broader than the segments of the calyx, and are placed 



of its tube; the rays of the 



cylindrically round the 



>P 



deflected along the side of the tube towards the bottom 



down to the dissepiment 



fo 



a circle on the 



wal I 



above the base of the column, which has a 



stipe that elevates the pai 



pports bey 



corolla. The species differs from P. Mu 



the 

 fly in 



having the crown parted into lie ear 



one 



P 



The itpp 



stripes, and not of 

 ; remarkable for 



encircling the branches which bear them by the lobes that 

 form the sinus or indentation at the base, and thus assuming 

 the perfoliate mien of the upper foliage of certain sorts of 



The 



bel 



seldom exceeds the 



Honeysuckle 



length of 



petioles, and even the leaves along the nerves at their under 



feet, is villous above, as are the peel 



rface 



Nat 



gro 



cr 



here they are likewise glaucous and veined. 



of the West Indies. Found by Dr. S 

 in hedges on parched spots 



the 



southern side of Jamaica; by Sioane on the wooded 



cky mountains of 



land 



Introduced by Mr. William Fordyce in 1806'. 



• ■• • • 



Requires the treatment we have recommended in the 

 fourteenth article of this work for the tropical portion of 

 the genus. 



The drawing was made this summer from a plant which 

 flowered in Lord Tankerville's collection at Walton-upon- 

 Thames. 



a One of the petals, b A segment of the upper portion of the calyx. 

 eThe dissepiment of the nectary, d The inmost crown or deflected oper- 

 culum, e The outer crown, f The column ; which is a stipe or stalk 

 coated by the 5 united filaments to where these divide, bearing the pistil 



on its summit, g A stamen. ' h The germen. i A style, k The c ' - 

 without the corolla. 



ilyx 



