with the bright blue patches of this interesting stranger, but 
it was never our good fortune to see it alive, till we met with 
it in the garden of Mrs. Marryat, at Wimbledon, where our 
drawing was made last September. 
It had been given to Mrs. Pallisser by Professor Tenore 
as his Campanula Cavolini; but probably in mistake; for it 
agrees entirely, not only with the account given of C. fragilis 
by that Botanist, in the latest of his published works, but 
also with dried specimens from himself under the same 
name. C. Cavolini has much smaller and paler flowers, and 
the segments of the calyx both narrower and longer. 
A perennial plant, for which it will be difficult to find in 
this country the same combination of the mild dry air, the 
limestone rocks, and the sunny skies of Naples. We presume 
it will be necessary to treat it as a greenhouse or delicate 
frame plant in winter; and no doubt the greatest prêcaution 
will be reguired to prevent its damping off. 
