaves opposite, broadly lanceolate, very acuminate, OCTOBER 1st, 1847. thick and fleshy, entire, penninerved. / terminal, generally upon a pendent branch, and then they iuclim- upwards and become erect, fascicled or subumbellate ; eight or ten flowers or probably more are in a fascicle. / ; short, single-flowered. Calyx deeply cut, almost to the base, into five linear-subulate, erect teeth. Corolla in general shape much resembling that of uE. speciosm, but of an uniform dark purple or puce colour ; the inside of the mouth, which is contracted, yellow and surrounded by a band of black : the lobes erect, upper one bifid. St a Hint* : filaments very much exserted, and connected in pairs by the oblong anthers. BtyU much shorter than the stamens, scarcely exserted. Tab. 4329. hibiscus grossulari^efolius. Gooseberry-leaved Hibiscus. Xnt.Ord. Malvaceae.— Monadeiphia Polyandrfa. Gen. Char. Calyx cinctus involucello ssepius polyphyllo, rarius foliolis paucis aut inter se coalitis. Tetala hinc non auriculata. Stigmata 5. Carpella m capsulam 5-locularem coalita, valvis intus medio septiferis, loculis polyspermia aut rarius monospermis. DC. Hibiscus (Bombicella) grosmlariafolks ; fruticosus erectus pilis stellatis paten- tibus pubescens, foliis petiolatis cordatis 3-5-lobis, lobis obovatis obtusis sinuato-lobatis, peduncvdis axillaribus solitariis unifloris, supra medium articulatis bracteatis, inyolucri monophylli 10-12-partiti laciniis lineari- subulatis, calycis laciniis lanceolato-acuminatis, stylo exserto, stigmate 5-radiato. Hibiscus grossularisefolius. Mujuel, in Plant. Treks, p. 240. I cannot assert with certainty that this is the H. grossularicefolius of Miquel, for it does not in all respects accord with the descrip- tion : neither in our recent or dried specimens can it be said of our plant, " totus to*ce»#-stellato-tomentosus "; nor can the leaf-stalks or peduncles be considered " short ", nor the involucre 8- (but 10-12-) fid; and the stigma is not capitate, but dilated and lobed. Still the general characteristics are so similar that the differences may be accounted for on the supposition that the able Miquel described from an imperfect dried specimen of Preiss. I run the risk of retaining the name, rather than load the system with needless synonyms. Australia does not seem eminently rich in species of Hibiscus ; but some of them are eminently beautiful ; and the present one is no exception. It was raised in the Royal Gardens of Kew from Swan-River seeds, sent by Mr. Drummond, and has this character to recommend it, that in the summer, if planted against a wall, it makes a beautiful open border plant, flowering frequently during the summer months. Descr. A shrub three to four feet high; branches terete, younger ones, leaves, and calyx (the latter more copiously) OCTOBER 1st, 1847. clothed with tufts of stellated patent hairs. Leaves on petioles nearly as long as themselves, cordate with a deep sinus at the base, three-, but more generally deeply five-lobed, the lobes obovate, obtuse or retuse and again lobed and serrated or toothed at the margin. Stipules subulate, deciduous. Peduncles longer than the leaves, terete, single-flowered, axillary, solitary, with a joint above the middle, and there bearing two or three small, subulate bracteas. Involucre cup-shaped, hemispherical, longitudinally ribbed, and cut into ten to twelve subulate teeth or segments. Calyx deeply 5 -fid, twice as long as the involucre ; the segments ovate, acuminate, ribbed. Corolla large handsome, rich blueish-purple, slightly downy in a broad line outside on each petal. Petals triangular, obovate, oblique; one angle rounded, the opposite one sharp and mucronate. Column of stamens elongated, free portions of the filaments spreading. Style longer than the tube, stigma dilated, with five obtuse rays. Young fruit elliptical, shorter than the calyx, stellato-pubescent. Tab 4330. COLUMNEA crassifolia. Thick-leaved Columnea. Nat. Ord. Gesneriace.e. — Didynamia Angiospermia. Gen. Char. Calyx liber 5-partitus. Corolla tubulosa, rectiuscula, basi postice gibba, ringens, lobis superiore erecto fornicate- iiiferiore trifido patente. Stamina 4 didynama, antheris conuexis, quinti postici rudimentum. Qlandulce 1-5 circa basin ovarii. Bacca 1-locularis, placentis 2 parietalibus bilobis. Semina ob- longa. — Frutices Americani Jlexiles erecti aut scandentes. Folia opposita brevi- petiolata crassiuscula subserrata, Mrsuta v. pubescentia. Peduncub axillares solitarii aut conferti. Corollae coccinea. DC. Columnea crassifolia ; caide sufrruticoso-carnoso squamuloso-punctato radicante, foliis brevi-petiolatis erectis lineari-lanceolatis acuminatis carnosis subin- tegerrimis supra atro-viridibus glabris nitidis subtus flavo-rufescentibus pilosiusculis, floribus solitariis axillaribus, calycis glabri lobis lanceolatis acuminatis erectis subintegerrimis. corollis niagnis coccineis hirsutissimis. Columnea crassifolia. Horb&lan. This is the largest-flowered and most beautiful of this beautiful genus, of which I regret that I know nothing more concerning its history than that it was sent to us by Mr. Makoy of Liege, under the name of Columnea crassifolia ; which appellation being unex- ceptionable, I gladly adopt. It is probably a native of Mexico, and extremely different from any species hitherto described. It requires the heat of the stove, and is readily increased by cuttings, which are exceedingly tenacious of life ; a specimen, under pressure for the Herbarium, continuing to push a green shoot at the extremity two months after being gathered. Descr. Our plants are scarcely a foot high and the stems are simple, disposed to spread and to throw out fibrous roots at the joints, terete, fleshy, suftruticose, scurry with brown scales which give them a spotted appearance. Leaves four or five inches long, shortly petiolate, erect, narrow-lanceolate, acuminate, fleshy, nearly entire, dark glossy green and quite glabrous above, beneath paler yellowish-red and very slightly hairy. Peduncles axillary, short, thick, single-flowered : flowers erect, very large. Calyx ^ nearly an inch long, brownish-green, cut almost to the OCTOBER 1st, 1847. into rive erect, lanceolate, acuminate, nearly entire segment*. Corolla between three and four inches long, bright scarlet, shaggy with long red hair; tube curved; Hmb with the upper lip galeate, entire, the mouth very open, the lower tip having the two lateral segments short and appearing rather to belong to the upper than to the lower lip, the intermediate segment is deflexed. Stamens and style shorter than the corolla. Ovary with a shallow hypogynous ring, enlarging at the back into a conspicuous broad gland. Fig. 1. Pistil and hypogynous cup. 2. Back view of the large gland : — niacj- itifiea. Tab. 4331. SIPHOCAMPYLOS glandulosa. Glandular Siphocampylox. Nat. Ord. Lobeliace.e. — Pentandbia Monogyma. Gen. Char. {Vide supra, Tab. 4178.) Sipiiocampylos glmdmkm ; ubique raolliter pubescens, cauie superne angu- lato herbaceo, foliis sublouge petiolatis eordato-rugosis duplicato-dentatis denticiilis nigro-glandulosis, pedunculis axillaribus solitariis folio brevioribus unifloris infra medium bibraetcatis, calycis tubo turbinato 10-sulcato, limbi lobis lanceolatis patentibus marginibus reflexis profunde glanduloso-serratis, ooroftsB (rosea?) nutantis curvatis tubo eompresso 5-clavato lineis 5 elevatis limbi laeiuiis 5 oblongo-ovatis orerto-patentibus subaequalibus, staminibus styloque iiirlusi?;. A handsome species of Pohl's genus Siphocampylos, from Bogota, of which seeds were sent to'Syon and to the Royal Gardens of Kew, by Mr. Purdie, in 1845. Our drawing was taken from a fine flowering specimen in the Greenhouse of His Grace the late Duke of Northumberland. It grows freely and flowers abundantly during the summer months. Descr. Stems herbaceous, yet apparently perennial, erect, two to three feet high, clothed with soft short down, as is every part of the plant. Leaves alternate, large, cordate, petiolate, wrinkled, deeply and doubly dentate, the teeth all terminated by black glands. Petioles an inch or more long, slender. Pedun- cles axillary, solitary, single-flowered, shorter than the leaf, downy or almost tomentose like the calyx. Calyx of five somewhat leafy, spreading, lanceolate segments, the margins reflexed, deeply glanduloso-serrate, tube turbinate, sulcate ; limb of five almost equal, spreading, glanduloso-serrate segments. Corolla rose colour, downy, two or two and a half inches long, clavate, laterally compressed, contracted below the insertion of the stamens, and again dilated at the very base ; limb of five nearly equal segments, of which the upper lip consists of two slightly incurved, the lower of three very slightly spreading segments, all ovato-lanceolate. Stamens scarcely protruded, inserted below OCTOBER 1st, 1847. the middle of the corolla. Anthers lead-colour, united into a tube, all hairy at the point and ciliated at their margins. Stigma of two nearly orbicular, spreading lips, downy within, the margins reflexed. IA. etlitk Tab. 4332. isopogon sphjerocephalus. Mound-headed Isopogon. Nat. Ord. Proteace^e. — Tetrandria Monogynia. Gen. Char. Perianthium quadrifidum, tubo gracili diutius persistente. Squama; nulla? bypogynse. Stylus totus deciduus. Stigma fusiforme v. cybndraceum. Nux sessilis, ventricosa, undique comosa. — Frutices rigidi. Folia glabra, plana v.Jiliformia, divisa v. integerrima. Capitula terminalia, raro axillaria. Flores modo densissime imbricati, strobilo globoso ; modo fastigiati, receptaculo communi planiusculo subinvolucrato, paleis deciduis congestis. Br. Isopogon spkeerocephalm ; ramis patenti-pilosis tomentosisquej foliis lineari- lanceolatis mucronulatis nervosis puberulis scabriusculis, strobibs termina- libus (rarius et axillaribus) sessibbus subglobosis, squamis ovatis acumi- natis villosis, calycis tubo glabro lobis crispato-villosis, stigmate articulato, articulo inferiore breviore turbinato stuposo superiore subulato glabro apice subdilatato excavato. Nees. Isopogon sphserocephalus. Lindl. Swan Jtiv. Bot. p. xxiv. «.163. Nees in Blunt. Preis. p. 508. A free growing Greenhouse shrub, of which the seeds, from the Swan River, sent by Mr. James Drummond, were reared in the Royal Gardens of Kew. It there flowers in the spring months, and attains a height of three to four feet. Descr. A woody shrub, with stout, terete branches, the younger ones downy and clothed with rather long spreading hairs. Leaves scattered, three to four inches long, broad, linear or linear-lanceolate, broadest above the middle, obtuse, mucro- nate, sessile, downy or rather silky, especially at the margins, which are hence ciliated : the texture is harsh, rigid, rather dull green, with a costa and oblique parallel nerves, everywhere quite entire. Heads of flowers terminal, solitary or more fre- quently clustered, and then the lower heads are subtended by a leaf. Bracteas ovate, acute, concave, shaggy with hair. Flowers dense, yellow. Tube of the perianth slender, villous at the base, the rest glabrous : lacinice spathulate, soon reflexed, externally very villous. Stamens lodged one in the hollow of each segment OCTOBER 1st, 1817. of the perianth. Style longer than the tube of the perianth, slender, glabrous. Stigma large, jointed ; lower joint globose, villous, upper joint subulate, glabrous. Fisr. 1. Flower-bud and 2. Expanded flower : — magnified. frb dYnf b'tftsgoi * Tab. 4333. EUCALYPTUS macrocarpa. Large-fruit rrf Eucalyptus, or Gum-Tree. Nat. Ord. Myrtace.e. — Icosandria Monogynia. Gen. Char. Cahjch tubus persistens obovatus aut globosus cupulfeformis, lindjits operculiformis integer basi circumscisse et regulariter dehiscens deciduus. Petala nulla. Stamina : JUamenia numerosa libera. Capsjda 4-locularis aut abortiv. 3-locidaris apice dehiscens polysperma. — Arbores (Novae Hollandise) excelste. Folia intrgerrima cor'wcea soepins alterna, rarius opposita. interdum in i'mtr,,/ 'ntdiridiiis varia, paucis exceptis glaberrima. Pedunculi axillares breves umbellam S—lb-jloram gerentes. Operculum in noniiulUs, ex cl. Brown, duplex, exterius calgcinuni, iiderius coroUinum. DC. Eucalyptus macrocarpa ; tota pulverulcnto-glauca, foliis oppositis elliptico- cordatis eoriaeeis acuminulatis, pedunculis axillaribus solltariis brevissimis onifloris, calvcis magni crassissimi opcrcido couico-liemisphserico acuminato, capsula maxima dcprcsso-bemispha*rica marginata lignosa 4-5-valvi. Eucalyptus macrocarpa. Hook. Ic PL v. 5. tab. 405, 406, 407. Lehm. PL Preiss. p. 132. It is truly said in the 'Icones Plantarum ' above quoted, that "one of the finest among the many fine plants lately sent by Mr. Jas. Drummond from the Swan River Colony, is the present new species of Eucalyptus!' That was spoken of the dried specimen : with still greater truth does the remark apply to the living individual. Our specimen is about five feet high ; and the large and copious foliage, covered everywhere with glaucous white powder, and the bright red flowers nestled among the leaves, form a very striking object. The colour of the flowers is due to the stamens alone ; for petals (as in the genus) there are none, and the calyx falls off like the lid of a box. Drum- mond found it at " Guangan," an open sandy desert, commencing about eighty miles E.S.E of Freemantle and continuing for two hundred miles. This barren country is bordered by a consi- derable forest, consisting principally of two species of Eucalyptus, called by the aborigines "Urac" and "Morral": the latter is the plant now before°us. The seed was raised at Kew in 1842, NOVEMBER 1ST, 1847. M and our plant, when five feet high, in the summer of 1847, blossomed in great perfection. Descr. A. shrub, everywhere covered with a glaucous-white, pulverulent substance; young branches four-sided. Leaves numerous, opposite, large, three to four inches long, elliptical- ovate or cordate, sessile and half embracing the stem, coriaceous, acuminulate, margined, penninerved, the nerves very patent, rather crowded, parallel. Flowers axillary, solitary, nearly sessile. Calyx-tube subhemispherical, but tapering : the free portion united into a hemispherical acuminate lid, which separates trans- versely from the very thick tube. Stamens exceedingly numerous. Filaments long, subulate, rich deep red ; the central ones spread- ing. . Anthers yellow. Style subulate. Fruit (see Ic. PI. f. 407) very large, orbicular, a depressed hemisphere, very woody, opening in the middle by four to five valves. Mg. 1. Calyx-tube adherent with the ovary. 2. Operculum : — natural size. Tab. 4334. MALACHADENIA clavata. Club-stalked Malachadenia. Nat. Ord. OrchidejE. — Gynandria Monandria. Gen. Char. Flos resupinatus. Sepala lateralia connata, apice reflexa libera, galeam formantia; dorsale cordatum acuminatum. Petala minima, scmamse- formia, rotundata. Labellum camosum, margine revolutum, basi mucronatum, cum pede elongato columnse sepalis lateralibus galeatis adnatse articulatum. Columna antice bicirrhosa, basi longe producta, stigmate lineari-oblongo. An- them bilocularis decidua. Pollinia 2, cereacea, sessilis, glandula molli, cubica, nuda. — Herba repens, pseudo-bulbis monophyllis, scapo radicali, floribus carnosis galeatis. Lindl. Malachadenia clavata. Malachadenia clavata. Lindl. Bot. Reg. 1839. Misc. p. 67. w.110. A Rio plant, in the collection of Mr.Bateman, where it bloomed first in 1839, (when Dr. Lindley described it as a new genus, Malachadenia, from the soft nature of the gland of the pollen- masses), and again in 1847, when we received from that gentle- man the flowering specimen here represented. The author speaks of its place among Vandea as doubtful; but to me the plant appears, both in habit and structure of the flowers, so close to Bolbophyllum, that I do not see how it can be separated. The locality given would seem to militate against such an opinion, Bolbophyllum having for a long time been considered peculiar to the Old World but Bolbophyllum recurvum is now announced by Dr. Lindley (in Bot. Reg. 1844, Miscel. p. 72) as a native of South America as well as of Sierra Leone. Be that as it may, the^plant is a very singular one, though it has little beauty to recommend it, and Mr. Bateman remarks, "it is the only epi- phytal Orchideous plant I know which emits a positive stench, and that too at all hours by night and day. In the stove it resembles the foulest carrion." It was first imported by Mr. Hooper of Lambeth. Descr. Bhizoma creeping, bulbiferous. Pseudo-bulbs oblong- ovate, solitary, curved, clothed with a membranous sheath, and NOVEMBER 1ST, 1847. M terminated by a solitary, oblong, acute, veinless, coriaceo-carnose leaf. Scape radical, slender, twice as long as the leaves, articu- lated, sheathed at the joints, thickened upwards among the flowers (whence the specific name). Flowers five or six, spicate, green, richly spotted with brown, resupinate. Bracteas shorter than the flower. Sepals erecto-patent, very concave, acuminate, dorsal one the largest. Petals very minute, squamiform. Lip articulated on the produced base of the column, upper half ovate, reflexed. Column with two projecting cirrhi. Pollen-masses two, yellow, sessile on a soft gland. Fig. 1. Flower deprived of the sepals. 2 and 3. Pollen-masses : — magnified. Tab. 4335. TRITONIA aurea. Golden Tritonia. Nat. Ord. Iride^e. — Triandria Monogynia. Gen. Char. Rerianthium corollinum superum subcampanulatum v. tubulosum, limbo sex-fido regulari v. subbilabiato, laciniis basi callosis. Stamina 3, infra faucem perigonii inserta, aubsecunda: Jilamenta filiformia: anthera versatiles. Ovarium ovatum, teretiusculum, triloculare. Ovula plurima, in loculorum an- gulo centrali biseriata. Stylus filiformia. Stigmata 3, ligularia, angusta, com- plicata, Integra v. breviter bifida. Capsula coriacea, subclavata, trigibba, tri- locularis, loculicido-trivalvis. Semina plurima subglobosa. — Herbfe Capenses-, rhizomate bulboso-tuberoso, foliis eollateralibus exsertis, cavlejunceo, tereti, grocili, simplici v. ramoso, floribus spicatis, scepius resupinatis. Endl. (sub Monbretiam.) Tritonia aurea ; seapo ancipiti-compreaao bialato Moso apice paniculato, folus panicula brevioribua lineari-ensiformibus coatatis striatia, bracteia apathiaque integerrimis aubherbaceis, perianthii toti aureo-crocei tubo limbo patentisaimo aubajquali paulo breviore laciniis oblongo-ovatis, staminibus lacmiarum longitudine, capaula subglobosa abortu trisperma. Tritonia aurea. Pappe, MS. in Hook. Herb, cum ic. et descr. I am indebted to Dr. Pappe, of Cape Town, for an excellent drawing by Mr. Villett, and dried specimens, obtained also by Mr. Villett, from the district of George, Cape of Good Hope, of this new species of Tritonia. Of all the genus this is the most beautiful, and, happily, it has been introduced to our gardens probably from the same source (Mr. Villett) by our friend Mr James Backhouse, of the Nursery, York. It seems easy ot cultivation and a profuse flowerer, remaining a long time in great beauty. A bed of it would be a far more striking object than the gaudy Gladiolus psitf acinus ; for the colour of the blossom is much more brilliant, and for such a purpose it will prove a great acquisition. , . •,- Descr. Bulb rather large, subglobose, striated, brown, sending out offsets from clefts in the sides. Scape a foot and a halt to two feet high, leafy below, naked or only bracteated, and panicled above, compressed, two-winged. Leaves distichous, long, but shorter than the scapq, narrow, linear, ensilorm, NOVEMBER 1st, 1847. striated, but with a distinct central costa. Flowers sessile on the panicle. Spatlia two-leaved ; leaflets ovate, acute, almost mucronate, not scariose but subherbaceous, and more or less coloured. Perianth rich orange-red ; tube about three quarters of an inch long, narrow, curved ; limb very patent, subirregular, the segments oblong-obovate. Stamens and style much exserted and nearly equal in length, a little curved. Anthers linear, yellow. Stigmas thickened at the apex. Capsule subglobose, longer than the persistent spatha, three-lobed, three-celled : most of the seeds abortive, one generally ripening in each cell, globose, smooth. Fig. 1. Capsule. 2. The same laid open. 'itdhj cic Tab. 4,336. RHODODENDRON Javanicum. Javanese Rhododendron. Nat. Ord. Ericaceae. — Decandria Monogynia. Gen. Char. Cat. 5-partitus. Cor. infundibuuformis rarius campanulata aut rotata, nunc regularis nunc plus minus irregularis semper 5-loba. Stam. 10 (rarius abortiv. 5-9) corollae non adnata ante et inter lobos sita, ssepius declinata, exserta. Antherce poris 2 terminalibus dehiscentes. Capsula 5-locularis, 5- valvis, aut 10-locul. 10-valvis, septicido-dehiscens. Semina axi columnari angu- lato adnata, compresso-scobiformia subulata. — Frutices rarius arbores. Folia sempervirentia petiolata integerrhaa. Flores in corymbos terminates dispositi. Alabastra fioratia squamosa. Corolla? conspicua? alia autjtavce. DC. Rhododendron Javanicum ; foliis ovalibus obovatisque subcoriaceis acutis basi attenuatis supra nudis subtus minute punctato-squamulosis, pedunculis glabris, ealyce obsoleto, corolla infundibuliformi-campanulata, limbi laciniis obovato-rotundatis, ovario 5-loculari. Rhododendron Javanicum. Bennett, in PI. Jav. Ear. p. 85. t. 29. Be Card. Brodr. v. l.p. 721. Vireya Javanica. Blume, Bijdr. p. 854. On communicating this splendid plant to me for figuring in the Botanical Magazine, Messrs. Veitch and Sons, its possessors, remark that " it is certainly one of the finest things ever intro- duced to our gardens ". And in this opinion we think all will agree who see the present representation, and more especially those who have the privilege of beholding, as we now do, the plant itself with its beautiful, glossy, bright green foliage and orange-coloured flowers (twelve on a bunch), here and there marked with red spots, and again spotted, as it were, with the dark black-purple coloured anthers, which lie generally five on each side towards the lower side of the mouth of the corolla. On a plant which previously flowered (equally sent from Java by Mr. Thos. Lobb), Mr. Veitch observes the flowers to be deeper coloured: again, Professor Blume mentions a citron-coloured variety, with smaller flowers. It is, as its name implies, an inhabitant of Java. Blume discovered it on the mountain NOVEMBER 1ST, 1847. Salak ; Dr. Horsfield, " on the volcanic range extending through Java, in dense forests, at an elevation of 4,000 feet above the level of the sea," Hence we are not surprised to learn from Mr. Veitch that it succeeds well under the mere shelter of a Greenhouse, where, that able cultivator thinks, it may probably be brought to blossom all the year round. Descr. A moderate sized shrub, with spreading branches. Leaves scattered, subcoriaceous, oblong-oval, or approaching to obovate, acute, tapering into a short petiole, naked above, beneath minutely dotted with very small brown peltate scales. Flowers fascicled, eight to ten or twelve or more, large, handsome, termi- nal. Peduncle glabrous, but squamulose, single-flowered. Calyx very small, five-lobed. Corolla large, showy, orange-coloured, (though not bright), with scattered red spots, between infundibuli- form and campanulate : the tube gradually widening upwards into a five-lobed, nearly equal limb : segments broadly obovate, rotundate, obtuse, spreading, or a little revolute. Stamens ten, slightly ascendent ; five on one side the style, lying against the corolla, five on the other side. Anthers dark purple, almost black, two-pored at the apex, from which pore the white pollen falls out in cohering masses. Ovary oblong, five-lobed. Stigma peltate, with five points (the margin looking less like an indu- sium than in the figure of Dr. Horsfield). Style about as long as the stamens. Fig. 1. Under side of a portion of the leaf, natural size, showing the squamu- lose dots. 2. Portion of the same: — magnified. 3. A scale: — more highly ■magnified. 4. Pistil : — magnified. Tab. 4337. TROPjEOLUM umbellatum. Umbellate Tropaolum, or Indian Cress. Nat. Old. TEOP^EOLEiE. OcTANDRIA MoNOGYNIA. Gen. Char. (Vide supra, Tab. 4097.) Tropjeolum umbellatum ; glabrum, scandens, foliis subpeltatis cordato-quinque- lobis, floribus umbellatis, calyce cylindraceo calcare obtuso subcurvato lon- giore, petalia spathulatis rectis acutis, 3 calycem superantibus, 2 minimis squamiformibus. One of the most remarkable of all the Tropteola, which have been characterized as bearing one-flowered peduncles ; here the flowers are umbellate, of a rich orange-red colour, tinged with green, and so copious as quite to overpower the foliage. For its first discovery the merit is due to Professor Jameson of Quito, who gathered it on Pilzhum, a mountain to which, he observes, it is quite peculiar, at an elevation of 7,000 feet above the level of the sea. To Messrs. Veitch and Sons we owe its introduction to our gardens, through their collector Mr. W. Lobb, who probably collected it on the same spot as that above mentioned, and from the nature of its locality their can be little doubt it will prove to be among the most hardy of the genus. It flowered in Messrs. Veitch's Nursery during the summer months of 1847. Descr. Root (according to Professor Jameson) a tuber of three or four pounds weight. Stem climbing, terete, slender, fleshy, purple, zigzag. Leaves remote, on long flexuose petioles, sub- peltate, cordate, deeply five-lobed, the lobes ovate, obtuse, nmcronate while young. Peduncles axillary, about as long as the petiole, bearing an umbel of five to six or more flowers, and small subulate bracts at the base of the peduncle and pedicels. Calyx orange-red, tipped with green at both extremities, most so when young, cylindrical, the limb erect, unequally five-lobed, the base extended into a curved blunt spur which is shorter than NOVEMBER 1ST, 1847. the calyx. Petals extremely unequal, spathulate, acute, ungui- culate, erect (not spreading) ; three of them red, a little longer than the calyx ; the two others orange, very minute, squamiform. Stamens as long as the petals. Ovary globose, three-lobed. Style thick, shorter than the stamens : stigma trifid. Kg. 1. Flower with the calyx removed from the spur. 2. Pistil : — magnified. lei. etlitk. IRjBBW Tab. 4a38. CHiENESTES lanceolata. Lanceolate-leaved Clusneste-s. Nat. Ord. Solane^e. — Pentandrta Monogynia. Gen. Cliar. Calyx tubulosus, inaequaliter obtuse 5-dentatus, subbilobus, demum parum auetus, lateraliter fissus persistens. Corolla hypogyna, infundibuliformi- tubulosa, subincurvata, lobis 5 acutis, margine floccosis, sestivatione valvato- induph'catis, basi plicatis, dentibus brevibus interjectis. Stamina 5 subinclusa, filamentis basi adnatis, mox libera, gracilibue, erectis vix exsertis; antheris oblongis, basi iixis. Ovarium ovatum, 2-loculare ; stylus gracdis, apice incrassatus, exsertus. Stigma clavato-bilobum. Bacca obovata, calyce bine fisso inclusa. Semina numerosa, in pulpo nidulantia, rugosa, reniformia. — Frutices Andicoli America? intertropical. Folia at 'tenia, petiolata. Flores sjoeciosi coccinei n. auran- tiaci (v.purpureo-cyanei). Bacca rubra. Miers. Ch^enestes lanceolata ; fruticosa, ranndis cano- v. subferrugineo-floccosis, fobis lanceolatis acmninatis supra parce pubescentibus infra pallidioribus floccoso- toinentosis, petiolo canaliculato tonientoso, umbellis brevibus multirloris, calyce urceolato 5-dentato mollissime pubescente pilis floccosis, corolla sub- curvata (j)urpureo-cyanea) parce puberula loborum marginibus floccosis, antheris lineari-oblongis subinclusis. Mien. Ch^enestes lanceolata. Miers, m Hook. Loud. Joum. Bot. v. 4. p. 338. The seeds of a fine flowering specimen of this were sent by Mr. Purdie from the mountains of Quindiu, marked " a very beautiful shrub "; and so it has proved. The young plants grew rapidly and were planted out against a wall in the Royal Gardens, in the summer of 1847, where they blossomed and continued to produce their umbels of rich deep-blue flowers till the cold of autumn injured them. These flowers, in colour and general appearance, bear considerable affinity with lockroma fubulosa, Benth. (Bot. Reg. 1845. t.20, — Habrothamnus cyanem, Lindl. 1. c. 1844. Misc. 68) ; but this truly belongs to Mr. Miers' new genus, CAanestes, of which the C. fuchsioides (Lycium, H. B. K. and Hook. Bot. Mag. t. 4149) may be considered the type ; it is very nearly allied to C. {Lycium, H. B. K.) umbrosa, Miers, — differing from that chiefly in its narrower and more downy leaves, and in the colour of the flowers ; here deep blue, DECEMBER 1ST, 1847. N in C. umbrosa " coccinei ", according to Humboldt. If, however, only the dry specimen be examined, our plant as well as the C. umbrosa may be supposed to have red flowers ; and hence our valuable friend Mr. Miers has observed in the Journal above quoted, of our C. lanceolata, that " the corolla seems crimson ". When recent, the flowers are as rich and deep a blue, a little inclining to purple, as the Iochroma figured by Dr. Lindley and their fine colour constitutes one of the great charms of the plant. Descr. A shrub four to five feet high, the young branches her- baceous, downy with stellated hair. Leaves alternate, rather large, oval or elliptical-lanceolate, membranaceous, acute, entire, tapering below into a long petiole, slightly downy above, beneath stellato- tomentose, the young leaves arachnoid : in age, however, almost every part becomes glabrous. Umbels axillary, or rather supra- axillary, and terminal or nearly so, almost sessile, downy. Pedi- cels slender, filiform, pendent. Flowers drooping. Calyx between urceolate and cylindrical, unequally five-toothed, the teeth blunt, erect : there is besides a cleft a little way down on one side. Corolla two inches long, rich deep purplish-blue, cylindrical, glabrous, somewhat dilated at the mouth into a short five-toothed spreading limb, which is downy. Stamens rather shorter than the style : both scarcely exserted. Fig. 1. Stamen. 2. Pistil: — magnified. ^ ~~y Tab. 4&39. BROWALLIA speciosa. Showy-flowered Browallia. Nat. Ord. Scrophularine^:. — Didynamia Angiospermia. Gen. Char. Cat. 5-dentatus v. 5-fidus. Corolla hypocraterimorpha, tubo su- perne parum dilatato, limbo obliquo breviter et late subbilabiatim 5-lobo, lobis emarginatis (in B. speciosa acuminatis) antico paulo majore, sestivatione plicato- bilabiata. Stamina fertilia 4 ; postica breviora, filamentis lanatis, antherariim loculo altero minimo casso ; antica longiora, antheris asqualiter bilocularibus. Stylus apice bifidus, lobis latissimis divaricato-subbilobis, intus stigmatosis. Capsula membranacea, valvulis bifidis, dissepimento tenuissimo. Embryo rectus. — Herbse rarius frutices, Americae australis, plus minus viscido-pubescentes. Folia alierna, integer ritna. Flores ad axillas foliorum superiorum pedicellati ; in cytnas irregulares terminates dispositi. Corollee violacea, carulescentes v. albida. Benth. in Be Cand. Browallia speciosa ; foliis oppositis alternisve ovatis acuminatis petiolatis, pedunculis axillaribus solitariis unifloris, calycis laciniis subulatis tubum aequantibus,. corolte laciniis ovato-acuminatis. Had not the name of grandiflora been pre-occupied, we should gladly have adopted it for the present new species of Browallia which we had the good fortune to receive from our Collector, Mr. Purdie, who discovered it in the mountains of Tolima and Quindiu, in the year 1846. The flowers are thrice the size of those of B. grandiflora and the segments of the corolla are not retuse, nor bifid, but acuminate. It flowered in September, 1 847, both in the stove of Kew Gardens and in those of Syon House, being derived from the same source. Descr. Stem erect, branched, glabrous (as is almost every part of the plant). Leaves sometimes opposite, sometimes alter- nate. Peduncles axillary, solitary, single-flowered, in general shorter than the leaf. Calyx-tube ovato-cylindrical : limb of five, erect, subulate segments, nearly equal in length with the tube. Corolla hypocrateriform : tube long, slender, thrice the length of the calyx: limb oblique, somewhat two-lipped, of five large, spreading, ovate, acuminate segments, striated, pale lilac beneath, DECEMBER 1ST, 1847. N ^ dark purple above : throat white. Stamens inserted in the faux, didynamous ; filaments short, ciliated, curved above. Anthers didymous. Ovary globose on a short small disc, two-celled. Ovules very numerous on a large central placenta in each cell : style nearly as long as the tube of the corolla. Stigma two-lipped, four-lobed within the lips. Fig. 1. Tube of the corolla laid open, showing the stamens and pistil. 2. Back view of the stigma and upper portions of the style. 8. Front view of ditto : — magnified. jlsevB^tnt: Tab. 4340. EXACUM TETRAGONUM ; /3. bicolor. Square-stalked Exacum ; two-coloured var. Nat. Ord. Gentiane^. — Tetrandria Monogynia. Gen. Char. Calyx 4-5-partitus, segmentis dorso carinatis v. alatis. Corolla rotata marcescens, tubo demum globoso, limbo 5-partito. Stam. 4-5, corollas fauci inserta, suberecta. Antherce immutatee, per apertnram rimae poriformem apice dehiscentes. Ovarium valvis introflexis biloculare, ovubs suturse centrali utrintpie affixis. Stylus distinctus, dedinatus, deciduus, stigmate indiviso capi- tidato v. leviter transverse sulcato. Capsula bilocularis, bivalvis, septicida, pla- centis centralibus nunc secedentibus nunc in unam coadunatis demum e valvis liberatis. Semina minutissima, placentis immersa. — Herbse plerumque annua, strict^, glaberrimce, cyma terminali, in India Orientali insulisque nonnullis maris Indici indigence. Griseb. in DC. Exacum tetragonum; caule tetragono subsimplici, foliis subamplexicaulibus ovato-oblongis acuminatis 5-nerviis margine lsevibus, calycis alati 4-partiti segmentis aristato-acuminatis, corollae tubo brevi lobis ovato-lanceolatis subacuminatis. Exacum tetragonum. Eoxb. Fl. Ind. vA.p. 396. ed. Wall. v. 1. p. 413. Wall, Ic. Plant. Ear. v. 3. if. 276. Wall. Cat. n. 4356. Griseb. Gen. et Sp. Gent. p. 107. et in Be Cand. Prodr. v. 9. p. 44. Exacum Hamiltonii. Don, Gard. Diet. v. 4<.p. 213. |Q. roseurn, Griseb.; foliis paulo angustioribus, corolla rosea. Griseb. in De Cand. Prodr. I. c. b. bicolor ; foliis fere ovatis, corolla? segmentis albidis apice purpureis. Exacum bicolor. Eoxb. Fl. Did. v. 1. p. 397. ed. Wall. v. 1. p. 413. Griseb. in De Cand. Prodr. v. 9. p. 45. An East Indian plant, for the seeds of which we are indebted to J. E. Law, Esq., of Tanna, Bombay. He finds it growing profusely in the Concan among long grass. The seeds being sown in the autumn of 1846, produced flowering plants in the stove of the Royal Gardens in June, 1847. The blossoms are highly ornamental; but as the plant is annual it may prove difficult in some seasons to ripen the seed. That it is the species called Exacum bicolor by Roxburgh, I can hardly doubt, and Mr. Law agrees with me in considering it to be so ; but 1 am equally disposed to believe that the E. bicolor is only a var. of DECEMBER 1ST, 1847- F. tetragonum. The flowers are very variable in size and colour, and even in our plant Mr. Law observes the colour is sometimes altogether purple ; and Dr. Roxburgh remarks that the leaves are also very variable. Descr. Foot annual. Stem erect, a foot and more high, simple below, panicled above, tetragonous ; the angles more or less winged. Leaves sometimes broadly ovate, acute, becoming narrower upward, ovato-lanceolate, and even lanceolato-acuminate above, three- to five-nerved, glabrous, smooth at the margin, pale beneath. Flowers in a cyme or panicle, few (in our speci- men), or (in the native specimens) many-flowered : branches trichotomous, or dichotomous with a single-flowered peduncle in the axil, all tetragonous and slightly winged at the angle, with a subulate bractea at the base. Calyx deeply five-partite : the segments broadly ovate, aristato-acuminate, furnished with a broad wing on the keel, which is decurrent more or less on the angles of the footstalk. Petals large, obliquely obovate, acute, purple, white at the base. Stamens four, curved to one side. Filaments short. Anthers large, subulate, truncate and opening by an oblong pore at the extremity. Ovary ovate : style longer than the stamens : stigma two-lipped. Fig. 1. Tube of the corolla 2. Pistil : — magnified. IB-eeve/iny;' Tab. 4341. ANEMONE Japonica. Japan Anemone. Nat. Ord. Ranunculace^e. — Polyandria Polygynia. Gen. Char. Involucrum 3-florum, a flore distans, foliolis incisis. Calyx petaloi- deus, 5-15-sepalus. Petala 0. Be Cand. Anemone Japonica ; caulescens, foliis radicalibus caulinisqne ternatim sectis, segmentis cordatis trilobis inaequaliter ampliato-serratis, involucralibus inferioribus petiolatis basi cuneatis caeterum conformibus superioribus sessilibus, pedunculis elongatis v. uudis imifloris v. dichotomo-ramosis et iterum involucratis, sepabs plerumque 20 extus sericeis, caryopsibus ecau- datis dense villosis. Sieb. Anemone Japonica. Siebold, Fl. Japonica, v. 1. p. 16. t. 5. Lindl. Bot. Misc. 1846. p. 66. Walp. Repert. Bot. v. 1. p. 28. Atragene Japonica. Tliunb. Fl. Jap. p. 239. Clematis? polypetala. Be Cand. Prodr. v. 1. p. 10. A native of damp woods on a mountain called Kifune, near Miaho, in Japan, and introduced to this country by Mr. Fortune during his travels in China. As the plant is, according to Siebold, much cultivated by the Japanese on account of the beauty of its flowers, I cannot but fear that what have been transmitted to our Gardens exhibit strong marks of the flowers being double (floribus plenis), which may account for the fact mentioned by Siebold of the seeds rarely coming to perfection. Be that as it may, the species is a very beautiful one, flowering during the summer months and till late in the autumn. It is, moreover, perfectly hardy, and has endured, unharmed, the winter of 1846-7, in the open air. A moist soil seems most favourable to its success. Descr. A herbaceous perennial, everywhere soft and downy with short hairs, leaves radical, on long petioles, ternate : leaflets petiolulate, cordate or cordato-ovate, acute, three- or five- nerved, irregularly cut into three or five lobes (the lateral leaflets oblique) and coarsely serrated. Scape erect, one and a half to two feet high, divided above in a trichotomous manner, involu- december 1st, 1847. crate, some of the branches or peduncles single-flowered, others again ternately divided and then again involucrate : leaves of the involucre ternate, nearly sessile, the leaflets divided as the radical leaves but scarcely petiolulate. "Flower* large, handsome, erect. Perianth rose-lilac, consisting of from fifteen to twenty oblong- obovate, spreading sepals. Stamens numerous. Anthers bright yellow. Ovaria numerous, ovate, silky, collected into a globose head. Styles extremely short, hooked. U3AZ. IFitoh.M-etliBi Tab. 4342. GESNERIA TRIFLORA. TJiree-flowered Gesneria. Nat. Ord. Gesneriace^e. — Didynamia Angiospermia. Gen. Char. {Vide supra, Tab. 4217.) Gesneria trijiora ; caule erecto obscure tetragono subsimplici petiolisque dense ferrugineo-lanatis, internodiis elongatis, foliis amplis ovato-acuminatis serratis reticulato-rugosis pubescentibus subtus pallidis dense lanatis, pe- dunculis axdlaribus umbellatim trifloris petiolo pedicellisque brevioribus lanatis, urabelbs basi bibracteatis, calycis lanati tubo hemisphserico lacinias acuminatas aequante, corollae flavae tubo ventricoso rufo-birsutissimo, limbi ore contracto, lobis parvis rotundatis patentibus. Tubers of this Gesneria were sent from New Grenada by Mr. Purdie, and flowering plants were in perfection in the Royal Gardens in the summer of 1847, continuing a long time in blossom. The flowers are by no means so copious as in the G. Hondensis, to which the species is in some respects allied ; but the corollas and foliage, too, are larger. It has affinity also with G.elongata, said to be from "Quito?", (I possess specimens from Mexico) : which has much longer peduncles, and a different habit and foliage. . Descu. A foot and a half or two feet high, nearly simple, erect, stout, obscurely four-sided, densely clothed with ferruginous tomentum. The space between the pairs of leaves is elongated. Leaves opposite, four to six inches long, on woolly petioles, ovate, acuminate, serrated: upper surface dark green, wrinkled with copiously reticulated nerves, and downy beneath; the costa and main nerves are prominent, and the whole densely covered with pale tomentum. Peduncles axillary, solitary, shorter even than the petiole, woolly, bearing, in an umbel, three, elongated pedicels longer than the peduncle, and, at their base, two small opposite ovate bracteas. Calyx woolly, hemispherical, cut half way down into five ovato-lanceolato, erect, acuminated segments Corolla nearly thrice as long as the calyx, tubular, but slightly curved and ventricose, yellow, densely clothed with shaggy red hair; DECEMBER 1ST 184 the mouth contracted, spotted ; the limb of five short, spreading, rounded lobes. Stamens and pistil included. Ovary ovate, hairy, with five unequal orange-coloured glands at the base : style downy : stigma two-lipped. Fig. 1. Pistil and hypogynous glands : — magnified. M43, Tab. 4343. GARDENIA nitida. Glossy-leaved Gardenia. Nat. Ord. Rubiaceje. — Pentandria Monogynia. Gen. Char. {Vide mpra, Tab. 4307.) Gardenia nitida; inermis glaberrima, foliis oppositis ternisve submembranaceis lato- seu oblongo-lanceolatis acuminatis petiolatis undulatis nitidis, stipulis late ovatis acutis, floribus terminalibus solitariis sessilibus, calycis tubo cybndraceo ecostato, timbo 6-partito laciniis obovatis fobaceis patentibus tubo aequilongis coroUas tubo ter brevioribus, corolla? speciosse albas tubo cylindraceo (3 poll, longo) limbi 7-partito laciniis oblongis cito reflexis marginibus revolutis, staminibus 6-7 inclusis, stylo exserto apice bifido, stigmatibus cuneatis bifidis. From the stove of Messrs. Lucombe and Pince, who raised it from seeds taken from a dried specimen gathered by Mr. Whitfield at Sierra Leone. It proves to be a perfectly new and most distinct species, possessing handsome, dark green, glossy foliage, flowers among the larger of the genus, deliciously scented, the calyx furnished with large leafy segments, the corolla of the purest white, its limb cut into seven long segments which are soon reflected, as shown in our figure. Though shrubby, it is eminently suited to " pot culture ", and deserves a place in every stove. It blossoms in October and November, and will probably be found to do so at other seasons. Descr. The flowering plant from which our figure was taken is remarkable for its dense, compact, and sturdy habit, not more than two feet high, but three feet across, so as even without blossoms to be a beautiful object ; young branches herbaceous, glabrous, as is every part of the plant. Leaves oblong-lanceolate, tapering at both extremities, below into a short petiole, penni- nerved and reticulated, undulate, very glossy and dark green above, paler beneath. Stipules broadly ovate or triangular, acuminate, appressed. Flower axillary, solitary, sessile, large, white, deliciously fragrant. Calyx-tube much elongated, cylin- drical : limb of seven rather spreading obovate, or spathulate DECEMBER 1ST, 184?. spreading leafy segments. Corolla pure white : tube slender, cylindrical, about as long as the whole calyx, slightly wider upwards : the limb of seven very long, oblong, obtuse segments, soon becoming reflexed, and their sides or margins also reflexed. Stamens six or seven, included. Style filiform, a little exserted ; Stigma bifid, the segments cuneate and bifid. .j3^, IReevs ■&% Tab. 4344. THIBAUDIA Pichinchensis, /?. glabra. Pichincha Thibaudia ; glabrous var. Nat. Ord. Ericace.e. — Decandria Monogynia. Gen. Char. {Vide supra, Tab. 4303). Thibaudia PichincJienm ; ramulis angulatis sparse furfuraceo-hirtellis glabrisve, foliis brevissime petiolatis ovali-oblongis sublanceolatisve obtuse acuminatis basi rotundatis quintuplinervibus v. subpenninervibus utrinque scabrius- culis subtus pilis pams nigris raris conspersis, racemis axillaribus flori- bundis folio brevioribus, bracteis parvis, calycibus furfuraceo-hirtellis, co- rollis glabris. Benth. Thibaudia Pichinchensis. Benth. Plant. Hartw. p. 223. n. 1217. ff. glabra ; ubique omnino glabra vel foliis solummodo subtus pilis raris fuscis instructis. (Tab. nostr. 4344.) Rich as my Herbarium is in specimens of Thibaudia from the Andes of South America and of Mexico, there is not one that exactly corresponds with the present; and in no genus is it harder to refer the individuals to described species, even when aided by figures. Our plant is raised from seeds sent from the elevated mountains of Columbia by our Collector, Mr. Purdie, and it flowered first in the Greenhouse at Syon, in September, 1847. It approaches, however, so closely to the specimens of T. Pichinchensis of Mr. Bentham, collected by Hartweg on the west side of Pichincha, and still more to the description of the latter author, that I am disposed to pronounce it a glabrous variety of that species. From Professor Jameson I have a Thibaudia (no. 293) "from woods on the western side of Pichincha"; and another "from Pulalaqua, 9,000 feet above the sea-level ", which I am inclined to consider identical with our present plant, but the leaves are blunter and the flowers narrower. It is only from an extensive suite of specimens, or from an investigation of living plants, that we can arrive at any accurate conclusions ; and no genus is more worthy of a full monography. The present species is eminently beautiful, with its DECEMBER 1ST, 1847. bright green, rather ample foliage and flowers, larger than and as waxy as those of any Heath. Descr. At present our plant forms a shrub only a foot and a half to two feet high, (six to twelve feet, according to Hartweg) with glabrous slightly angled branches, the young ones green. Leaves alternate, on short petioles, oblong-ovate, acuminate, but in general rather obtuse, between coriaceous and fleshy, gla- brous, or only with a few short pale brown, scattered, paleaceous hairs beneath, rather obscurely penninerved in the recent state, but in the dry state very conspicuously so ; and the nerves, besides the mid-rib, consist of two on each side from below the middle, generally (but not invariably opposite), the lowest pair is directed upwards and usually become obsolete above the middle, slightly anastomosing, the two upper nerves converge towards the point and are connected to the costa and margin by a few faint trans- verse nervelets. Racemes axillary and subterminal, of from four to six or more flowers. Peduncle shorter than the leaves, and, as well as the pedicels, inclining downwards (towards the under-side of the leaves), bracteated j bracteas minute. Calyx red (with its adherent ovary) turbinate, articulated upon the pedicel, quite glabrous, the limb cut into five, short, triangular, acute teeth. Corolla deep rose-red, waxy, paler at the mouth, nearly an inch long, urceolate ; limb of five, equal, rather spreading, acute teeth or segments. Stamens included : filaments very broad, membrana- ceous, slightly cohering at the margin : anthers linear-subulate, downy, the broad portion attached to the front, or inner-side of the filament, the narrow, acuminated portion free, and opening by two linear pores or slits at the summit. Fig. 1. Calyx and pistil. 2. Two stamens: — magnified. INDEX, In which the Latin names of the Plants contained in the Third Volume of the Third Series (or Seventy-third Volume of the Work) are alphabetically arranged. Plate. 4316 Abelia floribunda. 4306 Acacia celastrifolia. 4312 Achimenes cupreata. 4328 iEschynanthus longiflorus. 4320 speciosus. 4293 iEchmea discolor. 4341 Anemone Japonica. 4291 Anigozanthos fuliginosa. 4295 Angrsecum funale. 4313 Anguloa Clowesii, var. 4281 Begonia fuchsoides. 4308 Berberis ilicifolia. 4339 Browallia speciosa. 4287 Brunfelsia nitida; 0? Jamai- censis. 4300 Calceolaria amplexicaubs. 4338 Chsenestes lanceolata. 4284 Chirita Sinensis. 4327 Walkeriee. 4294 Columnea aureo-nitens. 4330 crassifoba. 4279 Cordyline Eumphii. 4317 Dryandra carduacea ; var. angus- tifolia. 4326 Echinocactus cinnabarinus. 4311 hexaedrophorus. 4296 Williamsii. 4333 Eucalyptus macrocarpa. 4340 Exacum tetragonum ; /3. bicolor. 4280 Exogonium Purga. 4322 Gardenia longistyla. 4307 malleifera. 4343 nitida. 4342 Gesneria triflora. 4329 Hibiscus grossularisefolius. Plate. 4310 Hypocyrta leucostoma. 4301 Ipomsea muricata. 4305 pulcbella. 4332 Isopogon sphserocephalus. 4325 Ixora Griffithii. 4302 Laelia cinnabarina. 4314 Leucothoe pulchra. 4315 Liebigia speciosa. 4324 Lisianthus acutangulus. 4334 Malacbadenia clavata. 4299 Marsdenia maculata. 4292 Martynia fragrans. 4321 Medinilla speciosa. 4285 Nepenthes Kafflesiana. 4282 Niphaea albo-lineata. 4297 Phalsenopsis araabilis. 4289 Pharbitis catbartica. 4319 Pentstemon Gordoni. 4309 Puya Altensteinii ; var. gigantea. 4336 Rhododendron Javanicum. 4298 Buellia Purdieana. 4331 Siphocampylos glandulosa. 4286 microstoma. 4283 Smithia purpurea. 4318 Salvia leucantha. 4290 Scutellaria cordifoba. 4344 Thibaudia Pichinchensis, /3. glabra. 4303 ■ pulcherrima. 4288 Tillandsia bulbosa ; var. picta. 4335 Tritonia aurea. 4323 Tropseolum speciosum. 4337 ■ umbellatum. 4304 Vanda cristata. 4275-8 Victoria regia. INDEX, In which the English names of the Plants contained in the Third Volume of the Third Series (or Seventy-third Volume of the Work) are alphabetically arranged. Plate. 4316 Abelia, copious-flowering. 4306 Acacia, Celastrus-leaved. 4312 Achimenes, copper-leaved. 4293 iEchmea, two-coloured, or Crab's Eye. 4328 iEschynanthus, long-flowered. 4320 showy. 4341 Anemone, Japan. 4295 Angrsecum, cord-like. 4313 Anguloa, Mr. Clowes's var. 4291 Anigozanthos, sooty. 4281 Begonia, Fuchsia-like, or Ele- phant's Ear. 4308 Berberry, holly-leaved. 4339 Browallia, showy -flowered. 4287 Brunfelsia, shining-leaved; Ja- maica var. ? 4297 Butterfly-Plant, Indian. 4300 Calceolaria, or Slipper-wort, clasping-leaved. 4338 Chsenestes, lanceolate-leaved. 4284 Chirita, Chinese. 4327 Mrs. Walker's. 4294 Columnea, golden. 4330 ■ thick-leaved. 4279 Cordyline, Rumphius'. 4317 Dryandra, Thistle-like; narrow- leaved var. 4326 Echinocactus, cinnabar-flowered. 4311 hexsedron. 4296 Mr. Williams' 4281 Elephant's Ear, Fuchsia-like. 4333 Eucalyptus, large-fruited or Gum Tree. 4340 Exacum, square-stalked ; two- coloured var. 4307 Gardenia, clapper-bearing. 4343 glossy-leaved. 4322 long-styled. Plate. 4342 Gesneria, three-flowered. 4333 Gum-Tree, large-fruited. 4329 Hibiscus, Gooseberry-leaved. 4310 Hypocyrta, white-mouthed. 4323 Indian Cress, showy. 4337 umbellate. 4301 Ipomaea, fine-leaved. 4305 handsome. 4332 Isopogon, round-headed. 4325 Ixora, Mrs. Griffith's. 4302 Lselia, cinnabar-coloured. 4314 Leucothoe, elegant. 4315 Liebigia, showy. 4324 Lisianthus, sharp-angled. 4334 Malachadenia, club-stalked. 4299 Marsdcnia, spotted-leaved. 4292 Martynia, fragrant. 4321 Medinilla, showy. 4282 Niphaea, white-lined. 4319 Pentstemon, Mr. Gordon's. 4289 Pharbitis, purging. 4285 Pitcher-Plant, Sir Stamford Baffles'. 4309 Puya, Altenstein's ; gigantic par. 4280 Purga or True Jalap. 4336 Ehododendron, Javanese. 4298 lluellia, Mr. Purdie's. 4318 Sage, white-flowered. 4331 Siphocampylos, glandular. 4286 • small-mouthed. 4299 Skull-cap, heart-leaved. 4283 Smithia, purple-flowered. 4303 Thibaudia, beautiful. 4344 Pichincha, glabrous var. 4288 Tillandsia, bulbous; coloured^/. 4335 Tritonia, golden. 4334 Vanda, crested. 4275-8 Water-Lily, great, Victoria. COMPANION TO THE BOTANICAL MAGAZINE. ADDITION TO THE « HOETUS KEWENSIS." Clerodendron macrophyllum. Elatum glabruin fruticosum, foliis amplis ellipticis coriaceis ajiice acumi- natis basi obtusis in petiolum crassum semiteretem breviter decurrentibus integerrimis costa nervisque subtus valde prominentibus, paniculis axillari- bus terminalibusque braeteatis, bracteis longis spathulatis, pedunculis ultimis trichotomis, pedicellis apice dilatatis, calycibus deltoideo-acuminatis profunde 5-partitis, laciniis lanceolato-acuminatis conniventibus, corollae (albee) tubo calycem duplo superante, limbo 5-lobo, lobis secundis lineari- oblongis extimis angustioribus, staminibus flexuosis divaricatis styloque longe exsertis. Clerodendron macrophyllum, Bl. Beitr. {non Sims). Clerodendron phyllomega, Steud. Nomencl. vol.i. p. 382. Walters, Repert. Boi. vol. iv. p. 104. Hab. Sandy places on Seribu Mountains of Java ; and introduced from thence by Mr. Veitch, in whose Nursery at Mount Radford, Exeter, three plants have been in blossom for six weeks, and are now (December, 1846) in high perfection. One of the finest of all the species of Clerodendron ; with white flowers indeed, but what is wanting in brilliancy of colour in the corolla is amply compensated by the noble foliage (almost resembling that of some East Indian Magnolia) and the vast panicle of innumerable blossoms. It is of easy growth, and continues many weeks uninterruptedly in flower. It is a soft- wooded shrub, an inch in thickness at the base of the stem, erect, three feet high. The leaves fourteen to sixteen inches long inde- pendent of the petiole, thick and subcoriaceous, dark green, with a very prominent midrib and nerves beneath. The panicles are terminal and axillary ; so copious, that the whole plant may be said to be one vast pyramidal leafy panicle. The flowers are about the size and of the same colour as those of Cler. nutans (Bot. Mag. Tab. 3049). No figure could possibly do justice to this fine plant in the small pages of our Magazine. It has, we under- stand, been recently exhibited at a Meeting of the Horticultural Society in Regent Street. * The Cler. macrophyllum of Sims (Bot. Mag. t.2536), is only a downy variety of Cler. (Volkameria) serratum, L. B NOTICE OF A BOTANICAL MISSION TO THE WEST INDIES AND NEW GRENADA; BY WILLIAM PURDIE, Collector for the Royal Gardens of Kew ; in letters addressed to the Editor. (Continued from vol. ii. p. 42.) Santa Martha, June 4th, 1844. Since my last letter, of the 5th of May,* I have made several excursions to the mountains behind Santa Martha, but on no occasion have I got any higher than 2,000 feet ; further progress being impossible from this side. I find there are only two direc- tions in which the Nivada can be reached, one is by way of Rio de la Hacha, the other by the Valle de Upari. The former is the route by which Mr. Linden ascended, and the distance from hence is 150 miles. The latter is the way I think of pursuing, for it is untrodden by any botanist, and it also seems unadvisable to follow Mr. Linden's footsteps : the distance by the Valle de Upari is 250 miles. Behind Santa Martha rises a succession of mountain ridges ; terminated, so far as can be seen from this place, by a lofty range, apparently about 6,000 feet high. Behind this range lies the Valle de Upari, by which the Nivada may be gained. I understand it is a very rich district. Hitherto I have found Orckidece very scarce. There has been great difficulty in obtaining mules ; owing to the want of inland population, there is no demand for these animals, except what are actually in use, and I find them both scarce and dear. As yet, I have bought only two, for which I paid 180 dollars. They are, however, good and valuable. This beautiful country lies uncultivated for want of inhabitants ; forests stretch in every direction, hardly a rood of land is reclaimed. There is no intercourse with the interior, and the hire of mules costs 24 dollars each to go to the Valle and back again ; with the stipulation, too, that the journey must be performed in a given number of days. Thus it is cheapest in the end to pur- chase, and I have taken care to select such animals as will please the eye, as well as prove serviceable ; otherwise there would be great difficulty in disposing of them again, when I go away. These Columbians look very sharp to their own interests. Hitherto my excursions have been made cheaply ; for the gentle- men, to whom I brought letters of introduction, kindly lent me * No letter appears to have arrived of this date. 3 beasts for my journeys : but now I must have my own mules, and I shall require no fewer than four ; one for my riding, one to carry specimens and paper, and two others for various articles of cargo, plants, &e. I hope to set off for the Valle on Monday next. I now send a box of Orchidea and a few seeds, together with specimens of a highly curious tuberous-rooted plant, which I have never seen in flower. The Indians use a decoction of the root, not the tuber, for an eye-wash, and consider it a most valuable application for removing inflammation and healing injuries in that organ. The tuber should be kept almost entirely above the soil. The dristolochia is singular, and its roots contain a valuable astringent, which has the reputation of proving an antidote to the wounds of the most venomous serpents. The Indians aver that long keeping improves the virtue of these roots : some pieces, together with seeds and specimens, and a perfect capsule, are in the parcel. I also send specimens, not in bloom, of a remarkable tree, with a habit resembling a Punica ; it is marked Granadilla, and was discovered, I am told, by M. Funck during his brief visit to Santa Martha : he saw it in flower, and considered it to be a new and splendid species of Punica ; but to me it seems essentially distinct from that genus.* The calyx is inferior, the capsule dry, and the seeds winged. Though I have never seen the inflorescence, the above peculiarities convince me that M. Funck examined the tree no farther than its general habit, which certainly bears a strong resemblance to Punica, to which it owes its local appellation. Lest the seeds should not germinate, 1 shall procure living plants on my return from the Nivada 1 intend sending home a glass case, as soon as I can find withal to fill one. The roads in this country are dreadfully bad ; and communica- tion is mostly carried on by water. Yesterday, returning to Santa Martha, I was obliged to swim two rivers; sometimes they are quite unfordable : in fact, I never passed such a trying lortmglit as the last, it being impossible to keep myself dry. Ine paths are generally conducted by the river-sides, and often the mules capsize and hurl rider and load into the water: add to which, ram falls daily of the most terrific kind. I shall set off for the Valle on Monday, and be absent about three months, lo-day the weather is hot and moist, the thermometer indicating 8b in the shade at noon. . . , I will thank you to decide on the route you wish me to take, * It proves to be the rare and beautiful Lafoemia -puuicafolia of De Candolle.— Ed. after leaving Santa Martha. I could go by Maracaybo to Bogota, through the plains of Maraceto, and obtain the Palm which pro- duces the Vegetable Ivory, which I am informed grows there. It strikes me this would be the most eligible course to pursue ; and then proceed down the Magdalena to Chagres, thus avoiding the navigation up the river (the Magdalena) which is very long and tedious, occupying as much time as it would take to reach Bogota by way of Maracaybo. Pueblo Nuevo, Valle de Upari, July 25th. Two days ago I returned from La Nivada, bringing a collection of plants, seeds and specimens. The Post from Santa Martha has just put me in possession of your esteemed letter of April 16th; and though I have only two hours in which to answer it, I send a few lines, and can do no more this time, being engaged in preparing a box of seeds, which I shall send by the same con- veyance, to meet the August Packet. I am glad to hear that the articles I despatched formerly have reached England in good order. The Orchideous plant, marked Broughtonia, is very handsome. The present parcel of seeds will probably arrive about Oct. ; not sooner, because the packet goCs to Cartagena and Chagres and returns to the former place, before crossing to meet the Jamaica Packet. I must convey the seeds and specimens to La Pundacion, one hundred miles distant, whence they will go to Santa Martha, one hundred and ten miles more ; I shall send them by a canoe, and it is very probable I may arrive myself at Santa Martha, about the same period ; for I shall proceed by way of Rio de la Hacha. After conveying these things to La Pundacion, I return hither and ascend the mountains at all the accessible points, viz., the Indian village of Artankes, Rosario and Maracassa. Prom the latter, I trust it will be found practicable to reach the Nivada ; if not, I shall attempt it from the side of Rio de la Hacha, after despatching my collection to Santa Martha. I find M. Punck has preceded me in this direction, having attempted to climb the Nivada from the village of St. Sebastian, but failed in conse- quence of the excessive cold. I certainly never felt such a piercing air. I, however, reached the snow line and gathered a few plants peculiar to that region. The only combustible article that could be procured to make a fire withal, is a singular composite plant, which was too wet to burn readily. No shelter was there, but rocks. The suffering which the Indians seemed to endure from the cold was extreme, although the village where they reside is at an elevation of 6,000 feet ; on the second day, one of these poor creatures was unable to proceed, from lightness in the head*, and he lay down among the rocks, till I returned ; his companion was also very unwell, but I experienced no farther inconvenience, than a slight throbbing in the temples. This journey has not been quite so productive as I had hoped ; for although I have some good plants of Orchidece, all new to me, the number of species does not exceed ten. One is very remarkable ; it is a climber, with pseudo-bulbs upwards of a foot long. It grows fifteen to twenty feet high and bears a long twining spike of handsome Oncidium-like blossoms, but denoting a different genus ; it is a showy and remarkable plant. The best thing I procured is a terrestrial Cymbidium, allied to C. utriculatum, but without the conspicuous sheath; it is the handsomest terrestrial Orclddea I have ever seen. As I collected abundance of strong tubers, I hope it will succeed in England ; the plant is very rare, I have seen it only twice. Herewith I forward a box of one hundred kinds of seeds from the Nivada, some are of handsome Ericoid shrubs. The vegetation, near the snow line, consists mainly of types of European genera ; I noticed three Gerania and four Carices (one of which resembles C. penduld), two Ranunculi, a showy Alyssum &c. The seeds include a Botrychium and an Osmmida, an Umbellifera and a Senecio, two Vaccinia, one Cerastium, two species of Hieracium, several of Gnaphalium, and many fine shrubs, allied to Erica ; also a Lupine and Gentian and three singular tetrandrous plants ; I have plenty of seeds of the latter. Near the snow line grew two pretty species, quite unknown to me, and on the margin of the snow, a Primula (?) of which I regretted not to obtain plants or seed. I think of proceeding to Santa Martha in about six weeks, whence I shall make two excursions to the mountains in different directions, to an elevation of 3,000 feet, the greatest elevation that can be attained in that direction. The weather is now pretty good, but rain falls daily on the mountains, towards evening. The lowest temperature I have yet seen is 38°. Fahr., when the cold was extremely piercing. * One of the symptoms of the malady, called " La Puna ", which affects persons who ascend lofty mountains. See Mr. Cruikshank's description of it, on an ascent of the Andes.. Botanical Miscellany, vol. ii. p. 191— o. Valle Dupar, August 20th. 1844. I have just returned from La Fundacion, having forwarded three boxes of plants, chiefly Orchidece, and one of dried speci- mens. The former will, I hope be sent on without the least delay, but the dried plants can remain at Santa Martha till I return, as it is probable they may imbibe damp on the way and will require fresh papers, previous to their being despatched to England. Among the contents of the boxes are some very good Orchidece > a pretty Achimenes, which seems new, a handsome terrestrial Cymbidium, several tufts of a Sobralia, an Oncidium, with dis- tant pseudo-bulbs, and twining flower-stems, eight feet in length ; I have only one indifferent specimen of it. The plants are all packed in sheaths of maize, to absorb any superabundant moisture, and are now in excellent order. I expect to reach, shortly, a good country for Orchidece, which is not the character of any district I have yet visited. This immense cluster of mountains can only be gained by two routes, that of San Sebas- tian, and of the Rio de la Hacha ; in every other direction, they are absolutely inaccessible. The distance, in a direct line, from Santa Martha to La Nivada, is forty-six miles, and by the route I pursued two hundred and seventy miles, two hundred and twenty of which led through an uninteresting plain, a ramifi- cation of the great plain of the Magdalena, affording few plants. I am now on my road for three Indian villages, situated at the slight elevation of 2,000 feet, whence I hope to make my way to a higher latitute; 4,000 feet is probably the height most favourable to the production of Orchidece. After reaching Rio Hacha, I shall ascend the Nivada from that side, and I do not expect to return to Santa Martha before the beginning of October. From thence I plan to undertake two excursions to the interior, which is all that can be effected, because of the uninhabited nature of the country. Owing to the entire want of facilities of access, the fine soil and desirable climate of these mountains are lost to the human race ; and the thinly scattered population, chiefly of Spanish descent, is located in hot savannahs, of which the people's looks plainly testify the unhealthy influence. The few villages on the mountains belong exclusively to the aboriginal Indians ; the remote situation having preserved them from the ravages of Spanish conquest. A route leads to Bogota by Ocafia, which no botanist has visited, and it passes over some lofty moun- tains. You will find a charming and fragrant orchideous plant in the box ; it is numbered ' 9 '. I gathered it to day in flower. I expected to have arrived at Rio Hacha ere this time, but have been detained some days by the illness of one of my mules, which is now better. Among the seeds from the Nivada, you will find some of a curious Columnea ; it grows upright and pro- duces its flowers in large whorls, six inches across j the calyx, is scarlet, very large and showy, and the whole habit of the plant is striking. The flowers protrude but slightly beyond the calyx. The weather is exceedingly unsettled : the plains are warm : the thermometer varying from 90°. to 96°. in the shade ; a heat which is the more oppressive, from the absence, thus far inland, of the sea breeze. I find it is impracticable to reach Maracaybo by land. The Indians and some other tribes being now hostile to the Colum- bian Spaniards, it is said they will allow no one to traverse their territory. I am sorry to hear that the man bringing the post, was murdered the other day between Rio de la Hacha and Santa Martha, after being robbed of three hundred dollars. Rio de la Hacha, Oct. 19th, 1844. I arrived here yesterday from the interior, bringing my collec- tions with me. During this last excursion I have explored the south side of the Nivada de Sta. Martha in all its accessible parts. I sent hither before me, three mules' loads of plants, chiefly Orchidece, from the Sierras de Maracaybo ; my visit to which occupied a month beyond the time on which I had calculated ; but finding myself, when I reached the village of Molina, in the Valle Dupar, close to the above named Sierras, I judged it right to investigate the first great range. Though the wet weather was unfriendly to travelling, I gathered more Orchideous plants on these beautiful mountains, than have fallen to my lot during all my journeys in the Nivada. This Nivada is one solitary stupendous cluster, severed from the Sierras de Maracaybo, by the Valle Dupar, which is from ten to twenty-five miles in width and stretches its broad savannahs to the great plain of the Mag- dalena river on the w r est, and the extensive savannah of the Guajira to the east ; while a few hills, scattered on the flat land, seem to form an imperfect connexion between these two vast ridges. Among other Orchidea, I have found a splendid Limodorum (no. 22; resembling L. Tankervillia, but of much finer growth : its scapes are simple, three feet high, sepals pure white, and labellum dark purple : the blossoms are rather smaller than those of L. TankervillidB. It is rare and confined to one mountain 8 forest, where it grows in the earth among rotten trees and wood. Also a charming Peristeria and a Stanhojjea. I was surprised to find the forest, at the summit of the range, consisting of the same kind of Podocarpiw which I had seen in Jamaica ; it is of gigantic stature, vyeing with the loftiest trees. I am satisfied that these mountains, if traversed to Maracaybo, would produce many valuable plants, especially Orchidea; but the journey would be a task of no small difficulty ; for all communication was cut off, two years ago, with the view to prevent the escape of General Paz, and the way has never been re-opened. The savage tribes of wandering Indians, the bad state of the roads, and the abundance of tigers, bears, and other wild beasts, would offer formidable obstructions. It was a disappointment, on reaching Rio de la Hacha, to find no letters ; though I had requested Mr. Marks, the Vice- Consul at Sta. Martha, to forward what might arrive for me. Your last bears date April 16th. I fear this is but a bad season for sending home my plants, for though I have used all possible expedition, with the view of forwarding them ere winter, I have been unable to accomplish my design. The Packet has also changed its time of sailing, so that the middle of November is now the earliest period when the boxes can be sent, and they and my letter will go by the same opportunity. I am now busy packing four boxes, and I enclose a list of their contents. In two or three days, I shall set off for the Nivada, to ascend it by this side ; an excursion which will occupy about a month, when, on my return, I shall ship my plants from Sta. Martha, and there dispose of my mules ; that place affording the best market for them. The Nivada is four or five days from hence ; it has been the wet season ever since I came here, and my jour- ney has proved, of course, all the more slow and tedious and difficult. I send a few seeds, to fill up the spaces of the box ; among them are some good things : a species of Justicia, much resem- bling a Fuc/ma in habit and inflorescence ; the seeds were scarce, but I procured a small quantity. No. 181 is an interesting Ipomcea, of an upright heath-like habit, and large showy flowers ; there are three species of Aristolochia, two of Manettia, some of Pentstemon, with a greenish yellow inflorescence. No. 164, a Tetrandrous plant, is very showy, and has the habit of a Mimulus, and flowers like a Petunia, large and white. I have also some species of Orchideous plants, that I consider new. Shortly after Mr. Linden visited the Nivada, an epidemic broke 9 out among the Indians, which carried off about fifty persons ; and the poor ignorant beings attribute the malady to his pre- sumption in exploring that range, and consider him to be in concert with some evil spirit, and give him the name of 'El Diablo '. The governor assures me that this delusion is deeply rooted : he has vainly endeavoured to combat it, and even appre- hends it may interfere with my movements and hinder my success. Rio de la Hacha, Dec. 14th, 1844. Possibly you are surprised that my collections have not arrived before winter, and my own calculations are equally put out by it ; but the nature of the country through which I have travelled, the wet season and the great distance, have conspired to cause this delay. As far as the performance of my duty allowed (in executing which I have ascended the mountains, wherever it was practicable,) my movements have been made with expedition ; for my health was admirable, till the second ascent of the Nivada, from whence I am just returned ; I was there sharply attacked with fever and ague, and was laid up for a fortnight in San Miguel, an Indian village, the highest on this side of the Nivada, its elevation being about 5,000 feet. I believe that frequent wettings induced this illness ; but I am now happily recovered. It was my intention to reach Santa Martha, on the coast side, fifty miles from the road by which I have come ; and only ninety remained from a village called Dibulla, but I find it utterly impracticable to pursue that route, for I should be compelled, by keeping along the coast, to cross all the rivers at their mouths ; and some of them are truly so many arms of the sea. The whole flat country, lying between the sea and the mountains, several leagues wide, is inundated completely, which prevented bringing my mules from Dibulla. We have just had a few dry days ; and the general opinion is, that the wet season is over. I have therefore sent for the beasts, and shall travel by land, through the Valle Dupar, now the only practicable course ; for if I shipped my mules, the expense of it would be greater than that of going by land. It is also somewhat uncer- tain how long I might be detained here. Rio Hacha is prettily situated on the dry sandy beach, without any harbour : it is a cool and pleasant spot. If possible, I shall set off on the 1 7th. I have two objects in view, one is to sell my mules at Santa Martha ; for I should dis- pose of them here at a great loss, because the Indians breed these creatures in great numbers at Guagira ; and the other, E 10 because I fear that the four boxes of Orchidea and one of seeds, which were to leave Santa Martha by the November or Decem- ber packet, may have arrived in England, at a time of frost; so that I am very anxious to secure more of the same plants ; which I shall get in the Interior. Among the very fine species are a Scliomburghkia, a splendid Limodorum and a very singular and un- common Maxillaria. I have never seen the latter in full bloom, but judging from its strong habit and still stronger flower-stems, I expect it will prove a remarkable thing ; these I hope to pro- cure in a day or two, from the Sierras of Maracaybo ; the re- mainder of the road, three hundred miles, lies through a savan- nah country, and will afford the seeds of some fine Palms. I expect the distance will occupy about eighteen days. I shall pack up here the plants collected on this side of the Nivada, to be shipped by the first conveyance to Santa Martha ; whence they will be despatched, so as to reach England early in April, when there will be no risk of frost. Among other plants, gathered on this side of the Nivada, is a magnificent Oncidium ranking among the most conspicuous of that noble tribe : its bright yellow flowers are slightly striped in the centre with scarlet, and as large (which you will see by the specimens) as those of 0. Papilio : the habit of the species is strictly trailing, like a Manettia. I have some fears about getting this plant to England alive, its pseudo-bulbs being so delicate. I found it climbing over mossy trees, to then- topmost branches, on the river San Antonio, at an elevation of about 3,000 feet. There is also a showy and fragrant plant, like Catasetum, but a distinct genus. The ascent of this slope of the Nivada has afforded me many more plants than did the other side, by way of San Sebastian. The vegetation is generally stronger and finer. After ascending 2,000 feet, I came to a gigantic forest oiLaurus Per sea (Avocado Pear) strewing the ground with its delicious fruits, and the luxuriant foliage affording an impenetrable shade: there were also a few scattered Palms ; the slender and graceful Chamcedorea gracilis was particularly abundant ; producing pendent clusters of golden fruit, which imparted a lively aspect to the otherwise sombre wilderness. This mixture of trees continued till about 4,000 feet of elevation ; where Palms become more predominant, blending with the less noble but more delicate and beautiful Tree-Ferns. There was nothing, however, new to me in this vegetation. Higher still, at 5,000 feet, comes the Podocarpus, with some Myrtaceous trees, Melastoma and the stately Wax- Palm, the only Palm that is found at such an elevation. Hence, till shrubs cease (at about 11,000 feet) the beautiful Bef arias 11 (the Bhododendrons of South America) and other ericoid shrubs, with some suffruticose Syngenesia and a few conspicuous Melas- tomacees, compose the principal vegetation. The last plant of any size seen near the snow, is a robust Syngenesia, which is esteemed highly medicinal ; here and there grew also patches of a showy Lupine, some kinds of Geranium, and, in swampy spots, an Osmunda, several Carices, and a striking Pinguicula, reminding me of our P. grandiflora, with foliage of the same glistening and icy-cold nature. The plants that vegetated highest up were a conspicuous species of Alypium, and, along the margin of perpetual snow, a Primula ; which I should have much liked to gather in bloom. Many other plants were seen upon the Sierra, but not in sufficient abundance to form any feature in the landscape. I found in rocky spots a striking Echeveria ; a neat, but not conspicuous Daphne ; one species of Fuchsia, and two of Berberis, with a strong and rather rare Passion-flower, a Tropceolum, several Ardisia, an Ilex, and a Crataegus, &c. On my return hither two days ago, I received your and Mr. Smith's letters, announcing the arrival of my first box of plants from Sta. Martha : sorry I am that some of the contents had perished. I am now convinced that it is a faulty plan to pack OrchidecB (finally) shortly after they are gathered ; which I did with all my Jamaica plants, and with the box in question from Sta. Martha. I have observed that after carrying plants in open airy baskets for a week or two, the oldest bulbs of the Orchidece commonly perish : thus it must be advisable to ascertain their state before sending them away. When I arrived at Rio de la Hacha, I found, in the four boxes just despatched, that there was a full bushel of dead and broken rubbish : if this had been allowed to remain in consequence of the packages having been closed, it must have destroyed many more plants ; and to a similar process of unexamined decay, I attribute my previous failures. I am anxious to hear how the roots of Achimenes have borne the journey ; in order that I may yet secure more if desirable, for I know of a station where three species grow, on the mountains above Sta. Martha ; one of which 1 believe is not in cultivation. Every inquiry has been made, since I came into Columbia, with a view to obtaining intelligence of the Palo de Vacca (Cow-tree), but I can hear nothing of it, The Phytelephas (Vegetable Ivory Palm) is procurable at Sta. Martha, the nuts being brought from the province of Maraquita ; but I am not so sure of their freshness : therefore, in the absence of further directions from you about my movements, I think of ascending the Magdalena, IS and myself collecting growing plants and seeds of the Ivory Palm. If time allows, I shall make an excursion to the moun- tains in that district, and return to Santa Martha about the middle or end of March. I have much to do there and mean to make the best possible use of my opportunities and to bring with me all the plants I can. If there is anything you particularly desire to receive from Jamaica, have the goodness to specify it : my acquaintance with the stations in that island will probably enable me to procure it without difficulty, and it is probable I must come home via Jamaica. Santa Martha, February 21st, 1845. I returned to this place a month ago and was laid up imme- diately for a fortnight, with fever and ague i though weak, I am now recovered. There is much fever in the country, carrying off great numbers of people. My first business has been to prepare my plants, which are despatched by this day's Packet (the list is enclosed). They have been gathered some time and are packed in the way recommended by Mr. Smith in his last letter ; so that I trust they will arrive in the same excellent order they are in now. I particularly wish that the bulbs of the trailing Oncidium may succeed : they are delicate. They should be twisted round a mossy branch and placed in a cool part of the stove, their native habitat being river-courses, 4,000 feet above the level of the sea. I take the liberty of mentioning that the thermometers arrived safely ; but they are of no use to me ; because I want them to ascertain heights, which can be estimated sufficiently accurately by a thermometer for all botanical purposes. For instance, my thermometer gave the altitude, which I reached on the Sierra Nivada, as 14,500 feet ; and I calculated the snowy peaks above to be 2,000 feet higher than where I stood ; and as this amounts to the same measurement as Humboldt, and I tested the eleva- tion again when I descended, I feel satisfied with the general correctness of my reckoning. But the thermometers now sent are unfit even for the common temperature of the tropics, their range being only isfo Fahr.; so that riding in the sun would burst them in my pocket. Unfortunately I am now without one ; for a thermometer which I purchased in Jamaica was broken at the time of my illness. The boxes contain many fine plants. No. 3 is perhaps among the noblest of Orchidea ; its pseudo-bulbs resemble those of a 13 Gongora, but are longer, and the peduncles, two feet long, are pendent, and bear at the extremity three or four very large fra- grant flowers, with a scent equalling that of Stanhopea grandi- fiora, but more succulent, and thus very difficult to dry ; orange and scarlet are the prevailing colours of these charming blossoms. This plant is very rare, and comes from the Sierras of Maracaybo. I also send a box of seeds and one containing Cacti t there is a pretty Mammillaria and a few plants of a species of Melocactus, probably distinct from M. communis. Among the seeds are some of a splendid Passion-flower, which I gathered near the snow : it was in bloom on my first ascent, but I could not secure fruit, till the last time. I found this fruit very delicious, the Indians give it the name of Cummincalla. In a few days I expect to secure growing plants of Lafoensia punici/olia, for my Ward's case. I lately sold my four cargo mules for eight doubloons : less than they cost by a good deal ; but I have had eight months work of them, and they are, of course, somewhat out of condition, and grass being scarce, their keep is very dear here. I still retain my own riding mule, which I bought for one hundred dollars, and expect to realize the same sum for it. The most remarkable Palm I have seen is a scandent, or climbing one, called " Malamda," and with more the aspect of a briar than a palm : I send seeds of it. After I shall have made a few excursions to the mountains, behind Santa Martha, it is my present design to ascend the Mag- dalena, to three days journey above Mompax (eleven days' ascent in all). There, at a place called Taguaje, from the native name of the Ivory-Nut Palm {Phytelephas), this tree, the Tagua, abounds ; and I shall also be in the vicinity of Ocafia, the mountains of which may be worth a visit. But as this plan is formed in the absence of precise instructions from you, it is pro- bable the letters I look for by the next packet may alter my movements. I have collected many Palm-seeds of different kinds, which should have been sent home with the other things ; but I am unable to pack them properly without moss, which is not to be had till I go to Mancha. A plant of the singular Aristolochia is thriving beautifully in one of my glass cases. My dried specimens are also waiting till the next packet. 1 have been too ill to arrange and despatch them yet. Several gentlemen have given me descriptions of Phytelephas, {Ivory-Nut Palm) which they all profess to know well ; but the details which they communicate vary strangely. One says the 14 tree is dwarfish, not a yard high, and produces its nuts at the bottom ; while others assure me that it is a lofty Palm, and that the fruits are procured from the summit. Of course, I am the more desirous to see the tree myself. A few days since, thirty tons of the nuts arrived from the Magdalena, commissioned for America and Germany : 1 applied for and received some, and found, on cutting open two or three, that they were quite fresh, and the germ in a state of perfect vitality. Accordingly I planted some fifty, and I hope they may succeed. You speak of my collecting sea-weeds, but I have only visited the coast in two places, near Rio de la Hacha, which is low and sandy, and affords none. I hope to be more successful at Santa Martha. It will be necessary for me to return thither, that I may plant the nuts or growing specimens of Phytelephas, which I expect to procure up the Magdalena River. In the absence of instructions from you, I shall probably visit Antioquia, said to be famous for its rich mountain vegetation. Santa Martha, March 23rd, 1845. At the time when I wrote last, rather more than a month ago, I was very weak, from an attack of fever and ague. During my tardy recovery, I have been engaged in packing my dried speci- mens, which I forward in two boxes, by the same packet as carries this letter. Owing to the carelessness of the persons who brought my luggage from Rio de la Hacha, some of the bundles were immersed in salt water, to the injury of the specimens and destruction of the seeds. To-morrow I start for Mancha and other places in the vicinity, where I hope to procure plants to fill one glass case, reserving the other for the Ivory-Nut Palms. My present intended route is by way of Ocana, and thence to cross the mountains to Bogota, a beautiful and fertile district, according to the reports I hear, and which has never been hitherto travelled by any botanist. I have no doubt that I shall find many interesting plants at Bogota : have the kindness to address me, care of the British Minister. There are some good Ferns among the plants now sent, but this tribe is less numerous here than in the West India Islands. Among the dried specimens I have lost, were fine ones of Lafo- ensia punicifolia : two or three still remain, and some good Orchidece. I sent growing plants of a very fine Stanhopea, from the Sierra de Maracaybo, which is part of the same chain of the Andes which I shall meet with again at Ocana. The vegetation is said to be far richer around Bogota than at Santa 15 Martha, and there are snowy mountains between Ocana and Bogota. I am glad to hear that the Lace Barks thrive so well. I shall do my best to keep a journal of my travels, and to make notes of everything worthy of observation ; but this is no easy task, where all the arrangements devolve upon one individual : my eye has to be upon all minutiae, and often at night I am too weary to sit down to write. I am not yet quite decided whether to proceed to Bogota, by the Valle Dupar, or by the river Magdalena, ascending it to Ocaiia. The latter is the most direct course, but I shall of course get no plants that way. Tidings have just arrived from Bogota of a dreadful visitation that has befallen the Valle of Ambolema, famous for its tobacco. An avalanche descended from the snowy range of Tolima, and covered four leagues, engulphing a thousand persons, all its population. For many miles down the Magdalena river the effect of this catastrophe was seen, in the destruction of the fish killed by the sudden rush of cold water. Government has esti- mated the damage at 60,000 dollars worth of tobacco. Santa Martha, April 20th, 1845. Since the sailing of the last packet, I have made excursions to all accessible points of the mountain range lying behind this town, and have collected as many Orchidece, some very handsome species, as fill a large box. I have also many seeds : one is a species of Lisianthm which I had not before seen, an abundant flowerer though not very conspicuous ; the plant grows to about eighteen inches high, and is much branched. There are also fine ripe fruits of the Granadilla ; and I see in an old work called ' Floresta de Santa Martha,' and written by a Spanish military officer, about a hundred years ago, that the wood of this tree was then exported, being very highly prized for its beauty in orna- mental furniture. Now, nothing seems known of the Granadilla timber ; and, indeed, the taste for any decorative articles in a house is at the lowest ebb. I have not been able to fill the glass case with growing plants, as 1 hoped, and have therefore put Palm-seeds into the vacant spaces that they may germinate on the passage. I shall leave the case under the charge of Mr. Fer- guson, an English merchant, who is also appointed Vice Consul here, during the approaching temporary absence of Mr. Marks, who is about to proceed to Bogota, by way of the river. I trust to start myself the day after to-morrow, and mean to 16 diminish the expence of land-carriage by sending before me to the port of Ocafia, all such things as I can dispense with till I arrive there. The mule I mentioned before, is in good condition, and quite fit for the journey. Enclosed are some flowers of a splendid Orchidea : several growing plants of it are forwarded ; but I have been unable to dry good specimens. I shall write from Ocana, which is probably the first good botanizing ground I shall reach, six hundred miles distant, the country between is said to be all savanna. The weather con- tinues very warm, 90° in the shade, and 87° during night : happily there is no rain, which is a most favourable circumstance for my journey ; several rivers, difficult to be forded, occurring within a few days' travelling from hence. My health continues good. Ocana, July 20th, 1845. Since writing from Santa Martha, I have reached this place, traversing a burning plain from five to six hundred miles wide, and destitute of all vegetable interest, except as regards its numerous Palms. So very trying a journey I never made ; but my health was good, though I had one or two slight touches of fever. At the village of Semana, seventeen leagues from hence, and near the great river Magdalena, I entered the mountains by the Paroquia del Carmen, and saw, for the first time, the Tagua, or Ivory-Nut Palm {Phytelephas). Rising gradually between two ranges of mountains of great elevation, I reached Ocana, which is situated on an undulated amphitheatre of bare grassy hills, those in the distance only being clad with primitive forest. The elevation of the city is 2500 feet, the surrounding hills about 1500 feet more : there are 6,000 inhabitants. Nothing can be more delicious than the climate, the temperature varying from 65° to 75° Pahr. At Ocana, for the first time in South America, I have seen little gardens attached to the houses. Apples are grown with some success, and wheat is raised on the hills suffi- cient for the consumption of the town. I cannot praise the quality of the bread. Bad weather prevented my doing much for some days after my arrival. I have been obliged to purchase mules for the journey to Bogota ; the hire of each animal to go thither being charged forty -five dollars, while the price to buy them is only five dollars more ; — viz., fifty dollars for cargo mules, and from one hundred to one hundred and fifty dollars for those which are 17 used to the saddle. I am fortunately provided with a riding- beast, and have procured four others, at about 200 dollars : but the bargain was attended with much difficulty, for the people here are very hard to deal with. I spent about a fortnight in the mountains of Ocana. From the peculiarly marly nature of the soil, a Be/aria is common, even at this elevation : there are plants of it in the glass-case. Two gigantic forest-trees, species of Cinchona, abound in the virgin woods, they are conspicuous and highly fragrant. The most remarkable things I have found are two kinds of Siphocawpylus, one particularly handsome and rare; I send growing plants of them. Also, some small specimens of a most remarkable Balanophora, which I have often seen, five or six inches in diameter. The natives call it ' Cardon de la Cordillera '. Its colour is Indian-red and its rigid bracteas completely enclose the flower when in its most perfect state. Moist places, near the summit of the range, produce it abundantly. Also, another singular plant, allied to Balanophora, but quite a distinct genus : I have only three specimens and they are not yet dry. A showy Salvia, and a most beautiful Begonia* so closely resembling a Fuchsia, that I took it for one : in habit, and inflorescence, it rivals our finest cultivated Fuchsias, and excels them by being in bloom all the year : I send growing plants and a few seeds of it, and a quantity of roots of two species of Achimenes, new to me ; one, which I gathered in flower, grows dwarfish, its flowers are showy and white. Of Orchidea I found few : Nos. 1 and 2 are handsome and highly fragrant. Having received information, that my baggage, which, to save land-carriage, I sent by the river, had arrived at Puerta Mac- connal de Ocana, three days' journey from this place, I proceeded thither. I ascertained that the celebrated Phytelephas grew in that direction, and accordingly, one day after leaving Ocana, and on my way to the Port, I found it at La Laguneta, a small settlement, and being told that I should no where else have such good opportunity of collecting it, I spent some days there. The Phytelephas, or Ivory-nut Palm, is dioecious, very graceful in aspect and producing 15-20 pinnate leaves, which, when full-grown, measure nearly twenty feet in length, and are of a delicate pale green colour. The nature of this Palm is to have little or no stem, its habit is not robust. In old specimens, the mid-rib of the leaves is flattened, but in young and fruit-bearing ones, it is round. The aspect of both sexes is the same. The male plant is distinguished by its spatha: the female plant * Begonia fuclmoides ; lately published, with a figure, in the pages of our Botanical Magazine 18 produces none, or it bursts and disappears at a very early stage of growth. The male flowers and spatha are produced from the axils of the inner leaves and they incline outwards. The singular heads of fertile inflorescence grow round the base of the plant, often six clusters at one time and the heads rest on the ground, or are wedged between the leaves, and borne on a buried footstalk, of which the fibre is exceedingly tough. These clusters are of an imperfectly rounded form, covered with strong protuberan- ces, about an inch and a half long, resembling styles, but which have generally no connexion with the fructification of the seeds. On dissecting one of these compact heads, I found it to consist of many clusters, with three to five, commonly four seeds, com- pactly knitted together. Hence the name of this Palm," Cabeza del Nigro," by no means an inapt comparison, for the style- like projections resemble a black man's rigid hair. The styles contract to a point, tipped by a stigma, four or five inches long and again divided into as many points as there are seeds or cavities in the clusters. At a very early stage, these hollows are filled with a watery fluid, of a sweetish taste, which lessens in quantity with the advancing state of the fruit. The foliage of this Palm is used for thatching, and the whole of the houses in the Paroquia del Carmea are thus covered, the Ivory- nut Palm abounding in that neighbourhood. The leaves of other Palms are, however, better adapted to the purpose. Enclosing the seeds is a yellow, sweet, oily pulp, which is collected at the present season (October), and sold, under the name of Pepe del Tagua, for one real a pound, at Ocafia. A spoonfull of it, with a little sugar and water, makes the celebrated Chiche de Tagua, said to be the most delicious beverage of this country. It has, however, a slightly drastic property. Although this substance contains much oil, it never becomes rancid by keeping, but at the end of nine months it preserves, in a crude state, all its flavour and quality. The Phytelephas principally inhabits dense shady woods, facing the Magdalena, at an elevation of 1,000 to 3,000 feet on the mountains. I do not believe it is ever seen in the hot plains or level country. At the season when the fruit is ripe, the country- is scented with its fragrance and all wild animals, hogs and turkeys, are extremely fond of it. I shall leave this place in four days, for La Cruz Bucaramanga, proceeding thence to Pamplona, the highest town in New Grenada : snow frequently falls there. I shall return to Bucaramanga, that being the direct road to Bogota. The whole journey is in Tierra fria and I hope will afford some valuable plants. I am anxious to know how this consignment of plants &c. 19 arrives. The glass-case contains growing specimens of Tagua ; and the soil is full of fresh seeds. I also send a box of the newly- gathered nuts, packed in moss. If these should unfortunately suffer by the voyage, 1 can procure more on my way down the river and am therefore peculiarly desirous to know their fate, without delay. There are two singular kinds of Achimenes, which I hope may reach you alive ; if not, they are worth looking for, on my return route. When I reach Bogota, if I find no instructions from you as to my further course, I shall endeavour to employ my time to the best advantage ; botanizing in different directions, till I do receive orders. I am still of opinion that the Province of Antioquia offers a promising field. The plants in boxes and the glass-case will be forwarded by the Packet, which conveys this letter. My health is now, happily restored. Bogota, Nov. 13th, 1845. I reached this place four days, in good health ; but I find no letters, though a Packet has very recently arrived. The country I have traversed from Ocana hither is moun- tainous and beautiful, but unfortunately deficient in virgin forests ; owing to the practice which the inhabitants pursue of burning considerable tracts every year, their object being to obtain with little trouble, fresh grass for their cattle. Rich as is the soil, a very small amount of labour bestowed on cultivation would procure all the necessaries of life ; but such is the rooted idleness of the people that they prefer depending on their cattle. I found the cold very severe in the Paramos ; not from its absolute intensity, for the thermometer rarely falls below 40°, but because, in these elevated regions, the atmosphere is so rare. Animals and birds perish in great numbers with the cold : I noticed large tracts strewed with their bones. Still these places were highly interesting to me in a botanical point of view, and produced noble Gentians and Syngenesious plants. I am sending home a fine collection of seeds, chiefly of Ericea, Berberidece, a striking Tovaria &c. Four days' journey from Bogota, I found the most beautiful plant that has yet rewarded my researches, a Lisianthus, forming a dense shrub, about three feet high, and covered with lax racemes of scarlet flowers. As the seeds were not ripe, I must go again to collect them ; a considerable detour, which it is, however, advisable 20 to make, for the living plants which I took up, will not, I fear bear the journey to Antioquia: the route to reach which is by the Peak of Tolema. I arrived here with only a real and a half (nine-pence English) in my possession, in debt with my servants and my clothes almost reduced to rags. A few days, however, will enable me to set these little matters to rights. The situation of Bogota is delightful, though rather cold, the thermometer varying from 58° to 63°. The city stands at the sloping base of a rock, which rises almost perpendicularly 1500 feet above it. A beautiful plain, several leagues in extent, stretches in front ; while westward there is a fine view of the snowy peak of Tolema, which I shall pass on my way to Antioquia. You will be glad to hear that I detected the famous Cow-Tree of this country (Arbol de Leche); indeed, two kinds of what is so called. I have sent seeds of one sort ; the other, of inferior quality and value, was not in fruit, but in flower. Both are of gigantic stature, and it is singular that they are quite distinct, though probably alike belonging to the family of Sapotece. The most esteemed of these Cow-Trees was laden with its golden fruit, the size of a pigeon's egg, which strewed the ground beneath. Every part of the tree, including the delicious fruit, abounds with milk, which is agreeable, and tastes like sugared cream ; having, however, a clammy consistency, which does not please all palates. I found no injurious effects to follow my partaking freely of this vegetable milk. Bogota, Feb. 11th, 1846. On my return from a tour, through Muzo and Tunja, I have the pleasure to receive your letter of the 19th, of October. A few days since I dispatched a box of seeds, two of growing plants, and two of dried specimens. Every precaution has been used in the packing and I think that no injury can occur, except mischief be done in going from the river to Santa Martha. The navigation, though only thirty miles from the mouth of the river to the latter place, is carried on in such wretched, ill-constructed, and worse managed craft, that I am ready to tremble for the fate of my boxes. All was in the best condition when despatched. Bogota, February 9th, 1846. The purport of your last letter has somewhat changed my proposed route. I shall still, however, go to Antioquia, and return, either by way of the Rio Conca, or by the Magdalena, to 21 Santa Martha. The post is expected to arrive on the 11th; and I am occupying the interval in excursions around Bogota. I return you my grateful thanks for recommending me to the office of Curator of the Botanic Gardens at Trinidad. If I obtain the appointment, I trust to do good service to Botany. I have just despatched a box of seeds, two of dried specimens, and one of living plants. They are all carefully packed ; and if they sustain no injury between this place and Santa Martha, where the" navigation as before stated is very ill conducted, there is little fear of damage on the longer voyage to Europe. Among the dried plants, you will find two specimens of a Balanopliorous species. It is small and rare: the form is globular and it inhabits moist temperate woods, growing parasitically on decayed vegetable substance. There are also duplicates of one which I had sent previously and of which I hope soon to transmit an interesting detailed account: the genus is certainly distinct from Bala- nophora. The plant is edible and has curious yellowish rigid calyces, which might almost be considered bracteas. You will be pleased, I think, with the various species of Gesne- riacecs : there are seeds of them all. One, which is equally rare and handsome, has terminal drooping spikes : another, a Lisi- anthus, is fine and scarlet-flowered. I procured the seeds of it, by retracing my steps 100 miles on purpose, but I considered these pains well rewarded, by the beauty and abundance of seeds which I was thus enabled to gather. 1 have also, at last, suc- ceeded in getting abundance of seeds of a Mutisia, a Drimgs&c. During an excursion of five days to the East of Bogota, I gathered an Achimenes and a Lisianthus ; neither of which I had seen before. The latter grows very strong and is peculiar to this district. I was also much struck with the beauty of a Loam, with noble tulip-shaped flowers, and an upright habit. Its stings are very formidable, but, happily, the pain they inflict is of short duration. This remarkable species is singularly local, affecting only one spot, so far as I can ascertain, namely the bottom of a deep ravine, called El Vafion, fifteen miles east of Bogota, where it grows in immense quantity. Dr. Cespedes informs me that it is undescribed; and he is acquainted with no other habitat for it. The scenery and vegetation of this ravine are most beautiful ; its elevation is 2,000 feet above the sea, and as Mr. Marks, who accompanied me, justly observed, you would sooner take it for a flower-garden, than as forming part of a primeval forest. I also send seeds of two species of Passiflora, one of which inhabits the mountains to the east of Bogota, at an altitude of 13,000 feet. 22 Immediately after the Post comes I shall start for Tolema and Quindiu, returning through Antioquia. I am concerned to tell you that Dr. Cespedes, from whom I have received great kindness, is now suffering from an accident. He was passing on horse-back beneath some trees, when his progress was impeded by a large branch, which struck him so severely as to break several ribs. This has brought his botanical excursion to a close, and threatens to be of dangerous consequence. Dr. Cespedes gave me much valuable information respecting the rare plants of the neighbourhood and their localities. He knows six species of Theobroma. On the Plains of San Martin a species grows which is in universal esteem among the inhabitants, who call it " Cacao verde ": two kinds are particularly handsome : so I consider one of those forwarded in the last case. Among my specimens are two Theobromas distinct from T. Cacos. From the same gentleman I hear of a PJnjtelephas, which has a twisted prostrate trunk ; it is so rare, that he only met with one instance of it during a year's residence amid a large forest of these trees. Santa Anna, near Honda, April 18th, 1846. Since writing from Bogota, I have visited the Paramo of Ruiz, which forms the northern extremity of the snowy range of Tolema, and is about eighty miles distant. Two reasons led me to choose this route : the vegetation promised to be like that of the Paramo of Quindiu ; and Mr. Linden had already visited the Peak of Tolema. The journey has not proved quite so productive as I hoped ; though I have gathered some few very good plants. It was necessary to return here in order to ship my collections and, besides ensuring a quicker despatch, thus to save the expense and trouble of carrying them over Quindiu. The rainy season has just begun, to the great joy of every one but myself. The protracted drought had been the cause of pressing scarcity, especially at Bogota. On my way to the Paramo of Ruiz, I was enchanted with the rich luxuriance of the lower mountains : no where have I seen more beautiful vegetation. Several kinds of Palm are conspicuous : I forward seeds of two species, along with the Phvtdepka?, which also grows there in great abundance. I am happy to inform you that I have had, at last, the good fortune to detect the male flowers of the Ivory-Nut Palm, for which I long sought in vain. The singularity of this inflorescence is only equalled by its beauty. It differs from most other Palms by having a double spatha ; 23 the central column is thickly set with clusters of male blossoms, and forms, when taken all together, a mass three feet long, and four inches thick. Half is concealed within the spatha, from which the other portion projects in a gracefully recurved form. The fragrance is most powerful and delicious, beyond that of any other plant, and so diffusive, that the air, for many yards around, was alive with myriads of annoying insects, which first attracted my notice : the closeness of the forest not permitting me to discern the blossoms at any distance. I had, afterwards, to carry it in my hands for twelve miles, and though I killed a number of insects that followed me, the next day, a great many still hovered about it, which had come from the wood where it grew. Some of the Mosses of the Paramo, now sent, are peculiarly interesting : also a box of the Orchidece, which I gathered at a height of 10,000 feet, containing many new and beautiful species. The cold, at that height is intense, particularly in the morning and evening ; the absolute degree of cold is not great, but it is extremely penetrating, and sets the teeth chattering violently. However reluctant to give way, I found myself constrained to own its trying effects. You will be gratified, I think, with some bottles of Balanopho- rous plants : the spirits sold here are so weak and inferior, that it will perhaps be well to fill them again in England. The tall slender specimen is what Dr. Mutis proposed calling Helosis aquatica. Dr. Cespedes showed me a very bad figure of it, as described by Mutis, before I saw the growing plant. It is so abundant in some spots, that I could have loaded a waggon with it ; none of its allies are found in nearly equal profusion. One of the species resembles what I gathered in Ocana, but is very distinct, having a separate envelope which, in an early stage, covers the expanding flower stem. 1 had hoped to give, in this letter, an account of the fearful avalanche, which caused such loss of life and property last year, but my time and paper forbid any details. I passed over the place, on my way to the Paramo : it stretches twelve miles, and from being a rich fertile district, is now reduced to desolate waste, where not a particle of vegetation remains. The fall of the then freezing mass overthrew whole forests, and buried the houses, strewing the country with stones and fragments of up- rooted trees, and engulphing, it is said, upwards of six hundred human beings. (To be continued) •:\ BAMBOO CANE. The Bamboo, is one of those surprising Tropical Grasses, of which we have no parallel in Temperate Climes. An idea of the grandeur and beauty which these magnificent arborescent Grasses impose upon the face of their native country, may, perhaps, be best collected from the account of Capt. Basil Hall, who, after travelling during the night in a palanquin, from the bare Table land of Mysore, towards the hilly and thickly-wooded regions overhanging the Malabar country, awoke in the morning, when, says he, " I found myself in the midst of one of the most curious and magnificent scenes which my eyes had ever beheld. It appeared as if I were travelling among the clustered columns of some enormous and enchanted Gothic Cathedral, compared to which the Minster of York, or the Cathedral at Winchester, would have seemed mere baby houses : the ground extended on all sides as smooth, and flat, and clear of underwood, as if the whole had been paved with grave stones. From this level surface rose on every hand, and as far as the eye could penetrate into the forest, immense symmetrical clusters of Bamboo, varying in diameter at their base, from six feet, to twenty or thirty, and even to twice that width, as I ascertained by actual measurement. For above eight or ten feet from the ground, each indivi- dual of these clusters, preserved a form nearly cylindrical, after which, it began gradually to swell outwards, assuming for itself a graceful curve and rising to the height, some of sixty, some of eighty, and some even of one hundred, feet in the air : the extreme end being at lines horizontal, or even drooping gently over, like the tips of the feathers in the Prince of Wales' plume. The gorgeous clusters stood at the distance of from fifteen to twenty yards from one another, and being totally free from the interruption of brushwood, could be distinguished at a great distance, more than a mile, certainly, in every direction, forming, under the influence of an active imagination, naves and transeps, aisles and choirs, such as none but a Gothic architect ever dared to conceive. Overhead, the interlacing curves of the Bamboos constituted as complete a groined roof as that of Win- chester or Westminster, on a scale of grandeur far beyond the bold conception even of those wonderful artists, who devised that glorious school of architecture. " On counting the separate Bamboos, in some of the smallest, and also in some of the largest clusters, I found the numbers to vary from twenty or thirty, to upwards of two hundred ; and the 25 height, generally, from sixty to one hundred feet from the ground at the point of intersection of the curves overhead. Most of the Bamboos were somewhat thicker than a man's thigh at the ground, where, as I have before said, they are clustered so close as to be almost in contact. They then taper off very gradually to the extreme end, where the point is not thicker than a quill. " There occurs a joint at about every foot and a half; distin- guished not only by a flat ring, or fillet, but by a set of small branches, eight or ten feet long, striking out at right angles to the main Bamboo. These minor shoots are again divided into joints ; from which, other series of shoots, still more minute, are thrown out, and so on for many successions, the last always terminating in a sharp-pointed narrow leaf, two or three inches long, and half an inch wide in the middle, not unlike a large Tea leaf, when spread out. As each Bamboo, of the hundred or more forming the cluster, sends out shoots from every joint, and as all the joints of these subordinate plants do the same, a com- pact mass is formed by these innumerable little branches, which cross one another at every possible angle. If a person were to rill a hat full of pins and needles, and shake them about for some minutes, it might give a notion of the inextricable confusion which is presented to the eye in looking into one of these clustered columns of Bamboos. It is only at the top, where the bend takes place, that the foliage has full room to play, or where the tapering arms of this magnificent plant form, by their meeting and crossing, a complete system of pointed arches. " What surprised me at first, very much, and greatly puzzled me, too, was to observe that, notwithstanding the multitude of lateral shoots from each of the main Bamboos, and from all the subordinate branches, not a single trace of displacement, or the slightest obstruction to the growth of any branch, could be detected. Every person must have heard of the astonishing rapidity of growth in the Bamboo : it is said, indeed, that in one season it starts up to its whole length, I do not know if this be true, but am quite certain that if one of the main Bamboos were to spring from the ground in the centre, or even near the sides of the cluster, and that from its points there were, at the same time, to sprout the lateral branches I have described, it would be impossible for the main stem to force its way through the ob- structions presented by the network, formed by the little branches growing from the joints of the other Bamboos in the cluster." Captain Hall then goes on to state how he thinks we can perceive " the way in which Nature manages this difficult affair. When the Bamboo first springs out of the ground, it is about as 26 thick as a man's wrist, always highly polished, with an extremely hard point ; and, as no lateral shoots are put out until it has attained its] full height, it readily makes its way through the thickest ramified masses, while the subordinate branches, growing in the same manner, find no difficulty in piercing this complicated mass of vegetable life. " I saw ", continues this Author ; " Bamboos in every different stage of this process, and particularly I noticed several of the main stems rising to the height of seventy feet and upwards, of a clear yellow colour, and evidently of recent growth, but without a single lateral branch growing from their joints, from top to bottom ; and this led me to infer that their extreme height had not been reached, or was but just attained." Bamboos are applied to many useful purposes, both in India, China, and Japan. The tender tops are used to form a pickle ; an excellent paper is manufactured from the tissue of the stem , and the stems themselves are employed in a great variety of ways, such as the making of furniture for their houses, cups, tubs, and boxes : also, in the construction of dwellings, which are sometimes covered with the gigantic leaves of the Banana : in making water-pipes, and in the construction of fences. The substance called, in India, Tabashur, is procured from the joints ; it was ascertained, by Dr. Turner, to consist of silica, with a minute proportion of lime and vegetable matter. EXTREMES OF TEMPERATURES AT VARIOUS TIMES AND PLACES. (I am indebted to the kindness of Captain Sir Everard Home, Bart., R.N., for the following interesting table, made during an extended voyage in H.M.S. ' North-Star ', which may be of use to many persons who cultivate plants from any of the regions there mentioned, and for regidating the temperature of houses, &c. — Ed.) TEMPECATCRE. ■ PLACE. MONTH. LIMIT. HEAT COLD.j Singapore. May. 10 ,h tol5 th | 88° „ n o Malay Peninsula, South extremity. n February. 4 _ 12 89 78 Hong-Kong. January. 16 — 24 j 66 53 jChina. June. 1 — 5 | 84 78 Macao. January. 24 — 26 j 68 56 Chusan. October. 21 — 31 1 76 60 H November. 1— 30 I 75 46 December. 1 — 31 ] 76 43 >» January. 1— 9 62 44 27 PLACE. MONTH. LIMIT. IEXPEIilTUIE. HEAT. COLD. Woosung, June. 16 th to30 th 83° 72 China. 55 July. 1 — 31 91 69 55 August. 1 — 31 89 75 55 September. 1 — 30 88 69 October. 1 — 19 78 61 Copang. April, May. 29— 2 89 79 Island Timor. Port Essington. March. 6 — 31 94 78 New Holland, North Coast. 55 April. 1 — 23 93 77 KingGeorge's Island March. 23 — 31 75 59 Do. 55 May, June. 26—2 72 53 South Coast. Port Phillip. June, July. 20—1 64 49 Do. Sydney. February. 10 — 24 92 68 Ditto, East Coast. March. 12 — 31 79 61 33 3 — 11 84 70 3J April. 1 — 30 81 57 55 May. 1 — 12 73 56 55 June. 12 — 30 70 51 55 June, July. 19—6 67 53 - 55 July. 1—16 70 54 55 July, Aug. 16— 1 68 51 Nov. Dec. 27—9 80 63 Hobart-Town. May, June. 27—8 61 47 Van Diemen's Land. Port Arthur. June. 9 — 13 60 50 South Extremity. 93 November. 23 — 30 70 52 Do. 33 December. 1 — 31 73 48 53 January. 1 — 31 83 47 » February. 1 — 23 78 48 New Zealand. Bay of Islands. January. 1 — 18 76 60 North End of 55 March, April. 30 — 5 75 66 55 April, May. 26 — 12 71 60 55 May. 20 — 25 70 60 August. 1 — 31 68 50 55 September. 1 — 30 68 49 October. 1 — 31 69 58 November. 1 — 30 73 59 December. 1 — 31 73 61 100 miles South of Auckland. January. 20 — 26 73 64 Bay of Islands. March. 23 — 29 73 67 April. 7 — 23 74 60 55 May. 14 — 18 66 60 August. 10 — 14 66 54 October. 13 — 24 68 54 November. 10 — 16 66 56 Dec. Jan. 23 — 18 76 60 Port Nicholson. Jan. Feb. 26— 3 74 60 Cook's Strait. 35 February. 16 — 24 71 58 35 Aug. Sept. Oct. 31.1to31 and 1 to 5 65 48 28 TEMrXBATlTBE. PLACE. MCNTH. LIMIT. HEAT. COLD- Nelson. February. 3 rd tol0 ,h 72 60° In Blind Bay. >> October. 10—14 65 55 A-Karoa. November. 1 — 10 68 53 Banks's Peninsula, NewZealand,Middle. Norfolk Island. July. 10 — 19 71 00 Tonga-taboo Island. July, August. 29—6 83 68 Friendly Islands. Varan Island. August. 14 — 20 84 72 Do. TJpolu Navigator' s I. Aug. and Sept. 24 — 1 88 80 Navigator's Group. Wallis's Island. September. 5 — 14 87 80 Latitude 13° 20' S., Long. 176° 20' W. Cape of Good Hope. February. 24 — 27 76 64 35 May. 25 — 31 05 5 7 St. Helena. June. 22 — 28 11 70 Ascension. July. 3— 5 80 76 Fayal, Azores. August. 8 — 11 81 74 Halifax, Nova Scotia. May. 25 — 28 52 45 5 , June. 3 — 10 63 50 Bermuda. Jan. Feb. 22 — 10 72 5 33 March, April. 14—4 73 5!) „ June. 10 — 27 83 75 Port Royal, Jamaica. January. 3 — 11 83 75 tf February. 13 — 15 82 76 >i Feb. March. 27— 1 80 76 »> July. 11 — 31 86 78 jj August. 1 — 28 85 78 jj Sept. Oct. 28 — 10 84 79 jj Oct. Nov. 26— 11 84 76 33 Nov. Dec. 17— 4 82 75 33 December. 8 — 17 83 75 Port Antonio. Dec. Jan. 24— 2 80 67 North side of Barbadoes. Dec. Jan. 20—5 81 70 Carlisle Bay. 33 January. 9 — 16 84 74 33 February. 21 — 26 84 74 33 March, April. 8— 8 82 74 33 April. 13 — 17 S4 77 31 May. 1 — 14 82 77 3) June. 1—15 84 78 Antigua. April. 1 — 30 81 70 Carib. Islands St. Thomas's. May. 16 — 19 83 79 St. Vincent's. April, May. 22 — 11 84 70 Carib. Sea. Trinidad. January. 7 — 12 82 76 St. Juan's, Nicaragua January. 18 — 24 83 76 Musquito Coast. „ September. 10 — 12 83 79 Chagres. Jan. Feb. 30— 1 82 79 Isth. Panama. 33 September. 17 — 20 84 78 Carthagena. Jan. Feb. 28—9 83 74 ,, November. 9 — 13 86 81 La Guayra. April. 11 — 14 81 75 Demerara. May, June. 29—1 82 78 Para June. 1 — 30 84 76 Brazil . i) July. 1 — 31 84 77 29 TEMPERATURE.! PLACE. MONTH. LIMIT. HEAT. cold! Para. August. l st to31 st 86° 7 7° Brazil. 1 — 13 84 76 " September. October. 1 — 30 84 ! 1 — 31 85 77 76 Nov. and Dec. 124 — 11 84 77 December. 1—31 84 77 Maranham. September. October. 23 — 30 84 1 — 31 S3 78 76 >> November. 1 — 21 | 82 1 8 — 25 | 83 78 78 The same intelligent friend (Capt. Sir Everard Home, Bart.,) in reply to some queries put to him, has given the following in- teresting notices : — " There is no fear of the Pines {Araucaria excel set) being ex- hausted upon Norfolk Island. The island is very nearly covered with' them ; their outline having, at a distance, the appearance of Cathedral ruins, &c, as the light or shade may be; and the convicts do no more work than they are obliged. " I forget whether I mentioned to you that the island was- formerly covered with orange-trees. The Commandant, in 1827, Colonel Morrison, believing that the fruit furnished means of sustenance to the runaway convicts, caused them to be destroyed, with a very few exceptions, which trees have since gone off; and although every means have been taken to re-establish them, they will not succeed. In 1844 there was but one tree upon the island, and that was in an unhealthy state. " In the Island of Ascension, the vegetables cultivated in the garden will not re-produce their seed : the seed being supplied by contract, it is often old and bad. When I was there, this time last year, they had not vegetables to give the sick in the hospital, the consequence of which was that the men did not recover; and those sent to the island from the Coast of Africa, instead of re- turning thence to their duty, were invalided, and sent to England. I think the gardens of those islands might be supplied regularly with good seed, from some Government establishment in England that could be depended upon. In New Zealand, beans, peas, &c, do not bear a crop until the second year. " In Van Diemen's Land it is believed that neither fruit nor flowers have the same flavour or perfume as here, although they are very fine. Nor have bees the same degree of venom in their stings. " The largest known tree there is twenty-four and a half feet 30 in diameter, the tallest is ISO feet: they are White Gum trees. Hops, &c., in the Southern Hemisphere turn in the same direction as they do in Europe." "At Port Nicholson (Cook's Strait), French Beans and Scarlet Runners are not good until the second year. Broad, or Windsor, Beans produce the best crop in the second year. Scarlet Kale is never good, for want of frost to sweeten it : it is bitter." An excellent correspondent, Assistant-Surgeon J. E. Stocks, Esq., of Scinde, writes as follows, from that country, so little known in a botanical point of view. — " Perhaps a brief statement of what I have seen of the Scinde vegetation may be acceptable, though almost valueless from its incompleteness. However, I trust one day to do better, and this may illustrate the few plants I have now sent. " The Beloochistan Hills (Brahooie range), which form the W. boundary of Scinde and run parallel with the river, sending spurs towards it, are confined to the right bank t except at two places, viz., Sukkur and Hyderabad, where the river passes through a Limestone range, which does not, however, extend far from the river on its left bank. The hills and their spurs vary in their distance from the river, (reaching down to it sometimes, as at Jerruk and Sehwan,) and the tract of land between them and the river is well cultivated, more especially the oval island formed by the divergence and re-entrance of the Arun branch (of which Lake Munchur is a mere expansion). On the left bank, the land is less and less cultivated as you recede from the river, till it shades off into the great desert to the E., and the little desert, to the S.E. " During the inundation, numerous canals carry fertility over a large extent of country ; and under the admirable management of Major Scott, will, in a few years, make the revenue swell out wonderfully. But it requires two years yet, at an expense of 20,000/. a year, to bring the canals back to the state in which they were when we conquered the country. Eor the Scindians neglected tillage, and allowed the canals to choke up, for two successive years, not knowing what would happen, whether the Ameers would be restored, or whether w r e should hold the country ; and the staple commodity of Scinde, viz., sand, being a bad material for canal- works, they get blocked up if neglected a single year. The Marrum grasses would be of great use in 31 Scinde, or the Spinifeoe squarrosus, of the Concan, which binds the ' ribbed sea-sand.' To return to Scinde : there is the Delta also, ending in the line of Sea-coast, forming the S.W. boundary. The Delta I do not know, except that it produces gigantic grasses and sedges in abundance ; and I have only seen the coast at the extreme west angle, where, at Kurrachee, the Beloochistan hills come down to the sea. "There grow the Convolvulus Pes-Capra, Salsolas, Salicornias, jEgiceras majus (mentioned by Arrian as having sweet flowers like a violet, laurel leaves, and growing below high-water mark, which can apply to nothing so well as to this), a Scavola, and, no doubt, Avicennia and Rhizophoras, though I have not seen these last. " A Stat ice and a Lycium seem also to confine themselves (as much as they can) to the neighbourhood of the sea ; and many plants, when growing within reach of the salt breezes, get fat and hypertrophied, with thickened leaves. AVhat is it that causes the change above referred to ? " In the sandy deserts of Scinde grow Calotropis Hamiltonii, and its parasite Phelipaa Calotropidis, Capparis aphylla, Zizyphi, Acacias, Mimosas, Cassias, Indi gofer as, Neurada, Cucumis ama- rus, Colocynthis vulgaris, Fagonia Mysorensis, Equisetum debile, Tributes lanuginoms, Alhagi Maurorum, Prosopis spinigera, Fa- chellia Farnesiana, Corchorus humilis (Munro — Wight's ' Icones.' 1073, Corchorus humifums, Law in « Bombay Catalogue,' p. 254.) which regularly opens its flowers at 3, p.m.. " Round villages, or where the soil is better, or has been cultivated, grow also Sidas {humilis, alba, &c), Lebretonia, Pavotiia, Abelmoschi, Abutilons, Cardiospermum Halicacubum, Aristolochia bracteata, Phyllanthus Niruri, Polygalas fBothiana, rosmarinifolia, &c), Gynandropsis pentaphylla, Cadaba Indica, Commelinas, Lactuca sarmentosa, Sonchi, Zapania nodiflora, Gi- sekia molluginoides, Aerva lanata, Celosia argentca, Achgranthes lappacea and altermflora, Gtiaphaliums, Solanums, Argemone Mexicana; several Corchori, Trianthcmas, Portulaceas, Poly- carpaa spadicea, Glinus diclamnoides, Boerhaavia procumbens, and one, if not two, shrubby species. Justicia bicahculata, paniculata, echioides, repens, and other Acanihacea. Xanthium Indicum, Ipomaa Pes-Tigridis, pilosa, and dasysperma, Pharbitis Nil, Batatas pentaphylla, Colony ction maricatum, Convolvulus mi- crophyllus, and two Jacque?nontias. " On the spurs of the Beloochistan hills (limestone formation) grow Euphorbia antiquorum, two Barlerias (both, I think, new), Monsonia Lawiana, Melhania abutiloides, Linaria ramosissima, 32 two Cleomes, Seddera, Balsamodendron Roxburahii and pnbescens, Cometes Su.rafeusis, Serraa purpurea. Heliotropes, Amelia, Xygopliyllum simpler and another species, Didesmw, Tavemiera, Ca inpylantlms saholoides, a shrubby Convolvulus, Gossypium obtusi- folw.m, Antirrhinum htsbifoliwm (nriki), &c. Again, Salvadora Persiea, Ochradenus dioicus, Leptadenia Jacqtremontiana, with Bryonia epigiPa, Bligncliosia mala, Cocci nia Indira, Tufas, Jfoiuor- dica Balsamina and Pilogyne cerasiformia Onilii), these, though not rock-plants, yet will grow where in the crevices there is any earth, or round the stems of the Euphorbia. On the river bank grow Zapania nodifora, Banuneulus Indicm, a Potentilla, Grangea sEgyptiaea, a Bumex, and young germinating plants of Tama- rix and a Populus* {the Ban tree of Scinde), cover the mud banks for miles. The Tamarisk is a great feature in Scinde, on the river banks, and in choked up canals and ravines. There are two species, one a large tree, whose flowers I have not as yet seen : its timber is useful ; as arc the woods of Dalbergia Sissoo (the Talee), Capparis aplylla (the Kureel), Acacia vera (the Ba- bool or Keehir). The SMkargues of the Ameers were formed almost exclusively of the Babool, which attains an enormous size, and is a most magnificent tree. These forests arc quite a feature in the country about Hyderabad ; as art: the palm-groves (Plaeui.v) about Sukkur. " I forward you a few plants gathered round Kurrachee, from which, collected at intervals, and under disadvantages, the fore- shadowings of the Scinde vegetation may be traced. Among the interesting genera are Neurada, Cometes, Serreea (Senra, DC), Ocltradenus, Didesmus, Seddera, all Egyptain and Arabian genera. Besides which, two Balsamodendrons (one new), — two (new?) Cleomes, two Jacquemontias, a shrubby Cone oh: id us, two Zygo- phylla (one new), a Statice, a Chaseanum, a Tycium, abundance of Boraginea? {Arnebia, Heliotropes, Heliop/iytum, &c.), show a vegetation much akin to South Persia, Arabia and Egypt ; in short, the nearest approach in India (geographically and botani- cally) to the "Syrian" vegetation, — Schouw's "Acacia and Mimosa region "—which extends to the Punjaub, and even to Agra and Delhi, as Royle long ago observed." ^ * A very remarkable species of Poplar, very nearly allied to, if not identical with, Populus Evphratica, Dne. — Ed. 33 ADDITIONS TO THE "HORTUS KEWENSIS." 1. Ceropegia Cumin giana. Volubilis glabra, foliis ovatis basi cordatis apice longe attenuatis acutis tenuibus, pedunculis folium medium sequantibus plurifloris, sepalis acutis, corolla? tubo clavato, limbi laciniis oblongis glabris apice cohserentibus, corona stam. ampla, fol. externe acuminatis approximatis glabris, interior, subulatis exterior, vix duplo superantibus. — Becaisne in Be Cand. Prodr. vol. viii. p. 643. Hab. Philippine Islands, Cuming, n. 447. Island of Ba'lla, m the Java Sound, Thos. Lobb. Cull, in Horl. Veitch, 1847. A very pretty climber and free flowerer, from the collection of Messrs. Veitch and Sons, in whose stove, at Exeter, it bloomed in August, 1847. The flowers are among the largest of the genus, and variegated with dull green and reddish brown. 2. Calceolaria (Aposecos) chelidonioides. Var. ? SUBIXTEGMFOLIA. Annua (?) ramosa, pilis sparsis hispidula, foliis pinnatisectis, seg- mentis paucis, terminali maximo ovato lateralibus oblongis, lanceolatisye dentatis subincisisve, petiolis vix connatis, laciniis calycinis ovatis acutis, corollas labio superiore calyce dimidio breviore, inferiore maximo porrecto obovato orbiculato basi abrupte et longiuscule contracto breviter aperto, antherarum connnectivo jwstiec incrassato loculo adnato sub-sessih pollrm- !'( to, antice elongato clavato sterili. — Benth. Calceolaria chelidonioides, H. B.K., Nov. Gen. elsp. Am. vol. n. p. 37b. C. pinnata, Buiz, et Pav. Fl. Per. et Chil. vol. i. p. 14. 1. 19. f. a. (non Linn.) Benth. in Be Cand. Prodr. vol. x. p. 204. Var. Leedsii ; foliis fere omnibus integris. Hab. Peru, Columbia, Mexico. Yar. Leedsii, Bolivia, Bridges. Cult. in Horl. B. Leeds, 1847. A hardy, creeping, herbaceous, but apparently perennial species, raised by Mr. Leeds, of Manchester, from seeds collected m Bolivia by Bridges. It may, perhaps, prove a distinct species, for the leaves can be scarcely said to be pinnatifid in every part of the plant, but resemble those of the upper portion of most of my native specimens of the true C. chelidonioides. It clearly be- longs to Mr. Bentham's Aposecos section ; of which C. pmnata is the type If it proves new, as is more than probable, I should wish it to be called C. Leedsii, in compliment to a gentleman of Manchester, E. Leeds, Esq., who reared it from seed, and who is indefatigable in introducing new plants into our gardens. 34 3. Aster Caubulicus. Herbaceus erectus ramosus, ramis obtuse angulatis fusco-pubescentibus foliis subsessilibus lanceolatis (supremis sublinearibus) acuminatis basi subatteuuatis subundulatis iiiferioribus obscure dentatis supra impresso- reticulatim venosis glabris subtus pallidis nervis prominentibus subpubes- centibus, corymbis multifioris, pedicellis sparse foliosis pubescenti-subviscosis, involucri ovati squamis imbricatis 3-4-serialibus liueari-subulatis viridibus pubescentibus apice sphacelatis inferioribus 1-2 remotis bracteiformibus, acheniis compressis pilosis radii sterilibus. Hab. Caubul. Cult, iu Hort. Kew, 1846. Receive! from Mr. Cameron of the Birmingham Garden. A pretty shrubby Aster, flowering in the Autumn in the open border, for it seems quite hardy, as late as October and probably till the frosts cut it off. Two to three feet high, erect, branched, copiously leafy ; leaves, with axillary shoots, four inches long in the lower parts of the plant, two and three in the upper, where they become narrower and almost linear. Corymbs ample, many- flowered; the flowers small but closely placed, ray pale and bright purple, disc deep yellow ; pappus in a single series almost white ; setae scabrous. Notice of the Pines introduced of late years into England, and especially of the Pinus Austriaca ; by the Rev. J. Rogers. The Pinus Austriaca appears to have been introduced into England in the year 1835 : the English name is the Austrian or Black Pine, and it is also called the nigricans or nigrescens. Having been recommended to me as a hardy Pine, likely to do well in Cornwall, I began to plant it there in 1839, and reared 489 trees that year, and was encouraged, by the satisfactory appearance of this Pine, to plant double the number in the following year : so that by the end of 1846 I had planted 28,739. It seems peculiarly adapted to bear the violent and blighting winds to which Cornwall is subject, and which render care and skill on the part of the cultivator, both in the selection of the trees best adapted to the climate, and in choosing the proper time and mode of planting, essentially necessary. Neither the Larch, the Scotch Fir, nor the Spruce, will stand the south-west and north-west winds ; the Pinaster has been hitherto considered the only Pine which endures our blighting winds without injury, and I believe that a larger proportion of this is planted 35 in Cornwall than in any other county. But the Pinus Austriaca is in many respects superior. The Pinaster, indeed, grows more rapidly, presents a fuller mass of foliage to our prevailing winds, and consequently is an excellent nurse in an exposed situation ; but it is more difficult to rear than the Pinus Aus- triaca, and suffers much in the nursery in a very dry, or very wet season. An unfavourable season has sometimes killed from one third to half of my young Pinasters ; whilst at the same time, and in the same nursery, I have not lost more than five per cent, of my Austriacas. The Pinaster is also less firmly rooted, and generally requires to be banked up after a storm for the first three years. The wood of the Pinaster is brittle, and subject to the worm : the Austriaca, as far as I can judge from cutting down small trees, appears tough, and is said to be durable, and, from the comparative straightness of its stem, is much better calculated for planking. It does not thrive like the Pinaster in a dry stony soil, but it promises to bear expo- sure to the sea air equally well. The largest of my Austriacas, planted probably in 1839, is eleven feet high and two inches and an eighth in diameter, three feet above the ground. A few are beginning to produce cones which are about the size of those of the Scotch Fir ; still this Pine does not bear cones either so early or so freely as the Pinaster. A shelter having been formed by the Pinaster and the Austriaca, other and less hardy pines may be planted, even in exposed situations ; the Scotch Fir, the Larch, the Spruce, and the Silver ; though the latter endures exposure better than the other Pines. I have mentioned that the Pines of India succeed in Cornwall : of these the Cedrus Deodara is the most graceful and vigorous : the Abies Morinda promises well, and will grow in moderately exposed situations : the Pinus excelsa likes shelter, yet grows feebly without it, the wood is soft, like the kindred Pine, the Weymouth. The Picea Webbiana is a very slowly growing Pine, though highly ornamental, where, as at Dropmore, it exhibits its purple cones. I have not yet succeeded in raising the Pinus lonpfolia, and my plants of the Pinus Gerardiana are hardly sufficiently advanced to exhibit their character. There is one Pine, the produce of California, which stands our climate, and promises to be a great ornament to our plantations, — the Pinus insignis : it has a rich full foliage of various shades of green, grows as freely as the Pinaster, and, like that Pine, requires to be occasionally banked up if planted in an exposed situation. I have not yet tried it in situations fully exposed to the winds ; but it has all the appearance of being very hardy, 36 and bids fair to endure the blighting winds of Cornwall. My two largest Pines of this species measure, respectively, ten feet eight and thirteen feet five in height, and were planted about the year 1841. I conclude with one remark on the management of Fir plantations, the result of some years' expe- rience. Thinning ought to be commenced at a very early period, before the thinnings are of any value. It tends greatly to the thriving of the trees to admit the sun and air freely, as soon as a shelter has been formed against the prevailing winds. Weeds and underwood should be cut and laid round the trees, which will keep the trees from the too powerful effect of the sun, and will also check the growth of the weeds. One thinning prepares the way for an early repetition, and as soon as the branches meet, the intermediate trees should be cut down. I never cut the side limbs of a Fir, except preparatory to felling it the succeeding winter ; and the flourishing state of my plantations fully confirms the propriety of this mode of treatment. Planters generally begin to thin their plantations when injury has been already sustained by the trees growing too near, and by the want of the free access of the air and the sun. Penrose. August 25th, 1847. T/ie Ceylon Botanic Garden. (Extract of a despatch to the Colonial Secretary from Sir J. EMERSON TENNENT, ou the condition of the Ceylon Botanic Garden.) In connexion with the agriculture of the island, I feel it my duty to call your Lordship's attention to the very satisfactory progress of this institution, and the services which it is rendering to the development of the natural resources of the island. The attention of its superintendent, Dr. Gardner, has been directed not merely to scientific investigation, but to the intro- duction from other countries and the acclimatized cultivation of such exotic plants as are likely to add to the agricultural wealth of the island. Previously to the arrival of the present superintendent, who was selected by Sir W. J. Hooker, the garden had been so neglected as to be almost valueless to the colony. By Dr. Gardner s attention and exertions, it is now one of the most flourishing and useful institutions in India: large nurseries have been established for the propagation and distribution of useful plants, 37 which are sold at a trifling price to the public, and numbers of foreign trees and vegetables have been successfully introduced. The result is that hundreds of thousands of trees and plants of all descriptions have been dispersed throughout the island, at a very moderate cost to the Government. Dr. Gardner is likewise engaged in the preparation of a Flora Ceylanica, a work which will contain descriptions of all the plants indigenous to the island, so far as he can obtain them, and thus make known to the scientific world, the history and uses of the vegetable pro- ductions of a region, with which the botanists of Europe are less acquainted than any other portion of India of equal extent. On the Native Cloth and on the Kava of the South Sea Islanders. (In a letter from Capt. Sir EVERARD HOME, Bart.. R.N.) The Plantations in the Island of Tongataboo, the largest of the Friendly group, consist principally of Yams, Taro, and the Paper Mulberry. From the bark of the latter, taken when the stem is about two inches in diameter, the cloth is prepared with which both sexes of the inhabitants are clothed ; and it is thus made. After being soaked in water it is laid upon a log of wood, which is about as large as the axle-tree of a large cart, small at each end, both extremities supported on the ground by three small pieces of wood, two being laid parallel to each other and to the main log, the third is laid across ; the ends of the log thus rest upon the cross pieces, which raise it three or four inches from the ground, according to the thickness of the pieces of wood which support it. The bark, when placed upon the log, is beaten out by the women with an instrument made of heavy wood, something like a rolling-pin, except that it is square from the handle, which is round. The beating commences at daylight in the morning and continues, without ceasing, until three in the afternoon, unless the women are working against time, some great event, such as a marriage, causing increased exertion, when they go on until dark. The noise caused by the beaters is loud and musical ; they keep time in the opera- tion ; two or four beaters are usually at work in every house, or under a shed formed for the purpose in the enclosed court- yard which surrounds each dwelling, so that the women of Tonga make more noise than those of any place I ever visited. 38 When the bark is beaten out it is called " Tapa ", and the breadths are pasted together with paste made of the flour of Arrow-root or Taro. When dried, it is printed, after which it is called "Gnato". The pattern is devised by the King's family, the type or pattern is raised upon the leaf of the Pandanus, and, contrary to other prints, the side which receives the stamp is the wrong side, the reverse being the right side. King Josiah Tubo, to show what could be produced in this way, had a piece of cloth made, which was, as I am informed, two miles in length and 120 feet wide. When finished, it was necessary to spread it, and the ground had to be cleared to display it upon. When the first piece was cut off there was a great feast of pigs and yams ; it was all distributed, and the specimen sent to the Garden is a part of it.* It is worn round the waist in a large fold, covering the body from above the hips to the knees, and is secured round the middle by a girdle of mat or tapa. The only distinction in dress of the King or his sons, consists in the girdle, which is of Tapa, in the raw state, and of a dull white colour. By loosing the girdle the cloth can be drawn over the whole body, and is so worn in rainy weather. In some islands, as at the Navigators, it is made, not by beating, but by scraping or pressing out with cockle shells upon a flat board, held between the knees 5 this operation is performed by the water side, and the cloth is kept constantly wet ; but it is of inferior quality. Kava. When on a visit to the Tue Tonga, at Tonga-ta-boo, this Chief asked me if I would have some Kava, saying he knew we did not drink it, but, if I pleased, he would have some made ; which offer I accepted. This great man, whose person is held sacred by the natives, sat upon the mat which covered the floor of the house, his back resting against one of the pillars which support the roof. The centre of the room was a clear space ; the opposite side was filled with natives, who sat in silence, forming a semi-circle before him. They sit cross-legged like the Turks. A man being called from amongst them, crouched down in a most humble manner as he received his orders from the Tue Tonga, and having with his right hand touched both his (the Tue Tonga's) * Among many valuable contributions made by Sir Everard Home, to our Botanical Museum at Kew, are specimens of this cloth and the apparatus 101 preparing it. — Ed. 39 feet, which were tucked up under his hams, started on his errand. He shortly returned carrying a large plant of the Kava (a species of Pepper, Piper methysticum, L.), under his arm. It appeared just as it had been taken from the ground, the leaves, only, having been removed from the stems, they were about three feet long and ten or twelve in number, an inch in diameter at the base, and tapering toward the end. He brought the plant in a stooping posture, holding it in both his hands, the root towards me, and, having thrown it gently down upon the mat before me, withdrew. After it had lain upon the ground a few seconds, it was removed by the man who brought it, to the opposite end of the hall. A large bowl * of wood, having four short thick legs of the same, was taken down from a pillar of the house, against which it hung, and was placed before a young man, I believe the son of the Tue Tonga, the handsomest and the chief person in the assembly, who sat in the centre of the front row of those who filled the space opposite to us. A long bone (?) which I took to be the tooth of a narwhal, was then brought in, with which the root was broken and divided into separate pieces, the man holding the bone in a vertical posi- tion and pounding the root, also held upright, with the broad end of it, which done, the bone was taken out again, and the portions of root and stems, about six inches long, were distributed to the persons who sat on each side of the bowl, who, after scraping off the earth which adhered to the roots, and cleaning it well with the fibres of the cocoa-nut husk, broke off portions with their teeth and commenced chewing it. Whilst this part of the operation was performing, I was engaged in conversation with the Chief, and answering his questions. Presently after two men arrived, bearing upon a pole between them two baskets, one of which contained a baked pig and yams, the other, parcels of a kind of jelly made of arrow-root mixed with the juice of sugar-cane: these parcels were tied up in portions of the leaves of Banana, and were about as large as a good-sized pudding; they were about eight or ten in number. The appearance of the dish was not inviting, but upon experiment, being hungry, it was by no means to be despised. The pig was sent to the boat. There was enough, in all, for at least twenty people. The Kava root being masticated, the young man who presided over the bowl first threw his mouthfull into it : those who were * The bowl, and specimens of the Pepper, or Kava plant, are deposited in the Museum of the Royal Gardens. — Ed. l (l near enough flung in what they had chewed, and those who sat farther off put their morsels into small dishes made of Banana leaves, which were handed round to receive them, and their con- tents being all collected in the bowl, water was brought in cala- bashes, about six in number, containing together about two gallons, or perhaps more. The water being poured into the bowl, the young man with his hands commenced mixing the masticated mash with the water ; when this was thoroughly done, he took a large bunch of fibres of the bark of a tree called Fow (a Hibiscus?), resembling coarse tow: this he spread with both his hands along the margin of the bowl opposite to him, and drew it through the liquor, which had the effect of straining it, bringing away all broken fibres and pieces of the root, these being retained in the Fow, which was well wrung over the bowl, and the process was repeated until the liquor was free from frag- ments, which were all retained in the centre of the Fow. All this was done slowly, and with an air of ceremony. Small square cups, which would contain ahout half a pint or less, made of the leaf of the Banana, were then produced, and the Fow being filled with Kava from the bowl, over which the cup is held, the liquor ran from it into the vessel. The first dish was brought to me. Etiquette, of which I was ignorant, requires that it should be drunk off, and the cup thrown into the centre of the room. I tasted it, and handed the cup to Tue Tonga, who immediately sent it to be filled up, as if that which I had taken had dimi- nished the quantity : he then drank it off, and threw the cup towards the bowl. Others were served, a person calling out to whom it was to be carried ; otherwise, the whole was performed in silence. Each, as he drank off his cup, threw it into the middle of the floor, towards the bowl; they were all served sitting. There is, I believe, in all things respecting Kava, as much etiquette as in any ceremonies in the stiffest court in Europe; and we, who do not know and follow them, are by these people considered as deficient in politeness and refinement as they would be at London or Paris in the best societies. This, however, is to be said, that in decency and propriety of manners, if not to say elegance, some of these natives would set an example which might be followed with advantage by many at the above-named places. When the Kava was finished, the bowl was wiped with Fow, which was frequently wrung. With it the young man wiped his hands and arms, and then, having shaken it well, hung it up to dry, and the bowl resumed its station against the pillar of the house. There is a property in this vegetable, which, after frequent 41 use stains the bowl to a colour resembling bronze, so much so that the first I saw I believed to be made of that metal. The taste is pungent and unpleasant, leaving an uncomfortable huski- ness in the throat. The Romish priests who are upon the island, drink Kava with the natives with whom they reside. The Tue Tonga is a pagan ; but King Josiah and those who have been converted to Christianity have left it off, at the desire of the Protestant Missionaries. In Wallis's Island the French pilot, who is a respectable person, drinks Kava from choice, which he makes by stamping the root in a mortar. At the Feejee Group it is so scarce, that a man about to sail from Tonga for those islands, provided himself with as much as would fill a moderate-sized cart, which was to answer all purposes of barter, &c. The yams of the Feejees are the best in the South Seas. At Wallis's Island I met the King, walking from his house in which he had slept to that in which he was to pass the day. A root of Kava, without the stems, was carried slung upon a pole before him • it was broken up and brewed as soon as he arrived, exactly in the same manner as at Tonga, except that those who had to chew the root washed their mouths before commencing their office ; there also the principal person present, next to himself, prepared the mixture. Under the shade of a tree upon the Island of Vavou I saw a Kava party of the poorest sort : it consisted of an old man and five or six others ; they had but a very small piece of dry root, yet they used as much solemnity in making the beverage as at the house of the Tue Tonga, so that it was a ridiculous spectacle.