retreat, we hail it with more delight than the most gaudy 



flowers of fashion of the day. Such a one is the Tangier 



Pea, hardy in constitution, beautiful in form, rich in colour, 



admirably adapted for every purpose to which a climbing 

 plant 



useful 



inhabitant of our Gardens a hundred 



and fifty years ago, but never now to be 



For this 



we reproduce 



from 



specimen growmg 



the 



Garden of the Horticultural Society in 1830, where its 



hardihood of character enabled 



brave 



se- 



ity a season that was fatal to many of the beauties of 



India, Mexico, and North-western America 

 A native of Barbary. 



J. L. 







